Saturday, June 21, 2008

5 No BS Ways To Get A Credit Score For Free [Equifax]



 
 

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via Consumerist by Ben Popken on 6/20/08

Here are 5 ways to get your credit score for free. Note, all of them are the credit scores developed by the credit bureaus themselves, Experian, TransUnion, and Equifax, and are not your FICO score, which is only sold by the Fair Issac Corporation (you can get your FICO score through myfico.com). Only the FICO score is used by lenders to determine your credit worthiness. However, you can at least use these credit bureau scores to get a general sense of how good your credit is.

  • CreditKarma.com: Gives you your TransUnion score. Advertising-supported.
  • E-Loan: Experian score. Scroll down to "One-Time Credit Snapshots" and "Free Credit Score (Credit Score Only)"
  • Prosper: Experian score. Information on how to do it here.
  • LendingClub: Gives you a letter grade score, which you can use this chart to translate to a numerical score.
  • Washington Mutual Credit Cards: Get your Transunion score when you log in.
  • Another way these are useful is that if you check in periodically and keep track of the results, you can see how your score fluctuates and try to correlate its delta with any credit-related actions you took during that time. But, if you're shopping for a loan or a mortgage, you will definitely want to pony up the cash and get your real FICO score.

    [via MyMoneyBlog]



 
 

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Happy Moratorium Day! Another $162-billion for war | AfterDowningStreet.org

Happy Moratorium Day! Another $162-billion for war | AfterDowningStreet.org: "Another cave-in by Congressional Democrats. Another deal to keep the war going, in exchange for a few crumbs.

Today is Iraq Moratorium day. Do something to let them know what you think.

It's true that 151 Democrats voted against the war funding. So, if you want to thank them, go ahead -- but don't thank them too much, David Swanson says. Here's the roll call.

'Not a single one of them did a damned thing more than vote no,' Swanson (left), of Democrats.com, ImpeachCheney.org and , AfterDowningStreet.org said in a Milwaukee appearance Thursday night. They didn't issue public statements to the media, write their colleagues, or do anything to press to defeat the bill. 'They voted no, knowing it would pass.'"

Democrats Hoyer, Pelosi Hand White House Sweeping Legislative Victories | AfterDowningStreet.org

Democrats Hoyer, Pelosi Hand White House Sweeping Legislative Victories | AfterDowningStreet.org: "In a one-two punch Thursday and Friday, Democrats, led by Pelosi, gave the Bush administration sweeping new domestic spy powers, immunized telecom companies that participated in possibly illegal surveillance of American citizens, and agreed to further fund the occupation of Iraq with a promise to the White House that the final bill would not include benchmarks or timetables for withdrawal.

The Senate is expected to vote on both bills next week and would put to rest of months of partisan bickering and guarantees that the issue won’t pop up during the height of the presidential campaign in the fall. President Bush said he would sign both pieces of legislation into law when it crosses his desk"

Rep. Steve King (R-IA) to McClellan: Why couldn’t you just shut up?



 
 

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via Crooks and Liars by SilentPatriot on 6/20/08

  Who can forget Rep Steve King's horrible words about Obama back in Iowa?

King: "And I will tell you that, if he is elected president, then the, the radical Islamists, the, the al-Qaida, and the radical Islamists and their supporters, will be dancing in the streets in greater numbers than they did on September 11….

Well, he's baaaack. In one of the most reprehensible lines of questioning today - and Lord knows there were many as Republicans desperately try to outdo each other on who can cover Bush's ass best - GOP stooge Steve King takes the cake with this gem:

"Couldn't you have taken this to the grave with you and done this country a favor?"

video_wmv Download | Play  video_mov Download | Play

You see, in bizarro Republican world, staying silent and allowing your fellow citizens to remain clueless about how their leaders lie to them is the right, patriotic thing to do. Only traitors speak up about how their country is being flushed down the toilet when there's still time to actually do something about it.

You should be ashamed of yourself, Scott.


 
 

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Thursday, June 19, 2008

Bush And McCain Try To Steal Credit For Webb’s GI Bill That They Consistentl...



 
 

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via Think Progress by Amanda on 6/19/08

bushmccain.jpg Yesterday, House leaders in both parties struck a deal on a war supplemental bill that includes expanded college benefits for veterans. The GI Bill is Sen. Jim Webb's (D-VA) version, as well as a provision allowing troops to transfer the benefits to family members. President Bush has promised to sign the legislation.

Now, however, Bush and Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) — the two most vocal opponents of Webb's bill — are trying to take credit for it. They are claiming that they always supported the generous benefits — their main concern was just ensuring the benefits' transferability:

McCain: That has always been my primary concern with respect to the Webb bill. … With the addition of the transferability provisions sought by Senators Graham, Burr, myself and others to give service members the right to transfer earned G.I. Bill benefits to spouses and children, we will have achieved in offering vastly improved educational benefit.

Bush: Throughout the past five months, President Bush and members of his Administration have worked hard to ensure that an expansion of GI benefits includes transferability. … The President is pleased that Congress answered his call.

Webb said that he had been considering changing his bill to include a transferability option. But instead of working with him, McCain and Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) went ahead and introduced an opposing bill. While it did have transferability, it also had less generous educational benefits.

This was never the real reason Bush and McCain opposed the legislation. Their constant complaint was that Webb's version was too generous and would lead to a drop in military retention:

McCain: "I want to make sure that we have incentives for people to remain in the military as well as for people to join the military."

Bush administration: "The last thing we want to do is provide a benefit — or the last thing we want to do is create a situation in which we are losing our men and women who we have worked so hard to train."

As the CBO concluded, these claims about retention were inaccurate. The Pentagon also argued that it was too generous to confer benefits on troops after "only" two years of service, and legislation offered by McCain and his Senate allies would have reserved the most generous benefits for those who have served at least 12 years, excluding most servicemembers.


 
 

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Congress in One Word



 
 

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via Open Congress : Congress Gossip Blog by Donny Shaw on 6/19/08

The Sunlight Foundation yesterday launched a really cool new site: CapitolWords. It's insanely simple – for every day Congress is in session, the site displays the word that was spoken most frequently in the House and Senate or inserted in the Congressional Record. Yesterday's hot word was "oil." The day before that, "health." This is a great tool for tracking trends in the issues Congress deems most worthy of action… er, debate.

There is definitely substantial analysis to be drawn from the data. For example, Chris Hayes at The Nation noticed that "you have to go back to May 15th to get the most recent day that "Iraq" was the most commonly invoked word."


 
 

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Florida’s Republican House Speaker calls McCain ‘disingenuous’ for linking d...



 
 

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via Think Progress by Matt on 6/19/08

Though he supports offshore drilling, Florida House Speaker Marco Rubio (R) "challenged Gov. Charlie Crist and John McCain's implication that drilling could lower gas prices anytime soon." Rubio told the Miami Herald today that Crist and McCain are making a "disingenuous" and "flawed" argument:

"For anyone to represent that someone drilling off the coast in Florida is going to lower gas prices here or anywhere in this country is disingenuous and a flawed argument," he said. "Oil drilling could take 10 years before any oil is pulled out of the ground, and there are a large number of leases held by oil companies that are not being exploited now. We can't say we need more until we've exploited those."

(HT: Ben Smith)


 
 

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Eight in 10 Americans say country is headed in the ‘wrong direction.’



 
 

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via Think Progress by Amanda on 6/19/08

A new AP-Ipsos poll finds that nearly eight in 10 Americans believe "the country is moving in the wrong direction…amid soaring food and gas prices, falling home values and unending war. Just 17 percent say the country is going in the right direction." This figure is the lowest since the survey began in 2003, and when compared with other past surveys, "the general level of pessimism is the worst in almost 30 years."


 
 

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Conservatives Echo McCain’s False Claim That Katrina Caused No Oil Spill Damage



 
 

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via Think Progress by Guest on 6/19/08

In a Tuesday speech delivered before an audience of oil executives, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) pushed to overturn the federal ban on offshore oil drilling. McCain claimed drilling is so "safe" that "not even Hurricane Katrina and Rita could cause significant spillage from battered rigs off the coasts of New Orleans and Houston." Watch it:

Picking up McCain's talking points, a growing chorus of conservatives have repeated this claim as justification for expanded drilling:

George Will: "Hurricanes Katrina and Rita destroyed or damaged hundreds of drilling rigs without causing a large spill."

Wall Street Journal editorial: "Hurricanes Katrina and Rita flattened terminals across the Gulf of Mexico but didn't cause a single oil spill."

Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne: "When Katrina and Rita hit the Gulf Coast where we have about 4,000 oil and gas platforms, 3,000 were in the direct line of the storms - the most significant storms we've seen ever - and 3,000 of those had to be shut down. We had no significant oil spill. The system worked."

Fox News' Dick Morris: "And by the way, the safety concerns, Hurricane Katrina didn't cause any leakage or any spill in the Gulf of Mexico oil wells."

The truth is that Hurricane Katrina caused oil spillage so significant it was clearly visible from space. It also wreaked environmental havock near the scale of the 1989 Exxon Valdez disaster.

The Wonk Room's Brad Johnson explains the disastrous extent of Katrina's wreckage of Gulf oil facilities.

Lee Fang


 
 

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Film Flashback: How Steve Carell Killed John Hughes And Succeeded Through Vomit

Film Flashback: How Steve Carell Killed John Hughes And Succeeded Through Vomit
Check out the clips in this article - very funny

How to covertly train paramilitaries, censor the press, ban unions, employ terrorists, conduct warrantless searches, suspend habeas corpus, conceal br

How to covertly train paramilitaries, censor the press, ban unions, employ terrorists, conduct warrantless searches, suspend habeas corpus, conceal breaches of the Geneva Convention and make the population love it

From Wikileaks: release of "a sensitive 219 page US military counterinsurgency manual. The manual, Foreign Internal Defense Tactics Techniques and Procedures for Special Forces (1994, 2004), may be critically described as "what we learned about running death squads and propping up corrupt government in Latin America and how to apply it to other places". Its contents are both history defining for Latin America and, given the continued role of US Special Forces in the suppression of insurgencies, including in Iraq and Afghanistan, history making."

Wikileaks claims "The leaked manual, which has been verified with military sources, is the official US Special Forces doctrine for Foreign Internal Defense or FID."

Crooks and Liars » Waas: Cronyism by the head of the OJJDP led to the promotion of Golf instead of funds for Delinquency prevention

Crooks and Liars » Waas: Cronyism by the head of the OJJDP led to the promotion of Golf instead of funds for Delinquency prevention
Murray Waas has an incredible story up about the horror that is known as Bush cronyism from the Justice Department’s Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP).

J. Robert Flores, the administrator of OJJDP has cut funding for the training of corrections officers to prevent the physical and sexual abuse of incarcerated children. He has cut funds for a program to counsel rape victims that had been praised by President Bush. He has cut funds to prevent the incarceration of mentally ill or mentally retarded children. And he has cut funding for programs to prevent the suicide of gay and lesbian children.

Isn’t it interesting that Bill Bennett’s wife gets a nice taste of cash out of this haul instead of it going to help teens stay out of prison :

The consequences to children were devastating. When incarcerated with adults, children are subjected to physical and sexual assaults, raped, and even murdered. According to the Justice Department’s Bureau of Justice Statistics, for the year 2005, 21% of sexual assault victims in jails were juveniles even though kids only constitute less than 1% of the nation’s incarcerated population …read on

And Murray says: “Tomorrow morning, Flores will be questioned under oath about all of this before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.” He’s got a lot more on the story

TPMMuckraker | Talking Points Memo | Congressman's Sister Pleads Guilty

TPMMuckraker | Talking Points Memo | Congressman's Sister Pleads Guilty: "Brenda Jefferson, a younger sister of embattled U.S. Rep. William Jefferson, pleaded guilty this afternoon to concealing her knowledge of an alleged conspiracy to take money from nonprofits that involved several of her relatives."

cryptogon.com » Archives » The Best Farmland in the U.S. Is Flooded; Most Americans Are Too Stupid to Panic

cryptogon.com » Archives » The Best Farmland in the U.S. Is Flooded; Most Americans Are Too Stupid to Panic: "The best commentary I could offer is a link to a previous story:

World’s Largest Maker of Crop Nutrients: Famines May Occur Without Record Harvests

But I’ll ramble on a bit more about this, anyway.

As soon as I became aware of the flooding situation in the American Midwest, I posted the story with the EMERGENCY prefix on the title. Just so we’re clear, when I write EMERGENCY at the beginning of a post title, this is my way of indicating that the situation is as serious as it gets. It means that I feel as though everyone reading should consider taking immediate evasive action. All the jawboning about conspiracy, how things could have been, how things should be, etc. are behind us now. You know, EMERGENCY, act fast, eyes wide, nostrils flared, etc."

New York City spends $2 billion on stadiums while slashing public funds

New York City spends $2 billion on stadiums while slashing public funds: "New York City’s two major league baseball teams are in the midst of constructing enormously expensive new stadiums to be ready for opening day of the 2009 baseball season.

Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, which opened 85 years ago, will be replaced by a new structure that is going up right across the street, on the current site of Macombs Dam Park. The new stadium is expected to cost at least $1.3 billion, making it the most expensive stadium ever built in the US. The $1.3 billion figure does not include at least $500 million that the city is spending for garages and to replace the parkland handed over for the new stadium."

Philippines: Spiralling rice prices bring hunger to millions

Philippines: Spiralling rice prices bring hunger to millions: "An Asian Development Bank report published in May estimated that food price increases in the Philippines could send an estimated 2.72 million people into absolute poverty. This was the best-case scenario, based on an assumption that the cost of food would rise by 10 percent over the next year. More than 5.6 million people would be pauperised if food prices jumped by 20 percent and over 8.8 million people if the increase were 30 percent."

Populism and plutocracy: Obama speaks to the Wall Street Journal

Populism and plutocracy: Obama speaks to the Wall Street Journal:

An interview with Barack Obama published Tuesday in the Wall Street Journal, the newspaper of record of big business, gives a glimpse of the tricky double game that the Democratic presidential candidate is playing in the 2008 campaign. He seeks to combine populist rhetoric about the economic difficulties confronting millions of working people with reassurances to American billionaires that an Obama administration can be relied upon to defend their interests.

Obama spoke with Journal reporters on his campaign bus Monday, as he made multiple appearances in Michigan along the corridor of urban blight, from Flint to Detroit, in what was once the heartland of the American auto industry. His interview followed a speech in Flint, in which he outlined an economic program that he called his “competitiveness agenda,” and preceded a large rally held at Joe Louis Arena in downtown Detroit.

The essence of Obama’s approach to economic issues, as with his candidacy as a whole, is the attempt to reconcile the irreconcilable. He voices sympathy for the plight of the unemployed, those without health insurance, those paying record high gas prices, without expressing the slightest hostility to the financial parasites responsible for creating such conditions: the highly paid corporate CEOs, hedge fund operators, investment bankers and commodities speculators.

