Be INFORMED

Tuesday, February 01, 2011

Harry Reid: Cuts To Social Security Off The Table

                  Original Article

Harry Reid: Social Security "Off The Table"

by Forrest Brown       Mon Jan 31, 2011
Reid delivery - photo 1

Did you ever wonder if your voice is actually heard by political leaders after you sign a petition or share your personal story on issues like Social Security?

Last week, PCCC members delivered over 50,000 notes directly to Senator Harry Reid -- thanking him for boldly opposing cuts to Social Security. We also read notes from PCCC members like you out loud.

Click here to watch video from the event -- and join our effective campaign to protect Social Security.

Reid delivery - photo 2After listening to the powerful stories of PCCC members, Senator Reid took an even stronger stand for Social Security than he did before.

At our event, Senator Reid said "it's become the official position of the Republican Party to privatize and dismantle Social Security" -- which he called "the most successful social program in the history of the world."

The Majority Leader then vowed to do everything in his power to keep Social Security "off the table." Reid's words in the PCCC video made news today in the Wall Street Journal, the Atlantic, TPM and Huffington Post. This is big news, as many politicians on both sides of the aisle have refused to take this position.

Reid delivery - photo 3
Click here to watch video from the event, including more bold statements from Reid. Then, join our effective campaign to protect Social Security.

PCCC members Larry Fleisher, Gloria Spottswood, and David Klutts were also eloquent voices at the event. We know their stories and others were heard! You can see them on the video too.

Tweets After Mubarak’s Speech

Watch Al Jazeera Live

    The latest Tweets since Mubarak gave his speech earlier.

glcarlstrom State television airing a Mubarak biopic, now recounting his days in the air force (sort of glossed over that whole 1967/1973 thing). · reply

AymanM History may be repeating itself. Former tunisian prez Ben Ali gave 3 speeches and said not re-running in elex b4 fleeing #Egypt #jan25 #feb1 8 minutes ago · reply

AymanM #mubarak announcement that he won't seek re-elex in sept not enough 4 #Egypt protesters who respond w angry chants #jan25 #feb1 11 minutes ago · reply

glcarlstrom One line that jumped out at me in Mubarak's speech: "I will die on this soil." Translation: "I won't follow in Ben Ali's footsteps." #jan25 16 minutes ago · reply

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A Remarkable Thing In Egypt Revolution

    President Mubarak has announced that he will not seek another term as the President of Egypt. he still is appearing to stay put. Go to  Al Jazeera Live for reactions to his speech, which just ended.  He sounded just like an American Republican politician, talk a lot but say nothing.

   Update:  Al Jazeera has just reported that the military is trying to find a way for Mubarak to leave while saving face.  He is widely respected by the military as "one of their own" and they do not want him to be seen as being "thrown out".

 This is something that I haven’t thought about.

by Granny Doc     Tue Feb 01, 2011
For a week now, I have been puzzling over the various comments, and attempts to gin up hysteria, pervading the media coverage of the popular uprising in Cairo.  There was something askew, leaking through in such small doses, that I could not put into words what was bothering me.  Then, this morning, Chuck Todd said it,  "A peaceful movement without a leader."

Imagine the horror of that!!

It is possible for millions of people to gather and without some jacknape with an AK47 threatening them, they can police themselves.

The BBC and CNN have reported that groups are searching those who want to join the demonstration and, if they find weapons they turn that individual and their guns, over to the military.  If they are not armed, they shake their hands and escort them to the center of the square. 

People sharing their increasingly limited food stuffs, offering shelter and water, and standing guard over the sleeping protesters.  Singing.  Yelling.  Dancing.

And all without "official" sanction, "crowd control", or authoritarian strutting.  A world that doesn't NEED "leaders".

How that must terrify everyone who thinks they are in control of something or other!

After decades of a popular media producing films of crowds gone wild, women who scream, men who can't control their violent impulses, and the need for a "strong" leader to keep civilization on track, what must it do the subtext of every disaster, political, and religious themed attempt to cow the public into accepting an overlord?

We don't need no stinkin' badges!

Meanwhile, Jordan Gets In On The Protest Fever And…

    ….it is being reported that  King Abdullah II has dismissed his  government due to the street protests which started on Tuesday over prices and reforms. They’ve protested in previous weeks but today the people took it up a notch.

Jordanians had been calling for the resignation of prime minister Samir Rifai who is blamed for a rise in fuel and food prices and slowed political reforms.
A Jordanian official said the monarch officially accepted the resignation of Rifai, a wealthy politician and former court adviser, and asked Marouf Bakhit to form a new cabinet.  

"[Bakhit] is a former general and briefly ambassador to Israel who has been prime minister before. He's someone who would be seen as a safe pair of hands," Rosemary Hollis, professor of Middle East policy studies at London's City University, said.      Al Jazeera

    Many of the people of Jordan are getting bolder after having watched the Egyptian citizens take on the establishment there with some pretty good results. Jordanians blame  free market corruption  for the sad state the poor in the country.

   Sort of like what has been going on in the United States with the middle class and the poor.

