Rachel Maddow did an absolutely wonderful job dismantling the Republican talking points that Ronald Reagan’s “Voodoo Economics” or “trickle-down economics” worked, pointing out how the Republicans who keep coming on the air claiming that tax cuts for the rich benefit the “job creators” are full of a bunch of bullpucky. The people who end up primarily benefiting from these tax cuts are the rich, who as Rachel showed in the footage from when Reagan’s tax cuts first passed, spend more on luxury items they don’t even need, while the rest of us get to feel those economic benefits trickling down our heads in the form of something besides water. Now if we just had every pundit making things this clear to the American public instead of allowing the Republicans to come on the air and lie about “job creators” being taxed day… after day… after day… maybe… just maybe we’d have a less misinformed public. Sadly this segment on Rachel’s show isn’t required viewing for every citizen in the United States. Her charts and graphs about what’s happened to the incomes of the rich and the poor sadly are ones that we’re not seeing on any other broadcast as well. Pass this one on to your friends and neighbors. We need to be letting every member of Congress and President Obama know it’s not acceptable to see these tax cuts for the rich allowed to be extended at the expense of bankrupting our country or attempting to balance our budget on the backs of the working class and the poor. Kudos to Rachel for laying out the lies about tax cuts trickling down to the rest of us so plainly. UPDATE: Compare and contrast that to lying hack Pat Buchanan who appeared with “Democratic strategist” Peter Fenn on MSNBC today after the first two votes for a partial extension of the tax cuts failed. Click here to view this media
Continue reading …Photo: Ben+Sam Not a moment too soon the House passed The Healthy Hunger-Free Kids Act just two days ago after it passed the Senate in August. This is long overdo as far as I’m concerned and just before the holiday season, it puts school nutrition and our kids on the front burner again. That’s not to say that disconcerting compromises didn’t make for a less than perfect bill, but getting
Continue reading …Forces fighting wildfire at Hai-Bar nature reserve on Mount Carmel receive reinforcement after running out of water. ‘The flames are 15-20 meters high,’ their commander reports. Fire and rescue commissioner: It’ll take a day or two to contain fire
Continue reading …An anonymous donor and a 13-year-old boy became a couple of Santa’s helpers when they replaced some gifts that had be stolen from a 10-year-old boy who’s fighting brain cancer. (Dec. 4)
Continue reading …Click here to view this media We’ve been rooting since the election for Senate Democrats to show some spine and reform the filibuster at the start of the coming session — Sen. Jeff Merkley, as we reported then, has been developing a plan that makes so much sense it’s almost certain never to make it through. Moreover, as with the public option and the economic stimulus package, we haven’t exactly been holding our collective breaths waiting for it to happen, given Democrats’ extensive history of evolving spines made of orange Jell-O. Now, however, it seems Republicans have so overplayed their hand in bullying Democrats around that they might actually force the Democrats to grow spines and do the job. Ezra Klein has the details : Mitch McConnell’s threat to filibuster literally everything Democrats want to do until Democrats and Republicans agree to a compromise on the Bush tax cuts can be read as a power play, but it can also be read as a dare: At this point, Republicans are sure that they can abuse the rules as much as they’d like and Democrats won’t dare do a thing about it. McConnell’s blanket filibuster now joins Richard Shelby’s blanket hold as the two most egregious acts of procedural brinkmanship in a Congress that’s been chock-full of rules-based obstruction. If there’s a wild card here, it’s Sen. Jeff Merkley and the other Democrats who’ve been agitating for rules reform for well over a year now. Today, Merkley released his proposal (pdf), and it’s a detailed, thoughtful and supportable package of reforms — even for those who believe in the filibuster. You can read the whole memo here (PDF – 101.98 KB) . As we noted before, the beauty of the Merkley plan is that it preserves the filibuster but makes it so it actually in practice is what it was intended to be: a last resort of a determined minority willing to stake its members’ precious time and resources to make it happen, instead of an easy way to halt any kind of deliberation with a simple check-off, as is the case now. As Ezra notes: This is filibuster reform that even the filibuster’s supporters can love: It focuses the practice on the tradition of debate and discussion that Senate traditionalists consider to be the institution’s indispensable trait. Even so, a few days ago, I would’ve told you it didn’t have a chance, as there’d be no energy to look at the rules again. But McConnell’s announcement of a blanket filibuster that’s meant to stop the Senate from debating legislation rather than ensure that all sides have time to be heard may be just the push the traditionalists needed. Greg Sargent noted that making the change will not require a filibuster-proof majority : Merkley’s office believes such a change to the rules could be accomplished with a simple majority vote in the Senate, and Merkley will be pushing colleagues to join his effort to make such a vote happen at the outset of the new session in January. Sen. Merkley was on Rachel Maddow’s show the other night to explain. Heather has the transcript here.
