Friday, July 29, 2011

Davids Daily Dose - Friday July 29th

1/  "Obama should stop being reasonable" is the title of this thoughtful article on the President, and Michael Tomasky makes a lot of sense. 
As of this [Friday] morning the House bill has collapsed, with the Tea Party wing of the Republicans determined to crash the economy, so if there was ever a time to stand up and make a fxxking decision it's now.
This article, with the author's guesses of what is in Obama's head, sounds true and it will be interesting to see how this debt ceiling non-crisis plays out. 
A "must read" for all of you politically aware folks....

Obama Should Stop Being Reasonable

With the U.S. government on the edge of default, Michael Tomasky asks why President Obama won’t do what he needs to do and raise the debt ceiling unilaterally.

Jul 27, 2011 6:41 PM EDT
At this desperate hour, Barack Obama surely has to be thinking hard about invoking Section 4 of the 14th Amendment, unilaterally raising the debt ceiling, and getting on with it. With the House Republicans now rejecting a proposal (Harry Reid’s) that is 100 percent cuts and no revenues, there can be little question in the minds of most non-Kool-Aid-swilling Americans about the identity of the unreasonable party. Indeed it could be argued that acting unilaterally now is the only responsible move. Bill Clinton, well-versed in dealing with Republican implacability, told Joe Conason’s National Memo that he would pursue this course. And yet one senses the president is highly reluctant to do it. Why?
Click here to find out more!
Three explanations strike me as plausible, although none of them is particularly defensible at this point, with public opinion now clearly persuaded that this really is a crisis and that politicians should compromise to address it. That is to say: the president has a majority on his side now. If there is no deal by close of business Friday or sometime Saturday, surely Obama will have to go it alone by the time the Asian markets open on Sunday afternoon East Coast time, and surely a majority will either approve or come along reluctantly once the president makes the case for his actions.
Why wouldn’t he? The first reason would be the straightforward and obvious one that he and his handlers fear the political repercussions. Some Republicans, and certainly the right-wing noise machine, will crow for impeachment. Obama and his White House are not exactly a group that itches for a fight. They would be dragged perforce into a partisan mud-wrestling match, which Obama has proved time and again he doesn’t want.












2/  Climate change is on us, with extreme weather events going to be part of our lives for the forseeable future. But what will happen when a world in economic crisis can't afford to deal with the financial consequences of floods, tornadoes, droughts, hurricanes etc.? Boggles the mind, doesn't it?

(NaturalNews) Chris Hedges, a Pulitzer Prize-winning author and former international correspondent for theNew York Times writes, "What we are seeing is the beginning of a catastrophic breakdown of globalization. The world as we know it is coming to an end. Most of us are reacting to the great unraveling by pretending it is not happening but events will implode right in our faces whether we like it or not. The deadly convergence of environmental and economic catastrophe is not coincidental. Corporations turn everything, from human beings to the naturalworld, into commodities they ruthlessly exploit until exhaustion or death. The race of doom is now between environmental collapse and global economic collapse. Which will get us first? Or will they get us at the same time?"

I'm not sure of the timeline here as it's not clear in the article, but the premise is sound. 

Extreme weather costs money. It costs huge amounts to rebuild, restore and get 

whatever has been affected back to "normal". But the "normal" has changed, and these

weather disasters are going to keep coming so in a time of financial stress are we going 

to abandon whole areas of the country to their fate? Sounds very Republican.......

Something has provoked a profound alteration toconditionson our planet driving the atmosphere and earth into convulsion. Theweathercontinues to be beyond worst-case-scenario expectations of weathermen everywhere. Epic floods, massive wildfires,droughtand the deadliest tornado season in 60 years are ravaging theUnited States, with scientists warning that even more extreme weather is on the way. From all points on the compass come reports ofnatural disasters.Life is getting extremely uncomfortable for earth's populations as record heat, cold, rain and drought conditions are recorded.




There is also a video in the article about the Inuit [Eskimos] in the far north sensing the earth has changed....tribal elders are worried......this footage is from the CBC in Canada....
But in this country of illiterates and crazy Republicans, where climate change is denied and laughed at, what do these old people know......3 minutes......









