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Congress Should Support Israel’s Right to All Land Ahead of UN Vote

The video embedded above shows the jubilant celebrations taking place in Gaza, while we were attacked on September 11. No, it wasn’t just a few “extremists” who were celebrating; it was the average Joe Palestinian. Unfortunately, not only have we declined to treat them as an enemy, we have refused to cut off any foreign aid. Instead, the Bush and Obama administrations have diverted our diplomatic… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Red State Discovery Date : 06/03/2008 18:15 Number of articles : 19

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Iran to free US hikers jailed for spying

Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal were detained for entering country illegally, along with Sarah Shourd who was freed last year Two Americans sentenced in Iran to eight years in jail for espionage and illegally crossing the border are set for release on bail, their lawyer said on Tuesday. News of the deal came after Iran’s president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, revealed in separate interviews with two US media organisations that Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal, both 29, who had already been held for two years, will be able to return home in the next few days. In an interview with the semi-official Fars news agency, lawyer Masoud Shafii later confirmed Ahmadinejad’s remarks over Iran’s decision to release the two men, saying they are expected to be freed after paying $500,000 (£316,000) in bail money. The pair were arrested by Iranian security officials in July 2009 along with a friend, Sarah Shourd, 33, after walking across an unmarked border between Iran and Iraqi Kurdistan. Last September, in a similar move and with the same amount of bail, Shourd who became engaged to Bauer while in jail, was released on health grounds. “The families of these two Americans and the Swiss embassy which hosts the US interests section in Tehran have been informed of this issue and Bauer and Fattal can leave Iran similar to Sara Shourd,” Fars added. The Washington Post quoted president Ahmadinejad as saying that Bauer and Fattal were granted a “unilateral pardon”. “I am helping to arrange for their release in a couple of days so they will be able to return home,” he told the paper in an interview in Tehran. “This is of course going to be a unilateral humanitarian gesture.” The US network NBC, which also interviewed the president on the same day, said the Americans will be released in two days. Ahmadinejad appears to be crediting himself for their expected release ahead of his visit to New York for the UN general assembly meeting later this month. In August, an Iranian court sentenced the two men each to three years for illegally entering Iran and a further five years for spying for US intelligence services. Their lawyer lodged an appeal against the sentences and Amnesty International said their conviction made a “mockery of justice”. The court’s verdict was at odds with earlier comments made by Iran’s foreign ministry officials who said before the trial that they would be freed. The contrast highlighted a growing rift between Iran’s judiciary, which is close to the supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and Ahmadinejad’s government. It is not clear why Iran has finally decided to grant them an apparent clemency but international pressure and Iran’s isolation in the region could be factors. A deal might also have been made in exchange for the lifting of the travel ban on Fereidoun Abbasi-Davani, the head of Iran’s atomic energy agency. The offer to release the Americans comes two days after Iran’s nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili said Iran is ready to resume nuclear talks with the EU. It might be an attempt by Iran to reduce tensions with the US and other powers involved in negotiations over its nuclear programme. The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Yukiya Amano, said on Monday he was “increasingly concerned” over Iran’s nuclear activities, which the west worries might have military dimensions. Iran says it wants nuclear energy for producing electricity. Iran Middle East United States Saeed Kamali Dehghan guardian.co.uk

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A popular idea in President Obama’s new jobs bill could represent a step toward fundamentally transforming the existing system of federal jobless benefits. Some critics say that such a move is long overdue–but others worry that a major overhaul could threaten a program that since the Depression has been a core component of the social

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Flashback 2007: Tim Russert and Chris Matthews Agree Social Security Is ‘A Bad Ponzi Scheme’