Health Care Reform

                      Original Article

Mitt: No apology for HIS individual health care mandate

by Jed Lewison Tue Feb 01, 2011
While all this focus on the constitutionality of the individual health care mandate might be an annoying political distraction for the White House, for Mitt Romney it's an absolute f^$#!ng disaster because now, every time the subject of health care reform comes up, the first thing Mitt has to do is explain why it was okay for him to sign the individual health care mandate into law, but it was really horrible for Barack Obama to do the same thing. Case in point:

Mitt Romney: No Apology for Individual Health Care Mandate

On the kick off to his "No Apology" book tour Mitt Romney is on message – refusing to apologize for the Massachusetts health care law that, like President Obama’s federal legislation, requires citizens to buy health insurance.

“I’m not apologizing for it, I’m indicating that we went in one direction and there are other possible directions. I’d like to see states pursue their own ideas, see which ideas work best,” Romney told me.

That stand seems to reject the advice of Karl Rove and others who say that Romney can’t get the GOP nomination in 2012 unless he finds a way to distance himself from "Romneycare", but Romney did concede that his Massachusetts plan is imperfect.

So, basically, Mitt's answer now boils down to this: my individual health care mandate was okay because I was a governor. Barack Obama's wasn't okay because he was president. In other words, it's a state's rights issue.

Sarah Palin A Russian Spy?

 

 

 

 

Oh Yes! The Republicans Hard At Work To Screw Social Security Recipients If Necessary

   If not for the fact that many seniors in this country rely on their monthly Social Security checks to live on, this would be funny.

Edited for length

GOP intros bills to "Pay China First" before Soc. Sec. recipients

by Eclectablog      Mon Jan 31, 2011
You might think the GOP hates the poor and the elderly and, really, all of those that rely on entitlement payments of one sort or another. But I'll bet you didn't know how much they hate them.
They hate them enough to introduce
a bill that prioritizes paying off our debt to China over their monthly checks.
That's right. Congressman Tom McClintock of California has introduced H.R. 421 – "To require that the Government prioritize all obligations on the debt held by the public in the event that the debt limit is reached." This bill would prioritize payments to China and our other creditors over our own citizens should Congress not raise the debt ceiling.

According to Talking Points Memo, Pat Toomey will do the same in the Senate.

"I intend to introduce legislation that would require the Treasury to make interest payments on our debt its first priority in the event that the debt ceiling is not raised," Sen. Pat Toomey (R-PA) wrote in a Friday Wall Street Journal op-ed.
If passed, Toomey's plan would require the government to cut large checks to foreign countries, and major financial institutions, before paying off its obligations to Social Security beneficiaries and other citizens owed money by the Treasury -- that is, if the U.S. hits its debt ceiling.

UPDATE: Here's the text of Toomey's Senate bill (S.B. 163 – "The Full Faith and Credit Act", [aka, "The Pay China First Act"]):

In the event that the debt of the United States Government, as defined in section 3101 of title 31, United States Code, reaches the statutory limit, the authority of the Department of the Treasury provided in section 3123 of title 31, United States Code, to pay with legal tender the principal and interest on debt held by the public shall take priority over all other obligations incurred by the Government of the United States.

(H/T to hope4usa who emailed me the Senate bill [all two pages of it.])

Here are some reactions from around the country.
From
Xavier Becerra of California:

Hard to believe, but true: members of the new Republican majority have introduced legislation that rips the hard earned Social Security benefits out of the hands of seniors, widows and disabled workers—and hands them over to creditors like China. This ‘Pay China First’ plan would treat retired American workers as second class citizens in line behind foreign lenders even though Social Security had nothing to do with the nation's $14 trillion debt. Working Americans want us to focus on cutting wasteful spending—and keep our hands off of their hard earned benefits.

From Chris Van Hollen, Congressman from Maryland and Ranking Member on the Budget Committee:

House Republicans’ new proposal to put foreign creditors – including China – before American families is deeply troubling and will hurt our economic recovery.  There is no question that we must come together as a Congress now to put a long-term plan in place to reduce the deficit.  But this country must not put China first, and fail to extend that same full faith and credit to American taxpayers.  We must get our fiscal house in order, and at the State of the Union the President laid out ideas to tackle this challenge.  But for the new Republican majority to do so at the expense of the economic security of American families and seniors is reckless and irresponsible.  Democrats will fight any legislation that doesn’t put American families first.

Kent Conrad, Chairman of the Budget Committee:

It is a dreadful idea. Basically what the Republicans are saying is pay China first; we're going to forget about the American public and the things that they need. Somehow they are secondary?

================
Cross-posted at Eclectablog.com.

Latest Tweets From Egypt Since Mubarak’s Speech

Watch Al Jazeera Live

    The latest Tweets since Mubarak gave his speech earlier.

glcarlstrom State television airing a Mubarak biopic, now recounting his days in the air force (sort of glossed over that whole 1967/1973 thing). · reply

AymanM History may be repeating itself. Former tunisian prez Ben Ali gave 3 speeches and said not re-running in elex b4 fleeing #Egypt #jan25 #feb1 8 minutes ago · reply

AymanM #mubarak announcement that he won't seek re-elex in sept not enough 4 #Egypt protesters who respond w angry chants #jan25 #feb1 11 minutes ago · reply

glcarlstrom One line that jumped out at me in Mubarak's speech: "I will die on this soil." Translation: "I won't follow in Ben Ali's footsteps." #jan25 16 minutes ago · reply

No Internet In Egypt

    Al Jazeera reports that the last remaining working  ISP (Noor Group) in Egypt has been shut down leaving the entire country offline. this means a total blackout of what is going on in the country as the 1 million man protest gets underway Tuesday.

