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Bill Maher Calls Sarah Palin A ‘Dumb [Vagina]‘

The sexist media attacks on Sarah Palin clearly know no bounds. On Friday, in the middle of his opening monologue on HBO's “Real Time,” Bill Maher actually used a highly derogatory term for a woman's vagina while referring to the former Alaska governor (video courtesy Jeff Poor follows with transcript and commentary, serious vulgarity warning): BILL MAHER: Oh, and did you hear this? [Laughs] Sarah Palin finally heard what happened in Japan… [Audience laughter] MAHER: …and she’s demanding that we invade Tsunami. I mean, she says, “These Tsunamians will not get away with this.” Oh speaking of dumb twats, did you… [Audience laughter and applause] MAHER: Oh, you’re right, yeah I let the cat out the bag on that one, huh folks?” Is the universal media hatred for this woman so pervasive that it's now acceptable for a man to call her that? Can the dreaded C-word be far behind? At what point will women's groups such as NOW step in and complain about this disgracefully sexist treatment? Or has the double standard surrounding women on different sides of the political aisle now reached a point that anything no matter how vulgar or offensive is totally acceptable if it is said about a conservative? Nice job, Bill. Stay classy!

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Ed Schultz Attacks ‘Toxic’ Ann Coulter: ‘There Is Always Misinformation’ When She’s On TV

