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Without a Revolution, Americans Are History

The United States is running out of time to get its budget and trade deficits under control. Despite the urgency of the situation, 2010 has been wasted in hype about a non-existent recovery. As recently as August 2 Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner penned a New York Times column, “Welcome to the Recovery.” As John Williams (shadowstats.com) has made clear on many occasions, an appearance of recovery was created by over-counting employment and undercounting inflation. Warnings by Williams, Gerald Celente, and myself have gone unheeded, but our warnings recently had echoes from Boston University professor Laurence Kotlikoff and from David Stockman, who excoriated the Republican Party for becoming big-spending Democrats. It is encouraging to see some realization that, this time, Washington cannot spend the economy out of recession. The deficits are already too large for the dollar to survive as reserve currency, and deficit spending cannot put Americans back to work in jobs that have been moved offshore. However, the solutions offered by those who are beginning to recognize that there is a problem are discouraging. Kotlikoff thinks the solution is savage Social Security and Medicare cuts or equally savage tax increases or hyperinflation to destroy the vast debts. Perhaps economists lack imagination, or perhaps they don’t want to be cut off from Wall Street and corporate subsidies, but Social Security and Medicare are insufficient at their present levels, especially considering the erosion of private pensions by the dot com, derivative and real estate bubbles. Cuts in Social Security and Medicare, for which people have paid 15 per cent of their earnings all their lives, would result in starvation and deaths from curable diseases. Tax increases make even less sense. It is widely acknowledged that the majority of households cannot survive on one job. Both husband and wife work and often one of the partners has two jobs in order to make ends meet. Raising taxes makes it harder to make ends meet–thus more foreclosures, more food stamps, more homelessness. What kind of economist or humane person thinks this is a solution? Ah, but we will tax the rich. The rich have enough money. They will simply stop earning. Let’s get real. Here is what the government is likely to do. Once Washington realize that the dollar is at risk and that they can no longer finance their wars by borrowing abroad, the government will either levy a tax on private pensions on the grounds that the pensions have accumulated tax-deferred, or the government will require pension fund managers to purchase Treasury debt with our pensions. This will buy the government a bit more time while pension accounts are loaded up with worthless paper. The last Bush budget deficit (2008) was in the $400-500 billion range, about the size of the Chinese, Japanese, and OPEC trade surpluses with the US. Traditionally, these trade surpluses have been recycled to the US and finance the federal budget deficit. In 2009 and 2010 the federal deficit jumped to $1,400 billion, a back-to-back trillion dollar increase. There are not sufficient trade surpluses to finance a deficit this large. From where comes the money? The answer is from individuals fleeing the stock market into “safe” Treasury bonds and from the bankster bailout, not so much the TARP money as the Federal Reserve’s exchange of bank reserves for questionable financial paper such as subprime derivatives. The banks used their excess reserves to purchase Treasury debt. These financing maneuvers are one-time tricks. Once people have fled stocks, that movement into Treasuries is over. The opposition to the bankster bailout likely precludes another. So where does the money come from the next time? The Treasury was able to unload a lot of debt thanks to “the Greek crisis,” which the New York banksters and hedge funds multiplied into “the euro crisis.” The financial press served as a financing arm for the US Treasury by creating panic about European debt and the euro. Central banks and individuals who had taken refuge from the dollar in euros were panicked out of their euros, and they rushed into dollars by purchasing US Treasury debt. This movement from euros to dollars weakened the alternative reserve currency to the dollar, halted the dollar’s decline, and financed the US budget deficit a while longer. Possibly the game can be replayed with Spanish debt, Irish debt, and whatever unlucky country is eswept in by the thoughtless expansion of the European Union. But when no countries remain that can be destabilized by Wall Street investment banksters and hedge funds, what then finances the US budget deficit? The only remaining financier is the Federal Reserve. When Treasury bonds brought to auction do not sell, the Federal Reserve must purchase them. The Federal Reserve purchases the bonds by creating new demand deposits, or checking accounts, for the Treasury. As the Treasury spends the proceeds of the new debt sales, the US money supply expands by the amount of the Federal Reserve’s purchase of Treasury debt. Do goods and services expand by the same amount? Imports will increase as US jobs have been offshored and given to foreigners, thus worsening the trade deficit. When the Federal Reserve purchases the Treasury’s new debt issues, the money supply will increase by more than the supply of domestically produced goods and services. Prices are likely to rise. How high will they rise? The longer money is created in order that government can pay its bills, the more likely hyperinflation will be the result. The economy has not recovered. By the end of this year it will be obvious that the collapsing economy means a larger than $1.4 trillion budget deficit to finance. Will it be $2 trillion? Higher? Whatever the size, the rest of the world will see that the dollar is being printed in such quantities that it cannot serve as reserve currency. At that point wholesale dumping of dollars will result as foreign central banks try to unload a worthless currency. Continued at: http://www.prisonplanet.com/without-a-revolution-americans-are-history.html added by: Dagum

