Tag Archives: president-obama

Obama to NASA Chief: Better Relations With Muslim World is the Foremost Mission

NASA Administrator Charles Bolden said in a recent interview that his “foremost” mission as the head of America's space exploration agency is to improve relations with the Muslim world. Though international diplomacy would seem well outside NASA's orbit, Bolden said in an interview with Al Jazeera that strengthening those ties was among the top tasks President Obama assigned him. He said better interaction with the Muslim world would ultimately advance space travel. “When I became the NASA administrator — or before I became the NASA administrator — he charged me with three things. One was he wanted me to help re-inspire children to want to get into science and math, he wanted me to expand our international relationships, and third, and perhaps foremost, he wanted me to find a way to reach out to the Muslim world and engage much more with dominantly Muslim nations. The NASA administrator was in the Middle East last month marking the one-year anniversary since Obama delivered an address to Muslim nations in Cairo. Bolden spoke in June at the American University in Cairo — in his interview with Al Jazeera, he described space travel as an international collaboration of which Muslim nations must be a part. http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/07/05/nasa-chief-frontier-better-relations-… added by: JohnA

The Death of Internet Anonymity

After a year-long analysis of the state of Internet security led by the National Security council, President Obama's cybersecurity coordinator Howard Schmidt has released details of the administration's plan to protect the masses from cyberscumbags by creating a federal system for online identity authentication… https://www.infosecisland.com/blogview/4501-The-Death-of-Internet-Anonymity.html added by: Paisano1

Petraeus Uses a Word the President Won’t Use to Describe Goal in Afghanistan

The first six words (bolded by me) of Deb Riechmann’s report from Kabul, Afghanistan for the Associated Press are refreshing: “We are in this to win,” Gen. David Petraeus said as he took the reins of an Afghan war effort troubled by waning support, an emboldened enemy, government corruption and a looming commitment to withdraw troops – even with no sign of violence easing. It would have been even more refreshing if Riechmann, who obviously felt compelled to tick off as many of the reasons Petraeus and the troops he leads may not meet the goal as quickly as possible, would have reminded readers that Petraeus’s boss, President Barack Obama, has been decidedly allergic to using the words “win” and “victory” in Afghanistan since his inauguration. One of her later paragraphs presented a perfect opportunity to remind readers of the president’s aversion. She passed; she shouldn’t have. Petraeus, thankfully, feels no need to hold back, as noted later in Reichmann’s report (bolds are mine): … “We are engaged in a contest of wills,” Petraeus said Sunday as he accepted the command of U.S. and NATO forces before several hundred U.S., coalition and Afghan officials who gathered on a grassy area outside NATO headquarters in Kabul. … “In answer, we must demonstrate to the people and to the Taliban that Afghan and international forces are here to safeguard the Afghan people, and that we are in this to win,” Petraeus said on the Fourth of July, U.S. Independence Day. Continual discussion about President Barack Obama’s desire to start withdrawing U.S. forces in July 2011 has blurred the definition of what would constitute victory. That coupled with the abrupt firing of Petraeus’ predecessor, a move that laid bare a rift between civilian and military efforts in the country, has created at least the perception that the NATO mission needs to be righted. … June was the deadliest month for the allied force since the war began, with 102 U.S. and international troops killed. … “After years of war, we have arrived at a critical moment,” Petraeus said. “We must demonstrate to the Afghan people – and to the world – that al-Qaida and its network of extremist allies will not be allowed to once again establish sanctuaries in Afghanistan from which they can launch attacks on the Afghan people and on freedom-loving nations around the world.” Petraeus suggested he would refine – or at least review – the implementation of rules under which NATO soldiers fight, including curbs on the use of airpower and heavy weapons if civilians are at risk, “to determine where refinements might be needed.” In a March 27, 2009 address at the Council on Foreign Relations, President Obama outlined a “Strategy for Afghanistan and Pakistan.” The words “win” and “victory” or synonyms of those words do not appear. The closest he got was a promise “to disrupt, dismantle, and defeat al Qaeda in Pakistan and Afghanistan, and to prevent their return to either country in the future.” Later, he said “to the terrorists who oppose us, my message is the same: we will defeat you.” Maybe that suffices for some, but then there was this incident, four months later, as reported by the Associated Press : President Barack Obama says he’s uncomfortable using the word “victory” to describe the United States’ goal in Afghanistan. He says the U.S. fight there is against broader terrorism and not a nation. … When Obama delivered a speech in March about his strategy on Afghanistan and Pakistan, he did not use the word “victory.” Obama spoke with ABC’s “Nightline” while traveling to Ohio and Illinois. A lengthier report at Fox News included this nugget:  “We’re not dealing with nation states at this point. We’re concerned with Al Qaeda and the Taliban, Al Qaeda’s allies,” he (Obama) said. “So when you have a non-state actor, a shadowy operation like Al Qaeda, our goal is to make sure they can’t attack the United States.” The only sure way to “to make sure they can’t attack the United States” is to kill or capture as many of their members as possible until the rest surrender or disband and permanently give up their terrorist ways — in other words, to win (i.e., achieve v-v-v-v … victory in) the unconventional war we are fighting against them. Rhetorical reluctance aside, one can only hope that President Obama will let General Petraeus do what must be done to win, even if he (Obama) will probably never acknowledge it when it occurs — just as he has never acknowledged the victory in Iraq (Petraeus, as shown here , more than likely has). Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .

