Just days after Sony’s Qriocity video-on-demand service went live across Europe, in flies this — news that the aforesaid service will be spreading its wings and touching the PSP in short order. Word on the street has it that the next PlayStation Portable update (v6.35) will bring along Music Unlimited powered by Qriocity, described as a “new, cloud-based, digital music service from Sony that will give music lovers access to millions of songs stored and synchronized through the cloud.” Post-update, users will notice a new icon in the PSP’s XrossMediaBar under the ‘Music’ category, and moreover, the Media Go application for managing PSP downloadable content on your PC will be updated “with enhancements to the user interface and advanced photo editing tools.” Sony’s remaining mum on a launch date, but the internet is already abuzz about what this may mean for the impending PlayStation Phone . Will Sony finally have a leg-up over iOS with an ingrained unlimited music client? A boy can dream, can’t he? Sony PSP to gain unlimited music via cloud-based Qriocity service originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 29 Nov 2010 12:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Click here to view this media The utter falsity of a statement is no barrier to Republican leaders repeating it. And so it was Sunday, as South Carolina Senator Lindsay Graham offered his version of the GOP’s Uber Lie that tax cuts pay for themselves. Appearing on Fox News Sunday, Graham defended the Republicans’ demand for another $700 billion windfall for the wealthy by announcing the fiscal equivalent of the sun rising in the west and setting in the east: “When you look historically, when we raise taxes, the economy slows and we don’t get any more revenue. When we cut taxes, the economy grows and we maintain the same amount of revenue.” Not on this planet. In his version of the Republican myth that ” tax cuts pay for themselves ,” President Bush confidently proclaimed, “You cut taxes and the tax revenues increase.” In 2007, Graham’s puppet master John McCain explained, “Tax cuts, starting with Kennedy, as we all know, increase revenues.” As it turned out, not so much. After Ronald Reagan tripled the national debt with his supply-side tax cuts, George W. Bush doubled it again with his own. And in between, the Clinton years saw robust economic growth, balanced budgets along with higher taxes (which, by the way, every single Republican in the House and Senate voted against.) In fact, the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities (CBPP) found that the Bush tax cuts accounted for almost half of the mushrooming deficits during his tenure. As another CBPP analysis forecast , over the next 10 years, the Bush tax cuts if made permanent will contribute more to the U.S. budget deficit than the Obama stimulus, the TARP program, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and revenue lost to the recession put together . Predictably, the Bush tax cuts didn’t come anywhere close to paying for themselves. And as Congressional Budget Office projections revealed in June, making them permanent is the very worst thing the so-called deficit hawks could do to reduce the U.S. debt. Sadly, Lindsay Graham’s fraud is now orthodoxy in Republican circles . Despite the inescapable conclusion of history, theory and empirical evidence to the contrary, Mitch McConnell, Jon Kyl, John Boehner, Tom Coburn, John McCain, Kay Bailey Hutchison and other Republican alchemists continue to insist that cutting taxes increases government revenue and thereby reduces the deficit. Of course, even though the tax cut claim is laughably false, conservative ideology requires that it must true. Otherwise, the Republicans have just been giving money to rich people . For more background, charts and data, see ” 10 Epic Failure of the Bush Tax Cuts .”