In his discussion with the Journal about the collapse of the old industrial centers of the United States, Obama gave a blunt description of the impact of globalization on American society. “We’re going through a big shift from a national economy that was also dominant across the globe to a truly global economy in which we’re seeing competition from every corner,” he said.

“The combination of globalization and technology and automation all weaken the position of workers,” he continued. “I would add an anti-union climate to that list. But all weakens the position of workers, particularly blue-collar workers, in the economy, and some of it is just historical. You know after World War II, we were in this unique position where Europe was decimated, Japan was decimated. China was off the grid because of Mao. And so we didn’t have a lot of competition out there, and now other countries are rising and automation has supplanted a lot of work that used to be done by middle-class workers.”

Obama noted the growth of economic inequality over the past two decades—under the Clinton administration as well as the Bush administration—and he observed that this contradicted the claims that an increase in productivity would raise living standards overall. “What we’ve seen is rising productivity, rising corporate profits but flat-lining or even declining wages and incomes for the average family,” he said.

For that reason, he explained, some form of government intervention in economic life was required to alter the distribution of wealth: “It’s going to be important for us to pay attention to not only growing the pie, which is always critical, but also some attention to how it is sliced. I do not believe that those two things—fair distribution and robust economic growth—are mutually exclusive.”

Obama is the first Democratic presidential candidate in a generation even to raise the issue of wealth distribution in a campaign. However, the resulting article in the Journal did not portray him as a dangerous radical, but as a potential ally of big business who might be persuaded to lower taxes on corporate America.

As the article summed up the Democratic candidate’s policy: “Sen. Barack Obama shed new light on his economic plans for the country, saying he would rely on a heavy dose of government spending to spur growth, use the tax code to narrow the widening gap between winners and losers in the U.S. economy, and possibly back a reduction in corporate tax rates.”

Obama repeatedly presented his policies as business-friendly, and disavowed any commitment to expanding the size of the federal government: “I think the danger is always to equate size of government with effectiveness, and I don’t. It’s not clear to me that we want a larger government, but we certainly want a government that is setting more intelligent priorities and using taxpayer dollars more wisely and structuring tax policies that are conducive to long-term economic growth.”

He argued that the policies of the Bush administration had been so completely skewed towards the wealthy that they had actually been counterproductive, in terms of the long-term interests of the corporate elite.

“If, as some talk about, we’ve got a winner-take-all economy where the highly skilled, highly educated are reaping huge rewards and the unskilled or even semi-skilled are getting a much smaller share of the economy, then our tax policies can help cushion some of the blow through providing health care,” he said. “So if people lose their jobs they’re not losing their health care as well. That actually makes a more flexible work force that makes workers more mobile and less resistant to change.”

This extraordinary statement deserves consideration. Obama is not opposed to people losing their jobs or to reducing the share of the national income going to low and middle-income workers. He presents himself to the Journal, not as the advocate of working people, but as an adviser to the corporate oligarchy, explaining to them the techniques required to make workers, as he put it, “more mobile and less resistant to change.”

This language is an elliptical reference to events like the recent strike by workers at American Axle, who proved highly “resistant to change,” opposing the demands by the company, and its billionaire CEO Richard Dauch, for drastic cuts in wages and benefits and the elimination of thousands of jobs. Obama adopts essentially the same standpoint as that of the United Auto Workers union bureaucracy, which sought through a combination of “cushions” (buyouts) and threats to compel the workers to accept the company’s demands.

Obama’s statement also contains a basic falsification. The growth of inequality is not, as he claims, driven primarily by differences in education and skills. It represents a radical and historically unprecedented transfer of wealth from the working people to the owners of capital. Wealth begets more wealth, particularly as the basis of the US economy increasingly shifts from the production of goods to the manipulation of financial markets.

Asked directly by the Journal, “Would you like to reduce the corporate tax rate?” Obama responded, “If we could eliminate loopholes in taxes, create a level playing field, then I think there’s the possibility to reducing corporate rates.” He said his team of economic advisers—headed by the newly appointed Jason Furman, a former top aide to Citigroup chairman Robert Rubin—was going to “take a look at that.”

As for his choice of policy advisers, Obama boasted of his pragmatic and non-ideological approach, saying he would consult both Wall Street figures like Rubin, Treasury secretary in the Clinton administration, and more liberal figures like Robert Reich, the former Clinton secretary of labor. “I tend to be eclectic,” he told the Journal. “I’m going to make these judgments not based on some fierce ideological pre-disposition but based on what makes sense. I’m a big believer in evidence. I’m a big believer in fact. You know, if somebody shows me we can do something better through a market mechanism, I’m happy to do it. I have no vested interest in expanding government or setting up a program just for the sake of setting one up.”

The message could not be clearer: no return to “big government” (a coded reference to slashing government social programs), no bashing of big business, no objection to “market” (i.e., profit-based) approaches to social problems.

This olive branch to Wall Street does not represent a change in direction, but a continuation of the course which Obama has pursued throughout the campaign to secure the Democratic presidential nomination. And Wall Street has long taken notice: according to figures compiled by the Center for Responsive Politics, Obama has raised more money from individual donors and political action committees in the securities and investment sector than any other campaign, slightly more than Hillary Clinton and more than double Republican John McCain.

In part, of course, this simply represents Wall Street investing in what is clearly a promising “start-up” venture: Obama currently leads in national polls, and on Wednesday the Quinnipiac poll reported that he had taken the lead over McCain for the first time in three critical “battleground” states, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Florida.

Much has been made in sections of the liberal press about the supposedly progressive character of Obama’s tax policies, as though they represented an effort to revive a welfare-state approach to social spending on health care and education. This is clearly not the case.

According to an analysis by the Tax Policy Center, both the Democratic and the Republican candidates would significantly reduce the revenues of the federal government. Obama’s tax plan would cut taxes overall by $2.7 trillion, compared to $3.7 trillion for McCain.

Obama’s policies can be considered unfriendly to the super-rich only by comparison to those of George W. Bush. They are actually somewhat less onerous than those carried out in Bill Clinton’s first term in office, when the income tax rate for the wealthy was raised by a small amount.

As for his proposals for increased spending on infrastructure, outlined in his Flint speech, these include $15 billion a year for ten years on new energy technology, $60 billion for transportation improvements, particularly railroads and energy grids, and $10 billion for early childhood education.

These sums—a combined total of $220 billion over ten years—are a mere drop in the bucket compared to the unmet social needs, which now run into the trillions. The total is less than the annual gross profits of the leading Wall Street firms.

As for its economic impact, Obama’s energy plan would pump less into the economy over ten years than this year’s economic stimulus package, agreed on by the Bush White House and the Democratic Congress earlier this year, whose long-term economic effect will be next to nothing.

The reason for the gross disparity between reformist rhetoric and actual policy is plain: Obama, like McCain and Clinton, is a capitalist politician who defends the profit system. He will propose only those measures which are compatible with the interests of the giant corporations and billionaires who are the real rulers in American society.

The defense of the interests of working people requires a break with the corporate-controlled political framework, the two-party system, and the building of an independent mass political party that will fight for the working class, in America and worldwide, on the basis of a socialist program.

See Also:
At AIPAC, Obama outlines policy shift to defend US, Israeli interests
[11 June 2008]
Obama clinches Democratic presidential nomination
[5 June 2008]
The two faces of Barack Obama
[14 February 2008]

cryptogon.com » Archives » Flooded Corn Fields = Higher Gasoline Prices

cryptogon.com » Archives » Flooded Corn Fields = Higher Gasoline Prices: "This situation represents a massive, slow moving disaster and few people (outside of commodity trading circles) even realize it yet. The criminal corn lobby, and the whores in Congress who service it, are the ones to thank for this.

Via: Reuters:

U.S. gasoline prices, which have already jumped to a nationwide average over $4 per gallon, may get an extra nudge from soaring costs for gasoline-additive ethanol as the worst floods in 15 years hit the Midwest Corn Belt."

cryptogon.com » Archives » Giant Oil Companies to Return to Iraq Under No Bid Contracts

cryptogon.com » Archives » Giant Oil Companies to Return to Iraq Under No Bid Contracts: "Four Western oil companies are in the final stages of negotiations this month on contracts that will return them to Iraq, 36 years after losing their oil concession to nationalization as Saddam Hussein rose to power.

Exxon Mobil, Shell, Total and BP — the original partners in the Iraq Petroleum Company — along with Chevron and a number of smaller oil companies, are in talks with Iraq’s Oil Ministry for no-bid contracts to service Iraq’s largest fields, according to ministry officials, oil company officials and an American diplomat.

The deals, expected to be announced on June 30, will lay the foundation for the first commercial work for the major companies in Iraq since the American invasion, and open a new and potentially lucrative country for their operations."

cryptogon.com » Archives » Secret Report Says U.S. Nuke Parts Missing

cryptogon.com » Archives » Secret Report Says U.S. Nuke Parts Missing: "The US military cannot locate hundreds of sensitive nuclear missile components, according to several government officials familiar with a secret Pentagon report on nuclear safeguards.

Robert Gates, US defence secretary, recently fired both the US Air Force chief of staff and air force secretary after an investigation blamed the air force for the inadvertent shipment of nuclear missile nose cones to Taiwan."

cryptogon.com » Archives » FLOODING TO INFLATE GROCERY BILLS ACROSS THE BOARD

cryptogon.com » Archives » FLOODING TO INFLATE GROCERY BILLS ACROSS THE BOARD: "For consumers feeling the pinch of higher food prices, the flooding of prime Midwest farmland will bring more bad news in supermarkets through next year.

By wiping out corn and soybean crops across Iowa, Illinois and other states, the flood is driving up prices that were already at historic highs and increasing the cost of feed for cattle, hogs and poultry.

Economists say that will force livestock farms to cut back on production even more than they were, and that will eventually lead to higher prices for beef, pork, chicken, milk and eggs."

The FISA Bill



 
 

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via Emptywheel by emptywheel on 6/19/08

Here it is.

Immunity

As Glenn says, the "immunity" provision here sucks ass. Here's the operative language:

[A] civil action may not lie or be maintained in a Federal or State court against any person for providing assistance to an element of the intelligence community, and shall be properly dismissed, if the Attorney General certifies to the district court of the United States in which such action is pending that

[snip]

(4) the assistance alleged to have been provided by the electronic communication service provider was --

(A) in connection with intelligence activity involving communications that was (i) authorized by the President during the period beginning on September 11, 2001, and ending on January 17, 2007 and (ii) designed to prevent or detect a terrorist attack, or activities in preparation of a terrorist attack, against the United States" and

(B) the subject of a written request or directive, or a series of written requests or directives, from the Attorney General or the head of an element of the intelligence community (or the deputy of such person) to the electronic communication service provider indicating that the activity was (i) authorized by the President; and (ii) determined to be lawful.

Contrary to what the WSJ suggested, this provision puts no restrictions on whether the directives were authorized by anyone but the President--all it takes to get off scott free, in this bill, is for the President to have said the program was legal, regardless of whether it was or the whether the telecoms should have questioned whether the directives were legal.

Minimization

The minimization rules on this still suck. FISC gets to review the procedures themselves, to make sure they will adequately protect US persons' data. But the FISC does not get to review whether the government is doing what it says it's doing with regards to minimization--the AG and the intelligence branch still get to do that.

Wiretapping Overseas

This bill provides significantly more protection for Americans traveling overseas, requiring an extra level of review before tapping an American traveling abroad.

Wiretapping in the US

This bill has slightly more protections for Americans in the US, prohibiting wiretaps if a communication is intended entirely for people within the US. That's a slight improvement, of course, because the bill still allows the collection of information on--say--an email in which one person is outside the US.

Use of Information

The bill addresses a problem that Russ Feingold identified--what happens to data collected in a program that the FISC subsequently finds improper. Feingold wanted the goverment to have to get rid of this data. This bill strikes a middle ground: it prohibits the government from using such data in a trial or other official hearing. But it still gets to keep the data improperly collected.

Exclusivity

The bill does contain a reasonable exclusivity provision, which virtually guarantees they'll get DiFi's support:

Except as provided in subsection (b), the procedures of chapters 119, 121, and 206 of title 18, United States Code, and this Act shall be the exclusive means by which electronic surveillance and the interception of domestic wire, oral, or electronic communications may be conducted.

Only an express statutory authorization for electronic surveillance or the interception of domestic wire, oral, or electronic communications, other than as an amendment to this Act or chapters 119, 121, or 206 of title 18, United Staes Code, shall constitute an additional exclusive means for the purpose of subsection (a).

This would seem to prevent the John Yoos of the world from pretending that the AUMF constitued authorization to wiretap.

Review of the Illegal Program

The bill takes an idea included in the House bill--a review of the program to find out what really happened--and dumps that review into the lap of the Inspectors General of the various agencies (the House bill had called for a bipartisan commission). The OPR review of the authorization of the program is included in this. An IG picked by the President and approved by the Senate will, a year after the bill is passed, present an unclassified report on the program (with classified annex). That review cannot name anyone in the private sector involved in the illegal wiretapping.

I'll work on fleshing this out with the bill's language--let me know what you see in the bill in the thread...


 
 

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Strange Bedfellows meet on FISA



 
 

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via Crooks and Liars by John Amato on 6/19/08

UPDATE: There's some new info just coming out on the FISA bill that we'll have up in a little while. It looks like a ummm….compromise a giveaway deal has been struck: "ACLU Condemns FISA Deal, Declares Surveillance Bill Unconstitutional"

So far we've raised over 100K in less than 30 hours on our latest push back against the new FISA bill that might get passed. If you haven't donated, please do. We're working up a plan for our next targets.

We've started a new coalition with the ACLU called Strange Bedfellows

The ACLU is joining with activists from the Ron Paul campaign, represented by Break the Matrix, Rick Williams and Trevor Lymon, and civil liberties writer Glenn Greenwald of Salon, and leading liberal bloggers including, Jane Hamsher of firedoglake, Matt Stoller of Open Left, John Amato of Crooks and Liars, Howie Klein of Down with Tyranny, Digby, Josh Nelson of The Seminal and activist Josh Koster to tell Congress that we will not let them ignore the Constitution or give immunity to telecoms which deliberately broke our laws for years.

We are not sitting back while Congress is having negotiations—trying to figure out a way to grant the Telecoms immunity for breaking the law repeatedly when you and I would have been thrown in jail and waterboarded by Rumsfeld for not paying parking tickets…Anyway, we ran ads against Chris Carney (Comcast actually rejected one of our ads against him. Ha!) and now we're setting our sights on Steny Hoyer and another Blue Dog. But Phase 1 is still underway so please help us out…Here's somebody I'm not particularly fond of, especially with Regina Thomas, a progressive state Senator running against him. I give you John Barrow….

 

Glenn explains:

Rep. John Barrow was, like Carney, one of the 21 Blue Dogs who signed the letter to Nancy Pelosi back in March demanding that they be allowed to vote on the Rockefeller/Cheney Senate bill. In July, Barrow faces a very credible primary challenger — Georgia State House Rep. Regina Thomas — who is much more in step with the district's Democratic base.

