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ABC Highlights Complaints That ‘There is Little Heart’ in Rick Perry’s Texas

ABC Highlights Complaints That 'There is Little Heart' in Rick Perry's Texas On Saturday's World News on ABC, correspondent Jim Avila filed a report in which he focused mostly on aspects of Texas's economy that receive praise, but he ended up warning that things may not really be as good as they seem, as the ABC correspondent highlighted claims that, “deep in the heart of Rick Perry's Texas, there is little heart.” Avila concluded his piece: JIM AVILA: But there is another side to that Texas spirit, a story Rick Perry is less likely to tout out on the campaign trail. His state leads the way in low-wage jobs – almost 10 percent of employees making minimum wage or less, compared to six percent nationwide. And with a poverty rate of 17 percent, Texas is among the 10 poorest states in the nation. PAUL BURKA, TEXAS MONTHLY: We have the highest percentage of people without health insurance. We do very little to support people who aren't making it. AVILA: Deep cuts in education helped balance the budget, and the divide between rich and poor is the fourth widest in the country. Some argue that, deep in the heart of Rick Perry's Texas, there is little heart. Jim Avila, ABC News, San Antonio. Below is a complete transcript of the report from the Saturday, August 20, World News on ABC: DAVID MUIR: We turn now to politics here in this country and to Texas Governor Rick Perry, who campaigned today in South Carolina, a key battleground for the Republican presidential nomination. He is running, above all, on his record of creating jobs in Texas. So, tonight here, a World News “Fact Check” on the numbers, as our team traveled some 400 miles through the Lone Star State. Here's ABC's Jim Avila. JIM AVILA: They're the numbers driving Rick Perry to the national stage. Under the governor's watch, Texas has become a job machine: one million new ones over the last decade. A full 40 percent of all jobs created in this country are here. GOVERNOR RICK PERRY (R-TX): Jobs bring security. They bring pride. They bring further opportunity. AVILA: And for Rick Perry, they could bring the presidency. We set out in a 400-mile journey through the heart of Texas, where oil boom and gas exploration has made a new class of millionaires out of random Texas landowners in small towns like Cotulla. MARIANE HALL, COTULLA TEXAS CHAMBER OF COMMERCE: People are coming in every day with businesses building hotels and restaurants. Of course, the bank is growing in deposits. AVILA: We found more traditional job creation outside San Antonio, where Toyota builds Tacoma and Tundra pickups. No unions in Texas or state income taxes. Toyota employs more than 4,000 people here. Just down the road, business is booming for Bill Cox, desperate to hire three more workers at his small manufacturing business. AVILA: These are not McDonald's jobs? BILL COX, BUSINESS OWNER: No, they're not. They're full-time jobs with overtime and growth. AVILA: New businesses and thriving old ones. The 120-year-old Dr. Pepper bottle in Dublin, Texas. BILL KLOSTER, OWNER OF DUBLIN DR. PEPPER: I think this country is built on entrepreneurs. AVILA: But there is another side to that Texas spirit, a story Rick Perry is less likely to tout out on the campaign trail. His state leads the way in low-wage jobs – almost 10 percent of employees making minimum wage or less, compared to six percent nationwide. And with a poverty rate of 17 percent, Texas is among the 10 poorest states in the nation. PAUL BURKA, TEXAS MONTHLY: We have the highest percentage of people without health insurance. We do very little to support people who aren't making it. AVILA: Deep cuts in education helped balance the budget, and the divide between rich and poor is the fourth widest in the country. Some argue that, deep in the heart of Rick Perry's Texas, there is little heart. Jim Avila, ABC News, San Antonio.

