Click here to view this media Paragraph Four of the Department of Justice Memo says it all: After careful consideration, including a review of my recommendation, the President has concluded that given a number of factors, including a documented history of discrimination, classifications based on sexual orientation should be subject to a more heightened standard of scrutiny. The President has also concluded that Section 3 of DOMA, as applied to legally married same-sex couples, fails to meet that standard and is therefore unconstitutional. Given that conclusion, the President has instructed the Department not to defend the statute in such cases. I fully concur with the President’s determination. This is a huge victory. FINALLY. UPDATE: House Speaker John Boehner, in an absolute fit of political amnesia, released a statement . While Americans want Washington to focus on creating jobs and cutting spending, the President will have to explain why he thinks now is the appropriate time to stir up a controversial issue that sharply divides the nation. Because abortion, slavery, and lay-offs are not controversial? So be it.
Continue reading …Scores of people fleeing the unrest in Libya are making their way to the border with Egypt. So far only Egyptians have been let through, no Libyans. Egyptian workers are returning to their native country, bringing all they can carry – televisions, refrigerators and washing machines Jamal Elshayyal reports from Salloum, on the Egyptian side of the border.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Jeffrey Sachs was actually allowed some air time on Morning Joe to make a lot of really great points about how America is spending our money in the midst of what’s being called a budget crisis. I would argue that we don’t have a budget crisis. We have a refusal to levy adequate taxation on those that can afford it “crisis” created by our politicians who refuse to raise taxes on the rich at at time in our history that resembles the Gilded Age with income disparity. As Sachs noted, we’re going after discretionary spending which hits in is words, science, education, technology, and energy and he’s exactly right on how our approach to what we should be cutting is completely wrong. As he noted we’re not going after the extreme amount of waste in our military industrial complex, we’re not fixing the amount of profits going to the insurance companies that are driving up the cost of our health care, the oil industry and corporate tax evasion. Instead we’re looking to cut programs that harm the working class in America and I just want to say thank you to Jeffrey Sachs for laying out there how wrong headed our economic policies in the United States have been for at least the last thirty years. Scarborough’s response of course was to say that our working class and our seniors just haven’t given quite enough so the oligarchs can keep their pockets lined. Brzezinski to her credit, pointed out that her father said if this keeps up we might see people taking to the streets and that he was called crazy for saying so. She didn’t lay it on her buddy Scarborough and said he might not have been the one that said it, but I have the feeling that he was exactly who she was talking about and she gave him a pass. Of course Joe thought it was a good time to go to commercial break after she pointed that out to him. I’m wondering if they’ll have Sachs on again any time soon since he dared to speak the truth on that show. I’m not holding my breath for him to get another chance to say what he did today.
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Continue reading …Click here to view this media Dear Crooks and Liars community, please indulge me here and tell me what this man just said. Please? I know, I’m supposed to tell you what he just said but I can’t. Try as I might, I just can’t follow his leaps from Saudi Arabia to Mumbai to people living in shanties in the shadow of the rich guy’s 66-story mansion saying to themselves, “Gawd, I wanna be just like him” to the kids in the USA saying “Life sucks but I’m not getting out in the streets because I have a cool president” to the idea that none of this — none whatsoever — has to do with income inequality. As with any serving of word salad, the meat is usually in the bottom of the bowl, and so it is here, where he hits the punch line at young people, suggesting they’re so caught up in the president’s coolness they’re oblivious to their ongoing frustration about a lack of upward mobility. WTF? And how did we get from Mumbai mansions to that, anyway? About that income inequality thing. The chart they put up on the screen has absolutely nothing to do with per capita income. It’s per capita GDP, and by no means should be interpreted as mean income. Take Qatar , for example. The fact that it has the highest per capita GDP certainly shouldn’t cause anyone to assume all people in Qatar are rich. In fact, 20% of Qatar’s population holds 52% of the wealth . Not that facts matter or anything, but India actually has a lower rate of income inequality, though it is rising over time. Wonkery aside, did that man really just say that income inequality isn’t an issue? That the real problem is that people don’t believe there’s a possibility of upward mobility and that the reason for that is…coolness? It couldn’t be the permanently lost jobs, or the war being waged on the poor and middle class at all, right? It’s just…coolness? BECK: Let me go Charles to you. You brought up Saudi Arabia. I think Saudi Arabia’s absolutely — absolutely going to feel the pressure and possibly collapse. PAYNE: You’re absolutely right because this again — if it was about economics,, the average GDP per capita $23,000, they could probably get away with that, but it’s about something much larger, much bigger. But I gotta tell you, before you went to break you were talking about the youth and how