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Who Wants To Ban Books In Chicago – And Which Books?

RebelPundit set up an opportunity for attendees at the Chicago Printer’s Row Literature Festival in June. They put together a board with the covers from books written by these writers: The authors of the books we offered to ban were Glenn Beck, Sarah Palin, Ann Coulter, Andrew Breitbart, Ayn Rand, Michael Savage, Bill Clinton, Michael Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Real Revo Discovery Date : 11/07/2011 18:45 Number of articles : 3

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Video of the Day: The Book of Harry Potter

While Tessa Netting’s parody of “Hello” from The Book of Mormon can’t compete with the original song’s hilarious lyrics, it is pretty adorable, and we’ve obviously got Harry Potter on the brain this week with the final film opening in theaters this Friday. Plus, Netting gets bonus points for the fact that she tackles nine Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Flavorwire Discovery Date : 11/07/2011 05:22 Number of articles : 3

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Halladay and Weaver to Start in All-Star Game

Philadelphia right-hander Roy Halladay will start for the National League in Tuesday night’s All-Star game against the Los Angeles Angels’ Jered Weaver. Managers Bruce Bochy and Ron Washington announced their starting pitchers Monday. (July 11)

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President Obama started this morning by giving a presser about the supposed ‘Grand Bargain’ he’s looking for since House Speaker John Boehner came out and said he wouldn’t agree to a big deal. He said that’s he’s willing to take heat from his own party over programs and things we really believe in. “I am prepared to take on significant heat from my party to get something done,” Obama said, contending he has “bent over backward” to work with Republicans. Naturally. Obama made the case on Republican terms that we must tighten our belts if we want to get the deficit under control and so everybody has to be willing to negotiate or a deal will never get done. he won’t sign off on any short extensions of the debt ceiling either. There’s been much speculation about how much of his words have matched what he truly believes in and if it’s a tactical ploy aimed at the GOP ans Independent voters. I think we’re past that point. The absurdity of this whole debate was explained away by Mitch McConnell yesterday on FOX when he said that their goal is not for deficit reduction or job growth, but to make Obama a one term president. “The single most important thing we want to achieve is for President Obama to be a one-term president,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell told National Journal ‘s Major Garrett in October. Fox News’ Bret Baier asked McConnell Sunday if that was still his major objective. “Well, that is true,” McConnell replied. “That’s my single most important political goal, along with every active Republican in the country.” – McConnell told Baier that a “Grand Bargain,” where Republicans agree to tax hikes in exchange for cutting Social Security and Medicare benefits, was likely off the table. “I think it is. Everything they told me and the Speaker is to get a big package would require big tax increases in the middle of the economic situation that is extraordinarily difficult with 9.2% unemployment. We think it’s a terrible idea. It’s a job-killer.” “Nobody is talk about not raising the debt ceiling,” McConnell later insisted. If this is true then why not have a clean debt ceiling vote and move on from here? I’d say because Obama wants a Grand Bargain to hang his hat on. “Eating our peas,’ was the thing I heard that stood out as well as what the media is going to take away from it. “I’ve been hearing from my Republican friends for some time it is a moral imperative to tackle our debt and deficits in a serious way,” Mr. Obama said. “What I’ve said to them is, let’s go.” The president said today he would not accept a smaller, short-term deal. “We might as well do it now,” he said. “Pull off the band aid. Eat our peas.” Framing this debate in Republican terms has been a big problem for me as well as many other progressives and it’s not likely to change. Atrios: We can’t read minds, so at some point we have to judge people by their words and actions. This press conference tells us that the austerity crap isn’t some bit of political posturing, it’s a belief. We’re doomed. Candy Crowley of CNN was going on and on about the Biden deal, on Sunday as if that was the miracle cure for this debate, but there is no movement on that