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President Obama’s jobs speech was pretty good for the most part except when he brought up the part about reforms to Medicare and Medicaid: I’m not sure if this article in FT (which is behind firewall) is accurate, but if it is then I’m getting very nervous and so is the Democratic party. Obama to propose Medicare and Medicaid cuts : Barack Obama is expected to lay out a plan next week that would cut several hundred billion dollars from Medicare and Medicaid, the large government healthcare schemes for the elderly and the poor, as part of a pitch to cut future deficits by more than $1,500bn. Senior White House officials said the US president would base a detailed blueprint for fiscal reform, which is to be delivered on Monday, on an earlier speech he delivered in April on deficit reduction.. The announcement could create tensions within the Democratic party, which has traditionally staunchly defended Medicare. Mr Obama’s fiscal proposal will be released just one week after the president unveiled a separate plan to raise more than $450bn to pay for a jobs bill that senior officials said would be the president’s singular focus in coming weeks. The NY Times writes: Democrats See Perils on Path to Health Cuts As Congress opens a politically charged exploration of ways to pare the deficit, President Obama is expected to seek hundreds of billions of dollars in savings in Medicare and Medicaid , delighting Republicans and dismaying many Democrats who fear that his proposals will become a starting point for bigger cuts in the popular health programs. The president made clear his intentions in his speech to a joint session of Congress last week when, setting forth a plan to create jobs and revive the economy, he said he disagreed with members of his party “who don’t think we should make any changes at all to Medicare and Medicaid.” Few Democrats fit that description. But many say that if, as expected, Mr. Obama next week proposes $300 billion to $500 billion of savings over 10 years in entitlement programs, he will provide political cover for a new bipartisan Congressional committee to cut just as much or more. And, they say, such proposals from the White House will hamstring Democrats who had been hoping to employ Medicare as a potent issue against Republicans in 2012 campaigns after many Congressional Republicans backed a budget that would have substantially altered Medicare by providing future beneficiaries with a subsidy to enroll in private health care plans. Representative Emanuel Cleaver II , Democrat of Missouri and chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus , said: “Ninety-eight percent of the president’s speech was excellent. The Democratic caucus and the black caucus are fired up. But you will find that we have some differences with the president’s plan as it relates to Medicare and Medicaid. We would rather see some kind of increase in revenue as opposed to cutting these programs.” By offering such proposals, Mr. Cleaver said, the president “cancels out any bludgeoning that Democrats might give the Republicans over Medicare and Medicaid.” This grand bargain fetish while pleasing to the Villagers will haunt him and the rest of the Democratic party in 2012 if they actually go through with it. A new poll by Bloomberg bares this out : Support for one of the party’s central tenets is declining, with just 34 percent of the country now favoring repeal of President Barack Obama’s health-care overhaul, down from 41 percent six months ago. Republicans support repeal, while political independents and Democrats don’t. A 51 percent majority says a special congressional committee considering how to reduce the federal deficit by $1.5 trillion should opt to raise taxes on higher-income earners before curbing entitlements such as Medicare or Social Security, rejecting Republican pledges against tax increases. Almost six of 10 say the panel must do one or the other to meet its deficit-cutting goal. “Taxes are at the heart of the controversy because Americans hold two conflicting views,” said J. Ann Selzer, president of Selzer & Co. “In the abstract, they’d rather cut than raise taxes. But in the context of near-term goals to cut the deficit, they prefer raising taxes to cutting entitlements.” And Republican ideas are dropping like a rock: Rejecting Republican Plans—Majorities reject many specifics of Republicans’ long-term plan to balance the budget. More than three-quarters oppose cuts to Medicaid, the federal-state health-insurance program for the poor, and almost 6 of 10 reject replacing the Medicare plan for the elderly with a private voucher system. A 54 percent majority would raise taxes on families earning more than $250,000 per year, a measure that Republican leaders oppose. As Digby notes , there’s a little chatter out there that some Democrats are being softened up for reasons I don’t understand, but it should be a complete non-starter for any Democratic president. It’s pure folly. The Democrats seized momentum from the passing of Paul Ryan’s Medicare Destruction Plan. Aren’t they getting the message that these trial balloons are a flop? All the polls say the same things. Don’t cut benefits and really, there isn’t any reason to. We have a revenue problem, not an austerity or tax problems. Let’s wait and see shall we? UPDATE: Carville has the right idea. I’ve been terribly angry with the WH’s strategy for a long time and have written about it just as long. 1. Fire somebody. No — fire a lot of people. This may be news to you but this is not going well. For precedent, see Russian Army 64th division at Stalingrad. There were enough deaths at Stalingrad to make the entire tea party collectively orgasm. Mr. President, your hinge of fate must turn. Bill Clinton fired many people in 1994 and took a lot of heat for it. Reagan fired most of his campaign staff in 1980. Republicans historically fired their own speaker, Newt Gingrich. Bush fired Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. For God’s sake, why are we still looking at the same political and economic advisers that got us into this mess? It’s not working. Furthermore, it’s not going to work with the same team, the same strategy and the same excuses. I know economic analysts are smart — some work 17-hour days. It’s time to show them the exit. Wake up — show us you are doing something. 2. Indict people. There are certain people in American finance who haven’t been held responsible for utterly ruining the economic fabric of our country. Demand from the attorney general a clear status of the state of investigation concerning these extraordinary injustices imposed upon the American people. I know Attorney General Eric Holder is a close friend of yours, but if his explanations aren’t good, fire him too. Demand answers to why no one has been indicted. Mr. President, people are livid. Tell people that you, too, are angry and sickened by the irresponsible actions on Wall Street that caused so much suffering. Do not accept excuses. Demand action now. 3. Make a case like a Democrat. While we are going along with the Republican austerity garbage, who is making the case against it? It’s not the Democrats!

