Tag Archives: Reuters

AP Breaking: Supremes’ Ruling ‘Casts Doubt’ on Chicago Handgun Ban

Lord have mercy, even when it hits him in the face, the Associated Press’s Mark Sherman won’t concede the obvious : “Cast doubt”? Is that what court rulings do now? A USA Today item has it right: Other sources describing the ruling accurately include:  CNN — “Court rules for gun rights, strikes Chicago handgun ban” Fox News — “High Court’s Big Ruling For Gun Rights.” From text: “Today’s ruling also invalidates Chicago’s handgun ban.” Reuters, as carried at the New York Times — “Supreme Court Rules Chicago Gun Ban Unconstitutional” As with the Washington, DC Heller case in 2008 , the real outrage is that the ruling was 5-4. Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .

Read the original here:
AP Breaking: Supremes’ Ruling ‘Casts Doubt’ on Chicago Handgun Ban

Media: GOP Blocks Unemployment Bill to Hurt Economy Before Midterm Elections

On Thursday, a new unemployment bill died in Congress as Senator Ben Nelson (D-Neb.) joined Republicans on the grounds that government spending can’t go on forever. Instead of reporting both sides, the media couldn’t seem to hide their anger. The bill was called a “jobless aid” package that “governors were counting on” to help “the poor” across the nation. Almost all news reports began from the Democrat perspective and waited several paragraphs before weakly defending Republicans. Worse yet, a consensus with far more damaging impact began to grow: the loss will cause the nation’s economy to fall into a double dip recession, and it will be entirely the Republicans’ fault. Never mind last year’s stimulus bill worth $700 billion, or the bank bailout of 2008, both of which have failed to live up to promises of recovery. No, our economy is suffering because fiscal conservatives won’t spend even more. The Seattle Times was quick on the draw Thursday night with a clearly disappointed report headlined ” Republicans Continue Blockade of Federal Aid Bill .” What followed was an obviously biased effort to paint Republicans in a bad light: Senate Republicans on Thursday once again blocked legislation to reinstate long-term unemployment benefits for people who have exhausted their aid. With the Senate apparently paralyzed by partisan gridlock, the fate of the aid, as well as tax breaks for businesses and $16 billion in aid for cash-strapped states, remains unclear. Dozens of states, including Washington, are hoping for federal aid to help balance their budgets. Republican lawmakers – joined by Democrat Ben Nelson of Nebraska – maintained a unified front to sustain a filibuster of the $110 billion bill. The vote was 57-41, three short of the 60 needed to cut off debate and bring the bill to a final vote. Democrats said they would give no further ground and put the onus on Republicans to make concessions. Those who have “exhausted their aid” are the long-term unemployed who received financial assistance for up to 99 weeks already. Republicans seem to have this crazy notion that receiving government assistance that long might be long enough, and perhaps it’s time to start asking if Keynesian economics is working. But according to the Seattle Times, that kind of talk is just “partisan gridlock.” The article quoted one Republican against three Democrats and never got any deeper than vague concerns about the national debt. Toward the end, the Times went to White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs to imply that Republicans were sabotaging the economy: In a statement, the White House vowed to keep pushing for the bill. “The president has been clear: Americans should not fall victim to Republican obstruction at a time of great economic challenge for our nation’s families,” spokesman Robert Gibbs said. By Friday morning, this became the battle cry for reporters around the country. Reuters published an article that advanced the point in plainer terms: The bill, which also would have provided more aid to cash-strapped states for the Medicaid health program for the poor, fell a few votes short of the 60 needed to advance in the 100-member Senate. One Democrat, Ben Nelson, joined 40 Republicans to block the measure. Democrats argued that the bill would have helped shore up the fragile U.S. economic recovery, a priority for President Barack Obama’s administration. Yes, saving the economy has been one of President Obama’s priorities for some time now, mostly because nothing he does seems to save it. But Reuters didn’t have time to mention an inconvenient thing like that. Readers were expected to believe the premise that one more spending bill would have shored up the economy if not for those meddling Republicans. A few hours later, the Associated Press got involved with an even sharper accusation aimed directly at Republicans: The rejected bill would have provided $16 billion in new aid to states, preserving the jobs of thousands of state and local government workers and providing what White House officials called an insurance policy against a double-dip recession. It also included dozens of tax breaks sought by business lobbyists and tax increases on domestically produced oil and on investment fund managers. “This is a bill that would remedy serious challenges that American families face as a result of this Great Recession,” said Max Baucus, D-Mont., the chief author of the bill. “This is a bill that works to build a stronger economy. This is a bill to put Americans back to work.” How strange that quote didn’t show up in the early dispatches Thursday night. It’s almost as if the media spent Friday collectively drifting toward a good narrative. By 4:00 Friday, the economy-sabotage angle was official. The Washington Post’s Greg Sargent used the Plum Line blog for the announcement : A number of bloggers today have been up in arms about the apparent failure of the jobs bill in the Senate, now that it looks like no Republicans will help Dems break the GOP filibuster. This could have terrible consequences, and Senator Debbie Stabenow, in particular, is furious. Today she argued that Republicans want the economy to tank in order to help themselves in the midterms Thus in less than 24 hours, it went from Republicans worrying about the national debt to Republicans purposely tanking the economy just to embarrass Democrats. Not to be left out, Bloomberg’s Shobhana Chandra also cut right to the bone in an article on Friday: The Senate’s failure to pass legislation extending unemployment benefits will slow the pace of the U.S. recovery, said economist David Resler. The bill’s demise will trim economic growth by 0.2 percentage point this quarter and by 0.4 point in the period from July through September, estimated Resler, chief economist at Nomura Securities International Inc. in New York. So you see, economic growth apparently comes only by way of government spending, and this time there’s a real expert to say so! But all is not lost. While working hard to opine on the terrible news, Chandra inadvertently let something slip: Resler estimated that the unemployment rate, 9.7 percent in May, may decline by as much as one percentage point as some workers drop out of the labor force and others accept jobs they might have rejected earlier. Wait…when people finally realize they can’t live on government assistance forever, they might buckle down and accept a tough job? This nugget appeared exactly 11 paragraphs down from the headline and was quickly glossed over. So maybe, just maybe, Republicans are trying to enact market-based principles by urging people to go back to work. Maybe it has nothing to do with sabotaging the economy after all. Don’t count on that particular narrative to grow any legs, though. An hour after the Washington Post hit piece, the Associated Press was back for more : Labor Secretary Hilda Solis said Friday that Senate Republicans could be prolonging the recession by opposing a spending bill that would have extended unemployment benefits. Solis, talking to a group of Latino government officials in Denver, said Republicans were wrong to oppose to a broader jobs bill that would have extended jobless benefits for about 200,000 people a week. She warned of dire consequences if benefits are shut off. “This will be devastating and could take us back to a deeper recession,” Solis said Oh yeah, urging healthy workers to accept less glamorous jobs is really the “devastating” consequence of a diabolical Republican strategy. Good to know we have professional, independent, unbiased journalists hard on the trail of Republican masterminds. 

