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Super Bowl: The second official teaser for JJ Abrams’…

Super Bowl: The second official teaser for JJ Abrams’ Steven Spielberg-produced sci-fi thriller Super 8 offers a first look at actual footage from the film, which had heretofore remained top secret. Earlier today, an LA Times article on the movie provided this synopsis: The Paramount Pictures release is set in Ohio in 1979 and introduces a troupe of six youngsters who are using a Super 8 camera to… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Daily What Discovery Date : 07/02/2011 02:36 Number of articles : 3

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Al Jazeera speaks to an Egyptian activist

Al Jazeera speaks to Ramy – a protester who has been camping out in the Egyptian capital Cairo’s Liberation Square for most nights.

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Xperia Play Commercial Airs During Super Bowl

We’ve known about the Xperia Play for quite awhile and it’s been rumored for years since people pretty much projected a Playstation phone as a logical consumer product extension for Sony. Somehow, I missed the Sony Ericsson Xperia Play commercial during the Super Bowl, but YouTube hooked me up with the rerun: When I first Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Android Phone Fans Discovery Date : 07/02/2011 02:12 Number of articles : 4

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Super Bowl TV Commercials: Fast Five, Priest, Just Go With It, Limitless, The Eagle

[1] Here is a compilation of some of the movie commercials which have aired during the Super Bowl so far. The movies include: Fast Five, Priest, Just Go With It, Limitless, and The Eagle. Hit the jump to watch now. Leave your thoughts in the comments below. Fast Five: Priest: Just Go With It: The Eagle: [1] http://www.slashfilm.com/wp/wp-content/images/ZZ385C9551.jpg Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : /Film Discovery Date : 07/02/2011 01:14 Number of articles : 3

