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ABC Notes Dem Refusal to Budge on Medicare, CBS Gives Impression Dems Willing to Cut
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To WaPo, Grover Norquist Is Too Rigid, But Donna Edwards Keeps Obama from Being a Republican

On Tuesday, The Washington Post's Jason Horowitz mocked Grover Norquist's vigilance (or rigidity) against tax increases as “almost religious” in its intensity, his no-new-taxes pledge a “sacred text.” So when the sandal is on the other foot, and a leftist shows great vigilance (or rigidity) against any reduction in the growth of Medicare and Social Security, is that “almost religious”? Not to reporter Ben Pershing in his Friday article on ultraliberal Rep. Donna Edwards of Maryland. The headline was “Edwards emerging as liberals' voice.”

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Rupertgate Friday – Exit Ginger And Yonder Walk The Feebees.

enlarge Credit: Reuters Rebekah Brooks – “no room on the bus. However . . .” Click here to view this media The Scandal That Keeps On Scandalizing. The latest today (as of 9:00 am PDT) includes the abrupt resignation of News International Chief Executive and former editor of News Of The World Rebekah Brooks, in the wake of upcoming questioning before Parliament next Tuesday. Her replacement is former Sky Italia Chief Tom Mockridge, fresh from doing battle with Berlusconi over Television dominance in Italy. Rupert Murdoch held a Mea Culpa session with the parents of murdered girl Mily Dowler, some say the catalytic episode in this scandal. No cameras allowed. And it was also disclosed this morning that disgraced and now jailed former Editor of NotW and Communications director for David Cameron Andy Coulson was vacationing at the Cameron’s Country Home as late as March of this year, two months after his resignation. And Attorney General Eric Holder, disclosed during a Press Conference in Sydney that the FBI and other not-as-yet-named investigators were looking in to the possible hacking of 9/11 victims phones. A sea of tips and an ocean of icebergs. Doubtless more as the hours pass. Owing to the 24 hour Strike by the Broadcast Journalists Union at the BBC, only the One O’Clock News was available in a truncated version and PM wasn’t broadcast at all (perfect timing . . .not). The rest of this post is made up of the minutes leading up to the 5 o’clock news and the James Whale Program via LBC, the commercial News/Talk station in London. Interesting dialogue going on over there no matter where you go. And they have commercials . . . lots of them. I tried cutting down the amount of extraneous stuff, but had to let some slip by in order to get this post up. Bear with it. The strike should be over soon.

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The Rev. Al Sharpton Knocks Down Pat Buchanan’s Talking Points on Reagan Being a Tax Cutter

Click here to view this media While arguing about whether the Republicans and their astroturf “tea party” base should be accepting any new tax increases during this negotiation over raising the debt ceiling, which is by the way pissing me off to no end because this whole argument that’s going on now should be part of budget negotiations and not whether we’re going to pay for bills we’ve already run up under the Bush administration, Pat Buchanan suggested that his hero, Ronald Reagan did not raise taxes while he was President. Buchanan tried trotting out the tired line that I’ve heard him use before, but was not called out for before and that is Ronald Reagan did raise taxes, but he regretted it. BUCHANAN: I was with Ronald Reagan Al in the White House, he cut taxes twenty five percent across the board… (crosstalk) SHARPTON: He raised taxes eleven times. Where you at work that day Pat? BUCHANAN: I told you I came into the White House and he came up and he explained to me the terrible mistake he had made and he said they gave me three dollars in spending increases or three dollars in spending increases for every dollar in tax cuts, I was robbed, and that’s not going to happen again. And that’s why the Republicans are holding their ground. SHARPTON: Pat, he did it, eleven times. Eleven times. All Buchanan could resort to is asking if Reagan was a tax cutter or a tax hiker, with nothing to substantiate that claim one way or the other. If MSNBC doesn’t want to hire Al Sharpton, maybe Current TV will. I think they offered Chris Hayes a contract so Current would not have the chance to do so. Even if you’ve got some issues with Sharpton as I do, I think he’s not someone conservatives want to go up against in a debate and he’s done a really good job filling in for Cenk Uygur. He filled in for Ed Schultz before Cenk went on vacation and his performance on that show was pretty rough and he looked a little nervous. I think he’s found his stride while filling in for Cenk over the last couple of weeks. I would be extremely happy if more of their hosts were as confrontational with their right wing guests as we’ve seen out of Al while he’s been filling in and challenging them on their talking points. Sharpton also did a great job the day before with taking on another right wing Republican, Rep. Tim Huelskamp which you can watch here. Click here to view this media He also did a really good job with Rep. Jack Kingston which I posted here — Rev. Al Sharpton Hits Jack Kingston for Defending Trickle Down Economics and with Rep. Tom Graves here . I’d be more than happy to see Al get some more air time where he’s not letting these right wingers come on and filibuster their talking points, but challenging them instead. If MSNBC would like to find something to fill their re-air of Tweety’s show or some other slot during some of their useless daytime milquetoast programming, I think they’d be wise to think about giving Al a spot. If they don’t, I hope Current picks him up.

