Tag Archives: government

By 6-to-1 Margin, Networks Paint Debate Over “Tax Cuts,” Not Raising Rates

Even with Monday’s deal between President Obama and top Republicans, no American’s income tax rates will actually decline on January 1 (although, if the deal passes, workers will notice a modest reduction in their payroll taxes in 2011). Yet throughout this debate, the broadcast networks have insisted on framing the debate as about “tax cuts” and “tax breaks,” not about forestalling a tax increase that could jeopardize the weak recovery. MRC analysts reviewed all 23 ABC, CBS and NBC evening news stories about the tax debate from the start of the lame-duck session of Congress on November 15 through December 5, just before the GOP and Obama struck their deal. Network reporters used the phrase “tax cut” a total of 71 times to characterize the issue at hand. CBS’s Nancy Cordes, for example, talked about “the battle over the Bush tax cuts” on the November 15 Evening News. Two nights later, NBC’s Chuck Todd related a new poll showing how “49 percent say don’t give the wealthy these tax cuts” — as if the “the wealthy” would be getting some new gift from the government. read more

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By 6-to-1 Margin, Networks Paint Debate Over “Tax Cuts,” Not Raising Rates

‘The Vice Guide To Everything’ Goes Everywhere, Because No One Else Does

Vice co-founder Shane Smith and company bring their worldwide adventures to MTV Monday at 11 p.m. ET. By James Montgomery “The Vice Guide To Everything” co-founder Shane Smith Photo: MTV News Over the past year, “The Vice Guide to Everything” stars Ryan Duffy, Thomas Morton and Shane Smith have spent quality time with Yemeni rebels, Palestinian car thieves and Russian mobsters … to name just a few. And they did it basically because no one else will. “Well, I think journalism has changed … there was a time we actually believed what the news told us,” Smith, co-founder of Vice, the magazine and burgeoning media conglomerate that proudly goes places others won’t (both literally and physically), told MTV News. “And I think after the last two wars, where mainstream media was completely co-opted by the government and, in its own admission, failed in what it was supposed to do, that young people got totally disenfranchised … and because mainstream news media failed its job, people like us had to come and fill the vacuum.” And on Monday (December 6) at 11 p.m. ET, Smith and his cohorts will begin fighting that good fight on MTV, with the premiere of “The Vice Guide to Everything,” a 30-minute, wholly irreverent, oft eye-opening look at people and places that the mainstream media wouldn’t dare cover, let alone spend time with. Armed with only cameras, the occasional translator and the odd “fixer” (basically a local hired to ensure they’re not killed) these three went there, and came back with some incredible stories. “I was most scared in Yemen, when we were shooting with the rebels and the Houthis and tribal leaders who have death warrants on their head,” Smith explained. “The secret police arrested us, took all of our stuff, and we had all these cards of every rebel leader that the government wanted to kill … so the guy who helped us out there actually had to bribe the secret police to give us the tapes so we could wipe them … then we were able to get out.” “[There were] these car thieves in the West Bank that, because of all the restrictions on trade — importing car parts, specifically — if you want a car in Palestine, you basically pay some guy, he sneaks into Israel, he steals a car, brings it back and nobody finds you,” Morton added. “And we were hanging out with these guys who basically do that for a living, and … we steal a car together, and then a day later, he and a couple of his goon buddies showed up and tried to shake us down. The problem was they only spoke Arabic, our field producer spoke a little bit of Arabic, but we were basically relying on a translator for them to shake us down. And it was the most dragged-out event on the planet. … It just kept going for so long that, by the end of it, everybody was visibly bored with the proceedings, and they gave up.” And despite the near-death experiences, the “Vice” crew said that their show isn’t about pushing the boundaries just for the thrill of it (though, certainly, that plays a part). It’s to tell compelling stories and introduce American viewers to the kinds of things that go on every single day, no matter how hard the news networks try to ignore them. “[It’s] not that we’re Walter Cronkite or anything, but that whole era is over,” Smith said. “So, I think one of the things we do is we just show a story that resonates with people … and that’s what we’re trying to do with this show, which you should watch, Mondays at 11.” “The Vice Guide to Everything” airs Mondays at 11 p.m. ET on MTV.

