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Continue reading …Check out this video of Ellen Page juggling two oranges and a grapefruit! The 24-year-old actress takes a bow after a quick 30-second impromptu performance where she showed off her hand-eye coordination skills. Ellen recently chatted about her latest flick, Super, in which she plays Rainn Wilson’s superhero sidekick Boltie. “I love playing roles that are physical, absolutely Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Just Jared Discovery Date : 09/04/2011 22:33 Number of articles : 3
Continue reading …House Budget Committee chairman Paul Ryan (R., Wis.) delivers the weekly Republican address to discuss his 2012 budget — ” The Path to Prosperity ” — a bold, serious effort to “move the debate in Washington from billions of spending cuts, to trillions.” “…more than just a budget, it is a commitment.” The facts are these: Washington has not been telling you the truth about the magnitude of the problems… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Corner Discovery Date : 09/04/2011 18:58 Number of articles : 2
Continue reading …House Budget Committee chairman Paul Ryan (R., Wis.) delivers the weekly Republican address to discuss his 2012 budget — ” The Path to Prosperity ” — a bold, serious effort to “move the debate in Washington from billions of spending cuts, to trillions.” “…more than just a budget, it is a commitment.” The facts are these: Washington has not been telling you the truth about the magnitude of the problems… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Corner Discovery Date : 09/04/2011 18:58 Number of articles : 2
Continue reading …The following video contains shocking scenes of the dire consequences of a federal government shutdown. Viewer discretion is advised. Produced by Meredith Bragg and Nick Gillespie. Go to Reason.tv for downloadable versions and subscribe to our YouTube Channel to receive automatic notifications when new material goes live. For more on life during government shutdowns, go here and here . Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Reason Magazine – Hit & Run Discovery Date : 08/04/2011 21:35 Number of articles : 2
Continue reading …Mark Levin decides to give his 2 cents on the “budget deal” that was reached late Friday. Hat Tip The Blaze . Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : P/Oed Patriot Discovery Date : 09/04/2011 23:21 Number of articles : 4
Continue reading …Click here to view this media I have to say that I’m in agreement with Ezra Klein here. After the budget deal was reached with Republicans and the President and Harry Reid came out praising the deal as some great bipartisan achievement, I felt the same way he did when he talked to Lawrence O’Donnell about it last night. All they did is validate the Republican’s agenda for more spending cuts at a time when our economy cannot afford it. And they just made it a lot harder to push back against any future austerity measures the Republicans demand when they start debating Paul Ryan’s horrible budget proposal. And as I said in my earlier post with Chris Hayes and Howard Fineman’s reaction to the budget deal, I do not understand how President Obama or the Democrats believe that alienating their base helps them win the next election. And by his base, I’m not talking about myself or liberal bloggers. I’m talking about the working class and the poor in America who voted for him in the last election, and who are going to have to live with these cuts and the job losses they’re going to cause. They look like they’re buying into the beltway Villagers’ narrative and their constant drumbeat about how looking “like an adult” and “everyone getting along” is the most important thing, as though anyone who’s just struggling to get by cares about any of that crap. They care if the policies you enact are helpful or harmful to their pocketbooks. They care about getting Americans back to work and outsourcing jobs. They care that we still have a middle class left in this country and that they’re kids might have an opportunity to do better than they have economically as they make their way through life. What they don’t care about is whether the two parties we’ve got running this country looked like they were getting along while they voted to approve horrid measures that are going to make their lives worse. I understand just as Ezra does that the President and Reid didn’t have any choice but to negotiate with the Republicans to keep from shutting down the government and they were going to have to agree to things that a lot of us weren’t going to like. But don’t go out there and make a deal for some crap sandwich where you didn’t fight harder publicly for the people you’re supposed to be representing and then tell the rest of us how good it’s supposed to taste. I don’t know if the rest of the public that doesn’t follow all of this the same way I do is going to react the same way I did to the President’s speech or what just got agreed to this week during this negotiation on the budget, but as Ezra pointed out in his piece at The Washington Post, this isn’t 1995 and if the economy doesn’t get better, Obama is not going to be remembered as a successful president. Here’s more from Klein’s post and there’s more there, so go read the whole thing, but his column pretty well just reiterates what he said in the video above with his initial reaction to this with Lawrence O’Donnell — 2011 is not 1995 : The substance of this deal is bad. But the way Democrats are selling it makes it much, much worse. The final compromise was $38.5 billion below 2010’s funding levels. That’s $78.5 billion below President Obama’s original budget proposal, which would’ve added $40 billion to 2010’s funding levels, and $6.5 billion below John Boehner’s original counteroffer, which would’ve subtracted $32 billion from 2010’s budget totals. In the end, the real negotiation was not between the Republicans and the Democrats, or even the Republicans and the White House. It was between John Boehner and the conservative wing of his party. And once that became clear, it turned out that Boehner’s original offer wasn’t even in the middle. It was slightly center-left. But you would’ve never known it from President Obama’s encomium to the agreement. Obama bragged about “making the largest annual spending cut in our history.” Harry Reid joined him, repeatedly calling the cuts “historic.” It fell to Boehner to give a clipped, businesslike statement on the deal. If you were just tuning in, you might’ve thought Boehner had been arguing for moderation, while both Obama and Reid sought to cut deeper. You would never have known that Democrats had spent months resisting these “historic” cuts, warning that they’d cost jobs and slow the recovery. So why were Reid and Obama so eager to celebrate Boehner’s compromise with his conservative members? The Democrats believe it’s good to look like a winner, even if you’ve lost. But they’re sacrificing more than they let on. By celebrating spending cuts, they’ve opened the door to further austerity measures at a moment when the recovery remains fragile. Claiming political victory now opens the door to further policy defeats later. Right now, the economy is weak. Giving into austerity will weaken it further, or at least delay recovery for longer. And if Obama does not get a recovery, then he will not be a successful president, no matter how hard he works to claim Boehner’s successes as his own. Clinton’s speeches were persuasive because the labor market did a lot of his talking for him. But when unemployment is stuck at eight percent, there’s no such thing as a great communicator. And here’s more from Krugman who agrees with Klein — Celebrating Defeat .
