As Demi Lovato was spiraling out of control, struggling with an eating disorder, self-mutilation and other issues, there were members of her team who knew that she was hurting herself, but did nothing to stop it. So, she fired them. (Sept. 22)
Continue reading …On the day after Iran released two Americans it had held for more than two years on spy charges, US diplomats have walked out of the UN General Assembly during a speech by Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. (Sept. 22)
Continue reading …NY Rep. Hinchey argues against the GOP continuing resolution due to the disaster relief provisions Someone should have told Eric Cantor holding disaster aid hostage for budget cuts was a bad idea. Maybe someone did, but he chose not to listen. The net result of that was a disastrous vote yesterday in the House of Representatives on what should have been a routine continuing resolution to keep agreed-upon budget numbers in place. What happened instead highlights the ongoing and rising tension between the tea party freshmen and the rest of the Republican party. ThinkProgress : Attached to the bill was a highly controversial measure that gives the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s Disaster Relief Fund additional funding to pay for both recent disaster relief efforts and recovery projects from disasters that may have happened years ago — but only by stealing $1.5 BILLION from a successful job creation program to “offset” the spending to help disaster victims. Strangely, Republicans steal $1.5 BILLION from the jobs program, but only offset $1 BILLION in disaster funding. THE JOBS REPUBLICANS WANT TO KILL: The program they want to steal $1.5 BILLION from, the Advanced Technology Vehicles Manufacturing Program , has already created approximately 40,000 American jobs by spurring American manufacturing in 11 states across the country. The program, if it remains fully funded, stands to create at least another 50-60,000 American jobs in states like Missouri, Indiana, Ohio, Florida, Louisiana, Illinois, and Michigan. Democrats whipped against the bill because of its job-killing nature, and it was defeated on a final bipartisan count of 195-230. Here’s the thing: Had Republicans not defected, it would have passed. So the question is, which Republicans defected and why? Can you guess? Yes, tea party freshmen bolted because it didn’t cut enough spending, and because they had vowed not to pass omnibus spending bills. So Democrats bolted because it killed jobs and inadequately funded disaster relief and Republicans bolted because it didn’t kill enough jobs or cut enough spending. Oh, and they think it’s totally okay to shut down the government, too. That leaves John Boehner to figure out whether he’s going to keep pandering to the extreme right wing of his party or try to fashion a compromise with Democrats. According to this National Journal report, he’s very frustrated with the tea party folks right now . Boehner was described as “spitting nails” during a closed-door member meeting on Wednesday, and his harsh talk demonstrated that the usually unflappable speaker is reaching something close to a breaking point with his internally divided conference. Those close to Boehner said there is a growing anger in the leadership that some in the freshman class and other intractable conservatives pay no mind to the legislative dangers of abandoning leadership—especially at a time when Democrats feel as if they and President Obama are fighting for their political lives. Top GOP leadership aides said Boehner knew the stopgap bill would fail and wanted to prove to the Republicans who defected how their actions would force party leaders to negotiate with Democrats to win passage of the must-pass bill. A government shutdown is not an acceptable alternative to GOP leaders, a message Boehner reiterated on Thursday. “There’s no threat of government shutdown—let’s just get this out there,” he said. In private, Boehner has grown tired of what he dismissively calls the “know-it-alls who have all the right answers.” Boehner knew what a defeat would mean—a more costly spending bill, one that provides more emergency disaster relief and contains fewer budget offsets. Oh, John Boehner, you should have gotten some lessons from former Speaker Nancy Pelosi on this. There comes a time where you just have to decide that the hard line won’t work. At some point compromises have to be made. Had Boehner done a deal with Pelosi to include the just-passed Senate Disaster Relief bill as an amendment, it’s possible it could have passed and sent a strong message to Those Who Have The Right Answers. Instead, he’s got a public rift in his party and what looks to be a public spat with Eric Cantor. Cantor framed his arguments as opposition to the Senate disaster bill, but he was really spewing the tea party lines. From Politico , before the vote was taken: “The real debate here is whether we’re going to stick to the agreement of the debt ceiling, which said that we’ve got the fixed number at the top…and are we going to start spending more?” Cantor said Wednesday. “Are we going to allow, yet again, another opportunity to take advantage of a crisis? We’re not for that. We’re for getting the people the disaster relief they need and do so in a responsible manner, and that’s why what you’ll see today is a CR that’ll pass the House floor and go over to the Senate.” Oops! So what did he say afterward? Not much . Oh, by the way. The program they wanted to strip funds from? The Advanced Technology Vehicles Manufacturing Program? Well, that’s an interesting thing, as it turns out, since Darrell Issa pushed for a federal loan guarantee under that very program for a campaign donor. The guarantee wasn’t granted, and the company has returned deposits made for the three-wheeled electric vehicles. Was the choice to cut that program and Issa’s current hair-trigger investigations of green energy programs revenge or stewardship? I’ll let you make that call.