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‘The Vice Guide To Everything’ Goes Everywhere, Because No One Else Does

France braces itself for Eric Cantona cashpoint revolution

France is bracing for Eric Cantona's bank-run revolution tomorrow Tuesday 7 December, with the government criticising his call for the public to stage a mass cash-withdrawal and the left questioning whether it would have much effect.When the ex Manchester United footballer gave a video interview in October calling on his fellow citizens to stage a world-wide cashpoint revolution against the financial system on December 7, the number of Cantona's lucky shirt.Asked about street demonstrations to protest against government austerity measures, Cantona said: “We have to change the way we do things nowadays. Talking of revolution, I don't mean we are going to pick up guns and go out to kill people. Revolution is very simple to do nowadays,” he told the French paper Presse Ocean.”What's the system? The system revolves around banks. The system is built on the banks' power. So it can be destroyed by the banks. Instead of having three million people going out to demonstrate with a placard, those three million people go to their bank branch, they withdraw their money and the banks crumble.” He directed people: “You go to your bank in your village and you withdraw your money.” But as tens of thousands of people signed up to the online campaigns led by a Franco-Belgian anti-bank protest group, the French government warned against “Eric Le Rouge” sticking his nose into economics.Francois Baroin, the budget minister, said: “It would be funny if it wasn't so tragic.” FCantona's call to arms was “grotesque” and “not serious”. inance minister Christine Lagarde said witheringly: “There are those who play football magnificently, I wouldn't dare to try. I think it's best for everyone to stick to their own speciality.” The director general of BNP Paribas deemed Cantona's appeal “ill-founded”. added by: sbacker

Malaysian police clash with protesters over water privitization

Thousands of protesters clashed with Malaysian police to call for an end to privatization of water utilities in the country. And close to 60 people were arrested for defying a police ban and attempting to march on the streets. Earlier, opposition legislators gathered near the National Mosque to address the crowd about issues concerning privatization in Selangor, a state which surrounds the capital Kuala Lumpur. The Malaysian government has embarked on progressive privatization of water following concerns of water scarcity in the country. Currently urban Malaysians use 500 liters of water per day. The government says this could increase to 700 liters per day due to rapid urbanization in the country. Selangor is the richest state in the country and ruled by the opposition alliance led by opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim. In 2005, the federal government privatized water management in Selangor to Syabas but the opposition said it has only incurred losses and may need to be bailed out. Selangor wants to take back water management but this effort is being blocked by the government and Syabas. Research done has projected that by 2050, 65 countries would be hit by water supply problems with a total of seven billion people affected. The debate about water privatization has been intensifying in Malaysia. However human rights workers say that there are many other avenues of ensuring adequate water supply in the country without burdening the poor as privatization would lead to a hike in tariffs. But they also say that this needs policy changes from the government. Video at the link. added by: JanforGore

