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A year after Facebook billionaire Mark Zuckerberg announced on “Oprah” that he was giving $100 million to the troubled school system in Newark, N.J., city officials say at least some of that money will go directly to teachers. About $600,000 will be parceled out in $10,000 grants to teachers who come up with innovative classroom programs,

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Afghans Pay Respect to Slain Leader

Afghans paid respect to Burhanuddin Rabbani the day after the former president was assassinated. Officials said the suicide bomber who killed him had waited for days to meet with Rabbani. (Sept. 21)

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ShowBiz Minute: Kutcher, Hilton, DWTS

Ashton Kutcher sets sitcom record; Paris Hilton finishes probation in Vegas drug case; First celebrity gets ejected from ‘Dancing with the Stars.’ (Sept. 21)

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Reagan’s Failed Sell of Government as Too Big

enlarge Credit: Associated Press Here’s a history lesson from the fall of 1973: it’s been very, very hard for the right to bamboozle the country into agreeing with them that big government is bad for their well-being. Their progress has been halting, fragile, and easily reversed. Because, of course, it is not bad for their well-being—it is imperative—for really, people are not all that stupid. But they keep trying, and they will keep trying, with far too many assists from people in our own beloved and benighted Democratic Party—because weakening government is all too good for the well-being of powerful interests that, well, are not good for the the well-being of the country at all. In 1973 Ronald Reagan got really got serious for the first time about running for President. His vehicle, Team Reagan decided, would be a ballot initiative designed to show the world that the people of California agreed with their governor: government wasn’t the solution to our problems. Government was the problem. Then, once the ballot initiative passed, he would barnstorm the country selling the idea to other states, and be hailed as a hero. The idea was born because that year, some bad accounting and an improving economy had left the state of California with a nearly $1 billion fiscal surplus. Reagan’s announced intention was to “return the money to taxpayers,” writing into the California constitution a cap on both taxes and government spending. The architects included an economist named Milton Friedman and his gubernatorial chief of staff Edwin Meese—appropriate names, because in every respect “Propostion 1″ was a perfect template for a generation of conservative movement appeals to follow that—well, let’s quote Ronald Reagan himself: “Are we automatically destined to tax and spend, spend and tax indefinitely, until the people have nothing left of their earnings for themselves? Have we abandoned or forgotten the interests and well-being of the taxpayer whose toil makes government possible in the first place? Or is he to become a pawn in a deadly game of government monopoly whose only purpose is to serve the confiscatory appetites of runaway government spending?” Ronald Reagan put everything he had into selling Proposition 1. It was a brilliant, deeply Reaganite political performance. The leader of the anti-Proposition 1 forces, Democratic Assembly Speaker Robert Moretti, said he was in favor of lowering taxes too, just like he was “in favor of motherhood” and “against sin.” He just thought turning the state Constitution into an iron corset was madness. He, too, marshaled an array of statistics to demonstrate why Proposition 1 could not do what it was intended to do, and challenged the governor to debate. Reagan refused him. Moretti explained why he thought Reagan was ducking him: because in any tax limitation program that included, as Reagan’s did, an expenditure ceiling, programs would have to be cut, and “He knows he cannot answer the questions we raise as to which programs will be cut.” So he challenged the governor again and again and again and again—and five times Reagan refused him. Reagan was playing an entirely different game. When he made statistical claims, he blithely let them contradict each another. For instance, they said his plan would create deficits. He responded it would produce $41.5 billion in 15 years in new money. But then he also stated as the plan’s fundamental intention giving the state less money to spend. His critics would scratch their heads—and unveil another brace of statistics. Then he would respond with moralistic perorations, making them look like pedantic asses—which was the game he was playing: “When the advocates of bigger and bigger government manage to get their hands on an extra tax dollar or two,” he would quip, “they hang on like a gila monster until they find some way to spend it.” Again, his opponents opponents threw up their hands. If Reagan wanted to cut taxes and spending, what of his last seven years as governor? California’s secretary of state, who was also the son of the governor Reagan replaced in 1966 and who