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Looks like the incoming freshmen class of Republicans has all of their talking points down pat — we care about small businesses, tax cuts control runaway spending, we’re listening to the American people, freedom, and god bless America! Or in other words, another two years of platitudes and trickle-down economics. Hi, I’m Austin Scott. Earlier this month, I had the privilege of being elected to represent the people of Georgia’s Eighth Congressional District. This week, Americans will gather to give thanks for what matters most: for me, that’s family, faith and freedom. We are fortunate to live in a country where we, the people, are free to speak out and alter the course of our government. The American people have sent 85 new Republicans to Washington with a clear message: listen up, stop the job-killing policies, stop the runaway spending, and focus on getting our country back on track. The people certainly picked the right group of messengers to get the job done. Our freshman class includes seven farmers, six medical doctors, three car dealers, a former FBI agent, a pizzeria owner, and a former NFL lineman. All told, we’ve got 33 small businesspeople, folks who understand what it’s like to sign the front of a paycheck, and not just the back of one. It’s a new breed of leaders for a new majority and a new Congress. Republican leaders recognize how extraordinary our class is. The day after the election, they put us to work as part of the transition team planning for the new majority. Our freshman class has also been granted an unprecedented two seats at the leadership table in the 112th Congress. We’re excited to have Kristi Noem and Tim Scott representing us on the leadership team. But let’s face facts: fresh faces alone aren’t enough to bring about the change in course the American people are demanding. The real work lies ahead. As much as we have to be thankful for, too many Georgians and too many Americans have been out of work for far too long. Our new Republican majority is ready to focus on creating jobs and putting a stop to the runaway spending in Washington, DC. House Republicans have put a plan of action on paper with the Pledge to America, a governing agenda built by listening to the people. Watching our democracy work just as our founding fathers intended reminds us how hard-fought and hard-won our freedoms are. At this hour, tens of thousands of our sons and daughters are overseas in Iraq, Afghanistan and around the world standing guard in defense of our country and the values on which it was built. We give thanks to our true heroes in uniform, we keep faith with them, and we mourn their fallen comrades. Thank you for listening. May God bless you, those you hold dear, and the great United States of America.”
Continue reading …Click here to view this media This video, produced by Taiwan’s NMA (Next Media TV, is good for more than a laugh. It also makes you realize what an international laughingstock Palin’s continuing high profile makes of the American political scene generally. They must think that we’re frigging nuts to even allow someone like this the kind of political ascendancy she’s achieved. And you know what? They’re right.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Heather has already talked about the right’s revisionist history around Thanksgiving that cropped up this year, but the story isn’t complete without discussing Rush Limbaugh’s sneering attack on President Obama’s Thanksgiving proclamation : Every cliche that is wrong about Thanksgiving shows up in his proclamation. The Pilgrims show up at Plymouth. The Indians had been there for thousands of years. We get off the boats. We don’t know how to feed ourselves. The Indians show us how. They shared their skill in agriculture, which helped the early colonists survive and whose rich culture continues to add to our nation’s Heritage. Is it possible he believes it? I don’t doubt that he believes it, and even if he doesn’t believe it, he wants everybody else to believe it. Obama believes that this nation is fatally flawed since its founding, even before its founding, so it stands to reason — you know, a lot of people did not hear the true story of Thanksgiving until I wrote it in my book in the early nineties. I can remember Snerdley and H.R. were stunned when they heard the first story of Thanksgiving, the real story, because we’d all been taught a variation of the Indians saved us. We had to draw pictures of it in school, that’s exactly right, art projects of the Indians saving us. Well, that would be because they actually did save us — largely through teaching white settlers agricultural techniques: Time and familiarity has reduced to quaint memory the crucial nature of Indian agriculture for white settlers on the Atlantic coast early in the seventeenth century. Every American school child can recite the story of Squanto and his service to the Pilgrims at Plymouth. It is a charming incident in our historical texts culminating in a grand feast of thanksgiving. The harsh reality of the time, as William Bradford well knew and recorded, inscribed a bleaker circumstance. Without the seed corn and beans Bradford’s fellow adventurers unearthed in November 1620, survival of the colony was doubtful. Without Squanto to teach them the arts of New World agriculture the Pilgrims’ future was likely to be short indeed. The settlers’ failure to master Squanto’s teaching forced the colony to rely on food supplies purchased from successful Indian farmers. Not until the second year did the Pilgrims’ own fields produce in sufficient abundance to assure