this thing has spread. You know, the misconception this is somehow about income inequality and things like that I find amazing because people in Egypt, people in Tunisia, people in Saudi Arabia, the average person there makes more money per year than the average person in India or China. And then in the meantime you’ve got a guy in India who just built a 66-story house in Mumbai. Mumbai, 66% of the houses are made out of tin. So you’ve got this 60-story single family house casting a shadow on all of these shanties and people aren’t in the streets. You know why? BECK: Why? PAYNE: Because they look up at that and they say “That can be me.” We’re losing that in this country but around the world in certain pockets of the world where you don’t see that stuff going on…It has nothing to do with per capita income. Again, it has to do with the fact that where young people believe they have a chance at this upward mobility…and unfortunately what I’m worried about — we’re talking about these other countries…in this country our youth don’t really believe there’s upward mobility and the only reason there’s not outrage out there is because they think we have a cool president. This little onslaught came after Beck prepped us all with predictions of doom and death as the Middle East implodes in a domino effect that causes state after state to fall into one of several buckets: Open Society a la Soros, United Islamic Nations/Caliphate/Sharia Law, or Global Communism. Today’s villains star Van Jones, Richard Trumka, and the “clowns out front with the cheesehats”. I just have to share it, because someone you know will tell you that the cheesehat guys are going to subvert our country. You need to know where they got that from. Click here to view this media
Continue reading …Part 1: Part 2: This is a BFD : We all know that Governor Scott Walker takes his orders from Billionaires and Tea Party loaders Koch Brothers. But thanks to this guy named Murphy , we know how much Scott Walker is in bed with the Koch Brothers. Scott Walker just got the Sarah Palin’s treatment when someone called him while posing as David Koch. Just like Palin, Walker believed it and fall into the trap. Greg Sargent at the Washington Post has confirmed it is a real call. The transcript is unbelievable. I really think that even outside Wisconsin’s constitutional limits regarding recalling the governor, that Walker needs to step down now. Not for getting punked, but what he admits to considering with the man he assumes is Americans for Prosperity funder David Koch. * Walker doesn’t bat an eye when Koch describes the opposition as “Democrat bastards.” * Walker reveals that he and other Republicans are looking at whether they can charge an “ethics code violation if not an outright felony” if unions are paying for food or lodging for any of the Dem state senators. * Walker says he’s sending out notices next week to some five or six thousand state workers letting them know that they are “at risk” of layoffs. “Beautiful, beautiful,” the Koch impersonator replies. “You gotta crush that union.” UPDATES below the fold: More from Sargent: UPDATE, 11:54 a.m.: In a key detail, Walker reveals that he is, in effect, laying a trap for Wisconsin Dems. He says he is mulling inviting the Senate and Assembly Dem and GOP leaders to sit down and talk, but only if all the missing Senate Dems return to work. Then, tellingly, he reveals that the real game plan here is that if they do return, Republicans might be able to use a procedural move to move forward with their proposal. “If they’re actually in session for that day and they take a recess, this 19 Senate Republicans could then go into action and they’d have a quorum because they started out that way,” he says. “If you heard that I was going to talk to them that would be the only reason why.” Then the fake Koch says this: “Bring a baseball bat. That’s what I’d do.” Walker doesn’t bat an eye, and responds: “I have one in my office, you’d be happy with that. I’ve got a slugger with my name on it.” 12:09 p.m.: Another key exchange: FAKE KOCH: What we were thinking about the crowds was, planting some troublemakers. WALKER: We thought about that. My only gut reaction to that would be, right now, the lawmakers I talk to have just completely had it with them. The public is not really fond of this.The teachers union did some polling and focus groups… It’s unclear what Walker means when he says he “thought” about planting some troublemakers, but it seems fair to ask him for clarification. And as I suspected, a watchdog group in investigating whether Walker admitted to breaking any campaign finance or ethics laws in the conversation . UPDATE #2 : Walker’s office has announced he will address the media at 2:30pm. UPDATE #3: Top Six Revelations in the Call Between Fake David Koch and Governor Scott Walker More information as the story develops…
Continue reading …New Jersey Republican Governor Chris Christie stopped by the Today show, on Wednesday morning, to educate viewers and NBC's Ann Curry about the problems of public employee unions and explained that when it comes to getting government costs under control sometimes you just have to say no. Curry mostly questioned Christie from the left, as she asked if there was “a coordinated” GOP agenda to make unions “scapegoats” for a problem “created by Wall Street” and the “banks” and suggested that “in some ways it doesn't sort of make sense…that the unions really are to blame.” For his part, Christie responded: “It's, it's an issue of wanting to say yes all the time as a public official. You know you never want to say no to anybody because 'Oh you're much more popular if you say yes.' Well you know what? It's time we have to start saying no to certain things to be able to say yes to the things that will help to grow our economy and create a more prosperous future.” Curry began her interview