Whether or not Social Security is a Ponzi scheme was again a source of great discussion during Monday's Republican presidential debate, and it appears this is likely going to be a hot issue throughout this election cycle. What should be interesting to participants and pundits alike is that during the last presidential campaign, on November 5, 2007, the late Tim Russert, and Chris Matthews, while talking about the Democrat candidates on an episode of MSNBC's “Hardball” broadcast exactly one year before America elected its first black president, agreed that Social Security was “a bad Ponzi scheme” (transcript follows with transcript and commentary): CHRIS MATTHEWS, HOST: Welcome back to HARDBALL. We’ve been talking about how this race for the White House is going to play out. We’re giving the “Power Rankings,” as we’ve just done tonight. We’re going to be giving them later tonight. We’re also one year from this election. So where do things stand right now? Tim Russert’s NBC News Washington bureau chief, and of course, moderator of “Meet the Press,” and very much, of course, moderator of all these debates. Tim, thank you for joining us. TIM RUSSERT, HOST, “MEET THE PRESS”: A pleasure, Chris. MATTHEWS: Let’s talk about — we’ve been talking about — and we’re going to talk about later tonight — about this — about the rankings down the road. But right now, Hillary Clinton coming out of these debates, this debate last week — are you looking for something in the NBC poll that comes out mid-week? Do you expect something to — I saw that Obama picked up 6 points in one of the polls, in a poll taken during the course of those days last week when we had the debate. RUSSERT: Yes, and there’s other polls which indicate it’s still very much a status quo race. Iowa is what it’s all about, and those are the — that’s the place we want the see the polls. I think if anything emerged from the debate, it was that John Edwards and Barack Obama and Chris Dodd demonstrated that they’re willing to fight for the nomination by separating themselves on issues from Senator Clinton, who’s the frontrunner then and the frontrunner now. But there are differences of opinion on Iran, on Social Security, on a whole variety of issues. And I think we’re going to see those played out in Iowa, and as goes Iowa, I think may go the Democratic nomination. MATTHEWS: Are you getting a sense from the Clinton campaign where they’re willing to hold tight and basically tough it out without taking these tough positions? In other words, rather than take the heat for not taking a strong stand on Social Security reform, on what to do in Iran, what to do in Iraq, are they willing to just take the heat and say, Look, we’re not going to give those answers. Our opponents want those answers. We’re going to stay where we are. RUSSERT: Senator Clinton said she’s comfortable with the answers that she’s given. She did say she could have done better on the immigration questions, for illegal immigrants’ driver’s licenses. But my sense is the next debate they have is only going to be heightened in terms of people scrutinizing, saying, Where do you stand? What do you believe? Not only for Senator Clinton but for all of them. MATTHEWS: You know what it reminds me of? Remember in biology class in high school, where you had the starfish trying to open up the clam? These guys are trying to keep open up the clam, and she’s going to stay clammed up. She doesn’t have anything (INAUDIBLE) If you think about it, what does she gain if she says, Let’s raise taxes for Social Security, let’s raise the retirement age, let’s raise whatever, let’s reduce the benefits? What they want her to do is show some pain (ph) to the public, and she doesn’t want to do it. RUSSERT: Well, Senator Obama had said that he had — would have everything on the table for Social Security, and now he’s limited that, as well. So all of them can be scrutinized. But I think, Chris, the important thing for voters who are watching this, it’s more than just a game of primary versus the general election. They’re waiting for leadership. MATTHEWS: OK. RUSSERT: And if you’re going to make tough decisions as a president, you have to answer tough questions. What are you going to do? Show us how you’re going the lead us. Everyone knows Social Security, as it’s constructed, is not going to be in the same place it’s going to be for the next generation, Democrats, Republicans, liberals, conservatives. MATTHEWS: It’s a bad Ponzi scheme, at this point. Yeah. So almost four years ago, NBC News's former Washington bureau chief and host of “Meet the Press,” along with the current host of “Hardball,” ironically in a discussion about Democrat presidential candidates, agreed that Social Security is “a bad Ponzi scheme.” But when a Republican presidential candidate – Texas Governor Rick Perry – said this during a debate roughly four years later, the “Hardball” host and many of his colleagues in the press labeled it as unacceptable anti-American psycho talk. It sure seems Matthews can't make up his mind about whether making such a comparison is valid or verboten given his numerous flipflops on this issue. Far more importantly, he and Russert were by no means the first liberal media members to discuss this. The Weekly Standard's Jonathan Last wrote recently that such remarks were made as far back as November 13, 1967, when the late liberal Nobel Prize-winning economist and Newsweek columnist Paul Samuelson observed (h/t Ed Driscoll ): Social Security is squarely based on what has been called the eighth wonder of the world: compound interest. A growing nation is the greatest Ponzi scheme ever contrived. And that is a fact, not a paradox.

