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Stephen Moyer, Anna Paquin Of ‘True Blood’ Marry

The co-stars tie the knot in Malibu. By Mawuse Ziegbe Anna Paquin and Stephen Moyer (file) Photo: Getty Images The couple that gets naked together apparently stays together. Days after “True Blood” co-stars Anna Paquin and Stephen Moyer appeared nude on the cover of Rolling Stone (flanked by fellow “Blood” actor Alexander Skarsgard), the couple engaged in a more modest declaration of their love, and wed on Saturday in California. According to UsMagazine.com, the duo got married at a private home in Malibu. The nuptials were attended by guests such as Elijah Wood and “Blood” co-star Carrie Preston. Paquin, who plays psychic server Sookie, and Moyer, who brings the heat as vampire Bill, struck up a romance after portraying lovers on the HBO hit. The onscreen couple went public with their offscreen relationship in early 2009 and announced their engagement last August. Moyer told MTV News earlier this year that he had no doubt he and his “Blood” flame, who recently revealed that she was bisexual , were going to spend their lives together. “She wasn’t going to say no [to my proposal],” Moyer said. “Are you crazy?” The duo are continuing a Hollywood tradition of finding love on set , and Paquin recently explained that there are ups and downs to mixing business with pleasure. “You don’t want to bring personal stuff to work,” Paquin said in a recent issue of Self magazine. However, she did insist that she feels lucky to be able to mix it up with her man on the job. “It’s a luxury to get to go to work with the person I want to spend the rest of my life with, because I love my job and I’m really happy.” Leave your well-wishes for the couple below! Related Photos Just Married: Stephen Moyer and Anna Paquin

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Stephen Moyer, Anna Paquin Of ‘True Blood’ Marry

Report: Shirley Sherrod to Meet with Vilsack on Tuesday; Will the Press Raise Worker Exploitation Charges?

The Theater of the Sherrod(s) is apparently not over. At AL.com last night, Mike Tomberlin of the Birmingham News reported the following : Former USDA employee Shirley Sherrod says she will meet Tuesday with agriculture secretary Shirley Sherrod, the former USDA rural development director for Georgia, said today she plans to meet Tuesday with U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack to discuss a new job offer. … Sherrod today spoke in the Sumter County town of Epes at an event hosted by the Southern Cooperatives/Land Assistance Fund. Ben Jealous, executive director of the NAACP, shared the stage with Sherrod during a panel discussion. Sherrod said she had no ill feelings toward the NAACP or President Barack Obama. It the meeting does indeed occur, it will be an interesting test of establishment media credibility, given the accusations leveled at Ms. Sherrod and her husband Charles by Ron Wilkins at the leftist publication Counterpunch several weeks ago . Here are some of the specifics: The Other Side of Shirley Sherrod … The swirling controversy over the racist dismissal of Shirley Sherrod from her USDA post has obscured her profoundly oppositional behavior toward black agricultural workers in the 1970s. What most of Mrs. Sherrod’s supporters are not aware of is the elitist and anti-black-labor role that she and fellow managers of New Communities Inc. (NCI) played. These individuals under-paid, mistreated and fired black laborers–many of them less than 16 years of age–in the same fields of southwest Georgia where their ancestors suffered under chattel slavery. … Mrs. Sherrod says she began to see poverty as more central than race. So, should indigent black child farm laborers warrant less reflection by Mrs. Sherrod? What lessons does she have to share from her tenure as management when she had power over her own people working under deplorable conditions at the same New Communities, Inc.