himself hoped to succeed him in 1974, pointed out that he’d increased both dramatically. And already had a line-item veto, which he had never effectively used. “How can a magic formula, written by invisible lawyers,” Jerry Brown asked, “do what Ronald Reagan has been unwilling or unable to do?” The same services Reagan had been refusing to cut in the last seven years as governor, critics would logically observe, would suffer. Reagan would indicate the emergency fund would protect them. But then he would say he didn’t even want to protect government bureaucrats anyway. But if government employees were all money-sucking monsters, why was the state budget in surplus in the first place? But demagoguery, it seemed, was working. On Election Eve the Las Vegas oddsmaker Jimmy the Greek gave Proposition 1 a three to one chance of passage. Then came election day. Proposition 1 was crushed 54 to 46 percent. One conservative state senator said that if the governor used the same strategy to run for president, he’d “be lucky to find a plane ticket to where the convention is.” What happened? You might say the ideological conditions were not yet ripe. Just how radically those ideological conditions have changed between then and now is suggested by an extraordinary editorial on Proposition 1 that appeared in the far-off Milwaukee Journal . Entitled “Voters Smarter Than Reagan,” it argued Californians’ admirably “saw through the phoniness, and recognized the menace to the well-being of the commonwealth of this scheme.” Now check this out. The Milwaukee Journal continued, “the proposition had the surface appeal of the politicians’ favorite, but false, homily that says government should ‘live within its income like everyone else.’ Government in fact is not like everyone else, but uniquely different. It alone can, and most be able to, determine the level of its own income, through the taxing power. To equate its financial situation with that of a private household is utter illogic.” I need not dwell on the fact that what a provincial newspaper late in 1973 saw as “utter illogic” is n ow the hegemonic common sense even among ostensibly liberal Democrats, and is the favorite budgetary metaphor of President Obama himself. Now, as most of us know, a tax limitation proposal was indeed written into the California constitution, in the form of Proposition 13, five years later. I don’t have time to go into the details, but the reasons Proposition 13 won were highly contingent to the entirely unique fiscal situation of California at the time, and had little to do with any universal rejection of government itself. What did happen, however, was that conservatives quite effectively claimed Proposition 13 as a nationwide mandate for radical reduction of taxation and government. They did that, of course, in 1980 too—and had lots of success passing budgets and laws that harmonized with the claim. But here is a very crucial point about our political moment: Ronald Reagan did not get elected because he promised to dismantle big government in America. The statistics are compiled in the perennially useful 1986 study Right Turn: The Decline of the Democrats and the Future of American Politics by Thomas Ferguson and Joel Rogers. One poll they cite from Opinion Research Corporation asked voters in 1980 whether “too much” was being spent on the environment, health, education, welfare, and urban aide programs. Only 21 percent thought so, the same percentage as in 1976, 1977, and 1978, The amount saying the amount spent was either “Too little” or “about right” was never lower in those years than 72 percent. The number favoring keeping “taxes and services about where they are” was the same in 1975 and 1980—45 percent. The pattern continued well into Reagan’s presidency. In 1983 the Los Angeles Times found that only five percent of Americans found regulations “too strict,” while 42 percent called them “not strong enough.” Between 1978 and 1982, according to surveys from the Chicago Council on Foreign Relations, the number of voters who wished to “expand” rather than “cut back” not just social spending in general, but the dreaded “welfare” programs, increased by 26 percentage points. And finally, in 1984, when Reagan’s approval rating was 68 percent, only 35 percent favored cuts in social programs to reduce the deficit, which of course was their president’s strenuously stated preference on the matter. 65 percent believed such cuts were imminent—and, of course, that November, well over 60 percent of them voted for Reagan instead of the Democrat Walter Mondale. Think of those 1976-1984 public opinion statistics when you read the ones today that show the vast majority of the American public want jobs, not cuts—and for rich people and corporations to finally pay their fair share in taxes. And yet, still, somehow, the engines of austerity keep grinding on, and taxes on corporations and the rich keep getting lower, and lower, and lower. It’s frustrating, baffling. Rogers and Ferguson call that “policy alignment without electoral realignment.” How and why did it happen? That will have to be a topic for another time.