Mobile telephone networks have also been severely disrupted in Egypt along with the Internet.

Activists have used mobile phones and the internet to organise the most serious anti-government demonstrations in decades, protests inspired by the uprising in Tunisia.

    But thanks to Twitter and a little innovation on the part of Google…

Google worked with Twitter and freshly acquired SayNow, a startup specialising in social online voice platforms, to make it possible for anyone to "tweet" by leaving a message at any of three telephone numbers.

"Like many people we've been glued to the news unfolding in Egypt and thinking of what we could do to help people on the ground," Google product manager Abdel-Karim Mardini and SayNow co-founder Ujjwal Singh said in a blog post.

"Over the weekend we came up with the idea of a speak-to-tweet service - the ability for anyone to tweet using just a voice connection," they said.

Voice mail messages left at +16504194196; +390662207294 or +97316199855 will instantly be converted into text messages, referred to as tweets, and posted at Twitter with an identifying "hashtag" of #egypt.

Twitter hashtags are intended as search terms so people can more easily find comments related to particular topics or events.

Monday, January 31, 2011

Egypt: Latest Tweets

  Connect to Al Jazeera Live English for continuing coverage.

  A few of the latest Tweets coming from both journalist and Egyptian citizens.

glcarlstrom Unconfirmed rumor that Egyptian gov't is planning to shut down cell networks tomorrow. #jan25 16 minutes ago · reply

evanchill Rumors of a coming mobile phone crackdown, which would make sense given tmrw is supposed to be a big march & police are back. #jan25 26 minutes ago · reply

glcarlstrom Omar Suleiman tonight promised a "dialogue" with "all political parties" and said it would lead to constitutional reforms. #egypt 57 minutes ago · reply

ajimran #Egypt: Egyptian VP OMAR SULIEMAN says Mubarak asked him to begin dialogue for constitutional changes. about 1 hour ago · reply

SherineT visited prison in cairo where 3200 inmates escaped. found 10 inmates refusing to leave! had nowhere to go #Jan25 #egypt 2 hours ago · reply

glcarlstrom Protests slowly beginning to take an economic toll on ordinary Egyptians: http://ow.ly/3NqO1 #jan25 #egypt about 1 hour ago · reply

Egypt Protests:Day 7

Al Jazeera Live

    After 6 days of keeping their opinions to themselves, Israel has finally voiced its concerns over the unrest in Egypt.

Israel called on the United States and a number of European countries over the weekend to curb their criticism of President Hosni Mubarak to preserve stability in the region.

Jerusalem seeks to convince its allies that it is in the West's interest to maintain the stability of the Egyptian regime. The diplomatic measures came after statements in Western capitals implying that the United States and European Union supported Mubarak's ouster.

    I wonder how the Egyptians are going to feel when they discover that their neighbor prefers that the dictator stay in control of the country. Is Israel afraid that maybe the next government in Egypt may not be so accommodating to their wishes?

"The Americans and the Europeans are being pulled along by public opinion and aren't considering their genuine interests," one senior Israeli official said. "Even if they are critical of Mubarak they have to make their friends feel that they're not alone. Jordan and Saudi Arabia see the reactions in the West, how everyone is abandoning Mubarak, and this will have very serious implications."

        Now, so far as the protests are concerned, there are many in Israel who like the idea of political change in Egypt and many are hoping that the same can happen in their country.

Al Jazeera English

But interviews revealed something shocking: Some Jewish Israelis, fed up with the stalled peace process and frustrated with the status quo, said that they hope to see an uprising similar to Egypt's sweep through their own country.
Amongst them is a 33-year-old Jewish Israeli woman who lives in Tel Aviv and works in education. When asked if anti-government protests - which began in Tunisia and have spread to Egypt, Jordan and Yemen - might erupt here, she answered: "We're far from it. And I say this in happiness and sadness."
She explained that watching events unfold in Tunisia made her value Israel's stability. But, she added, "I think the appropriate thing here would be a revolution."
Why?
What the interviewee calls Israel's "hidden dictatorships" - political wheeling and dealing that gives the religious right a disproportionate amount of power and allows the Jewish settlers to keep on building illegally.
Rita, a 38-year-old housewife who asked to be identified by a pseudonym, remarked of Egypt's   protests: "I wish that we had people that would go out to the streets like that."

    You can read here to get views from Israelis who could care less if the Egyptians kill themselves trying to gain a Democracy.

 

 

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Fisk: Murbarak's Regime "is Over"/Opposition Groups Unite Behind ElBaradei

Original Article

by david mizner         Sun Jan 30, 2011

According to Al-Jazeera, Mubarak is planning to spend his post-dictator years in Tel-Aviv now that Saudi Arabia has refused to accept him. Is this the beginning of the end of the regime? Robert Fisk think so, and he offers this opinion from Cairo, where he joined the protests, climbing on top of an American-made tank.