(NCI) identified in the current issue? Shirley Sherrod could have included this chapter of her history in the same confession speech. Justice and integrity require at least as much accountability from Mrs. Sherrod to the poor black farm workers of NCI as to the white farmers she came to befriend. This lack of full disclosure of the whole truth is a “sin of omission” that trivializes the suffering of poor black farm workers and exacerbates the offenses of NCI. Shirley Sherrod was New Communities Inc. store manager during the 1970s. As such, Mrs. Sherrod was a key member of the NCI administrative team, which exploited and abused the workforce in the field. The 6,000 acre New Communities Inc. in Lee County promoted itself during the latter part of the 1960s and throughout the 70s as a land trust committed to improving the lives of the rural black poor. Underneath this facade, the young and old worked long hours with few breaks, the pay averaged sixty-seven cents an hour, fieldwork behind equipment spraying pesticides was commonplace and workers expressing dissatisfaction were fired without recourse. … Worker protest at New Communities eventually garnered some assistance from the United Farm Workers Union in nearby Florida in the person of one of its most formidable organizers, black State Director, the late Mack Lyons. The September 28, 1974 UFW newspaper El Malcriado, page two, reported on the worker’s strike (“Children Farm Workers Strike Black Co-op”) and the UFW stepped in to protect black farm workers from exploitation by NCI. Fearful of both UFW efforts to unionize NCI’s labor force and scrutiny by the Georgia State Wage and Hour Division, the Sherrods and NCI management hastily issued checks in varying amounts to strikers to makeup ostensibly for minimum wage differentials. It is bitter irony that the Sherrods have succeeded in being awarded $300,000 following a discrimination lawsuit, while Mrs. Hawkins and other impoverished NCI black laborers whom NCI exploited were never adequately compensated for their “pain and suffering”. In addition to the “pain and suffering” payments Wilkins noted, NCI “won a thirteen million dollar settlement in the minority farmers law suit Pigford vs Vilsack.” This occurred in late July of last year, just a few days before Sherrod was hired by Vilsack to be the USDA’s Georgia Director for Rural Development. A graphic of the full article to which Mr. Wilkins referred is here . The two most damning paragraphs are these, which directly relate to Charles Sherrod: Your eyes are not deceiving you. The UFW accused the Sherrods of using scab labor. Wilkins wrapped up his Counterpunch column with a challenge: Ask Shirley Sherrod about this part of her history. I know this story well, for I was one of those workers at NCI. Will the establishment press follow up? Based on the non-coverage of Wilkins’s accusations during past three weeks, the prognosis is: “Very doubtful.” A Google News search on “Ron Wilkins” (in quotes) returns all of 10 items , eight of which relate to the Cal State professor’s accusations. Three of those eight cover two items authored by yours truly, including this August 8 NewsBusters post . Of the remaining five, three are posts at center-right blogs ( NCPPR , American Thinker , Patriot Post ). There is also an excerpt at the Daily Caller , plus an item at Digital Journal . A search on “Ron Wilkins” (not in quotes) at the New York Times returns nothing relevant . It’s virtually inconceivable that such damaging baggage would be ignored if a conservative, Republican, or important businessperson had been similarly accused of worker exploitation. The Associated Press has picked the Birmingham News item, which is on the wire service’s raw national feed. There are now no valid excuses for ignoring what Wilkins has alleged. Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .

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Report: Shirley Sherrod to Meet with Vilsack on Tuesday; Will the Press Raise Worker Exploitation Charges?

Valerie Plame ‘Fair Game’ Movie Tosses Name Leaker Richard Armitage Down Memory Hole

The only way we even know the name of Valerie Plame (and fame seeking hubby Joe Wilson) is that that former Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage leaked her name as a CIA officer to columnist Robert Novak. That is what set in motion the long drawn out Plamegate affair in which only Scooter Libby was convicted of something other than leaking her name. So you would figure that the supposedly biographical movie scheduled for a November USA release about Plame, Fair Game , would feature Armitage front and center as the principal villain. Right? Wrong. The fact is that “Fair Game” has tossed Richard Armitage down the memory hole. The man who is responsible for the reason that any of us even know who Valerie Plame is appears nowhere in the extensive IMDB cast credits for this movie. Of course, the aforementioned Scooter Libby (David Andrews) who did not leak her name is listed. Also listed in the cast is the Armitage-leaked name of Valerie Plame (Naomi Watts), fame seeking hubby Joe Wilson (Sean Penn), Nervous Analyst #1 (Louis Ozawa Changchien), Chauvinist Analyst (Sean Mahon),  Head Paparazzo (Harry L. Seddon), Four Seasons Waitress (Satu Rautaharju), Starbucks Employee (Angela Lewis), and Turkish Embassy Guest (Marsall Factora). However, as for the person who made the “Fair Game” movie possible by leaking Valerie Plame’s name, he appears nowhere in the cast credits. Ironically you can learn more about the real facts of the Plame case (and who leaked Plame’s name) by reading the IMDB “Fair Game” message board than by seeing the movie itself. Some sample posts that delivers the information that the “Fair Game” propanda movie refuses to touch: …The film conveniently leaves out the fact that we know who leaked her name and that character isn’t even in the film… Funny how neither Novak nor Armitage are in the film then, right? Libby didn’t leak Plame’s name. Armitage (a Bush critic and enemy) “leaked” it and only after he was specifically asked by Novak why on earth James Wilson was sent to Niger in the first place. Novak then called the CIA to make sure it was ok to publish her name, and they gave him what he considered the green light. The CIA made absolutely no effort to convince him he shouldn’t print the name, so he printed it. That’s how real journalists in a free state operate. If the CIA wanted the name kept secret, they could have easily done so. Novak himself has kept names out of articles many times over the years for exactly such reasons. The CIA made no efforts, most likely because Plame wasn’t all that “undercover” and they genuinely didn’t have any valid reasons to convince Novak not to use her name, so they didn’t bother.  Wilson was hired by the CIA to investigate claims about yellow cake in Niger. He later wrote an op-ed piece attacking the Bush administration using his experience investigating in Niger as source of authority. It became a big news story. At that point, the smarter journalists started wondering who this Wilson guy was, and did some background checking on him. This background check left them puzzled, because their was nothing in Wilson’s resume which would even remotely recommend him being sent on such a mission. So Washington DC based reporter Robert Novak called around trying to find out why Wilson got sent. Eventually, George W. Bush enemy and Colin Powell lap boy Richard Armitage told Novak that Wilson’s wife works at the CIA and she’s the one who pushed him for the job. I am amazed how Hollywood is willing to lose hundreds of millions, if not billions, to sell their leftist progapanda. At some point this will be self-limiting, when they run out of money or studio stockholders tire of losing money.  The final poster above has a point. “Fair Game” is doomed to become another leftwing proganda flick flop that will follow in the wake of many other such box office bombs. However, it is not too late for the producers of “Fair Game” to salvage this movie. Your humble correspondent recommends that they do some creative editing to remake this movie as a comedy. Keep all the original scenes but edit in one of my favorite actors, Bruce McGill (who also portrays the CIA Deputy Director for Operations Jim Pavitt), with a shaved head and a lot of jacket padding to play the part of a phantom Richard Armitage who nobody in the movie even notices. As the boring melodramatic “action” in the movie takes place, McGill as Armitage  appears in many of the scenes yelling things like, “HEY VALERIE! Nobody would even know you if I hadn’t leaked your name! Why don’t you or anybody else here even acknowledge my existence?” Not only would such a movie be more accurate but it would draw much more box office sales than the doomed-to-fail original.

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Valerie Plame ‘Fair Game’ Movie Tosses Name Leaker Richard Armitage Down Memory Hole

‘The Expendables’ Stars Talk Sequel

‘I would love to come back. Thank god I don’t die,’ laughed Terry Crews. By Eric Ditzian, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Sylvester Stallone in “The Expendables” Sylvester Stallone knows exactly where he’s going to take the Expendables, his band of grizzled mercenaries , now that their flick has grossed $35 million over its opening weekend: back to the multiplex for a sequel. And Sly’s “Expendables” co-stars are primed and ready to go, as they told MTV News when we caught up with them at Comic-Con last month. “I would love to come back. Thank god I don’t die,” laughed Terry Crews. “I’m ready to come back and do another.” Dolph Lundgren also expressed his desire to return for a second installment, which Stallone has said is already plotted out in his mind. Sly is hoping that with Arnold Schwarzenegger leaving the California governor’s mansion early next year, the action hero will return to “Expendables” territory, perhaps for a meatier role this time. “If this works, I would love to get him in the next one,” Stallone told us. “I really think so. He’s been out of the limelight a long time, and I think this is the kind of film that would be a nice intro.” Sly convinced Arnie to do it once; there’s no reason to think he can’t do it again. There’s just something magnetic about Stallone, as interviews with his co-stars made clear. Again and again during our Comic-Con chats, the cast spoke effusively about Sly’s leadership skills on-set. “With all this testosterone and all this adrenaline walking around, he kept it all in check,” laughed Steve Austin. Added Crews, “There’s no other person on the planet who could have put something like this [together] except for Sylvester Stallone. He created the whole summer tent pole as we know it. To be involved and to be with these guys, these legends, the whole thing, I’m just honored.” Check out everything we’ve got on “The Expendables.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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Misdiagnosed Vets Can’t Get PTSD Treatment