The liberal media collectively hyperventilated the past couple of days after conservative author Ann Coulter had the nerve to claim that radiation at certain levels is actually a good thing. Jumping on the breathless bandwagon was MSNBC's Ed Schultz Friday who called Coulter “toxic” as he attacked her assertions without clearly elucidating her point (video follows with transcript and commentary): ED SCHULTZ, HOST: And welcome back to THE ED SHOW — time for “The Takedown.” A lot of people say Ann Coulter is toxic. But we had no idea that she would take that literally. Coulter says there’s no problem with exposing yourself to high levels of radiation. You would laugh at her if she wasn’t making light of a terrible tragedy. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) ANN COULTER, CONSERVATIVE AUTHOR: There’s a growing body of evidence that radiation in excess of what the government says are the minimum amounts you should be exposed to were actually good for you and reduce cases of cancer. (END VIDEO CLIP) SCHULTZ: In a titled column, “A Glowing Report on Radiation,” Coulter dismissed the dangerous effects of nuclear disaster in Japan. She wrote, “The only good news is that anyone exposed to excess radiation from the nuclear power plants is now probably much less likely to get cancer.” Her basic premise is what the scientific community calls hormesis. It’s the theory that low doses of radiation can help fight diseases. Recent reports by the United States National Research Council, the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements, and the United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation all concluded that insufficient human data on hormesis exists. So, while it’s possible there may be health benefits to low doses of radiation, you won’t find any international scientific agencies promoting that theory just yet. But Coulter isn’t just talking about low doses. She’s giving the impression that high level radiation exposure is safe, even though a reading at the Fukushima plant showed enough leakage to cause acute radiation sickness in anyone exposed for more than a couple of hours. Coulter even goes back to the old myth that only 31 people died as a result of the Chernobyl meltdown — a myth we debunked on this program earlier this week. If you remember, some studies have the resulting death count from Chernobyl as high as 500,000 people. Coulter probably thought her expert opinion would find a captive audience on FOX News, but watch Bill O’Reilly’s reaction to Coulter’s theory. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) BILL O’REILLY, FOX NEWS: What you say may be true. There may be some doses of radiation that the human body can ward off infection. But in something like this, you have to get the folks out of there. COULTER: OK. But the point is O’REILLY: And you have to report — you have to report worst-case scenario. (END VIDEO CLIP) SCHULTZ: Even Bill O’Reilly can’t get onboard with Coulter’s scientific method. This Bill O’Reilly: (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) O’REILLY: Tide goes in tide goes out. Never a miscommunication. You can’t explain that. (END VIDEO CLIP) SCHULTZ: Radiation in, radiation out; who knows. When Bill O’Reilly is lecturing you about your shoddy science, you know you’re off the rails. But Ann Coulter doesn’t care about science. She only cares about being provocative so Fox will keep putting her on TV. She is so predictable. You could write a scientific formula for her. Ann goes on TV. Ann goes off TV. There is always misinformation. That’s the Takedown. Let's analyze this slowly. Here's what Coulter wrote Wednesday: As The New York Times science section reported in 2001, an increasing number of scientists believe that at some level — much higher than the minimums set by the U.S. government — radiation is good for you. “They theorize,” the Times said, that “these doses protect against cancer by activating cells' natural defense mechanisms.” Among the studies mentioned by the Times was one in Canada finding that tuberculosis patients subjected to multiple chest X-rays had much lower rates of breast cancer than the general population. Schultz conveniently ignored that Coulter cited the Times in her piece. That's unfortunately what passes for journalism at MSNBC these days. Rather than mimic his negligence, let's take a look at what the Times reported in its November 2001 article ” For Radiation, How Much Is Too Much? “: In their efforts to protect Americans from the hazards of radiation, federal agencies have found themselves in a quandary. People are constantly exposed to radiation from natural sources — from cosmic rays, radon seeping out of the earth and radioactive substances in soil, water, food and even from potassium in the human body itself. Compared with this radiation, the amounts coming from human efforts like nuclear plants are, relatively, minuscule. So, the question is, How closely must this radiation be regulated? Up to now, regulators have typically acted as if every bit of excess exposure is potentially hazardous. But some scientists question this assumption. “But some scientists question this assumption.” You can see why Schultz ignored this Times piece: In a report last year on radiation standards, the General Accounting Office, the investigative arm of Congress, said: ''The standards administered by E.P.A. and N.R.C. to protect the public from low-level radiation exposure do not have a conclusive scientific basis, despite decades of research.'' The situation is further confused, experts say, because regulatory standards are a hodgepodge. The Environmental Protection Agency advocates a standard for all radiation exposure from a single source or site at 15 millirem a year, with no more than 4 coming from ground water. A standard chest X-ray, in comparison, gives about 10 millirem to the chest, which is equivalent to 1 or 2 millirem to the whole body. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission sets its acceptable level of radiation exposure from any one source at 25 millirem a year. In contrast, the natural level of background radiation in the United States, on average, is about 350 millirem a year, and in some areas of the country it is many times higher than that. Having established a premise from an almost ten-year-old Times article, Coulter found other supportive sources: A $10 million Department of Energy study from 1991 examined 10 years of epidemiological research by the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health on 700,000 shipyard workers, some of whom had been exposed to 10 times more radiation than the others from their work on the ships' nuclear reactors. The workers exposed to excess radiation had a 24 percent lower death rate and a 25 percent lower cancer mortality than the non-irradiated workers. In 1983, a series of apartment buildings in Taiwan were accidentally constructed with massive amounts of cobalt 60, a radioactive substance. After 16 years, the buildings' 10,000 occupants developed only five cases of cancer. The cancer rate for the same age group in the general Taiwanese population over that time period predicted 170 cancers. The people in those buildings had been exposed to radiation nearly five times the maximum “safe” level according to the U.S. government. But they ended up with a cancer rate 96 percent lower than the general population. Bernard L. Cohen, a physics professor at the University of Pittsburgh, compared radon exposure and lung cancer rates in 1,729 counties covering 90 percent of the U.S. population. His study in the 1990s found far fewer cases of lung cancer in those counties with the highest amounts of radon — a correlation that could not be explained by smoking rates. Tom Bethell, author of the The Politically Incorrect Guide to Science has been writing for years about the beneficial effects of some radiation, or “hormesis.” And what was Coulter's conclusion? Although it is hardly a settled scientific fact that excess radiation is a health benefit, there's certainly evidence that it decreases the risk of some cancers — and there are plenty of scientists willing to say so. Indeed. Radiation therapy is even used to kill various cancers. Makes one wonder if Schultz is aware of such treatment. But missed in all of the shouting was Coulter's real point: I guess good radiation stories are not as exciting as news anchors warning of mutant humans and scary nuclear power plants — news anchors who, by the way, have injected small amounts of poison into their foreheads to stave off wrinkles. Which is to say: The general theory that small amounts of toxins can be healthy is widely accepted –except in the case of radiation. Every day Americans pop multivitamins containing trace amount of zinc, magnesium, selenium, copper, manganese, chromium, molybdenum, nickel, boron — all poisons. They get flu shots. They'll drink copious amounts of coffee to ingest a poison: caffeine. (Back in the '70s, Professor Cohen offered to eat as much plutonium as Ralph Nader would eat caffeine — an offer Nader never accepted.) But in the case of radiation, the media have Americans convinced that the minutest amount is always deadly. Although reporters love to issue sensationalized reports about the danger from Japan's nuclear reactors, remember that, so far, thousands have died only because of Mother Nature. And the survivors may outlive all of us over here in hermetically sealed, radiation-free America. Indeed. From the moment this nuclear crisis began last Friday, our media have been fear-mongering the situation rather than properly informing a concerned public. Instead of telling people the minimal risks of hazardous radiation levels reaching our continent, the press have incited anxieties creating runs on potassium iodide up and down the West Coast. Rather than participate in this nonsense, Coulter wrote a well-researched piece Wednesday presenting a side of this story that should have been included alongside the hyperventilation for some balance.