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The story of “Happy Feet,” the wayward emperor penguin that turned up in New Zealand, has captivated the world, but we may never know how it ends. The young penguin was returned to the wild last week and a transmitter that was attached to him has stopped relaying information to…

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This 3D Photo Documentary Is Like Walking into the 1930s [Video]

The images here, mapped in 3D by documentarian Miklós Falvay, depict the first Hungarian gas station and the people who frequented it. Titled Motalko , it’s something like stepping into the Great Gatsby or a Hemingway novel. [ Vimeo via Laughing Squid ] More » Broadcasting platform : Vimeo Source : Gizmodo Discovery Date : 15/07/2011 23:43 Number of articles : 6

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This 3D Photo Documentary Is Like Walking into the 1930s [Video]

The images here, mapped in 3D by documentarian Miklós Falvay, depict the first Hungarian gas station and the people who frequented it. Titled Motalko , it’s something like stepping into the Great Gatsby or a Hemingway novel. [ Vimeo via Laughing Squid ] More » Broadcasting platform : Vimeo Source : Gizmodo Discovery Date : 15/07/2011 23:43 Number of articles : 6

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Barack Obama: Soup-Ladler-in-Chief

Do the words “unclear on the concept” ring a bell? Obama seems hellbent (imagery intended) not to commemorate the cowardly attack on American soil that killed three thousand innocent men women and children on 9/11/2001. We have discussed his trying to substitute his “Day of Service” nationally, here , here and Andrew Roman’s take here . There is a time and a place for volunteering. There is a time… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Say Anything Discovery Date : 11/09/2011 21:30 Number of articles : 4

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For a very long time, I have been ranting about how CNN is trying to keep the tea party viable and present them as something other than what they are. From their hiring of Dana Loesch and Erick Erickson to their shameless promotion of the very corporate, AstroTurf href=”http://crooksandliars.com/karoli/cnn-joins-great-american-tea-party-express”> Tea Party Express bus tours, CNN has been on the job. All that positioning as the best tea party network in television should reflect in the ratings their little tea party debate receives tonight. After all, this group is less popular than just about anyone else in the country, even among their own members! New York Times , August 5th : In the most recent poll, most Americans took a negative view of the debt-ceiling negotiations, seeing them as “mostly about gaining political advantage.” With Republicans in charge of the House, more of the blame fell on them. And many people — a 43 percent plurality — saw the Tea Party as having too much influence on Republicans. Perhaps not surprisingly, Democrats were most likely to have an unfavorable view of the Tea Party. But a plurality of independents, too — 40 percent — viewed the Tea Party negatively, and said it had too much influence on the Republican Party. Still, CNN flogs away and continues to try to build their brand as TeaNewsNetwork : “I’m starting to hear for the first time, we’ve got to be careful about the ideology,” he said. “Winning the nomination is only half the game. This is about winning back the White House.” Griffin expects eventually both the GOP party establishment and tea party voters will come around to support the party’s candidate so long as they see winning back the White House as a real possibility. Whatever the outcome, don’t count the tea party out, he said. Despite many predictions that the movement had reached its peak, the tea party continues to be a relevant force because it is based upon sustained anger among the electorate, said Griffin. “The tea party is an organic movement that was largely created by people who were frustrated by Washington,” he said. “There’s not much you can do about something that’s genuine, something that grew organically. You cannot crush that out given the noise coming out of Washington these days.” I got a kick out of Digby’s rant this morning. Loesch, in her guise as a normal person, replies that there really isn’t a disagreement about this at all and that the “grassroots” (is “Tea Party” out of vogue these days?) believes that instead of redistributing wealth they should “expand the tax base” and if you look at the past six decades, “it’s proven.” She cleverly avoids saying what she means by that: that poor people don’t pay enough taxes. Now she’s complaining that Obama didn’t fulfill his promises, which she evidently wants people to think she supported, and says “the grassroots” want him to cut taxes, end regulations and pass the Keystone Pipeline project. Why is she on my TV? TeaNN. The network with less news, more bluster. Brought to you by the Tea Party Express, FreedomWorks, and corporate interests everywhere.

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BMW i3 electric and i8 plug-in cars on display at Frankfurt

We’ve seen ‘em as sketches and we’ve seen ‘em having fun on the snow , but now, after getting a few upgrades , they’re parked on the stage at Frankfurt. BMW rolled out its new i3 and i8 electric cars, part of a new sub-brand focused on efficiency and responsive driving — though it’ll ultimately be up to the driver to determine just how responsively these behave on the road. The i3 is a pure electric, 150km range (about 100 miles) and a very lightweight construction of both aluminum and carbon fiber. The i8, meanwhile, is a plug-in hybrid that is said to deliver about 87MPG and yet still get from 0 – 60MPH in under five seconds. Spunky, then. It also sports those funky laser headlights that are both far more efficient and far more awesome sounding than current LED models. This is what they look like in the flesh, and if all goes according to plan you’ll be seeing them for yourselves when they enter production in 2013. Gallery: BMW i3 and i8 Gallery: BMW i Family BMW i3 electric and i8 plug-in cars on display at Frankfurt originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 13 Sep 2011 09:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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