survival. To the south, in Virginia, the Jamestown settlement had already benefited from Indian agriculture. On at least two occasions the imperial chieftain, Powhatan, provided Jamestown with sufficient food to stave off disaster. The Jamestown settlers and later commentators seldom understood Powhatan’s motivation and apparent inconstancy toward the settlement. A broader view of the chief’s effort to establish an empire in the Chesapeake area might shed some light on the seeming enigma, but for the Englishmen at Jamestown the fact that lie came and with food was enough. To the good fortune of Plymouth and Jamestown the coastal Indians produced food in quantity. The coastal tribes’ ability to feed themselves and the white settlements belied the popular conception of Indian agriculture in that region as bare subsistence. Indeed, where investigators have explored the question a different picture emerged. In southern New England at least, Indian agriculture accounted for over 65 percent of the native population’s diet and surplus production for trade and storage was common. In any event, it did not take the Plymouth colony long to discover that their gift from the Indians had a value beyond feeding the settlement. Within four years after their arrival at Plymouth settlers profited from Indian agriculture and entered into relationships that dominated Indian-white contacts for the next two hundred years and more. In the fall of 1625 Governor William Bradford sent a boatload of corn up the Kennebec River to trade with the interior tribes for furs. His men returned with a store of beaver and other furs that financed the colony’s needs for the next year. In later years Massachusetts further developed its fur trade, raised its own corn for export, and purchased corn from the Indians for resale. You can also read William Bradford’s eyewitness account for more. Now it is true that Bradford’s account also details how the Pilgrims discovered that communal farming was a distinctly inferior scheme to private farming, which is where Stossel and Limbaugh obtain their claim that the first Thanksgiving was about the failure of socialism — which, as Brian at RightWingWatch has detailed already, is a load of bollocks and a deliberate misreading of the history. As Digby says : At this point it’s clear that according to Rush, there’s literally nothing good you can say about a racial minority in America (unless they are dutifully serving as right wing poster children.) Of course not. Because in Rushtopia, white people are the cream of creation, and any suggestion that their inferiors might actually have helped them survive and thrive is an outrageous slander upon the race.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Looks like David Gergen isn’t done pimping for Erskine Bowles and Alan Simpson yet. Gergen uses what’s going on in Ireland right now as as excuse to tell Americans that we had better get ready for some “tough medicine” once the deficit commission comes out with their report next week and of course that “medicine” should start with going after Social Security. Heaven forbid the rich should have to pay back the government for those tax cuts . Gergen apparently thinks the peons should be paying for their excesses. MALVEAUX: On Wall Street, investors did not buy into the excitement over Black Friday. The Dow Jones Industrial average was down 95 points when the closing bell rang earlier at 1:00 p.m. today. Now, I’ll explain the slight in stock prices on worries about Europe’s growing debt crisis. We’re going to see new action next week to try to slash the federal deficit in this country. I want to bring in our senior political analyst, David Gergen, to talk a little bit about that. Happy Thanksgiving, David. The president’s bipartisan deficit commission are going to be releasing their formal recommendations next week. A lot has been leaked already and people are not happy about hearing the retirement age going up, Social Security benefits going down. One of the co-, Allen Simpson, said this. He says, I’ve never had any nastier mail or had been in a more difficult position in my life, just vicious. People I’ve known, relatives saying, you son of a bitch, how could you do this? His language not ours, but clearly, I mean, to tackle the deficit here, if you can’t tackle Social Security, I mean, how are these guys going to do this without just being slammed all around? GERGEN: Well, it’s a very, very tough proposition, and we’re really on — I think United Nation and president and Congress are now going to have to face some very tough decisions. Just think about Poppy’s report here, the very encouraging report about the shopping today. Folks from Ireland here shopping that’s good news. But at this very moment, Ireland is about to go bankrupt, and you know, had to be bailed out by the European Union. At the same time now, fears are spreading about Portugal and maybe about Spain, which is a much, much bigger economy. So, this question of when a government gets too far and the debt is serious and it can have huge consequences, and what we know now is the bipartisan commission is supposed to report next Wednesday on whether it can come to an agreement on how to deal with America’s exploding deficit. Our national debt has almost doubled. To nearly — has nearly to nearly doubled to $14 trillion in just the last seven years. MALVEAUX: Well, David, let me ask you this. Obviously, they have some examples, some recommendations they’ve made, and perhaps, these are not going to be put into effect right away. The other co-chair, Erskine Bowles, says that the changes will be relatively slow. None of our