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Maxim

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Maxim

Let’s Play Lufia: Curse of The Sinistrals PT17 – Procuring Priphea БУРИТО СЛУЖБА СПАСЕНИЯ 2001 БУРИТО ЖЁЛТАЯ ПРЕССА 2001 maxim Maxim UK Mens Magazine | Celebrity Girls, Mens Fashion, Entertainment Welcome to Maxim Magazine UK, your free guide to cover girls, celebrity girls, hot babes, mens fashion, men’s clothing, top tens, cars, gadgets, sport, music, video, … Bollywood Press: Deepal Shaw Hot Maxim India March Photoshoot Deepal Shaw Hot Maxim India March Photoshoot. Deepal Shaw Hot Maxim India March Photoshoot. Posted by Samra at 1:27 AM · Email This BlogThis! Share to Twitter Share to Facebook Share to Google Buzz. Labels: Bollywood, Gallery, Masala, … Scream 4 Blurb In Maxim Magazine | Scream-Trilogy Scream 4 Blurb In Maxim Magazine. By wicked-scribe • March 19, 2011. Nothing new, but for press collectors here’s a little blurb on Scream 4 in the new issue of Maxim Magazine. Thanks to JoeNob for the scan. … The American Patriot Blog: Firebomb Thrown at Elderly Woman at Pro … The Official Blog of the American Patriot: Michael J. Maxim , internet radio show host, author, and activist. Several new posts made weekly here with podcasts, videos and more posted at www.MichaelJMaxim.com! … Tanner Curl: Maxim : monkeys are hilarious Maxim : monkeys are hilarious. What happens when the two-year prohibition of vehicles in the Longleat Safari Park in England ends and a car is left unattended in the monkey area? Hilarity, that’s what. … EarlyBirdClicks says: #FREE SHIPPING #7 : Maxim (1-year): Maxim (1-year) Magazine Subscription Dennis Publishing (222) Price:… http://dlvr.it/HKH4f #cheaptweet

