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the Gap unveils its Wu-Tang plan

Fashion gurus at the Gap have come up with a novel idea to sweep aside their Autumn competition – go ghetto. The Gap meets rap collaboration comes in the form of a Wu-Tang Clan branded t-shirt, designed to ‘Protect Ya Neck’ and presumably all other parts of your torso. The Clan – whose members include

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New Ad From Bevan Dufty

A cute new ad from openly gay San Francisco mayoral candidate Bevan Dufty includes his young daughter. Via email, my pal Karl Frisch speculates that this might be a first for an LGBT candidate. Subscribe to Joe.My.God. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Joe. My. God. Discovery Date : 30/09/2011 22:00 Number of articles : 3

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Bernanke says US economy is ‘close to faltering’

Fed chairman blames euro crisis, uncertainty over jobs market and political battles in Washington for gloomy economic outlook Federal reserve chairman Ben Bernanke has warned that US economic recovery is “close to faltering”, and that a “disorderly” default in the Greek debt would have a serious impact. In testimony to Congress, Bernanke was repeatedly quizzed about the impact of the European crisis on America. He said the US was an “innocent bystander” in the eurozone debt standoff and that US banks were not heavily exposed to Europe’s most troubled economies. But he warned that Europe’s economic woes were already having a negative impact on US stock markets. “Unless the European situation is brought under control, it could be a much more serious situation for the US economy,” he said. Bernanke also warned that political warfare in Washington was a threat to the US economy. He told the Joint Economic committee that the recent row over raising the debt ceiling had been very unhelpful at a time of increasing economic uncertainty. “It’s no way to run a railroad,” he said. In written testimony and during a question-and-answer session, Bernanke told Congress that the Federal reserve has acted forcefully to support growth and was prepared to take further action if necessary. But he warned that political infighting was a risk to the fragile US economic recovery. “Monetary policy can be a powerful tool, but it is not a panacea for the problems currently faced by the US economy,” Bernanke said. “Fostering healthy growth and job creation is a shared responsibility of all economic policymakers.” Bernanke was asked about the Occupy Wall Street protests, now in their third week in New York and spreading across the US. “I would just say that very generally people are quite unhappy about the state of the economy,” said Bernanke, and with “some justification”. “At some level I can’t blame them. Nine percent unemployment and slow growth is not a good situation,” he said. Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont asked Bernanke: “In light of the protests, did Wall Street’s greed and recklessness lead to the crisis?” Bernanke said: “Excessive risk-taking had a lot to do with it.” So did the failures of regulators, he said. Bernanke said the US economy had grown more slowly than expected, in part because of unexpected setbacks like the Japanese earthquake and Europe’s debt crisis – but also because of the US’s own problems, especially in the jobs market. “The recovery from the crisis has been much less robust than we hoped.” “Probably the most significant factor depressing consumer confidence, however, has been the poor performance of the job market,” Bernanke said. “Private payrolls rose by only about 100,000 jobs per month on average over the summer — half of the rate posted earlier in the year – and state and local governments have continued to shed jobs,” he said. Moreover, recent indicators, including new claims for unemployment insurance and surveys of hiring plans, point to the likelihood of more sluggish job growth in the period ahead, he said. “We need to make sure that the recovery continues and doesn’t drop back,” Bernanke added. US economy Ben Bernanke US economic growth and recession US unemployment and employment data European debt crisis United States Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk

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Bear Rushes Into Pa. Home, Taking on Couple

A black bear comes in with the family dog at a home in Duncannon, Pennsylvania, wounding residents Richard and Angela Moyer. (Oct. 4)

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Truck Bomb in Somalia Kills Dozens

Islamist militants detonated a truck bomb Tuesday in front of the education ministry in Somalia’s capital, killing dozens of people. (Oct. 4)

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I Slept in Zuccotti Park for This Report

