Emmy Nominations 2011: Actresses Who Should Win And Who Will Win (VIDEO) Primetime Emmy Nominations 2011: Outstanding Dramas including Dexter, FNL, Game of Thrones & More Peaceful200906 says: RT @ HuffPostCulture : Check out our complete list of Emmy predictions. Do you agree? http://t.co/dFrNEcnN
Continue reading …TheFireTracker2 says: USGS PAGER info for 6 . 8 India # earthquake http://t.co/yQGdil5 6 #Sept18quake
Continue reading …Click here to view this media GOP presidential candidate Herman Cain appeared on Fox News Sunday again this weekend and he’s still out there touting his ridiculous 999 plan as some magical cure for our economy, when it’s pretty much more of the same that we’ve been hearing from most of these Republicans, which is to lower taxes on the rich at the expense of everyone else and privatize Social Security . When Chris Wallace pointed out to Cain that they took a look at his plan and his numbers didn’t quite add up and even though Cain claimed his plan was researched by leading economists, they couldn’t find any of their names. Cain’s explanation — he doesn’t want to “compromise their confidentiality.” I’d say it’s more likely he either doesn’t have any advisers who are actually economic experts, or they’re about as reputable as Arthur Laffer and his infamous Laffer Curve he drew on a napkin that got all the right-wingers worked into a frenzy as an excuse for the rich not to pay their fair share of taxes. Transcript via Fox News : WALLACE: OK, you are now pushing what you call the 999 plan for economic growth — 9 percent corporate flat tax and 9 percent personal flat tax and 9 percent sales tax, but you would eliminate the payroll tax, the estate tax and the tax on capitol gains. Question, what do you think that would do to the economy? CAIN: It would boost the economy and here’s why. Think about the fact that corporations now are looking at for the next year and few months a 35 percent top corporate tax rate. To wake up and say you mean the tax rate is going to be 9 percent? That is going to inspire the business community. Secondly, small businesses which generate most of the jobs, they are also going to be excited because it is going to treat subchapter S and S corporations the same. What the president doesn’t understand, a lot of people don’t understand, is when he throws around numbers like everybody making over $250,000 is going to impose another tax, he is punishing small business, because with a subchapter S corporation, if you eke out a profit, you have to run it through personal income tax and you could be penalized if you make too much money. WALLACE: Let me ask you about this, though, you say that this plan would be revenue neutral, yet you would lose all these rates — you would lower all these rates, you would eliminate the deductions and we’d end up with the same amount of total revenue for the government as what we currently have. We went to your website to try to check this out. There is no explanation on your website of how you arrived at 999 or how these numbers add up. CAIN: Here is how we arrived at it. I had some of the best economists in this country help me to develop this plan. You know, my background is mathematics. It was a simple regression analysis. We took the government data and looked at how much tax revenue from personal income tax, how much tax revenue came from corporate tax, how much revenue came from capitol gains tax, how much revenue from the death tax. We added them all up and you do a simple regression analysis and say in order to reduce this much on corporate income, personal income and national sales tax, what should that number be if we equally break up those three buckets. It was a simple regression analysis. WALLACE: Now you say that, and you say — and you just repeated that this plan was researched and developed by some of the leading economic thinkers in the country. Again we looked at your website, no mention of anyone. CAIN: No, I haven’t put them on there, — the most important thing is to put the plan on there. We are following up now with an official scoring of my plan, but because the way it was derived was so simple to produce such a simple concept we didn’t make that a priority. WALLACE: All right. But let me ask you about this, because Mitt Romney came out with a 59-point plan on jobs. Glenn Hubbard who was — is now the Dean of Columbia Business School and was the chairman of the council of economic advisers for George W. Bush wrote the forward, helped him develop the plan. Tell me the name of one of these leading economic thinkers who helped you come up with this plan. CAIN: The chairman of my economic advisers is a gentleman by the name of Rich Lowery of Cleveland, Ohio. He worked with a couple of other people quite frankly that are well known that I’m not at liberty to mention their names. WALLACE: Why not? CAIN: Because they have their own independence businesses and I don’t want to compromise their confidentiality at this point. When they tell me it is OK to mention their names publicly, I will mention it. But I — trust me, it was a couple of people that you know very well. But I don’t want to compromise their… WALLACE: But wouldn’t they be proud? I mean, if this is a great plan wouldn’t they be proud to say? CAIN: They’d be proud after I get it passed. And then they would be. But no, Chris, I got some people to work — help me go through the thinking on this that I’m not going to compromise their confidentiality at this point just to prove to people that this is a well thought out plan. WALLACE: Well, let me just say, because there isn’t a whole lot of back up, and we don’t have the bona fides of a guy like Glenn Hubbard. We