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Government-backed mortgage giant Fannie Mae knew as far back as 2003 that law firms it had hired to foreclose on delinquent borrowers were engaging in extensive abuses, but did little to fix the problem, according to a new report (pdf). It wasn’t until the summer of 2010 that the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), which

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This is encouraging news . It looks like the unions who have promised to support Occupy Wall Street are going to do more than march — the TWU is doing whatever they can to obstruct a police crackdown on protestors. There will be a massive march Wednesday with participating unions and Moveon.org taking part in the event: In support of the ongoing “Occupy Wall Street” protest, the Transport Workers Union is going to court to stop its drivers from being required to transport arrested demonstrators. Local 100 is seeking a restraining order against the police department and the Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Union leaders say drivers’ rights were violated when they were forced to bus arrested demonstrators from the Brooklyn Bridge on Saturday. They also say the NYPD commandeered several MTA buses, and in at least one case, passengers were booted from the bus so demonstrators could be loaded up. “Our operators are not there to transport folks that are arrested, particularly innocent folks that are arrested. That’s particularly appalling to Local 100,” said John Samuelsen, president of Local 100. In response, MTA officials said the authority has a long history of cooperating with the police department and other law enforcement agencies when they have transportation needs. Meanwhile, Occupy Wall Street demonstrators took their fight to City Hall Monday. Hundreds began what they called a “march of the zombie bankers” to protest greed and express their outrage over the mass arrests this weekend. Protestors were joined by film producer Amy Goodman, who just settled a suit with Minneapolis St. Paul Police and the Secret Service over her 2008 arrest during the Republican National Convention. “It is these kinds of public protests, these shows of public dissent where so often the police crackdown, as we have seen with one of the largest mass arrests of protesters in the history of this country just this past weekend,” said Goodman. EDITOR’S NOTE: What I love about this clip is Samuelsen has an Amato accent. Solidarity!

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In Tuesday’s “ Anti-Wall Street Protests Spreading to Cities Large and Small ,” New York Times reporters Erik Eckholm and Timothy Williams bolster the “populist” left-wing activists protesting against greedy bankers (among other items of the standard left-wing wish list) in Lower Manhattan. While the Times’s coverage of conservative Tea Party rallies pointed out the most extreme and “ fringe ” elements present, the paper has thus far eschewed labels like “far-left” or even “liberal,” and ignored the cadre of Communists and offensive posters decrying “Nazi bankers” in Zuccotti Park in Lower Manhattan. And while the massive-yet-peaceful Tea Party rallies were seen as ruptures of inchoate and ignorant anger orchestrated by conservative think tanks that constantly threatened to explode into violence, the young, arrest-prone leftist campers near Wall Street are portrayed as the thin edge of an uprising of justified citizen anger. A loose-knit populist campaign that started on Wall Street three weeks ago has spread to dozens of cities across the country, with protesters camped out in Los Angeles near City Hall, assembled before the Federal Reserve Bank in Chicago and marching through downtown Boston to rally against corporate greed, unemployment and the role of financial institutions in the economic crisis. With little organization and a reliance on Facebook, Twitter and Google groups to share methods, the Occupy Wall Street campaign, as the prototype in New York is called, has clearly tapped into a deep vein of anger, experts in social movements said , bringing longtime crusaders against globalization and professional anarchists together with younger people frustrated by poor job prospects. Yet the actual attendance figures spotlighted by the Times were less than overwhelming. In Chicago on Monday morning, about a dozen people outside the Federal Reserve Bank sat on the ground or lay in sleeping bags, surrounded by protest signs and hampers filled with donated food and blankets. The demonstrators, who have been in Chicago since Sept. 24, said they had collected so much food that they started giving the surplus to homeless people. …. Strategists on the left said they were buoyed by the outpouring of energy and hoped it would contribute to a newly powerful progressive movement . Robert Borosage, co-director of the Campaign for America’s Future, in Washington, noted that the Wall Street demonstrations followed protests in Wisconsin this year over efforts to suppress public employee unions and numerous rallies on economic and employment issues. The new protesters have shown a remarkable commitment and have stayed nonviolent in the face of aggressive actions by the New York police, he said. “I think that as a result they really touched a chord among activists across the country.”

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The universe isn’t just expanding, it’s expanding faster every day. Three American scientists who made that discovery have won the Nobel Prize in Physics today for their efforts, the AP reports. The men were split between two competing research teams during the 1990s, with Saul Perlmutter on one and Adam…

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Cancer Spike Tied To Hpv

Lakotasky says: PSP: Cancer spike in men tied to HPV ? – http://t.co/0mILVgNE

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You may have noticed something missing from Monday Night Football last night: namely, Hank Williams Jr. asking, “Are you ready for some football?” as he’s been doing for more than 20 years. ESPN pulled the country star’s iconic song from the broadcast after Williams compared President Obama to Adolf Hitler…