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If you’re paranoid that the Mayans might have been right about the Dec. 21, 2012 apocalypse, then maybe you should start sucking up to the people at Pink Visual. The LA-based porn studio says it’s building a lavish “post-apocalyptic” bunker, complete with fully-stocked bars, performance stages, and a studio to…

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Bosch C3 6V and 12V Fully Automatic 4-Mode Battery Charger and Maintainer

Type: Automotive Parts and Accessories Title: Bosch C3 6V and 12V Fully Automatic 4-Mode Battery Charger and Maintainer See all customer reviews Product Description: The Bosch battery charger for 6 volt and 12 volt lead acid batteries (AGM, WET, GEL, open, VRLA) uses state-of-the-art charging technology and self-monitoring functions to ensure high quality charging for long battery life. One button operation, built-in pulse and trickle charge function, and a comprehensive safety concept make these chargers very easy and safe to use. Built in safety features like spark, short circuit and reverse polarity protection ensure the safety of the operator and the health of the battery. Features: One touch smart charging with automatic voltage detection for easy operation Micro Computer Unit prevents overcharging, overheating, provides reverse polarity protection for user/battery safety Maintenance/Trickle charging mode automatically switches on when battery is fully charged For trucks, cars, motorcycles, lawn tractors, recreational vehicles batteries Included accessories like hook, charger cable with built in fuse, 2 fully insulated charger clamps See the details

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Reading While Eating for September 15: Hip to Be Square

Thursday’s links talk criminal SpongeBob and “sleep boxes” at airports. Shopping Secrets: See how stores like Whole Foods “prime” customers to shop by using unconscious sensory clues. (Fast Company) Catch Some Z’s: In Moscow, you can rent tiny airport “sleep boxes” while you wait for your plane to board. (The Hairpin) Political Chat: GOP frontrunner

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A program trending downward in recent years knows it has to fight even harder to secure top prospects. That’s just the nature of college football recruiting.

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At just 21 years old, Dakota Meyer charged into a firefight in Afghanistan—five times—to save 36 lives from an ambush, and today he will become the first living Marine to receive the Medal of Honor since the Vietnam War. But before the ceremony honoring his actions on September…

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Mommie Dearest is about to get her comeuppance once more, in the form of naked home videos. Christina Crawford, who penned the famous exposé on celebrity mother Joan Crawford, is now developing a one-woman show called Surviving Mommie Dearest , in which she will reveal new details about her upbringing. She’ll…

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Canon plans Hollywood event, ready to roll out the red carpet on November 3rd

Oh, what’s this, Canon ? You want your turn in the spotlight as well? Well, we suppose a hint of an announcement is better than a non-announcement , so bring it on! The imaging company just sent us word of a presumably star-studded SoCal event on November 3rd, giving its cameras a chance to walk the red carpet in a rather surprising Hollywood role reversal. We’re not sure exactly what Canon plans to unveil that night — a new mirrorless camera , or perhaps some fancy pants camcorder, destined for Hollywood’s elite? But assuming the company isn’t crying wolf, we’ll be there with a live report from the red carpet. Canon plans Hollywood event, ready to roll out the red carpet on November 3rd originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 15 Sep 2011 18:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Teens and Peer Pressure

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Teens and Peer Pressure

Learn how peer pressure can affect your teen’s decisions and how you can help him resist pressure from other teens.

