Peter Kinder, Missouri Republican Lt. Governor, Embroiled In Stripper Scandal

Don’t you just love those fiscally Conservative, Family Values Tea Party Republicans?

I think this guy just heard the “party” part….

Hypocrites….

Click the HuffingtonPost link to see the video:

 

Peter Kinder, the Lieutenant Governor of Missouri, is at the center of racy allegations.

St Louis area stripper Tammy Chapman says that Kinder pursued an inappropriate relationship with her, and was a regular at a local strip bar.

Kinder is a single man, but as a Tea Party-backed political, the revelations do little to endear him to that conservative group.

The L.A. Times reports that some of Kinder’s political allies have deserted him.

Southwest Missouri GOP committeeman Tim Garrison also withdrew support for Kinder, saying Kinder’s claim that he only stopped by the pantless bar to use the bathroom “do not pass the laugh test,” according to a letter obtained by the Post-Dispatch. Kinder says he has not been to a strip club in 10 years, but that didn’t sway Garrison.

via Peter Kinder, Missouri Lt. Governor, Embroiled In Stripper Scandal (VIDEO).

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France Introduces New Tax on High Incomes- At the Request of the Rich

Another reason to love the French…

This is an example of how you should handle deficits- both as a government and as a citizen.

This U.S. Congress is doing all it can to protect its millionaires from paying their fair share while taking more and more from the Middle Class and the poor.

The French also know a little bit about how nasty class warfare can become when the Rich have too much and flaunt it too openly.  They learned the hard way, it’s best to all pull together in the spirit of equality and solidarity.

I don’t want to hear a damn thing about “freedom fries”….

Viva la France!

 

 

The French government is to impose an extra tax of 3% on annual income above 500,000 euros (£440,000; $721,000).

It is part of a package of measures to try to cut the country’s deficit by 12bn euros over two years.

The tax increase came after some of France’s wealthiest people had called on the government to tackle its deficit by raising taxes on the rich.

Paris has also reduced its economic growth forecast for 2012 to 1.75% from a previous 2.25%.

‘Rigorous’

And it has cut its 2011 growth forecast from 2% to 1.75%, Prime Minister Francois Fillon has said.

He said the new tax would remain in place until France reduces its budget deficit back under the EU’s intended limit of 3% of GDP, which should occur in 2013.

France plans to trim its public deficit to 5.7 % this year, 4.6 % next year and 3% in 2013.

“This is a rigorous policy that will allow France to remain relaxed,” Mr Fillon said. “Our country must stick to its [deficit] commitments. It’s in the interest of all French people.”

Faced with flat growth, the persistent threat to the country’s precious AAA rating, and all sorts of turmoil on the nervous financial markets, President Sarkozy is wielding the axe.

In total he’s proposing 12bn euros of savings over the next two years.

Higher taxes for big companies, a cap on tax deductions applying to overtime – and a new “special contribution” from the wealthiest in the country.

It’s a U-turn – in so many ways – designed to reassure investors and voters alike that only he can be trusted with the French economy.

Sixteen executives, including Europe’s richest woman, the L’Oreal heiress Liliane Bettencourt, had offered in an open letter to pay a “special contribution” in a spirit of “solidarity”.

It appeared on the website of the French magazine Le Nouvel Observateur.

It was signed by some of France’s most high-profile chief executives, including Christophe de Margerie of oil firm Total, Frederic Oudea of bank Societe Generale, and Air France’s Jean-Cyril Spinetta.

They said: “We, the presidents and leaders of industry, businessmen and women, bankers and wealthy citizens would like the richest people to have to pay a ‘special contribution’.”

They said they had benefited from the French system and that: “When the public finances deficit and the prospects of a worsening state debt threaten the future of France and Europe and when the government is asking everybody for solidarity, it seems necessary for us to contribute.”

They warned, however, that the contribution should not be so severe that it would provoke an exodus of the rich or increased tax avoidance.

via BBC News – France introduces new tax on high incomes.

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Cheney: My book will have ‘heads exploding’ in D.C’

Who the hell wants to read this?

Haven’t we heard enough about this crew that destroyed our economy, sold us out to corporate power and oil company greed, screwed the Middle Class and workers, abused and misused those in our military, tried to ruin the environment and tarnished the image of America, possibly forever, with their lies, power grabs, unconstitutional actions and wars of choice?

All I want to hear is when they will be arrested, prosecuted, convicted and sentenced.  Enough of their lies, rationalizations and attempts to alter history…

 

When former Vice President Dick Cheney releases his memoir early next week, it may cause the second earthquake in Washington, D.C., this month.