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Puppet Puppy

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Puppet Puppy

(YouTube link) If you didn’t see the strings, you’d just think this was a skinny dog. This talented puppeteer was spotted on the streets of Recoleta, Buenos Aires, Argentina. Bonus: “Stormy Weather.” -via Arbroath Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Neatorama Discovery Date : 02/10/2011 02:28 Number of articles : 3

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Amanda Knox has been freed and while the case may continue to be hotly debated in the Italian press, commentators in the US and Britain are overwhelmingly of the opinion that justice has been done. The Knox case, “was a textbook example of our never-ending fascination with the supposed femme…

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NJ Gov. Christie: "Now Is Not My Time"

New Jersey Governor Chris Christie announces he will not be candidate for 2012 Republican presidential nomination. (Oct. 4)

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Michelle Rhee Hires Republican Lobbyist To Push ‘Reforms’ Over The Top In Pennsylvania

enlarge To understand the attack on public education in Pennsylvania, begin with Rachel Tabachnik’s comprehensive report on the partnership between far right-wing funders like the DeVos family with Michelle Rhee’s national StudentsFirst organization, and the Pennsylvania StudentsFirst organization, which shares the same name as Rhee’s group, but has very different people running it. The Pennsylvania Students First organization is actually an affiliate of American Federation for Children (AFC), chaired by Betsy DeVos, as it states on the website. A donation to Students First PAC was received from Joel Greenberg, a board member of AFC, on the date the PAC was formed. Approximately 5 million dollars from Greenberg, a co-founder of Susquehanna Investment Group (SIG), and two of the other SIG co-founders, Jeffrey Yass and Arthur Dantchik, would follow between March 10 and May 11, 2010. Most of this money was, in turn, contributed to the campaign of Democratic gubernatorial candidate Anthony H. Williams. Graphic at right is the AFC board of directors. It would be simple enough to dismiss the Pennsylvania organization as a cynical effort to piggyback onto the national Rhee organization, which still seems to meet with the approval of liberals who aren’t paying attention, except that Michelle Rhee is bear-hugging projects of that organization and gracing them with her appearance and support. For example: Rhee visited Lincoln Charter in June of 2011 , with Gov. Corbett, Ed. Sec. Roy Tomalis, and Jeffrey E. Piccola. The school choice bill in Pennsylvania is Piccola’s number one priority , and Governor Corbett is in lockstep with that goal. DeVos’ StudentsFirst PAC donated $50,000 to Piccola, so it’s reasonable to conclude they’re expecting some results for that donation. Rhee spoke to teachers at the Mastery Academy charter school in Philadelphia on Sept. 22. Dawn Chavous, a board member at a Mastery School, is also an employee at the DeVos-funded StudentsFirst PAC . Finally, there is the now-infamous appearance with Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker at the gala sponsored by American Federation for Children, the DeVos organization which spawned Pennsylvania’s StudentsFirst organization. From this evidence alone, it would be easy enough to conclude that Rhee is either amoral or Republican. Take your pick, but I’m leaning toward Republican with her latest new hire. With the Pennsylvania school choice bill still stuck in the ever-grinding gears of legislative activity, Rhee has decided she needs a lobbyist to give it a jumpstart, and that lobbyist is a Republican strategist by the name of Ray Zaborney , former campaign manager for Lynn Swann’s gubernatorial bid . Zaborney is also currently advising Republican Tim Burns’ bid to unseat Senator Bob Casey in 2012. It wasn’t immediately clear that Zaborney’s registration applied to the Rhee organization, rather than the DeVos organization. But a check of the mailing address for StudentsFirst.org — 406 7th Street NW 2nd Floor, Washington, DC 20004 confirms that it is the Rhee organization’s Washington, DC mailing address. Zaborney gave testimony at the Pennsylvania House Education Committee hearings about the efficacy of charter schools and how best to expand them. He was to appear alongside Dawn Chavous, of the DeVos StudentsFirst.org group, according to this published agenda: 12:30-1:15 Lunch 1:15-1:45 Unite PA-Sharon Cherubin and Don Adams 1:45-2:15 Philadelphia Archdiocese-Sister Edward Quinn, IHM and Mr. Jason M. Budd 2:15-2:45 Freedom Works 2:45-3:30 Students First Dawn Chavous, Raymond Zaborney However, transcripts indicate he did not, in fact appear at those hearings. It appears that Zaborney is keeping a low profile on whatever education activities he is undertaking on behalf of Michelle Rhee. But his prior public statements are anything but ambivalent: He is a full supporter of vouchers, ending teacher tenure and other hot-button issues Rhee advocates. There is no question school reforms are needed. What isn’t needed is private schools run by fundamentalist religious groups with more of an eye to conversion than education. For Michelle Rhee to continue to present herself as some sort of non-partisan crusader for reform without acknowledging who her partners are and what their agendas are is a dangerous thing. Pennsylvania’s tea partiers are pretty angry about stalled school reform. It was one of their top-ticket items, and they’re expecting action. It looks like Rhee is there to help them deliver.

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