Alex Simmons produced Vanguard's “War Crimes,” about veterans who have been charged with violent crimes. In the last two years the Army has drastically cut the number of “personality disorder” designations, increasingly diagnosing soldiers instead with post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD. This change comes after The Nation reported that thousands of soldiers at the height of the Iraq War may have been misdiagnosed, and were thus unable to seek treatment for what they really have — PTSD. From one recent news account: Unlike PTSD, which the Army regards as a treatable mental disability caused by the acute stresses of war, the military designation of a personality disorder can have devastating consequences for soldiers. Defined as a “deeply ingrained maladaptive pattern of behavior,” a personality disorder is considered a “pre-existing condition” that relieves the military of its duty to pay for the person's health care or combat-related disability pay. In “War Crimes” we saw that PTSD can be treated but — when it goes unchecked — it can lead to disastrous scenarios. Read more from The Nation about this issue. Watch an extra from “War Crimes” about a Los Angeles organization that treats vets with PTSD: “War Crimes” airs Wednesday, August 18 at 10/9c on Current TV. Watch a trailer for the episode after the jump. added by: alexsimmons

Katy Perry Says Her Mom Sends Russell Brand ‘Inappropriate’ E-Mails

‘She flirts with him, and I tell him to stop,’ singer tells Glamour UK. By Jocelyn Vena Russell Brand and Katy Perry Photo: Charley Gallay/ WireImage Katy Perry doesn’t mind being inappropriate with her fianc