one either. Joan McCarter writes from earlier today: The Biden agreement had settled on about $1.5 trillion in cuts, while another $500 billion in cuts would be included if Republicans agreed to $200-300 billion in tax loophole closures. That’s balanced, right? The “sticking point,” for Republicans, is what it’s always been: raising taxes for rich people . Proving yet again that none of this is about the deficit, at least not for the GOP. For their part, Democrats are repeating the mantra that entitlements be protected . After the meeting ended, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi said in a statement: “We came into this weekend with the prospect that we could achieve a grand bargain. We are still hopeful for a large bipartisan agreement, which means more stability for our economy, more growth and jobs, and more deficit reduction over a longer period of time.” She added: “This package must do no harm to the middle class or to economic growth. It must also protect Medicare and Social Security beneficiaries, and we continue to have serious concerns about shifting billions in Medicaid costs to the states.” …. Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), appearing on CNN’s “State of the Union,” said the Biden talks identified only about $1 trillion in spending cuts. Democrats would agree to those cuts only if certain tax loopholes were closed, such as tax breaks for corporate jet owners and subsidies for oil and gas companies. Digby Writes : The accusation that those of us who are upset about cuts to Medicare, medicaid and Social security don’t care about the programs is especially clever, I have to admit. That will prove to be quite useful I imagine. For Republicans. “I think it would give the American people enormous confidence that this town can actually do something one in a while,” Obama said. I think the President’s goal is exactly what he says it is: to do Big Things.I just don’t think it matters much what the substance of those Big Things is. d-day writes: However, he made a few key statements that give insight into the negotiations. First of all, Obama said that, without Republicans budging on revenue, “I don’t think something’s going to get done. If their proposition is my way or the highway, I don’t see us getting a deal.” That would hold for a maximalist, grand bargain deal of $4 trillion, or a medium-sized deal of $2 trillion. Obama said that Democrats in the Senate would have to agree to a deal, and that House Democratic votes would be needed to pass any deal. “I will not accept a deal in which I (meaning a rich person -ed.) am asked to do nothing, while a parent out there struggling to figure out how to get a kid to college will have a couple thousand less in student loans.” Job creation did finally come up when and the president believes that until the deficit is done first, jobs can’t move forward: Greg Sargent Obama plainly believes that the only way to manage any kind of pivot to jobs is to take the deficit off the table as an issue first. Obama thinks the GOP will ultimately capitulate to some degree on revenues, but knows full well it will be a bad deal for Dems. By signaling openness to entitlements cuts that will anger the Dem base, he hopes to increase the political price the GOP pays for intransigence on revenues and is hoping to preemptively blame Republicans for the lopsided nature of the ultimate deal. More important, he is putting them on notice that once a deficit deal is reached, they’ll have run out of excuses for opposing job creation measures that require government spending. I don’t know if this will work, either politically or in terms of job creation, but this is clearly the course he’s chosen. So what does this all mean? Keynesian economics is dead at this point in time and that’s a shame. If it fails I guess Obama can say he tried in good faith at a significant cost to Democratic principles because he’s willing to negotiate and compromise, and Villagers will love that, but will America understand? Full transcript here.

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Watch a Man Shoot Himself in the Leg During Fake Duel With a Silhouette

Back in February, we brought you the viral video of a DEA agent shooting himself in the leg while giving a gun safety demonstration. Today, we bring you the video of a man shooting himself in the leg while having a duel with a fake silhouette. The video, it should be noted, contains some graphic language. After all, the man does shoot himself in the leg. So for those who do not want to play the raw… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Blaze Discovery Date : 11/07/2011 14:00 Number of articles : 2