[T]he streets of Cairo proved what the United States and EU leaders have simply failed to grasp. It is over.

hat tip/HouseofProgress

The speed with which events are unfolding is simply breathtaking. (Although from another perspective this has been happening for decades.) It seemed like just yesterday, because it was just yesterday, that I, feigning knowledge, was telling people that Mubarak was still likely to put a cap back on the unrest. Not so, according to Fisk, and he ought to know. Voted "International Journalist of the Year" seven times, he's been living in and reporting on the Middle East since the seventies.

The Egyptian tanks, the delirious protesters sitting atop them, the flags, the 40,000 protesters weeping and crying and cheering in Freedom Square and praying around them, the Muslim Brotherhood official sitting amid the tank passengers. Should this be compared to the liberation of Bucharest? Climbing on to an American-made battle tank myself, I could only remember those wonderful films of the liberation of Paris. A few hundred metres away, Hosni Mubarak's black-uniformed security police were still firing at demonstrators near the interior ministry. It was a wild, historical victory celebration, Mubarak's own tanks freeing his capital from his own dictatorship.

In the pantomime world of Mubarak himself – and of Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton in Washington – the man who still claims to be president of Egypt swore in the most preposterous choice of vice-president in an attempt to soften the fury of the protesters – Omar Suleiman, Egypt's chief negotiator with Israel and his senior intelligence officer, a 75-year-old with years of visits to Tel Aviv and Jerusalem and four heart attacks to his credit. How this elderly apparatchik might be expected to deal with the anger and joy of liberation of 80 million Egyptians is beyond imagination. When I told the demonstrators on the tank around me the news of Suleiman's appointment, they burst into laughter.

Their crews, in battledress and smiling and in some cases clapping their hands, made no attempt to wipe off the graffiti that the crowds had spray-painted on their tanks. "Mubarak Out – Get Out", and "Your regime is over, Mubarak" have now been plastered on almost every Egyptian tank on the streets of Cairo. On one of the tanks circling Freedom Square was a senior member of the Muslim Brotherhood, Mohamed Beltagi. Earlier, I had walked beside a convoy of tanks near the suburb of Garden City as crowds scrambled on to the machines to hand oranges to the crews, applauding them as Egyptian patriots. However crazed Mubarak's choice of vice-president and his gradual appointment of a powerless new government of cronies, the streets of Cairo proved what the United States and EU leaders have simply failed to grasp. It is over.

That's the good news, but there is plenty of horrible news too, of course. More than one hundred people have died. Looting is rampant. Mubarak has shut down Al-Jazeera. Fisk:

So the "liberation" of Cairo – where, grimly, there came news last night of the looting of the Qasr al-Aini hospital – has yet to run its full course. The end may be clear. The tragedy is not over.

What happens next? No one one knows. But as conservatives and others fret about the "Islamist menace," I want to share this post from Heather Hulbert.

The ‘Islamist Menace’ is overblown. Some American commentators have argued that Al Jazeera is somehow fanning Islamism and anti-Americanism with its coverage. But as Marc Lynch has pointed out, Egyptian citizens, like Tunisians before them, are so—justifiably—angry at their governments that it’s hard to imagine what new provocations the station could come up with. Similarly, concern about the relative strength of the Muslim Brotherhood, which espouses a fundamentalist strain of Islam and has championed and employed violence in the past, should be balanced against three other facts: (1) The Brotherhood has renounced violence and it has been active in Egyptian politics, transformed by an internal debate about whether and how to participate, for some time now; (2) Thus far, observers on the ground report that it is young, secular Egyptians who are leading this revolt; (3) The Islamist Muslim Brotherhood, the largest opposition organization in Egypt, is a first-rank enemy of Al Qaeda, and has been for decades. (A chapter in the recent “Self-Inflicted Wounds” from West Point’s Combating Terrorism Center lays out the feud, and how it has played out in Egypt, South Asia and elsewhere, in detail. Briefly, the Brotherhood’s goals have been more political and focused on individual governments—and thus less focused on what Bin Laden refers to as the “far enemy”—the United States homeland.) Meanwhile, it is reasonable to be concerned about the future role of radical extremists where other forces are weak, but this kind of scaremongering is actually quite ignorant; it’s also disheartening and potentially damaging to the true democrats—some of whom organize around Islam, and some of whom don’t—that are doing the struggling and dying right now. Americans, like others around the world, are instinctively cheering for them. They are right to do so.

I'm cheering for the protestors, and I'm in awe of the courage.

UPDATE: fladem provides links to word other developments, including this important news from the Guardian.

Sensational political developments in Cairo, with reports that five opposition movements, including the key Muslim Brotherhood, have mandated Mohammed ElBaradei to negotiate over the formation of a temporary "national salvation government."

Osama Ghazlai Harb of the National Democrsatic Front told BBC Arabic that this would be a transitional administration that would oversee the cancellation of the emergency laws and the release of all political prisoners

Plus from the NYtimes reports that Mubarak may be going to London, not Tel Aviv. Consensus here seems to be that the idea that he would go to Israel doesn't make sense.