Cheney: My book will have ‘heads exploding’ in D.C.

“There are gonna be heads exploding all over Washington,’’ when his memoir comes out Aug. 30, former Vice President Dick Cheney said in an interview that will air Aug. 29. Among the revelations: Cheney kept a resignation letter in a safe in case he had a heart attack or stroke.

“There are gonna be heads exploding all over Washington,’’ Cheney told NBC’s Jamie Gangel in an exclusive interview that will air on NBC’s “Dateline” at 10 p.m. ET Aug. 29.

In the book, titled “In My Time,’’ Cheney addresses a broad range of topics, including the attacks of Sept. 11; a secret resignation letter he kept in a safe in case he experienced catastrophic health issues, and his thoughts about former President George W. Bush and ex-Secretaries of State Condoleezza Rice and Colin Powell. The 46th vice president discusses those topics and more in his candid, unapologetic interview with Gangel, and he’ll likely have more to say when he appears live on TODAY with Matt Lauer on Aug. 30, the day his book hits stores.

via Cheney: My book will have ‘heads exploding’ in D.C. – books – TODAY.com.

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Rick Perry Vaults Into Lead For GOP Nomination In Two National Polls

This is getting to be fun…

Public Policy Polling is one of the most accurate pollsters in the country.

Rick Perry, aka Governor Goodhair,  is not only evil, but certifiably crazy.  See previous posts on this blog and elsewhere….

President Obama should be able to destroy him, but it would be one of the nastiest campaigns ever seen.

Of course, Governor Goodhair may yet fade. Karl Rove and the Bushies hate him and will do all they can do to bring him down.  But the GOP Primary voters are so crazy, it might not matter what anyone says or does….The crazier the candidate, the more they like them.  See how well Michele Bachmann polls here, as well…

Poor Willard Romney, he’s starting to see it all slip away.  I guess that’s why he needs that big, new retirement house in California….

From TalkingPointsMemo.com:

Former Mass. Governor Mitt Romney has been the frontrunner in most national polls of the GOP primary over the last year, and the general punditry considered it his nomination to lose, at least at first. And while it’s still early, new polling released on Wednesday shows his unchallenged time at the head of the pack may be over.

A new national Gallup poll of GOP and GOP-leaning voters shows Romney, who had more than a quarter of the total vote in Gallup’s June numbers in the same poll, has fallen to 17 percent, while newly minted candidate Tex. Gov. Rick Perry surges to 29 percent and the lead. Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN), considered a top contender, falls to fourth with 10 percent, behind Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX) at 13 percent. The rest of the field is in single digits.

Public Policy Polling (D) also came out with a national poll of GOP voters on Wednesday, which showed similar results. In that survey, Perry leads with 33 percent in the field of announced candidates, followed by Romney at 20 percent and Bachmann at 16. The rest of the field in that poll were also in single digits.

Both polls showed Perry’s favorability ratings are very high among Republican primary voters. Gallup recently published “positive intensity scores” on the GOP field (a metric that measures strong favorability against strong unfavorability), which show Perry as the highest rated of the GOP major contenders, although less known. In the PPP poll, Perry registered a 64 percent favorablility rating against 17 unfavorable, a number that reflected findings in another PPP poll released Tuesday of Iowa GOP voters.

The Gallup poll included live telephone interviews conducted from August 17th to 21st with Republicans and GOP-leaning independents, and has a sampling error of four percent. The PPP national poll used 663 automated interviews conducted from August 18th to the 21st with GOP voters, and has a sampling error of 3.8 percent.

via Perry Vaults Into Lead For GOP Nomination In Two National Polls | TPMDC.

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The Help Takes the Box Office, Becomes Second Viable Best Picture Contender of 2011

I loved the book and I loved the movie…

I’m glad to see the film of “The Help” getting such a great response and Oscar talk- especially for Viola Davis.

I really don’t quite get the criticism.  I don’t see how it glorifies Jim Crow or racism.  Quite the opposite.  One of the points is that the only way these black women’s stories could be told in the South in 1963, was anonymously and if a white women helped tell them.  The risks they took in just speaking to her were pretty clear to me.  As was the racism and danger of the times.

If anything, “The Help” shows the evils of racism and Jim Crow – and the Junior League.  Just kidding about the League.  Kind of…this does really show how it enforced conformity…

I was around in the South in 1963.  I think some of the people who criticize this film/book either weren’t there or are looking at the situation through a 2011 lens without the appropriate filters….

