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Rick Perry told Michele Bachmann in Monday night’s GOP debate that he received only a $5,000 donation from HPV vaccine maker Merck, but his financial ties to the drug maker are closer than that figure suggests, the Washington Post finds. Perry’s campaigns have received almost $30,000 from Merck…

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Terry Fator

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Terry Fator

Terry Fator America’s got talent 2011 the finals [HD] Terry Fator (Ventriloquist) – Julius, Aint No Sunshine – America’s Got Talent 2011 (Finals) Terry Fator performs live on America’s Got Talent ~ The Finale StevenFlores5 says: Terry Fator Celebrates Two Year Anniversary at The Mirage http://t.co/jSPEHQY

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Carl Lewis Back On Ballot

rickychaneight says: http://t.co/gHewimO Court: Carl Lewis back on ballot in NJ Senate race

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QUOTE: Iran Prison Resembles a Hotel

“(Fattal and Bauer are enjoying) very good conditions here in prison … it’s like staying in a hotel.” — MAHMOUD AHMADINEJAD, Iran’s president, on the conditions of the two American hikers being held in prison (via CNN)

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Transformers: Dark of the Moon (Two-Disc Blu-ray/DVD Combo + Digital Copy)

Type: DVD Title: Transformers: Dark of the Moon (Two-Disc Blu-ray/DVD Combo + Digital Copy) See all customer reviews Amazon.com: Talk about “transforming.” Michael Bay tested the patience of even the most devoted Transformers fan with the second installment of the franchise, Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen , but the hyperactive director bounces back in energetic form with number three, Transformers: Dark of the Moon . From the long opening sequence (a zany alternate-history reading of the NASA moon program, complete with cameos by John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon) through the predictably extended action climax, Bay is actually on his best behavior. Sure, his taste is as vulgar as ever (is introducing your leading lady via a lingering butt shot part of the director’s personal signature?), but the story line is streamlined and the action is coherent: the constant chop-chop of the fighting sequences in Revenge is gone, replaced by a long-take approach that actually shows us who’s fighting who. Plus, it’s hard to resist a tilting skyscraper that allows the protagonists to slide down its glassy exterior. I know, right? Shia LaBeouf returns, armed with a new and improbably bodacious girlfriend (Rosie Huntington-Whiteley); although initially unemployed, he’s drawn back into protecting the planet from giant outer-space robots, as the Decepticons menace the Earth once again. John Turturro and Josh Duhamel return to help, and Frances McDormand and John Malkovich join the club. Let’s reduce critical expectations and say that if you’re going to make a dumb movie about mass destruction, this is the way to do it (and if that sounds like faint praise, compare the movie to its abysmal predecessor). Throw in Hangover funnyman Ken Jeong, computer nerd Alan Tudyk doing a German accent, and the voice of Leonard Nimoy as Sentinel Prime, and you’ve got yourself a three-ring circus of extremely spirited nonsense. Just how Michael Bay wants it. –Robert Horton Actors: Shia Labeouf Josh Duhamel See the details

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Tim Geithner urges Europe to act decisively on debt crisis