Anyway, I'll fill you in as we go forward….


 
 

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Fight Hoyer’s Compromise: UPDATED 1 & 2



 
 

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via Crooks and Liars by Nicole Belle on 6/19/08

John mentioned our new coalition, Strange Bedfellows, earlier and I can't reiterate more strongly the need to fight Blue Dogs like Steny Hoyer, so if you can donate, please do so. Think of the message it sends to Congress that we are willing to fight our own if they don't represent us and our Democratic values the way they should.

Steny Hoyer's "compromise" on FISA is odd, to put it mildly–infuriating to put it accurately. With a majority in the Senate, why the need for a compromise? Is it that Hoyer is just afraid not to be invited to any more cocktail parties by his Republican brethren? Even the NY Times calls it ridiculous. Booman:

Glenn Greenwald has been leading the charge against Steny Hoyer's FISA capitulation plan. It's very comforting to see that the New York Times' editorial board agrees with us that Hoyer's plan is an outrage:

[..]The bill is not a compromise. The final details are being worked out, but all indications are that many of its provisions are both unnecessary and a threat to the Bill of Rights. The White House and the Congressional Republicans who support the bill have two real aims. They want to undermine the power of the courts to review the legality of domestic spying programs. And they want to give a legal shield to the telecommunications companies that broke the law by helping Mr. Bush carry out his warrantless wiretapping operation.

Bingo. The editorial goes on to detail the sham more thoroughly. The big 'concession' in this deal is that the matter of retroactive immunity for telecom corporations will be decided in a federal district court rather than in the ultra-secret FISA court.[..]

Here's the meat of this issue. All electronic surveillance involving U.S. citizens must be carried out in accordance with the FISA law. And, provided that the law is followed there can be no liability for telecom corporations or anyone else that provides assistance. That's laid out here(emphasis mine):

(i) Bar to legal action
No cause of action shall lie in any court against any provider of a wire or electronic communication service, landlord, custodian, or other person (including any officer, employee, agent, or other specified person thereof) that furnishes any information, facilities, or technical assistance in accordance with a court order or request for emergency assistance under this chapter for electronic surveillance or physical search.

Good God, is this why we elected a Democratic majority in 2006? So they can continue to enable the Bush administration as more and more independent sources have verified the criminality that we've claimed correctly all along?

UPDATE 1: CQ Politics and WSJ are reporting the deal is done. Hoyer, capitulating until the end, tries to spin it:

Hoyer said that if a deal was finalized, he would support it, even though he " would not like it." He said he would have preferred the original House version of the legislation which didn't include retroactive immunity for the phone companies.

But he said that if a compromise bill wasn't brought forward, pressure would come from the Democratic caucus to allow a vote on the Senate version of the legislation which includes full retroactive immunity for the phone companies.[..]

"No matter how they spin it, it is still immunity, period," said Kevin Bankston, senior staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a group involved in the lawsuits.

Don't take this lying down. McJoan has some ideas of what you can do, including asking our new putative head of the Democratic Party, Presidential Nominee Barack Obama, to kill this before it comes to a vote:

Call Barack Obama and urge him to make a public statement reiterating his opposition to telco amnesty. His opposition could kill this deal: Phone (202) 224-2854, Fax (202) 228-4260
Call Steny Hoyer and tell him this is a bad deal: Phone (202) 225-4131, Fax (202) 225-4300
Call Nancy Pelosi and urge her to pull the bill from the House schedule: Phone (202) 225-4965, Fax (202) 225-8259
Call your representative and tell them to vote no on the FISA rewrite tomorrow.

UPDATE 2: Empty Wheel has more:

As Glenn says, the "immunity" provision here sucks ass. Here's the operative language:

[A] civil action may not lie or be maintained in a Federal or State court against any person for providing assistance to an element of the intelligence community, and shall be properly dismissed, if the Attorney General certifies to the district court of the United States in which such action is pending that

[snip]

(4) the assistance alleged to have been provided by the electronic communication service provider was –

(A) in connection with intelligence activity involving communications that was (i) authorized by the President during the period beginning on September 11, 2001, and ending on January 17, 2007 and (ii) designed to prevent or detect a terrorist attack, or activities in preparation of a terrorist attack, against the United States" and

(B) the subject of a written request or directive, or a series of written requests or directives, from the Attorney General or the head of an element of the intelligence community (or the deputy of such person) to the electronic communication service provider indicating that the activity was (i) authorized by the President; and (ii) determined to be lawful.

Contrary to what the WSJ suggested, this provision puts no restrictions on whether the directives were authorized by anyone but the President–all it takes to get off scott free, in this bill, is for the President to have said the program was legal, regardless of whether it was or the whether the telecoms should have questioned whether the directives were legal.


 
 

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Former UBS Banker Pleas Guilty to Tax Evasion



 
 

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via TPMMuckraker by Kate Klonick on 6/19/08

Besides the sub-prime mortgage crisis, UBS has an entirely different set of problems to worry about: the criminal prosecution of their former employees and the possible public exposure of their massive wealth management business.

Bradley Birkenfeld, a former UBS banker in Geneva, pled guilty in a Florida court today, for conspiring to hide $200 million in client assets in order to avoid paying U.S. taxes. The plea is the latest in bad news for the bank, who has its wealthiest clients running for cover as authorities pressure bank officials to give up the names of over 20,000 of their high-net- worth clients.

And it's all because no one wanted to pay their taxes. Birkenfeld and colleague Mario Staggl, currently at large, helped billionaire American real estate developer and owner of Olen Properties Corp., Igor Olenicoff avoid almost $7.2 million in taxes between 2001 and 2006. Olenicoff was sentenced on April 14, 2008 and agreed to pay $52 million in back taxes.

In his statement today in U.S. District Court in Fort Lauderdale, Birkenfeld detailed how he, Staggl and other managers and bankers at UBS had concealed client assets.

From a Department of Justice press release earlier today:

Birkenfeld, managers and bankers at the Swiss bank, and U.S. clients prepared false and misleading IRS forms that claimed that the owners of the accounts were sham off-shore entities' and failed to prepare and file IRS forms that should have identified the true U.S. owner of the accounts.

To further assist U.S. clients of the bank in concealing their offshore accounts, Birkenfeld admitted that he, Mario Staggl, additional private bankers and managers at the Swiss bank, and others advised U.S. clients to place cash and valuables in Swiss safety deposit boxes, and purchase jewels, artwork and luxury items using the funds in their Swiss bank account while overseas. Additionally, they advised the clients to misrepresent the receipt of funds from the Swiss bank account in the United States as loans from the bank; destroy all off-shore banking records existing in the United States; utilize Swiss bank credit cards that they claimed could not be discovered by U.S. authorities; and file false U.S. individual income tax returns that omitted income earned by the clients and fraudulently misrepresented that the clients did not have an interest in and signature authority over accounts held offshore.

. . . To circumvent the requirements of the agreement between the bank and the IRS, Birkenfeld and others conspired to conceal the American real estate developer's ownership and control of the $200 million of assets hidden offshore by creating and utilizing nominee and sham entities, including Bahamian corporations, Liechtenstein trusts and Danish corporations.

According to the DOJ, Birkenfeld and his co-conspirators actions were in direct violation of a 2001 agreement between UBS and the American government, which stated that the Swiss bank would "identify and document any customers who received reportable U.S. source income or would withhold and anonymously pay a 28 percent withholding tax."

The guilty plea is the latest in what has been an ongoing and dramatic investigation of UBS and its Geneva bankers. In April of 2008, Martin Liechti, head of UBS' international wealth management business for the America's was briefly detained while passing through Miami airport. Birkenfeld, who has been talking to prosecutors for over a year regarding this matter, was arrested on May 7 upon entering the U.S. at Logan Airport for a high school reunion.

Staggl, co-founder of New Haven Trust Company Ltd. in Liechtenstein is considered a fugitive and is still at large.


 
 

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Al Gore Responds



 
 

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algore2.jpg

We told y'all earlier that former vice president Al Gore seemed a little two faced when it was revealed by the Tennessee Center for Policy Research that the former Vice President's home energy use has risen by more than 10% over the past year.

Mr. Gore's spokesperson reached out to us to set the record straight.

Here's what she said:

I had the chance to read your blog today and wanted to take a chance to
clear the record:

1. The Gores undertook a three plus year renovation that concluded in
November 2007 with the issuance, in November 2007 of Gold LEED (Leadership
in Energy and Environmental Design) from the US Green Building Council.

2. As part of this renovation, the Gores have:
-Installed a geothermal system for heating, cooling and hot water
-Installed 33 solar panels
-Completely retrofitted their appliances, windows, ductwork, insulation, and
lighting.

3. Since the renovations were complete, the Gores have saved 40 percent on
their site energy use (which is a combination of electricity and natural gas
bills–the two major sources of global warming gases).

4. The Gores also purchase their electricity, through their utility, from
the Green PowerSwitch program–which means that their electricity come from
solar, wind and methane gas.

So, in summary, the Gores have: made their home more energy efficient, the
produce electricity from renewable power (solar, geothermal) and they
purchase renewable power. No one is perfect, but they are doing their part.

Finally, the Gores are also donating a substantial amount of their personal
time to educate the public about the climate crisis as well as donating the
proceeds of their work to charity. They have donated the proceeds of the
Nobel Peace Prize, "An Inconvenient Truth" (the book and film), and Mrs.
Gore's photography to the Alliance for Climate Protection and The Climate
Project.

And there you have it.

Thoughts?

[Image via WENN.]


 
 

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McCain heckled for accepting most money from Big Oil.



 
 

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via Think Progress by Faiz on 6/19/08

Last night during a townhall event in Missouri, John McCain was confronted by a protester who yelled out that he had accepted a half million dollars this year from "big oil." "That's more than any other senator!" the protester said. "How can you be trusted?" (Raw Story has the video.) Later, McCain was asked about this in a news conference. "I don't know what he's talking about. So I can't respond," McCain said. The Wall Street Journal informs:

Indeed, McCain does lead all other senators, and all others who ran for president, in contributions from the oil and gas industry, according to the Center for Responsive Politics' analysis of federal data in the 2007-08 election cycle. McCain collected $724,000 through May.


 
 

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The Bush Legacy Bus…coming to a town near you.



 
 

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via Think Progress by Satyam on 6/19/08

Americans United for Change is launching a Bush Legacy Bus Tour, a "museum on wheels dedicated to chronicling the disastrous legacy of President Bush and the conservative policies he and his allies have pursued." The bus hits the road June 24 and is scheduled to make roughly 150 stops between now and Election Day. View a slideshow of the construction of the bus here.

bushbus1.jpg


 
 

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Wednesday, June 18, 2008

A big, hot mess: Celebrities who aren't going green -- chicagotribune.com

A big, hot mess: Celebrities who aren't going green -- chicagotribune.com

EPA Head Must Resign | AfterDowningStreet.org

EPA Head Must Resign | AfterDowningStreet.org

Please Join Us in Demanding the Resignation of EPA Administrator Stephen Johnson

Johnson punishes whistleblowers, stonewalls Congress, and devastates the environment.

A coalition has formed to demand his resignation that includes the No Fear Coalition, AfterDowningStreet.org, Democrats.com, Friends of the Earth, the Black Leadership Roundtable, the Hip Hop Caucus, the Federally Employed Legal Defense Fund, the Congress Against Racism and Corruption in Law Enforcement, the Backbone Campaign, OpEdNews, World Prout Assembly, Code Pink, Why Not News, the Black Commentator, the Urban Journal, and the National Whistleblower Center.

Rev. Walter E. Fauntroy, Member of Congress 1971- 1991, and Chair of the National Black Leadership Conference, has drafted an open letter demanding Johnson's resignation. You can read and sign the letter (which will add to a petition count and send an Email to your representative and two senators), and read much more about Stephen Johnson, at: http://johnsonmustgo.org

Please sign the letter right away:
http://johnsonmustgo.org

Please forward this message far and wide!

Man Loses 86 lbs Eating 1,200-1,400 Calories Per Day Of McDonald's Food [Mcd...



 
 

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via Consumerist by Meg Marco on 6/18/08

Chris Coleson, a businessman from Richmond, VA told his wife he could lose weight by eating anywhere — even McDonald's.

"I told her I could lose weight eating anywhere," he said. "I told her I could do it eating at McDonald's."

So he did. By eating two meals a day (and only two meals) consisting of "wraps, apple-walnut salads and the occasional cheeseburger" Chris has lost 86 lbs since December.

Coleson told AdAge that he's not interested in being the next "Jared," but would like to encourage McDonald's to build playgrounds where parents with disabilities can play with their children.

"I wasn't disabled when I weighed 300 pounds, but it made me think about parents who are," said Mr. Coleson. He currently "works closely with his local YMCA and the Wounded Warrior Project, which provides services to disabled veterans," says AdAge.

Has McDonald's Found Its Jared? [AdAge]
(Photo: meghannmarco )



 
 

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Wal-Mart "Genuine Steakhouse Brand Steaks" Are "100% Guaranteed Fresh" (Some...



 
 

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via Consumerist by Meg Marco on 6/18/08

Reader Richie would like to point out the impressive pointlessness of this Wal-Mart promotion for "Genuine SteakHouse Steak."

So the brand name is "Genuine Steakhouse," therefore they are Genuine Steakhouse Steaks. This does not mean anything. They are not "genuine" anything, nor are they coming from a "steakhouse," except for, I guess the slaughterhouse, which is a house where steaks come from. The next sentence, "100% freshness guaranteed or your money back" is also pretty lean on meaning. One would hope that spoiled, past-due meat would not be sold in the first place and I think it's safe to say that, should that meat accidentally get sold, it would certainly be accepted for a refund. Then again, I don't know much about Wal-Mart, so maybe they are always selling rotten meat and not giving you money back for it. Who's to say.

What they have cleverly done here is put a bunch of connotation-rich words near each other, in a construction that prevents the words from having any kind of actual meaning that might make it incumbent upon the company to provide anything even slightly out of the ordinary. Genuine Steakhouse...100% guaranteed...money back. A casual gloss could easily give you the false impression that they are somehow guaranteeing that this meat has a certain level of quality, or comes from a specific steakhouse, or something like that. In fact, they are just announcing the fact that they are putting a trademarked brand name on run-of-the-mill USDA-whatever meat, and then guaranteeing that they won't sell it once it putrefies.

Oh, Richie, this is what happens when you think about Wal-Mart too much. It's bad for your health. Speaking of bad for your health, if you click on over to the SteakHouse Steaks page at Walmart.com, you'll see that concerning the "100% guaranteed fresh" bit..."*Restrictions apply. Please see store for details."

Eek.

Meaningless, You Mean It's All Been Meaningless [I Feel Crazy]
Wal-Mart Steaks



 
 

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Chicago Traffic Nation's Third Worst



 
 

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via Chicagoist by Margaret Lyons on 6/18/08

2008_6_18.cars.jpgChicago has the third worst traffic in the country, according to a new study. Only LA and New York out-congest us. Bee-beeep!