3/  Melissa Harris-Perry is guest hosting Rachael's show, and here she gives a most interesting analysis on the wealth distribution in the US, with the expected result but it's also worse than you might expect......
Minorities [blacks and hispanics] are huge losers in our society, with really bad implications for the future.....
She's good.....13 minutes......











4/  An 8 year old girl is murdered by a pedophile in Britain - the Murdoch [Fox News] paper News of the World leads a campaign to pass legislation and champions the mother of the dead girl. The paper [editor Rebekah Brooks] gives her a cell phone as a present to use in her grief that is already pre-hacked. They listen to her calls for eight years......

New Hacking Case Outrages Britain

By Ravi Somaiya and Sarah Lyall, The New York Times
28 July 11
ritain was awash in a new surge of outrage over the phone hacking scandal on Thursday, as news emerged that Scotland Yard had added to the list of probable victims a woman whose 8-year-old daughter was murdered by a repeat sex offender in 2000.
The tabloid at the center of the scandal, The News of the World, had championed the campaign of the grieving mother, Sara Payne, for a law warning parents if child sex offenders lived nearby. Mrs. Payne, who was paralyzed by a stroke in recent years, had written warmly of the paper in its final edition, calling it "an old friend."
A statement released on behalf of Mrs. Payne by the Phoenix Foundation, a children's charity she founded, described her as devastated and disappointed. "Today is a very sad dark day for us," the charity added in a posting on Facebook. "Our faith in good people has taken a real battering." The page noted that she was struggling in the wake of the July 1 anniversary of her daughter's abduction.
British news channels, which had been growing weary of the scandal - into a fourth week of cascading revelations that have shaken the media, political elite and police - broke into their scheduled reports to report the allegations that Ms. Payne had been hacked.













5/  This video, with a happy ending, about a young whale in the Sea of Cortez is terrific to watch. Listen to the comment from the child near the end...he or she clearly understands the whale's behavior and sums it up. Great clip.....7 minutes.......
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EBYPlcSD490&feature=share
 










6/  Matt Taibbi hears the drumbeats out of Washington supporting the repatriation tax holiday for corporations.....meaning the lobbyists have started to pay off politicians in a big way......and not just the Republicans......

The madness that is the proposed tax repatriation holiday is continuing and gathering steam. More and more members of congress are coming out of the woodwork, scratching their chins in contemplative consideration as it were, pretending that they’ve just realized what a great day a corporate tax holiday would be – not that they’ve taken gazillions of dollars from the firms lobbying for it or anything.
The latest convert seems to be Nevada Democrat Shelley Berkley. Berkley’s plan is to offer a pseudo-holiday – not the full-fledged happy-ending massage the companies wanted (i.e. a reduction from 35 percent+ to 5.25 percent) but a mere ten-point shave:
Representative Shelley Berkley, a Nevada Democrat, is the latest lawmaker to consider legislation allowing multinational companies to send offshore profits to the U.S. at a reduced tax rate.
Her proposal, which was confirmed yesterday by Berkley’s communications director,David Cherry, would allow companies to return profits to the U.S. at a 25 percent tax rate, 10 percentage points below the maximum statutory rate. Most companies publicly supporting a holiday, such as Duke Energy Corp., have spoken favorably of the 5.25 percent rate that is being offered by Representative Kevin Brady, a Texas Republican.
One thing that people must understand about this tax repatriation business is that it’s a wholly bipartisan affair. It’s not solely the work of evil Republicans. This is a scheme that requires heavies in both parties to help ram the knotty, hard-to-sell legislation through. On the Democratic side, unsurprisingly, the main actor is going to be Chuck Schumer. John Kerry is also involved with this nastiness. Barbara Boxer led the 2004 effort and the failed 2009 campaign to get a holiday, and is rumored to be lurking somewhere in this business.












7/  Sorry to keep adding Jon Stewart clips, but this one is wonderful - his favourite target Fox News, and their bleating about Christians being victimised....
On a scale of 1-10 for Daily Shows, this is a 9.5........nine minutes.....
