Kanye West’s Greatest Awards-Show Performances — Until 2010 VMAs

From his epic ‘Jesus Walks’ at the Grammys to his powerful return at the BET Awards, ‘Ye knows how to work the stage. By James Montgomery Kanye West performs at the 2008 VMAs Photo: Kevin Mazur/WireImage On Thursday (August 12), Kanye West took to his Twitter account to proclaim: “Just met with MTV and it’s about to go down! VMAs!!!” What he meant, of course, is that he’d just been confirmed as a performer at the 2010 MTV Video Music Awards . On Sunday, September 12 — live from Los Angeles at 9 p.m. ET — things are gonna get really interesting, because while Kanye is perhaps best known for his awards-show tirades , tantrums and troublemaking , he has a lengthy list of downright amazing performances over the years too. So, in anticipation of Yeezy’s triumphant return to the VMA stage, we’ve compiled a list of his greatest awards-show performances yet: “Love Lockdown,” 2008 MTV VMAs One year after vowing he’d “never return” to MTV, Kanye thankfully went back on his word , closing out the 2008 VMAs with a stirring premiere of “Love Lockdown,” the first single from his 808s & Heartbreak album. Decked out in a gray suit (complete with beating, LED heart), backed only by a line of riot-gear-clad Japanese drummers, this was an introduction to West’s stripped-down, vulnerable 808s era. Of course, given that he performed the tune in front of an acre-sized wide screen, “stripped down” is a relative term. It’s Kanye we’re talking about, after all. “Power,” 2010 BET Awards West returned from his self-imposed exile (after the Taylor Swift incident at the ’09 VMAs) with this performance, a fiery, fierce debut of his brand-new single “Power.” Standing atop a volcano, impossibly huge Horus chain draped over his neck, the message was clear: Not only was he back, but West was stronger than ever. And also, apparently, fire-retardant. “Swagga Like Us,” 2009 Grammys Joined by fellow hip-hop heavyweights T.I., Jay-Z, Lil Wayne and (a very pregnant) M.I.A., Kanye wowed the Grammy audience with an appropriately swaggering take on the epic posse cut. The performance recalled the glory of the Rat Pack years — tuxedos, bandstands, etc. — and, judging on his verse alone, West was most definitely the Sinatra of the evening. “Jesus Walks,” 2005 Grammys Arguably Kanye’s biggest performance of all time. Joined by Mavis Staples, John Legend and the Blind Boys of Alabama, he took the audience to Sunday service, danced around like Diddy, died in the arms of a silhouetted woman, attended his own funeral, then ascended to heaven, in a white suit and angel wings. Seriously, all of that happened. Oh, and moments later, his College Dropout wins Best Rap Album, at which point West gives an ultra-cocky speech that culminated in him proclaiming, “A lot of people were wondering what I was going to do if I didn’t win anything tonight … I guess we’ll never know.” “Stronger” and “Hey Mama,” 2008 Grammys The polar opposite of “Jesus Walks,” this performance starts off with a typically Kanye-ian take on hit single “Stronger” (smoking lunar landscape, glow-in-the-dark suit, Daft Punk cameo) but then makes an abrupt about-face, as West ditched all the flash and did an updated version of his song “Hey Mama,” changing lyrics to reflect the recent death of his mother, Donda . Crouching beneath a single spotlight, he nearly breaks down at several points, and when he’s done, the Grammy audience gives him a much-deserved standing ovation. It’s his most straightforward performance to date. And yet, it’s also his most powerful. What is your favorite Kanye awards-show performance? Are you looking forward to what he’ll do at this year’s VMAs? Let us know in the comments! The 27th annual MTV Video Music Awards will be broadcast live from the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on September 12 at 9 p.m. ET. Fans can go to VMA.MTV.com (or text VMA to 97979 if they are Verizon subscribers) to vote for the winners from now through September 12. Related Videos Gearing Up For The 2010 VMAs! Related Photos Kanye West’s Greatest Television Performances Related Artists Kanye West

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Kanye West’s Greatest Awards-Show Performances — Until 2010 VMAs

Is this the world’s creepiest robot? Japanese inventor develops the bald, legless Telenoid R1