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Raw Video: Migrants Clash With Italian Police

Migrants clashed with police at an overcrowded holding center on the tiny Italian island of Lampedusa Wednesday. (Sept. 21)

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Mexican Motorists Witness Gruesome Body Dump

Suspected drug traffickers blocked traffic on a main road and dumped 35 slain victims during rush hour in a Gulf of Mexico city while gunmen stood guard and pointed their weapons at horrified motorists. (Sept. 21)

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Eee Pad Slider shipping now, Archos 80 G9 hits pre-order status

It’s practically raining tablets these days, and two more just hit the market. Of course, the Asus Eee Pad Slider and Archos 80 G9 were announced some time ago, but now you can finally handover your hard-earned paper for one of these Android 3.2-sporting devices. The Slider is already available from a variety of outlets, including New Egg and Amazon, starting at $479, while the G9 is up for pre-order direct from Archos starting at just $299. If you need a reminder of what to expect from the latest Honeycomb slates you should check out our hands-on coverage before hitting those source links and loading up your shopping cart. [Thanks, BH] Eee Pad Slider shipping now, Archos 80 G9 hits pre-order status originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 21 Sep 2011 12:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Julian Assange publishers to release autobiography without his consent

Canongate to publish ‘unauthorised first draft’ of WikiLeaks founder’s autobiography it has secretly printed and shipped Julian Assange’s publishers will tomorrow publish “the unauthorised first draft” of his autobiography without his consent, months after the WikiLeaks founder withdrew from a million-pound contract for his memoirs. In a dramatic move, Canongate has defied Assange’s wishes and secretly printed thousands of copies of The Unauthorised Autobiography, by Julian Assange, copies of which have been shipped amid strict security to booksellers in preparation for imminent release. The enormous security operation put in place by the publishers, according to a source, was in order to stop the author blocking publication. Assange signed a high-profile deal, reportedly worth a total of £930,000, with the Edinburgh-based publisher and the US firm Alfred A Knopf in December. The manuscript was subsequently sold in 35 countries. Assange said at the time he believed the book would beocme “one of the unifying documents of our generation”. But after seeing a first draft in March, the WikiLeaks founder told his publishers that he no longer intended to write the book, believing it could give ammunition to US prosecutors seeking his extradition over possible espionage charges relating to the WikiLeaks cable release. He formally withdrew from his contract on 7 June. According to the Independent, which has announced it is to serialise the book, starting tomorrow, the publisher and Assange have been locked in a bitter dispute since then over the contract and his £500,000 advance, which he has not returned. Assange, requiring funds for his legal fight against extradition to Sweden on rape and sexual assault charges, is understood to have placed the advance in escrow, meaning that his legal team have first claim on any assets.The Independent said Andrew O’Hagan, Assange’s ghostwriter, had asked for his name to be removed from the book. Neither Assange, O’Hagan, nor his current or former lawyers were available for comment. “Despite sitting for more than 50 hours of taped interviews and spending many late nights at Ellingham Hall in Norfolk (where he was – and still is – living under house arrest) discussing his life and the work of WikiLeaks with the writer he had enlisted to help him, Julian became increasingly troubled by the thought of publishing an autobiography,” Canongate said in a statement. “After reading the first draft of the book that was delivered to the publishers at the end of March, he declared, ‘All memoir is prostitution’. “On 7 June 2011, Julian told Canongate he wanted to cancel his contract. However, he had already signed his advance over to his lawyers to settle his legal bills and has not repaid the advance owed since. So the contract still stands and Canongate has decided to honour it and publish the autobiography.” According to the Independent, Canongate, faced with a financial crisis, gave Assange two months to work on the manuscript, and, finally, a 12-day window to seek an injunction, which expired on Monday. But, according to a source, the top secrecy around publication had been in order to stop “the author” blocking publication. In his memoir, the paper says, Assange writes of the Swedish allegations that he had been warned by a source in an unnamed intelligence agency that the US government had been planning to set him up. He admits to sleeping with the two women, and to being “an unreliable boyfriend”. “The international situation had me in its grip, and although I had spent time with these women, I wasn’t paying enough attention to them, or ringing them back, or able to step out of the zone that came down with all these threats and statements against me in America,” he states. “One of my mistakes was to expect them to understand this? I wasn’t a reliable boyfriend, or even a very courteous sleeping partner, and this began to figure. Unless, of course, the agenda had been rigged from the start.” In a preface to the book, Canongate explains its reasons for defying Assange’s wishes. “We disagree with Julian’s assessment of the book. We believe it explains both the man and his work, underlining his commitment to the truth. Julian always claimed the book was well written; we agree, and this also encouraged us to make the book available to readers.” The volume, Canongate said, “fulfils … the promise of the original book proposal and is, like its author, passionate, provocative and opinionated”. Julian Assange WikiLeaks Biography Esther Addley guardian.co.uk

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Nick Clegg: we can and will do more for growth and jobs