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Meet RINO Reagan

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This weekend, Republicans marked the 100th birthday of Ronald Reagan with speeches celebrating his small government philosophy, anti-tax fervor and hard-line foreign policy. But if Reagan was a GOP candidate today, he would doubtless fall victim to violations of his own 11th Commandment , “Thou shalt not speak ill of any fellow Republican.” Because despite all of the right-wing hagiography , Ronald Reagan ballooned the national debt, repeatedly raised taxes, signed abortion rights legislation and negotiated with terrorists in Iran. For those and so many other perceived offenses, the GOP rank and file – and especially its purity-demanding Tea Partiers – would today brand a reanimated Ronald Reagan a Republican in Name Only . Meet RINO Reagan: Reagan tripled the national debt Reagan raised taxes 11 times Reagan expanded the size of government Reagan supported the “socialist” Earned Income Tax Credit Reagan negotiated with terrorists in Tehran Reagan sought to eliminate nuclear weapons Reagan gave amnesty to millions of illegal immigrants Reagan approved protectionist trade barriers Reagan signed abortion rights law in California Reagan eventually debunked AIDS myths Republicans continued to perpetuate 1. Reagan Tripled the National Debt . As most analysts predicted, Reagan’s massive $749 billion supply-side tax cuts in 1981 quickly produced even more massive annual budget deficits. Combined with his rapid increase in defense spending, Reagan delivered not the balanced budgets he promised, but record-settings deficits. Even his OMB alchemist David Stockman could not obscure the disaster with his famous “rosy scenarios.” Forced to raise taxes twice to avert financial catastrophe, the Gipper nonetheless presided over a tripling of the American national debt to nearly $3 trillion. By the time he left office in 1989, Ronald Reagan more than equaled the entire debt burden produced by the previous 200 years of American history. It’s no wonder Stockman lamented last year : “[The] debt explosion has resulted not from big spending by the Democrats, but instead the Republican Party’s embrace, about three decades ago, of the insidious doctrine that deficits don’t matter if they result from tax cuts.” Sarah Palin’s revisionist history Friday notwithstanding, it was Reagan who put the United States on “the road to ruin.” 2. Reagan Raised Taxes 11 Times As ThinkProgress noted, the inedible image of Ronald Reagan the tax cutter is “false mythology.” (It is also worth noting that it was President Obama and not Reagan who delivered the largest two year tax cut in American history.) While Governor Reagan doubled California’s state spending and signed the biggest tax hike up to that point, as President he raised taxes in seven of his eight years in office. As former GOP Senator Alan Simpson, who called Reagan “a dear friend,” told NPR, “Ronald Reagan raised taxes 11 times in his administration — I was there.” 3. Reagan Expanded the Size of Government On Friday, Sarah Palin told the Reaganauts assembled by the Young Americans for Freedom, “We need to stop spending and cut government back down to size.” If that’s the case, her role model should be Democrat Bill Clinton and not Republican Ronald Reagan . As USA Today pointed out five years ago, measured as a percentage of gross domestic product, average annual federal spending dropped far more under Bill Clinton (-1.8%) than Ronald Reagan (-0.6%). And as Slate’s Michael Kinsley explained ten years ago in marking Reagan’s 90th birthday: Federal government spending was a quarter higher in real terms when Reagan left office than when he entered. As a share of GDP, the federal government shrank from 22.2 percent to 21.2 percent–a whopping one percentage point. The federal civilian work force increased from 2.8 million to 3 million. (Yes, it increased even if you exclude Defense Department civilians. And, no, assuming a year or two of lag time for a president’s policies to take effect doesn’t materially change any of these results.) Under eight years of Big Government Bill Clinton, to choose another president at random, the federal civilian work force went down from 2.9 million to 2.68 million. Federal spending grew by 11 percent in real terms–less than half as much as under Reagan. As a share of GDP, federal spending shrank from 21.5 percent to 18.3 percent–more than double Reagan’s reduction, ending up with a federal government share of the economy about a tenth smaller than Reagan left behind. As the Gipper’s biographer Lou Cannon aptly summed it up, “He was no Tea Partier.” 4. Reagan Supported the “Socialist” Earned Income Tax Credit Both during and after the 2008 presidential campaign , Republican candidates and commentators blasted Barack Obama’s proposals to offer Americans expanded tax credits as “socialism”, “welfare” and worse. If so, they should also be directing their ire at Ronald Reagan. While virtually all working Americans pay the Social Security and Medicare payroll taxes ( levies increased by President Reagan ), many don’t pay federal income tax thanks to the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC). As the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities noted in 2005, the EITC was not only very successful in lowering poverty, the provision “has enjoyed substantial bipartisan support. President Reagan, President George H. W. Bush, and President Clinton all praised it and proposed expansions in it.” While many of his conservative heirs now express disdain for the working poor , Ronald Reagan championed the refundable Earned Income Tax Credit. As the American Prospect recalled in 2006: Almost 20 years ago, as he signed into law the tax bill expanding the Earned Income Tax Credit, President Ronald Reagan hailed it as “the best anti-poverty, the best pro-family, the best job creation measure to come out of Congress.” 5. Reagan Negotiated with Terrorists in Tehran . Criticizing President Obama as weak on Iran, Sarah Palin declared in December that “just as Ronald Reagan once denounced an ‘evil empire’ and looked forward to a time when communism was left on the ‘ash heap of history,’ we should look forward to a future where the twisted ideology and aggressive will to dominate of Khomeini and his successors are consigned to history’s dustbin.” That would be the same Ronald Reagan whose policy consisted of giving the mullahs in Iran a cake, a Bible – and U.S. arms. The Iran-Contra scandal , as you’ll recall, almost laid waste to the Reagan presidency. Desperate to free U.S. hostages held by Iranian proxies in Lebanon, President Reagan provided weapons Tehran badly needed in its long war with Saddam Hussein (who, of course, was backed by the United States). In a clumsy and illegal attempt to skirt U.S. law, the proceeds of those sales were then funneled to the contras fighting the Sandinistas in Nicaragua. And as the New York Times recalled, Reagan’s fiasco started with an emissary bearing gifts from the Gipper himself, including “a Bible with a handwritten verse from President Reagan for Iranian leaders” and “and a key-shaped cake to symbolize the anticipated ”opening” to Iran.’” The rest, as they say, is history. After his initial denials, President Reagan was forced to address the nation on March 4, 1987 and acknowledge he indeed swapped arms for hostages ( video here ): “A few months ago I told the American people I did not trade arms for hostages. My heart and my best intentions still tell me that’s true, but the facts and the evidence tell me it is not. As the Tower board reported, what began as a strategic opening to Iran deteriorated, in its implementation, into trading arms for hostages.” 