Its pale torso is about the size of a small child, it has no legs and just stumps for arms.For a man who has made his life's work coming up with increasingly creepy robots, Hiroshi Ishiguro has really outdone himself this time.The Japanese roboticist has just unveiled his latest creation – a strange robotic creature called the Telenoid R1. LINK : http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1299890/Creepy-Telenoid-R1-robot-… added by: Maryleaf

CNN’s Feyerick Plays Hardball With Ground Zero Mosque Developer

On Wednesday’s Newsroom, CNN correspondent Deborah Feyerick refreshingly asked the developer behind the planned mosque near Ground Zero many hard questions. Feyerick bluntly asked Sharif el-Gamel, “Why not have a prayer space for Buddhists or Jews or Christians… why must it be Muslim? ” The correspondent even brought up how one of the landing gear of one of the planes ended up on the site of the planned mosque . Feyrick conducted her hardball interview of el-Gamel at his New York City office. The CNN correspondent almost immediately launched into her prayer space question. When the real estate developer initially replied, “There are Jewish community centers all over the country,” Feyerick interrupted with a sharp retort: ” But the Jews didn’t take down two towers .” El-Gamel continued that “there are YMCA’s all over the country,” but she gave a similar reply: ” But the Christians didn’t take down two towers .” The journalist followed up with the issue of the planned mosque’s proximity to the Ground Zero and mentioned the plane wreckage that ended up on the site: ” For those who are so- still sensitive and so raw to this, their question- their overriding question is, why here? Why so close? It’s two blocks, but it was close enough that landing gear ended up on the roof. Why? ” Later in the segment, Feyerick mentioned the recent confrontational zoning meeting where supporters and opponents of the mosque faced off and quoted from one of the opponents who used a historical parallel: ” Coming out of that hearing, somebody said, ‘The Japanese would never have dared to build on Pearl Harbor.’ What makes this different? ” Towards the end of the segment, the CNN correspondent asked el-Gamel if he planned to make sure Islamic extremism stays out of the “Islamic community center” and if they would reject funding from Islamist sources: “Can you guarantee that this center will r oot out extremism or completely reject any extremists that try to get into it?…Will you reject any money that comes…from any person, any country, any organization… that has any links to terrorism ? Will you be doing due diligence ?” In her final question, Feyerick asked the developer to directly address a key claim by the opponents of the mosque: ” For those who would say, this is not an olive branch to greater understanding, this is more an act of defiance- how would you answer those people? ” The full transcript of correspondent Deborah Feyerich’s interview of Sharif el-Gamel, which aired 47 minutes into the 12 pm Eastern hour of Wednesday’s Newsroom program: FREDERICKA WHITFIELD: Some say plans to build an Islamic center and mosque near 9/11’s Ground Zero disrespects the victims of the attacks. Others say that attitude is bigoted and intolerant. CNN’s Deborah Feyerick spoke with the developer of the project to get his thoughts. DEBORAH FEYERICK: This is where you sort of conceived of the idea? SHARIF EL-GAMEL, SOHO PROPERTIES: Yes, it is. FEYERICK (voice-over): Meet New York real estate developer Sharif el-Gamel, the man at the center of a controversial plan a stone’s throw from the World Trade Center site. EL-GAMEL: This is an Muslim-led project. This is an Islamic community center that will cater to all of New York. There’s gym and basketball courts. FEYERICK: Plans include a performing arts center, swimming pool, child care facilities, and yes, a Muslim prayer space two blocks from the worst terror attack in U.S. history. FEYERICK (on-camera): Why not have a prayer space for Buddhists or Jews or Christians or- why must it be Muslim? It can’t just be a business decision. EL-GAMEL: There are Jewish community centers all over the country. There are Y- FEYERICK: But the Jews didn’t take down two towers. EL-GAMEL: There are YMCA’s all over the country- FEYERICK: But the Christians didn’t take down two towers. EL-GAMEL: And this is- and this is a need that exists. FEYERICK: For those who are so- still sensitive and so raw to this, their question- their overriding question is, why here? Why so close? It’s two blocks, but it was close enough that landing gear ended up on the roof. Why? EL-GAMEL: There is a need. It’s supply and demand. The community wants it. The politicians are supporting it. FEYERICK (voice-over): Maybe, but many who attended a town hall meeting recently were dead set against it. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Have we forgotten what happened at 9/11? EL-GAMEL: What happened that day is not Islam. What happened that day is terrorism. FEYERICK (on-camera): Coming out of that hearing, somebody said, ‘The Japanese would never have dared to build on Pearl Harbor.’ What makes this different? EL-GAMEL: If you were at that hearing the way that I was at that hearing, you come out understanding that there is a great need for dialogue now. FEYERICK (voice-over): El-Gamel says many people don’t understand Islam. But does that make it Islamophobia? EL-GAMEL: One hundred percent. FEYERICK (on-camera): Why? EL-GAMEL: Because the moderate voice of Islam is not coming out. FEYERICK: Can you guarantee that this center will root out extremism or completely reject any extremists that try to get into it? EL-GAMEL: One hundred percent- we will not tolerate extremism. We will not tolerate extremism. FEYERICK (voice-over): And yet, critics say the religious leader, Iman Faisal Abdul Rauf, has links to groups that support terror. EL-GAMEL: Imam Faisal is one of the most moderate Muslims that exists in this country today. FEYERICK (on-camera): Will you reject any money that comes, either directly or indirectly, from any person, any country, any organization, any corporation, that has any links to terrorism? Will you be doing due diligence? EL-GAMEL: We are going to be doing extreme due diligence, and we are going to hire the best security experts in the country to help us walk through the process, and we plan on being very transparent throughout the whole process. FEYERICK: For those who would say, this is not an olive branch to greater understanding, this is more an act of defiance- how would you answer those people? EL-GAMEL: This is an olive branch. FEYERICK: El-Gamel points out there are more than a million Muslims in the tri-state area, and that the American Muslim consumer spends nearly $200 billion a year. So, when he talks about this center as a business, it certainly is that. He also says he wants his two young daughters to have a place where they can feel a sense of cultural and religious pride and belonging- where everyone can learn and share in the mainstream Muslim experience. Deborah Feyerick, CNN, New York.