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GCSE results: one in four could get A grade

Education expert predicts another record year of results as union leader warns against tinkering with league tables and targets Nearly one in four GCSE entries could be awarded at least an A grade in what is expected to be another record year of results, it has been predicted. And around one in 12 exams could score a coveted A*, an education expert has suggested. Teenagers in England, Wales and Northern Ireland receive their GCSE results on Thursday (25 August). Last summer, the pass rate rose for the 23rd year in a row, with 69.1% of entries achieving at least a C grade. Professor Alan Smithers, of the Centre for Education and Employment Research at Buckingham University, suggested this could reach 70% this year. And the proportions of exams earning top grades could rise slightly, he said. “I would say, that on the pattern of previous years, we could expect approaching 8% to get an A*.” Smithers added that the percentage achieving at least an A grade could nudge up to 23%. In 2010, 22.6% of exams got an A or A*, while 7.5% were awarded an A*. As pupils anticipate their results, one union leader warned that tinkering with exams and league tables is damaging for students. Dr Mary Bousted, general secretary of the Association of Teachers and Lecturers (ATL) , said: “The pressure on schools and teachers of the league tables has already led to too much teaching focusing on getting pupils through exams. “The government’s intention to devalue and limit vocational qualifications in future league tables will tie schools’ hands and push many young people into qualifications that don’t allow them to develop their talents and excel. “In addition, this year the arbitrary introduction of new GCSE floor targets is pushing schools to concentrate their attention on borderline C/D pupils at the expense of other pupils. “We need an education system fit for all, not the select few.” Under the government’s new benchmark, all secondary schools should have 35% of pupils gaining at least five C grades at GCSE, including English and maths, and ministers are aiming to raise this to 50% by 2015. Brian Lightman, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders (ASCL) , said he expected another good year of results, with an increase in the numbers achieving five A*-Cs including English and maths. He said young people were facing “an enormously tough time”. “In terms of difficulties, they are facing fears about unemployment, they are aware of cuts, and changes to university arrangements. Finding a way through that to an informed decision is incredibly difficult. “We want, and need, young people to be staying in education, I hope they are encouraged by the good results I’m sure they will get, and want to stay in education, and that we can reassure them that it’s worthwhile.” GCSEs Schools guardian.co.uk

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In Midst of Obamamania Media Journalists Fret Obama Victim of the ‘Worst PR Machine in History’

President Barack Obama continues to benefit from a fawning media of which past Presidents could only dream, yet on Sunday’s This Week two journalists fretted he’s not getting enough credit for his accomplishments, a lack of recognition they blamed on his staff’s poor public relations efforts. Since he’s taken office, FBN’s Liz Claman asserted, “almost every sector in the S&P is up double digit percentages” and “this is also the President under whom we got Osama bin Laden. Those two things are not getting him any gravitas at the moment.” So, she despaired, “whoever’s running PR for him needs to work on that part of it.” (video below) New York Times reporter Jeff Zeleny maintained the White House’s public relations shortcomings are “even breaking through to voters,” citing an Obama supporter in Illinois who “said he [Obama] must have the worst PR machine in history.” Zeleny recalled how he asked the man what he meant and “he said look at all of the good things he’s done and we haven't heard about it.” The guy must not watch or read any news. From the Sunday, August 21 This Week on ABC hosted by Jake Tapper: LIZ CLAMAN, FOX BUSINESS NETWORK: What does it say that Maxine Waters is the one who is now being critical of the President who was supposed to be the uniter. Last week you saw he united people. He united the Tea Partiers, the far left, and certainly the people in the middle, the centrists, by saying, where is your leadership on jobs? To make people wait for that speech is questionable. But on the same side, you could say this is the President who, since he has taken over – and a lot of people have looked at 401(k)s and been worried lately – since he's taken over, almost every sector in the S&P is up double digit percentages. Things have recovered. This is also the President under whom we got Osama bin Laden. Those two things are not getting him any gravitas at the moment. Whoever’s running PR for him needs to work on that part of it, and then add to it and say here's what we're going to do. Do the contracts, do the government things that George talked about. Talk about making sure and Donna's ideas, how about getting the permits in the Gulf for drilling natural gas which is clean burning, and we have a lot of it. Why not get those back up to speed. They did a lease sale last week, that's important. But to get the government to start allowing that to happen. Those are real job, Jake. JEFF ZELENY, NEW YORK TIMES : I mean, I think the PR thing is one thing that's even breaking through to voters. I was talking to a man outside the President's town hall in Atkinson, Illinois. He was pounding in flags a couple hours before the President's visit. JAKE TAPPER: Oh yeah, the whole road was lined with flags. ZELENY: It really was, it was this extraordinary site. He voted for Obama and he said he still believes in this President, but he said he must have the worst PR machine in history. So this is from a man pounding in flags in Atkinson, Illinois. I said what do you mean by that? He said look at all of the good things he's done and we haven't heard about it. So I think that is one sort of quiet hope for these people who still feel support of the President, that at the end of the day, when you match his accomplishments with whoever his opponent is going to be that he will come out looking stronger.