US treasury secretary urges European governments to use ‘overwhelming force’ to address eurozone’s financial woes. The US treasury secretary, Tim Geithner, has urged European governments to use “overwhelming force” to address the eurozone’s financial woes. Comparing Europe’s troubles to the US banking crisis, Geithner told a New York conference on Wednesday that Washington had been “behind the curve” when it came to tackling its financial crisis. Political leaders had put aside their differences to act swiftly, he said, “but we’re still living with scars of that crisis”. Geithner, who will attend a meeting of European finance ministers in Poland on Friday, said: “If you think about the basic lessons of the financial crisis, it takes a number of things to solve it definitively.” US stock markets rose as Geithner was speaking, cheered by news that the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, had moved to quash speculation that Greece was nearing bankruptcy or would be forced to leave the 17-nation eurozone. After a telephone conference with Merkel and the Greek prime minister, George Papandreou, French president Nicolas Sarkozy said France would do “whatever it takes” to save Greece. But the US stock markets started to lose their gains as investors became more nervous about the scale of the European crisis. Nick Kalivas, vice-president of equities and financial research at MF Global in Chicago, said the US markets were being driven by news from Europe. Kalivas said good and bad news was acting to “push and pull” the market up and down amid scepticism from investors about the ability of Europe’s leaders to finalise a deal. “The US markets would be doing a lot better if the European crisis wasn’t around,” he said. Speaking in New York at the Delivering Alpha conference – organised by CNBC and Institutional Investor magazine – Geithner said Europe needed to take drastic steps to address its problems. But he said he was confident Europe would act decisively. “There is no chance that the major countries of Europe will let their institutions be at risk in the eyes of the market,” Geithner said. This will be the first time Geithner has addressed Europe’s Economic and Financial Affairs Council, known as Ecofin. The two-day meeting is being held in Wroclaw. “They invited to me come and I thought it would be polite to accept that,” he said. “What they’re doing is very challenging … They have a terrible growth problem.” Geithner has been pushing for some time for Europe to take more decisive action to address its debt crisis. The Wroclaw meeting is Geithner’s second European trip in seven days. Earlier this week he told the Group of Seven meeting of finance ministers and central bankers in Marseilles, France, that they should “act more forcefully” to address the crisis. On Tuesday, the US president, Barack Obama, said Europe must do more to address its economic woes. “In the end the big countries in Europe, the leaders in Europe, must meet and take a decision on how to co-ordinate monetary integration with more effective coordinated fiscal policy,” Obama told reporters at the White House. Nicolas Veron, a senior fellow at Bruegel, a Brussels-based economics research group, said the US was sending very clear signals about the scale of its concern about Europe. “There is a feeling in the US that there is a risk of contagion,” he said. “And this justifies the US doing what it can to avoid a disorderly outcome.” European debt crisis Financial crisis European banks Banking United States Europe Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk

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Michael Giesey spent thousands of dollars in immigration fees to try to keep his German-born wife as a legal resident of the United States. For a while, Giesey thought all the money and time spent on forms and interviews would finally pay off. He and his wife and their 7-year-old daughter were going to be

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Eddie Vedder Talks West Memphis Three

Speaking at the Toronto International Film Festival, musician Eddie Vedder expressed his continuing support for the West Memphis Three, and revealed that Pearl Jam are “helping them to regain their footing in the outside world.” (Sept. 14)

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IMF Reports That ‘Austerity’ Causes Job Loses and Lower Wages

Here’s another reason why President Obama needs to stop paying homage to the deficit hawks and confidence fairies. These past few years, the Republican line on job creation has been simple: Cut government spending, tame the deficit, and unemployment will fall. Maybe not tomorrow, maybe not the day after, but soon. “To put it simply,” House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R- Va.) said last spring, “less government spending means more private-sector jobs.” But that’s not exactly a rigorous study. So here’s a rigorous study. In a new paper for the International Monetary Fund, Laurence Ball, Daniel Leigh and Prakash Loungani look at 173 episodes of fiscal austerity over the past 30 years—with the average deficit cut amounting to 1 percent of GDP. Their verdict? Austerity “lowers incomes in the short term, with wage-earners taking more of a hit than others; it also raises unemployment, particularly long-term unemployment.” More specifically, an austerity program that curbs the deficit by 1 percent of GDP reduces real incomes by about 0.6 percent and raises unemployment by almost 0.5 percentage points. What’s more, the IMF notes, the losses are twice as big when the central bank can’t cut rates (a good description of the present.) Typically, income and employment don’t fully recover even five years after the austerity program is put in place. There’s also a class dimension here: A deficit cut of that size tends to cause real wage income, where lower-income folks get their money, to shrink by 0.9 percent, whereas rents and profits, which higher-income folks depend on, decline by just 0.3 percent. And, as the chart on the right shows, profits tend to bounce back faster than wages. Kevin Drum remarks: So what happens if we tighten our belts and cut back on spending, as Republicans unanimously want us to do? A new IMF study estimates the effect of a cutback equal to 1% of GDP, which amounts to about $150 billion in the U.S. According to both the GOP leadership and its crew of presidential candidates, this would be peanuts, a mere down payment on serious budget cutting. And maybe so. Unfortunately, as the chart below shows, a cutback of that size would lead to lower incomes and dramatically higher unemployment. But wait! There’s more! The IMF study says the effect is twice as big as the one in Chart 2 when central banks can’t cut interest rates. And guess what? The Fed already has interest rates at zero. They can’t cut them any further. In other words, the GOP’s version of belt-tightening would probably jack up unemployment rates by nearly a full point. Welcome to Rick Perry’s America. ( Via Brad Plumer. ) enlarge Credit: Washington Post Austerity reduces incomes and raises unemployment Ain’t austerity grand? Paul Krugman writes: In the first half of last year a strange delusion swept much of the policy elite on both sides of the Atlantic — the belief that cutting spending in the face of high unemployment would actually create jobs. I went after this stuff early and hard (I suspect that the confidence fairy will be one of my lasting contributions to economic discourse); still, it’s good to have a steadily mounting weight of evidence about just how wrong that view was. And what’s dangerous is that the Villagers are ignoring all the evidence and sticking with the right-wing economic model no matter what. I wish one rich beltway elite except for Thomas Friedman would come out and say what they really feel. For the working class and poor—’suffering is good.’ We are living in a morality play written by sociopaths, determined to make the poor suffer for the sins of the rich. George Osborne’s austerity programme will cut the living standards of Britain’s families by more than 10% over the next three years as those on the lowest incomes suffer most from the tax increases and spending cuts designed to reduce the budget deficit. A study from the Institute for Fiscal Studies, the UK’s leading experts on the public finances, concludes that the chancellor’s strategy will result in greater inequality and rising child poverty, throwing into reverse progress made in the final years of the last Labour government. Well, not everyone of course…

