Category Archives: Politics

Rielle Hunter, John Edwards Wedding Planned: Report‎

Gag me…

This just caps a day of insanity…

John Edwards has “reportedly” asked mistress Rielle Hunter to marry him, according to tabloid magazine The National Enquirer.

The Hollywood Gossip has a screenshot of the latest issue of the Enquirer, the publication that broke the original story about Edwards’s liaison with Hunter, his campaign videographer, and predicts that the two might tie the knot this summer, if at all.

While the Enquirer gained some credibility for its coverage of the Edwards affair, it is worth noting that they posted nearly the exact same story regarding an Edwards-Hunter nuptial and a “luxury $3.5 million beachfront home” last year, a report that was later denied.

John Edwards’s wife, Elizabeth Edwards, passed away last month after a battle with cancer. In her will, she left her possessions to her three children, while leaving out her estranged husband entirely.

via Rielle Hunter, John Edwards Wedding Planned: Report‎.

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AMERICAblog News: Sorry Boehner, you don’t get to overrule CBO

More on the Republican’s trying to alter the facts…

From John Arovosis at Americablog.com

It’s really quite egregious what the Republicans in the House are trying to do, now in their second day of running the US House. The Republicans are trying to make it so that CBO is no longer the arbiter of how much legislation costs, and whether it adds or subtracts from the deficit.

For those who don’t know, the Congressional Budget Office is an independent agency of the Congress. Neither the Democrats nor the Republicans run it. It is completely independent. But the Republicans are unhappy that CBO has concluded, repeatedly, that last year’s health care reform legislation will save over $100bn over the next ten years, and they’re even more unhappy that CBO has just upped its numbers to $230bn for the cost of repealing HCR over the next ten years.

So, when they’re confronted with incontrovertible facts, the Republicans attack the source, and lie.

Every single journalist working in Washington, DC knows about CBO. They know CBO is independent, and that CBO is what we use to “score” legislation, period. The Republicans can not be permitted to get away with removing CBO as the final arbiter of how much legislation costs. The damage to decision-making in Washington would be tremendous. The Republicans in the House literally issued their own analysis today of what they think health care reform will cost. And nobody cares. It’s irrelevant what the Republicans in the House, or frankly the White House, “thinks” health care reform will save us. What matters is what independent impartial arbiters say, and that’s CBO.

More:  AMERICAblog News: Sorry Boehner, you don’t get to overrule CBO.

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Filed under Health Care, Politics

New CBO Analysis: GOP’s Push For Health Law Repeal Would Increase Deficit By $230 Billion Over 10 Years

Talk about inconvenient truths….

Of course, the GOP Leadership has a way of just ignoring any facts that are inconvenient to their agenda…

Moments ago, the Congressional Budget Office released its cost estimate for the GOP’s health care repeal bill — H.R. 2, the Repealing the Job-Killing Health Care Law Act, introduced yesterday in the House by the new Republican majority:

– 32 million Americans will lose coverage compared to current law: “Under H.R. 2, about 32 million fewer nonelderly people would have health insurance in 2019, leaving a total of about 54 million nonelderly people uninsured. The share of legal nonelderly residents with insurance coverage in 2019 would be about 83 percent, compared with a projected share of 94 percent under current law (and 83 percent currently).” (p. 8-9)

– Increases deficit by $230 billion over 10 years: “Consequently, over the 2012–2021 period, the effect of H.R. 2 on federal deficits as a result of changes in direct spending and revenues is likely to be an increase in the vicinity of $230 billion, plus or minus the effects of technical and economic changes to CBO’s and JCT’s projections for that period.” (p. 5)

– Huge deficit increases over next decade: “Correspondingly, CBO estimates that enacting H.R. 2 would increase federal deficits in the decade after 2019 by an amount that is in a broad range around one-half percent of GDP, plus or minus the effects of technical and economic changes that CBO and JCT will include in the forthcoming estimate. For the decade beginning after 2021, the effect of H.R. 2 on federal deficits as a share of the economy would probably be somewhat larger.” (p. 7)

– Individuals would pay more for health insurance: “Although premiums in the individual market would be lower, on average, under H.R. 2 than under current law, many people would end up paying more for health insurance— because under current law, the majority of enrollees purchasing coverage in that market would receive subsidies via the insurance exchanges, and H.R. 2 would eliminate those subsidies.” (p. 9-10)

– Average health care benefits would be worse: “In particular, if H.R. 2 was enacted… the average insurance policy in this market would cover a smaller share of enrollees’ costs for health care and a slightly narrower range of benefits.” (p.9)

– Premiums for employer-sponsored insurance would increase: “Premiums for employment-based coverage obtained through large employers would be slightly higher under H.R. 2 than under current law, reflecting the net impact of many relatively small changes.” (p. 10)

More:   ThinkProgress » New CBO Analysis: GOP’s Push For Health Law Repeal Would Increase Deficit By $230 Billion Over 10 Years.

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Broken Promises: The House GOP Breaks Several Of Its Own Pledges On First Day In Power

After just one day in  power, the Republicans are backing off their promises to the Masses.