Read the rest here:
Petraeus Uses a Word the President Won’t Use to Describe Goal in Afghanistan

Prominent Green Activists Ask Obama To Step Up Climate Efforts Now

photo via flickr On Friday, notable environmentalists Al Gore, Fredd Krupp, and others sent a letter to President Obama warning him that time is running short this year to pass a bill that caps carbon pollution and asking him to personally intervene in the sausage making process to help get something done. The Senate’s leadership has not yet settled on a bill to get behind, with competing bills looking only at the utility industry, responsible for about 40 percent of US emissions, while others want an economy-wide solution. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

Read the original:
Prominent Green Activists Ask Obama To Step Up Climate Efforts Now

Google Compensates Gay Couples for Extra Taxes

If you think Google is a future Big Brother, maybe Big Brother isn't so dystopic after all–because Google is showing the world how corporate responsibility is done. Our wonderful federal government mandates that employer-provided health benefits for employees in domestic partnerships–benefits which are tax free for fully married couples–count as taxable income if the partner isn't considered a dependent. Congress noticed and tried to do something about it, eliminating the tax in the health care overhaul legislation passed by the House last November–but the provision didn't make it into the version that was signed by President Obama in March. So what do you expect to happen when a gay employee at Google brings up that GLBT employees will pay an average of $1,069 more per year than their straight married coworkers? At many companies, this might get you in trouble, but Google has proven once again that they are not the typical company. Starting Thursday, Google will begin compensating employees whose domestic partners (and those dependent on them) receive health benefits–for the extra taxes which married couples do not have to pay, retroactively to January 1st. The extra compensation will only cover domestic partnerships of the same sex, because opposite-sex couples can get married and avoid the added tax. The company also eliminated gay couples' one-year waiting period for infertility benefits and added domestic partners to its family leave policy. “If you were to add it all up, it’s not like we are talking hundreds of thousands per employee,” said Laszlo Bock, Google's vice president for human resources. “It will cost some money, but it was more about doing the right thing.” Experts say other companies might follow Google's lead, especially Google's Silicon Valley competitors, and offer similar benefits. 36 percent of large companies that offer health benefits provide coverage for same-sex domestic partners, and more than half of Fortune 500 companies provide domestic partner coverage. Very few (such as Cisco, Kimpton Hotels and the Gates Foundation) compensate for the extra taxes, though. So if Google is the next Big Brother… can I get in on that? “Google supports its LGBT employees in many ways: raising its voice in matters of policy, taking a moment to remember the plight of transgender people around the world and going the extra mile to ensure that its employees are treated fairly.” http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2010/07/celebrating-pride-2010.html http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/01/your-money/01benefits.html?_r=2 added by: Pawper

9-11 Ring A Bell? Donny Doesn’t Remember Why We Went Into Afghanistan

How clueless can a guy who lives in Manhattan possibly be?   Discussing the Afghanistan war on Morning Joe, Donny Deutsch claimed “people weren’t clear why we were there in the first place.” Uh, Donny . . . Fortunately, the ever-affable Willie Geist was there to diplomatically offer Deutsch a brief history lesson. WILLIE GEIST: Well, it was clear in the first months after 9-11. Remember, Donny?  That little piece of the Manhattan skyline puzzle that’s missing?  The Taliban regime in Afghanistan that harbored al Qaeda members who plotted it?  Hello?