And the critic, who tweated her opinions on Twitter in a running stream while she watched the film, has no validity.  Anyone who texts during a movie is obviously not taking the time to absorb it or pay attention to the arch of the story.  And has no damn manners….

If Michelle Obama and Oprah Winfrey support it, that’s good enough for me….

From Sasha Stone at AwardsDaily.com:

Be it controversial or not there is no denying the power of The Help so much so that it is lighting up the box office through word of mouth.  The publicity has been off the hook as well, perhaps not playing to the blogerati but hitting right at the heart of white audiences, right smack dab in the middle of Blind Side territory.

I was sitting at a dinner with about six women (white, upper middle class) and the first thing that was brought up was “have you seen The Help? Wasn’t that so good?”  The conversation then checked in with who hadn’t yet seen it.  After it died down I brought up the subject of race.  Needless to say it didn’t go over well.  What did come out of the conversation was how timely the film was in terms of Hispanic nannies (do we say Hispanic or Latina?) and how there should be some rumination on this idea of what determines family and what doesn’t.

You can’t tell people who responded emotionally to a film like this that they shouldn’t like it because it isn’t politically correct, or that it’s offensive to African Americans and that any response to that is an endorsement of said repression and the perpetuating of the Jim Crow racism that has and continues to oppress multitudes.  I’m not even saying I disagree.  But I am acknowledging the emotional power of the film, just as I’m now acknowledging that a movie that does this well at the box office, has this kind of emotional heat, plays to women the way it does, has a very very good chance at winding up in the number 1 spot on AMPAS ballots.  Like last year’s winner proved, the heart wants what it wants. No matter if it was a stuttering King or not – the emotional response is real.

What makes an accidental Best Picture nominee today? It’s usually a movie that somehow slips under or over the blogerati, and/or critics (mind you, The Help received many good reviews, most notably from Entertainment Weekly’s Owen Gleibermann) to become a hit and a strong awards contender DESPITE the shunning by the elite (this theory was offered up on our podcast recording this morning by Jeff Wells).  In other words, a good movie is a good movie is a good movie.

When you have a screening at the White House by Michelle Obama and a very public endorsement by Ms. Oprah Winfrey herself, you can pretty much forget any sort of pubic shaming of the film; it has now been deemed perfect acceptable by two of the country’s strongest and most powerful black women.

It is also important to remember that voting is done privately and anonymously.  That keeps it fairly honest so that no one is necessarily going to vote for what they SHOULD vote for – not for the best film, but the film they liked the most, starring characters they cared about the most.  When it gets right down to it, the heart is the most influential organ when it comes to Oscar voting.

Therefore, I see The Help clocking in as 2011′s second truly strong and formidable Oscar contender (plus, when you get a load of the publicity team behind it you will see it can’t be beat).  I count the first as Woody Allen’s Midnight in Paris, another film that is receiving strong word of mouth, is Woody Allen’s biggest money maker to date and feels more timely than ever, as its message is about looking to the future and not trying to live in the past.

via The Help Takes the Box Office, Becomes Second Viable Best Picture Contender of 2011 | Awards Daily.

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Congress Has an Answer for Public Wrath: Eliminate Town Halls

Remember a couple of years ago, there were all those staged town halls with Tea Baggers ranting against health care reform?

That scared the Dems for life…

Well, the Republicans aren’t about to let that happen to them.  They are canceling their August Recess Town Halls or making people pay to attend.  So much for going back home and talking to the constituents they allegedly serve.  They aren’t about to allow those “YouTube” moments to occur or be captured.  If they do happen to have a town hall, most Reps are barring cameras and recording devices.

Paul Ryan  is just having people evicted from his office and/or arrested.

What was that Hillary said back in the 1990’s about a “vast right-wing conspiracy”?

From MotherJones.com:

Congress approval rating—currently 13 percent, according to Gallup—is at a historic low, and its disapproval rating, at 84 percent, is at a historic high. Many Americans eagerly awaited Congress August recess so they could use town hall meetings and other public appearances to  give their elected officials a piece of their mind. Theres just one problem: most of Congress isnt scheduling any town halls. None. Zilch.The think tank No Labels called the offices of all 430 active members of Congress and found that 60 percent of them werent scheduling town hall meetings. According to No Labels analysis, more Democrats than Republicans are shutting themselves off from their constituents: 68 percent of Dems and 51 percent of Republicans hadnt planned a town hall during Congress weeks-long summer break. Click here to see if your representative or senator is planning a town hall or not.Not to be ignored, angry citizens, at least in one high profile district, have taken action to get some attention. Last week, a handful of unemployed constituents organized a sit-in in GOP Rep. Paul Ryans office in Kenosha, Wisconsin, while 100 protesters picketed outside. Ryan in particular has drawn heaps of criticism for his plan to eliminate Medicare as we know it and refashion Medicaid into a state-based block grant program. In the end, Ryans staff had police remove the protesters from the office, which was done peacefully.Paul Ryan has made himself available during the recess—but for a price. Thats right: Ryan and other lawmakers are now charging constituents to attend public events and ask them questions. Ryan wanted $15 a head. Rep. Dan Quayle R-Ariz., Politico reported, is charging $35 from attendees who want to ask him questions over a catered lunch at a Phoenix law firm. Rep. Chip Cravaack R-Minn. also wants money—$10 a person—to attend an his event, which is hosted by the National Federation of Independent Businesses.Why the ticket price? At the very least, its a way to weed out the unemployed and financially burdened, who are also the most likely to give lawmakers an earful for the dismal state of the labor market and sluggish economic recovery. As Scott Page, a twice laid-off worker who participated in the sit-in inside Paul Ryans office, told a local blogger, “I dont have $15 to ask Rep. Ryan questions, so I guess this is the only means I have to talk to him.”

via Congress Has an Answer for Public Wrath: Eliminate Town Halls | Mother Jones.

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Marco Rubio: Medicare, Social Security ‘Weakened Us As People,’ Made Us Lazy

People really need to start paying attention to what these Republicans are saying- and the Democrats need to do a better job of publicizing it and calling them out in public.

This Tea Bagger Senator is on every GOP Presidential Candidates short list for Vice President.  Because he’s from the key swing state of Florida.  Well, his value may have just gone down.  This type of talk is not going to go over well in retiree-land….

Oh, one other thing….He seems to think families and communities should look out for their own.  Well, it’s not 1950 and families and communities are not necessarily there for people who have had to move around all their lives for jobs and to satisfy the Corporations they work(ed) for….These guys need to wake up.

From ThinkProgress.org.  Click the link to go to their site if you want to  see the video.  If not, hopefully, you will see it in an attack ad from the DNC soon.

 

Potential vice president running mate Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) dismissed the importance of programs like Medicare and Social Security during a speech at the Reagan Presidential Library this afternoon, arguing that the initiatives “weakened us as people”:

These programs actually weakened us as a people. You see, almost forever, it was institutions in society that assumed the role of taking care of one another. If someone was sick in your family, you took care of them. If a neighbor met misfortune, you took care of them. You saved for your retirement and your future because you had to. We took these things upon ourselves in our communities, our families, and our homes, and our churches and our synagogues. But all that changed when the government began to assume those responsibilities. All of a sudden, for an increasing number of people in our nation, it was no longer necessary to worry about saving for security because that was the government’s job.

via Marco Rubio: Medicare, Social Security ‘Weakened Us As People,’ Made Us Lazy | ThinkProgress.

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Large Things That Could Fit Inside Mitt Romney’s New House

Remember Mitt Romney?  The “unemployed” millionaire, former GOP favorite and candidate who considers Corporations “people”?

Well, here is some more information that shows just how much he is “just like us”….

More like shows just how much he “just doesn’t get it”….

From Vanity Fair.com:

The Huffington Post reports that uniquely unlikeable presidential candidate Mitt Romney “has filed an application with the San Diego government to bulldoze [his $12 million] 3,009-square-foot beachfront house in La Jolla, California, and replace it with a 11,062-square-foot property.” What sorts of things could Romney fit inside his new house? Tons of things, it turns out.

  1. The Memphis-area Enterprise-Rent-A-Car facility
  2. The Waubonsee Community College ceramics studio
  3. The Manhattan office of Bonobos, the men’s clothing store
  4. The meat locker at the Harlem Fairway
  5. The Diane Von Furstenberg flaship store in New York’s Meatpacking District
  6. The Condé Nast cafeteria
  7. The Music Hall of Williamsburg
  8. Jennifer Aniston’s old house
  9. The top-of-the-line luxury spa at the Trump International™ Hotel & Tower Las Vegas
  10. The world’s largest whale

via Large Things That Could Fit Inside Mitt Romney’s New House | Blogs | Vanity Fair.

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Student Loans Skyrocket, Grants Decline as College Tuition Spikes

This is  a problem that really disturbs me….

For generations, we have , as a nation, tried to encourage education and make it possible for any deserving Student.  An educated work force is the way to lead the world both economically and creatively.  Thought leadership leads to jobs and innovation….