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CNN’s Feyerick Plays Hardball With Ground Zero Mosque Developer

Japanese Subway Restaurant Grows Own Hydroponic Lettuce In Store (Video)

Image via InventorSpot There’s a new draw for Japanese commuters looking for a fast meal in the form of a sandwich. The Subway Japan store in the Marunouchi Building, across the street from the always-busy Tokyo Station, has a new enclosed hydroponic garden for growing lettuce. Grown without any agrochemicals, the organic lettuce is the freshest ingredient the store can possibly offer, living out the “Eat Fresh” tag line from the chain. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Japanese Subway Restaurant Grows Own Hydroponic Lettuce In Store (Video)

Yuka Hirata

Yuka Hirata (平田 裕香, Hirata Yuka?, September 15, 1983–) is a Japanese actress, tarento, and gravure idol from Hokkaidō. She portrayed Mere (メレ, Mere?) in the Super Sentai Series Juken Sentai Gekiranger. She has also appeared in Food Fight and several idol videos.

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Yuka Hirata

Sea Shepherd’s Anti-Whaling Activist, Peter Bethune, Sentenced in Japan

Anti-whaling activist receives probation and suspended sentence By the CNN Wire Staff July 7, 2010 4:53 a.m. EDT This undated handout obtained from the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society on February 16 shows Peter Bethune. * Japan (CNN) — Anti-whaling activist Peter Bethune was given a two-year suspended prison sentence and five years' probation Wednesday by a Tokyo district court judge for his role in boarding a Japanese whaling ship. Bethune was found guilty on five charges, ranging from assault against whalers to trespassing into a whaling vessel. Bethune had previously pleaded guilty to all charges but assault. He could have received up to 15 years behind bars on charges. Bethune testified during his trial in May that he had no intention of hurting anyone when he protested Japan's whale hunt. The New Zealand activist from the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society said that he believed the bottles of butyric acid he threw at the Shonan Maru 2 whaling ship were non-toxic and would not harm anyone. Prosecutors said the butyric acid burned two crew members of the Japanese whaling fleet, but Sea Shepherd called it a harmless, albeit rancid, liquid. Butyric acid is found in rancid butter and vomit. At the May hearing, he tearfully described the January collision between the Shonan Maru 2 and the Sea Shepherd's multi-million-dollar speedboat, the Ady Gil. The crash sunk the Ady Gil, which Bethune captained. Weeks later, Bethune jumped aboard the Shonan Maru 2 and attempted to make a citizen's arrest of the captain. He was arrested and brought back to Japan to face criminal charges. “I admit that I boarded the Shonan Maru, but I believe that I have good reason to do so,” he said. “I admit that I fired the butyric acid.” Bethune's case is the first time a Sea Shepherd activist has been tried in a Japanese criminal court in the group's long-running battle with Japan's whalers in the icy waters of the Antarctic. “It's encouraged us. It's certainly motivated us, and we're going back to the Southern Ocean with far more support than ever,” said Paul Watson, Sea Shepherd founder. “I hope that we'll be much more effective because of it.” “Pete Bethune is a hero in New Zealand,” Watson added. “He's a hero worldwide to people who want to see the end of whaling.” Japan annually hunts whales in the Antarctic, despite a worldwide moratorium on whaling, under the loophole that a country may legally do so if its purpose is scientific research. Sea Shepherd has claimed the science argument is a sham, noting that the whale meat then gets sold in Japanese markets and served in restaurants. “They're targeting endangered whales in an established international whale sanctuary in violation of the Antarctic treaty,” Watson said. “They're criminals.” CNN's Junko Ogura contributed to this report. added by: EthicalVegan