The report says that our local roadways were 2.1 percent more congested in 2006 than in 2007, the most traffic-heavy rush hour to travel in Chicago is Friday from 5-6pm, and the lightest rush hour is Friday from 9–10am. Chicago-area bottlenecks account for 21 of the top-100 worst jams in America, with the Mannheim Road exit on the Eisenhower the area's worst and the nation's ninth-crappiest.

Our "travel time index," the ratio of how long a trip takes with traffic to how long it would take without, is 1.23; LA's is 1.45 and New York's is 1.29. [Full report, photo by coollead]



 
 

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McCain’s secrecy over Navy records raises questions



 
 

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via Crooks and Liars by SilentPatriot on 6/18/08

  Let me first start off by making absolutely clear that this is not intended in any way to be a "swift boat"-style attack on John McCain and his service. Despite what you may think of him as a Senator or Presidential candidate, there is no denying the fact that he served his country in ways that most of us could never even imagine. For that he deserves our utmost respect and appreciation. But that doesn't mean, however, that all claims about his service should be blindly accepted without scrutiny.

Indeed, investigative reporter Jeffrey Klein has uncovered what appear to be serious gaps in Senator McCain's military records. What Klein has discovered strongly suggests that the McCain campaign is deliberately trying to exaggerate the circumstances surrounding a promotion McCain turned down in order to serve in public life. As Klein notes, the timing — along with McCain's lackluster academics and poor piloting skills, among other things– would seem to disqualify him for the promotion in which the campaign now claims he rejected. What's more, McCain's refusal to publicly release his entire Navy record — something John Kerry did after his record came under scrutiny — only fuels speculation that he is tying to hide something.

HuffPo:

Is McCain now getting away with more by hiding his official history and by having his national security adviser inflate McCain's resume with a bogus promotion to admiral humbly declined? If so, McCain may be attempting to hide why the Navy was in fact slow to promote him upwards despite his suffering as a POW and his distinguished naval heritage.

The entire article is worth the read, as it meticulously documents the serious gaps in question. Again, this is in no way intended to impugn McCain's military service or the years of torture he endured at the hands of his barbaric captors. Instead, the point is to evaluate the veracity of the claims his campaign is now making in order to help him get elected, and to also challenge him to live up to his promise of open government by fully disclosing his service record.

Just like we are all obligated to honor his heroic service, I think the American people deserve the right to evaluate the official record.


 
 

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I never knew Google was THIS massive!

I never knew Google was THIS massive!

Remember Bradley Schlozman? Possible Perjury



 
 

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via Crooks and Liars by Steve Benen on 6/18/08

Remember the U.S. Attorney purge scandal? The travesty in which the White House and the Justice Department politicized federal law enforcement? It was, for my money, among the biggest Bush-related domestic scandals of the last eight years (top three, at least).

It is not, however, quite over yet.

Justice Department lawyers have filed a grand-jury referral stemming from the 2006 U.S. attorneys scandal, according to people familiar with the probe, a move indicating that the yearlong investigation may be entering a new phase.

The grand-jury referral, the first time the probe has moved beyond the investigative phase, relates to allegations of political meddling in the Justice Department's civil-rights division, these people say. Specifically, it focuses on possible perjury by Bradley Schlozman, who served a year as interim U.S. attorney in Kansas City, Mo.

Mr. Schlozman left the Justice Department last year after he was challenged over his hiring of conservative lawyers at the civil-rights division and his decision later as U.S. attorney to bring voter-fraud charges against members of a left-leaning voter-registration group days before the 2006 election.

Schlozman, an inept character who's almost amusing in his clumsiness, has a very serious problem on his hands, which will not only lead to the likely criminal prosecution of a former top official in Bush's Justice Department, but once again bring into focus how the Bush administration operated.

It's easy to get confused over which comically corrupt Bushie is which, so let's take a quick stroll down memory lane. It's a funny story, actually….

When it comes to the politicization of the Justice Department, Schlozman was actually at the heart of two scandals. The first was Schlozman's decision as the former U.S. Attorney for Kansas City, to bring highly dubious indictments against a left-leaning voter-registration group shortly before the '06 midterm elections.

The other deals with Schlozman's responsibilities as the deputy head of the Civil Rights Division at the Justice Department. He assured the Senate Judiciary Committee, under oath, that his employment decisions were entirely above-board, and not at all based on political considerations.

If senators were able to peak below his witness table, they might have noticed that his pants were on fire.

Karen Stevens, Tovah Calderon and Teresa Kwong had a lot in common. They had good performance ratings as career lawyers in the Justice Department's civil rights division. And they were minority women transferred out of their jobs [three] years ago — over the objections of their immediate supervisors — by Bradley Schlozman, then the acting assistant attorney general for civil rights.

Schlozman ordered supervisors to tell the women that they had performance problems or that the office was overstaffed. But one lawyer, Conor Dugan, told colleagues that the recent Bush appointee had confided that his real motive was to "make room for some good Americans" in that high-impact office, according to four lawyers who said they heard the account from Dugan.

In another politically tinged conversation recounted by former colleagues, Schlozman asked a supervisor if a career lawyer who had voted for Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), a onetime political rival of President Bush, could still be trusted.

That last one is a particular favorite. In the fall of 2004, Schlozman asked DoJ supervisors about the "loyalty" of division lawyer Angela Miller. She was a Republican who clerked for a conservative federal appeals judge, but Schlozman learned (it's not clear how) that Miller backed McCain in a 2000 primary. Schlozman asked Miller's bosses, "Can we still trust her?"

When the Bush gang insisted on "good Americans," they applied a fairly narrow set of standards.

Indeed, not all of the standards were ideological. Schlozman targeted minority women, whose on-the-job performance was unquestioned, apparently because Schlozman wasn't convinced that they would be "team players." In other words, to qualify as a "good American," you not only had to be conservative, but you also had to be a white guy.

And these were the standards used by the man Bush asked to help lead the Civil Rights Division of the Justice Department.

Now, keep in mind, Schlozman acknowledged that he bragged about hiring Republicans and conservatives for the Civil Rights Division, but insisted it was all talk. To apply partisan/ideological standards to career employees at a government agency would be illegal, so Schlozman insisted that nothing improper took place.

But literally everyone around him believes he was lying. Blatantly.

"When he said he didn't engage in political hiring, most of us thought that was just laughable," said one lawyer in the section, referring to Schlozman's June 5 testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee. "Everything Schlozman did was political. And he said so." […]

Schlozman and several deputies also took an unusual interest in the assignment of office responsibility for appellate cases and, according to the lawyers and one of the supervisors, repeatedly ordered Flynn to take cases away from career lawyers with expertise and hand them to recent hires whose resumes listed membership in conservative groups, including the Federalist Society.

Schlozman was put in an untenable position — he could acknowledge what he'd done at the DoJ (and necessarily admit that he broke the law) or he could deny everything (and risk perjury charges). He chose the latter.

And now a grand jury is going to hear all about it.


 
 

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Obama Doesn't Like Muslims???



 
 

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wenn5112364.jpg

On Monday, two Muslim women at Barack Obama's rally in Detroit, MI were not allowed by campaign volunteers to sit behind the podium.

Both rejections were made in separate instances and by different volunteers.

The staff on hand were trying to prevent the women's headscarves from appearing on television or in photographs with Obama.

Michigan has one of the largest Muslim and Arab populations in the United States, so this is clearly not sitting well with many Muslim supporters.

Obama has even vigorously denied rumors that he is Muslim, though occasionally adds that he means no disrespect to Islam. But the denials seem to some to be implying that there is something wrong with the Muslim faith.

Hebba Aref, a lawyer who lives near Detroit was denied a seat and says, "I was coming to support him, and I felt like I was discriminated against by the very person who was supposed to be bringing this change, who I could really relate to. The message that I thought was delivered to us was that they do not want him associated with Muslims or Muslim supporters."

A volunteer asked three of Aref's friends if they would like to sit behind the stage. The men stated they would, but mentioned they were at the rally with some friends.

The volunteer, an African American woman in her mid-20s, asked if their friends looked and were dressed like the men, who were all light skinned and wearing suits. One of the men mentioned that their friend (Aref) was wearing a headscarf with her suit.

That's when Aref's friend says that the volunteer, "explained to me that because of the political climate and what's going on in the world and what's going on with Muslim Americans, it's not good for [Aref] to be seen on TV or associated with Obama."

As for the second incident, that occurred while waiting in line, two of Shimaa Abdelfadeel's non-Muslim friends were ahead of her. A volunteer approached them and asked if they wanted to be seated in the special section behind Obama. The friends said yes and asked for Shimaa to come along.

That's when the volunteer told them their friend would need to take the headscarf off or stay out of the special section. The friends declined the invite.

When Shimaa confronted the volunteer she was told, "We're not letting anyone with anything on their heads like baseball [caps] or scarves sit behind the stage. It has nothing to do with your religion!"

Although photographs of the event show men with hats seated in the section behind Obama and former VP Al Gore.

Since the incident, the campaign has apologized to the women. However, the two Obama supporters say they feel betrayed by their treatment.

Bill Burton, Obama's spokesman, says, "This is of course not the policy of the campaign. It is offensive and counter to Obama's commitment to bring Americans together and simply not the kind of campaign we run. We sincerely apologize for the behavior of these volunteers."

When in doubt, blame someone else.

Though maybe this time it was the volunteers. Photographs from a Seattle rally earlier this year show a couple in Muslim clothing sitting behind Obama.

Next time, better screen your volunteers better.

[Image via WENN.]


 
 

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Lowe's CEO Robert Niblock Email Address And Phone Number [Robert Niblock]



 
 

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via Consumerist by Ben Popken on 6/18/08

Robert A. Niblock
First Vice Chairman, Chairman, President & CEO
Lowe's Companies, Inc.
1000 Lowe's Blvd
Mooresville, NC 28117
Phone: 704-758-2084
robert.a.niblock@lowes.com

Tammy picks up, but if you use these tips for stating your case calmly and succinctly, you should be fine. Here are also some numbers for directly reaching their executive customer service team.



 
 

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Grocery Shrink Ray Hits Apple Jacks, Cocoa Krispies, Corn Pops, Froot Loops ...



 
 

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via Consumerist by Meg Marco on 6/18/08

Kellogg has confirmed that the much-feared grocery shrink ray has now focused its malevolent beam on Apple Jacks, Cocoa Krispies, Corn Pops, Froot Loops and Honey Smacks. Boxes were shrunk by an average of 2.4 ounces.

"This price adjustment on select ready-to-eat cereal brands was taken to offset rising commodity costs for ingredients and energy used to manufacture and distribute these products," a spokesperson said.

While this is sad, we're slightly more disturbed that cereal now comes with a picture of a senior citizen on the front and an "adventure spoon" inside.

Kellogg shrinks boxes of several cereal brands [AJC]
(Photo: iwantamonkey )



 
 

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Worst Company In America 2008 "Sweet 16": Bank of America VS Blue Cross Blue...



 
 

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via Consumerist by Meg Marco on 6/18/08

Which Company Is Worse?
( surveys)Here's your seventh "Sweet 16" match-up: #7 Bank of America VS #23 Blue Cross Blue Shield

Here's what some of you had to say about these two companies:

Bank of America:

"BoA is not just "a" bank, they're a bank with some of the least customer-friendly policies in America. Re-opening closed accounts then charging $35 for it? That's not a courtesy, that's fraud."

"Can u say overdraft? Lets take billions from the poor every year and feel good about it!"

Blue Cross Blue Shield:

"Any health company that tries to screw their own customers in a proactive way deserves to burn in hell."

"Blue Cross Blue Shield just dropped my 85 year old grandparents with no warning. Oh yeah, my grandmother just was diagnosed with Alzheimer's. Coincidence? What a bag of flaming @*&%#s!"

This is a post in our Worst Company In America 2008 series. The companies nominated for this honor were chosen by you, the readers. Keep track of all the goings on at consumerist.com/tag/worst-company-in-america.



 
 

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Happy Birthday, Roger



 
 

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via Chicagoist by Karl Klockars on 6/18/08

The man who put film criticism on everyone's cultural map and one of Chicago's favorite sons Roger Ebert celebrates his 66th birthday today. This serves to remind us of the gaping hole left next to Rich Roeper (a voice from the Peanut Gallery, "What about the gaping hole that is Rich Roeper?" ha-ha, smartypants) during At The Movies. Suffice to say, if they were to get rid of Rich et al entirely, have Ebert simply write longhand for 25 minutes about the week's films, and then just hold it up to the screen for us to read for the final five, we'd be fine with that.

This is also as good a time as any to once again bring up our ongoing Get Well Roger Project. And as a reminder of why we love Roger, not only did he love Halloween and Dawn of the Dead (the original, of course), he also dug Predator. And Predator fucking rules.



 
 

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New In Snack Food: Caffeine-Infused Chips



 
 

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via Chicagoist by Jacy Wojcik on 6/18/08

5-18-2008-Chicagoist-engobi.jpgHmmm...how to make an already not-so-healthy product even worse for you? Add a shit-ton of caffeine, of course! The creators of Engobi (short for Energy Go Bites) have done just that with their new line of caffeine-infused snack chips. Each 1.5 ounce single serving bag has 140 mg of caffeine, making it stronger than a serving of brewed coffee, Redbull, espresso, regular Jessie Spano–strength caffeine pills, etc. Flavors come in Lemon Lift and Cinnamon Surge, which sounds almost as delicious as Mountain Dew flavored Doritos.

Now, we fully understand the immense desire for caffeine on certain occasions—morning cup of coffee with the newspaper, an espresso with dessert, venti-anything after an all-night drink fest—and we also realize there are studies showing a little caffeine is actually good for you. But a cup of coffee is one thing. A tiny bag of 220 calories, 11 grams of fat, 3 grams of saturated fat, sodium filled, caffeine infused potato chips is certainly another. Bring on the panic attacks and the heart disease. [S-T]



 
 

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Bush Disagrees With His Own Energy Dept, Claims Drilling In Arctic Refuge Wi...



 
 

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via Think Progress by Ben on 6/18/08

This morning in the White House Rose Garden, President Bush called on Congress to "pass good legislation as soon as possible" that would lift the federal ban on exploring the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) and allow states to permit offshore oil drilling. Bush said in order to relieve the "painful level" of gas prices, "our nation must produce more oil."

As part of his plan, Bush also reiterated his demand that Congress allow oil drilling in the Alaskan Arctic Wildlife Refuge. According to Bush, drilling for oil in the Arctic Refuge will "bring enormous benefits to the American people":

BUSH: we should expand oil production by permitting exploration in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge or ANWR. … In the years since [1995], the price of oil has increased sevenfold and the price of American gasoline has more than tripled. … I urge members of congress to allow this remote region to bring enormous benefits to the American people.

Watch it:

Bush's claim isn't even backed up by his own administration. A Department of Energy report released last month found that the Arctic Refuge's reserves will do little to reduce the price of a barrel of oil:

If Congress were to open up the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to drilling, crude oil prices would probably drop by an average of only 75 cents a barrel, according to Department of Energy projections issued Thursday.