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Vonn

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Vonn

NooKiller36 Macht witzigen ultra kill Lindsey Vonn finishes 13th in slalom at the World Cup finals in Lenzerheide (SUI) March 18, 2011 FIS Weltcup Damen – Versprecher Maria Riesch wins Alpine World Cup overall title – Sports- NBC Sports Maria Riesch ended Lindsey Vonn’s three-year reign as queen of Alpine skiing on Saturday, winning the World Cup overall title after the final race was canceled. Riesch Leapfrogs Vonn and Sets Up a Showdown Vonn , who entered Friday’s slalom with a 27-point advantage, trails by 3 after finishing 13th. Riesch, her friend and longtime rival, was fourth. The champion will be determined in the last race of the season, a giant slalom. … Maria Riesch beats Lindsey Vonn for Alpine World Cup overall title … ReutersMaria Riesch beats Lindsey Vonn for Alpine World Cup overall title after final …Washington PostBy AP, Saturday, March 19, 5:46 AM LENZERHEIDE, Switzerland — Maria Riesch ended Lindsey Vonn’s three-year reign as queen of Alpine … Riesch and Vonn battling for World Cup Title | Rocky Mountain … In the closest women s battle for the overall World Cup title since 2005, Maria Riesch now leads Lindsey Vonn by three points. Tina Maze won her first World Cup slalom on slushy snow. Riesch placed 4th, gaining her 50 points for a total … Outdoors 720: Lindsey Vonn : Can she four-peat as World Cup champion? Slalom 1 – Lindsey 0.” See how it happened here. Now, if you want to watch Vonn finish 13th in Friday’s slalom at the World Cup finals, check out the video below. Riesch overtook Vonn in the World Cup standings by finishing fourth. … ExcessiveSports says: Lindsey Vonn 'devastated' to lose World Cup title (AP): Lindsey Vonn says she feels “devastated” losing her Worl… http://bit.ly/f5aT1W

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You don’t suppose they’re going to start acting like those brown people in New Orleans , are they? With petrol running low, delivery trucks are struggling to get supplies to those hardest hit by the earthquake and tsunami in Japan. And as provisions decline, tension rises. Al Jazeera’s Steve Chao reports from Morioka.

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Arizona Senate wises up: Pearce’s latest round of immigrant-bashing bills summarily tossed

Click here to view this media People tried to warn Russell Pearce, president of the Arizona Senate and the father of SB1070, that it might not be a good idea to push hard on yet another round of immigrant-bashing legislation while Arizona’s economy continued to suffer and groan from the weight of his previous “landmark”. And there were plenty of warning signs that Arizonans were waking up to the cold reality of what they had done to themselves. But of course, Pearce being the extremist nutcase that he is, there was no persuading him to turn back. Which produced yesterday’s stark repudiation by his fellow Republicans in the Senate: The state Senate voted down a package of birthright-citizenship bills, with Republicans split over the measures and Democrats opposed. Four other significant Senate immigration measures also failed. Those bills would have banned illegal immigrants from state universities, made it a crime for illegal immigrants to drive a vehicle in Arizona, required school districts to check the legal status of students, and required hospitals to check the legal status of patients. The impetus for the bills’ defeat, as it happens, came from the Arizona business community, whose leaders penned a letter to the Senate warning them that the bills were a horrendous idea : A coalition of Arizona business groups delivered a letter to the Arizona State Senate Tuesday saying it would be unwise for the Legislature to pass additional immigration legislation, despite lack of action on the federal level. Sixty CEOs – from a wide swath of industries and including heavyweights such as Doug Parker, Gerrit van Huisstede and Linda Hunt – signed the letter as legislators mull a new slate of immigration bills. Last year’s passage of Senate Bill 1070 created a firestorm of criticism and boycotts against the state. The CEO’s point to its “unintended consequences.” The letter’s reasoning was quite clear: Arizona’s lawmakers and citizens are right to be concerned about illegal immigration. But we must acknowledge that when Arizona goes it alone on this issue, unintended consequences inevitably occur. Last year, boycotts were called against our state’s business community, adversely impacting our already-struggling economy and costing us jobs. Arizona-based businesses saw contracts cancelled or were turned away from bidding. “Sales outside of the state declined. Even a business which merely had ‘Arizona’ in its name felt the effects of the boycotts, compelling them to launch an educational campaign about their company’s roots in Brooklyn. It is an undeniable fact that each of our companies and our employees were impacted by the boycotts and the coincident negative image. “Tourism, one of our state’s largest industries and employment centers, also suffered from negative perceptions after the passage of SB 1070. The fact Gov. Brewer directed $250,000 to repairing Arizona’s reputation strongly suggests these efforts – whether fair or unfair – are harmful to our image. Pearce’s main gopher, State Sen. Ron Gould, was typically petulant about the reversal : On Twitter he provided the names of all the Republicans who voted against the bills and told his followers to “contact them.” Following the session he said that too many Republicans talk tough on the campaign trail but don’t deliver when it comes to votes. He was especially pissy toward the business community: Senator Gould was asked if that letter perhaps played a role to which he replied, “Well there’s some people who are bought and paid for by the Chamber of Commerce.” When asked if he will try to introduce similar legislation next session he said, “Maybe we will put everybody through the same misery one more time.” You’ll note in the video above that the reporter talks to one of the signees — a local small businessman. Unsurprisingly, he was inundated with hate mail and threatening phone calls. Kos has more on the larger immigration picture around the nation.