Tweets From Egypt

                           Al Jazeera Live

    I bring you some of the latest Tweets from journalist and citizens living in Egypt.

nolanjazeera profile

nolanjazeera Volleys of gunfire ringing out over #Cairo right now. Sounds like area near Interior Ministry? Another sleepless night for #Egypt 24 minutes ago ·

AymanM #egypt number of protesters dwindling down at Tahrir Square but atmosphere of defiance not waning #jan25 31 minutes ago · reply

RT @astroehlein: If the #Egypt revolution doesn't convince US cable companies to carry AJE, nothing ever will. #ratings !! 15 minutes ago via TweetDeck

RT @sharifkouddous: Tents in the middle of Tahrir Square.Some people lying down on grass.Many will sleep here.They refuse to leave. #egypt 17 minutes ago via TweetDeck

RT @AymanM: #ElBaradei has arrived at Tahrir Square, huge crowd gathers around him #egypt #jan25 (via phone) about 1 hour ago via TweetDeck

RT @BorowitzReport: #Egypt wants #Mubarak out today, but he has requested "a two-week embezzlement period." #Jan25 about 2 hours ago via TweetDeck

RT @sharifkouddous: The energy is indescribable. Huge part of crowd clapping in unison, chanting together. #Egypt about 2 hours ago via TweetDeck

   and just for the humor…

RT @ianvisits: Fox News (who else?) regional map puts Egypt in the wrong place - in Iraq as it happens. http://j.mp/e5Gg81 about 2 hours ago via TweetDeck

Politics: Cartoon Style

   my pick of the past weeks best political cartoons.

Copyright © 2011 Universal Press Syndicate

Copyright © 2011 Universal Press Syndicate

Cagle Cartoons

Friday, January 28, 2011

Egypt: Live Coverage Links

    Watch Al Jazeera Live to stay up to date in events in Egypt.

Democracy Now

Cairo, Egypt—In the second day of defiance of a military curfew, more than 150,000 protesters packed into Tahrir Square Sunday to call on President Hosni Mubarak to step down. The mood was celebratory and victorious. For most, it was not a question of if, but when, Mubarak would leave.

Military tanks have been stationed at entrance points around the square with soldiers forming barricades across streets and alleyways. In another departure from ordinary Cairo life, people quickly formed orderly queues to get through the army checkpoints. Soldiers frisked people and checked their identification cards. One soldier said they were making sure no one with police or state security credentials could enter.

"Omar Suleiman is not an option. The people are chanting against him today," said Nazly Hussein, a 30 year-old protester in Tahrir. "People want to bring down the system...I don’t think anyone is going home until the president and everyone around him leaves."

   I guess that the dictator in Egypt is having a hard time making travel arrangements as it has been rumored that at least countries have turned him down thus far.

    Does the Middle East have a Salvation Army unit?

LINKS:

  • Al Jazeera Live

    Haaretz

    The Arabist

  • Democracy Now

    BBC Live

    Nile News Live

  • Social Security Thievery

        Brought to you by Mitch McConnell and his pals in government.

     title=

    Hillbilly Report

    Yup it's true. $2.5 or $2.6, depending on who's counting, Trillion of our Social Security money is gone. Senator Mitch McConnell and his pals have spent it. All $2.5/$2.6 Trillion of it and gave us a IOU. That worked OK as long as there was more money coming into Social Security than going out. But now when there's less coming into Social Security than going out and the IOU's are due Senator Mitch McConnell and his pals worried about the solvency of Social Security. Really? It's sock it to Grandma time.     Read More...

    Egypt turns off internet, Lieberman wants same option for US

    Original Article

    by Cenobyte     Fri Jan 28, 2011
    Yep -- Joe Liebermann is still an asshole.

    As Egypt cuts Internet access to and from the outside world in its efforts to quash the popular uprising, it is worth revisiting the fact that Joe Liebermann wants the government here to have that very same power.

    On Thursday Jan 27th at 22:34 UTC the Egyptian Government effectively removed Egypt from the internet. Nearly all inbound and outbound connections to the web were shut down. The internet intelligence authority Renesys explains it here and confirms that "virtually all of Egypt's Internet addresses are now unreachable, worldwide." This has never happened before in the entire history of the internet, with a nation of this size. A block of this scale is completely unheard of, and Senator Joe Lieberman wants to be able to do the same thing in the US.

    This isn't a new move, last year Senators Lieberman and Collins introduced a fairly far-reaching bill that would allow the US Government to shut down civilian access to the internet should a "Cybersecurity Emergency" arise, and keep it offline indefinitely. That version of the bill received some criticism though Lieberman continued to insist it was important. The bill, now referred to as the 'Protecting Cyberspace as a National Asset Act' (PCNAA) has been revised a bit and most notably now removes all judicial oversight. This bill is still currently circulating and will be voted on later this year. Lieberman has said it should be a top priority.

    So long, Joe. Don't let the door hit you on the ass on the way out.

    Egypt Protesters:Live Stream

      Brought to you by Al Jazeera. Click HERE as the stream cannot be embedded on this site.

    Mubarak Regime Is Going Down

    DailyKos

    Breaking: Police Siding with Protesters in Egypt. Mubarak regime falling.

    by OllieGarkey     Fri Jan 28, 2011
    Al Jazeera has LIVE video: http://english.aljazeera.net/...