8/  Mountaintop removal in the Appalachian states is causing cancer.....about 60,000 cases.......but will anything be done? Nope - the energy oligarchs will see to that so they can preserve their easy profits and to hell with the environment.

 But it's also cost shifting - think how much 60,000 cases of cancer cost.....oh wait a minute - these are poor people so most of them don't have insurance? Well that's all right then, I guess they just "die quickly"......


Mountaintop Removal Linked to 60,000 Additional Cancer Cases

By Jeff Biggers, Reader Supported News
27 July 11
 mong the 1.2 million American citizens living in mountaintop removal mining counties in central Appalachia, an additional 60,000 cases of cancer are directly linked to the federally sanctioned strip-mining practice.
That is the damning conclusion in a breakthrough study, released last night in the peer-reviewed Journal of Community Health: The Publication for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention. Led by West Virginia University researcher Dr. Michael Hendryx, among others, the study entitled "Self-Reported Cancer Rates in Two Rural Areas of West Virginia with and Without Mountaintop Coal Mining" drew from a groundbreaking community-based participatory research survey conducted in Boone County, West Virginia in the spring of 2011, which gathered person-level health data from communities directly impacted by mountaintop mining, and compared to communities without mining.













9/  Great video about a young Italian group that sing opera, similar to the "Three Tenors" but about 25 years younger. 
Il Volo.....these lads are superstars of the future......excellent video, about 4 minutes......











10/  Wow - Goldman Sachs has been quiet lately, but this is one of the scams they are quietly hosing all of society with. They have a huge warehouse where they buy and store  25% of the worlds scrap aluminum - having cornered a bit of the market in this metal, they buy futures and make billions.  

(Pratima Desai, Clare Baldwin, Susan Thomas and Melanie Burton) - In a rundown patch of Detroit, enclosed by a cyclone fence and barbed wire, stands an unremarkable warehouse that investment bank Goldman Sachs has transformed into a money-making machine.
The derelict neighborhood off Michigan Avenue is a sharp contrast to Goldman's bustling skyscraper headquarters near Wall Street, but the two operations share one important element: management by the bank's savvy financial professionals.
A string of warehouses in Detroit, most of them operated by Goldman, has stockpiled more than a million tonnes of the industrial metal aluminum, about a quarter of global reported inventories.
Simply storing all that metal generates tens of millions of dollars in rental revenues for Goldman every year.
There's just one problem: only a trickle of the aluminum is leaving the depots, creating a supply pinch for manufacturers of everything from soft drink cans to aircraft.
The resulting spike in prices has sparked a clash between companies forced to pay more for their aluminum and wait months for it to be delivered, Goldman, which is keen to keep its cash machines humming and the London Metal Exchange (LME), the world's benchmark industrial metals market, which critics accuse of lax oversight.











11/  Music video - time for this one again - Katy Perry with "Last Friday Night", her 8 minute story/musical production.....clever, funny, great song.....and guest appearances from Kenny G., the Hanson Brothers, Debbie Gibson and more.....












12/  Very cool 2 minute trailer for the new Batman movie coming in 2012...."The Dark Knight Rises"......very dark, moody.....
















13/  A number of firsts here - Rick Scott implodes on CNN, watch his stupid face and his blank, mindless responses.....and the anchor keeps going after him.....actually two anchors...."Answer the question Governor".....good to see a "lamestream media" anchor getting tough.....

Three minutes of sad, pathetic footage of our Florida moron you elected.....
When not looking for national security news, I like to check in on Florida politics, which are a great bellwether for the nation at large. Specifically, I like to track tea party Republican Gov. Rick Scott, who lives just a couple blocks from me, and who'ssetting records for unpopularity, just months into his tenure.
Scott's latest crusade is to argue against any rise in the federal debt ceiling—an issue in which he has no official say, and whose basic economic consequences he seems to grasp not one jot. (This week, Scott said Florida would see no effects from a US default; his opponent in last year's gubernatorial race, former state CFO Alex Sink, called his statement "clueless...That's Florida Budgeting 101.") The beleaguered guv took his case to CNN today, and managed to get himself yelled at by two anchors. At one point, Ali Velshi gave up. "Why is this difficult for you to understand, governor?"
