tried to do our own very rough analysis and you are a lot better of this idea of regression analysis than we are. It looks to us under your plan corporations and the wealthy will end up paying a considerably less than they currently do, and lower income people, particularly the 45 percent, roughly of Americans who don’t pay any income tax now will end up paying a lot more true? CAIN: No. Not true. Everyone who works pays the payroll tax, which is 15.3 percent. So even if you don’t own a corporation and don’t have to pay corporate taxes, your tax goes from 15.3 to — Secondly on the national sales tax. WALLACE: Yeah, but what about the 45 percent who don’t pay income tax now? CAIN: A good economic growth plan should not be designed to help more people not pay taxes, Chris. And let me give you the statistic as to why. 50 percent of the taxpayers pay 97 percent of the taxes. What are we supposed to do, get that number to 50 percent paying 100 percent? No. And — WALLACE: I’m not saying it’s wrong, I’m just saying though that they’re going to end up paying more in taxes. CAIN: They are going to end up paying some taxes, but not necessarily more. And here’s why. The individual taxpayer will decide how they spend their money in terms of the 9 percent sales tax. OK? Now, their behavior will determine how much tax they pay. Only if they spend every dime that they make will they pay the full 9 percent. It will encourage savings and it will encourage people to be responsible for their own decision-making WALLACE: Mr. Cain, we’re going to have to leave it there. It is one of the new plans, one of the few new plans that’s come out. And we’re going to have to explore it some more. CAIN: We will have it officially explored (ph), and I’m going to try to get my advisers to allow me to use their name. WALLACE: Well, we would like to have them and you back on. Mr. Cain, it’s always a pleasure. CAIN: Thanks, Chris. It’s a pleasure. Thank you. WALLACE: And we’ll see you at the big debate on Thursday in Florida. CAIN: I’ll be there. I’ll be there. WALLACE: I am sure you will be. Me too.
Continue reading …Atlanta based Mariachi Cabos doing a wonderful cover of “The Wall” by Pink Floyd at La Fogata in Chapin, SC. via Marshall Kirkpatrick Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Laughing Squid Discovery Date : 31/07/2011 23:18 Number of articles : 4
Continue reading …Harrison Krix of Volpin Props has created an amazing, working replica of the famous helmet worn by Thomas Bangalter, one-half of cult French electro-duo Daft Punk. The helmet certainly looks the part, but it also boasts “350 LEDs, can run over 4 hours on a single charge, and the matrix is capable of being updated on-the-fly with a Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Flavorwire Discovery Date : 18/09/2011 16:12 Number of articles : 2
Continue reading …An awe inspiring Youtube video has just emerged of the International Space station flying over the world in real time showing a stunning view of flight from space in full 1080p HD glory. We used to wait for main news bulletins for news about space travel and aspects of it used to be cloaked in secrecy but now you can pass this wonderful video around via social media… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Simply Zesty Discovery Date : 18/09/2011 13:22 Number of articles : 3
Continue reading …An awe inspiring Youtube video has just emerged of the International Space station flying over the world in real time showing a stunning view of flight from space in full 1080p HD glory. We used to wait for main news bulletins for news about space travel and aspects of it used to be cloaked in secrecy but now you can pass this wonderful video around via social media… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Simply Zesty Discovery Date : 18/09/2011 13:22 Number of articles : 3
Continue reading …video platform video management video solutions video player Former President Bill Clinton appears on This Week With Christiane Amanpour to talk about the upcoming Clinton Global Initiative and its focus on job creation . I was part of a group of bloggers that got to meet with him a few years ago, and he was talking about green retrofits then. As I recall, the energy savings numbers he said could be created by retrofits were jaw-dropping, so this makes more sense than ever: AMANPOUR: Now, sir, your mantra right now is jobs, jobs, jobs. What do you think can happen to radically shift the unemployment picture and also pass muster in Washington in these very partisan times? CLINTON: Well, I don’t know that I’m the best person to answer the second part of that question. But I believe that we, those of us who aren’t in government, can think of ways to create jobs which will reinforce what I believe are the positive suggestions coming out of Washington. Essentially, the president’s plan has big payroll tax cuts in it, which will benefit the economy by lowering the average family’s tax bill by 1,500 dollars. And then they can have that to spend. That will help. And then by lowering payroll taxes for employers, will make it more attractive for them to hire new people. But those of us who aren’t in government, we don’t have anything to do with that. So what we should do is focus on possible areas of job creation that will free up some of the corporate money that’s in Treasuries now, that could be invested in America, and make bank loans more attractive to create jobs. So that’s what we try to do. We try to go around thinking about ways to specifically to do that. And if you look at the way the CGI program is set up this year, we also are trying to create more jobs around the world by focusing on the