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Cannibalistic killer not watched properly in Broadmoor, inquest finds

Peter Bryan, who smashed fellow patient’s head on floor because ‘he wanted to eat him’, not adequately assessed A man who attacked and killed a fellow patient at a high-security psychiatric hospital because he “wanted to eat him” was not being watched properly, and had not been adequately assessed, an inquest jury ruled on Thursday. Peter Bryan “smashed” Richard Loudwell’s head on the floor at Broadmoor hospital and tied a ligature around his neck on April 25 2004, an inquest at Berkshire coroners court heard. Loudwell, 60, who was admitted to Broadmoor in January that year, was taken to Frimley Park hospital in Surrey but died 41 days later, never having regained consciousness. The jury was told Bryan had attacked a 21-year-old woman, hitting her on the head around six times with a claw hammer in 1993. He later pleaded guilty to manslaughter on grounds of diminished responsibility. Bryan spent eight years at Rampton hospital and was eventually allowed back into society, but later attacked and killed a man, named in reports as Brian Cherry on February 17 2004. The victim had been dismembered and officers found a frying pan on the stove with tissue from the dead man’s brain. Bryan told officers: “I ate his brains with butter. It was really nice.” The killer was admitted to Broadmoor’s Luton ward on April 15 2004, after a stay at Belmarsh prison where he was described as “unpredictable”; presenting a “grave risk to others” and “extremely dangerous”. He was put in seclusion but four days after his arrival was allowed to mingle with patients under “general observations” or 15-minute checks, the inquest was told. But just after 6pm on April 25 he attacked Loudwell in the dining room of Luton ward. At the conclusion of the inquest, the jury ruled Loudwell died of bronchopneumonia, a hypoxic brain injury, ligature strangulation and blunt trauma to the head. Recording a narrative verdict, the jury said the dining room was not adequately observed by nursing staff at the time of the attack. Jurors also found Bryan’s mental state had not been adequately examined before his release from seclusion on April 19, or between that date and the attack on April 25. “Until such a mental state examination was completed, Peter Bryan should have been on higher observations than the general level. Such failure may have contributed to Richard Loudwell’s death.” The verdict said the absence of one or more of several factors may have contributed to Loudwell’s death. These included a pre-admission nursing report, a clinical team meeting, an adequate mental state examination, a formal written risk assessment and medical staff regularly seeing Bryan when he was out of seclusion. The inquest was told there were 19 patients in Luton ward on the day of the attack on Loudwell. Nine members of staff were present for the afternoon shift. Joanne Fisher, registered mental nurse and team leader on the ward, described finding Loudwell with head injuries on the floor of the ward dining room. In a statement read by Berkshire coroner Peter Bedford, she said Bryan told her: “I got him from behind, I put a ligature around his neck so that he wouldn’t make a noise, and I smashed his head.” She added: “Mr Bryan said he had been thinking about it for a few days. He also said: ‘I wanted to eat him.’” From Fisher’s statements, the inquest heard Loudwell was “hard to work with”, “generally unco-operative” and had complained of bullying. He had gone against advice from staff not to disclose the offence for which he was in Broadmoor, the inquest heard, and one senior member of nursing staff described him as the “most unpopular patient I have ever met”, saying it was “inevitable” that “sooner or later” he would be assaulted. But according to Fisher’s statement, he had started to “interact” more and shortly before he was attacked was seen playing cards with patients. She said she was not aware of Bryan being involved in bullying Loudwell. In the jury’s narrative verdict, they said staff should have known both men were in the dining room, but “having regard to Peter Bryan’s presentation whilst in Broadmoor”, it should not have caused concern that they were in the room together. Crime guardian.co.uk

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