Social Security: Government ‘Ponzi’ Scheme Turns 75 with $41 Billion Shortfall

This is a historic year for the largest government program: Social Security, which turns 75 in just a few days. The program is also running a deficit for the first time since 1983, and ahead of estimates. Initially, Social Security was created to provide supplemental income to elderly and disabled people who could not work, and was signed into law by President Franklin D. Roosevelt Aug. 14, 1935. Social Security is in the red six years earlier than forecasted, and for the first time since 1983 (the last time the program was “fixed”). Downplaying the significance of the problem, The New York Times reported March 24, that the program is facing a “small” $29 billion shortfall this year because the high 9.5 percent unemployment rate is cutting into payroll tax collections that fund the program’s benefits. Oh, and because there isn’t actually a trust fund with all the money previously collected by people paying into the system. Problems are mounting for the Social Security program which essentially is a government-created “Ponzi scheme.” It was a boon for the earliest entrants to the program like Ida May Fuller. She was the recipient of the first monthly retirement check, in 1940, and continued to collect until her death in 1975. Fuller worked only three years under the system: paying in $24.75 in taxes. By the time of her death she had collected a total of $22,888.92 according to the Social Security Administration. In 2010, the public is skeptical that they will get anything back from the system they pay into with each paycheck. A USA Today/Gallup poll found that three-fourths of people between 18 and 34 years of age don’t expect to get a Social Security check. Yet the news media have opposed much needed reform recently by ignoring or downplaying the problems with Social Security, and during the Bush years by attacking conservative reform proposals. They have allowed liberals to attack conservatives for wanting to make changes to the program, editorialized that Social Security will be just fine and practically ignored the failure of the program’s trustees to provide its annual report on time this year. The three broadcast networks have done little reporting on the postponement – even though the trustees are delaying bad news during an election year. The president’s debt commission is also looking into entitlements like Social Security to come up with policy solutions, but those won’t be announced until December – conveniently after the election. Every year the trustees of Social Security are required to publish their annual analysis by April 1. CATO Institute’s Jagadeesh Gokhale and Mark J. Warshawsky pointed this out in Forbes on July 12, 2010. “This year, however, the trustees have postponed its release indefinitely.” Why does that matter? Because, according to that article “The program’s financial condition continues to remain hidden from public view.” The trustees’ report was finally released Aug. 5, but when The New York Times announced its findings there was no mention that the report was four months late.The Times’ story also hyped the solvency of Medicare (something seriously in question), while admitting that Social Security is in the red. Nor did it point out that the shortfall had grown to a projection of $41 billion this year, $12 billion more than the Times had reported in March. Still, the Times quickly reassured the public it was “not a cause for panic,” according to Social Security commissioner Michael J. Astrue. The Times quoted the report, Social Security trustees, Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and the co-chair of a liberal coalition, but not a single conservative voice. A Times editorial predictably spun the report by saying, “Social Security is holding up even in the face of a weak economy.” USA Today supplied its view on Social Security in an editorial Aug. 9. “[H]ere’s something Americans can cross off their be-very-afraid list: whether Social Security will be around so they can worry about all those other threats in relative financial comfort.” According to the liberal media, the problems facing Social Security are “easily fixable.” USA Today argued that it is only necessary to “economize elsewhere,” but that Washington doesn’t like to do that. CNN Money’s senior writer Jeanne Sahadi also said that fixing Social Security “should be a snap.” Sahadi’s solutions were not new: increase the retirement age, reduce growth in benefit levels and raising the cap on how much of wages is subject to the payroll tax. But she didn’t point out how politically difficult those solutions actually are, or the mainstream media’s past attacks on reform proposals. When President Bush attempted to tackle Social Security reform , the five major networks (ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN and FOX) aired twice as many left-leaning stories as right-leaning. Despite the media spin, “urgent reform is necessary” said Nicola Moore of The Heritage Foundation. Moore pointed out that Social Security has a $7.9 trillion shortfall “which means the program would require $7.9 trillion in cash  today! – to afford its promises.” Kathryn Nix, also of Heritage, wrote in June that “the early arrival of the need for a Social Security bailout should serve as a severe reminder to the Obama Administration that entitlement reform is needed now.” MSNBC Host Portrays Conservative Attempt at Reform as Attack on Middle Class According to at least one leftie pundit on MSNBC, attempts toward reform are actually attacks on the middle class in disguise. That’s what Keith Olbermann said on Aug. 9. “Republicans are tipping their hand somewhat about where they would get the money to pay for more tax cuts from the rich. Take it from the middle class. And make Americans work longer before they can retire,” Olbermann declared on his program. He cited Republican leader John Boehner’s comments about raising the retirement age to 70. Boehner has offered that possibility in June as one solution to make Social Security solvent, not , as Olbermann suggested, simply a way to “pay for more tax cuts from the rich.” Olbermann showed video of NBC’s David Gregory trying to force Boehner to say that he “favors” raising the retirement age. The MSNBC talking head didn’t bother to inform his viewers that the government is already paying out more for Social Security than it is taking in and will only get worse without intervention. The ‘Trust Fund’ Myth, a ‘Ponzi Scheme’ Despite the use of the phrase “trust fund” by