    UK's The Guardian newspaper is now reporting that Egyptian police are siding with the protesters. This is exactly how Tunisia fell to democratic forces. We are now seeing the same shift occur in Egypt.

    "[The Regime] is already falling. It can't stop." Said a State Journalist to Jack Shenker, a reporter for the Guardian.

    This comes on the heels of the news that El Baradei, one of the regime's most famous opponents, has been taken into custody.

    This is the biggest political shakeup since the fall of the Warsaw pact. The protests have moved out of Tunisia, the protesters are winning in Egypt. Yemen and Lebanon are expected to see further protests today. The Anonymous hacking group is planning to make attacks against Algerian government websites.

    I will continue to update this Diary as the news moves forward.

    Update Scarce posted the audio report.

    Update:

    The police have now given up fighting the protesters. The police and protesters are now talking, with protesters bringing water and vinegar (for teargas) to the police. Afternoon prayer has just been called and hundreds are praying in front of the mosque in east Alexandria.

    Much more reading

    As Egyptian’s Take to The Streets For Real Democracy, Obama Loses His Voice

       It is a funny thing with our Presidents over the years. They will stand up while giving their speeches about how all countries should have “ real democracies “ with their citizens having more human rights and such things,but, when the citizens of a country such as Egypt actually take to the streets wanting a better government and more rights, our President (s) suddenly lose the will to speak up and tell the current leaders of said country that perhaps it is time for a change. Obama, mister democracy himself, is no exception to this rule. In the case of the uprising in Egypt, he may be keeping his mouth shut because the United States sends billions of dollars to the soon to be toppled (I hope) Mubarak regime.

    "The fourth issue that I will address is democracy," he declared, before explaining that while the United States won't impose its own system, it was committed to governments that "reflect the will of the people... I do have an unyielding belief that all people yearn for certain things: the ability to speak your mind and have a say in how you are governed; confidence in the rule of law and the equal administration of justice; government that is transparent and doesn't steal from the people; the freedom to live as you choose. Those are not just American ideas, they are human rights, and that is why we will support them everywhere."

    "No matter where it takes hold," the president concluded, "government of the people and by the people sets a single standard for all who hold power."     2009 Cairo Speech

       So President Obama. Do the people of Egypt not count in the fight for a “ real democracy?”  You talk the talk, but now you cannot/will not walk the walk when it comes right down to it.

    Al Jazeera

    Similarly, president Obama has refused to take a strong stand in support of the burgeoning pro-democracy movement and has been no more discriminating in his public characterisation of American support for its Egyptian "ally". Mubarak continued through yesterday to be praised as a crucial partner of the US. Most important, there has been absolutely no call for real democracy.

    Rather, only "reform" has been suggested to the Egyptian government so that, in Obama's words, "people have mechanisms in order to express legitimate grievances".

    "I've always said to him that making sure that they are moving forward on reform - political reform, economic reform - is absolutely critical for the long-term well-being of Egypt," advised the president, although vice-president Joe Biden has refused to refer to Mubarak as a dictator, leading one to wonder how bad a leader must be to deserve the title,

        A State Department spokesman had an interview with Al Jazeera on Thursday.  Go HERE to watch it if you have the time. Get educated!

        Barack Obama! Open your mouth and say the D-word

    Thursday, January 27, 2011

    Social Security In Deficit?

      Who would have thought that Social Security would be running in the deficit category after all of the reports out that have been saying that it would be in good shape for years to come? It is now being reported that the Social Security trust funds will be depleted sometime near 2037.

                               Yahoo/ A.P.

    The massive retirement program has been suffering from the effects of the struggling economy for several years. It first went into deficit last year but had been projected to post surpluses for a few more years before permanently slipping into the red in 2016

    This year alone, Social Security will pay out $45 billion more in retirement, disability and survivors' benefits than it collects in payroll taxes, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office said. That figure nearly triples — to $130 billion — when the new one-year cut in payroll taxes is included.

       Of course, all of those baby boomers will begin hitting the retirement age and applying for benefits also, so we can all look forward to an even bigger lag in those S.S. trust funds. Our lovely Congress says that it will replace the shortfall, but that will only add to our already massive deficit.

        Why do I get the feeling that you and I are being set-up by our politicians so that they can then come in with a big list of cut-backs that we will have to have in order to keep Social Security solvent? This will be the excuse for raising the retirement age and for cutting our benefits also.

       We are about to get screwed royally!

    Republicans:What The Tea Partiers Do Best

       You can count on more of this to come to an area near you.

    Original Article

    Tea party FAIL leads to state agency takeover of county's finances

    by devtob      Wed Jan 26, 2011
    Nassau County, NY, just east of NYC on Long Island, is one of the wealthiest counties in the country.

    But, after electing a tea party Republican county executive in 2009, it cannot balance its budget, and today a state financial oversight agency (imposed after decades of GOP misrule led to a $100 million bailout in 2000) seized control of the county's finances.

    The new tea party county executive, Ed Mangano, had cut taxes, but not much spending, leaving a deficit of at least $50 million in its $2.7 billion budget. So the Nassau Interim Finance Authority (NIFA) now controls the county's books.