by citing the New York Times editorial page to the governor, as she asked if in states like New Jersey, Wisconsin, Ohio and Indiana there was “a coordinated Republican political agenda to this attack or this effort, this pointed effort at unions?” To which Christie pointed out government spending is so out of control that even Democrats like Governor Jerry Brown in California were being forced to make cuts. The following is the relevant back and forth between Christie and Curry as it was aired on the February 23 Today show: ANN CURRY: Chris Christie is the Republican governor of New Jersey and was the first, as we just heard, to take on public employees unions. Governor Christie, good morning to you. GOV. CHRIS CHRISTIE: Good morning, Ann. CURRY: You probably are the best person to ask about a New York Times editorial in this morning's papers that basically talks about a – says that there is a political agenda by Republican governors, not just from Wisconsin but also in Ohio and Indiana that in each case, quote, “Republican talk of balancing budgets is cover for the real purpose of gutting the political force of middle class state workers who are steady supporters of Democrats and pose a threat to a growing conservative agenda.” Is there a coordinated Republican political agenda to this attack or this effort, this pointed effort at unions? CHRISTIE: No and, and if you look at it, these fights are going on all over the country, not just with Republicans but with Democrats. Look at California, Jerry Brown is talking about cutting their take home pay eight to 10 percent and laying off a bunch of state workers. This is about re-shifting our priorities. So if you want to do things in New Jersey, like I want to do, which is to provide property tax relief for middle class taxpayers. Well you know you can't continue to pay health benefits in New Jersey where this government pays 92 percent of the cost of health care for each person. That doesn't happen anywhere. And so we have to make these choices and they have to become part of the shared sacrifice. [On screen headline: "Cost-Cutting With Christie, Are Unions To Blame For State Budget Shortfalls?"] CURRY: Okay so then the idea then that some critics have, that you are making unions scapegoats for a problem that really wasn't created by unions but was really created by Wall Street, created by the banks and the downturn in the economy, what do you say to those critics? CHRISTIE: Well what I say to those critics are, they're not paying attention. Because if you were paying attention the problems here that are created on the state budget – sure we have a deficit problem that was helped by the economic downturn but what we also have are benefits and costs that are out of control. The family policy that most state workers in New Jersey get – $24,000 a year and they pay eight percent of that cost, the taxpayers pay the rest. We cannot afford these type of things any more. We have a pension deficit of $54 billion dollars in New Jersey. I mean that wasn't created by Wall Street. That was created by the fact that the benefits are too high and the payments in are too low. CURRY: But this problem, budget problem is not just with states with collective bargaining deals. For example, there are many states that have denied collective bargaining rights that also have very large budget deficits. So in some ways it doesn't sort of make sense, that this idea that the unions really are to blame. CHRISTIE: Oh I'm saying it's just about collective bargaining, Ann. Because even in states, as you point out, where collective bargaining doesn't exist, legislatures have been too generous to public employees over time. So it's not just an issue of collective bargaining. It's, it's an issue of wanting to say yes all the time as a public official. You know you never want to say no to anybody because “Oh you're much more popular if you say yes.” Well you know what? It's time we have to start saying no to certain things to be able to say yes to the things that will help to grow our economy and create a more prosperous future. —Geoffrey Dickens is the Senior News Analyst at the Media Research Center. You can follow him on Twitter here
Continue reading …A day after Muammar Gaddafi threatened protesters with death in a televised speech, an army commander tells Al Jazeera that his forces are with the people, not the Libyan leader. The town of Misurata, in western Libya, has reportedly fallen to the opposition, and much of the east seems to be controlled by pro-democracy protesters. Laurence Lee reports on the latest events.
Continue reading …USA Today's Wednesday cover story (“Killings Escalate Piracy Crisis”), has this reference to a quote obtained by the Associated Press: Killing hostages “has now become part of our rules,” said a pirate who identified himself as Muse Abdi in a statement to the Associated Press. “From now on, anyone who tries to rescue the hostages in our hands will only collect dead bodies,” Abdi said. “It will never, ever happen that hostages are rescued and we are hauled to prison.” Pretty provocative, right? In fact, it resembles a declaration of war without the rules of war. You might even call it a declaration of t-t-t-t … terrorism. The problem is, Abdi's quote is no longer in any story at the Associated Press's home web site, and is rarely present in other Internet news reports. A search at the AP's home site on “Muse Abdi” (in quotes) returns no results . An AP home site search on “Abdi” returns one relevant item that relates to Abdiwali Abdiqadir Muse, a pirate who was sentenced to 33 years in prison last week. Muse's sentencing is cited as being a possible motivation for the hostage-taking of Scott Adam, wife Jean Adam, Bob Riggle, and Phyllis Macay, who were killed by their captors on Tuesday. As of 10:30 ET, six of
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