14/  Damn - I was so looking forward to "Cowboys and Aliens" with Daniel Craig, and really hoping it was excellent.....but the review is only decent, i.e. "B"......oh well, going to see it anyway.....

Galloping across the desert, his inscrutable baby blues fixed on the horizon, Daniel Craig makes for a surprisingly convincing cowboy. Some actors, including a few in his new movie, “Cowboys & Aliens,” look too modern for old-timey roles. There isn’t enough grit, suffering and poor nutrition in their faces, and their gestures and gaits are timed to the impatient rhythms of the information age. But Mr. Craig, with his brutally handsome face and coiled physicality, looks like a rawhide whip that’s just itching to get cracking.

He does, eventually, though it takes the director,Jon Favreau, a long time to wake up his movie, giving it a good kick about a half-hour in. Maybe it’s all the western clichés he had to line up, including the dusty town, the gun-toting preacher, the mild-mannered doctor, the trigger-happy scion of a powerful cattleman adored by the American Indian orphan who would make him a better son. Don’t forget the surrogate for this PG-13 picture’s presumptive audience, a wide-eyed boy whom you half expect to cry out for Shane. And then there’s the faithful pooch that in one scene yelps when (finally!) he encounters a genre-hopping extraterrestrial with razored lobster claws that looks like a cousin of the monsters from the “Alien” films.
That these new beasties even evoke the nightmarish creatures originally created by the artist H. R. Gigeris a testament to his genius and to this movie’s lack of imagination. It’s too bad. Mr. Favreau, who directed the “Iron Man” films, isn’t an innovator, but he can have a nice, light touch, and his actors always seem as if they were happy to be there, which is true here too. Here, though, he wavers uncertainly between goofy pastiche and seriousness in a movie that wastes its title and misses the opportunity to play with, you know, ideas about the western and science-fiction horror.


Two minute trailer......














Todays video - dogs and fishing......what's not to like.......











Todays really funny redneck joke.......


REDNECK FARM KID  
in the Marine Corps

  Dear Ma and Pa,

I am well.  Hope you are. Tell Brother Walt and Brother Elmer the Marine Corps beats working for old man Minch by a mile. Tell them to join up quick before all of the places are filled.

I was restless at first because you get to stay in bed till nearly 6 a.m. But I am getting so I like to sleep late. Tell Walt and Elmer all you do before breakfast is smooth your cot, and shine some things.  No hogs to slop, feed to pitch, mash to mix, wood to split, fire to lay.

Practically nothing.

Men got to shave but it is not so bad, there's warm water.  Breakfast is strong on trimmings like fruit juice, cereal, eggs, bacon, etc., but kind of weak on chops, potatoes, ham, steak, fried eggplant, pie and other regular food, but tell Walt and Elmer you can always sit by the two city boys that live on coffee. Their food,  plus yours, holds you until noon when you get fed again. It's no wonder these city boys can't walk much.

We go on 'route marches,' which the platoon sergeant says are long walks to harden us. If he thinks so, it's not my place to tell him different. A 'route march' is about as far as to our mailbox at home. Then the city guys get sore feet and we all ride back in trucks.

The sergeant is like a school teacher.  He nags a lot. The Captain is like the school board. Majors and colonels just ride around and frown. They don't bother you none.

This next will kill Walt and Elmer with laughing. I keep getting medals for shooting. I don't know why...  The bulls-eye is near as big as a chipmunk head and don't move, and it ain't shooting at you like the Higgett boys at home. All you got to do is lie there all comfortable and hit it. You don't even load your own cartridges. They come in boxes.

Then we have what they call hand-to-hand combat training. You get to wrestle with them city boys. I have to be real careful though, they break real easy.  It ain't like fighting with that ole bull at home. I'm about the best they got in this except for that Tug Jordan from over in Silver Lake....I only beat him once...He joined up the same time as me, but I'm only 5'6' and 130 pounds and he's 6'8' and near 300 pounds dry.