6. Reagan Sought to Eliminate Nuclear Weapons In late 2010, hard-line Republicans opposed President Obama’s new START treaty calling for joint reductions in the American and Russian nuclear stockpiles. Sadly for GOP hawks, it was Ronald Reagan and not Barack Obama who declared, “m]y dream…became a world free of nuclear weapons.” And as the Washington Monthly recalled in 2003, Reagan’s idealism startled and shocked his advisers and allies: Driven by this dream, Reagan embraced Mikhail Gorbachev and initiated a series of negotiations that ultimately alarmed everyone in his administration. Hardliners like Patrick Buchanan, Richard Perle, and Caspar Weinberger reacted in horror to the very idea of engaging the Soviets in such talks, warning against the “grand illusion” of peace. “Reagan is a weakened president, weakened in spirit as well as clout,” echoed New Right leader Paul Weyrich in The Washington Post. Administration pragmatists like George Shultz and Robert McFarlane, who supported negotiations but believed in deterrence, were shocked by how far Reagan took them. At the Reykjavik summit, he and Gorbachev almost agreed to the “zero option” to eliminate both sides’ thermonuclear arms. Reagan’s unwillingness to give up his cherished missile-defense program doomed the agreement, though the talks did yield the signature arms-reduction pact of his presidency, the 1987 INF treaty. 7. Reagan Gave Amnesty to Millions of Illegal Immigrants Codifying the growing xenophobia within the Republican Party, the 2008 GOP platform insisted: “We oppose amnesty. The rule of law suffers if government policies encourage or reward illegal activity. The American people’s rejection of en masse legalizations is especially appropriate given the federal government’s past failures to enforce the law.” Which is why, as ThinkProgres s again helpfully highlighted, conservatives are now so eager to hush up RINO Reagan’s history on immigration: Reagan signed into law a bill that made any immigrant who had entered the country before 1982 eligible for amnesty. The bill was sold as a crackdown, but its tough sanctions on employers who hired undocumented immigrants were removed before final passage. The bill helped 3 million people and millions more family members gain American residency. It has since become a source of major embarrassment for conservatives. 8. Reagan Approved Protectionist Trade Barriers Ronald Reagan believed in free markets and free trade. Except when he didn’t. In 2004, Alan Tonelson praised what he called Reagan’s “trade realism” : Reagan’s tactics were flexible. In autos, machine tools, and steel, his administration subjected foreign producers to so-called voluntary export restraints. In semiconductors, Reagan officials negotiated an agreement to secure a specific share of the Japanese market for U.S. companies, and then imposed tariffs on Japanese electronics imports when Tokyo briefly refused to keep a promise to halt semiconductor dumping. But it was Reagan’s decisive intervention to save legendary American motorcycle maker Harley Davidson which drew the ire of conservatives at the time, if not now. The libertarian Cato Institute groused about the 49.4% import tariff on foreign motorcycles Reagan authorized in 1983: Last spring, the import duties on large motorcycles were raised drastically. By any economic criterion, the new tariff is counterproductive, and the Reagan administration was fully aware of it. The decision is thus an interesting case study in the political economy of protectionism. 9. Reagan Signed Abortion Rights Law in California Despite his paeans to the pro-life crowd, RINO Reagan did very little to advance their radical anti-abortion agenda. As ThinkProgress summarized his record on reproductive rights: As governor of California in 1967, Reagan signed a bill to liberalize the state’s abortion laws that “resulted in more than a million abortions.” When Reagan ran for president, he advocated a constitutional amendment that would have prohibited all abortions except when necessary to save the life of the mother, but once in office, he “never seriously pursued” curbing choice. 10. Reagan Eventually Debunked AIDS Myths Republicans Continued to Perpetuate Not wanting to anger his allies on the Christian right when it came to what they deemed the “gay plague,” Reagan remained silent on the exploding AIDS epidemic throughout most of his presidency. And when he did speak up in 1985 (as he did at the urging of staffer and future Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts ), Reagan ignored both basic science and basic compassion in setting back the cause of truth and public health: “I’m glad I’m not faced with that problem today [sending children to school where another student has AIDS] and I can well understand the plight of the parents and how they feel about it…And yet medicine has not come forth unequivocally and said ‘This we know for a fact, that it is safe.’ And until they do I think we have to do the best we can with this problem. I can understand both sides of it.” The next day, the head of the Centers for Disease Control and the chief scientists at the National Institutes of Health called a news conference to correct President Reagan’s tragic error and confirm that AIDS was a blood-borne sexually transmitted disease not spread by casual contact. In what would be the first high-impact celebrity intervention among Republicans, it took a plea from Elizabeth Taylor to get Ronald Reagan to deliver a speech at the 1987 meeting of amfAR , the American Foundation for AIDS Research: As dangerous and deadly as AIDS is, many of the fears surrounding it are unfounded. These fears are based on ignorance… The Public Health Service has stated that there’s no medical reason for barring a person with the virus from any routine school or work activity. There’s no reason for those who carry the AIDS virus to wear a scarlet A. AIDS is not a casually contagious disease. We’re still learning about how AIDS is transmitted, but experts tell us you don’t get it from telephones or swimming pools or drinking fountains. You don’t get it from shaking hands or sitting on a bus or anywhere else, for that matter. And most important, you don’t get AIDS by donating blood. Education is critical to clearing up the fears. Education is also crucial to stopping the transmission of the disease. Five years later, future Arkansas Governor and current GOP White House frontrunner Mike Huckabee still hadn’t got the message. As a Senate candidate in 1992, he called homosexuality “an aberrant, unnatural, and sinful lifestyle, and we now know it can pose a dangerous public health risk.” Huckabee then called for Huckabee called for draconian – and discriminatory – action: “If the federal government is truly serious about doing something with the AIDS virus, we need to take steps that would isolate the carriers of this plague. It is difficult to understand the public policy towards AIDS. It is the first time in the history of civilization in which the carriers of a genuine plague have not been isolated from the general population, and in which this deadly disease for which there is no cure is being treated as a civil rights issue instead of the true health crisis it represents.” Fourteen years later, Senate Majority Leader and physician Bill Frist declined to say whether he thought HIV-AIDS could be transmitted through tears or sweat, as a disputed federal education program championed by some conservative groups had suggested. (For more debunking of the right-wing mythology surrounding Ronald Reagan, see these recent articles from the Washington Post , CNN , ThinkProgress and CBS . For the definitive account of the conservative revisionist history project, see Will Bunch’s excellent book, Tear Down This Myth .) (This piece also appears at Perrspectives .)