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Chávez to return to Cuba for cancer treatment

Second phase of Chávez’s cancer treatment may include chemotherapy or radiation treatment Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez announced on Friday that he will return to Cuba to begin a new phase of cancer treatment that may include chemotherapy. Chávez said he would go to Havana on Saturday “to begin what we’ve called the second phase”. He said he was sending a letter to the president of Venezuela’s national assembly, Fernando Soto Rojas, to seek immediate “legislative authorisation” for his trip as required by the constitution. It was not clear how long Chávez planned to remain in Cuba. The 56-year-old’s cancer diagnosis has thrown Venezuela’s political landscape into uncertainty in the past two weeks. Chávez, who has been a dominant force for his more than 12 years in office, has assured the country that he is confident he will recover while also saying that a long road to recovery remains. Chávez underwent surgery in Cuba on 20 June to remove a cancerous tumour from his pelvic region. He has said the tumour was the size of a baseball. Chávez had aknowledged on Wednesday for the first time that he expected eventually to undergo chemotherapy or radiation treatment. He announced his plans to travel to Cuba after meeting with Peruvian president-elect Ollanta Humala at the presidential palace. Humala wished Chávez the best in “this personal battle you are leading”. The revelation of his trip to Cuba came after reports from Brazil said the Venezuelan leader could undergo his next round of treatment at the Sirio-Libanes hospital in São Paulo, which is considered one of the best hospitals in South America. As they began their meeting at the presidential palace, Humala told Chávez: “Count on our prayers.” “You still have to fulfil a mission with your people as president,” Humala said before they walked into the palace together. Chaávez has kept up near-daily public remarks in the past week while shortening the length of his televised speeches, saying he is under strict doctors’ orders. He has abandoned his usual late-night speeches, though on Thursday he spoke to a crowd of supporters and led a cabinet meeting. Chávez told state television on Friday that while recovering from surgery, he has been waking up at 5am and reading the German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche. He said he has taken up painting again and has been creating a landscape from one of the windows of the presidential palace. “I know there are people who are happy because they believe I’m dying, that I’m going to die soon,” Chávez said. “But those evil wishes are part of that hatred … that is erased like a tsunami of love by the blessings and prayers of a nation, of millions.” Hugo Chávez Venezuela Cuba Cancer guardian.co.uk