    Details, below.

    The Newsday division of Cablevision presumably has a story about this, behind its stupid paywall, so here's some background and quote from the New York Times story linked above and the Daily News' coverage.

    From the Times:

    The move, which came after months of steadily more ominous threats and a downgrade of Nassau’s debt by a credit-rating agency in November, turns the oversight board into a control board, with vast power to rewrite the county’s budget and veto labor contracts, borrowings and other important financial commitments.

    As a first step, the control board ordered the county government to rewrite its budget by Feb. 15 omitting cost-savings items that the board has called specious or too risky.

    snip

    "Some places manage their way into fiscal problems, and other places are beset by social forces, many of them outside of their own control," said Steven J. Hancox, a deputy state comptroller who oversees local government. "Nassau has had a history where the populace has enjoyed a variety of services, and those cost money. It doesn’t really matter where you are; when the money dries up you have tough choices to make."

    snip

    The takeover was a stinging rebuke to Nassau’s county executive, Edward P. Mangano, a Republican who took office a year ago after upsetting a popular incumbent in 2009. Mr. Mangano had repeatedly said the budget was balanced, and then insisted there were ample contingencies to cover any shortfalls. But the authority said that many of his assertions were unfounded or unsupportable.

    The "variety of services" includes three 18-hole and one 9-hole golf courses, ocean and bay beach parks, and scores of pools, athletic fields and tennis courts.

    Not that there's anything wrong with that -- parks, etc., add a lot to the quality of life anywhere, but such services cost money. 

    The takeover vote was unanimous, among a board that includes Conservative Party activist and Nassau County resident George Marlin, who had this to say to the Times:

    The county’s 2011 budget is built on a foundation of sand.

    The Daily News had more Marlin quote:

    Nassau County for many years believed it could continue to spend at a rate that far outpaced the growth of revenues. That resulted in major problems a decade ago. Unfortunately the politicians didn't learn; there are expensive union contracts. Ed Mangano has inherited a huge fiscal mess.

    Maybe so, but Mangano made the mess messier by pushing through energy and property tax cuts, which are popular, but problematic since tax cuts ALWAYS lead to less tax revenue.

    Property taxes in Nassau County are extraordinarily high, top-five in the nation, but so are the level of services -- education, police/fire/EMS, Medicaid, parks, etc.

    After Nassau County's fiscal crisis/bailout 11 years ago, Democrats won control of the county for the first time ever and were able to manage its finances.

    Now the same cannot be said for the tea party Republicans of Nassau County.

    Wednesday, January 26, 2011

    Tampa Water Department Ripping Off Homeowners?

       When homeowners in a few Tampa neighborhoods received their current water bills in January, more than a few were shocked with the amount of the bill. Some had bills for as much as $2,000 for water usage in December 2010,and, needless to say, they pitched a fit with the water department.

        Of course, the water department told the homeowners that the bills are correct and that maybe the owners had a leaky water sprinkler system, or maybe they had a toilet that was running non-stop. Some homeowners had a bill which was as much as 10 times the normal amount!  Judy Sellers told WTSP10News that her average bill is only  $30.92,but her latest one was $343.32, that is 10 time over the average cost.

    The water department says most of the high bills are coming from the New Tampa, Carrollwood, and Dana Shores areas.

    "It just defies logic, is all I can say," said council member Mary Mulhern.

       It’s even worse for many others. Check this out.

    This week, one homeowner complained her bill went from $41 to $854. Another said her charges shot up from $60 to $563. In all, 17 Dana Shores residents say their bills have skyrocketed.

      So just how bad is this?

    Resident Jen Older said her water bill is $854.47. Previous bills averaged about $40. A breakdown showed the city recorded Older's home using 115,948 gallons of water in November and December — about 58,000 gallons a month.

    The average Tampa family uses about 6,000 gallons a month, the department said.

      But wait! There’s more!

       Let’s go over to the New Tampa part of the region. In New Tampa we have housing developments such as Tampa Palms, and Hunters Green. These are not your average income areas. Some of these homeowners have been getting the shaft also.

    Barb O'Malley of Tampa Palms got her water bill which is $2,500 for using 183,00 gallons of water. That is enough to fill her swimming pool 8 times. Water company inspectors told her that an irrigation leak and an toilet that ran intermittently was the reason for her high bill.           Source

           Tampa Bay Online

    Michael Tucker of Hunter's Green had a bill of $2,700 and found one broken sprinkler head in his lawn a day before inspectors visited to check for leaks. The inspector told Tucker that even he couldn't see how a lone malfunctioning sprinkler could account for his billed usage of 207,000 gallons of water.

    Tucker said the inspector told him he was writing a report and would test the irrigation system a second time before any adjustments are made to his bill.

    "My concern is, even with the adjustment, the bill still has got me using 207,000 gallons," Tucker said.

        Tampa Water has told the Tampa City Council that they will adjust the water usage rate down to their lowest tier rate, Tier0. 

    That rate is $1.82 for every 100 cubic feet, or 748 gallons of water, used. The two highest rates in the city's seven-tier system are $10.92 and $16.38, respectively, for every 100 cubic feet of water used.