politicians and journalists, to describe Social Security, the government has been spending that money and replacing it with Treasury bonds (IOUs) for years. A Nexis search for Social Security and trust fund found 68 newspaper stories at just four major newspapers in the past year. News articles such as the Aug. 6, USA Today story about Medicare and Social Security mentioned the “trust fund” as if it were a pile of money that “won’t run dry” until 2037. But Los Angeles Times business columnist Michael Hiltzik took it much further than the average news story. Hiltzik attacked those concerned with Social Security’s fiscal viability Aug. 8. In a piece entitled, “Myth of Social Security shortfall,” he said that the shortfall would be “covered” by “interest on the Treasury bonds in the Social Security trust fund.” Hiltzik further defended the notion of those bonds being “real money,” and lashed out at those “trying to bamboozle Americans into thinking Social Security is insolvent.” But it isn’t real “money,” any more than a person swapping debt by paying one credit card with another is paying with money. Unless revenue comes in that can cover the debts, the person is in trouble. CATO’s Michael Cannon criticized the Aug. 9, New York Times editorial on Social Security for claiming the program can still “pay full benefits until 2037” and current attention to the red ink does not “endanger benefits, because any shortfall can be covered by the trust fund.” Cannon reacted: “No. It. Can’t. Because there are no funds in the Social Security ‘trust fund’.” He characterized the entire idea as “an institutionalized, ritualized lie.”. One that news outlets continued to promote. Back in 2009, Mark Brandly , a professor of economics and adjunct scholar of the Ludwig von Mises Institute, explained how the system works and why it is deteriorating. Social Security is a “pay-as-you-go system,” he said. “[T]he government takes your money and gives it to Social Security recipients. In order to get workers to accept this system, the government promises to take other people’s money and give it to you when you retire.” Essentially, Brandly said it is a huge Ponzi scheme . Surprisingly, CNBC’s Jim Cramer who “loves” Social Security, completely agreed with the Ponzi characterization. In 2008, the ‘Mad Money’ host ranted that the Bernard Madoff $50 billion scam was not the “largest Ponzi scheme ever,” as some had been calling it. “We know the truth about Ponzi schemes,” Cramer said. ” We all know the name of the biggest Ponzi scheme in history and it’s not even illegal. In fact, it is run by the U.S. government. And the name of it – well they call it Social Security.” Cramer explained that by its very definition, Social Security was such a scheme: “In a Ponzi scheme, investors get the returns from the money paid in by subsequent investors and eventually the whole thing falls apart. The last people to invest get hosed. In Social Security, a program I love, workers pay for the benefits of current retirees and hope someday future workers will pay for their benefits – it’s all a Ponzi scheme.” Yet, even reporters who admit that the “trust fund” is a joke, continue to use the phrase instead of criticizing the politicians who perpetrate the myth that Social Security is solvent. Brandly also wrote that the system can only remain sound if “a lot of people die before collecting” check, and if there are more people paying in that collecting. But as more people were paying in the Social Security Administration (SSA) ran a “surplus,” but as government often does – it borrowed from itself leaving IOUs in the so-called “trust fund.” The program is in trouble for that very reason, and because people are living longer and the baby boomers are about to retire, leaving far fewer younger workers paying into the system. According to The CPA Online , Social Security paid out only to retiring individuals 65 and older beginning in 1942. Between 1937 and 1942, it paid out in lump sum to individuals retiring. Benefits did not extend to dependents and survivors until 1939. In 1935, when the program was created average life expectancy was below 65 years of age: 59.9 for men and 63.9 for women . Even by 1942, life expectancy was much lower than today (64.7 for men, 67.9 for women). The projected life expectancy for 2010 is 75.7 for men and 80.8 for women. Currently, people can begin collecting full benefits at age 66, or collect at a permanently lower rate beginning at age 62 or a higher rate if they wait until age 70. But the mainstream media attitude seems to be – don’t worry, it will all work out. Even the USA Today maintained optimism in an editorial that admitted (unlike its earlier news story) the fund is “just IOUs.” They still argued that it would politically impossible to ” renege ” on benefits for retiring Americans. Attacks on Private Accounts The network news media has historically provided a skewed perspective on Social Security and reform proposals. A three – part Business & Media Institute Special Report in 2005, when reform was a hot topic, found a left-ward tilt in Social Security stories twice as often as a conservative slant. That study, Biased Accounts, examined 125 stories on the five major networks and discovered that 44 percent of stories were slanted to the left, compared to 22 percent in the conservative direction. The remaining stories were neutral. Those findings might have looked drastically different if President Bush had not made a concerted effort stumping for Social Security reform. The president’s appearances and statements on the issue accounted for almost one-fourth of the conservative talking points in the study. One of the most popular talking points about Social Security was the liberal idea that personal accounts lead to “risky” stock investments. The argument that the conservative plan and/or the stock market were “risky” came up 53 times. Trish Regan even set her Feb. 5, 2005, “CBS Evening News” report against the backdrop of Reno, Nev., a popular gambling destination. Unsurprisingly, local worker Maureen Fager said about personal accounts, “This is Reno, Nevada. I know a gamble when I see it.” The financial planner they took her to, David Yeske, even claimed that humans aren’t cut out to deal with such matters though that is how he makes his living. “The human brain has been wired for social interactions, not analyzing numbers,” Yeske said. That same report also misstated the age of retirement for Fager and a 27-year-old worker. It was unclear whether Yeske or the reporter was making the mistake.