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Vinegar contaminated with antifreeze kills Chinese Muslims at Ramadan meal

Investigators blame vinegar stored in former antifreeze barrels for mass food poisoning outbreak in Xinjiang region Vinegar tainted with antifreeze is suspected of killing 11 people and making a further 120 ill after a communal Ramadan meal in China’s far western region of Xinjiang. Investigators suspect the victims consumed vinegar that was put in two plastic barrels that had previously been used to store toxic antifreeze, the official Xinhua news agency reported. It said the mass food poisoning occurred on Saturday night in a village close to Hotan city in Xinjiang, a region that borders Afghanistan and Pakistan. The victims were Muslims who were sharing an evening meal after the daily fast observed during Ramadan. Xinhua said children as young as six were among the dead. One person was in a critical condition. Authorities were still testing to confirm the source of the poisoning, it said. China’s food safety record has been battered by the rampant use of illegal or substandard additives by unscrupulous food producers. Milk powder laced with the industrial chemical melamine killed at least six children and made 300,000 ill in 2008. Producers added the nitrogen-rich melamine powder so their milk would seem higher in protein. Revenge attacks using rat poison or other chemicals are also common in China, where access to firearms and other deadly weapons is tightly controlled. In April, three children died and 35 others became ill after drinking milk tainted with nitrite. An investigation showed that a local dairy farmer had put the poison into a competitor’s milk supply. Accidental contamination is also a problem, caused by poor hygiene, particularly in rural areas, and weak quality control by regulators. China Food safety Ramadan Religion Islam guardian.co.uk

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Libya: rebel forces reach heart of Tripoli – live updates

• Tripoli celebrates after rebels reach Green Square • Obama: ‘Tripoli slipping from the grasp of a tyrant’ • Gaddafi’s son Saif al-Islam arrested • Defiant Gaddafi urges supporters to defend capital 8.05am: Fighting has broken out near the Rixos hotel in the Tripoli, a doctor told Sky News. Is is likely to be day of wild rumour and conflicting reports, not least about the whereabouts of Muammar Gaddafi. Diplomats told AFP that the Libyan leader is still in his residence in Tripoli. There have also been reports that he has fled. All this is impossible to verify. 7.31am: Welcome to Middle East Live as momentous events unfold in the Libyan capital Tripoli. Here’s a summary of the main developments overnight. You can read more details on Sunday’s extended live blog : • The rebels reached Green Square in the heart of Tripoli and vowed to rename it Martyrs Square, as it was originally known. • There are reports of heavy clashes around Muammar Gaddafi’s compound in Tripoli. His forces are believed to be in control of up to 20% of the capital. Gaddafi’s whereabouts are unknown. • The International Criminal Court said it had confirmation that Gaddafi’s son, Saif al-Islam, had been arrested. Gaddafi’s eldest son Mohammed is also believed to be under house arrest. • The rebels’ spokesman promised they would guarantee Gaddafi’s safety and said they wanted to see him stand trial in Libya and nowhere else. • President Obama has put out a statement on the situation in Libya in which he says Gaddafi must “acknowledge the reality that he no longer controls Libya. He needs to relinquish power once and for all”. • Gaddafi issued a desperate call to Libyan tribes to come to the capital to defend it , while government spokesman Moussa Ibrahim proposed a ceasefire. Libya Muammar Gaddafi Nato US foreign policy International criminal court Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest Syria Bashar Al-Assad Israel Egypt Matthew Weaver guardian.co.uk

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Title: Like A Ship (Without A Sail) Artist: Pastor T.L. Barrett and the Youth for Christ Choir Shake-it Sunday. Check this out.

