While NBC on Tuesday focused on the “funny” and “intelligent” side of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, Nightline's Brian Ross conducted a tough, hard-hitting investigation into the questionable finances of the man attacked by colleagues
Continue reading …So just what is the Creative ZiiEagle Movie Box? What exactly do you get from this? Here’s what we’ve gathered: A set-top box featuring 668 movies from Celestial’s Shaw Brothers Film Collection. “3,000 years of Chinese culture and secrets of the much elusive ‘Confucian thing.’” A price tag — 888 Singapore dollars ($676 in US currency) — that “solves the perennial video piracy problem in one stroke.” The reason for that awesome picture above to exist. Singapore, consider yourself enlightened, and consider your days of video piracy officially numbered. Creative ZiiEagle Movie Box promises 3,000 years of Chinese culture in one sleek burgundy package originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Dec 2010 15:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …The “Helping Hand” is glove-like device is designed to identify different products through the use of radio frequency tags, or RFIDs. (Dec. 15)
Continue reading …At least 41 people killed in attack on the eve of Ashoura as Sunni rebel group Jundollah claims responsibility Iran’s state-run news network captures the scene after the bombing Photograph: Press TV/EPA Iran’s biggest Shia religious holiday was overshadowed by a suicide bombing today that killed 41 people in eastern province of Sistan-Baluchistan. It was claimed by a Sunni rebel group. The attack at the Imam Hussein mosque in the port city of Chabahar, close to the Pakistani border, happened during a religious ceremony on the eve of Ashoura. More than 50 people were injured in the attack involving four bombers, two of whom detonated explosives attached to their belts. A third was shot at by…
Continue reading …As expected, the Senate passed the much discussed Tax Cut deal with overwhelming support, 81-19. The Senate on Wednesday approved a sweeping tax package negotiated by the White House and congressional Republicans, and House leaders – who were looking to amend the measure in a way that would satisfy liberals without unraveling the deal altogether – said a House vote could follow as soon as Thursday. The Senate’s approval of the bill came after three amendments were decisively rejected. One, sponsored by Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.), would have permanently extended all of the Bush tax cuts. Another, introduced by Sen. Bernard Sanders (I-Vt.), would have excluded the wealthiest 2 percent of Americans from the tax-cut extension…. read on .
Continue reading …Image: joost j. bakker via flickr Still waiting for the opportunity to report some good news on coal ash , but unfortunately, that’s not today. Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER) has sent a letter to the Pennsylvania State Auditor complaining about the disposal of toxic coal ash into abandoned mines, causing water pollution and toxic vapors, all under the c… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …The only way to open this editorial is to admit something I’ve been rather shy about on the pages of Engadget: I’ve been an avid BlackBerry fan and user for about six years now. I mean a real addict — the kind who wakes up each morning looking for a blinking red LED, the kind who’s refused to give up push email and BlackBerry Messenger in favor of more powerful, polished, and progressive mobile operating systems like iOS, Android, and webOS. In fact, when my Verizon contract was up last year I opted to get a Curve 8530 instead of the Motorola Droid or Palm Pre — to say nothing of making the leap over to AT&T for the iPhone. There were lots of reasons I didn’t want to give up my BlackBerry, but five days ago I lost that very Curve in a San Fransisco cab. Then coincidentally, a day later I saw RIM co-CEO Mike Lazaridis speak at the D: Dive Into Mobile conference , where he almost embarrassingly avoided every question about the company’s immediate smartphone strategy. I had always known that RIM was behind the curve (always a great pun!), but I also always had hope that the company would catch up with modern smartphones of today. Sadly, watching Mike dodge questions on the D stage took that hope away from me — it’s crystal clear that RIM won’t have a solution to compete with those powerful smartphones anytime soon. So, what happens to a BlackBerry diehard like myself? Where do I go from here? Continue reading Editorial: RIM seems to be as lost as my BlackBerry Editorial: RIM seems to be as lost as my BlackBerry originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Dec 2010 15:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …enlarge Credit: Economic Policy Institute Move over, welfare queens, IRS agents and trial lawyers. The Republican Party has a new bogeyman: the public employee . With a sluggish U.S. economy, cash-strapped states and under-funded pension programs, Tim Pawlenty , Sarah Palin and other leading