CNN’s Moos: Booing Scouts Weren’t ‘Courteous and Kind’ to President Obama

On Tuesday’s American Morning, CNN’s Jeanne Moos picked up on the viral video of Boy Scouts booing President Obama’s taped message to the recent National Jamboree, but got in a light jab at the youth for their behavior: “Booing would seem to go against some of the 12 tenets of Boy Scout Law. A Boy Scout is ‘trustworthy, loyal, helpful, friendly, courteous, kind’- wait a minute, ‘courteous and kind’? ” The correspondent, known for her light reports for the network, concluded the 6 am Eastern hour with “unique take” on the video, as anchor John Roberts put it. Moos noted that “45,000 Scouts were celebrating the 100th anniversary of Scouting” in the United States at the Jamboree, which was held at the U.S. Army’s Fort A.P. Hill in Virginia, and that “two months earlier, the White House informed the Scouts that the President had prior commitments.” Moos continued that the “Scouts…booed the President’s message, and this 23-second video made its way on to conservative websites, which slammed the President for forsaking the Boy Scouts to appear on ‘The View.'” She later gave the Obama administration’s explanation for the apparent snub: “The White House says ‘The View’ had nothing to do with it- that the President was already scheduled to be on the road that day.” The CNN correspondent’s jab against the booing culprits, using two of the twelve points of the Scout Law , came near the end of the report. She added that “a statement from the Boy Scouts said the organization does not condone booing.” Moos concluded, “If the President’s watching this, the jamboree returns in four years.” In the past, Moos has hit subjects from both sides of the political spectrum. On the April 30, 2008 edition of American Morning, the correspondent devoted all but six seconds of a two-and-a-half minute report to “granny” supporters of Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama’s presidential campaigns. Later that year, during the Democratic National Convention, she highlighted the dancing antics of CNN’s liberal pundits . Just over a year ago, on August 4, 2009, Moos devoted an entire segment to the viral Obama as the Joker image . That December, the correspondent also exposed left-wing rage being directed at independent Connecticut Senator Joe Lieberman. Most recently, during a June 22, 2010 report, she refreshingly spotlighted how the President frequently golfed during the oil leak disaster in the Gulf of Mexico. The full transcript of Jeanne Moos’s report from Tuesday’s American Morning: KIRAN CHETRY: Meantime, the Boy Scouts are voicing their displeasure with President Obama, claiming that he passed up an invitation to join their big jamboree to appear on ‘The View.’ JOHN ROBERTS: No one, though, was prepared for just how emotionally the Scouts would react, and here’s Jeanne Moos with her unique take on it. JEANNE MOOS (voice-over): It’s bad enough getting booed, whether you’re busted for dog fighting (crowd boos football player Michael Vick), or competing for Miss Universe- UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE ANNOUNCER: USA. (crowd boos) MOOS: But imagine getting booed by the Boy Scouts. (scouts boo as taped message of President Obama plays, from YouTube.com video) And the person they’re booing is the president of the United States. Actually, what they were booing was President Obama sending a taped message, rather than coming in person to the recent Boy Scout jamboree. UNIDENTIFIED MALE 1: Thanks for showing up! MOOS: Some 45,000 Scouts were celebrating the 100th anniversary of Scouting. Two months earlier, the White House informed the Scouts that the President had prior commitments. UNIDENTIFIED MALE 2: It doesn’t really bother me. UNIDENTIFIED MALE 3: Disappointed but, I mean- busy man. What can you do? MOOS: But just a few days after those interviews- PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA: Scouts just like you- MOOS: Scouts just like these booed the President’s message, and this 23-second video made its way on to conservative websites, which slammed the President for forsaking the Boy Scouts to appear on ‘The View.’ OBAMA (from ABC’s ‘The View’): Thank you! MOOS: Some figured the booing tape was somehow doctored. (reading from website) ‘I don’t believe for one second that these 23 seconds of film is accurate.’ MOOS (on-camera): Believe it- some Boy Scouts booed.  (holding three fingers up in Scout Sign) Trust me, ‘Scout’s honor.’ MOOS (voice-over): The Boy Scout who shot it wouldn’t do an interview, but he told us that though he didn’t boo, there was a moderate amount of booing going on around him, mostly from Scouts annoyed, not because of the President’s policies, but because he didn’t show up as six previous presidents have. The White House says ‘The View’ had nothing to do with it- that the President was already scheduled to be on the road that day. JON STEWART (from Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show”): Look on the bright side. Boy Scouts will finally get their merit badge for crushing disappointment. Look- MOOS (on-camera): Now, on the face of it, booing would seem to go against some of the 12 tenets of Boy Scout Law. MOOS (voice-over): A Boy Scout is ‘trustworthy, loyal, helpful, friendly, courteous, kind’- wait a minute, ‘courteous and kind’? (scouts booing, from YouTube.com video) A statement from the Boy Scouts said the organization does not condone booing. UNIDENTIFIED MALE 4: I hope you’re watching this! MOOS: If the President’s watching this, the jamboree returns in four years. OBAMA (from 2009 Inauguration): I, Barack Hussein Obama, do solemnly swear- MOOS: That if re-elected, I will try to make it to the next jamboree. OBAMA: So help me God. MOOS: Jeanne Moos, CNN, New York.   ROBERTS: Some of the Boy Scouts not too happy about getting a taped message.