Wall Street was an actual wall once. In the 1600s, Dutch occupiers needed to keep out the natives, pirates, and unwanted dregs. You learned the Dutch stole the island for $24, but they really paid 60 guilders, which is over $1,000 in today-money. Still a steal, for Manhattan. In 2011, the rent is too damn high…unless you’re willing to sleep in the park. I boarded a Greyhound in Buffalo on Friday night. Sleep didn’t happen. (It’s my theory that their seats are designed by cheap extraterrestrial laborers who have no knowledge of human anatomy.) Hopped the A train to Fulton St. and found my way, past the brightly lit WTC construction, to a rain-soaked Zuccotti Park by about 4 am. Dubbed “Liberty Square,” the park is home to Occupy Wall Street. And it’s not a park. It’s got a few small trees and a couple flowerbeds, but not one soft blade of grass. The concrete was lined with roughly 150 mummified protesters, rolled up in tarps, ominously looking like a fresh crime scene. Cops in raincoats, walking the perimeter. The gatekeepers. enlarge Credit: Ian Murphy I don’t want to say this, but my first impression – after rolling up in my own tarp and failing to sleep for a few hours – was that the place looked, and smelled, like the parking lot of a Phish concert. Patchouli does not a movement make. And as much as I want to say reports, like this much-derided New York Times piece , have cast an unfair light on these young occupiers, they’re not entirely inaccurate. My first contact was with a woman named Chris. “You want a vitamin? You want a chewable Airborne?” I took them, not having the heart to tell her that Airborne cold “remedy” does absolutely nothing. Was Airborne a perfect metaphor for #OccupyWallStreet? I cynically wondered. Chris was a medic volunteer. The medic station is accompanied by the kitchen, the media area, the comfort area (dedicated to sleeping bags, socks, etc.), and the General Assembly. There are other volunteer duties, such as sanitation and security, which consist of walking around with a garbage bags and walkie-talkies, respectively. You’ve no doubt heard about the General Assembly. It’s how the protesters communicate, organize, and reach something resembling consensus. “Mic check!” someone will call. “Mic check!” the crowd responds. They communicate this way because the police cracked down on the use of sound amplifiers. It’s an elegant, albeit annoying, solution. The press has generally portrayed the protest as disorganized. Some protesters even expressed their frustration over the disorganization to me during the weekend. But without any sort of hierarchical structure, it’s amazing and inspiring that anything gets done at all. People are being fed, clothed, sheltered (as much as the no tent law allows), live-streaming speeches and Tweeting the latest developments, and receiving medical attention if they need it. It’s a real ground up grassroots thing, powered by personal responsibility to participate in the democratic process. “The lack of focus is unfortunate,” a woman named Christine told me, “but I think if we stay here long enough, other groups will be pulled in.” That’s essential, and it’s happening as I type. Hippies thrive in protest environments, and they can even be useful in procuring humus, for instance, but the face of this movement can’t be obscured with dreadlocks. It’s what wonks call “bad optics.” “It would appear to a lot of people that it’s disorganized,” said Mark Jacobs, the head of a nonprofit from Sante Fe, “but it’s not.” The organic nature of the occupation makes traditional reporting nearly impossible. No one’s in charge; there’s no spokesperson; there are no agreed-upon talking points. And a lot of the time, people have no idea what’s happening. “There’s a lot of misinformation,” a guy named Fumaini told me. “I heard that Blackwater was here.” That was probably my fault, as I was wearing a Blackwater baseball hat. Don’t ask. “People are fed up,” Fumaini said. “They don’t know what to do, and they’re looking for an outlet.” *** The crowd grew steadily all day, with less resemblance to a jam band concert every passing hour. The drums beat. The saxophone wailed. Tai Chi circle. Some sort of meditation. Lots of pizza. Too much pizza, really. “Free hugs!” offered by a Justin Bieber doppelganger. Woody Guthrie all over the damn place. The rain. Signs and tourists. The goddamn rain. And still, morale was high. After last weekends’ pepper spraying Bologna, the movement’s gained steam and a steady flow of coverage, but the day’s media presence was minimal – compared to what it would look like in 24 hours. A little after 3 pm, the balloons arrive. A massive bunch of multicolored helium jobbers on a long string. This means the march is imminent. They’re also functional, giving those near the back of the parade an idea where things are headed. Today, the march headed down Broadway toward the Brooklyn Bridge. Several thousand strong. “Occupy Wall Street!” they chant. “All day! All week!” More cowbell. Across the street, I’ve scurried, limped parallel to the front of the procession. Back already in spasms, this clubfooted reporter gives up the chase, letting the dissenting throng pass by. A few minutes later, a sizable contingent of New York’s Finest hurry past, in what looks like an attempt to handle a crowd bottleneck, as the protesters proceed from the wide sidewalk to the narrower bridge walkway. But the cops don’t corral, and they don’t use the walkway. They’re walking on the roadway. Amazing, I think; with many protesters in tow, the cops are leading the march across the bridge proper. Have the gatekeepers opened the gate? enlarge Credit: Ian Murphy So I’m milling around the sprawling sidewalk area directly across from the entrance to the outbound, smoking and wheezing — not necessarily in that order – when I get a text from Trotsky. He’s a mysterious figure, who’s always on the front lines of the revolution. I last saw him in Madison, Wisconsin at the height of their continuing occupation. “I’m at Nazi Bankers,” it reads. “Where are you?” “Nazi Bankers” was a large sign held by a man at Liberty Square – in accordance with Godwin’s Law. A few texts back and forth. More cigarettes. The passing throng. Another large wave of cops casually huddle up, and stroll down the outbound. I don’t think much of it at the