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Republicans Try to Gut Medicaid as Studies Show Its Success

enlarge Credit: McClatchy As the debate over health care reform heated up in the fall of 2009, Tennessee Republican Senator Lamar Alexander called Medicaid “a medical ghetto” that “none of us, or any of our families, would ever want to be a part of for our health care.” As it turns out, Alexander and his GOP colleagues were as wrong as they were cynical. A breakthrough study by the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) reveals that Medicaid recipients have far greater access to doctors, live healthier lives and enjoy more financial stability than those who must go without. Nevertheless, 98% of Congressional Republicans voted to gut Medicaid spending by over $1 trillion in the next decade and with it, add up to 44 million people to the ranks of the uninsured . Currently, the $300 billion Medicaid program serves roughly 60 million Americans. On average, the federal government picks up 57% of the tab , with poorer states like Mississippi and Alabama getting 75% of the funding from Washington. Medicaid not only pays for a third of nursing home care in the United States; it covers a third of all childbirths. (In Texas, the figure is one-half.) As with Medicare, Medicaid provides insurance for substantially less than private insurers (27% less for children, 20% for adults.) Still, the likes of Senator Alexander and Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-NC) suggested that it is better to be uninsured than on Medicaid. Not according to the NBER. The same nonpartisan group that determines the official beginning and end of recessions, NBER found, as Harvard researcher and former member of President George W. Bush’s Council of Economic Advisers Katherine Baicker put it, ” Medicaid matters .” The NBER study avoided the pitfalls of past studies by examining the case of Oregon . After Oregon in 2008 established a lottery to add 10,000 people to it limited Medicaid rolls, the NBER team interview 6,000 of the lucky ones and 6,000 of the 90,000 who lost out . The results were striking: We find that in this first year, the treatment group had substantively and statistically significantly higher health care utilization (including primary and preventive care as well as hospitalizations), lower out-of-pocket medical expenditures and medical debt (including fewer bills sent to collection), and better self-reported physical and mental health than the control group. The New York Times provided some of the details of the Medicaid success story: Those with Medicaid were 35 percent more likely to go to a clinic or see a doctor, 15 percent more likely to use prescription drugs and 30 percent more likely to be admitted to a hospital. Researchers were unable to detect a change in emergency room use. Women with insurance were 60 percent more likely to have mammograms, and those with insurance were 20 percent more likely to have their cholesterol checked. They were 70 percent more likely to have a particular clinic or office for medical care and 55 percent more likely to have a doctor whom they usually saw. The insured also felt better: the likelihood that they said their health was good or excellent increased by 25 percent, and they were 40 percent less likely to say that their health had worsened in the past year than those without insurance. As Ezra Klein of the Washington Post summed up the findings, “knowing that Medicaid matters is good, but we already sort of knew that.” But back in Washington, in response to that self-evident truth, Democrats and Republicans have drawn contradictory lessons and offered diametrically opposed plans for the future. By extending Medicaid coverage to families earning up to 133% of the poverty level, starting in 2014 the Affordable Care Act passed by Democrats in Congress will bring insurance to millions more Americans. A March study by the Commonwealth Fund revealed that revealed that when fully implemented, the ACA will bring relief to “nearly all of the 52 million working-age adults who were without health insurance for a time in 2010.” Not if the Republicans get their way. With the passage of the Ryan 2012 budget proposal, Republicans voted to slash Medicaid funding by $1 trillion over 10 years while sending the remaining dollars as block grants to the states. As it turns out, that gambit would not only repeal the 2010 Affordable Care Act law, but guarantee than millions of low income Americans are deprived of health care. In its latest state-by-state analysis, the Kaiser Family Foundation detailed the devastating impact of the budget backed by 235 House Republicans and 40 GOP Senators: Projected federal spending on Medicaid for the 10-year period 2012 to 2021 would fall by $1.4 trillion, a 34 percent decline. By 2021, states would receive $243 billion less annually in federal Medicaid money