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Women are an important constituency in the Democratic party (they were twice as likely to vote for Obama in the last election as any other group). Add to that the fact that one of the most common fears among single women is becoming a bag lady . Gee, Medicare and Social Security cuts sound like a real formula for electoral success, huh? This week, multimillionaire House minority leader Rep. Nancy Pelosi seemingly alerted women to the dangers of the changes to Social Security and Medicare in the various debt ceiling proposals – but also claims that a change to the chained CPI isn’t a cut. That sounds like she sees the train coming down the track and knows she has to sell it to her caucus: “We know firsthand the impact of changes in Medicare,” said Pelosi, flanked by 14 other Democratic women. “We know it because we are women and caregivers and we know it because of the people we represent. We know it because of the special interest we have taken in this bedrock of security for women and families in our country.” Several lawmakers pointed out that women tend to live longer than men, and are usually the primary caregivers in families – making their dependency on key social programs that much more urgent. Several of Pelosi’s colleagues were adamant that changing how Social Security benefits are calculated would essentially be cutting benefits – a stance that the House’s top Democrat didn’t embrace on Tuesday. Rep. Gwen Moore (D-Wis.) [Ed. note: net worth $130K ] stressed that using the chained Consumer Price Index to calculate benefits would push more seniors into poverty. And Rep. Nydia Velazquez (D-N.Y.) [Ed. note: assets up to $5M , with debt totaling $5M] added that reducing these cost-of-living adjustments would “acutely harm” Latina women. Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) [Ed. note: net worth $50M ] said “even Grover Norquist” – the influential leader of the anti-tax group Americans for Tax Reform – considers using the chained CPI to determine benefits a tax hike. “Let’s remember that the average income on Social Security is $19,000 a year,” said Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.). [Ed. note: collects a pension of almost $23K annum from State of Illinois, net worth up to $390,999] “And these are the people who ought to be paying to cut the deficit here?” NOTE: I’m continuing my little experiment of illustrating just how large a class divide exists between us and our elected representatives. As has been reported elsewhere, members of Congress seem to have amazing luck with the stock market – frequently beating the Street by significant margins. So let’s keep in mind that their interests may not always align with ours.

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Deeply Concerned Chris Matthews Fears Climate Change Will ‘Create Trade Routes Across the Arctic Circle!’

Appearing on fellow MSNBCer Ed Schultz's radio show yesterday, Chris Matthews waxed apocalyptic about what he believes will be a dire consequence of climate change. Matthews told Schultz of an unidentified friend in Alaska, presumably not Sarah Palin, who warned him of what's to come from warming temperatures

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Grief and anger over stabbing at Greek resort of British youth Robert Sebbage

Mourning procession at the resort of Laganas, Europe’s party capital on Zakynthos, led by father of Greek taxi driver who killed former England football mascot Robert Sebbage Bloodstains still mark the place where Robert Sebbage was stabbed. On Friday night, a floral tribute to the former England football mascot was erected at the spot by a mourning procession led by the father of the Greek taxi driver who plunged the knife into the 19-year-old holidaymaker’s heart. For a while, Laganas, Europe’s party capital, went quiet as the bars and clubs and open-front restaurants along its neon-lit strip turned off their sound systems. “This is a double tragedy,” lamented Dionysios Morfis, hours after his taxi driver son, Stelios, was imprisoned on charges of premeditated murder after confessing to stabbing Sebbage and four of his friends in an early morning brawl on Wednesday night. “A boy has been killed and his family destroyed, but my own son will pay for it for the rest of his life. We are a broken family, too.” In 2007 Sebbage walked into Wembley stadium with David Beckham at his side; the