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Super Bowl: Christina Aguilera suffers a lyrical malfunction…

Super Bowl: Christina Aguilera suffers a lyrical malfunction midway through her treasonous rendition of the National Anthem. [ sportspage .] Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Daily What Discovery Date : 07/02/2011 00:44 Number of articles : 8

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Motorola’s Xoom Super Bowl commercial tips hat to Apple’s ’1984′ spot (video)

We saw it teased right around 48 hours ago, and now Motorola’s full Xoom Super Bowl ad is out and about for the world to see. It aired just moments ago during Super Bowl XLV , and it’s fairly obvious where it took inspiration . It’s easily one of the best tech spots we’ve seen in quite some while, and as much as Motorola has been hyping its Honeycomb-based superslate , we’d say it better sell quite a few to recoup what it’s already lost in marketing — even at $800 a pop , it’ll still take a boatload. The real question, however, is this: will today’s America even get it ? Hop on past the break and mash play if you missed out. P.S. – Missed our coverage of Super Bowl Media Day? Catch up here ! Continue reading Motorola’s Xoom Super Bowl commercial tips hat to Apple’s ’1984′ spot (video) Motorola’s Xoom Super Bowl commercial tips hat to Apple’s ’1984′ spot (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 06 Feb 2011 19:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Best Buy ad prices Motorola Xoom at $800, affirms February 24th launch date

The evidence for a Motorola Xoom launch on February 24th just became that bit more compelling, courtesy of this here Best Buy ad. It promises Moto’s Android tablet will be in stores a couple of weeks from now, decorated with a daunting $799.99 sticker. That price agrees with one of our earliest leaks on the matter, purportedly from Verizon’s own systems , so all the pieces seem to be falling into place for a pretty exciting end to February for Android fans. This flier also has some data tariffs on it, starting at $20 per month for a 1GB allowance and stretching up to a 10GB limit for $80 (identical to VZW’s pricing with the Galaxy Tab). Doesn’t really sound like the most appealing proposition we’ve ever heard, but maybe if those prices remain static once the Xoom gets its 4G upgrade, we could learn to love them. Update : Motorola’s official Xoom portal just went live , presumably as its Super Bowl ad finally aired. Best Buy ad prices Motorola Xoom at $800, affirms February 24th launch date originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 06 Feb 2011 19:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Super Bowl XLV Open Thread

enlarge Credit: The Chocolate Swirl Football, food, million dollar commercials. Who are you rooting for? What’s the best play of the game? Kickoff is at 6:30 pm Eastern / 3:30 Pacific. Also, Blue America has a Super Bowl game going on. Everytime The Packers score, donate to the Blue America fund to help get rid of Wisconsin’s biggest disgrace: Paul Ryan. Football open thread, Super Bowl 2011 Steelers 31% (4 votes) Packers 69% (9 votes) 13 votes

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Peggy Noonan Strikes Back at Andrea Mitchell’s Claim ‘Republicans Are Trying to Appropriate Reagan’