Liberal Democrat leader closes party conference with speech urging supporters: ‘Never apologise for the difficult things we are having to do’ The Liberal Democrat leader, Nick Clegg, closed the party’s conference on Wednesday with a promise that the party “can and will do more” to help a worsening economy. Stressing that the coalition would not veer from its commitment to eliminate the structural deficit by the end of the parliament, he admitted there was a “long, hard road ahead”. Quoting JS Mill, he added: “the only struggles worth having are the uphill ones” and urged his party to lift their spirits, saying: “Never apologise for the difficult things we are having to do.” He said the Lib Dems were anchoring the government to the centre ground and keeping it to a liberal path. The party had grown up by going through the door of government, he said, doing the right thing and not the easy thing in the national interest. Clegg also promised to keep the Human Rights Act, continue to reform the health service, build a new balanced economy and “fight for greater fairness, even in the headwinds of an economic slowdown”. He told the conference: “In a coalition, we have two kinds of power – the power to hold our coalition partners back and the power to move the government forwards, so we can keep the government to a liberal path, anchor the government in the centre ground.” In a lengthy passage on the state of the economy, he said the “outlook for the global economy has got worse”, adding: “We need to do more, we can do more, and we will do more for growth and jobs.” But his aides insisted the speech should not be seen as a call to increase capital spending or bring forward planned spending, saying the goal remained to eliminate the structural deficit by 2015. Faced with calls from some of his party colleagues to loosen controls on capital spending, Clegg said deficit reduction laid the foundations for growth and no shortcuts existed. Claiming “we were right to pull the economy back from the brink”, he said the recovery was “fragile”, adding: “In the last few days alone, we have seen a financial storm in the eurozone, rising unemployment, falling stock markets. “It is clearer now than ever that deficit reduction was essential to protect the economy, to protect homes and jobs. Deficit reduction lays the foundations for growth. “Handing control of the economy to the bond traders: that’s not progressive. Burying your head in the sand: that’s not liberal. Saddling our children with the nation’s debt: that’s not fair.” The speech was designed to set out a route map for the Lib Dems in government, with Clegg claiming that the party – still floundering at 10% in the polls – would eventually gain respect for acting in the national interest. The Lib Dems he said, had moved from the easy promises of opposition to the invidious choices of government. Uniquely, he said, the party stood up against a trinity of vested interests – media moguls, union barons and greedy bankers. Clegg admitted: “None of us could have predicted how tough government would be. “We’ve lost support, we’ve lost councillors, and we lost a referendum. I know how painful it has been to face anger and frustration on the doorstep. Some of you may have even wondered: will it all be worth it in the end?” But he claimed he and the Lib Dems had “picked themselves up and had now come out fighting for the NHS, human rights and families”. Unlike the speeches of many of his cabinet colleagues earlier in the week, his remarks were devoid of attacks on the Conservatives, instead highlighting party differences by referring to Lib Dem policies such as higher personal allowances and the pupil premium. But the leader’s speech contained pointed criticisms of Labour over the economy and for being under the control of the trade unions. In his sole explicit reference to the Tory right he said: “The left accuse us of being powerless puppets, duped by a rightwing Conservative clique. The right accuse us of being a sinister leftwing clique who’ve duped powerless Conservatives. I do wish they’d make up their minds.” He claimed the party had matured, saying: “We proved something about ourselves last year, when we faced a historic choice – whether or not to enter government in coalition with the Conservatives. “The easy thing would have been to sit on the opposition benches throwing rocks at the government as it tried to get control of the public finances. It might even, in the short run, have been more popular, but it would not have been right. At that moment, Britain needed a strong government.” In a reference to the political rows disabling the US, Clegg said: “While other countries have been riven by political bickering, we have shown that a coalition forged in a time of emergency could be a different kind of government, governing differently.” In a series of attacks on Labour, he described Ed Balls and Ed Miliband as”the backroom boys at the time when Labour was failing to balance the books, failing to regulate the financial markets, and failing to take on the banks”. “The two Eds, behind the scenes, lurking in the shadows, always plotting, always scheming, never taking responsibility. At this time of crisis what Britain needs is real leadership. This is no time for the backroom boys,” he said, adding that people should “never, ever trust Labour with our economy again”. Clegg called Miliband’s claim to be the enemy of vested interest risible, and said: “While we were campaigning for change in the banking system, they were on their prawn cocktail offensive in the City. “While we’ve led the charge against the media barons, Labour has cowered before them for decades. The most shocking thing about the news that Tony Blair is godfather to one of Rupert Murdoch’s children is that nobody was really shocked at all.” He said it was wrong for the unions to be able to “buy themselves” a party, and challenged Miliband to sanction proposed reforms to the party funding system due to be published shortly by Sir Christopher Kelly, the chairman of standards in public life. “We are all stuck in a system that we know is wrong,” he said. “We’ve all been damaged by it. But if we learned anything from the expenses scandal, it is surely that, if the system’s broken, we should not wait for the next scandal. We should fix it, and fix it fast.” He also addressed the anger still felt in the country and among Liberal Democrats over the party’s “heart-wrenching” decision to treble tuition fees in breach of its manifesto promise. “Like all of you, I saw the anger. I understand it. I felt it. I have learned from it. And I know how much damage this has done to us as a party,” he said. “Probably the most important lesson I have learned is this: no matter how hard you work on the details of a policy, it’s no good if the perception is wrong. We failed to properly explain the dilemmas. We failed to explain that there were no other easy options. And we have failed so far to show that the new system will be much, much better than people fear.” He ended by telling delegates: “Hold your heads up and look our critics squarely in the eye. “Never apologise for the difficult things we are having to do. We are serving a great country at a time of great need. There are no shortcuts, but we won’t flinch.” Nick Clegg Liberal Democrat conference Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrat conference 2011 Economic policy Economics Global economy Recession Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk

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Raw Video: Restaurant Boat Capsizes on River

In China, a restaurant boat breaks free of its moorings, colliding with another boat. One firefighter uses a rope to reach the troubled vessel. Authorities say all 11 people were rescued from the water. (Sept. 21)

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