The report…found that oil production in the refuge "is not projected to have a large impact on world oil prices."

Moreover, in 2005, DoE estimated that there are nearly 18 billion barrels of oil available in the OCS, which is roughly double the reserves in the Arctic Refuge. Thus, by 2025, drilling in Alaska and the OCS would shave around $2.25 off the cost of a barrel of oil meaning "little to no impact on the price at the pump, today or tomorrow."

At best, Bush's plan saves mere pennies on a gallon of gasoline 20 years from now, while putting billions more into Big Oil's pockets. Perhaps oil company executives were the "American people" he was referring to.


 
 

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Bush Disagrees With His Own Energy Dept, Claims Drilling In Arctic Refuge Wi...



 
 

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via Think Progress by Ben on 6/18/08

This morning in the White House Rose Garden, President Bush called on Congress to "pass good legislation as soon as possible" that would lift the federal ban on exploring the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) and allow states to permit offshore oil drilling. Bush said in order to relieve the "painful level" of gas prices, "our nation must produce more oil."

As part of his plan, Bush also reiterated his demand that Congress allow oil drilling in the Alaskan Arctic Wildlife Refuge. According to Bush, drilling for oil in the Arctic Refuge will "bring enormous benefits to the American people":

BUSH: we should expand oil production by permitting exploration in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge or ANWR. … In the years since [1995], the price of oil has increased sevenfold and the price of American gasoline has more than tripled. … I urge members of congress to allow this remote region to bring enormous benefits to the American people.

Watch it:

Bush's claim isn't even backed up by his own administration. A Department of Energy report released last month found that the Arctic Refuge's reserves will do little to reduce the price of a barrel of oil:

If Congress were to open up the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to drilling, crude oil prices would probably drop by an average of only 75 cents a barrel, according to Department of Energy projections issued Thursday.

The report…found that oil production in the refuge "is not projected to have a large impact on world oil prices."

Moreover, in 2005, DoE estimated that there are nearly 18 billion barrels of oil available in the OCS, which is roughly double the reserves in the Arctic Refuge. Thus, by 2025, drilling in Alaska and the OCS would shave around $2.25 off the cost of a barrel of oil meaning "little to no impact on the price at the pump, today or tomorrow."

At best, Bush's plan saves mere pennies on a gallon of gasoline 20 years from now, while putting billions more into Big Oil's pockets. Perhaps oil company executives were the "American people" he was referring to.


 
 

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Top McCain adviser: offshore drilling will have ‘no immediate effect’ on gas...



 
 

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via Think Progress by Matt on 6/18/08

In a speech that pleased oil executives yesterday, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) explained his flip-flop in favor of ending the federal ban on offshore oil drilling by saying he was trying to "address the concerns of Americans who are struggling right now to pay for gasoline." But McCain's message was contradicted yesterday by his top economic adviser, Douglas Holtz-Eakin, who told reporters that new offshore drilling wouldn't help lower current gas prices:

Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a senior advisor to McCain's campaign, acknowledged in a conference call to reporters that new offshore drilling would have no immediate effect on supplies or prices.

The Energy Information Administration says that new offshore drilling wouldn't have "a significant impact" on gas prices until 2030.


 
 

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Darrell Issa Adds Russert Outrage to His Hall of Shame



 
 

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via Crooks and Liars by Jon Perr on 6/18/08

As ThinkProgress reported earlier Tuesday, the execrable California Republican Congressman Darrell Issa used the day of Tim Russert's wake to appropriate the memory of the late Meet the Press host for political purposes. After members of the House offered their condolences and eulogies to Russert while discussing a resolution in his honor, Issa took to floor to make a pitch for off-shore drilling:

"We are going to miss Tim Russert when it comes to the people on both sides of the issue of why we have $5 oil - $5 gasoline and $135 oil. I think Tim Russert would have been just the right guy to hold people accountable, who would talk about the 68 million acres that are, quote, inactive, while in fact 41 million are under current lease and use and are producing millions of barrels of oil and natural gas a day…

…So, Madam Speaker, I am going to miss Tim Russert because this debate is too important not to have a fact-oriented, unbiased moderator who could in fact bring to bear the truth that we need to have."

As abominable as Issa's performance today was, it hardly ranks as his worst. From attacking the families of dead Blackwater contractors and accusing Valerie Plame of perjury to playing a vital role in purging a U.S. attorney and committing myriad other outrages, Issa had long since guaranteed himself a particularly hot seat in Dante's inner circle. Perrspectives has a look back at the Top 10 Moments from Darrell Issa's Hall of Shame


 
 

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Inflation, Kellogg-style: Less product, same price



 
 

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via BloggingStocks by Michael Rainey on 6/18/08

Filed under: Products and services, Marketing and advertising, Kellogg Co (K), Commodities

Like all processed food producers, Kellogg Company (NYSE: K) is facing rapidly climbing costs for corn, wheat and sugar, the basic building blocks for many of its products. Rather than passing those costs on to consumers in a straightforward manner by raising prices, Kellogg is taking a sneakier route: making some of its cereal boxes smaller while keeping the price the same.

Starting this month, Kellogg will shrink the size of boxes of Apple Jacks, Cocoa Krispies, Corn Pops, Froot Loops and Honey Smacks by an average of 2.4 ounces.

Of course, using this approach is in the end the same as simply raising prices. The key is price per ounce, which goes up whether you reduce quantity or increase price. So although you will pay the same price for a box of these sweet cereals, the per ounce cost of a corn syrup high in the morning will go up.

Even though reducing ounces per box amounts to a price increase, smaller boxes have a different psychological effect than adding a few pennies to the retail price. Food companies use this approach in the hope that most consumers won't notice, and research suggests that this is in fact true.

I suppose this means that most shoppers don't look at the per ounce cost when buying things like cereal. When it comes to inflation, maybe ignorance really is bliss.
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Packages Shrink but Prices Stay the Same



 
 

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via Free Money Finance by NA on 6/18/08

Ice cream, chips, mayonnaise, cereal, etc. have all shrunk their packages but kept prices the same. Then today I found this piece that says cereal makers are doing it again:

Kellogg Co. is using smaller packaging while charging the same prices for five of its cereals sold in the United States, effectively raising their prices for the second time this year. The company started shipping the new boxes to stores in early June.

Boxes were reduced by an average of 2.4 ounces for 14 items sold under the Apple Jacks, Cocoa Krispies, Corn Pops, Froot Loops and Honey Smacks brands, said Kellogg spokeswoman Susanne Norwitz.

Why do companies do this? Because it's a way of taking a price increase that consumers often don't notice. With commodity prices increasing so much, most manufacturers HAVE to take price increase of some sort and this is the easiest way of doing it. As someone who's been in marketing for almost 20 years, I can tell you that it works from a business standpoint. Not saying it's right to do, just saying it works.


 
 

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US: CEO pay sets new record as economy tanks

US: CEO pay sets new record as economy tanks: "Average CEO compensation grew by 3.5 percent last year despite slowing economic growth, falling profits and mass layoffs, according to an Associated Press review published Monday. The review found that the S&P 500 CEO received an average yearly compensation of $8.4 million, up $280,000 (an average raise that is the equivalent of six times the US median household income) during 2006.

The data render ridiculous those apologies for social inequality resting on the idea that CEO pay is linked to ‘performance’ in some meaningful way. The Associated Press review found that “CEO pay rose or fell regardless of the direction of a company’s stock price or profits.” The report also notes that half of the 10 best paid CEOs—who collectively hauled in half a billion dollars last year—presided over companies whose profits shrank “dramatically.”"

McCain confused about his own energy policy



 
 

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via Crooks and Liars by Steve Benen on 6/17/08

It just keeps getting worse with the Arizona senator. From his press conference yesterday:

QUESTION: The European Union has set mandatory targets on renewable energy. Is that something you would consider in a McCain administration? […]

MCCAIN: Sure. I believe in the cap-and-trade system, as you know. I would not at this time make those — impose a mandatory cap at this time. But I do believe that we have to establish targets for reductions of greenhouse gas emissions over time, and I think those can be met.

As Kate Sheppard explained, McCain new position is "completely out of line with his own proposal for a cap-and-trade scheme, both the plan he proposed with Joe Lieberman last year and his own presidential plan, released last month. They both would, by nature, be mandatory — hence the 'cap' in the name."

In other words, McCain doesn't understand his own policy. Or, as hilzoy noted, "The best you can say for McCain, on this point, is that he is completely unfamiliar with what is supposed to be one of his signature issues. Not knowing what 'mandatory cap' means, in this context, is like not knowing what a 'strike' is in baseball."


 
 

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CNN notices McCain’s energy policy confusion



 
 

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via Crooks and Liars by Steve Benen on 6/18/08

Nice job by CNN's Dana Bash highlighting John McCain's incoherence on energy policy:

 

Matt Yglesias added, "What's this . . . John McCain flip-flops on energy policy and CNN tells the tale! Crazy stuff, don't they know he's a straight-talker who can do no wrong?"


 
 

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cryptogon.com » Archives » RBS ISSUES GLOBAL STOCK AND CREDIT CRASH ALERT

cryptogon.com » Archives » RBS ISSUES GLOBAL STOCK AND CREDIT CRASH ALERT: "The Royal Bank of Scotland has advised clients to brace for a full-fledged crash in global stock and credit markets over the next three months as inflation paralyses the major central banks.

“A very nasty period is soon to be upon us - be prepared,” said Bob Janjuah, the bank’s credit strategist."

How 4 Years of Saving Could Set You Up For Life



 
 

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via WallStreetFighter by noreply@blogger.com (Stephen) on 6/18/08

For all you recent college graduates entering the workforce, I realize that "Start Thinking About Your Savings" might be the lamest piece of advice uttered to you since, "Wow! There Is No Way You're OK To Drive Right Now". But I promise you, in both instances you'll be very happy in the pants that you heeded both warnings.

First off, let's take a little look-see at the financial future of our country. The way things are going, the idea of 'Social Security benefits' will be non-existent in the year 2041. Whoopsies! Therefore, if you're 21 years-old right now, you'll be royally screwed with a good few years to go before retirement age.

With medical advancements going the way they are, Super-Future-Year-2041-Viagra will be alarmingly good. And hot cougar retirees will be friskier and hotter than ever. Better have a little something put aside, if you want a piece of that 'retired and ready to bang' tail.

But forget about that for a second (if the imagery isn't permanently burned into your brain already). The real point here is how saving just a little now, as I'll demonstrate, gets you a lot more in the long run.

Case in point - you're 21. You get your first job and wisely open an Independent Retirement Account (IRA). Now let's say you take $2,000 out of your earnings each year and put that in your nice little IRA. You do this each year for four years until you are the ripe old age of 25. If at that point you sit on that IRA and let the magic of compound interest do it's work you'll have $552,625 when you are 65 years old and ready to retire. Insane, right?!

On the other hand, let's say you're a tool who acts like a jerk with your money throughout your twenties, ignoring that cleverly written and incredibly insightful WallStreetFighter article you once read. Then you miraculously wise up when you're 35 years old.

But now at 35 after putting that $2,000 in the IRA every year until you retire at 65, you'll only wind up with around a measly $361,000. Look how much less that is! Plus, you'll have spent sooo much more money over the years paying into the IRA, whereas in the earlier scenario you're only putting money aside for 4 friggin' years.

So were all those cases of Keystone Light and bottles of KY jelly worth it in your 20s? Well, yeah of course they were, but imagine how much more of the future (and 10x more potent) versions of it you could buy with your $552k bounty in 2041. Gawd-dam, 2041 is sooo gonna rock!

Of course none of this is factoring in inflation, meaning money in the future will be worth a lot less than it is today. But still, the amounts will always compound the same. It's like magic. Save wisely, my friends.


Here are some good sites for more info on this and other saving advice. I swear they're good. They didn't even pay me to say that. That's how good they are:
GetRichSlowly: What Is A Roth IRA and Why Should You Care?, June 5, 2007
MainStreet: 5 Ways Recent Grads Can Save For Retirement, June 18, 2008
Bank of America: Saving After College, June 2, 2008
MainStreet: Get The $200,000 Bonus You Never Knew About, May 20, 2008


 
 

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Sen. Reed castigates William Haynes: ‘You denigrated the integrity of the U....



 
 

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via Think Progress by Faiz on 6/18/08

Testifying before the Senate Armed Services Committee yesterday, former Pentagon counsel William Haynes tried to absolve himself of blame for detainee abuse in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Guantanamo Bay. "As the lawyer, I was not the decision maker. I was the adviser," he said. With anger in his voice, Sen. Jack Reed (D-RI) told Haynes that his advice had led American soldiers drastically astray:

You did a disservice to the soldiers of this nation. You empowered them to violate basic conditions which every soldier respects — the Uniformed Code of Military Justice, the Geneva Convention. … Don't go around with this attitude of you're protecting the integrity of the military. You degraded the integrity of the United States military.

Watch it:

Haynes was part of five-person team of high-level administration lawyers, dubbed the "War Council," who hatched out the legal framework for torture in secret meetings. McClatchy reports, "The quintet did more than condone harsh treatment, however. It created an environment in which it was nearly impossible to prosecute soldiers or officials for alleged crimes committed in U.S. detention facilities."


 
 

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Obama smear merchant has lengthy criminal record.



 
 

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via Think Progress by Ali on 6/18/08

Today, notorious Obama smear-peddler Larry Sinclair will speak at the National Press Club, presumably to continue to promote unfounded lies about Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL). Politico's Ben Smith reports that Sinclair's history "may get in the way of that pitch," as he has a 27-year criminal record, "with a specialty in crimes involving deceit." The charges included forgegy and stealing someone's tax returns; Sinclair is listed as "Wanted" by the Peublo County, CO Sheriff's Office.


 
 

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CBS’s Lara Logan: ‘Tell me the last time you saw the body of a dead American...



 
 

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via Think Progress by Ali on 6/18/08

Appearing on the Daily Show last night, CBS's Chief Foreign Correspondent Lara Logan crticized the lack of media attention to the Iraq war. She said she felt responsible for the fact that "no one really understands" what is happening in Iraq. She also said that the soldiers there "feel forgotten":

Tell me the last time you saw the body of a dead American soldier. What does that look like? Who in American knows what that looks like? Because I know what that looks like, and I feel responsible for the fact that no one else does. … And the soldiers do feel forgotten, they do. No doubt. From Afghanistan to Iraq, they absolutely feel — you know, we may be tired of hearing about this five years later, they still have to go out and do the same job.

Watch it:

In 2004, the conservative-controlled Senate backed President Bush's ban of photos of military coffins returning to Dover Air Force base. The Pentagon still restricts journalists' access to military funerals.


 
 

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Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Bogus Child Porn Prosecution Leaves Massachusetts Man a Social and Professio...



 
 

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via Don't Tase Me, Bro! by Phil Leggiere on 6/17/08

And, though the charges have ultimately been dropped after proof his computer was attacked by viruses, Mike Fiola can't even get an apology from the employer who fingered him for child porn or the state which prosecuted him.