Continue reading …Remarks of President Barack Obama As Prepared for Delivery Saturday, April 9, 2011 Washington, DC Last night, after weeks of long and difficult negotiations over our national budget, leaders of both parties came together to avert a government shutdown, cut spending, and invest in our future. This is good news for the American people. It means that small businesses can get the loans they need, our families… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Lynn Sweet Discovery Date : 09/04/2011 12:44 Number of articles : 3
Continue reading …ABC's Jonathan Karl last week asked Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wisc.) if his 2012 budget proposal is a “political kamikaze mission” that will “ultimately cost Republicans” their majority in the House. After Christiane Amanpour played this clip and asked if Ryan is a “visionary or a villain” on Sunday's “This Week,” George Will marvelously responded – likely to the dismay of all present! – “Paul Ryan is eight years younger than the President but vastly more experienced and conversant with these issues” (video follows with transcript and commentary): (BEGIN VIDEOTAPE) JONATHAN KARL, ABC: What do you say to nervous Republicans who say that this is a political kamikaze mission? You've just given Democrats a big target that may ultimately cost Republicans your majority here in the House? (END VIDEOTAPE) (BEGIN VIDEOTAPE) REP. PAUL RYAN (R-WISCONSIN): Look at these people, look at these new people who just got here. You know, they didn't come here for a political career. They came here for a cause. This is not a budget, this is a cause. (END VIDEOTAPE) CHRISTIANE AMANPOUR, HOST: Congressman Paul Ryan, certainly not one to fiddle around the edges of the financial crisis confronting this country. This week, he unveiled a sweeping budget proposal to cut $6 trillion from the budget over ten years. That is trillion with a “T”. Ryan would also revamp, some would say dismantle, the cherished programs Medicare and Medicaid. Is he a visionary or is he a villain? Whatever your point of view, one thing is not in dispute: Ryan's plan will drive this epic debate. So, let's bring back our roundtable, George Will, Chrystia Freeland, Ron Brownstein and Donna Brazile. George, you were just talking before we went to a break, how will this change the conversation? It will the Ryan plan. GEORGE WILL: Paul Ryan is eight years younger than the President but vastly more experienced and conversant with these issues. The Republicans are now bound as with hoops of steel to this plan by Ryan. They really can't avoid it, and the President can't avoid engaging it. Now, the President's initial response was that the Democrats will say this is extreme. This extreme plan by Paul Ryan envisions over the next decade a 34 percent increase in federal spending. It envisions adding trillions of dollars to the national debt. That's how slow the glide plan is that he proposes. Furthermore, on Medicare, Medicare is doomed as we know it, not by Mr. Ryan, but by Mr. Arithmetic. It just doesn't work anymore. And therefore, when he preposes essentially what the bipartisan commission on Medicare proposed more than a decade ago, premium support, which is, no matter what Mr. Hollen [sic] said a moment ago, is essentially what every federal worker has from the man who delivers your mail to Harry Reid who delivers stuff. Indeed, and what the media are going to do in the coming weeks is from the same playbook they used to prevent Social Security reform in 2005: distract, distort, and misinform. These folks have been complaining for months that Republicans having just taken control of the House were making minor cuts to discretionary spending while avoiding going after the real meat in the entitlement programs. Some of the more honest ones even criticized the President for doing the same thing in his budget proposal. Now that Ryan has come out with a plan that does go after Medicare and Medicaid, so-called journalists are going to forget all their previous squawking about there being no adults in the room willing to actually face up to the real budget problems facing the nation and instead demonize Ryan and Republicans for wanting to starve women, children, and the elderly. It's getting old, isn't it?
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