Link:
9-11 Ring A Bell? Donny Doesn’t Remember Why We Went Into Afghanistan

WaPo Slams BP Spending, Accepts $455K in Full-Page Ads

The Washington Post and BP may seem like the oddest couple since Felix and Oscar, but they’ve been spending a lot of time – and money – together. A Business & Media Institute study found that the Washington Post earned up to $455,652 on 17 BP ads during the month of June, or about $15,188.40 per day. All 17 ads were a full page in size, nine appeared on the back page, six ran in color, and three ran on Sundays. In short, that’s a fairly high-end ad campaign. However, companies typically receive discounts off of the open rate for large ad buys or for long-term contracts, so that final total may well be lower. BMI analyzed all 30 issues of the Post in the month of June and calculated the rates using the Post’s 2010 General Ad Rates Position Premiums . Based on the position premiums, a back page ad costs $28,954 daily ($31,456 on Sundays), ads on pages A2, A3, and A5 cost $208 daily ($216) per column inch, and other specified pages cost $103 daily ($110) per column inch. full page ad is 6 x 21 inches or 126 inches. BP back page ads totaled $260,586 and the Sunday ads, which appeared on pages A5 and A15 respectively, totaled $103,716, with color costs included in premium pricing. While advertising is the lifeblood for newspapers, it’s ironic that the Post has earned so much money from a company it has criticized over the past month, including their most recent June 30 story about BP’s corporate contributions. While reporter Carol D. Leonnig fretted about BP spending $112,000 on the national election cycle, her employer received over four times as much in one month, and BP nearly spent that much in the Sunday ads alone. Furthermore, Leonning griped about the $4.8 million BP spent over seven years. There are 84 months in seven years, which means BP spent $57,142.86 per month in corporate contributions, nearly eight times less than what it spent in one month on Washington Post ads. The media gleefully reported President Obama’s anger at BP’s new ad campaign and if BP spent this much money advertising with a conservative publication, the media may well have played the Republican-big-business-connection card. While the Post has a history of liberal positions, including being anti-business and advocating everything from Value-Added Taxes (VAT) to gay rights and environmentalism . But when it comes to earning money, the Post is laughing all the way to the bank.

Read this article:
WaPo Slams BP Spending, Accepts $455K in Full-Page Ads

Network Morning Shows Unanimously Gush Over Larry King

The morning programs of the Big Three networks all sang the praises of CNN host Larry King after he announced on Tuesday his upcoming retirement from his program, while overlooking his liberal bent at times. Both Willie Geist on NBC’s Today show and CBS’s Harry Smith labeled King ” legendary ,” while ABC’s George Stephanopoulos heralded how he was ” on top of his game ” for most of his career. NBC correspondent Peter Alexander reused Geist’s “legendary” label, and chronicled the CNN personality’s “perch in prime time” during his 25 years on his Larry King Live program, spotlighting how he “has interviewed nearly 50,000 people over more than 50 years in broadcasting.” Alexander underlined this with clips from King’s interviews of Frank Sinatra, Ross Perot, and Paris Hilton, noting that ” if you wanted the country to listen, you sat down with Larry King .”  The correspondent also included a clip from Ken Baker of E! News, who stated that “whoever is going to replace Larry King has obviously very big shoes to fill .” CBS’s Smith used the “legendary” term in the top-of-the-hour tease at 7 am Eastern. Twenty minutes later, during a segment with substitute anchor Erica Hill, he described King’s 1985 premiere on CNN as a “grand experiment” and concluded that “twenty-five years later, it seemed to work out all right.” The two labeled him a “very interesting” and “good” guy. At the bottom of the hour, correspondent Jim Axelrod did a similar chronicle of the CNN host’s career to Alexander’s on NBC, choosing instead President Obama, Carrie Prejean, and Lady Gaga as the notables to highlight. His concluding line echoed Ken Baker’s line on NBC: ” Whoever gets the job, they won’t be easy suspenders to fill .” Smith then brought on The Washington Post’s  Howard Kurtz to discuss the host’s impending retirement, who, as Tim Graham noted earlier on Wednesday , speculated whether a “variety show” like King’s, where “you talk to a president one day and Lady Gaga the next,” could survive in an “increasingly partisan cable television universe.” ABC’s Stephanopoulos proclaimed the host ” the undisputed king of late night talk ” on Good Morning America and stated that “no one had a longer run and King was on top of his game for most of it .” After correspondent Dan Harris’s report on the CNN personality’s career, Harris, Stephanopoulos, and substitute anchor Elizabeth Vargas speculated on who would replace King. The former Clinton operative endorsed a liberal colleague of his at CBS: ” Katie Couric’s my pick . But, I guess she doesn’t want it.” The three morning programs did all mention how King’s past few years were “rocky,” as Stephanopoulos put it, between a decline in ratings and the reports of a possible divorce with his seventh wife. But they all omitted his occasional shots at conservatives, as MRC’s Notables Quotables chronicled over the years.