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The Engineer Guy Breaks Down An LCD Monitor, Informatively

We all know basically how an LCD works — there’s a backlight, there are pixels, sub-pixels, and so on. But I was unaware of the polarizing crystals and the reasoning behind top-down refreshes. Bill Hammack from the U of Illinois (and one of my favorite video bloggers right now) shows us what’s what in this Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : CrunchGear Discovery Date : 17/03/2011 22:30 Number of articles : 4

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The Engineer Guy Breaks Down An LCD Monitor, Informatively

We all know basically how an LCD works — there’s a backlight, there are pixels, sub-pixels, and so on. But I was unaware of the polarizing crystals and the reasoning behind top-down refreshes. Bill Hammack from the U of Illinois (and one of my favorite video bloggers right now) shows us what’s what in this Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : CrunchGear Discovery Date : 17/03/2011 22:30 Number of articles : 4

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iPhone-Controlled Kitchen Island Slides Up With A Slickness

This is really cool. I’m sure those of us with stationary kitchen islands wish we could scoot it out of the way now and then, but even then, where would we put it? This guy, using an iPhone app I don’t recognize, is controlling a lift in a utility room downstairs that lifts that kitchen Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : CrunchGear Discovery Date : 18/03/2011 03:00 Number of articles : 4

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Maher: ‘Every Black Person Scares Republicans Unless They Look Like Urkel, Talk Like Colin Powell and Wear Bill Cosby Sweaters’