Be sure to tell Walt and Elmer to hurry and join before other fellers get onto this setup and come stampeding in.

Your loving daughter ,

Alice






 Todays bonus joke


I met a fairy today that said she would grant me one wish.

"I want to live forever," I said.

"Sorry," said the fairy, "I'm not allowed to grant wishes like that!"

"Fine," I said, "then I want to die after Congress gets their heads out of their asses."

"You crafty bastard," said the fairy.


Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Davids Daily Dose - Wednesday July 27th

Many many stories about the debt limit crisis, but since the story changes every day there's no point in obsessing over the detail.....but the scum in Congress and our cave-in President have to solve it......so depressing......










1/  Following the debt limit crisis? Too much BS for you? 

Can't blame you....but here's a brief primer, a Times Editorial.......

EDITORIAL

The Republican Wreckage

Published: July 25, 2011
House Republicans have lost sight of the country’s welfare. It’s hard to conclude anything else from their latest actions, including the House speaker’s dismissal of President Obama’s plea for compromise Monday night. They have largely succeeded in their campaign to ransom America’s economy for the biggest spending cuts in a generation. They have warped an exercise in paying off current debt into an argument about future spending. Yet, when they win another concession, they walk away.

Readers’ Comments

"We need more passion in defense of reasoned discourse, and more compassion for those who are suffering from an economic and financial crisis."
Barnabas D. Johnson, Peaks Island, Maine
This increasingly reckless game has pushed the nation to the brink of ruinous default. The Republicans have dimmed the futures of millions of jobless Americans, whose hopes for work grow more out of reach as government job programs are cut and interest rates begin to rise. They have made the federal government a laughingstock around the globe.
In a scathing prime-time television address Monday night, President Obama stepped off the sidelines to tell Americans the House Republicans were threatening a “deep economic crisis” that could send interest rates skyrocketing and hold up Social Security and veterans’ checks. By insisting on a single-minded approach and refusing to negotiate, he said, Republicans were violating the country’s founding principle of compromise.
“How can we ask a student to pay more for college before we ask hedge fund managers to stop paying taxes at a lower rate than their secretaries?” he said, invoking Ronald Reagan’s effort to make everyone pay a fair share and pointing out that his immediate predecessors had to ask for debt-ceiling increases under rules invented by Congress. He urged viewers to demand compromise. “The entire world is watching,” he said.
Mr. Obama denounced House Speaker John Boehner’s proposal to make cuts only, now, and raise the debt ceiling briefly, but he embraced the proposal made over the weekend by the Senate majority leader, Harry Reid, which gave Republicans virtually everything they said they wanted when they ignited this artificial crisis: $2.7 trillion from government spending over the next decade, with no revenue increases. It is, in fact, an awful plan, which cuts spending far too deeply at a time when the government should be summoning all its resources to solve the real economic problem of unemployment. It asks for absolutely no sacrifice from those who have prospered immensely as economic inequality has grown.
Mr. Reid’s proposal does at least protect Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security. And about half of its savings comes from the winding down of two wars, which naturally has drawn Republican opposition. (Though Republicans counted the same savings in their budgets.)
Mr. Boehner will not accept this as the last-ditch surrender that it is. The speaker, who followed Mr. Obama on TV with about five minutes of hoary talking points clearly written before the president spoke, is insisting on a planthat raises the debt ceiling until early next year and demands another vote on a balanced-budget amendment, rejected by the Senate last week. The result would be to stage this same debate over again in an election year. Never mind that this would almost certainly result in an immediate downgrade of the government’s credit.
We agreed strongly when Mr. Obama said Americans should be “offended” by this display and that they “may have voted for divided government but they didn’t vote for a dysfunctional government.” It’s hard not to conclude now that dysfunction is the Republicans’ goal — even if the cost is unthinkable.













2/  Still think this is a fair society? Then have a look at this story on how rich kids are going to summer camp in daddy's private jet.....