Signs That Show Man Made Global Warming is Definitely Still Happening

As your boiler breaks down, your pipes freeze, your car won’t start, your Ocado delivery fails to arrive, your train is cancelled, your neck is broken after slipping on black ice and you lie in an emergency ward waiting for a doctor to turn up only to learn that they’re all off today because of the weather, you might be forgiven for thinking that all this has something to do with global cooling, changes in the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, and the decline in sunspot activity perhaps auguring a new Maunder minimum. But you couldn’t be more wrong. “It’s all actually a sign that man made global warming is very much a live issue and that there’s more of it happening than ever,” says a top scientist, who holds the British record for securing grant-funding for global warming research projects so he must know what he’s talking about. “Look at the Met office,” the scientist goes on. “They’ve just told us that 2010 is the hottest year since records began in 1850 and even though the stupid Central England Temperature record tells us something quite different and even though the year hasn’t actually finished yet they must know what they’re talking about and they definitely can’t have fiddled the data because the Met office is part of the government and they wouldn’t lie or get things wrong which is why that barbecue summer was such a scorcher.” The big problem is, the scientist said, is that the public are really stupid. They think just because Dr David Viner of the Climatic Research Unit said in the Independent in 2000 that soon there’d be no snow because of global warming, when what he actually meant was that soon there’d be lots of snow and that this would be “proof” of global warming. The interviewer just missed out the word “proof” that’s all because journalists are lazy that way. Then the scientist issued a cut-out-and-keep guide of Signs That Show Man Made Global Warming Is Definitely Still Happening And That Cancun Won’t Be An Almighty Flop. 1. Warm weather 2. Cold weather 3. In-between weather. 4. Dark skies at night 5. Light skies in the morning 6. An unpleasant moist/damp/wet sensation when it rains 7. Ice appearing when the temperature drops below zero 8. Clouds rolling across sky in all sorts of funny shapes, some days like cotton wool, other days in streaks, and on some days not there at all. 9. Ursine subarboreal toilet activity 10. Strong new evidence of ultramontane sympathies at the Vatican added by: rodstradamus

Nets Expound on ‘Cost’ of Maintaining Tax Rates, Stress How ‘Tax Break for the Wealthy Increases the Deficit’

Framing the debate through a liberal prism hostile to continuing the current income tax rates, ABC and CBS worried Thursday night about the “cost” of not raising taxes, as if all money belongs to the government, as both expounded on how not ending the Bush rates will fuel massive deficits. “If all the Bush tax cuts end for the top two percent of earners, $700 billion will be added to government coffers,” CBS Evening News anchor Katie Couric warned, and “if all the cuts stay in place, the deficit will soar by $3.7 trillion over ten years.”

WikiLeaks cables: Secret Deal Let Americans Sidestep Cluster Bomb Ban | The Guardian