See the article here:
Media: GOP Blocks Unemployment Bill to Hurt Economy Before Midterm Elections

ABC News Prominently Features ‘Gay-Friendly’ McDonald’s Ad Airing In France

Is ABC News trying to position itself as the go to place for gay rights advocacy amongst the broadcast network websites? Ten days after featuring a video of a gay prom king and queen, the website prominently displayed a gay-themed McDonald’s ad. The video first appeared Monday with the title “McDonald’s Ad You Won’t See in the U.S: A fast-food commercial with a gay-friendly story is only airing in France.”  The website followed this up Tuesday with a piece headlined “Gay Group: Don’t Trust McDonald’s Commercial” (video follows with quotes from article and commentary): A gay business advocacy group is charging McDonald’s with hypocrisy after the global fast food giant aired a gay-themed commercial in France.  “They were looking to portray themselves as an advocate of the LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) community or an ally … when it was completely counter to what their actions here in the U.S. were,” said Justin Nelson, the president and co-founder of the National Gay and Lesbian Chamber of Commerce. “It’s completely hypocritical.”   Contrary to some online reports, Nelson said the NGLCC isn’t offended that the commercial won’t be broadcast on U.S. airwaves — it’s frustrated that it was broadcast at all, given McDonald’s recent history with the NGLCC.  For McDonald’s to “continue to distance themselves (from the gay community) here in the states and run an ad like that in another country — it just seemed to be a double standard or double speak,” he said. This, combined with the French commercial, led the chamber to send an angry letter, dated June 3, to McDonald’s vice chairman and CEO James Skinner. The letter dismissed the ad as “blatant geographic pandering” and called on McDonald’s to “show suppport for LGBT people, our families and our businesses — not just where it is politcally expedient, but around the globe.”  What is ABCNews.com telling us with all this gay rights activism? 