lights of the GOP are scape-goating government workers and their unions for the nation’s woes. Of course, there’s only one problem with Rush Limbaugh’s claim that public sector employees are “freeloaders” and the charge from Indiana Governor and GOP White House hopeful Mitch Daniels that they are a “new privileged class in America.” Like so much other conservative mythmaking, it’s simply not true . But that didn’t stop outgoing Minnesota Governor and 2012 Republican presidential contender Tim Pawlenty this week from pretending otherwise. In a Monday Wall Street Journal op-ed titled ” Government Unions vs. Taxpayers ,” Governor Pawlenty echoed half-term Governor Sarah Palin by targeting “unionized public employees [who] are making more money, receiving more generous benefits, and enjoying greater job security than the working families forced to pay for it with ever-higher taxes, deficits and debt.” How did this happen? Very quietly. The rise of government unions has been like a silent coup, an inside job engineered by self-interested politicians and fueled by campaign contributions. Pawlenty repeated his charge to Fox News on Monday: “You have public employees making more than their private-sector counterparts. They used to be under-benefited and underpaid. Now they’re both over-benefited and overpaid…it needs to stop.” Sadly for would-be President Pawlenty, the charge – whether at the federal, state or local level – is false. That’s the conclusion of a recent study by the Economic Policy Institute . Just one of many recent analyses debunking Republican charges about government workers and their unions, EPI found that “on average, state and local government workers are compensated 3.75% less than workers in the private sector.” (See the table above for details.) The report by Labor and Employment Relations Professor Jeffrey Keefe of Rutgers University revealed that public employees are undercompensated compared to similarly skilled private sector counterparts: The study analyzes workers with similar human capital. It controls for education, experience, hours of work, organizational size, gender, race, ethnicity and disability and finds that, compared to workers in the private sector, state government employees are undercompensated by 7.55% and local government employees are undercompensated by 1.84%. The study also finds that the benefits that state and local government workers receive do not offset the lower wages they are paid. The public/private earnings differential is greatest for doctors, lawyers and professional employees, the study finds. High school-educated public workers, on the other hand, are more highly compensated than private sector employees, because the public sector sets a floor on compensation. The earnings floor has collapsed in the private sector. Those findings echoed the results of another new study of the public worker wage penalty in New England . That joint research by the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR) and the Political Economy Research Institute of the University of Massachusetts upended tired union-bashing claims from the likes of Chris Christie (“There are “two classes of people in New Jersey: Public employees who receive rich benefits, and those who pay for them”) and Mitt Romney (“Average government workers are now making $30,000 a year more than the average private-sector worker”): In this study, “The Wage Penalty for State and Local Government Employees in New England,” PERI’s Jeffrey Thompson and John Schmitt of the Center for Economic Policy Research demonstrate that in New England the reality is the opposite. While the average state or local government worker does earn higher wages than in the private sector, this is because they are, on average, older and substantially better educated. In reality, there is a wage penalty for public workers in New England of close to 3%. To be sure, the attack on public employees heated up this summer, when Republicans in Congress pulled out all the stops to block a new federal aid package to state and local governments. Despite studies showing that cash-strapped states could shed as many as 900,000 teachers, policemen, firefighters and other workers, the Senate Republican Policy Committee insisted: “No state bailouts should be contemplated until the wages and pensions of public sector employees are brought into line.” As the United Steelworkers’ Fred Redmond wrote in The Hill in August: The National Institute for Retirement Security (NIRS) and the Council on State and Local Government Excellence (COS & LGE) released a jointly-funded study on this topic just as the Republican sound machine revved up this spring. On the facts, they found that every one of the Republican assertions is false. Analyzing data from the U.S. Government’s National Compensation Survey, their economists found that when factors such as education and work experience are taken into account, state and local employees earn less than their counterparts in the private sector. To be exact, state employees earn 11 percent less than comparable private sector