then 14-year-old from the town of Tadley in Hampshire was a Reading FC fan who had battled a rare neuropathic bowel disorder requiring regular trips to hospital. Police are still trying to establish what happened in this instance. But after his death, as the holiday season gets into full swing, Greece’s premier island resort in the Ionian sea is seething with barely disguised hatred between British partygoers determined to have a good time and Greek locals disgusted with their behaviour. “This place is a boiling cauldron,” said Giorgos Kallivis, who spent several hours with sweat pouring down his cheeks in the baking heat vainly trying to remove the blood from the pavement in front of his pottery shop. “Whoever says otherwise is closing their eyes to the truth. I’m not excusing what happened, but it was going to happen. And it could happen again. “Every night there’s a fight, someone gets beaten up. Tour operators are to blame: all they are interested in is getting the kids drunk, and that’s where they start to misbehave and all the trouble starts.” Greece is accustomed to young Britons who, like Sebbage, are often taking their first holiday abroad alone. But, after Malia in Crete and Faliraki in Rhodes, Laganas has scaled new heights in the realm of anything-goes behaviour. This week, the debauchery was on full display as beer-swilling youngsters careened around the resort on oversized quad bikes in the morning and emerged from marathon pub crawls in intoxicated fury at night. “Every morning I see them on the beach totally drunk when I’m laying out the loungers,” said Philippos Gorgoras, a hotel employee. “Today there was a couple having sex over there, and 10 others standing around them wildly clapping. What struck me was that the couple didn’t seem to mind.” The stabbing has shocked Greeks, but little pity has been shown Stelios Morfis. He had been a member of Athens’ elite presidential guard before returning to the island to work for his father’s cab firm. Born in Sydney to an Australian mother, the burly 21-year-old has run into trouble before. “Greeks are a hospitable people. What he did was absolutely deplorable,” said Nikos Diamantopoulos, a taxi driver in Patras town on the Peloponnese. “He might be saying he lashed out in self defence with his father’s fruit knife, but it’s unacceptable. A lot of us are very afraid that this will reflect badly on taxi drivers in Greece.” More than anything, the attack has prompted soul-searching among a debt-stricken nation dependent on tourism. Seated before an icon in his air-conditioned office, the police chief in Laganas, Dimitrios Angeloudis, was in no doubt where Greece had gone wrong. Tourism, he said, had become seriously toxic. Though British police officers, including rape specialists from Devon and Cornwall, visited the resort earlier this year, Angeloudis believes that no amount of help will resolve a situation increasingly out of control. “Not even an army could solve it. The root cause of the problem has to be dealt with first, starting with the pub crawls, but nobody wants to do that, because a lot of people would stand to suffer. “The only way out is if Laganas improves its infrastructure and focuses on a better-quality tourism. But that will require time, and, again, loss of money.” Local officials admit that adulterated alcohol also plays a role. Bars in the resort are notorious for serving cocktails mixed with pure spirit, part of an age-old tradition of making servings go further. “I’ve requested that there be quality control, that random tests be conducted on bottles in bars here, and it just hasn’t happened,” said Angeloudis. “These drinks encourage the very bad behaviour, which includes throwing bottles at taxis and police cars.” For Britons visiting Laganas, there has been shock at the death followed by anger and, among some, a desire for revenge, with holidaymakers threatening to stage protest rallies to “take back our blood”. “Taxi drivers are especially aggressive and it’s put all of us on edge,” said Alex Cambell, as he distributed flyers outside a club in the resort’s main strip. “They get a lot of flak, but they’re also well-known for beating tourists up.” Ben Phillips, a criminology student at Hull, put it another way: “I think this year will be my last party holiday. Next year I want to go travelling to see a bit of the world. I want to go to Peru.” Greece Crime Alcohol Europe Helena Smith guardian.co.uk