Sea Shepherd’s Captain Pete Bethune Given Suspended Sentence by Japanese Authorities

photo: Barbara Veiga / Sea Shepherd Pete Bethune, captain of Sea Shepherd Conservation Society ‘s now-sunken Ady Gil , has been given a two-year suspended sentence for boarding the whaler Shonan Maru #2 in an attempt to make a citizen’s arrest of the captain for attempted murder and deliver a bill for the cost of the sunken ship. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Sea Shepherd’s Captain Pete Bethune Given Suspended Sentence by Japanese Authorities

watch yumeiro patissiere episode 38

Yumeiro Patissiere – 38 梦色糕点师38 Yumeiro Patissiere (夢色パティシエール) is an ongoing Japanese shoujo manga series written and illustrated by Natsumi Matsumoto. It begain serialization in the October 2008 issue of Ribon. The individual chapters have been collected into three tankoubon volumes by Shueisha as of September 2009. The fourth volume is scheduled for November 2009. Martin critiqued the art of the series however, saying “The dessert designs are unquestionably the visual highlight, as other

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watch yumeiro patissiere episode 38

Katy Perry Explains ‘California Gurls’ Video, Frame By Frame

Pop star puts a ‘naughty twist’ on Candy Land for the new clip. By Jocelyn Vena Katy Perry In ‘California Gurls’ Video Photo: Capitol Katy Perry released her pastel-colored, candy-coated new video for “California Gurls” on Tuesday (June 15). In the clip, Perry is dressed in little or nothing and trounces around Candyfornia trying to save her California Gurls from Snoop Dogg’s Sugar Daddy and his Gummi Bear minions. Of course, with the help of some smooth dance moves and a whipped-cream-dispensing bra, the ladies dethrone the evil ruler. Perry sat down with MTV News to walk fans through the behind-the-scenes action. “I like the idea of this being like a board game,” she said. “It’s kind of like Candy Land. That was probably one of my favorite games to play growing up. I like to bring back those pure childhood moments and give them a little bit of a naughty twist, of course!” In the video, Katy travels through Candyfornia, trying to save her pals. “One of the first girls that I rescue out of the music video, one of the first California Gurls, is a girl that we’ve named Bubblicious Betty, and she’s caught in a bubble that Snoop Dogg has put her in from the Bubblicious volcano. “I continue on through Candyfornia,” she added. “I get caught in the candy-cane snake place, where it gets really dicey. I don’t know which tree stalk to climb so that I can get to the cotton-candy clouds.” The video’s elaborate set design gave Perry and her team the chance to really use their imaginations. “It was really exciting doing all of the set production,” she said. “We took over this huge movie set, basically, and we built the gingerbread house, and it has hearts and pink and color. I think it’s got so much color in it.” Of course, the video also has clothes that manage to dazzle the senses as well. “Diesel made me those shorts, which is really cool,” she said. “They bedazzled the Daisy Dukes. And then, of course, towards the end, after I have picked out all of the California Gurls that have been frozen in Candyfornia because Snoop is the evil Mister Oz-like figure, we go to his sugar castle on sugarcane beach, and we tell him who’s boss.” Having Snoop play the bad guy was one of the genius ideas that went into making this video, as was the popsicle that meets a sad end. “I was talking to the director when Snoop was doing his verse, [and] I was like, ‘I really want there to be a melting-popsicle guy,’ ” she revealed. “I just love stuff like that. I think I belong in Japan, in some alternate universe. I think this music video is a little bit my love for all things cute, confectionary and Japanese [and] childhood.” When fans watch the video, two looks will stand out: the cupcake bra and the chest-mounted frosting cannons. “I will tell you that those cupcake bra boobies, they were a little bit heavy and they were interesting,” she said. “It was really fun making these costumes. They’re all one-of-a-kind, and I love the Bettie Page moment in the red and the whipped-cream cans.” So how does it end? Well, Katy wins, of course. “I had the idea for the end shot,” she said. “I want Snoop to be covered in sand like we beat him!” What do you think of the “California Gurls” video? Let us know in the comments! Related Artists Katy Perry

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Katy Perry Explains ‘California Gurls’ Video, Frame By Frame