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It’s not only possible , it seems likely — considering that the radiation released from the site is increasing, not decreasing: Molten nuclear fuel in three reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi power plant is likely to have burned through pressure vessels, not just the cores , Japan has said in a report in which it also acknowledges it was unprepared for an accident of the severity of Fukushima. It is the first time Japanese authorities have admitted the possibility that the fuel suffered “melt-through” – a more serious scenario than a core meltdown. The report, which is to be submitted to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), said fuel rods in reactors No 1, 2 and 3 had probably not only melted, but also breached their inner containment vessels and accumulated in the outer steel containment vessels. The plant’s operator, Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco), says it believes the molten fuel is being cooled by water that has built up in the bottom of the three reactor buildings. The report includes an apology to the international community for the nuclear crisis – the world’s worst since Chernobyl in 1986 – and expresses “remorse that this accident has raised concerns around the world about the safety of nuclear power generation”.

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It’s not only possible , it seems likely — considering that the radiation released from the site is increasing, not decreasing: Molten nuclear fuel in three reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi power plant is likely to have burned through pressure vessels, not just the cores , Japan has said in a report in which it also acknowledges it was unprepared for an accident of the severity of Fukushima. It is the first time Japanese authorities have admitted the possibility that the fuel suffered “melt-through” – a more serious scenario than a core meltdown. The report, which is to be submitted to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), said fuel rods in reactors No 1, 2 and 3 had probably not only melted, but also breached their inner containment vessels and accumulated in the outer steel containment vessels. The plant’s operator, Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco), says it believes the molten fuel is being cooled by water that has built up in the bottom of the three reactor buildings. The report includes an apology to the international community for the nuclear crisis – the world’s worst since Chernobyl in 1986 – and expresses “remorse that this accident has raised concerns around the world about the safety of nuclear power generation”.

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Weiner Roast: 6 Punny Front Pages Take on Weinergate

Leave it to the tabloids. Purveyors of the puns, papers like the New York Post and Newsday sufficiently skewered Anthony Weiner in the midst of his Twitter photo scandal. Here are the six best headlines.

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Tim Pawlenty’s Ridiculous Google Test

enlarge Now here’s a novel idea: Tim Pawlenty, in his economic genius, proposes a Google test to balance the budget. There’s some obvious targets. We can start by applying what I call “The Google Test.” If you can find a good or service on the Internet. Then the federal government probably doesn’t need to be doing it. The post office — the government printing office — Amtrak — Fannie and Freddie were all built for a different time in our country. When the private sector did not adequately provide those services. That’s no longer the case. Really? Last time I looked I didn’t see private sector companies breaking my door down to offer me train service to Los Angeles during rush hour commute times, nor did I see them step up to propose a high-speed rail plan for our traffic-strapped area. FedEx and UPS don’t deliver individual hand-written letters unless they’re placed inside a FedEx/UPS-approved larger envelope and then I pay about $17 bucks to get it delivered to the recipient. That’s about 37 times higher than it costs me right now to send that letter via the post office. Banks? HAHAHAHAHA. Yes, banks are banging down the door to lend money, haven’t you noticed? Okay, I’ve had my fun. Time to be a little more serious here. It’s time to say very loudly that after ten years of the Bush tax cuts, that they’ve failed miserably. What Pawlenty is proposing is even more full-tilt BirchBagger: American businesses today pay the second highest tax rates in the world. That’s a recipe for failure — not adding jobs and economic growth. We should cut the business tax rate by more than half. I propose reducing the current rate from 35% to 15% . Oh yes, that will certainly create more jobs. We see how effective it is when large corporations pay no taxes, and actually receive refunds larger than their tax liability. That’s created so many jobs that unemployment rates are dropping into the zero zone. Oh, wait. Maybe not . Maybe it’s that whole “let’s be an optimist and set big goals” that will do the trick? Between 1983 and 1987 — the Reagan recovery grew at 4.9%. Between 1996 and 1999 —- under President Bill Clinton and a Republican Congress. The economy grew at more than 4.7%. In each case millions of new jobs were created — incomes rose — and unemployment fell to historic lows. The same can happen again. Growing at 5% a year — rather than the current level of 1.8% — would net us millions of new jobs. Trillions of dollars in new wealth. Put us on a path to saving our entitlement programs. And balance the federal budget. Yes, that’s it! It must be it, because he’s right, the economy grew under both Presidents Reagan and Clinton. But then, there was also that little problem of tax rates being higher under both of those presidents than it has been for the past 10 years. Oops. So is TPaw proposing a tax hike? Um, no. Ok, well then it must be the balanced budget thing that will create jobs, right? That’s why I support a constitutional amendment. That not only requires a balanced federal budget. But also caps federal spending as a percentage of our economy. Around the historical average of 18% of GDP. Only a constitutional amendment has the power to bind future Congresses to keep their promises. Force decision-makers to finally make decisions. And give statutory reforms a chance to succeed. That’s it! Just cap spending and lower taxes and those jobs will roll right on through, right? Only… TPaw left Minnesota with a $5 billion — billion with a B — deficit. Seems like the only option is to raise taxes. What a concept.

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Former CNNer Bob Franken: Pawlenty Plotting ‘Oligarchy’

It takes a former CNN “correspondent” to make Tim Pawlenty sound scary . . . It's kind of fun to watch former MSM “reporters” turn into totally-out, liberal partisans once they leave their “reporting” gigs.