Bill Maher went on a hate-filled rant about Republicans Friday night because the GOP in his view are too interested in “useless distractions” like public unions, ACORN, NPR and Planned Parenthood. After telling his “Real Time” audience, “Governing this country with Republicans is like rooming with a meth addict,” he dubbed the entire Party as racist saying, “Every black person scares you unless they look like Urkel, talk like Colin Powell and wear Bill Cosby sweaters” (video follows with transcript and commentary): BILL MAHER: New Rule: Fantasies are for sex, not public policy. When you go down the list of useless distractions that make up the Republican Party agenda – public unions and Sharia law, anchor babies and a mosque at Ground Zero, ACORN and National Public Radio, the war on Christmas, the New Black Panthers, Planned Parenthood, Michelle Obama’s war on dessert. Oh for Christ’s sake, she’s just trying to get you to eat a carrot not stick it up your ass! – you realize that one reason nothing gets done in America is that one of the political parties puts so much more into fantasy problems than real ones. Governing this country with Republicans is like rooming with a meth addict. You want to address real life problems like when the rent is do, and they’re saying, “How can you even think of that stuff when there’s police scanner voices coming out of the air conditioning unit?” What's really hysterical is that Maher later depicted a “real problem” facing the nation is climate change, but it's certainly not surprising this idiot has problems separating fantasy from reality: MAHER: Do you know what Republicans in Congress were working on this week? Two gym teachers named Sen. James Inhofe (R-Ok.) and Rep. Steve King (R-Ia.) introduced a bill that would require that all government functions be conducted in English, because you let someone down at the DMV say “Si” instead of “Yes,” the next thing you know George Lopez is hosting the “Tonight Show.” In Oklahoma, the voters there banned Sharia law, which is the strict religious law in the Koran, and who could blame them what with their Muslim population rapidly approaching zero. The falsehoods on display here were almost breathtaking. A Rasmussen poll taken last May found 87 percent of Americans favor English being declared our official language. One in August found 58 percent of respondents support English-only ballots. As such, Inhofe and King are with the majority of Americans, and Maher is once again with the minority. As for Oklahoma's Muslim population “rapidly approaching zero,” almost one percent of that state is a member of that religion. The Islamic Society of Oklahoma City gives a breakdown of Muslims in that region, as well as directions to the city's mosques, while proudly declaring, “Islam is the fastest growing religion in the United States. Every four years there are more than double the amount of Muslims living in the U.S.” As such, and not at all surprisingly, Maher was totally clueless of the facts on these two issues. Potentially more comical, the so-called comedian just last Friday called the Koran “a hate-filled book” while charging “the threat potentially from radicalized Muslims is a unique and greater threat” than from “right-wing militias and Timothy McVeigh types.” Now, just seven days later, he's defending this religion while castigating those trying to protect themselves from its radical elements. Alas, that's standard operational procedure for Maher. Facts and positions are tools to be twisted and manipulated in order to support those he agrees with, attack those he doesn't, and advance an agenda shared by a minority of Americans. But he wasn't done: MAHER: And how can you explain the fixation with ACORN and voter fraud? Republicans are obsessed with people cooking up wild, non-existent schemes to vote ignoring one important truth: this is America – no one wants to vote. What’s next – jury duty fraud? Washing the dishes fraud? I mean, the things that these people get exorcised about. I guess Maher was out of the country for all the Democrat claims of voter fraud in the 2000 and 2004 presidential elections. To suggest such accusations only come from the Right is akin to claiming only conservatives use violent rhetoric. Oh, that's right. Maher's guilty of that as well. Conveniently, this led to the portion of the program when Maher, apparently by contract, had to take a swipe at the former governor of Alaska: MAHER: Sarah Palin is one of those leading the charge to get rid of Planned Parenthood because there’s two things Sarah Palin is not interested in: it’s planning and parenthood. [Laughter and applause] And then there’s the New Black Panthers. Look, Republicans, I know this picture from Election Day 2008 scared you. If these guys weren’t trying to intimidate voters, why did they show up to that polling place deliberately black? And now it’s two years later, and that picture still scares you. Look, that guy who drove up from Orange County just ran out. Actually, it wasn't the color of their skin that frightened people away from that polling station. It was the nightsticks in their hands! But Maher and his racist ilk don't think weapons at a polling place are at all concerning as long as those wielding them are voting for Democrats. MAHER: But, it’s time you understood something: every black person scares you unless they look like Urkel, talk like Colin Powell and wear Bill Cosby sweaters, you fill your adult diaper. But here’s the thing, there are real problems: climate change, loose nukes, debt, infrastructure, the wealth gap, our addiction to oil from weird distant places run by monsters that want us dead – like Alaska. But NPR is not a problem. National Public Radio isn’t corrupting anyone and I’ll tell you why: because the simple-minded sheep who take orders from the radio are all taken. The simple-minded sheep are all taken? If only that were true, for if it were, his show would have been canceled years ago for having zero ratings.

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