recommendations take place in 2011 while the economy is still going through its recovery. In 2012, we’ll have $69 billion worth of cuts. What it will do is send signals to the market that America is serious about dealing with this deficit. Do you think this is going to work? Is it — is that going to be enough? GERGEN: It could work if, in fact, the White House and the Congress will rally to it. And Suzanne, I think this is a big test, another big test of President Obama’s leadership. You know, we’ve had this one test now we talked about a couple days ago with Regard to China and South Korea whether you can get the Chinese to help play ball with the United States and get the North Korean situation under control. Here, this is his commission. Is he going to put pressure on this commission now between now and Wednesday and really come to an agreement and get the kind of votes they need in there to make a recommendation or is he going to sit back on the side lines? Is he going to send people from the White House to talk quietly to the commission and assure them if they offer tough medicine, he, the president, will support it? He’s much more likely to get the votes if he’s willing to take the tough steps, and it starts with Social Security. MALVEAUX: All right. David, thank you so much. Appreciate your time. GERGEN: Thank you. MALVEAUX: Happy Holidays.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media I’m always glad to see our court jesters like Letterman and Stewart and Colbert do their best to make sure something that the public should be paying attention to doesn’t fly under the radar. David Letterman did just that with this Top Ten segment and so you didn’t have to be a reader of The Nation or watch Rachel Maddow’s show to know the U.S. screwed the pooch on this one. How we ended up negotiating with some fake Taliban leader is beyond me but as Scahill pointed out, it doesn’t bode well for any of our supposed intelligence on the ground in Afghanistan.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Sarah Palin’s still pushing hard on her “drill baby drill” mantra hard, especially in terms of the Alaska National Wildlife Refuge, which she can barely wait to open up for drilling and a new pipeline. She went on Greta Van Susteren’s show on Thanksgiving Day to criticize “the extreme politicians over on the left who want to buy into those extreme environmentalists who claim that there’s no way you can responsibly develop a plot of land that was set aside for oil and gas development” — particularly President Obama: SARAH PALIN: Well, Obama needs to get up here. If he has as much time as he has on his hands to take all these vacations, maybe he should vacation in ANWR. At least fly over it, Mr. President, or play — you know, play golf or do what he does. This is a national security need. This is — there’s that inherent link between security and our own domestic development. I think it’s inexcusable that our president won’t come up here and look at it. Does anyone know what Palin’s talking about here? Earlier this summer, Republicans tried attacking Obama for taking a vacation, until the WaPo pointed out that Obama at that point had taken far fewer days of vacation than his predecessor, the inimitable proprietor of the Lazy W Ranch in Crawford: Obama has embarked on nine “vacations” since taking office, bringing his total days off to 48. Some of those trips lasted a day and some, like his Christmas holiday in Hawaii, more than a week. By comparison, Bush had visited his ranch in Crawford, Tex., 14 times at this point in his administration and spent 115 days there. Indeed, FactCheck found that Obama also took less vacation time than the revered Saint Ronnie, too — though more than those lazy liberal Democrats, Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter. Maybe Palin has in mind Obama’s trip to Asia, since her pal Michele Bachmann had gone on national TV and lied about its magnitude and cost — even though its utter falsity was quickly established. Indeed, the wingnuts of the wingnutosphere have insisted on referring to it as Obama’s “vacation” in India. They were helped along in this by Glenn Beck, who described the trip as “$2 billion for ten days so [Obama] can go see the festival of lights.” BECK: All on the heels of his wife’s lavish trip to Spain, now our president is planning another lavish trip. And our dollar is losing value and the Chinese are warning us. The media again is missing it. The bickering today back and forth about how many hundreds or maybe — maybe billions of dollars this is going to cost to insure the president’s security but no one is asking, “Wait a minute, it could cost up to $2 billion to make sure he’s safe? Then why is he — has he seen the Grand Canyon?” From the November 4 edition of Glenn Beck: BECK: A report came out that has made the rounds on the Internet about the high cost of this trip. Some people say that it is up to $2 billion for 10 days. Is that true? I don’t know. The media is bickering back and forth about what the real cost is and how many ships will be there. Thirty-four warships, possibly. I don’t know. Two hundred million dollars a day while in India. I don’t know. president has blocked off eight hundred hotel rooms. Do we even know if he’s traveling with 3,000 people? Do we know if that’s true? No one knows any of the details of this trip, the real cost of the trip. One thing we can say for certain is it’s going to be quite expensive. In reality, of course, this is not a vacation at all, but a major diplomatic tour of ally nations, particularly India. And there’s a great deal at stake, both in terms of security