To Reach Simple Life of Summer Camp, Lining Up for Private Jets

Andy Molloy for The New York Times
Ana Sosa, 13, at the airport in Augusta, Me., on Saturday. She took a private jet from Miami with her parents to attend camp.
By 
Published: July 24, 2011
Gov. Paul LePage of Maine happened to be waiting for his flight at Augusta State Airport on a recent Saturday when the weekend crush began.
Andy Molloy for The New York Times
The tarmac at Augusta State Airport in Maine on Saturday, when traffic was well above average.

Readers’ Comments

Readers shared their thoughts on this article.
A turboprop Pilatus PC-12 carrying Melissa Thomas, her daughter, her daughter’s friend and a pile of lacrosse equipment took off for their home in Connecticut, following the girls’ three-week stay at Camp All-Star in nearby Kents Hill, Me. Shortly after, a Cessna Citation Excel arrived, and a mother, a father and their 13-year-old daughter emerged carrying a pink sleeping bag and two large duffel bags, all headed to Camp Vega in Fayette.
“Love it, love it, love it,” Mr. LePage said of the private-plane traffic generated by summer camps. “I wish they’d stay a week while they’re here. This is a big business.”
For decades, parents in the Northeast who sent their children to summer camp faced the same arduous logistics of traveling long distances to remote towns in Maine, New Hampshire and upstate New York to pick up their children or to attend parents’ visiting day.
Now, even as the economy limps along, more of the nation’s wealthier families are cutting out the car ride and chartering planes to fly to summer camps. One private jet broker, Todd Rome of Blue Star Jets, said his summer-camp business had jumped 30 percent over the last year.














3/  Most interesting story about one of the possible futures for education - online tutorials that challenge the kids to learn....

Someone forward this to our idiot Governor......

Excellent article........
“This,” says Matthew Carpenter, “is my favorite exercise.” I peer over his shoulder at his laptop screen to see the math problem the fifth grader is pondering. It’s an inverse trigonometric function: cos-1(1) = ?
Carpenter, a serious-faced 10-year-old wearing a gray T-shirt and an impressive black digital watch, pauses for a second, fidgets, then clicks on “0 degrees.” Presto: The computer tells him that he’s correct. The software then generates another problem, followed by another, and yet another, until he’s nailed 10 in a row in just a few minutes. All told, he’s done an insane 642 inverse trig problems. “It took a while for me to get it,” he admits sheepishly.
Carpenter, who attends Santa Rita Elementary, a public school in Los Altos, California, shouldn’t be doing work anywhere near this advanced. In fact, when I visited his class this spring—in a sun-drenched room festooned with a papercraft X-wing fighter and student paintings of trees—the kids were supposed to be learning basic fractions, decimals, and percentages. As his teacher, Kami Thordarson, explains, students don’t normally tackle inverse trig until high school, and sometimes not even then.
But last November, Thordarson began using Khan Academy in her class. Khan Academy is an educational website that, as its tagline puts it, aims to let anyone “learn almost anything—for free.” 














4/  So - is this you? Are you in denial about the value of your home? Read on, McDuff......

Homeowners in Denial About Value of Properties

By ANN CARRNS
Homeowners, especially those who bought their houses after the real-estate bubble burst, are still having trouble accepting just how much the values of their properties may have fallen, says a new report from the real-estate site Zillow.
Current sellers who bought their homes in 2007 or later, an analysis of the site’s home listings shows, are overpricing their properties by an average of 14 percent.















5/  Excellent commentary and background on the debt ceiling fight, and it's consequences on real people who are just collateral damage to the oligarchy and their minions in government.....
This article from the New Yorker is more thoughtful than most.......