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This is a very big deal. We have so many other things happening at once, but anything that accelerates the degradation of our environment is a priority: Saturday kicked off two weeks of sit-ins in Washington, D.C. for thousands of activists fighting the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline. On the first day, over 70 people were arrested at the White House fence, including protest organizer Bill McKibben. Tar Sands Action is fighting against the Keystone XL pipeline, which is a pipeline from the tar sands in Canada to refineries on the Gulf of Mexico. Protestors are asking President Obama to reject a permit for the pipeline. According to the organization, the pipeline “will send 900,000 barrels a day of the world’s dirtiest oil to US refineries , allowing further development of the Alberta tar sands – development which could mean ‘game over’ for the climate, in the word’s of NASA’s James Hansen.” On the other side, Democracy Now! reports, “Supporters of the pipeline say the pipeline will create some 20,000 construction jobs, and the company behind it, TransCanada, has already signed agreements to employ the members of four international unions if the project is approved.” Some celebrities have joined the fight, including Mark Ruffalo, who recently said in a video, “I’ve seen the kind of damage that out-of-control energy development can do to water and to communities near my own home, where fracking for natural gas is causing widespread pollution … All these problems are connected — we need to get off fossil fuels.” So the only jobs the administration can come up with involve destroying what’s left of the environment? Not what we voted for! You can sign their petition and donate here.

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This is a very big deal. We have so many other things happening at once, but anything that accelerates the degradation of our environment is a priority: Saturday kicked off two weeks of sit-ins in Washington, D.C. for thousands of activists fighting the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline. On the first day, over 70 people were arrested at the White House fence, including protest organizer Bill McKibben. Tar Sands Action is fighting against the Keystone XL pipeline, which is a pipeline from the tar sands in Canada to refineries on the Gulf of Mexico. Protestors are asking President Obama to reject a permit for the pipeline. According to the organization, the pipeline “will send 900,000 barrels a day of the world’s dirtiest oil to US refineries , allowing further development of the Alberta tar sands – development which could mean ‘game over’ for the climate, in the word’s of NASA’s James Hansen.” On the other side, Democracy Now! reports, “Supporters of the pipeline say the pipeline will create some 20,000 construction jobs, and the company behind it, TransCanada, has already signed agreements to employ the members of four international unions if the project is approved.” Some celebrities have joined the fight, including Mark Ruffalo, who recently said in a video, “I’ve seen the kind of damage that out-of-control energy development can do to water and to communities near my own home, where fracking for natural gas is causing widespread pollution … All these problems are connected — we need to get off fossil fuels.” So the only jobs the administration can come up with involve destroying what’s left of the environment? Not what we voted for! You can sign their petition and donate here.

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Tom Friedman: Michele Bachmann Is ‘Flat Out Nuts’ Thinking We Can Have $2 Gas Again