Continue reading …Fox News host Greta Van Susteren and Daily Caller editor Tucker Carlson had a scorching, intense, highly acrimonious debate on Monday night about an article Carlson’s website had run. Van Susteren began a feud with Carlson by taking to her blog and writing a scathing post about a Daily Caller article on some very offensive comments made about Sarah Palin by boxer Mike Tyson. The initial article quoted Tyson at length talking about allegations that Palin had a fling with former basketball player Glen Rice, but did not contain any overt denunciation of the comments. Later, Carlson posted an editor’s note to the piece, stressing that he found Tyson’s quotes “repulsive” — but not before Van Susteren walloped his judgment on her blog. She wrote that Carlson was a “pig” with no judgment who was pushing “smut” and violence against women by letting Tyson’s quotes run without comment. Carlson defended himself, saying he was trying to let Tyson’s words speak for themselves. On Monday, Carlson appeared on Van Susteren’s Fox News show, and it was clear that the two were still in deep disagreement. Carlson said he was confused about Van Susteren’s reaction. “Somehow you assumed that we were somehow making this attack on Sarah Palin, which is the opposite in fact of what we were doing,” he said. Van Susteren wasn’t buying that. “I think you’re lying, Tucker,” she said. She accused him of attaching his editor’s note because people “started raising holy hell” about the post. “It’s not journalism,” she said. “It glorifies violence against women.” “Please stop your ad hominem attacks,” Carlson said. He repeated that the site was merely doing its reporting job, and compared it to quoting a member of Al Qaeda. “You’re not a first offender with me,” Van Susteren said. “I gave you the benefit of the doubt six months ago when you wrote that MILF comment [about Sarah Palin] on your tweet.” Carlson fired back by noting that, during Tyson’s most recent appearance on Van Susteren’s show, the host had “asked him nothing about his sexual assault.” He wondered why Van Susteren was getting so angry about Tyson now. The two then shouted over each other for some time. “You’re a purveyor of the worst smut and violence against women!” Van Susteren told Carlson. “…You tried to hide it with that little editorial note.” The conversation continued until Van Susteren’s producer forced her to go to commercial. After the show, Van Susteren took to her blog, saying the conversation “didn’t go well.” Carlson, on the other hand, tweeted that he had “genuinely enjoyed” the chat. WATCH:
Continue reading …Jada Yuan’s profile of Zooey Deschanel in last week’s New York Magazine asked whether Deschanel’s distinctive brand of adorableness reinforces Hollywood stereotypes about women or expands them. Deschanel, whom Yuan describes as “the paragon of femininity,” is the Katy Perry doppelganger who’s spent the last decade cementing her place as a darling of the indie-film world. This fall, Deschanel steers her acting career in a different direction, starring in a new sitcom called “New Girl” about an eccentric woman who moves in with three single men following a difficult breakup. I haven’t yet seen “New Girl” (it premieres tonight on Fox), but it sounds equal parts worrisome and promising. Some of Deschanel’s character’s traits — “watching ‘Dirty Dancing’ six times a day, sobbing uncontrollably” — seem like echoes of some of the most unfortunate clichés about women that exist. On the plus side, “New Girl’s” comedy ostensibly has a screwball bent that’s been lacking on network TV in recent seasons. Even better, it was created by a female writer named Liz Meriwether who based Deschanel’s character on herself and who told Yuan approvingly, “I didn’t think I could find someone as weird as I am.” Where Meriwether sees weirdness, others see girlishness — and some critics have a problem with that. According to Yuan, some women “resent [Deschanel] for seemingly playing into the male fantasy that women are only attractive when they act like girls.” Yuan quotes a handful of men who find Deschanel attractive (“She’s so hot!,” etc.) and alludes to a controversy that briefly lit up the feminist blogosphere earlier this year when the writer and comedian Julie Klausner wrote a post claiming that women who adopt a cutesy Deschanelesque sensibility make it easier for men to denigrate