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Alec Baldwin, Mayor of New York? It Could Happen

The rumor mill hasn’t even had a moment to pause and take a breath in the wake of Weinergate, and already we’re speculating who could be next in line for New York politics. According to The Daily, Alec Baldwin’s long-held desire to delve into politics might be realized with a suggestion that he’s considering running

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Michele Bachmann’s new strategist Ed Rollins blasts Sarah Palin as being "Not Serious"

Click here to view this media Ed Rollins is a longtime Republican operative who back in 2009 had this to say about Sarah Palin: Ed Rollins on Sarah Palin quitting: It was a disaster and insulting He started his career in politics back in the days of Nixon to Reagan and then he was hired by Huckabee in 2008 as his national campaign chairman. He was interviewed in the documentary called Boogie Man , about the life of Lee Atwater, the man responsible for the Willie Horton ads in which he talked about his friendship to Lee. Rollins is considered a pro in GOPtopia: National Campaign Director to Ronald Reagan in the 1984. In 1987, he had decided to manage the campaign of former New York Congressman Jack Kemp , convinced that Bush was not the true conservative heir to Reagan. {} On December 14, 2007 , Republican Mike Huckabee announced he had hired Rollins as his national campaign chairman and senior advisor. Rollins was later overheard saying that he wanted to “knock out” Mitt Romney ‘s teeth. Rollins is now part of Bachmann’s team and had this to say about Momma Grizzly: Michele Bachmann’s new top consultant, Ed Rollins, began his tenure with scathing criticism of potential Bachmann rival Sarah Palin. “Sarah has not been serious over the last couple of years,” Rollins told Brian Kilmeade on his radio show, Kilmeade and Friends. “She got the Vice Presidential thing handed to her, she didn’t go to work in the sense of trying to gain more substance, she gave up her governorship.” He suggested that the contrast would favor Bachmann. “Michele Bachmann and others [have] worked hard, she has been a leader of the Tea Party which is a very important element here, she has been an attorney, she has done important things with family values.” “She is probably the best communicator [in the GOP field] now that Mike Huckabee’s not in there,” he said. Ed called her out on quitting her job as Governor of Alaska which virtually no Republican has dared to do before. And so it begins.

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Michele Bachmann’s new strategist Ed Rollins blasts Sarah Palin as being "Not Serious"

Click here to view this media Ed Rollins is a longtime Republican operative who back in 2009 had this to say about Sarah Palin: Ed Rollins on Sarah Palin quitting: It was a disaster and insulting He started his career in politics back in the days of Nixon to Reagan and then he was hired by Huckabee in 2008 as his national campaign chairman. He was interviewed in the documentary called Boogie Man , about the life of Lee Atwater, the man responsible for the Willie Horton ads in which he talked about his friendship to Lee. Rollins is considered a pro in GOPtopia: National Campaign Director to Ronald Reagan in the 1984. In 1987, he had decided to manage the campaign of former New York Congressman Jack Kemp , convinced that Bush was not the true conservative heir to Reagan. {} On December 14, 2007 , Republican Mike Huckabee announced he had hired Rollins as his national campaign chairman and senior advisor. Rollins was later overheard saying that he wanted to “knock out” Mitt Romney ‘s teeth. Rollins is now part of Bachmann’s team and had this to say about Momma Grizzly: Michele Bachmann’s new top consultant, Ed Rollins, began his tenure with scathing criticism of potential Bachmann rival Sarah Palin. “Sarah has not been serious over the last couple of years,” Rollins told Brian Kilmeade on his radio show, Kilmeade and Friends. “She got the Vice Presidential thing handed to her, she didn’t go to work in the sense of trying to gain more substance, she gave up her governorship.” He suggested that the contrast would favor Bachmann. “Michele Bachmann and others [have] worked hard, she has been a leader of the Tea Party which is a very important element here, she has been an attorney, she has done important things with family values.” “She is probably the best communicator [in the GOP field] now that Mike Huckabee’s not in there,” he said. Ed called her out on quitting her job as Governor of Alaska which virtually no Republican has dared to do before. And so it begins.

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Unseen Cecil Beaton pictures of Queen to go on show at V&A

Major photography exhibition will mark Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Previously unseen pictures of a young and relaxed Princess Elizabeth by Cecil Beaton, one of the most celebrated of photographers, will join his formal portraits of the Queen at a major exhibition at the Victorian and Albert museum to mark the Diamond Jubilee, it was announced yesterday. The show at the V&A draws on more than 18,000 photographs, negatives and transparencies in the V&A’s collection of Beaton’s royal portraits. Alongside nearly 30 years of the Queen’s portraits, there will be excerpts from Beaton’s diaries and letters. Given the nature of Beaton’s commission, his work was up among the most widely viewed and published photographs of the 20th century, many of the portraits will be quite familiar. But the show’s curator, Susanna Brown, said there would be items not previously exhibited, including informal snapshots of the Queen preparing for her coronation day in 1953, and the golden coach returning to the palace afterward. There will also be unexhibited shots of the wartime bomb damage to Buckingham Palace during the blitz – it was hit nine times. Beaton prepared intensively and nervously for each sitting in an attempt to get the perfect portrait. “I think they got on very well,” said Brown. “I think she [the Queen] understood that he was a real asset to them: he could really help, in terms of their public profile, and his images were circulated so widely. We tend to forget that these images were made for PR purposes; they went all over the world.” Beaton took photographs of Elizabeth at various stages of her reign: as a 16-year-old on becoming colonel-in-chief of the Grenadier Guards, at her coronation, and after the birth of each of her four children. One unanswered question is why the final Beaton portrait of the Queen is a formal setting, in the palace’s Blue Drawing Room, from 1968: why none from the 1970s, when the photographer was very much continuing to work, up until his death, in 1980? A version of the V&A show will open at the McManus museum and gallery, in Dundee, before opening in London on 8 February; it will then tour Leeds, Norwich and Newcastle. Photography V&A Museums The Queen Monarchy Mark Brown guardian.co.uk

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