But I really think the Republicans don’t want kids to get educations.  If you can think critically, odds are you see right through the GOP “smoke and mirrors.”  An educated electorate is the last thing they want….

I also partially blame today’s parents and students for driving up college costs.  All these new dorms going up so the kids can have private suites and private  bathrooms.  They seem to expect concierge level treatment from the schools.  How much of the increase in college costs is due to having to provide these luxuries to attract and keep today’s pampered students?

Still,  ultimately, we have to find a solution to make college affordable and for kids to be able to get jobs when they graduate.  Otherwise, the housing bubble bust is going to be nothing compared to the coming Student Loan explosion when these kids can’t pay off these outrageous loans.

 

From RawStory.com:

It’s no secret that college is an expensive endeavor, one that continues to hit the wallet well after the graduation caps are tossed. Recent data shows that the student loan situation is growing worse every year: students are accruing more debt and not always paying it off on time.

Mark Kantrowitz is the publisher of FinAid.org and has testified before Congress about the importance of financial aid programs. The bad news, according to Kantrowitz, is that not only is the burden of debt on students heavier than ever, it’s not going to get lighter any time soon.

“The total student loan outstanding debt exceeded outstanding debt for credit cards for the first time in 2010,” he said. “At the end of this year or early next year, outstanding student loan debt is expected to pass the trillion dollar mark for the first time.”

Between 1999 and the beginning of 2011, the federal student loan debt ballooned 511 percent. In the first quarter of 1999, the outstanding student loan debt was around $90 billion. By the first quarter of 2011, slightly over a decade later, the balance was around $550 billion in outstanding federal student loans.

Though the private sector doesn’t have the same stringent reporting requirements as the federal loan program, it’s easy to see that private loans have followed a similar steep upswing: The National Postsecondary Student Aid Study for the 1999-2000 school year reported $3,589,813,190 in debt through private student loans, which increased by 67.6 percent in the next year, and then by another 20 percent the next. Now, private educational debt is about $405 billion.

Combined, there is currently about $955 billion in outstanding student loans.

Moody’s reported this week that the default rate for private student loans is at 5.4 percent, up from 4.5 percent a year ago.

The rising rate of default can be linked directly to the poor state of the economy, Kantrowitz said.

“The main drivers of default rates are unemployment rates, interest rates and graduation rates,” he said. “It makes sense: if you don’t graduate, you’ll have more difficulty paying back your loans.”

The unemployment rate for those with bachelor’s degrees has also been on the rise, corresponding to the rising default rate for loans. Loans’ interest rates are also on the rise, an unfortunate conflation of sunsetting legislation that kept federal rates down and the national deficit, held at bay in part with the earnings from loans.

Unlike the financial crisis triggered by subprime mortgages, however, the student loan problem is not a bubble. It’s a balloon. As Kantrowitz explains it, a bubble is a disconnect between the value of a thing and its actual cost.

“It isn’t a student loan bubble so much as a long-term trend toward decreasing college affordability,” he said. “You can’t flip an education, turn around and sell it for more. You can only use it.”

Because student loans are a highly profitable, low-cost program for the government — they make about 15 cents back for every dollar they lend — there’s no danger of the loan program ending. Even on defaulted loans, the government still manages to recover about 85 cents per dollar loaned. As the deficit needs more feeding, however, interest rates on educational loans are one way to try and fill the gap, as are rising tuitions at state and public schools, which force students to take on more debt and make it harder for them to pay back that debt.

As education gets more expensive, students will look for less expensive options for their futures, thus decreasing the number of bachelor’s degrees earned per year and lowering the nation’s education rate.

“College affordability is going to get tougher and tougher with each passing year,” Kantrowitz said. “Every dollar of government grants is a dollar spent and every dollar of loan is actually profitable to the government. It’s going to be more difficult for families to pay for college over the next decade. Some students will shift their enrollment from more expensive college to less expensive college.

“Some will just not go to college.”

via Student loans skyrocket, grants decline as college tuition spikes | The Raw Story.

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Why there was an Earthquake in Virginia today….

Following the logic they used to explain Katrina and other natural disasters, there must have been an earthquake in the Old Dominion because Pat Robertson’s and Jerry Falwell’s organizations are headquarted in the State of Virginia.

Or because the Virginia Attorney General, Governor and GOP are anti-gay equality…

Seems logical if you buy into their previous assumptions…

Of course, logic doesn’t apply to these folk’s thought process…..

Maybe the earthquake was so mild just to warn those guys…..

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