women. (In the New York profile, Deschanel responds to her critics, saying, “I think the fact that people are associating being girlie with weakness, that needs to be examined.”) What I find baffling about the controversy surrounding Deschanel’s trademark adorableness is that she doesn’t fall neatly into a feminine pigeonhole. Yes, she is thin, white, conventionally beautiful, and bubbly, and she has an apparently authentic enthusiasm for cupcakes and baby animals. But she has played characters who curse indiscriminately (“The Good Girl”), defy their parents (“Almost Famous”), and reject the men who love them (“500 Days of Summer”) — not exactly ladylike behaviors — and her laugh (which Yuan describes rapturously as “as the joyous union of a bray, a bark, and a honk”) is decidedly unfeminine. Deschanel, as far as I can tell from her films and Yuan’s profile is, like all of us, complicated: a mix of soft and hard, girly and nerdy, silly and serious. The fact that Deschanel’s aesthetic seems to have struck a chord in Hollywood and America at large, so much so that she is now carrying her own sitcom, doesn’t bother me — more power to her. Getting to where Deschanel is in her career undoubtedly requires a significant amount of hard work, talent, and drive, and if Deschanel’s natural good looks and childlike idiosyncrasies have helped her along the way, so be it. If anything bothers me, it’s that there aren’t enough female faces and voices in Hollywood that look and sound significantly different from Deschanel’s. Where are the sitcoms written by and starring women of color, lesbian and bisexual women, women whose bodies don’t fit into sample-size clothing? Where are the scripts about women who hate movies like “Dirty Dancing,” who attack every problem with unflagging rationality, who don’t really enjoy baking cupcakes or sewing clothes? These women are no worse or better than the kind of woman Deschanel epitomizes — but they exist, and Hollywood would be a far more interesting place if it began representing them, too.
Continue reading …Should you need another reason to pack it in and go back to bed: After falling 284 points yesterday following the Fed’s announcement of Operation Twist , which investors interpreted as yet another gloomy assessment of the economy, the Dow kicked off today by plunging even more—a lot more. The…
Continue reading …It’s been a big week for amateur scientists, as TPM points out. About 40,000 people were recognized for helping Yale University astronomers locate two new planets beyond our solar system that may have Earth-like qualities through an online crowd-sourcing project. Meanwhile, amateur astronomer Theirry Legault captured images of the giant, earth-bound NASA satellite as it passed
Continue reading …Senate Democratic leaders Senate are urging the House to pass a stand alone disaster relief measure. The GOP-controlled House on Wednesday rejected a $3.7 billion in disaster relief as part of a bill to avert a government shutdown. (Sept. 22)
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Millionaire Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney said Wednesday that he was seeking better tax policies for people in the middle-class like himself. “I think it’s a real problem when you have half of Americans — almost half of Americans that are not paying income tax,” the candidate told a group of supporters at a town hall event in Florida. “My own view with regards to tax policy is that we ought to provide help to the people that have been hurt most by the Obama economy, and that’s the middle class.” “It’s not those at the low end and it’s certainly not for those at the very high end. It’s for the great middle-class, the 80 to 90 percent of us in this country.” Earlier at the same event, he had promised not to pander or be “phony.” In June, Romney told another group of unemployed Floridians that he was “also unemployed.” The former Massachusetts governor has a net worth estimated at up to $250 million . Earlier this month, a supporter in Tampa thanked him for creating jobs by quadrupling the size of his $12 million California beachfront mansion. Romney and his wife Ann also own homes in Lake Winnipesaukee, New Hampshire and Boston, Massachusetts. They recently sold two other homes in Belmont, Massachusetts and near Park City, Utah for about $8.75 million.
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