Image: The Last Cookie via flickr First, the Obama administration this week upheld the much-lambasted Bush-era decision to label polar bears as threatened rather than endangered. Then, it opened up critical polar bear habitat to offshore drilling. … Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Images credit House Industries Show and Tell No doubt you will see these someday on Unhappy Hipsters in the hands of cute little children in a minimalist Japanese home. Herman Miller in Japan is selling these lovely childrens’ blocks celebrating George Nelson, Charles Eames and Alexander Girard. The designers at House Industries describes them: The puzzle sides are based on the original Herma… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Even as the public grew increasingly disenchanted with Washington's full-throated liberal policies in 2010, the media elite's partisanship remained on full display. The Media Research Center's Best Notable Quotables of 2010 captured the highlights, as journalists continued to blame America's misfortunes on George W. Bush, even as they also insisted that Barack Obama deserved more credit for his amazing accomplishments. In the MRC's ” They Don't Miss Him Yet Award for Still Bashing Bush ,” Time's Joe Klein took the prize for insisting that the April 2010 Gulf oil spill was really Bush's fault: “This is more Bush’s second Katrina than Obama’s first,” Klein lamely insisted on The Chris Matthews Show. Klein made his crack on May 30, nearly 500 days after Bush left the Oval Office. read more
Continue reading …Images: DesignJoo From South Korean design studio DesignJoo comes the Giro One, the piece that lets you put your own spin on your shelves, lighting, and side tables. The concept is simple: shelves can be added and their height adjusted by spinning them up or down a central pole, at whose top are fixed two LED lamps. Set a shelf low enough, you’ve got a side table. Need more space for your library? Add on a few more shelves, and you’ve got a full, three-way bookshelf. … Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Bonnie previously noted that Brussels Sprouts are Back in Style . They are evidently a holiday thing in the UK; Former Toronto Mayor and former Brit David Miller complained on Twitter that they were all sold out and was overwhelmed with responses, including one offer to mail him some from Brussels. But back ‘ome he could have just gone to the Burger King, which has put them on the menu; a spokesperson notes: To many people, sprouts are just those little green cabbages that sit on the Christmas dinner… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …We’ve seen our fair share of budget tablets from the Augens , Cobys , and Viewsonics of the world over the last six months, but let’s not forget that before everyone and their mother jumped into the cheap-o Android tablet pool, Archos was already in the shallow end with its own sub-$200 tablets. But, while the company was first to market, products like the Archos 5 and 7 Home Tablet certainly weren’t anything to wait in line for — they both packed slow processors, resistive displays, and ran outdated versions of Google’s mobile OS. Whether it was the mediocre reviews or the competition coming up behind them, the French company knew it was time to step it up, and its Archos 70 and 101 attempt to right all those wrongs. The 7- and 10-inch tablet both have Android 2.2 , 1GHz ARM Cortex A8 processors, and capacitive screens. Oh, and don’t forget the front-facing VGA cameras. With each ringing up at $299, has Archos finally mastered the art of the cheap tablet? Find out in our full review! Gallery: Archos 70 and 101 Internet Tablets Continue reading Archos 70 and 101 Internet Tablet review Archos 70 and 101 Internet Tablet review originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 24 Dec 2010 12:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …The CBPP has a disturbing report out today on the new rules expected to be adopted by the Tea Party House of Representatives. It’s going to be a long two years. The new rules announced December 22 would replace pay-as-you-go with a much weaker, one-sided “cut-as-you-go” rule, under which increases in mandatory spending would still have to be paid for but tax cuts would not. In addition, increases in mandatory spending could be offset only by reductions in other mandatory spending, not by any measure to raise revenues such as by closing unproductive special-interest tax loopholes. For example, the House would be barred from paying for continuation of a provision enacted in 2009 (and extended in the just-enacted tax compromise) that enables many minimum-wage families to receive a full, rather than a partial, Child Tax Credit by closing wasteful tax breaks for multinational corporations that shelter profits overseas. Use of such an offset would violate the new House rules because the provision expanding the Child Tax Credit for working-poor families counts as spending and hence could not be paid for by closing a tax loophole. Yet the same new rules would enable the House to expand tax loopholes for multinational corporations and wealthy investors without paying for those tax breaks at all, because any tax cut, no matter how costly or ill-advised, could now be deficit financed. The new rules would stand the reconciliation process on its head , by allowing the House to use reconciliation to push through bills that greatly increase deficits as long as the deficit increases result from tax cuts, while barring the use of reconciliation in the House for legislation that reduces the deficit if that legislation contains a net increase in spending (no matter how small) that is more than offset by revenue-raising provisions. Under the Democratic-led House, reconciliation could only be used if it was deficit-neutral. The health care bill, for example, had effective dates pushed way out in order to spread out the cost in a way that would be offset by revenues coming in against it. Otherwise they couldn’t have gotten it through. Under this new House of Representatives, it won’t matter whether the deficit increases as the result of tax cuts provided they slash spending elsewhere. Basically, they’re rolling back everything to the Bush years when it comes to the budget and spending. I predict an ugly 2 years ahead, with battles over everything but defense spending.
Continue reading …A top military official says new warnings about insulated beverage containers are an example of federal officials trying to anticipate terror tactics. (Dec. 24)
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