Congresswoman Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) caused quite a stir last week when she said if elected president she would bring back $2/gallon gasoline prices. On CNN's “Reliable Sources” Sunday, New York Times columnist Tom Friedman – without supplying any economic data to support his claim – called Bachmann's pledge “flat out nuts” (video follows with transcript and commentary): HOWARD KURTZ, HOST: Tom Friedman, among the things that you have written about — in fact, you've written books about it — is economics, international economics. In the presidential campaign we have Michele Bachmann the other day saying that she will make sure that America gets $2.00 gasoline once again. She didn't offer a lot of specifics. Her Web site says, well, she's going to ease restrictions on drilling, roll back federal regulations on the shale gas industry. Is that a responsible pledge for a candidate to make, $2 gas? TOM FRIEDMAN, NEW YORK TIMES: It's flat out nuts. There's no way that that's going to happen. We're heading just — I wrote a book, “Hot, Flat, and Crowded.” OK? And I often hold it up when I'm going to talk about it. KURTZ: You're trying to sell it. FRIEDMAN: No. KURTZ: You can sell it right now. FRIEDMAN: Yes. I don't need to sell anymore. And I often say to audiences who don't believe in climate change, oh, you don't believe in hot? OK. Anybody done your research (ph) out there? Let's take hot off. But you better believe in flat and crowded. What does it mean? It means more and more people out there can see how we live, in a flat world, aspire to how we live, and live like we live: American-size homes, driving American-size cars, eating American-size Big Macs. That's going on in Brazil, India, China, now all over. So the world is getting flatter and flatter, middle class is growing everywhere, and there are just more people. Now, when you put flat and crowded together, more people and more people want to — and able to live like us — energy prices are only going to go one way, and they're not going to go toward $2.00 a gallon. KURTZ: But, in fact, you don't think there should be $2.00-a- gallon gas, even if it could be achieved. FRIEDMAN: Not at all. KURTZ: You want more expensive gas, or a gas tax — FRIEDMAN: Absolutely. KURTZ: — because you think we need to discourage consumption. That's not a very politically popular stance, which probably has something to do with the fact that it hasn't happened. FRIEDMAN: And that's why she's playing to that. But it's so unrealistic. And at the end of the day, let's think about it from the jobs point of view. If the world is getting flat and crowded, what's going to be the next great global industry? It's got to be clean energy that can satisfy that huge growing middle class market. So do you want to be actually telling Americans, let's keep investing in this old technology and this fuel that's a diminishing resource, or should we be looking to actually create this whole new industry? Let's do what neither Friedman nor Kurtz did, namely, look at some facts. According to the Energy Information Association, crude oil inventories are currently higher than they've been throughout most of the past 30 years with some exceptions: As for gasoline inventories , these are currently at about their average for the last 30 years: As such, the rise in oil and gas prices over the past eleven years has nothing to do with the American supply of either. But obviously, this is a global market. Therefore, what might be quite surprising to most readers is that according to the EIA, total world crude reserves have more than doubled since 1980. In fact, they go up virtually every year. As a result, the international reserves to production ratio has stayed rather static for the past 20 plus years (interactive chart): via chartsbin.com What this means is despite increasing international demand for oil, producers are constantly finding more of it to match the increase. Meanwhile, according to EIA, total world oil demand has declined since its 2007 peak, and likely will continue to do so if Europe and America go into a double-dip recession. Add it all up, and apart from speculation and the weak dollar, there is absolutely no supply/demand reason for oil and gas prices to be as high as they currently are. Even with such factors, U.S. retail gas prices were at $2/gallon as recently as May 2009, just a little over two years ago. Why Friedman thinks this is impossible to return to is likely based more in his own biases than facts. He did admit to Kurtz that he wants far more expensive gasoline to inhibit consumption. So why should his view of this natural resource be taken at all seriously? As it pertains to Bachmann's pledge, any change in posture towards domestic oil drilling in America would further impact the supply/demand equation putting additional pressure on prices. Combine this with weaker demand caused by a slowing economy, and $2/gallon is easily attainable. Finally, isn't it funny to hear Friedman discouraging investment in “this old technology” while pushing for “clean energy?” I guess he hasn't gotten the memo that the whole idea of green jobs has been a total failure and that one of the reasons Texas leads the nation in employment gains since the recession “ended” is due to “this old technology.” And his colleague at the Times, Paul Krugman, wonders why voters are so ill-informed.