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NBC Offers Scant Coverage of Big Dem Loss in NY Special Election

The Today show, which is a four hour program, on Wednesday devoted a scant 43 seconds of air time to a surprising loss by Democrats in a New York special congressional election. Both CBS and ABC offered more expansive coverage. ABC's Good Morning America saw the election of Republican Bob Turner as a “stunning upset.” Referencing another GOP win in Nevada, host George Stephanopoulos surprisingly speculated, “Landslide victories for Republicans in two key races. Could these early wins spell big trouble for President Obama? ” Reporter Jon Karl explained the scope of the defeat for the Democrats: “This is an election jolt for Democrats and the President. In New York City, Republicans scored a decisive victory in a district that hasn't sent a Republican to Congress since 1920.” GMA again featured the story in the 8am hour. News anchor Josh Elliott labeled the loss a “political shocker.” Over on CBS's Early Show, Nancy Cordes pointed out, “President Obama won the district by 11 points back in 2008, but he was polling very poorly in the past few weeks there.” She also noted that 40 percent of the district is Jewish and that this group isn't happy with the President's handling of Israel. The Today show could only manage two news briefs totaling just 43 seconds. In the first, Natalie Morales described the election as, simply, an “upset victory.” She added that “analysts believe frustration with the national economy and President Obama gave Republicans the edge.” In the second short story, Morales became slightly more descriptive, allowing that there are “political shock waves this morning in New York.” A transcript of the September 14 GMA segment can be found below: 7am tease GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: And breaking overnight, stunning upsets. Landslide victories for Republicans in two key races. Could these early wins spell big trouble for President Obama? 7:02 STEPHANOPOULOS: But we're going to begin this morning with two special election defeats for the Democrats and President Obama. The biggest surprise, right here in New York where Republicans picked up the congressional seat held by Anthony Weiner. You might remember, he was forced to resign after that sexting scandal broke this summer. ABC's Jon Karl joins us with more. Good morning, Jon. JON KARL: Good morning, George. This is an election jolt for Democrats and the President. In New York City, Republicans scored a decisive victory in a district that hasn't sent a Republican to Congress since 1920. Republican Bob Turner scored an improbable victory in the heart of Democratic New York City. BOB TURNER: It is people like me who got off their couch and said, “I'm as mad as hell and I'm not going to take it anymore.” KARL: Turner is best known as the creator of Jerry Springer Show and is a newcomer to politics. But the shockwaves from

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