NBC's Andrea Mitchell on Sunday made the preposterous claim that Republicans are trying to appropriate Ronald Reagan for their own political purposes. Appearing on “Meet the Press” with Mitchell, former Reagan speechwriter Peggy Noonan struck back and struck back hard (video follows with transcript and commentary): DAVID GREGORY, HOST: Willie Brown, let's talk about politics. Let's talk about the view of government that is being debated in our country right now. And Ronald Reagan, January 20th, 1981, his inaugural address, pretty much made clear his view of government. Watch this. (Videotape, January 20, 1981) PRES. RONALD REAGAN: In this present crisis government is not the solution to our problem. Government is the problem. (End videotape) MR. GREGORY: Isn't this the very debate that we are having today in our debate over spending, debate over role of government in this economy? WILLIE BROWN, FORMER MAYOR SAN FRANCISCO: It is the debate we are having today. But, you know, 1981 was a far cry from when Ronald Reagan actually started in government. It was 1966, 1967. And at that time period, he was not mouthing those kinds of words. Apparently Peggy wasn't writing for him at that time, and therefore he wasn't saying those kinds of words. He really learned about government and the operation of government and what government could or could not do in the eight years that he spent as a governor of the state of California. And they were really incredible learning years for this extraordinary, gifted person. So it doesn't surprise me in 1981 he would be saying the words that we're still living with and trying to address today. MR. GREGORY: And as much as modern-day conservatives, Andrea Mitchell, may take that sentence from his inaugural as gospel and run on that in their own debates with President Obama in Washington today, indeed Reagan was much more of a pragmatist than he was an ideologue when it came to the major issues. ANDREA MITCHELL, NBC: Absolutely. MR. GREGORY: Taxes, Social Security, and the like. MS. MITCHELL: I mean, he said, “This is–the sound you hear around my feet is the concrete breaking around my feet,” whatever the exact words were. People are trying–Republicans in particular, obviously–trying to appropriate Ronald Reagan for their own political purposes now. But his vision and his ability to work across party lines was so far broader. He stuck to his principles. He was authentic, which is I think one of the reasons why he's so admired after all of these years. But he knew when he needed to compromise, and he did. And he reached out with Democrats, not just the boll weevils who were the conservative Texas Democrats, but with Tip O'Neill and liberal Massachusetts Democrats as well when he needed to get something done with the help the really–the guidance of people like Jim Baker. But the genius of it all was that Ed Meese was there, there were conservatives there, and, and Jim Baker, more moderate Republicans. And it was a bit messy at times, but he had a range of views. And Nancy Reagan bringing even more people in to the–into play. MR. GREGORY: Would he think the tea party was up… PEGGY NOONAN, FORMER REAGAN SPEECHWRITER: I got to–whoa, whoa, whoa. Republicans are not, I think, trying to appropriate Ronald Reagan. Ronald Reagan was a Republican. Conservatives aren't trying to appropriate him. He was a conservative. Willie, he became a public figure in America two years before he was governor in 1964, and he laid out a speech as stern, if not sterner, in its conservatism in which he explained his views on taxes, “Cut them”; his views on the size of government, “Too big, too bullying”; his views on the Soviet Union, “Hold it back, it is expansionist.” This was all very clear. As a president, as a governor, he was pragmatic in his operation. Indeed. NewsBusters shared with readers on Sunday the very speech Noonan was referring to, and it was classic Reagan conservatism making you wonder what Brown and Mitchell were talking about. Or maybe not. After all, it is the Left and their media minions in recent months as the 100th anniversary of Reagan's birth approached that have been trying to not only appropriate him by making him look like more of a moderate than he was, but also working to paint the current White House resident in the Gipper's image to assist him in his re-election efforts. Even worse, all this gushing and fawning from folks like Mitchell go counter to years of media attacks against our 40th President: Remembering Ronald Reagan: The Reagan Legacy VIDEO: How the Media Have Worked to Distort, Dismantle and Destroy Ronald Reagan's Legacy Rewriting Ronald Reagan: Reagan and National Defense Bozell Column: The Media Never Loved Reagan Rewriting Ronald Reagan: Attacks on Reagan the Man Bozell, Hannity Address MSM's Makeover of Obama as Centrist and Reaganesque, Continued War on Tea Party Movement All Three Networks Agree: Obama Sounded 'Reaganesque' in State of the Union Amanpour Hails Obama as ‘Reaganesque’ But Contended Tea Party Too ‘Extreme’ for Reagan After years of bashing Reagan, the press suddenly think the way to get the current White House resident re-elected is by showing esteem for the Gipper while casting him as being very much like Obama. Fortunately for “Meet the Press” viewers Sunday, Noonan wasn't having any of it. Neither are we. Nice job of sticking up for your former boss, Peggy. Brava!

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