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Grief and anger over stabbing at Greek resort of British youth Robert Sebbage

Mourning procession at the resort of Laganas, Europe’s party capital on Zakynthos, led by father of Greek taxi driver who killed former England football mascot Robert Sebbage Bloodstains still mark the place where Robert Sebbage was stabbed. On Friday night, a floral tribute to the former England football mascot was erected at the spot by a mourning procession led by the father of the Greek taxi driver who plunged the knife into the 19-year-old holidaymaker’s heart. For a while, Laganas, Europe’s party capital, went quiet as the bars and clubs and open-front restaurants along its neon-lit strip turned off their sound systems. “This is a double tragedy,” lamented Dionysios Morfis, hours after his taxi driver son, Stelios, was imprisoned on charges of premeditated murder after confessing to stabbing Sebbage and four of his friends in an early morning brawl on Wednesday night. “A boy has been killed and his family destroyed, but my own son will pay for it for the rest of his life. We are a broken family, too.” In 2007 Sebbage walked into Wembley stadium with David Beckham at his side; the then 14-year-old from the town of Tadley in Hampshire was a Reading FC fan who had battled a rare neuropathic bowel disorder requiring regular trips to hospital. Police are still trying to establish what happened in this instance. But after his death, as the holiday season gets into full swing, Greece’s premier island resort in the Ionian sea is seething with barely disguised hatred between British partygoers determined to have a good time and Greek locals disgusted with their behaviour. “This place is a boiling cauldron,” said Giorgos Kallivis, who spent several hours with sweat pouring down his cheeks in the baking heat vainly trying to remove the blood from the pavement in front of his pottery shop. “Whoever says otherwise is closing their eyes to the truth. I’m not excusing what happened, but it was going to happen. And it could happen again. “Every night there’s a fight, someone gets beaten up. Tour operators are to blame: all they are interested in is getting the kids drunk, and that’s where they start to misbehave and all the trouble starts.” Greece is accustomed to young Britons who, like Sebbage, are often taking their first holiday abroad alone. But, after Malia in Crete and Faliraki in Rhodes, Laganas has scaled new heights in the realm of anything-goes behaviour. This week, the debauchery was on full display as beer-swilling youngsters careened around the resort on oversized quad bikes in the morning and emerged from marathon pub crawls in intoxicated fury at night. “Every morning I see them on the beach totally drunk when I’m laying out the loungers,” said Philippos Gorgoras, a hotel employee. “Today there was a couple having sex over there, and 10 others standing around them wildly clapping. What struck me was that the couple didn’t seem to mind.” The stabbing has shocked Greeks, but little pity has been shown Stelios Morfis. He had been a member of Athens’ elite presidential guard before returning to the island to work for his father’s cab firm. Born in Sydney to an Australian mother, the burly 21-year-old has run into trouble before. “Greeks are a hospitable people. What he did was absolutely deplorable,” said Nikos Diamantopoulos, a taxi driver in Patras town on the Peloponnese. “He might be saying he lashed out in self defence with his father’s fruit knife, but it’s unacceptable. A lot of us are very afraid that this will reflect badly on taxi drivers in Greece.” More than anything, the attack has prompted soul-searching among a debt-stricken nation dependent on tourism. Seated before an icon in his air-conditioned office, the police chief in Laganas, Dimitrios Angeloudis, was in no doubt where Greece had gone wrong. Tourism, he said, had become seriously toxic. Though British police officers, including rape specialists from Devon and Cornwall, visited the resort earlier this year, Angeloudis believes that no amount of help will resolve a situation increasingly out of control. “Not even an army could solve it. The root cause of the problem has to be dealt with first, starting with the pub crawls, but nobody wants to do that, because a lot of people would stand to suffer. “The only way out is if Laganas improves its infrastructure and focuses on a better-quality tourism. But that will require time, and, again, loss of money.” Local officials admit that adulterated alcohol also plays a role. Bars in the resort are notorious for serving cocktails mixed with pure spirit, part of an age-old tradition of making servings go further. “I’ve requested that there be quality control, that random tests be conducted on bottles in bars here, and it just hasn’t happened,” said Angeloudis. “These drinks encourage the very bad behaviour, which includes throwing bottles at taxis and police cars.” For Britons visiting Laganas, there has been shock at the death followed by anger and, among some, a desire for revenge, with holidaymakers threatening to stage protest rallies to “take back our blood”. “Taxi drivers are especially aggressive and it’s put all of us on edge,” said Alex Cambell, as he distributed flyers outside a club in the resort’s main strip. “They get a lot of flak, but they’re also well-known for beating tourists up.” Ben Phillips, a criminology student at Hull, put it another way: “I think this year will be my last party holiday. Next year I want to go travelling to see a bit of the world. I want to go to Peru.” Greece Crime Alcohol Europe Helena Smith guardian.co.uk

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Just went you thought that a crazy news week was going to end in a mellow note this Friday, massive dynamite exploded in Rupert Murdoch’s corrupt media empire. Just a little while ago news broke about yet another blockbuster resignation from Murdoch’s rattled camp . This time it is Les Hinton, who has been Murdoch’s lieutenant for more than 50 years. More from the Guardian, which has been all over this: Some more now on the career of Hinton, who served for 12 years as Executive Chairman of News International. Before that, he spent 20 years working in the US, first as a correspondent for the company’s newspapers in the UK and Australia and later in a series of senior management positions at its publishing and television business units. So just how bad and big is this stpru? As Eric Boehlert from Media Matters tweeted a little while ago: In the last month Murdoch has lost his News Corp general counsel, his @WSJ publisher and his Brit newspaper CEO; bit.ly/n6Gd8A Adding this : Does the canning of Brook and @WSJ Hinton mean that News Corp might have evidence that shocking 9/11 hacking allegation are true? Good question all around. Reminds me of this question posed in 2008 : Has Roger Ailes been keeping tabs on your phone calls? Fox laughed it off back then but it is not so funny any more. Guess we will have to stay tuned as the situation around Murdoch continues to unravel.

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