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CNN’s Moos: Booing Scouts Weren’t ‘Courteous and Kind’ to President Obama

Howard Dean Claims Unpopular ObamaCare Mandate Could be Ruled Unconstitutional

A well known political figure appears on MSNBC’s Daily Rundown and announces, in the wake of Missouri voters overwhelmingly supporting Proposition C to remove the insurance mandate from ObamaCare, that it is so unpopular that it will probably be removed from that legislation or that the courts will rule it unconstitutional. So was the person who delivered this opinion a conservative Republican? Nope. It was Howard Dean, former Democrat presidential candidate and chairman of the DNC who made that statement to a surprised Chuck Todd and Savannah Guthrie. The Daily Rundown conversation begins with Chuck Todd discussing the Proposition C landslide in Missouri: CHUCK TODD: In Missouri this week there was referendum on the ballot. Non-binding but it was, frankly, the legislature didn’t want to deal with the issue of healthcare and this mandate and about whether the state should challenge the mandate on the new healthcare plan. It got 71%. Yes, more Republicans turned out than Democrats. But 71% in Missouri, that has to make Democrats nervous, particularly in that Senate race. Robin Carnahan has got an uphill battle. HOWARD DEAN: She does have an uphill battle. She’s a great human being and a great person and I hope that she’s going to win that one. I think she can but the truth is the mandate is not essential to the plan anyway and never was essential to the plan. They did it in Massachusetts and had a mandate but we had universal healthcare for kids in my state without a mandate. At this point, a clearly surprised Savannah Guthrie steps in. SAVANNAH GUTHRIE: But wait, how can you say the mandate isn’t essential? The way we always had it explained to us by folks at the White House is that if you want to do anything about pre-existing conditions you got to get everybody into the game. That without the mandate you can’t require insurance companies to stop prohibiting… DEAN: We did. We did it 20 years ago in my state. We did it 20 years ago in my state. TODD: Without a mandate? DEAN: Without a mandate. TODD: How did you do it? DEAN: We just said all comers will have to get insurance. And you can’t charge…this is why our bill is so much better than what they just passed…you can’t charge more than 20% above the basic rate and the Senate is 300% based on age. The fact of the matter is I thought that the President was right in the campaign. Academically you want a mandate. The American people aren’t going to put up with a mandate. And I’ve made this prediction before and I am going to make it again, by the time this goes into effect in 2014 I think the mandate will be gone. Either through the courts or because it’s unpopular. You don’t need it. There will be 2 or 3 percent of the people who cheat. That is not enough to bring the system to a halt. And people don’t like to be told what to do. TODD: So you expect them to drop the mandate? DEAN: Well, the courts may rule it unconstitutional. So it isn’t only conservatives who think the ObamaCare mandate is not only unpopular but may be ruled unconstitutional as well. Count Howard Dean among the growing ranks of those who have the same belief. Which is why Todd and Guthrie were so surprised.

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Howard Dean Claims Unpopular ObamaCare Mandate Could be Ruled Unconstitutional

Waka Flocka Flame Denies Beef With Gucci Mane

Rapper acknowledges that he and the ‘Lemonade’ MC don’t speak. By Mawuse Ziegbe Waka Flocka Flame and Gucci Mane Photo: Getty Images It appears the stress of the hip-hop game has gotten to Gucci Mane and Waka Flocka Flame. Hip-hop fans have been buzzing about the duo after Flocka told Vibe magazine that the MCs “don’t talk anymore,” since after Gucci ditched Flocka’s mom as his manager. Flocka recently addressed the rumors surrounding their relationship and said that while things are different, he doesn’t harbor any bad feelings for Gucci. “I don’t think it’s no split. We couldn’t meet each other on a business level … or a personal level. Whatever the level is, I don’t know. I’m going this way and [he’s] going that way and we both killin’ these folk. That’s just what it is,” Flocka told DJ Drama on Atlanta’s Hot 107.9. The rapper attributed their lack of interaction to his schedule and said, “I’m super busy,” but maintained that “everything’s great.” Although their relationship appears strained, both rappers have scored major success. Last year was a banner year for Gucci who scored a slew of high-profile collabos with the likes of Usher and Mariah Carey. Although the MC spent part of the year in jail, his album, The State vs. Radric Davis, yielded hits like “Lemonade” and “Spotlight.” Flocka, who began his hip-hop ascent as a member of Gucci’s So Icey team, hit big with the rowdy club anthem, “O Let’s Do It,” which has earned him a “Hottest Breakthrough MC” nomination. Flocka insisted that everything is cool between him and his former mentor. “Ain’t no drama,” Flocka said. The rapper also insisted that he would never take things to another level and bring violence into the situation. “Don’t ever think it’s just like, ‘Ey, let’s get [him],’ ” Flocka said. “Don’t ever think I’m [going] to ride on him with another person. Let’s make that super clear.” What do you think of Waka Flocka Flame and Gucci Mane not speaking anymore? Do you want to see them work together again? Let us know in the comments below! Related Artists Waka Flocka Flame Gucci Mane

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Waka Flocka Flame Denies Beef With Gucci Mane