COMMENT

EMPTY WALLETS

by JULY 25, 2011

In the midst of the debt crisis in Washington, D.C., Danny Hartzell backed a Budget rental truck up to a no-frills apartment building that is on a strip of motels and pawnshops in Tampa, Florida. He had been laid off by a packaging plant during the financial crisis of 2008, had run through his unemployment benefits, and had then taken a part-time job stocking shelves at Target in the middle of the night, for $8.50 an hour. His daughter had developed bone cancer, and he was desperate to make money, but his hours soon dwindled to four or five a week. In April, Hartzell was terminated. His last biweekly paycheck was for a hundred and forty dollars, after taxes. “It’s kind of like I’ve fallen into that non-climbable-out-of rut,” he said. “If you can’t climb out, why not move?”
On the afternoon of July 1st, Hartzell was loading the family’s possessions into the rental truck—and brushing off the roaches that had infested the apartment, so that the bugs wouldn’t make the move, too—when a letter arrived from the State of Florida. Four days earlier, Governor Rick Scott, a Republican backed by the Tea Party, had signed a law making it harder for Floridians to collect jobless benefits, and the letter informed Hartzell that he was ineligible for new benefits after losing his job at Target. “I guess it’s just all water under the bridge at this point anyway, being that we’re going to stake a new claim,” Hartzell told his fifteen-year-old son. “Right, Brent?” Then the Hartzells drove ten hours north, to rural Georgia, where no job or house awaited them—only an old friend Hartzell had reconnected with on Facebook, and the hope of a fresh start.
On the day the family moved, there were officially 14.1 million unemployed Americans, or 9.2 per cent of the workforce. Hartzell himself probably isn’t counted in these statistics. In recent years, he has fallen into the more nebulous categories of the part-time employed, the long-term unemployed, and the “marginally attached”—the no-longer-looking unemployed. Economists report that the broader, and more accurate, unemployment rate is 16.2 per cent. Three years after the economic meltdown, nearly one in six Americans are out of work.

















6/  A very good 8 minute Jon Stewart.......his take on the President's address Monday - 
"Did He Just Quit?"

As the Aug. 2 deadline for raising the nation's debt ceiling approaches, Jon Stewart continues to take note of the ridiculous back-and-forth between President Obama and the Republicans in Congress. On Tuesday night's "Daily Show," Stewart focused on Obama's Monday night address and how it's starting to seem like the President is giving up.
First, Obama warned in his speech about potentially serious damage to our economy if the debt ceiling is not raised, but Stewart felt the message was undercut slightly by the "golden-chaired red carpet" room (or the "I killed bin Laden room" as it's known) in which he was giving the speech:

















7/  This just popped into my head the other day and it stuck there, repeating itself over and over and over.....so I dare you - open it and listen it for 90 seconds.....

Another stray thought - she was a candidate for the United States Senate, the choice of the Republican Party, and came close to being the first witch elected to public office.....

Go on.....open it up, listen.....


















8/  The title of this article says it all....a story about our crumbling infrastructure......

Why Are Our Bridges Made in China?

JUL 21 2011, 9:25 AM ET71
Rebuilding our infrastructure right here in America, instead of outsourcing projects overseas, could put us on a track toward economic recovery
Amtrak- AP- Tom Gannam- body.jpg
In my first piece for The Atlantic, I talked about the breakdown of our infrastructure based on my experience with the Washington DC Metro: the broken escalators, the slow Orange line, the unscheduled stops in the middle of tunnels. Today I'd like to add my complaints about the Maryland Area Regional Commuter line, MARC, where delays are not uncommon, and Amtrak's Acela, which sustained a speed of 0 mph for two straight hours in New York's Penn Station during one of my recent trips.
I choose the quiet car, because I don't want to hear the curses that greet one delay after another. But then I think, Is passivity really the American way? Aren't we supposed to take action, do something, get the job done? Americans solve problems. What's going on when I read that China is launching a new line of fast trains and we aren't even able to get our slow trains going? 
So I took it personally when Congressman John Mica, a Florida Republican and head of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee -- rather than embracing the idea of an infrastructure bank that had the backing of John Kerry (Democrat) and Kay Bailey Hutchinson (Republican), the Chamber of Commerce, and the AFL-CIO -- proposed to decrease infrastructure funding even beyond what Paul Ryan had proposed. Mica wants a 40 percent cut, to outdo the Tea Party's cut of 30 percent.
The Republicans say they want to create jobs. But making it difficult to get to work is not the right path. And it's tough get a job when you can't get to an interview on time. On the delayed Acela, one of my fellow passengers complained (despite being in the quiet car) that he was going to miss his meeting with a potential client. As we sat in the station, unmoving, he became increasingly agitated and depressed. "In this bad economy, I really can't afford not to meet him," he said.
