Here is the original post:
Network Morning Shows Unanimously Gush Over Larry King

V.A. Hospital May Have Infected 1,812 Veterans with HIV

VA hospital may have infected 1,800 veterans with HIV By the CNN Wire Staff June 30, 2010 1:44 a.m. EDT (CNN) — A Missouri VA hospital is under fire because it may have exposed more than 1,800 veterans to dangerous viruses like hepatitis and HIV. John Cochran VA Medical Center in St. Louis has recently mailed letters to 1,812 veterans telling them they could contract hepatitis B, hepatitis C and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) after visiting the medical center for dental work, said Rep. Russ Carnahan. Carnahan said Tuesday he is calling for a investigation into the issue and has sent a letter to President Obama about it. “This is absolutely unacceptable,” said Carnahan, a Democrat from Missouri. “No veteran who has served and risked their life for this great nation should have to worry about their personal safety when receiving much needed healthcare services from a Veterans Administration hospital.” The issue stems from a failure to clean dental instruments properly, the hospital told CNN affiliate KSDK. KSDK: VA dental patients at risk of infection Dr. Gina Michael, the association chief of staff at the hospital, told the affiliate that some dental technicians broke protocol by handwashing tools before putting them in cleaning machines. The instruments were supposed to only be put in the cleaning machines, Michael said. The handwashing started in February 2009 and went on until March of this year, the hospital told KSDK. The hospital has set up a special clinic and education centers to help patients who may have been infected. However, Carnahan said he feels more should be done and those responsible should be disciplined. “I can only imagine the horror and anger our veterans must be feeling after receiving this letter,” Carnahan said. “They have every right to be angry. So am I.” This is not the first time this year a hospital has been in hot water for not following proper procedures. In June, Palomar Hospital in San Diego, California, has sent certified letters to 3,400 patients who underwent colonoscopy and other similar procedures, informing the patients that there may be a potential of infection from items used and reused in the procedures. Carnahan said Tuesday he is calling for a investigation into the issue and has sent a letter to President Obama about it. “This is absolutely unacceptable,” said Carnahan, a Democrat from Missouri. “No veteran who has served and risked their life for this great nation should have to worry about their personal safety when receiving much needed healthcare services from a Veterans Administration hospital.” The issue stems from a failure to clean dental instruments properly, the hospital told CNN affiliate KSDK. KSDK: VA dental patients at risk of infection Dr. Gina Michael, the association chief of staff at the hospital, told the affiliate that some dental technicians broke protocol by handwashing tools before putting them in cleaning machines. The instruments were supposed to only be put in the cleaning machines, Michael said. The handwashing started in February 2009 and went on until March of this year, the hospital told KSDK. The hospital has set up a special clinic and education centers to help patients who may have been infected. However, Carnahan said he feels more should be done and those responsible should be disciplined. “I can only imagine the horror and anger our veterans must be feeling after receiving this letter,” Carnahan said. “They have every right to be angry. So am I.” This is not the first time this year a hospital has been in hot water for not following proper procedures. In June, Palomar Hospital in San Diego, California, has sent certified letters to 3,400 patients who underwent colonoscopy and other similar procedures, informing the patients that there may be a potential of infection from items used and reused in the procedures. http://www.stlouis.va.gov/STLOUIS/images/JC_Div.jpg added by: EthicalVegan

Matt Lauer Lectures: ‘Our Appetite for Oil’ Caused Spill

NBC’s Matt Lauer, on Tuesday’s Today show, blamed America’s “appetite for oil” as the reason for the spill in the Gulf and asked former NBC Nightly News anchor Tom Brokaw if the country will finally “take away the proper message” from the mess? For his part Brokaw responded that he hoped “young people who are coming of age” and entering public service and the corporate world will view the spill as a “defining moment” and warned if they didn’t make the needed changes “we’re gonna have these kinds of ecological disasters in waves coming year after year.” The following exchange was aired on the June 29 Today show: MATT LAUER: Yeah I want to touch back on this oil spill as, before I let you go. You know we’re, we’re seeing the blame game. A lot of blame going around. We’re seeing the villainization of a major corporation. We’re seeing the limits of our technology- TOM BROKAW: Right. LAUER: -played out in front of our eyes. But on that live camera, right there, we’re seeing something else. We’re seeing our seeing our appetite for oil. And do you think at the end of all this Americans are gonna take away the proper message? BROKAW: I hope so. I really believe that younger people are gonna be much more affected by all of this than people of a certain age, that includes you and me. Because we’ve grown up used to the idea of having oil and relying on it. I think young people who are coming of age who may want to go into public service at some point or go into the corporate world, this is a defining moment in their lives and they’re going to be thinking about this in a much different fashion than the rest of us might. And I think if anything good comes out of that, that might be the case. A new generational wave of determination to find an alternative to fossil fuel. I think that the oil blow-out is a metaphor for our times. It’s complex. It’s everything that we’ve been told has turned out not to be true and it really is a signal to the rest of us that we’ve got to do something about energy and the future or we’re gonna have these kinds of ecological disasters in waves coming year after year, decade after decade.

Read the original post:
Matt Lauer Lectures: ‘Our Appetite for Oil’ Caused Spill