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Kristol and Hayes Agree it Would be Good for GOP Presidential Candidates to Run on ‘Entitlement Reform’

Click here to view this media Another Sunday, another week where Bloody Bill Kristol proves himself to be wrong about everything. After some discussion on whether President Obama is going to have trouble being reelected and The Hill’s A.B. Stoddard pointing out that he might unless he ends up being fortunate enough to run against someone who voted for Paul Ryan’s budget plan, Bret Baier asks Kristol if the GOP would make make “reforming” “entitlements” into an asset. Naturally Kristol thinks that would be a winning issue for them. Naturally he and Stephen Hayes refuse to admit that privatizing Medicare would be putting an end to the program as we know it and no one on the Fox News Sunday panel bothered to point out that Social Security is not responsible for any of the problems we have now with our deficit. Jon Perr has been writing a lot about what was in Paul Ryan’s budget for some time now and lays out very plainly why Hayes is not telling the truth on what his plan would do to Medicare and Social Security in one of the earlier posts he wrote on it here — GOP Budget Proposes to Ration Medicare, Privatize Social Security . Transcript : BAIER: Bill, can you imagine any scenario where entitlement reform could be an asset to Republicans in 2012? KRISTOL: Sure, because people understand, I think, and certainly the right candidate can help the American public further understand, that we need to fundamentally reform entitlements. We’re $1.5 trillion in debt. Where’s that debt coming from? It’s coming from entitlements, which are 60 percent of the federal budget and which are going up much more quickly than the rest of the federal budget. Despite President Obama’s irresponsible domestic discretionary spending, it’s entitlements that are at the core of the problem. So of course Republicans are going to run on entitlement reform, as they should, and I think they can do so successfully. BAIER: Now, you have spoken out in favor of Congressman Paul Ryan getting in this race.Is there any development on that? Do you really believe that he’s getting in? KRISTOL: Well, the main development — and maybe I can hold this up — is I get sent this in the mail, a Ryan/Rubio 2012 button, which shows huge grassroots support for this effort. You know? People all over the country are having these buttons produced at their own expense. BAYH: It’s the alliteration ticket. KRISTOL: Well, “RR” is good for Republicans — Ronald Reagan, Ryan/Rubio. I think Steve’s done a lot of reporting on this. Paul Ryan is thinking of running. I think it’s 50/50. I think we’ll know in a week. If I had to bet, I would bet that he would run. I also think that if he doesn’t run, Chris Christie may run. I don’t think the current field is likely — it could be, but I don’t think it’s likely to be the final field. BAIER: Do you agree? BAYH: It’s getting a little late in the day. If they don’t act within the next couple of weeks, just pragmatically it’s tough. And if I could just say one thing about Paul, he’s a serious person. I admire the fact that he’s focusing on entitlements, but if he’s the nominee, it’s going to be a referendum on Social Security and Medicare. And it doesn’t help when you have serious publications out there that have said his plan would end Social Security and Medicare as we know it. People want to reform the programs, but they get a little scared when they say you’re going to end something that’s become such a fabric — part of the fabric of American life. BAIER: But doesn’t that fall into the whole demagoguing that issue, even at a time when some people say that the American public is ready for this adult conversation beyond what we’ve heard in the past about entitlements? BAYH: Well, both sides are going to engage in a little demagoguery, but what people want is reform, but it done in the right sort of way. And I’m afraid when they say end Social Security or Medicare as we know it, to most people that may raise the specter going a little too far. HAYES: I think we have different definitions of what serious publications are, perhaps, because I don’t think — look, it’s explicitly — BAYH: The Wall Street Journal. HAYES: They said it was going to end Medicare as we know it? BAYH: They did. HAYES: I don’t know. I think it would change Medicare and the way that Medicare is funded. It explicitly — the House Republican budget explicitly argues that it is meant to preserve Medicare while changing the funding mechanism that makes it solvent. If you look at what Nancy Pelosi has said, she has no plan. She has said, basically, our plan is Medicare. There’s no argument there. So I think it’s entirely possible that Republicans will run on structural reforms to Medicare so that they can preserve Medicare. And I think — look, if you want to talk and take a step back and look at the way that the race is likely to unfold, there’s no question that it will be, in large part, a referendum on jobs. But given the financial situation that the country is in right now, given the enormity of the problems that we have right now, it’s going to be in some respect a debate about our long-term fiscal situation. And I think there are some Republicans who think that incorporating a debate about entitlement reform is actually a positive.

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