than they would under current law, a 44 percent reduction. The effect on enrollment in state Medicaid programs could vary widely. By 2021, between 31 million and 44 million fewer people nationally would have Medicaid coverage under the House Budget Plan relative to expected enrollment under current law, the analysis finds, examining three possible scenarios using different assumptions about how states might respond to lower federal funding. Most of those people, given their low incomes and few options for other coverage, would end up uninsured. The House Budget Plan also could affect health centers, hospitals and safety-net facilities that serve low-income and uninsured people and rely heavily on Medicaid revenues. By 2021, hospitals could see reductions in Medicaid funding of between 31 percent and 38 percent annually, or as much as $84.3 billion, under the plan compared with projected funding under current law. The reductions would come at a time when millions more people would lack coverage, increasing the potential demand for uncompensated hospital care. As Jonathan Cohn explained, the Republicans’ health care havoc hardly ends there. While Paul Ryan’s draconian budget cuts would mortally wound Medicaid, block grants in the hands of Republican Governors like Rick Perry, Chris Christie, Rick Scott, Haley Barbour and Jan Brewer would be the final nail in the coffin: If the law changes and Medicaid becomes a block grant, then every year the federal government would simply give the states a lump sum, set by a fixed formula, and let the states make the most of it. Conservatives claim block grants would give states the flexibility they need to make their programs more efficient. But, as Harold Pollack has noted in these pages, states already have some flexibility. And because demand for Medicaid tends to peak during economic downturns, when state tax revenues fall, the likely impact of a block grant scheme would be to make Medicaid even less affordable at the time it is most necessary. That’s not to say plenty of governors wouldn’t take advantage of block grant status to change their Medicaid programs in ways they cannot now. They surely would–by capping enrollment, thinning benefits, increasing co-payments, and so on. Which is exactly what they are already doing now. Ezra Klein summed up the findings from a recent joint study by the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Bipartisan Policy Center : Twenty states implemented benefit restrictions in the past year. In fiscal year 2010, 39 states implemented Medicaid provider rate cuts or freezes (up from 33 in fiscal year 2009), and 37 states have provider rate restrictions planned for the next fiscal year. And as the New York Times and USA Today recently reported, the end of the Obama stimulus assistance is putting the Medicaid programs in already cash-strapped states on the brink of crisis. Despite the high recession-induced demand for health care services, the Times noted: From New Jersey to California, state officials are bracing for the end to more than $90 billion in federal largess specifically designated for Medicaid. To hold down costs, states are cutting Medicaid payments to doctors and hospitals, limiting benefits for Medicaid recipients, reducing the scope of covered services, requiring beneficiaries to pay larger co-payments and expanding the use of managed care… The Congressional Budget Office estimates that federal Medicaid spending will decline in 2012 for only the second time in the 46-year history of the program. But states say they will have to have to spend more on Medicaid as they struggle to make up for the loss of federal money. Just how bad it could get is revealed by a recent survey by the National Association of State Budget Officers, which revealed that 24 states are reducing Medicaid payments to providers, while 20 are limiting benefits in some way. Sadly, Medicaid spending is one of the items President Obama put on the table in his quixotic quest for a budget compromise with Congressional Republicans. While public support for Medicare may help American seniors withstand the Republican assault, Medicaid recipients probably won’t be so fortunate . As the Washington Post’s Klein was among the first to report, “Debt negotiators [are] focusing on Medicaid.” All of which prompted West Virginia Democratic Senator and chairman of the Senate Finance Subcommittee on Health Care Jay Rockefeller to lament: “Medicaid is very much on the chopping block. Seniors vote. But if you are poor and disabled, you might not vote, and if you are a child, you do not vote — that’s a lot of Medicaid’s population. They don’t have money to do lobbying.” Should that come to pass, the result would be an American tragedy. After all, as Harvard economist and NBER study co-author Katherine Baicker explained, “what we’ve learned is Medicaid matters.” (This piece also appears at Perrspectives .)