possibilities of green energy elsewhere, because it’s not just in America that the green tech jobs are growing at twice the rate of overall employment. It’s — that’s true around the world. And by focusing on trying to empower women and girls, because in many other countries, they’re left out of the economy. And that’s dragging the economic prospects of everyone down. AMANPOUR: So what will tell the CEOs and the world leaders who come to your Clinton Global Initiative meeting this next week? CLINTON: Well, I will ask them to put aside for the moment whatever their recommendations are to Washington about changes in the corporate tax laws or the trade bills or, you know, the tariffs that are imposed on component parts that some manufacturers use here but have to import from overseas, and just think about where we are now and what we can do now with the resources we now have. For example, I think we’ll have an update on an announcement we made in Chicago, where the AFL-CIO and a couple of its affiliate unions are going to put some of their own pension funds into putting people to work retrofitting buildings and doing other things that will create jobs for their members and for other Americans in a way that will actually make more money for the pension funds than just putting it into the stock market will today. And they’ll be in partnership with business instead of having a Washington political fight with them. AMANPOUR: Where do you see — obviously, this is all about this stubborn unemployment rate. Where do you see the unemployment, after all of these suggestions, and if they’re implemented — where do you see it standing this time next year? CLINTON: Well, if you look at the program that the president has outlined, I think if we had the payroll tax cuts and the special incentives to hire the long term unemployed, and we did some of the things that I have been pushing very hard for, to invest building retrofits, which, if we did it right, could create a billions of jobs, the estimates are right across the economic board, including by Mr. Zandy who was an economic adviser to Senator McCain in the 2008 election. All of the estimates that it will create somewhere between 1.3 and two million jobs, and drop unemployment by approximately one percent, maybe a little more. That’s if they’re implemented. That’s — we can’t do much better than that right now, unless — unless there is an aggressive action, which seems unlikely in Washington’s political climate, to clean up this housing mess, because that’s freezing too much investment in place. So I think that it’s a very good program that he outlined. I think if the Congress seriously takes him up on it and they start trying to work through it and get anything approaching the amount of activity that was recommended, they could put about two percent more on the GDP growth of the coming year, and they could drop unemployment by somewhere between one to two million. Or they can create one to two million jobs. AMANPOUR: You have said in the past that this is not time for Mexican standoff or sort of macho politics. What can be done to make people in this city understand that the country faces a national emergency in this regard? CLINTON: Well, we need a little bit of help from the American people. I mean, conflict has proved to be remarkably good politics. And it — that sort of thing, you know, that — it’s very hard for the people in Washington, who got there based on pure conflict, pure attack, pure ideology, to take it seriously when their same constituents are saying please do something positive. That’s not how they got elected. We live in a time where there’s this huge disconnect between the way the political system works and the way the economic system works. If you look — there are places all over America, believe it or not, that have low unemployment, high growth, strong home prices, jobs being created, a shortage of skilled workers. And in every one of those places, they have networks of cooperation. San Diego has the largest number of Nobel Prized scientists in America. It’s become the biotech center of the country. Everybody knows Silicon Valley’s back. But look at what’s happening in Pittsburgh, where they’re trading steel for nanotechnology and other biomedical advances. Look at what’s happening in Cleveland, around the Cleveland Clinic. Look at what’s happening in Massachusetts, with the recovery of high-tech manufacturing around the MIT area. I can give you lots and lots of other examples. Every place the American economy is booming, cooperation is the order of the day. But conflict is still good politics in Washington. So until the American people make it clear that whatever — however they voted in past elections, they want these folks to work together and to do something, there’s going to be a little ambivalence in Washington. AMANPOUR: Let me ask you this, then: Mayor Bloomberg of New York has said this week that unless something is done to really address this unemployment problem, there could be riots in the street, unrest. Do you — do you agree with that? CLINTON: I don’t know. There have been demonstrations in many other countries where the same thing is going on. But if you — the most important thing Mayor Bloomberg said recently is to offer land on Governor’s Island or Roosevelt Island or the Navy Yard in Brooklyn for a new world-class science and technology research center. And he said that he’ll kick in $100 million worth of investment if a group of universities will put one there, because he wants New York, in effect, to rival Silicon Valley as a technology center. That’s the kind of thing that works. If you want put people to work, we’ve got to