    City officials say unchecked leaks can push homeowners' water use into the highest tiers. The system was created to encourage water conservation.

      This problem is exclusive to just the homeowners either.

    According to the Hillsborough County School District, Middleton High School had a $65,000 water bill this month. That's four times the normal bill, even though they didn't have school for two weeks.       Source

      So, I guess that all of those mean high school children must have went to all of the water fountains on their way out the door, and jammed some object into them in order to keep them squirting out the water?

     

    Obama And Big Business

        In case you hadn’t noticed it yet, President Obama has been very busy doing his best as of late giving big business the front row in his policy making decisions. Business is making more profits than ever, so he has to give them even more help in order for them to amass even more cash.  A South Korean journalist has noticed how much Obama has been bending over for the business community.  Anything to get re-elected, I guess.

    Watching America

    Hankyung, South Korea
    Obama’s Business-Friendly
    Transformation

    By Hankyung Editorial
    Translated By Jiyoung Han
    23 January 2011

    Edited by Michelle Harris

    South Korea - Hankyung - Original Article (Korean)
    U.S. President Barack Obama’s latest string of business-friendly acts is garnering a lot of attention. Since taking office, Obama has been known to fiercely criticize Wall Street and emphasize the need to strengthen regulations. However, the president now seems to be pushing for the relaxation of regulations and other measures characteristic of a more business-friendly environment.
    In a Wall Street Journal editorial printed on Jan. 18, President Obama announced that the federal government would undertake a "review that will help bring order to regulations that have become a patchwork of overlapping rules." The president has also proceeded to draw prominent members of the private sector into the ranks of his administration, most notably naming Midwest Chairman of JPMorgan Chase William Daley as his White House Chief of Staff and CEO of General Electric Jeffrey Immelt as the Chairman of his outside panel of economic advisers. Obama’s business-friendly actions do not stop here. The president is even set to deliver a speech at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, an institution with which he has previously had fraught relations.
    The reason for President Obama’s transformation comes from his very acute realization that, for the sake of economic recovery and job creation, he cannot neglect to lend the private sector a helping hand. This is evident in the following passage of his Wall Street Journal piece: "Sometimes, those rules have gotten out of balance, placing unreasonable burdens on business — burdens that have stifled innovation and have had a chilling effect on growth and jobs."
    President Obama’s actions hold many implications. In contrast with the increasingly enterprise-supportive America, Korea is tightening the reins on the building pressures at home. The Korea Fair Trade Commission alone is interfering with extensive business studies in areas like oil refining, sugar manufacturing, and home shopping, subsequently eliminating basic things like production cost studies. Key big businesses are facing the pressures of rising subcontract prices in all directions.
    Although price stabilization is an urgent issue, artificially regulating prices and further increasing subcontract prices will distort the market order and weaken the vitality of business. For the sake of economic vitality and job creation, businesses must be provided an environment in which they are free to do as they wish. Governments must bear in mind how important it is not to burden businesses with constant interference. As such, today’s meeting between President Lee and the 30 group leaders must be a forum in which the difficulties of the business community are heard and solutions are sought together. It cannot become an occasion to strengthen government regulations.

    CLICK HERE FOR ORIGINAL VERSION

    Tuesday, January 25, 2011

    Luntz Trying to Freep CNN's Real-Time SOTU Poll

    by antonrobb       Tue Jan 25, 2011
    For some reason, my leftie mom wound up on an email list for Luntz Research. (I know, ewwww, gross.)  Anyway, she forwarded the below email to me.  It is clearly being sent to Luntz's list of lunkheads so they can flood CNN's dial testing of the SOTU with anti-Obama static.  Let's all forward this to our friends and relatives so we can counteract this effect.  These guys (as usual) have nothing to show in terms of constructive policy, just more delay, distraction, destruction and victimhood.  Such losers. 

    From: Maslansky, Luntz & Partners
    Sent: Mon, January 24, 2011 8:22:44 PM
    Subject: State of the Union Online Panel Invitation

    We would like to invite you to participate in a first-of-its-kind live CNN event that will provide the unique opportunity to register your personal, real-time reactions to tomorrow night’s State of the Union address.

    Your reactions, along with those of others around the country, will be part of CNN’s state of the union coverage.

    The system works just like the dial testing you may have seen on CNN and Fox – except YOU will be one of the participants, reacting to the president’s speech on your computer, in real-time, from your home or office.

    Your participation will help balance the post-speech coverage by providing pundits with real-time feedback from thousands of people around the country.

    To participate, please go to the link below by 8:55 pm EST/5:55pm PST on Tuesday, January 25th and follow the instructions on the screen.  Thanks in advance for your help and we look forward to seeing what you think of the speech.

    Link: http://app.bronto.com/...

    Username: square
    Password: off

    If you have any issues with the website, a browser refresh will usually fix them.

    Please take a minute to let us know if you plan on joining our online panel: RSVP

    Thank you,

    Michelle Corbett
    Research Manager

    You have been contacted because you have sent us information or expressed interest in the past. If this is incorrect or you wish to stop receiving these emails, there is now a link at the bottom of your email invitation to unsubscribe from our emails and focus group offers.

    To unsubscribe please click herehttp://app.bronto.com/...http://app.bronto.com/.