I’m not surprised and don’t know why anyone should be…

But then, I still don’t know why people voted for the Party that drove the economy into a ditch just three years ago…

P.T. Barnum was right, our electorate proves “there’s a sucker born every minute”.

Yesterday, Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) gaveled in the GOP takeover of the House. Christening his rein in tears, the self-proclaimed “most transparent person in this town” promised an era of more “honest” and “accountable” government with a set of new House rules to match. But that was yesterday afternoon. By nightfall, the House GOP leadership had already broken key pledges of transparency and accountability. Republicans have already walked back three key promises they touted up through the end of 111th Congress:

More:   ThinkProgress » Broken Promises: The House GOP Breaks Several Of Its Own Pledges On First Day In Power.

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Filed under History, Politics, The Economy

How We’re Learning to Be Happy With Less – Yahoo! News

More good news today…

It would be a major achievement for people in the U.S. to start appreciating what they have and not lust for more “stuff”.

The economy is still in rehab, but it doesn’t bother us all that much any more. In fact, we seem to be feeling nearly as good as we did before that awful recession messed everything up.

That’s what Americans have been telling the Gallup polling organization–and the nation’s mood suggests that the recession may have made us a wee bit heartier. We seem to be happier with less, for one thing, and we may even be getting more satisfaction out of the “little things” that took a back seat for a while to fancy cars, splashy homes, and tell-everybody vacations.

Gallup’s “well-being index” shows that Americans felt more happiness and less stress in 2010 than they did in 2009, which isn’t surprising, since 2009 was the year the economy hit bottom, unemployment surged, and the stock market hit a 13-year low. What is surprising is that the latest well-being numbers are comparable to those of February 2008–which was a high point before the nation’s mood began to sour and then turn downright grim as the financial panic hit in the fall of that year.

And

So why are we feeling just as content today as we did during better economic times? Maybe because we’ve changed our expectations and placed less importance on economic gain. Don’t get me wrong: I’m not suggesting that utopianism trumps consumerism. But Americans do seem to be saying they can be just as satisfied in an austere economic environment as they once were in an indulgent one. In addition to economic factors, Gallup’s well-being index also measures things such as the way people evaluate their own physical and emotional health, and whether people feel like they’re struggling or thriving. And those metrics suggest that more people have learned to be happy under tougher economic conditions. The percentage of Americans who feel they’re thriving, for example, is 54 percent in the latest survey. And the percentage who say they’re struggling is 43 percent. Both of those levels are better than they were at the beginning of 2008, when Gallup began doing its well-being surveys.

More:   How We’re Learning to Be Happy With Less – Yahoo! News.

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US electoral map gives Hispanics more heft: study | Raw Story

This is good news….since the GOP seems intent on angering the Hispanic voters.

The new electoral map that emerged from the 2010 US census favors Hispanics, the largest US minority group, as some states in which they live will win more representation in Congress, a study found Wednesday.

States with growing populations such as Texas and Florida will pick up extra congressional seats, while some northern states such as Ohio and Iowa are set to lose seats under a redistricting system ahead of the 2012 elections.

The study by the Pew Hispanic Center found that Hispanic voters are almost three times more numerous in those states that will pick up congressional seats and electoral college votes, than in states that will have to shed seats.

While 15.2 percent of eligible voters — those US citizens over 18 — are Hispanics in states that increased their political influence, they account for only 5.4 percent of the electorate in states that lost electoral heft, it said.

via US electoral map gives Hispanics more heft: study | Raw Story.

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Michael G. Messner – Olmsted’s ideals could help solve our real estate mess

This is great thinking…

Take empty stores and buildings, tear them down and build parks.  This would put people to work, reduce urban blight and have land available for use by new businesses near the parks as the economy turns around.

Makes sense to me…

From The Washington Post…

More than 150 years ago, America’s greatest landscape architect, Frederick Law Olmsted, created Central Park and changed New York forever. He went on to transform dozens more cities, leaving a priceless legacy of vibrant, beautiful cityscapes. And, in the process, he increased property values.

Olmsted discovered this himself when he tracked the value of land around Central Park and found that the city’s $13 million investment had led to an astounding $209 million increase in just 17 years. The architect recognized what many planners still fail to grasp: Parks and managed green space are vital pieces of urban infrastructure that not only improve the quality of life for millions of people but also drive economic growth.

Today we must act again to transform our cities. The commercial real estate binge of the past decade and the growth of online shopping as an alternative to brick-and-mortar stores have left more than 200,000 acres of vacant retail, office and industrial space. Residential real estate is a massive problem as well. Distressed properties are a drag on our communities and the economy and threaten to topple even more banks that hold mortgages on these “toxic assets.”

We need to move these toxic assets off the banks’ books, reduce the surplus of commercial space and create jobs, all while revitalizing our cities. This brings us back to Olmsted.

Olmsted designed transformative parks, campuses and greenways; his firm completed an amazing 6,000 commissions and launched a green wave across 19th-century America. The same kind of wave could help resolve the 21st-century real estate mess.