time, but I now realize this was the second line in a variation of a pincer movement. It’s a trap! While some 700 people were being arrested on the bridge, I was abdicating my journalistic responsibility, shooting the breeze with Slate reporter and MSNBC contributor Dave Weigel. “You going across?” he asked. “Hell no.” enlarge Credit: Ian Murphy “You’re going to have to move,” a cop told us. We couldn’t see what the hell was going on down the bridge, but the cops were clearing the line-of-sight just the same. Although it was a public sidewalk, we didn’t put up a fight and walked back to Liberty Square, terrible reporters we are. I kid. I sort of talked him out of going because if he went I’d have felt guilty. And fat – more fat. Weigel mentions that he just got tossed a Paul Ryan interview on the side, and I told him to ask Ryan why he’s such a douche. So look out for that #gamechanger. “All these assignments are just killing time until Romney becomes president,” he says, “and the Obama ‘Hope’ poster becomes completely ironic – officially ironic, more so than it already is.” “Jesus,” I say. “You really think he’ll win?” “Yeah,” he deadpans. I honestly couldn’t tell if he was joking. *** The funny thing about reporting, on the ground, from a modern movement is that people all over the world knew what happened on the bridge before I did via Facebook and Twitter. And even if I’d dragged my gimpy ass across the span, I’d of had no way of reporting the event live, anyway. I take the bus; I don’t have an iPhone; I am the 99 percent – the 60 percent, really. I hooked up with Trotsky and his friend Emily. She was in town for the Slut Walk that took place in Union Square, but decided to check out the occupation, too. More goddamn rain. And it’s getting dark. The police presence at the park thickens, and the protesters who’ve stayed behind to hold the fort look skittish. “$h!t’s about to go down, man,” one guy frantically tells me. “You can just feel it!” Tactically, it would have been a good time for the cops to clear the park, but they didn’t. They just stood there, while news of the arrests reached Liberty Square, silent, arms folded. Gatekeepers. Deliriously tired by this point, and up to my eyes with urine (where the hell do people in Manhattan pee?), I engaged in a vicious, diuretic cycle of Starbucks coffee, bathroom, coffee, bathroom. Corporate coffee is definitely not in line with the spirit of the occupation, but sometimes a dude just needs a pee break. The lack of public restrooms surrounding Liberty Square seems to this small-bladder blogger the biggest obstacle to success. I’d been on a de facto fast, despite easy access to free pizza, for a very tangible threat that I might crap my pants. I’m sorry, but those were the facts on the ground. And unlike the Times coverage of the Battle for the Brooklyn Bridge, I’m sticking to the facts. There will be no rewrite, dear readers. enlarge The rain. Damn the damn rain. Damn. Rain. I found the closest thing to dry cement I could, grabbed an empty water bottle (if nature called, yet again), and crawled into my sleeping bag, silently cursing the goddamn hippie jerk who’d lifted my tarp while I was gone. During the night, some anonymous occupier had wrapped me in another tarp – tarp 2, and left several miniature candy bars near my head. A large cheer rang out through the park into my dreams. Why is that field of sunflowers yelling at me!? Oh, their friends who were arrested, by evil squirrels, have been released. Of course. I stubbornly, sorely woke up, ate the candy bars, and discretely filled the water bottle (don’t judge me!) before realizing I was surrounded by hundreds of splayed out signs and even more protest tourists snapping pictures. It was noon. And I’d shamefully entered hobo territory – faux-bo territory. Credit: Ian Murphy And then Geraldo Rivera’s mustache walked by. It may or may not have been attached to Geraldo Rivera. I was too groggy to tell. A CNN van was parked across the street. Press passes dangled. Notebooks were open. Pens writing. Microphones listening. Quotes demonstrating the immoral nature of the American kleptocracy were being taken, soon to be made into news. The press was suddenly interested in Occupy Wall Street, and the oligarchs who’ve been robbing us all blind. And it only took several hundred arrests to get their attention. The crowd was a respectable thousand or so. It wasn’t a Phish concert. It was like Kenny Rogers was in town. I saw flannel and gray beards – and not just on pizza-seeking homeless gentlemen. A group of teachers were occupying the Northwest corner of the park. This was good. I hung around a while, talking to older people from all over the country, sipping coffee, erasing my tired cynicism, singing Woody Guthrie. My work here was done. The Occupy Together movement has spread, organically, spontaneously to a growing 125 cities worldwide, most in the U.S. And it all started with a whimsical Adbusters poster, and a little marketing help from Anonymous. Even about 50 people showed up to Niagara Square in Buffalo while I was busy having back spasms in Manhattan. The last time I was in Niagara Square, I was unlawfully arrested, for filming a gatekeeper. Next Saturday, I’ll be back with my camera – maybe a guitar, too. That machine kills fascists, I hear. The rules of essay structure now dictate that I tell you, Wall Street is still a wall. In a lot of ways. The very structure of our economic system is meant to keep out the poor, and make more of them, so the wealthy can skim all the cream. Our democracy’s been usurped by the ultra-wealthy to serve at the behest of the same – to the point that their risk has been socialized, absorbed by the taxpayer. The widening chasm between the haves and the have-nots has become too large to ignore, and with this comes the slow realization that the have-nots have all the power. If we just stick together, persist, and demand that things change. Frankly, they should have expected us. It won’t happen overnight, and it won’t be easy, but that’s just how it goes. For all the negative press the occupation has gotten, and how sloppy it truly is in some respects, it’s important to remember the wise words of Donald Rumsfeld, “Democracy is messy.” Ian Murphy is the editor of The BEAST . He sometimes uses something called Twitter .