focus on what works, and what works is not all this back and forth fighting in Washington. I think, as I said, I think that if we can’t fix the housing crisis now — which is probably not politically possible, but should be done — we can’t return to full employment . But if we adopt the plan that the president outlined, according to all this economic analysis, it will create between 1.5, 2 percent increase in GDP growth. It will put a million or two million people to work, and we’ll be on the way back. We need some signal out of Washington that they understand that cooperation is good economics, even if conflict is good politics. AMANPOUR: Mr. President, obviously the current situation in various polls are suggesting that people aren’t satisfied with President Obama’s leadership on this. And there was a special election in New York in District 9 that the Democrats lost after holding it for nearly 100 years. What does that say to you? CLINTON: Well, the New York case is — I know that district very well, and they were good enough to vote for me twice. But, I think, Mayor Koch had a big impact on that election because of the controversy surrounding Israel and how they’re reacting to the proposal of the Palestinians to get the U.N. to recognize them as a state. I think that had a lot to do with it. I also think it’s a real blue-collar district that is suffering economically. So, it didn’t surprise me. And I don’t think — and the Nevada district was a Republican district. So it’s just — it is what it is. We won not very long ago that district in upstate New York that had been Republican for even longer than this district had been Democrat because of the Medicare plan, and the Republicans have stopped talking about their plan to voucherize Medicare. So I — there’s a lot of upheaval now. A lot of, you know, people are feeling disjointed because they’re hurting economically and they don’t see the country going forward.
Continue reading …Meet the Press host David Gregory contented the fact a Republican presidential debate audience applauded Texas Governor Rick Perry for allowing the death penalty for murders, and three in an audience of hundreds shouted “yeah” to the idea a man who decided to not buy health insurance may be allowed to die, are “really a challenge to the notion that the Republican Party is the party of life and supports a culture of life.” (video after jump) After he played a clip of the audience applauding when Brian Williams pressed Perry on how “your state has executed 234 death row inmates, more than any other Governor in modern times,” Gregory declared that “an awkward moment of applause” before demanding of his guest, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell: “Does the audience response in both cases trouble you as a Republican?” Of course, executing murders following a due process procedure in which the accused are judged by a jury means they are hardly innocent and does not contradict the quest to protect the innocent life of those yet born nor of those near the end of life who have lost their mental capacities. Only three cheered the proposition the government shouldn’t step in to help a man who failed to plan for his own care – so not really representative of conservatives and/or Republicans. Even in that case, however, the adult man is not in the same position of a fetus unable to make decisions about the priorities of where to spend their money. Earlier, with video: “ NBC Debate Moderators Pepper Republicans with Questions from the Left ” From the end of Gregory’s segment with McConnell on the Sunday, September 18 Meet the Press: DAVID GREGORY: I want to play a couple of moments from recent debates that had to do with really a challenge to the notion that the Republican Party is the party of life and supports a culture of life. The first question, from my colleague Brian Williams in the debate that had to do with the death penalty, to Rick Perry. I'll show you that. BRIAN WILLIAMS, AT SEPTEMBER 7 DEBATE: Your state has executed 234 death row inmates, more than any other Governor in modern times. Have you- [audience applause] GREGORY: An awkward moment of applause. And then during the CNN debate, Wolf Blitzer asked Ron Paul whether a healthy man who had opted not to get insurance should be allowed to live, frankly, if it required intensive care for a period of six months. Here was the question. WOLF BLITZER, SEPTEMBER 12 DEBATE: Congressman, are you saying that society should just let him die? RON PAUL: No. THREE AUDIENCE MEMBERS, SEPARATELY: Yeah. GREGORY: Does the audience response in both cases trouble you as a Republican? SENATOR MITCH McCONNELL: Look, we have a lot of people running for President. There are going to be a lot of debates, a lot of things said. A lot of audience reactions. I don't have any particular reaction to what's going on in Republican campaign for President right now. I've got a big job to do trying to help turn this country around. And working with a President who I believe has been doing all of the wrong things. I mean, if you look at the stimulus bill, David, what did we get out of that? Turtle tunnels and Solyndra. Solyndra. Look, more money was lost on Solyndra than came to my state to fix roads and bridges out of the entire stimulus package last year. And now he's asking us to do it again. One of my favorite sayings here in Kentucky, out in the rural areas, is there's no education the second kick of a mule. I mean, we've been there. We've done that. Now he's asking us to do it again. I'm trying to get him to go in a different direction. I've got my hands full without commenting on all that's going on in the Republican campaigns for President.