The Boston Herald reports

A child porn possession charge lodged against a Department of Industrial Accidents investigator fired for having smut on his state-issued laptop has been dismissed because experts concluded he was unwittingly spammed.

"The overall forensics of the laptop suggest that it had been compromised by a virus," said Jake Wark, spokesman for Suffolk District Attorney Daniel Conley.

Nationally recognized computer forensic analyst Tami Loehrs told the Herald Michael Fiola's ordeal was "one of the most horrific cases I've seen."

"As soon as you mention child pornography, everybody's senses go out the window," she said.

Loehrs, who spent a month dissecting the computer for the defense, explained in a 30-page report that the laptop was running corrupted virus-protection software, and Fiola was hit by spammers and crackers bombarding its memory with images of incest and pre-teen porn not visible to the naked eye.

Two forensic examinations conducted by the state Attorney General's Office for the prosecution concurred with that conclusion, Wark said.

Still, Fiola, 53, whose wife, Robin, described as "computer-illiterate," wants his day in court. He intends to sue the DIA for "destroying our lives."

"Our lives have been hell," said Fiola, a former state park ranger now living in Rhode Island. "I hope to recover my reputation, but our friends all ran."

DIA spokeswoman Linnea Walsh confirmed Fiola "was terminated," but declined to say if any internal discipline has been meted out as a result of his name being cleared in court.

"We stand by our decision," she said.

Fiola's attorney Timothy Bradl is at a loss to understand why.

"Imagine this scenario: Your employer gives you a ticking time bomb full of child porn, and then you get fired, and then you get prosecuted as some kind of freak," he railed.

"Anybody who has a work laptop, this could happen to," he said. "Mike Fiola is a hunt-and-peck kind of computer guy. He can barely get on the Internet."

Thanks to the Agitator



 
 

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Rush Limbaugh Attacks Black Katrina victims and praises Whites as the Floods...



 
 

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via Crooks and Liars by John Amato on 6/17/08

Thanks to a C&Ler that emailed me much of this post. Limbaugh is an arrogant ideologue that loves Howard Kurtz and hates the black victims of NOLA. Don't you understand, it was all their fault for not escaping Hurricane Katrina! Wake, up! You drive by media fools. They were lazy, lazy people that deserved their fate. If only they were white and responsible. Just listen to this horrific rant as Limbaugh is all agush with admiration over the way in which Iowa and the midwest has responded to the flood disaster that befell the area last week. But to just congratulate the residents in their determination and courage in fighting the disaster isn't enough for the AM talk blowhard. Limbaugh could not pass up the opportunity to once again trot out his old, well known disdain for poor blacks in the south who were victims of Hurricane Katrina in 2005. To hear Limbaugh describe it, Iowa is more American, more honorable … you know … more white than Louisiana.

audio_mp3 Download | Play

It would seem that the images of floating bodies, and documented stories of elderly New Orleans residents drowning in their attics is cold hard facts surrounding humans that Rush Limbaugh thinks could have benefited by just pulling themselves up by their bootstraps a little more. Nevermind that more than 1700 human beings lost their lives on live television as America watched in horror. You don't hear progressives saying that Iowa is any less devastating because the death toll in those floods was a total of 5. It is still a tragedy. And progressives understand that full well.

But according to Rush the story of Iowa under water isn't a story about humans over coming adversity. It's a story about how much more patriotic the white bread basket is than the lazy south.


 
 

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DoD IG: KBR Overcharged The Navy After Hurricane Katrina



 
 

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via TPMMuckraker by Andrew Tilghman on 6/17/08

We pointed out this morning the New York Times story that suggested KBR was over charging the military on Iraq-related contracts and threatening to cut off services to combat troops if the bills weren't paid.

Now here's another one about KBR's billing. This time from the Department of Defense Inspector General. And it looks at the company's role in the clean-up efforts after Hurricane Katrina.

The Houston Chronicle reports:

The Pentagon Inspector General said he could find no documentation in Navy contracting files to back up KBR claims it paid fair and reasonable prices to subcontractors that served meals in New Orleans.

"The prices KBR agreed to pay were greatly inflated," the 86-page audit said.

"The Navy paid approximately $4.1 million for meals and services we calculate should have cost $1.7 million, more than a $2.3 million difference," said the audit, signed by Assistant Inspector General for Acquisition Management Richard Jolliffe.

. . . Altogether, the audit requested that the Navy seek refunds of at least $8.5 million for "inappropriate" payments to KBR.


 
 

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Bank of America: "Free" Checking Means You Have To Call And Have The Fee Wai...



 
 

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via Consumerist by Meg Marco on 6/17/08


Reader Tara has a checking account with Bank of America that's supposed to be "free" if she meets 1 of 3 balance requirements. She meets one of them, but Bank of America keeps charging her $20 — and they don't intend to stop.

My husband and I have 4 accounts with Bank of America - equity line of credit, checking, savings and a credit card. To qualify for free checking, you have to meet 1 of 3 requirements. 1st is to have a minimum of $5,000 in your checking account, the 2nd is to have $5,000 in your savings and the 3rd is to have a line of credit over a certain amount. Well, our equity loan is over that 3rd limit.

However, for the last couple of months, we continue to get the $20 account maintenance fee on our checking account. The first time we called, the associate waived the fee. The second time the associate waived the fee but told us we will have to continue to call to have it waived EVERY TIME after it was charged.

We were not sure why, so this last time my husband and I were very angry. He went in to our local branch and wanted a complete explanation of why we were continuing to get the charges and when they were going to stop.

They told him that though you only had to meet 1 of 3 requirements, that only one the computer checked every month was the $5,000 limit in your checking (which for most average Americans is the only requirement that is most likely the hardest to meet, especially during these economic times).

Even if our savings met the limit we would still get the $20 fee. My husband asked if he was really going to have to monitor our account every month for it, and the only way to have it not charged to us is to call after the fact EVERY MONTH? She said he was correct! So, Bank of America is more than willing to rip you off with the hopes that you don't keep up with your accounts, even though you meet the requirements for fee-free banking! We have banked with them for 8 years and have 4 accounts, and the answer we got was that we would have to call monthly, sit on hold and speak to someone different every time to make sure the bank wasn't taking the money they shouldn't be taking in the first place. Ridiculous! Needless to say, as soon as our house sells (it's on the market now), we are closing all accounts and moving elsewhere.


Tara C. from Nashville, TN

Sounds like a good plan to us. Anyone else have this problem with Bank of America?

(Photo: epicharmus )


Poll


 
 

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Best Buy CEO Bradbury Anderson's Email Address And Phone Number [Phone Numbers]



 
 

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via Consumerist by Ben Popken on 6/17/08

Bradbury H. Anderson, Vice Chairman & CEO
Best Buy Co., Inc.
7601 Penn Avenue South
Richfield, MN 55423-3645
Phone: 612-292-2453
brad.anderson@bestbuy.com

The phone number goes to a secretary, Debby. That's ok, that's where these guidelines for dealing with executive customer service come into play.


Poll


 
 

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White House Derides Investigation That Exposed Drug Testing On Vets As ‘Irre...



 
 

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via Think Progress by Think Progress on 6/17/08

Today, the Washington Times reported on the results of a joint investigation with ABC, which concluded that "mentally distressed veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan are being recruited for government tests on pharmaceutical drugs linked to suicide and other violent side effects."

In studies with the anti-smoking drug Chantix, for example, the VA "took three months to alert its patients about severe mental side effects." In today's press briefing, however, White House spokesperson Tony Fratto called the investigation "irresponsible" journalism, complaining that he "had to watch" the "awful" reporting:

I saw the reporting in your paper and on I think it was ABC this morning. I thought actually some of it was some of the most — certainly at least what I saw on television this morning was some of the more irresponsible reporting that I've ever seen, in terms of taking what this one — the experience of this one veteran and trying to leave the impression that this was a situation for all veterans. […]

And to try to imply that — and, in fact, not even imply. I see the words scrolled on a television screen this morning that the V.A. is using our veterans as guinea pigs, I thought was one of the most awful things I've ever had to watch on television.

Watch it:

If Fratto read the story instead of simply catching the scroll on a television screen, he'd know that thousands are potentially affected. Roughly nearly 1,000 veterans were enrolled in anti-smoking studies, with 143 using Chantix; 21 veterans reported "adverse effects," including one who suffered suicidal thoughts.

Furthermore, the VA and other agencies are currently conducting 25 tests on 4,796 veterans, "more than half of whom are just returning from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan."

Fratto also praised the "wonderful leadership" of VA Secretary James Peake, who recently said that concerns about post-traumatic stress disorder in veterans are "overblown".

Transcript: (more…)


 
 

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Big Oil fuels Straight Talk Express.



 
 

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via Think Progress by Faiz on 6/17/08

This afternoon in Houston, John McCain is delivering a "speech to energy industry leaders." Seeking to boost his cash-strapped campaign, McCain appears to be ditching his principles in favor of policies more palatable to oil interests. A whopping 74 percent of McCain's lifetime campaign contributions from the oil and gas industry has come since he announced for president. Brave New Films has put together this video highlighting the fact that "big oil fuels the Straight Talk Express." Watch it:


 
 

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Bloomberg.com: Exclusive

Bloomberg.com: Exclusive: "June 17 (Bloomberg) -- Adidas AG, which was awarded a $304.6 million verdict against Payless ShoeSource on May 5 for selling knockoff striped sneakers, is poised to win even more from Wal-Mart Stores Inc. in a lawsuit making similar claims."

The Ultimate Guide to Buying Cheap Wine

The Ultimate Guide to Buying Cheap Wine

Remembering Stan Winston: Cameron, McG, Favreau, Wright, Darabont



 
 

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via /Film by orfilms@gmail.com (slashfilm.com) on 6/17/08

The passing of Stan Winston hit everyone off guard yesterday, including the many people who have worked with the legend over the years.

McG has posted a statement on the Terminator Salvation: The Future Begins website, declaring his intention to dedicate the fourth Terminator film to the memory of Stan. Here is an excerpt: "Stan was a good guy who was in it for all the right reasons. He loved what he did. Stan confided in me once, that he created imaginary monsters as a child to keep him company. He said he felt like the only kid in the world who did this. Little did he know his childhood friends would come to be the heroes of millions. You are not alone Stan, the fruit of your imagination will be with us forever."

Hot Fuzz and Shaun of the Dead director Edgar Wright blogged: "A real genius. And a sad loss."

Meanwhile, AICN has done an awesome job of gathering statements from some of the filmmakers who have worked with him over the years. Here are some highlights.

James Cameron: "We've lost a great artist, a man who made a contribution to the cinema of the fantastic that will resound for a long long time. I don't need to list the indelible characters he and his team of artists brought to the screen. Readers of your site know them. We all know Stan's work, the genius of his designs. But not even the fans necessarily know how great he was as a man. I mean a real man — a man who knows that even though your artistic passion can rule your life, you still make time for your family and your friends. He was a good father, and he raised two great kids. His wife of 37 years, Karen, was with him in the beginning, helping him make plaster molds in their garage for low budget gigs on TV movies, and she was with him at the end."

Jon Favreau: "He was a giant. I was blessed to have known him. I worked with him on both Zathura and Iron Man. He was experienced and helped guide me while never losing his childlike enthusiasm. He was the king of integrating practical effects with CGI, never losing his relevance in an ever changing industry. I am proud to have worked with him and we were looking forward to future collaborations. I knew that he was struggling, but I had no idea that he would be gone so soon. Hollywood has lost a shining star."

Frank Darabont: "One of the blessings of being in movies is when you meet icons whose work you deeply admire and they turn out to be fantastic people. They're the ones you're honored to encounter along the way, the people who are kind and gracious and inspiring in addition to being superbly talented. They exhibit genuine humanity and touch your heart in various ways, and you foolishly figure they'll always be around to get to know better as the years go on. But then they are taken far too soon, and you're left with the deep and lasting regret of not having gotten to know them nearly as well as you'd wanted or expected to. I've met and lost a number of extraordinary people who fall into this category, among them Roddy McDowell, John Frankenheimer, Sidney Pollack, Dave Stevens, and John Alvin. Stan Winston now sadly joins my list."

Read the full letters, including more from Joe Dante, Rick Baker, Monster Squad director Fred Dekker and others on AICN.

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Democrats Hunker Down to Help the Unemployed



 
 

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via Open Congress : Congress Gossip Blog by Donny Shaw on 6/17/08

With the recent jump in the jobless rate, congressional Democrats are serious about extending unemployment insurance benefits. After running into opposition from Republicans and conservative Democrats in all the various ways they've tried to get the extension passed, the Democratic leaders are putting it back in the place it will be safest: the war funding bill. Once Congress passes that bill it will be up to President Bush to either accept the $162 billion in war money with the unemployment extension attached, or veto the whole thing and risk further delays in getting money and resources to U.S. troops in Iraq.

The AP reports on the Democrats' latest strategy:

In a challenge to President Bush, House Democratic leaders have decided to retain a 13-week extension of unemployment benefits as part of long-overdue legislation to pay for the war in Iraq.

[...]

The latest tentative agreement calls for the House to retain the unemployment benefits extension, despite a Bush veto threat, along with a major bill to beef up college benefits under the GI Bill for returning veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan.

In exchange, the Senate is expected to drop more than $10 billion in additional appropriations for programs such as heating subsidies for the poor, wildfire fighting, road and bridge repair and help for the Gulf Coast.

Reid spokesman Jim Manley said Monday that the Senate would take up the bill after the House passes it this week and try to send it on to the president's desk. But Republicans are expected to block the measure until a tax surcharge on the wealthy — used by the House to "pay for" the 10-year, $50 billion-plus cost of the increase in GI college benefits — is stripped out.

For more on the surtax Democrats were hoping to include in the bill, see this post on the Citizens for Tax Justice blog, which explains that "in 2007 only 0.3 percent of taxpayers were rich enough to be affected."

We'll be following this bill as things develop, as will, no doubt, the savvy commenters on the OpenCongress page for the unemployment bill. That bill, H.R.5749, has been the hottest bill on OpenCongress over the last few months, with more than 16,000 comments from people fighting to get it passed. The community there is definitely the best place to look for the most up to date, breaking news on this front. And If you are hoping for Congress to extend unemployment insurance, you should join in the discussion on that page and help to build political support for getting it enacted in the supplemental.


 
 

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Target CEO Gregg Steinhafel's Email Address And Phone Number [Gregg Steinhaf...



 
 

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via Consumerist by Ben Popken on 6/17/08

Gregg "If you squint I look like Alec Baldwin" Steinhafel
Gregg.Steinhafel@target.com
612-696-6234
fax: 612-696-6325

Assistant:
Denise May
Denise.May@target.com
612-696-6243

Phone numbers for his direct reports, inside...