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Despite Obama’s Defense, GMA Maintains Their Solyndra Scandal Blackout

For the 33rd consecutive day, ABC's Good Morning America on Tuesday omitted any mention of the Obama administration's Solyndra scandal, even though co-host George Stephanopoulos asked the President about it in an interview on Monday and elicited a newsworthy defense of the more than $500 million loan to the now-bankrupt company. Tuesday's show instead focused on other questions from the ABCNews.com/Yahoo online interview, like the best piece of advice the President has received from his wife and whether or not he would stop Bank of America's new monthly debt card fee. Stephanopoulos pressed Obama on Monday about his touting of Solyndra as a cornerstone of his stimulus program not even 18 months before it declared bankruptcy. In fact, he even included the exchange in his segment on that evening's ABC World News. “And for the first time, President Obama had to answer for Solyndra, the solar panel company which failed despite half a million dollars in government loans from the Energy Department,” Stephanopoulos touted on Monday's World News. “President Obama had held it up as a model for green jobs and clean energy.” “Do you regret that?” Stephanopoulos asked the President about the Solyndra loan. “No I don't, because if you look at the overall portfolio of loan guarantees that have been provided, overall it's doing well,” Obama answered. “And what we always understood was that not every single business is going to succeed in clean energy,” he added, noting that “hindsight is always 20/20.” Good Morning America didn't include that exchange but did air Stephanopoulos lobbying the President from the left to “put a stop” to Bank of America's new debit card fee – something NewsBusters reported on yesterday. “More than 40,000 questions came in online for the President, most expressing anxiety and anger about the economy, including outrage about Bank of America's five dollar debt card fee,” Stephanopoulos reported Tuesday morning. “Vicki Menkel wrote, 'Those are the types of things government should get involved in and put a stop to.'” ABC then played his question to the President: “Can you put a stop to that?” “Well you can stop it,” Obama answered, “because if you say to the banks you don't have some inherent right just to get a certain amount of profit, if your customers are being mistreated – and my hope is that you're going to see a bunch of the banks who say to themselves, you know what? This is actually not good business practice.”

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Apple’s ‘Let’s Talk iPhone’ keynote liveblog!

Hey! You made it! But it’s a little early. Not to worry, though — bookmark this page (yes, this one!) and return at the time listed below for our blow-by-blow coverage live from Cupertino! Psst… and toss your own time zone / day in comments below! 07:00AM – Hawaii 10:00AM – Pacific 11:00AM – Mountain 12:00PM – Central 01:00PM – Eastern 06:00PM – London 07:00PM – Paris 09:00PM – Moscow 02:00AM – Tokyo (October 5th) Continue reading Apple’s ‘Let’s Talk iPhone’ keynote liveblog! Apple’s ‘Let’s Talk iPhone’ keynote liveblog! originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 04 Oct 2011 12:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Cheryl Burke

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Cheryl Burke

BJ dancing Fly me to the moon DWTS October 3 2011 Cheryl Burke: Rob Has ‘Lost a Lot of Weight’ from Dancing Rob Kardashian & Cheryl Burke – Foxtrot.wmv CharlesFisher3 says: Dancing’s Cheryl Burke : Rob Kardashian Is Better Than Kim http://t.co/KMXVuP7w

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New Iphone

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New Iphone

iPhone 5 release date new iPhone 5g review be the first to get FREE test HERE new iphone5 Domain Name For Sale, onlineiphone5shop.com iPhone 5 release date new iPhone 5g review be the first to get FREE test HERE the_accidental says: RT @ stevelitchfield : Quite right @ ew4n : http://t.co/bsfsNOwS

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