Continue reading …There’s just no two ways about it: what Lufthansa has managed to accomplish here is nothing short of incredible. While avid jetsetters have been enjoying in-flight WiFi on (select) domestic routes for a few years now, the in-flight fun has been coming to an abrupt halt when boarding a flight requiring a passport. The dream of long-haul in-flight internet has felt like a distant one, but it seems that the future is indeed happening today. The carrier’s FlyNet service has been relaunched this week, and with assistance from Panasonic and the 802.11n gods that be, it’s now offering broadband internet access on intercontinental routes. At first, the service will be limited to select North Atlantic routes, but access should be available on “nearly the entire Lufthansa intercontinental network by the end of 2011.” No specific performance figures are being released, but the company does call it “extremely fast” and quick enough to open large attachments “without delay.” Better still, the airline will be enabling cellphone data access (GSM and GPRS) in the spring of next year, giving highfalutin’ bigwigs the ability to send and receive the most expensive text messages of their life. Deutsche Telekom will be providing the actual internet service, with pricing set as such: €10.95 (or 3,500 miles) for one hour or €19.95 (or 7,000 miles) for a 24-hour pass that also allows patrons to access the web on “on all Lufthansa connecting flights equipped with a hotspot during the period of validity as well as after the flight in Lufthansa lounges.” Oh, and did we mention that it’s totally free through January 31st, 2011? It is. Gallery: Lufthansa FlyNet in-flight WiFi service Continue reading Lufthansa launches in-flight WiFi on intercontinental flights, ushers in ‘the future’ Lufthansa launches in-flight WiFi on intercontinental flights, ushers in ‘the future’ originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 04 Dec 2010 15:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Islamabad: A Pakistani anti-terrorism court, conducting the trial of suspects charged with involvement in the assassination of Benazir Bhutto, on Saturday issued non-bailable warrants for the arrest of two police officers for “failing” to protect the former premier. The warrants were issued for former Rawalpindi police chief Saud Aziz and senior police officer Khurram Shahzad, prosecution lawyers told the media. Both officers played a key role in security arrangements for the election rally addressed by Bhutto on the day she was killed in the garrison city of Rawalpindi on December 27, 2007. Prosecutors filed an application for the two police officers to be summoned as accused in the case…
Continue reading …Interior minister responds to criticism over firefighting services’ unpreparedness for deadly Carmel blaze, accuses his predecessors of ‘failing to act’
Continue reading …VOJISLAV STJEPANOVIC Associated Press= BIJELJINA, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) — Three European nations struggled with harsh weather Saturday, as floods forced the evacuation of thousands of people in Bosnia and Albania, and snow caused part of the roof at a nuclear power plant in France to collapse. For the past four days, the Balkans have coped with the worst floods in a century, and western Europe has deal with subfreezing temperatures and heavy snowfalls that have led to fatalities and closed airports, highways and schools. In Bosnia, the army, police, volunteers and divers helped evacuate people about 2,000 people from their homes in the northeastern town of Bijeljina that was flooded…
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