Bart Butzer, VP Stores: (612)-696-4968
Christopher Perrigo, VP Target India: (612)-761-0613
Doug Scovanner, EVP Finance & CFO: (612)-761-6610
Janet Shalk, EVP Target Tech Services: (612)-304-5155
Jodee Kolzak, EVP Human Resources: (612)-696-6111
John Griffith, EVP Property Dev: (612)-761-1487
Kathee Tesija, EVP Merchandising: (612)-696-6134
Michael Francis, EVP Marketing: (612)-696-2822
Mitch Stover, SVP Distribution: (612)-304-2787
Stacia Andersen, President TSS: (612)-696-2856
Tim Baer, EVP General Counsel: (612)-696-6648
Tory Risch, EVP Stores: (612)-696-2476

(You know what it takes to sell discount Isaac Mizrahi throwcovers to bored suburban housewives? It takes brass balls.)


Poll


 
 

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Bad to the bone



 
 

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via Brilliant at Breakfast by Jill on 6/17/08

That's the Bush Administration, its privatization of the military, the contractors it uses, the coziness of KBR to Dick Cheney.

It's hard to believe that there are Americans who would begrudge the child of an illegal immigrant an education or health care; or who would send death threats to Graeme Frost's family because he got government-paid health care, but they don't seem to give a rat's ass about this:

The Army official who managed the Pentagon's largest contract in Iraq says he was ousted from his job when he refused to approve paying more than $1 billion in questionable charges to KBR, the Houston-based company that has provided food, housing and other services to American troops.

The official, Charles M. Smith, was the senior civilian overseeing the multibillion-dollar contract with KBR during the first two years of the war. Speaking out for the first time, Mr. Smith said that he was forced from his job in 2004 after informing KBR officials that the Army would impose escalating financial penalties if they failed to improve their chaotic Iraqi operations.

Army auditors had determined that KBR lacked credible data or records for more than $1 billion in spending, so Mr. Smith refused to sign off on the payments to the company. "They had a gigantic amount of costs they couldn't justify," he said in an interview. "Ultimately, the money that was going to KBR was money being taken away from the troops, and I wasn't going to do that."

But he was suddenly replaced, he said, and his successors — after taking the unusual step of hiring an outside contractor to consider KBR's claims — approved most of the payments he had tried to block.

Army officials denied that Mr. Smith had been removed because of the dispute, but confirmed that they had reversed his decision, arguing that blocking the payments to KBR would have eroded basic services to troops. They said that KBR had warned that if it was not paid, it would reduce payments to subcontractors, which in turn would cut back on services.


Um....excuse me? Doesn't that sound like blackmail? Let's read that last sentence again, shall we?

They said that KBR had warned that if it was not paid, it would reduce payments to subcontractors, which in turn would cut back on services.


Yup, that's exactly what it is: KBR gouges the Federal government, then demands payment or else it will cut services it provides to American troops.

And WHO is it that "supports the troops" again?

There just doesn't seem to be any limit to the amount of filth that passes for policy in the Bush years. This is about as reprehensible as anything I've seen from this bunch in the last eight years. Here we have a company, spun off from a company that employed Dick Cheney for years (and presumably to which he's returning after January), that has received a bunch of no-bid, no-accountability contracts from the United States government. It submits a bunch of questionable charges, then demands payment or else it will stop feeding American soldiers.

Doesn't this bother Americans, or are they too busy looking at pictures of Barack Obama's African relatives and telling their friends that he's really a Muslim? Or are they too busy monitoring the health care given to poor children?

 
 

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The American auto industry never learns



 
 

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via Brilliant at Breakfast by Jill on 6/17/08

You'd think that after the oil shocks of the 1970s, the Big Three would have learned that putting all your eggs in the Behemoth Basket may generate short-term profits, but is a lousy strategy in the long run.

I don't know if it's fossilized management or a function of the American corporation's unwillingness to think any farther than the next quarter,but anyone could have seen the demise of the SUV coming a mile away. We didn't see it happening today, or tomorrow, or even the next day, but it was clear that when you have vehicles guzzling a finite resource, sooner or later something's going to give.

And now General Motors is once again taking the hit:


Playing the urban warrior in a Hummer was a fairly inexpensive thrill when a gallon of gas cost just over $1. But at $4 a gallon, driving a full-powered Hummer H3 or a big Ford F-150 would cost a typical driver, who drives 15,000 miles a year, almost $4,300 in gas. This is more than 10 percent of the median earnings of full-time workers and about $2,200 more than it would cost to drive the same distance in a Honda Civic.

By May, there were signs that the S.U.V.-era was over. For the first time, Detroit's Big Three automakers and their trucks were outsold in the United States by fuel-efficient cars made by Asian companies. And monthly sales of Ford's muscular F-series pickups fell by a third, bumping it five spots from its previous perch as America's best-selling vehicle, behind the Honda Civic, the Toyota Corolla, the Toyota Camry and the Honda Accord. It was the first time since December 1992 that a car, not a truck, claimed the top spot in monthly sales.

The F-series pickup has been the nation's best-selling vehicle, on an annual basis, since 1981. But last month, the Ford Motor Company said that it would slash production of pickups and S.U.V.'s. Its full-size pickup plant in Cuautitlán, Mexico, is expected to be used to produce the Ford Fiesta, a subcompact car, instead.


None of this is going to help the U.S. automakers, who for two generations now have demonstrated that they are congenitally unable to build a reliable fuel-efficient car. The Ford Fiesta mentioned in the above article used to be sold here in the U.S. It was a hunk of junk, and I don't expect the newer version to be significantly better. The Fiesta is expected to replace the Focus, which was reasonably well-rated by Consumer Reports until 2008, when they said this about the "retooled" version:

The original Focus was agile and fun to drive, but the freshening for 2008 has taken away from that, with handling that is less crisp than before. The seating position is high and commanding, controls are clear and logically placed, and cabin access is easy. The ride is firm yet supple but the car is still noisy. Interior quality is lackluster.


The problem for the U.S. automakers is that for almost 40 years, they have ceded the fuel-efficient vehicle market to the Asian carmakers, to the point that no one in their right mind would even consider buying a Ford or General Motors compact car when for the same money you can get a proven-to-be-reliable player from Toyota, Honda, and now apparently even Hyundai has improved its quality.

Of course the last thing that American autoworkers need is the shuttering of more plants and the destruction of more jobs. But I wonder when the executives who make decisions like that to focus on gas-guzzlers are going to start paying some of the consequences of their actions instead of it always being the rank-and-file. General Motors CEO Rick Wagoner received a 64% bump in compensation while GM stock fell 19%. How many people below the CEO level would even still have their jobs with a performance like that?

 
 

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GOP convention button asks, ‘If Obama is president…will we still call it the...



 
 

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via Think Progress by Ali on 6/17/08

A booth at this weekend's Texas Republican convention sold buttons asking, "If Obama Is President…Will We Still Call It The White House?":

obama-button.JPG

The company that makes the buttons boasts providing "Patriotic and Republican Products." Another button they sell features a picture of Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-NY), with the phrase: "Life's a b**ch, don't vote for one." (HT: AmericaBlog)


 
 

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How Often Should You Change Your Oil?



 
 

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via CyberNet by Ashley on 6/17/08

change oil.pngThis isn't technology news per se, but it's definitely worth writing about. The question of the day is, how often should you change your oil? If you're like us, you've always been lead to believe that it was a must to change the oil every three months or 3,000 miles, whichever comes first. Even when you go to get your oil changed somewhere, they usually put a sticker on your windshield with the date and/or mileage when you need to come back and it's always 3,000 miles or 3 months. As it turns out,that "rule" is just a myth.

A recent article over at Yahoo Autos talks about how the 3,000 mile rule is a misconception and was only necessary back in the day when single-grade, non-detergent oils were used. These days the oil is an improved product that lasts a lot longer than it used to, and the engines are better too. Because of that, most manufacturers now recommend that the oil get changed at 5,000, 7,000, or 10,000 miles under "normal driving conditions."

Obviously the oil companies along with the companies that provide oil changes, like Jiffy Lube, are going to continue to promote the myth to get the business. Just know that even the manual for your vehicle will probably recommend an oil change at about every 7,500 miles and not 3,000 miles, if it's newer. Of course every vehicle will be different and it does all depend on the driving conditions, so look at your manual and see what the car manufacturer recommends. I checked out the manual on my vehicle - it's a 2000 Ford Ranger, and it says an oil change is needed every 5,000 miles.

It's probably worth checking your manual to see what is suggested because it could save you some money in the end…

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As Economy Tanks, Pets Feel the Bite



 
 

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via Chicagoist by Kevin Robinson on 6/17/08

More and more pet owners are having trouble putting gas in the tank and food on the table in this tough economy. And as families are having more trouble making ends meet, they're also having trouble feeding their pets. And animal welfare organizations that give out donated pet food are feeling the pinch as well.

2008_6_dog_food.jpg

The South Suburban Humane Society, which runs a pet food pantry on the fourth Thursday of the month is adding the second Tuesday of each month to handle the increased demand. "We used to hand out food from noon to about 3:30 (p.m.), until supplies were gone," Emily Gruszka, executive director of the South Suburban Humane Society told the Daily Southtown. "But the last two months, we've opened up to find 10 to 15 people already waiting in line. And we've had to close by 12:30 (p.m.) because we'd run out of food already." And the Animal Welfare League in Chicago Ridge has seen the number of people asking for pet food donations increase by 50 percent, and requests for discounted veterinary care has doubled. "We could do it every day if we had enough food, I mean, that's how bad it's gotten," said Linda Estrada, the group's director and president. "The line goes all the way down the street."

Unfortunately for pets, a bad economy doesn't just mean a shortage of kibble. As more people have felt the pinch on their pocketbooks, or worse, lost their jobs, they've had to give up their pets as well. With the cost of dog or cat care estimated at around $1000 a month, many people are considering pet ownership a luxury. According to Gruszka, 18 families gave up their pets last week, more than half citing financial reasons.

Photo by Kookybites



 
 

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Murkowski Reveals Two More Murky Deals in Financial Disclosure Amendments



 
 

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via TPMMuckraker by Kate Klonick on 6/17/08

Senators released financial disclosure forms last week, and among them were a series of amendments to earlier years' disclosure forms from Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK).

You might remember Murkowski for the sweetheart deal she failed to disclose in her forms last year. Murkowski had purchased a piece of property along the Kenai river from Bob Penney, a politically-prominent local developer connected to the Sen. Ted Stevens (R-AK) investigation, for about $120,000 under market-value. Murkowski failed to disclose the purchase, and later claimed it was for "personal use," though this still did not make it exempt from disclosure. She later amended her disclosure forms to reflect the sale and finally reversed the sale, selling the property back to Penney for the purchase price.

She has now amended her 2004, 2005 and 2006 disclosure documents to reveal roughly $100,000 of as yet-undisclosed income in the latter two years and some $60,000 of undisclosed income in 2004.

In all three years, Murkowski was receiving $60,000 a year in payments on a promissory note, stemming from the sale of her 50% share of 313 E. Street, a property that was held by New Frontiers Ventures, LLC, which was co-owned by Murkowski, her husband and her parents, Gov. Frank and Nancy Murkowski. The property was sold to Garcia Investment Group, LLC in 2003.

A note on the disclosure forms state that New Frontiers Ventures was later dissolved on December 31, 2006.

In 2005, Murkowski sold her 'Alaska Pasta Company' to Hope Nelson, a member of the Alaska Federation of Republican Women who, in May 2007, also helped organize a birthday party for Sen. Murkowski. Nelson made a down payment of $45,000, and has since paid $40,800 a year on a promissory note.


 
 

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McCain flip-flops on offshore drilling moratorium.



 
 

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via Think Progress by Matt on 6/17/08

Yesterday, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) offered "a bit of a capitulation to the oil companies" by announcing that he would end the federal ban on offshore oil drilling. Not only is McCain's move a break with environmental activist, but it is also "a reversal of the position he took in his 2000 presidential campaign." The Washington Post's Dana Milbank writes:

During his last run for the presidency, in 1999, McCain supported the drilling moratorium, and he scolded the "special interests in Washington" that sought offshore drilling leases. Yesterday, he announced that those very same "moratoria should be lifted" and proposed incentives for the states "in the form of tangible financial rewards, if the states decide to lift those moratoriums."

In 2000, McCain promised to "never lose sight" of fundamental principles on the issue.


 
 

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Jeffrey Klein: McCain's Secret, Questionable Record - Politics on The Huffington Post

Jeffrey Klein: McCain's Secret, Questionable Record - Politics on The Huffington Post: "Despite graduating in the bottom 1 percent of his Annapolis class, McCain was offered the most sought-after Navy assignment -- to become an aircraft carrier pilot. According to military historian John Karaagac, ''the Airdales,' the air wing of the Navy, acted and still do, as if unrivaled atop the naval pyramid. They acted as if they owned, not only the Navy, but the entire swath of blue water on the earth's surface.' The most accomplished midshipmen compete furiously for the few carrier pilot openings. After four abysmal academic years at Annapolis distinguished only by his misdeeds and malfeasance, no one with a record resembling McCain's would have been offered such a prized career path. The justification for this and subsequent plum assignments should be documented in McCain's naval file."

Brendan O'Neill: The Aids scare was a cynical public health scare | Comment is free | guardian.co.uk

Brendan O'Neill: The Aids scare was a cynical public health scare | Comment is free | guardian.co.uk: "Kevin de Cock, who has headed the global battle against Aids, said at the weekend that, outside very poor African countries, Aids is confined to 'high-risk groups', including men who have sex with men, injecting drug users, and sex workers. And even in these communities it remains quite rare. 'It is very unlikely there will be a heterosexual epidemic in countries [outside sub-Saharan Africa]', he said. In other words? All that hysterical fearmongering about Aids spreading among sexed-up western youth was a pack of lies."

Inconspicuous Consumption

Inconspicuous Consumption: "The two economists, along with Nikolai Roussanov of the University of Pennsylvania, have now attacked those questions. What they found not only provides insight into the economic differences between racial groups, it challenges common assumptions about luxury. Conspicuous consumption, this research suggests, is not an unambiguous signal of personal affluence. It’s a sign of belonging to a relatively poor group. Visible luxury thus serves less to establish the owner’s positive status as affluent than to fend off the negative perception that the owner is poor. The richer a society or peer group, the less important visible spending becomes."

VA testing drugs on mentally distressed veterans.



 
 

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via Think Progress by Satyam on 6/17/08

A Washington Times/ABC News investigation released today finds that "mentally distressed veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan are being recruited for government tests on pharmaceutical drugs linked to suicide and other violent side effects." The Times reports:

In one such experiment involving the controversial anti-smoking drug Chantix, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) took three months to alert its patients about severe mental side effects. The warning did not arrive until after one of the veterans taking the drug had suffered a psychotic episode that ended in a near lethal confrontation with police.

"VA officials defend their use of veterans in medical studies, saying that helping [post-traumatic stress disorder] sufferers to stop smoking would prolong their lives," the Times notes.


 
 

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Jean Schmidt Refuses To Retract False Claim That China Is ‘Drilling Off The ...