issue and major business deals. Is that what Palin means by “all this vacation time”? If so, it once again demonstrates her utter lack of fitness for the job. So, for that matter, does her ceaseless attempts to push ANWR drilling, because it clearly displays her eagerness to not only ignore real science but also to essentially open up her entire state to resource extraction without regard to consequences. To Van Susteren’s credit, she did invite Rep. Jay Inslee on to discuss the other side of the issue: Click here to view this media INSLEE: Well, I guess I’d offer three reasons that I think it’s unwise for us to move in this direction right now. Number one, the fact is — and this is just a geologic and economic fact — is that drilling in this area really is not going to make an appreciable difference for our economy. And the reason is, is that this represents less than half of 1 percent of the world’s oil reserves. And according to the energy studies that have been done, even if they prove out, which remains a question, might have — might have an impact of maybe 3 cents a gallon of our cost of gasoline in the year 2028. So it’s quite a minimal amount when you look at the word oil supply. In fact, the problem is, you know, we’ve only got 3 percent of the world’s oil supply, but we use 25 percent of the world’s oil. So it’s really not a solution to our problem. That’s number one. Number two — and I think this is an important fact — and I appreciate your looking at this issue — but the fact of the matter is, if we’re going to grow our economy, if we are going to seize the jobs of the next century, we have to get busy focusing our national debate and our national investment on the new clean energy technologies, or China is going to eat our lunch. China right now is preparing to roll out electric cars, lithium ion batteries, solar cells, cellulosic ethanol. This is where the future of energy is. We’ve a finite resource in oil, just like we had a finite resource in whale oil, and we made a transition. And we have to really focus our national energies in a bipartisan way, I would hope, on finding our way to compete with China to really build new energy sources of the future. And third — and this is an important one, and maybe it’s obvious but I think it’s worth saying. We’ve made some national commitments to our grandkids. We’ve done it in Yellowstone National Park. We’ve done it in Glacier. We’ve done it in Mt. Rainier National Park. And we’ve done it in the Arctic refuge. You know, a Republican, Teddy Roosevelt, started this whole shebang at the Pelican (ph) Refuge, and we’ve never violated that commitment. This is a special place. We’ve made a commitment that this is — this is during the Eisenhower administration, by the way. We made a decision that we were going to make a commitment to our grandchildren that we were going to preserve this relatively small space the way the creator designed it. And I just think that’s a commitment that we should keep. It’s the right thing for America both economically and as a part of a commitment to our grandkids. She later brought on Peter Van Tyne of the NRDC to explain that Palin in fact is lying about the impacts of the drilling: VAN TYNE: I think it is wrong on a couple of points. First of all, the coastal plain of the arctic refuge about 1.5 million acres is considered by the scientists to be the biological heart of that refuge. And think about this — in a two week period in the summer the porcupine caribou herd calves on the coastal plain, and they have 35,000 babies in that two-week period. On the coastal plain you have over 160 species of birds. In every state of your viewers there’s a bird that spends some portion of their life cycle on the Arctic Refuge coastal plain. And it’s also considered by scientists to be the most important land habitat in the United States for polar bears. And scientists say in the entire arctic, circumpolar arctic this place has the most diverse plant and animal species. You mentioned that there’s an idea of drilling being only a small area. That is simply not borne out. You yourself were over in the Prudhoe Bay area and you looked at the development there. This is 1,000 square miles of development, the size of Rhode Island. You can see it from space. There’s no way — the National Academy of Sciences has looked at these issues carefully. They say that when you drill in a particular place you’ve made the essential trade off, their words, not mine, where you are necessarily industrializing an area by drilling it for oil and actually undercutting if not completely eliminating the other values of the area. Maybe Palin needs to take a vacation down in the Gulf of Mexico to see some of the consequences of trusting the oil companies too much, eh?
Continue reading …enlarge They both would eventually have something in common. Click here to view this media Considering Nixon’s actual resignation didn’t take place until August of the following year, it seems incredible to imagine how the Watergate scandal would drag out for another nine months before he did. But this week in November of 1973, ending on the 24th, it was going full blast. President Nixon: “People have got to know whether or not their President is a crook. Well I’m not a crook. I’ve earned everything I’ve got”. Yep, this was the week he said that. And there was also the Energy Crisis to consider, which wasn’t going to go away anytime soon. The question of whether to ration gas or hike up the tax was under consideration. Ironically, it would wind up being both after a while. No winning there. Well, not unless you were an oil company.
Continue reading …