British and American officials colluded in a plan to hoodwink parliament over a proposed ban on cluster bombs, the Guardian can disclose. According to leaked US embassy dispatches, David Miliband, who was Britain's foreign secretary under Labour, approved the use of a loophole to manoeuvre around the ban and allow the US to keep the munitions on British territory. Unlike Britain, the US had refused to sign up to an international convention that bans the weapons because of the widespread injury they cause to civilians. The US military asserted that cluster bombs were “legitimate weapons that provide a vital military capability” and wanted to carry on using British bases regardless of the ban. Whitehall officials proposed that a specially created loophole to grant the US a free hand should be concealed from parliament in case it “complicated or muddied” the MPs' debate. Gordon Brown, as prime minister, had swung his political weight in 2008 behind the treaty to ban the use and stockpiling of cluster bombs. Britain therefore signed it, contrary to earlier assurances made by British officials to their US counterparts. The US had stockpiles of cluster munitions at bases on British soil and intended to keep them, regardless of the treaty. When the bill to ratify the treaty was going through parliament this year, the then Labour foreign ministers Glenys Kinnock and Chris Bryant repeatedly proclaimed that US cluster munition arsenals would be removed from British territory by the declared deadline of 2013. But a different picture emerges from a confidential account of a meeting between UK and US officials in May last year. It shows that the two governments concocted the “concept” of allowing US forces to store their cluster weapons as “temporary exceptions” and on a “case-by-case” basis for specific military operations. ( http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/us-embassy-cables-documents/208206 ) Foreign Office officials “confirmed that the concept was accepted at highest levels of the government, as that idea had been included in the draft letter from minister [David] Miliband to secretary [of state Hillary] Clinton”. US cluster munitions are permanently stored on ships off the coast of the Diego Garcia airbase in the Indian Ocean, the cables reveal. The base is crucial for US military missions in the Middle East. Diego Garcia, still deemed British territory, has been occupied by the US military since its inhabitants were expelled in the 1960s and 1970s. The British concept of a “temporary exception” to oblige the US does not appear to be envisaged in the treaty. But the British arranged that “any movement of cluster munitions from ships at Diego Garcia to planes there, temporary transit, or use from British territory … would require the temporary exception”. Nicholas Pickard, head of the Foreign Office's security policy unit, is quoted as saying: “It would be better for the US government and HMG [the British government] not to reach final agreement on this temporary agreement understanding until after the [treaty] ratification process is completed in parliament, so that they can tell parliamentarians that they have requested the US government to remove its cluster munitions by 2013, without complicating/muddying the debate by having to indicate that this request is open to exceptions.” Lady Kinnock subsequently promised parliament that there would be no “permanent stockpiles of cluster munitions on UK territory” after the treaty as the US had decided it no longer needed them on British soil. There is no suggestion that Kinnock or Bryant were aware of a plan to mislead parliament. Tonight, a Foreign Office spokesman said: “We reject any allegation that the Foreign Office deliberately misled parliament or failed in our obligation to inform parliament. We cannot go into specifics of any leaked documents because we condemn any unauthorised release of classified information.” David Miliband declined to comment. Cluster bombs drop large numbers of “bomblets” over a wide area. Many do not explode at the time but can kill long afterwards. The Americans dropped thousands of cluster bombs in Afghanistan and Iraq. Civilians in Vietnam still die from cluster bombs dropped by the US in the 1960s. The leaked US state department documents reveal American displeasure at the international project launched by Norway to outlaw cluster munitions. An American arms control diplomat, John Rood, privately told the Foreign Office in 2008 that the US disliked this initiative, called the Oslo process. The Americans denounced it as “impractical and unconstructive” and were urging countries not to sign up. ( http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/us-embassy-cables-documents/140962 ) Mariot Leslie, then director general of defence and intelligence in the Foreign Office, reassured him that the British were only taking part as a “tactical manoeuvre” and cluster bombs were “essential to its arsenal”. “The UK is concerned about the impact of the Oslo process on the aftermath of a conflict, foreseeing 'astronomical bills' handed out to those who used cluster munitions in the past,” Leslie is recorded as saying. But two weeks later Brown defied military opposition and went ahead in banning British cluster munitions. Afghanistan, which had suffered grievous civilian casualties from the continuing war on its territory, also unexpectedly signed up to the treaty in December 2008 “without prior consultation with the US government” and “despite assurances to the contrary from President Karzai”. ( http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/us-embassy-cables-documents/185048 ) Washington's reaction was to seek to convince the Kabul government that the US could still legally use cluster munitions on Afghan territory under the treaty, even if the Afghan regime itself could not. Diplomats recommended a “low-profile approach” at “sub-ministerial level … given the political sensitivities in Afghanistan surrounding cluster munitions, as well as air and artillery strikes in general”. added by: toyotabedzrock

McCain faults military gays study, wants ban kept | General Headlines | Comcast.net

“We send these young people into combat,” said McCain. “We think they're mature enough to fight and die. I think they're mature enough to make a judgment on who they want to serve with and the impact on their battle effectiveness.” McCain, a four-term Republican and former Navy pilot who endured a harrowing ordeal as a prisoner of war during the Vietnam War, has taken a higher profile on socially divisive issues since losing the 2008 presidential race to Barack Obama. He has even differed with his wife, Cindy, who in a recent online video opposed the military policy and accused the government of treating gays like “second-class citizens.” added by: mik661

"Operation Monkey" Aims to Kill Marauding Primates

Photo: jinterwas / CC They’re a roving band of macaques who’ve made a habit of treating crops in northern India as their own private buffet, making more than a few enemies in the process. Now, a militia of fed-up farmers has been formed to put an end to primates’ marauding ways, in an effort they’ve dubbed “Operation: Monkey” — but don’t let the name fool you, it won’t involve the type of hi-jinks the name might conjure. Rather, its an operation the government just approved wherein farmers are granted permission to… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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"Operation Monkey" Aims to Kill Marauding Primates

Protest the TSA body scanners! Clothes with the 4th Amendent on them when x rayed by TSA!

This is brilliant! They seem to be sold out of the shirts right now but I'm really thinking about getting one when they have more! Enjoy guys. Follow me if you dig it. added by: cclark_productions