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Morning Fluff: Mondays, amirite? This baby knows what I’m…

Morning Fluff: Mondays, amirite? This baby knows what I’m talking abOMG SO PRECIOUS. [ reddit .] Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Daily What Discovery Date : 11/07/2011 15:01 Number of articles : 2

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If you’re a teacher, or know one, you need to see this so you get a handle on what’s being planned for every state. There was a sudden influx of cash into Stand for Children in Illinois while this little scenario was going on. Stand for Children also supported Senate Bill 1 in Indiana and raised out-of-state money to support candidates in Denver-area elections. The right-wing Walton Foundation made grants in 2010 of $200,000 to Stand for Children in Colorado and $1.38 million to the Stand for Children Leadership Center. The Walton Foundation’s total for “Education Reform Grants” was $157 million in 2010 alone. These corporate right-wing and allegedly-liberal hedge fund education hobbyists (Bloomberg’s daughter and Steve Jobs’ wife, in addition to all the Wall St. types) are all over the place, like kudzu. Their actions are sneaky, undemocratic and harmful to children, because parents and teachers get no real say and there’s no research that supports what they do. Oh, and they want to break the seniority protections of every last teachers union. So pay attention! Fortunately, they were nowhere as successful* in Illinois as Edelman brags. Note: Since this video went viral, Jonah Edelman has apologized: As Lisa Guisbond said, “this is an amazing video from the Aspen Ideas Festival in which Stand For Children’s Jonah Edelman (yes, son of Marian Wright Edelman) explains how he, with the support of Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel and Arne Duncan’s senior advisor Jo Anderson (former Executive Director of the IEA) outfoxed the CTU, the IFT and the IEA’s Ken Swanson and Audrey Soglin into agreeing to Senate Bill 7.” For those who still believe that there is any way to trust, negotiate with, compromise with, or have any dealings with Ed Deform in any way that does not demand complete capitulation to the ed deformers, watch this video. Play it at your next union meeting, share it with the world. We do know some of what goes on at the Aspen Ideas Festival besides getting a chance to smell and touch sewer rats like Rupert Murdoch. Here is a great example of massive ego mixed with manipulative glee that was posted and quickly pulled from the Aspen site, but not before Fred Klonsky captured a copy for the world to see and hear. In this Machiavellian masterpiece, we see Jonah Edelman of Stand for Children infamy ( list of donors here ) describe in great detail how great wads of hedge-fund and other corporate cash came to bear on the last legislative election in Illinois, how all the best lobbyists were bought up by Deform (including minority ones), how unions were outspent and how politicians followed the money, how teacher unions were lured to the table and how they were totally manhandled by the best lawyers and negotiators that money can buy, how union leaders became complicit, scared, weak, groveling. Hear how Karen Lewis, head of Chicago Teachers Union was made a fool of, how she gave up the right to strike with less than a 75% strike vote (something that has never happened, as Jonah notes). Hear how Lewis gave the Deformer lawyers free rein to work out the details on a terrible agreement. As Jonah swaggers, “We got to decide all the fine print.” In those details is the insurance needed to impose the same IMPACT teacher eval plan that DC has. Jersey Jazzman offers his take. *Edelman completely exaggerates the changes in the new pension program. It’s nothing like what Wisconsin, Ohio, or New Jersey have done. In fact, most of what he claims credit for has been in the works for several years. Guess he needs to convince those donors to keep on giving — and keep those lobbyists employed!

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No More Privacy: Smart Meters Are Surveillance Devices That Monitor The Behavior In Your Home Every Single Minute Of Every Single Day

Have you heard about the new “smart meters” that are being installed in homes all across America? Under the guise of “reducing greenhouse gas emissions” and “reducing energy bills”, utility companies all over the United States are forcing tens of millions of American families to accept sophisticated surveillance devices in their homes. Currently, approximately 9 Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The American Dream Discovery Date : 08/07/2011 00:11 Number of articles : 4

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Obama: "I Will Not Sign" Short-term Debt Deal

President Barack Obama says he will not sign any temporary spending resolution, and that leaders must come up with a long-term solution to the debt and deficit. He says both parties agree the debt ceiling must be raised. (July 11)

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