 
 

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via Think Progress by Amanda on 6/17/08

On June 5, Rep. Jean Schmidt (R-OH) took to the House floor and criticized Congress for refusing to lift the ban on offshore oil drilling. To strengthen her point, she claimed that even China and Cuba are drilling off Florida's coast:

This very day, there is indeed the drilling activity off of our country's coast. Not by our U.S. companies; that would be illegal. Instead, the Chinese are drilling off the coast of Florida, with their new energy partner, Cuba. This Congress has failed to act time and time again. Our oil resources along our coastlines and in Alaska remain untapped in the name of environmentalism.

Watch it:

Schmidt's allegation is false. China is not drilling off the coast of Florida. Even Vice President Cheney, who also made the claim last week, put out a statement on Thursday admitting that he was wrong:

It is our understanding that, although Cuba has leased out exploration blocks 60 miles off the coast of southern Florida, which is closer than American firms are allowed to operate in that area, no Chinese firm is drilling there.

Conservative columnist George Will, who also made the claim in his June 5 column, today wrote a correction, stating, "[N]o Chinese company has been involved in Cuba's oil exploration that close to the United States."

Schmidt and other conservatives are refusing to back down, however. When asked whether she plans to issue a retraction, one of her spokesmen simply replied, "We will have a discussion." House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-OH), Minority Whip Roy Blunt (R-MO), and Rep. George Radanovich (R-CA), who also made the false claim, have gone further and defended their statements.

Similarly, other conservatives continue to peddle the propaganda. Just yesterday, conservative pundit Mary Matalin made the claim both on CNN and CNN Headline News. A Fox News guest also repeated the lie yesterday on Neil Cavuto's show.


 
 

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The Independent: ‘The end of this disastrous presidency is finally in sight.’



 
 

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via Think Progress by Ben on 6/17/08

On the heels of President Bush's farewell tour of Europe, the Independent (UK) issued a scathing editorial today reflecting on his visit and presidency:

bushweb.jpg[P]erhaps Mr Bush's most significant legacy, as far as Britain is concerned, will be the destruction of the instinctive trust of America and its leaders that once prevailed here. It is no exaggeration to say that Mr Bush has done more damage to relations between our two nations than any president in living memory. This rupture is not an accident of circumstance; there are no impersonal forces of history to blame. This sorry state of affairs is the consequence of the actions of a single leader and his small coterie of advisers. […]

And whatever the future holds for transatlantic relations, there will be very few in this country who watched President Bush's plane depart yesterday without a feeling of profound relief that the end of this disastrous presidency is finally in sight.


 
 

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Governor Jennifer on John McCain: ‘They want a change in the White House. Th...



 
 

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via Crooks and Liars by John Amato on 6/17/08

I heart Granholm. When have I ever said that? She's an incredible communicator who really captures the mood of the country and blue collar workers after living under the Conservative agenda for almost eight years. In the few minutes she had on The Situation Room Monday—Governor Granholm quickly and easily deconstructed McCain's talking points on every economic issue Wolf brought up. I guess after all was said and done it comes down to one word: "McSame." Michigan is lucky to have her.

video_wmv Download | Play video_mov Download | Play (h/t billw)

GRANHOLM: I'll tell you what blue collar American wants. They want a change in the White House. They don't want a third Bush term. Here in Michigan, in small towns across our state, where we have seen jobs go on a slow boat to China, on the Internet to India, or on a fast track to Mexico, we want to make sure that we have an investment, a manufacturing policy in this country that supports our job providers so we can keep jobs here. Bush and McCain will further the unfair trade policies that have hurt states like Michigan.

People are mad in Michigan. We're mad that the Bush administration has stood idly by while we have lost almost 400,000 jobs since Bush became president.

Can you imagine that, Wolf? Four hundred thousand jobs. That's our own version of Hurricane Katrina, only it's {trickled out} over the past seven and a half years. So we need a change in the White House. That's what people are mad at. They're mad at a White House that has not paid attention to middle America.

I can imagine it. Michigan is not the only state that has been devastated by the Bush doctrine. I love the way she made sure to incorporate the "trickle down" principals of Conservatism in her response to McCain's camp. For McCain to say that Obama is out of touch with blue collar working Americans is laughable since he has stood side by side with the conservative agenda that has been an utter failure for our country. I will say that the White House has paid attention to the fat cats on wall street. They certainly have made a killing while Bush has been in office. That's why we will constantly hear screams of "Obama is a socialistrun for the hills," by the Saturday morning zombie stock show guests on FOX.

Transcript via CNN:

BLITZER: Well, we've been telling our viewers Michigan has got the highest unemployment rate in the country now. Serious economic problems, as you well know better than anyone in your state.

Here's what John McCain says — as bad as it is in Michigan right now, if Obama's president, guess what? It could get a whole lot worse. Listen to McCain.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

MCCAIN: I believe that there are stark differences between myself and Senator Obama, whether it be he wants to raise taxes, I want to lower them.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

BLITZER: And he says everyone in Michigan, indeed across the country, would have higher taxes. He says given the hard economic times, this is about the worst time to go ahead and raise everyone's taxes.

What do you say to that charge?

GRANHOLM: Well, I don't know if he's been reading the economic plan, but the Obama plan has significant middle class, working class tax cuts. In fact, there was a national study that is a neutral study which said that average Americans, middle class Americans, would see three times as much of a tax break under Obama than they would under McCain.

I mean, the bottom line is, McCain, I'm not sure what his education policy is. I'm not sure what his energy policy is. But Barack Obama came to Michigan today, to Flint, Michigan, which is the heart of the auto industry. The reason why Michigan's economy is so challenged because of this massive contraction in our automotive sector.

So he came right to the heart of the auto industry. And what he said is that he is going to invest $150 billion in an entire energy sector of this country, creating jobs, millions of jobs in energy. That, for a state like Michigan, is hugely important to hear. He had specific plans for us.

BLITZER: All right. I guess what McCain is suggesting is that if you start raising taxes, even for wealthy Americans, families making more than $200,000 or $250,000 a year, and you start increasing capital gains taxes, and other taxes related to investments, that's going to hurt the aggregate, the overall U.S. economy. And it will further make it difficult for job creation and everything else you want in Michigan.

GRANHOLM: Well, the whole point that Barack Obama was making is that you have to make strategic investments in the areas that you know will grow jobs. He said that he would eliminate capital gains taxes on those entrepreneurs, the kind of jobs we want to create. But the very, very, very wealthiest, they can afford to contribute to the investment in our country to allow people to be able to go to college.

Every economist will tell you that the smartest economic development strategy is making sure you have a skilled work force for those employers. And that's exactly what Barack Obama's plan is.

BLITZER: McCain's really been hitting Obama hard over the past few days about those so-called "bitter" comments he made during the primary against Hillary Clinton. Listen to this latest — this latest statement that McCain made just today.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

MCCAIN: I won't tell them that in small towns across America and in Pennsylvania, that they are bitter or angry about their economic conditions, so therefore they embrace religion and the Second Amendment of the Constitution of the United States. I will never do that.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

BLITZER: All right. Do you want to respond to that? Because he's suggesting that Obama is simply out of touch with blue collar working Americans.

GRANHOLM: I'll tell you what blue collar American wants. They want a change in the White House. They don't want a third Bush term.

Here in Michigan, in small towns across our state, where we have seen jobs go on a slow boat to China, on the Internet to India, or on a fast track to Mexico, we want to make sure that we have an investment, a manufacturing policy in this country that supports our job providers so we can keep jobs here. Bush and McCain will further the unfair trade policies that have hurt states like Michigan.

People are mad in Michigan. We're mad that the Bush administration has stood idly by while we have lost almost 400,000 jobs since Bush became president.

Can you imagine that, Wolf? Four hundred thousand jobs. That's our own version of Hurricane Katrina, only it's trickled out over the past seven and a half years. So we need a change in the White House. That's what people are mad at. They're mad at a White House that has not paid attention to middle America.

BLITZER: How big of a deal is it that Senator Obama's going to have a special guest in Michigan with him later tonight. The former vice president of the United States, Al Gore, will be in your beautiful state to make this ringing endorsement.

GRANHOLM: Well, if you're making that announcement, I can't confirm. But if it were true that Al Gore was coming here, I could tell you that it is a great statement.

We in Michigan want to reinvent Michigan. We want to rebuild a clean, green state where technology and green technology and alternative energy and renewable energy is the sector of growth for job creation to replace those lost manufacturing jobs. And I tell you, if you look at what Al Gore has done in elevating the dialogue about climate change and in taking action, he will tell you that this is — yes, it's good for the planet, but it's also good for the economy and for jobs. And that's where Michigan stands right there.

BLITZER: Michigan's going to be very busy over these next few months. A battleground state.


 
 

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Glitzy OC reels in foreclosures : Housing Wire

Glitzy OC reels in foreclosures : Housing Wire: "The Orange County Register’s Mathew Padilla notes that foreclosures in Orange County — which includes such glamorous spots as Newport Beach and Laguna Beach — are soaring. In fact, it only took the first five months of 2008 to surpass the total number of foreclosures filed during all of 2007."

Monday, June 16, 2008

Mr. Mortgage’s Guide to the TRUTH! » Mr Mortgage: ‘Friends of Angelo’ were Everywhere at Every Bank.

Mr. Mortgage’s Guide to the TRUTH! » Mr Mortgage: ‘Friends of Angelo’ were Everywhere at Every Bank.

Worst Company In America 2008 "Sweet 16": Wal-Mart VS WellPoint

Worst Company In America 2008 "Sweet 16": Wal-Mart VS WellPoint: "Wal-Mart:
'I knew they pushed manufacturers to lesser quality items for their stores, but I was not expecting this to trickle down to frozen pizza. I know they have committed greater evils, but man, screwing with a DiGiorno should be punishable by death.'

'I bought a GE Skillet from them a while back and it was a piece of shit. To find out why, I checked the box and it said something like 'made for Wal-Mart' and ever since then, when I do venture into Wal-Mart I always check for that label.'

Wellpoint:
'Personal information that may have included Social Security numbers and pharmacy or medical data for about 128,000 WellPoint Inc. customers in several states was exposed online over the past year, the health insurer said Tuesday.'

'$2600 root canal - they covered about $435. filling? $16. right, like any licensed dentist is going to do a filling for $16.'"

Gas: What Goes Into The Price Of Gas?

Gas: What Goes Into The Price Of Gas?: "73% - Crude oil
11% - Federal and state taxes
10% - Refining costs and profits
6% - Distribution and marketing

He's also got a cool graph showing how this ratio has changed from 2001-2008.

What Goes Into the Price of Gas? [FiveCentNickel]"

Worst Company In America

Worst Company In America: "Current Worst Company In America Standings:

* Comcast is beating Ticketmaster
* Exxon is thumping DeBeers
* Diebold is destroying Best Buy
* ...and Capital One is edging out eBay/Paypal.

Will #5 Best Buy really not make the elite 8? Can Capital One hold its lead on eBay? With $4 gas a reality... can Exxon be stopped?"

Inhabitat » LILYPAD: Floating City for Climate Change Refugees

Inhabitat » LILYPAD: Floating City for Climate Change Refugees

Colin Powell slams Bush

Colin Powell slams Bush: "He was a four-star American general, the secretary of state during President George W. Bush's first term and remains a Republican.

But Colin Powell said Thursday in Vancouver that he is considering voting for Democrat Barack Obama in November -- and he took shots at the Bush administration's handling of the Iraq war and the holding of terrorism suspects in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

Powell told a crowd of about 1,000 people at the Vancouver Convention & Exhibition Centre that he hasn't decided whether to support Obama or Republican John McCain for the U.S. presidency.

Powell said that Obama's life story sums up the 'American dream' and he described McCain as the 'toughest man I've ever met.'"

Smoking Trees in Belize: The Worst Team in Baseball History

Smoking Trees in Belize: The Worst Team in Baseball History: "the 2005 Orioles, 4th place in the AL East with 74 wins are the worst team in MLB history. Why you ask? With 6 named on the Mitchell Report one would think that would be enough to brand this team the worst. Add the busted and snitching Rafael Palmeiro, and the notoriously sketchy Sammy Sosa, along with boozing’ and brawlin’ Sydney Ponson, and the 2005 O’s can field a starting 9 with each of the 7 deadly sins covered."

Stan Winston Passes Away



 
 

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via Cinematical by Eugene Novikov on 6/16/08

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A number of sources are reporting that pioneering make-up, special effects, and animatronics wizard Stan Winston has died at age 62 -- far too soon. No word yet on cause of death.

The word "legend" gets tossed around a lot when famous people die, but Stan Winston is a legend. He brought to life the Terminator, Jurassic Park's dinosaurs, Predator, Edward Scissorhands, and the Penguin, just to name a few. Even now, when one would think the advent of CGI would have started to make him obsolete, his practical effects genius got him work on movies like Iron Man and the forthcoming Terminator Salvation. I guess it was inevitable that in the age of computers, Winston would go from creating wonders to perfecting them. But Iron Man owes a great deal to him. He kept Tony Stark from looking silly in that metal suit.

Far from being obsolete, Stan Winston is irreplaceable. Movie lovers will never forget him.

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7,300 Rich Americans Paid $0.00 Taxes



 
 

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via Drudge Retort by reinheitsgebot on 6/16/08

IRS statistics show 7,389 federal tax returns with $200,000 or more in adjusted gross income reported no federal income taxes in 2005, a 161 percent jump from the 2,833 comparable returns filed in 2004.

 
 

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‘Recount’: Lieberman helps sink Gore in 2000 election



 
 

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via Crooks and Liars by John Amato on 6/16/08

If you thought we needed another reason to consider Joe Lieberman a wanker—there is this. I watched HBO's movie called Recount the other day and it reminded me once again about his painful appearance on Meet the Press where he gets scared out of doing what was right and does everything he can during the Florida election scandal in 2000 to get Bush elected

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Lieberman: "My own point of view, if I was there, I would give the benefit of the doubt to ballots coming in from military personnel, generally," Mr. Lieberman said on NBC's "Meet the Press." Of the local canvassing boards, he said, "If they have the capacity, I'd urge them to go back and take another look, because again, Al Gore and I don't want to ever be part of anything that would put an extra burden on the military personnel abroad."

The conciliatory words came a day after Gov. George W. Bush's campaign and its surrogates accused the Democrats of a systematic campaign to have military votes, which are presumed to strongly favor Mr. Bush, thrown out, while some service members voiced anger at that possibility.

"We're getting kicked around for saying illegal votes are illegal votes," said a Democratic congressman from Florida. "The Republicans got a lot of illegal votes counted on Friday that never would have been let in before, and now we're the ones retreating? Incredible."

Telephone: Gore is going ballistic, what the hell just happened?

Klain: I think Joe Lieberman just ended to 2000 primaries.

Thanks, Joe. Help John McCain all you want.

NY Times:

"We're getting kicked around for saying illegal votes are illegal votes," said a Democratic congressman from Florida. "The Republicans got a lot of illegal votes counted on Friday that never would have been let in before, and now we're the ones retreating? Incredible."


 
 

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Stan Winston is Dead



 
 

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