Read the original here:
ABC News Prominently Features ‘Gay-Friendly’ McDonald’s Ad Airing In France

Newsweek Wonders if Utah Republicans Will ‘Play Dirty’ by Voting for Leftist in Dem Primary

Liberals in the media frequently paint conservatives and Tea Party activists as pushing the GOP too far to the right to be electable in general elections. But the same complaint isn’t repeated on an endless loop when it comes to leftist activists challenging more centrist Democratic incumbents in primary contests. In fact, in some of those occasions, the media find a way to cast aspersions on Republicans. Take, for instance, a June 22 story on Newsweek.com, the headline for which posed the question, “Will Utah Republicans Play Dirty Today?” Writer McKay Coppins explained how one Republican state lawmaker had suggested that the party faithful in the state’s 2nd Congressional District should take advantage of the Democrats’ open primary system to cast votes for Claudia Wright, a liberal insurgent challenging Rep. Jim Matheson (D), rather than weighing in on the GOP primary contest. Although he noted that historically such tactical voting hasn’t been successful and that state Republican officials have officially “denounced the plan,” Coppins explained that the local media have become fixated on the notion and at least one radio host has described the crossover voting idea as “sleazy”: [F]or a while, it looked like a real possibility. An anonymously created Web site called “Conservatives for Claudia” has attracted thousands of page views, and Matheson himself has spent $800,000 this primary season to warn supporters that the party-crashing threat is real. And even though Republican officials (including, eventually, Wimmer) denounced the plan, it has continued to draw attention from the local press, with popular radio talk show host Doug Wright devoting significant air time to the idea. (He called it “sleazy.”) Republicans still might get their wish, though. A recent poll places Matheson 19 points ahead of Wright, but midterm primaries in Utah have historically garnered low turnouts, and early voting this year has been exceptionally unimpressive . With a passionate left-wing base, Wright could be poised for an upset in the primary – giving Republicans exactly what they hoped for.

View post:
Newsweek Wonders if Utah Republicans Will ‘Play Dirty’ by Voting for Leftist in Dem Primary

Stock Market Slumps on Consumer Spending Concerns

The news from Wall Street wasn’t great as the week wrapped up and trading shut down on Friday, although it wasn’t bad across the board, either. The stock market took a tumble, registering ongoing worries about consumer spending trends, but hey, at least the technology sector was hanging in there.

South Africa v Mexico – live | Analysis & Opinion |

Reuters World Cup 2010 Live Blog will feature on-the-spot coverage from our team if reporters in South Africa for the greatest show on earth. Join us each day for all the action, starting in Soccer City. … I’ve worked for Reuters as a sports reporter since 1998, based in Madrid, Barcelona, Frankfurt, Berlin and now London. I now divide my time between writing and editing for the Reuters sports news service, making videos and running both the soccer and sports blogs. …

Original post:
South Africa v Mexico – live | Analysis & Opinion |

World Cup 2010 podcast – day 1 | Analysis & Opinion |

Join us for our podcast on day one of the first African World Cup , as hosts South Africa prepare to test their growing confidence against unpredictable Mexico in front of 90000 vuvuzela-blaring fans in Soccer City. … for Reuters as a sports reporter since 1998, based in Madrid, Barcelona, Frankfurt, Berlin and now London. I now divide my time between writing and editing for the Reuters sports news service, making videos and running both the soccer and sports blogs. …

Visit link:
World Cup 2010 podcast – day 1 | Analysis & Opinion |

Robotnaut2 To Be Launched By NASA

Photo: Reuters As per report on General Motors’ website, NASA is sending a human-like robot made jointly with General Motors Co. (GM) to the International Space Station this fall. Robonaut2 is a 300-pound robot that will be used to test the effects of weightlessness as part of a plan to develop a robot that can work alongside astronauts and workers in GM plants. > > Read More Robotnaut2 To Be Launched By NASA is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

Wikileaks Says Robert Gates Is Lying in His Defense of Iraq Slaying Video [Fog Of War]

Earlier today, on ABC ‘s This Week , Defense Secretary Robert Gates defended the troops shown killing Iraqis in a video aired by leaks site Wikileaks . They responded to his rebuttal simply, in a tweet: “Robert Gates is a liar.” More