workers. Employees of city and county governments earn 12 percent less than their private sector counterparts. Pensions and health insurance coverage make up a slightly greater share of public employees’ overall compensation than those benefits do for private sector employees, but when those costs are included, state and local employees still wind up with less total compensation – 6.8 and 7.4 per cent less, respectively. Still, Republican leaders have extra ammunition – and talking points – for federal employees . Consider, for example, the “2 to 1″ claim now dominating the U.S media: “The average federal employee makes $120,000 a year. The average private employee makes $60,000 a year.” ( Rand Paul ) “It’s gotten to a point where the average federal worker makes twice as much as the average private sector worker.” ( John Boehner ) “Federal employees receive an average of $123,049 annually in pay and benefits, twice the average of the private sector.” ( Tim Pawlenty ) But as with state and local governments, this line of attack is an apples-to-oranges comparison at best and an outright deception at worst. As FactCheck pointed out: The analysis is based on data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis and crudely done by dividing total compensation (salary and benefits) by the number of current federal civilian employees. Comparing such averages is quite misleading, for two reasons: First, BEA says the figure is inflated by including compensation that is actually paid to benefit retirees, not just for current workers. The figure is at least several thousand dollars too high, by our calculations. Second, the average federal civilian worker is better educated, more experienced and more likely to have management or professional responsibilities than the average private worker. Over 44% of federal employees have a college degree, compared to about 19% of private sector workers. More importantly, an assessment of salaries (excluding benefits) by the Office of Personnel Management found that on average comparable federal civilian workers are paid 22 percent less than private workers . The disparities, even including incentive pay, are even greater in some metropolitan areas: (It is worth noting, as FactCheck does, that there are limitations to the OPM data. Not only are benefits not included, but the benchmarking methodology makes direct public/private section comparisons difficult.) It is true that since 2000, the pay of federal employees has risen faster than their private sector counterparts. (Then again, American average household income sank durng the Bush years.) There is also little doubt, as Pawlenty and Palin each point out, that states and localities face a crisis in meeting their future pension benefit obligations . But as Dean Baker of CEPR noted, many public employees don’t get Social Security, adding “most public sector pensions do not provide retirees with an especially high standard of living.” That public employees find themselves in the GOP’s crosshairs has less to do with their compensation than being what Sarah Palin decried as “union thugs.” As Jonathan Cohn of the New Republic pointed out, “Unions represent around 37 percent of public sector workers, compared to 7 percent of private sector workers.” (Left unsaid? They vote Democratic.) He then got to the heart of the matter: “But ask yourself the same question you should have been asking then: To what extent is the problem that the retirement benefits for unionized public sector workers have become too generous? And to what extent is the problem that retirement benefits for everybody else have become too stingy? I would suggest it’s more the latter than the former.” While Tim Pawlenty praised President Obama’s proposed pay freeze for federal employees as “a step in the right direction,” right now Republicans have bigger fish to fry. At a time of record income inequality , rising poverty and massive budget deficits , the GOP is focused on its $700 billion, 10-year tax cut windfall for the wealthy . Meanwhile, state and local governments continue to shed tens of thousands workers. As for those public servants still at work around the nation, they are, in the words of Rush Limbaugh , “a bunch of leftist, socialists, neo-communist union people asking their brothers in government to raise taxes.” No, they’re just the Republicans’ latest scapegoats. Scapegoats, it turns out, who get paid less, not more, than their private sector neighbors doing the same work. (This piece also appears at Perrspectives .)
Continue reading …There’s No Such Thing As Free Parking Earlier this year we quoted economist Tyler Cowen about the cost of free parking: Many suburbanites take free parking for granted, whether it’s in the lot of a big-box store or at home in the driveway. Yet the presence of so many parking spaces is an artifact of regulation and serves as a powerful subsidy to cars and car trips. But how many spaces are there, and what is the environmental impact of them?… Read the full story on TreeHugger
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