9/  Eight minute video on how Fox News distorts and ridicules "Global Warming", and how dangerous it is because it paralyses our political leadership......

http://www.readersupportednews.org/video/4-video/6717-how-fox-news-distorts-the-climate-debate




















10/  We try for some good video clips on DDD, but this is one of the best this year.....four minutes of dead-on impressions of celebrities.....what a talent!!!















Florida - 4 stories......

11/  By the time you read this Lake County Commissioners will probably have voted to overturn the long term plan for growth in the County to give developers a free hand.....excellent Lauren Ritchie column.....

Forget rural. Who needs rural anyway?

County commissioners are poised to vote Tuesday to settle rather than fight six formal objections to the county's growth plan. They're caving in to whining developers who are setting themselves up to profit at the expense of the people who live here today and are paying the bills.

So much for representing the people.

The six settlements — none of the objections were turned down, of course — will allow an oversized anchor store in rural Sorrento that dwarfs every other business; small housing developments in Lady Lake and the Thrill Hill area east of Eustis; a big subdivision that has been turned down numerous times on 700 acres called Clonts Grove in south Lake; a second subdivision in the old Jahna mine site east of Clermont and south of State Road 50 on 540 acres; and paved runways on rural property in the Lake Jem community.

















12/  Privatising prisons is a bad idea on all kinds of levels, but the most disturbing thing is that it's driven by corruption......the private prison companies pay bribes to politicians, and lobby for harsher sentences because the more people sent to prison, the more money they make......
Have that in the back of your mind the next time you get jury duty.....

Florida is seeking bids from private companies to take over management of 30 state prisons in an 18-country area in South Florida. The “fastest privatization venture ever undertaken by the state of Florida” is an effort by Gov. Rick Scott (R) to save the state money byoutsourcing prison oversight to the lowest bidder:
In an effort to cut costs, Gov. Rick Scott and the Legislature set a Jan. 1, 2012, deadline to privatize 30 state prisons, road camps and work release centers. [...]
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And the private prison industry isn’t just lobbying to take over state prisons; it’s also “working to make money through harsh policies and longer sentences.” According to a report by the Justice Policy Institute (JPI), private prisons spend millions on lobbying to put more people in jail, which translates to more profits for them. Last year, Corrections Corporation of America and GEO Group made over $2.9 billion in revenue.















13/  Good Scott Maxwell column on Perky Pam Bondi, and redistricting......

Floridians are fired up!

In the past few weeks, I've received hundreds of calls and emails from readers who want to fight back against politicians who waste their money, fight their votes and coddle the special interests.
Well, amen, brothers and sisters. That's why today's column preaches the gospel of empowerment.

Whether you're worked up about shady dealings at the attorney general's office or legislators trying to monkey with your votes, I've got plenty of ways to speak up — including one today right here in Orlando.

Troubling oustings

We start with Attorney General Pam Bondi, who made jaws drop when it was revealed that her office ousted two of its top investigators.

In case you missed the story, assistant attorneys general Theresa Edwards and June Clarkson were making national news uncovering foreclosure fraud when Bondi's office forced them out.

At first, Bondi's office refused to say why. But after public outcry intensified, Bondi's deputies claimed Clarkson and Edwards were guilty of "poor performance."

It was an interesting claim for two people who had recently helped net a $2 million settlement. Also for two people with stellar job reviews.

















14/  South Florida real estate is having a revival - having reached [what they think is] the bottom, vulture investors and South American money are coming back into the market.....


Affluent Buyers Reviving Market for Miami Homes

By 
Published: July 26, 2011
MIAMI — South Florida is the default capital of the country. Here in Miami-Dade County, one out of five households with mortgages is in foreclosure. Nearby Broward and Palm Beach counties are not far behind. Nearly 200,000 South Florida families are stuck in the mire of default.