Continue reading …Meet the Press host David Gregory contented the fact a Republican presidential debate audience applauded Texas Governor Rick Perry for allowing the death penalty for murders, and three in an audience of hundreds shouted “yeah” to the idea a man who decided to not buy health insurance may be allowed to die, are “really a challenge to the notion that the Republican Party is the party of life and supports a culture of life.” (video after jump) After he played a clip of the audience applauding when Brian Williams pressed Perry on how “your state has executed 234 death row inmates, more than any other Governor in modern times,” Gregory declared that “an awkward moment of applause” before demanding of his guest, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell: “Does the audience response in both cases trouble you as a Republican?” Of course, executing murders following a due process procedure in which the accused are judged by a jury means they are hardly innocent and does not contradict the quest to protect the innocent life of those yet born nor of those near the end of life who have lost their mental capacities. Only three cheered the proposition the government shouldn’t step in to help a man who failed to plan for his own care – so not really representative of conservatives and/or Republicans. Even in that case, however, the adult man is not in the same position of a fetus unable to make decisions about the priorities of where to spend their money. Earlier, with video: “ NBC Debate Moderators Pepper Republicans with Questions from the Left ” From the end of Gregory’s segment with McConnell on the Sunday, September 18 Meet the Press: DAVID GREGORY: I want to play a couple of moments from recent debates that had to do with really a challenge to the notion that the Republican Party is the party of life and supports a culture of life. The first question, from my colleague Brian Williams in the debate that had to do with the death penalty, to Rick Perry. I'll show you that. BRIAN WILLIAMS, AT SEPTEMBER 7 DEBATE: Your state has executed 234 death row inmates, more than any other Governor in modern times. Have you- [audience applause] GREGORY: An awkward moment of applause. And then during the CNN debate, Wolf Blitzer asked Ron Paul whether a healthy man who had opted not to get insurance should be allowed to live, frankly, if it required intensive care for a period of six months. Here was the question. WOLF BLITZER, SEPTEMBER 12 DEBATE: Congressman, are you saying that society should just let him die? RON PAUL: No. THREE AUDIENCE MEMBERS, SEPARATELY: Yeah. GREGORY: Does the audience response in both cases trouble you as a Republican? SENATOR MITCH McCONNELL: Look, we have a lot of people running for President. There are going to be a lot of debates, a lot of things said. A lot of audience reactions. I don't have any particular reaction to what's going on in Republican campaign for President right now. I've got a big job to do trying to help turn this country around. And working with a President who I believe has been doing all of the wrong things. I mean, if you look at the stimulus bill, David, what did we get out of that? Turtle tunnels and Solyndra. Solyndra. Look, more money was lost on Solyndra than came to my state to fix roads and bridges out of the entire stimulus package last year. And now he's asking us to do it again. One of my favorite sayings here in Kentucky, out in the rural areas, is there's no education the second kick of a mule. I mean, we've been there. We've done that. Now he's asking us to do it again. I'm trying to get him to go in a different direction. I've got my hands full without commenting on all that's going on in the Republican campaigns for President.
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