We don’t have the luxury of vacant land that Olmsted often started with, so we must bulldoze underperforming and underused property, put people to work creating parks on some of the land and “bank” the rest until the economy recovers.

More:   Michael G. Messner – Olmsted’s ideals could help solve our real estate mess.

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Aisle Not: Why One Woman Quit Grocery Stores for a Year | TakePart – Inspiration to Action

I would love to be able to get to this point…

I hate the professional Food Industry almost as much as the Pharmaceutical Industry….

Both have greatly contributed to the unhealthy, over-weight lifestyle so many Americans now lead…

If you haven’t seen “Food, Inc”, buy it or put it on your NetFlix list today.  It’s a real eye-opener.

One year ago, Carla Crownover kissed grocery stores goodbye.

She had just seen Food, Inc., Participant Media’s documentary on the seedy underbelly of the food industry, and she wanted nothing to do with the conventional food system that feeds the majority of Americans.

She pledged to abstain from grocery stores for 365 days and to go on a quest to find out where all the food she eats comes from. The end result? “I’ve learned a lot,” she told readers on her blog, Austin Urban Gardens.

TakePart caught up with Crownover recently, fresh after her one-year mark, to learn more about what it’s like to live off the food grid.

Prior to seeing Food, Inc., Crownover was already a conscientious eater. “I shopped the perimeter of the grocery store and didn’t buy many products in boxes or cans. I didn’t want to eat anything that had been manipulated to cook faster, or be ‘instant,'” she explains. “I had dropped diet sodas from my diet a couple years ago, and was leery of foods manipulated to have a long shelf life.”

When she sought out more information from Food, Inc., the film shocked her.

“Everything about factory farming [in the film] disgusted me. The feedlots packed full of animals standing in their own waste bothered me on several levels. I like to eat beef, but I don’t want the animal to have to live a horrible and unhealthy life so that I can have a steak.”

She saw genetically engineered chickens in the film that were too big to stand and never saw the light of day. “The chickens I get now from a local farm are free range up until their last moment,” she says. “The farmer once told me, ‘We like to believe they only have one bad day.’ And I loved that.”

via Aisle Not: Why One Woman Quit Grocery Stores for a Year | TakePart – Inspiration to Action.

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Filed under Education, Food, Health Care, Pets, Politics, Social Commentary, The Economy, The Environment

What Are Rich People Worried About in 2011? — Vanity Fair

From VanityFair.com….

There are a few specific fears that rich people in posh cities all over the world are experiencing right now. First and foremost, they’re fretting over the fact that they’ll never have as much money to spend as the mysterious Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich. Of course, no one knows exactly what kind of fortune Abramovich has managed to amass for himself (estimates range anywhere from $10 billion to more than $20 billion), but it’s clear he possesses the ability to establish ever higher standards for luxury, and other billionaires are beginning to get nervous that they can’t keep up.

News of the Russian tycoon’s latest celebration at his $90 million home in St. Bart’s made headlines everywhere. The event was an impressive gathering of A-listers from around the globe, where even the hired help could boast of rubbing shoulders with special guests The Black Eyed Peas. And all of this talk of extravagance ignores Abramovich’s unparalleled fleet of yachts, some of which typically winter in the harbor not far from his oceanfront estate. The newest addition to the flotilla, reports say, is a 500-plus-foot behemoth that officially claims the title of Largest Private Yacht in the World. For those agonizing about how to keep pace with the high-rolling Mr. Abramovich, utter despair is inevitable.

Second on the list of nagging concerns is the fear that the tentative economic recovery of 2010 will not survive in 2011. Naturally, people from all financial backgrounds have legitimate doubts about the stability of the economy from time to time, but for the wealthy such worrying takes on a nearly obsessive quality. Because money preserves the preeminent status of the entire upper class, sudden drops in the market threaten to destroy everything that the rich stand for.

And finally, the Madoff scandal continues to provoke extreme horror. Wealthy investors from almost every industry, from finance to Hollywood, are terrified that the next money manager they choose might turn out to be nothing more than a malicious conman.

via What Are Rich People Worried About in 2011? | VF Daily | Vanity Fair.

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Glenn Beck Dropped From New York Radio Station WOR

Well, there is some good news today…

Of course, it’s harder to fool New Yorkers than most other folks…

Still, maybe people are finally getting tired of his traveling Medicine Show…

Glenn Beck has been dropped by New York radio station WOR due to poor ratings, the New York Daily News reports. Beck’s radio show is due to go off the air on Jan. 17, and he is being replaced by Mike Gallagher, another nationally syndicated conservative talk show host.

Although Beck’s radio show is the third-biggest in the country, WOR program director Scott Wakefield told the Daily News, “Somewhat to our surprise, the show wasn’t getting what we wanted.”

WOR is one of New York’s two biggest talk radio stations, and the Daily News said it is unclear which local station Beck will be able to move his show to.

Meanwhile, Politico notes that Beck’s television ratings took a slight tumble in 2010. He was down 6.5% in total viewers compared to 2009, and 2.5% in the coveted A25-54 demo.

via Glenn Beck Dropped From New York Radio Station WOR.

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