Archive for December 21st, 2010

Dec
21

HeartHealthy Organizations Can Help Foodies During the Holidays

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HeartHealthy Organizations Can Help Foodies During the Holidays

One of the most difficult times of the years for everyone — when it comes to our diets — is also perhaps one of the happiest times of year: the holidays. Somewhere in the mix, we each must decide when, how much, and if at all we are going to reach for that caramel-covered treat, chocolate-dipped delight, or calorie-filled fritter.
This is an especially important consideration for those people who suffer from cardiac disease or other diseases that can cause the onset of cardiac disease, like diabetes or high blood pressure. For this reason, we here at Harboring Hearts Housing thought it was important to remind everyone that the joys of cooking can also be heart-healthy and full of deliciousness.
Over the years, I have known Sophia Brittan. She is a New York based healthy-cooking advocate, holistic health counselor, and a young woman who has dedicated much of her time to developing an approach to food that highlights different ways, that many of us never knew existed, to eat right and enjoy the experience — one that can include sweets and desserts.
For the holidays, Harboring Hearts reached out to Sophia and her online cooking show, Kitchen Caravan. She has created a special heart-healthy holiday recipe in support of Harboring Hearts mission to bring awareness to cardiac disease, and to feel good about the alternatives that exist for a happy, healthy heart diet. This year, she suggests an absolutely delicious white chocolate tartlettes.
It can be an incredibly stressful responsibility to change one’s ways, especially when it comes to food. So much of our heritage, cultural connections, memories, and comforts come from the foods we have grown to love. Sometimes, though, those foods can be our demise; eliminating them, emotionally painful. However, when it comes to sure-fire ways to be proactive about prevention of cardiac disease, diet should be one of the first places we look.
If you find that you are prone to heart disease, make the changes. Modify your lifestyle, but always remember that amazing, healthy alternatives exist for your palate — and Kitchen Caravan, Harboring Hearts, and many heart-healthy organizations exist to help you in that transition.

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Dec
21

The FCC Vote A Fresh Start for the New Year

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The FCC Vote A Fresh Start for the New Year

Earlier today, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) voted 3-2 in favor of a Net Neutrality plan which will provide assurances that Americans will continue to have an open Internet. Although the plan was not perfect, I believe it gives the business community a reason to invest in our country’s future. It seems appropriate that this compromise comes during the holiday season and just ahead of the New Year. It’s been a hard road as Congress, FCC Commissioners and other stakeholders have pushed hard to include their own agenda within the Internet policy framework. And while there have been numerous points of contention this vote marks a fresh start for 2011.
There are a number of benefits that will result from passage of this plan. Providing market certainty gives a much clearer understanding about where regulators stand which provides more direction for companies to strategize on how to best use and invest their resources. This means money will begin flowing to business expansions and new projects. This money will be used to build out a high-speed Internet infrastructure. These investments will create new employment opportunities for small businesses contracted by major telecommunications and high-tech firms and enable small companies that provide materials, supplies and manpower with opportunities for new business. These include companies that provide the materials for cell phone tower installation, high-speed Internet cables and network technologies to monitor and manage intricate supply chains.
All of this couldn’t come at a better time as Americans are desperate for some good news, especially in the form of new jobs and new investments in their communities. This is a positive step in the right direction, especially for low-income and minority communities who need access to affordable broadband. Affordable access to mobile devices and broadband technology allow for more Americans despite their income or ethnicity to connect online. This provides a new platform to learn, apply for jobs, invest and manage one’s health care. In our modern society and with a more global economy having access to information and cutting-edge technologies is necessary for undeserved communities to thrive.
As the new Congress begins its work in January, perhaps today’s vote will serve as a symbol that policymakers, advocacy groups and business interests can still come together and find common ground. As we all know Washington is far from perfect, yet inch by inch we can make progress and trying to guarantee all American’s can tap into the resources and opportunities available on the Internet. For many families across the country struggling to pay bills or find a job, it’s going to be an especially difficult holiday season. However the FCC’s plan should give us all a little comfort knowing that next year should prove more promising than the last.

Follow Julius H. Hollis on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/digitalequality

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Dec
21

Tough Sledding For Santa

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Tough Sledding For Santa

It’s been a tough year for a lot of people, including Santa. The BIG guy has seen a lot of changes at the North Pole. Elf layoffs top the list with the outsourcing of toy manufacturing going to China. The effect of that is that the GNP (Gifts from the North Pole) is running way behind the output from last year.
Mail was way down, too. No need for so many elves to open as many “Dear Santa” letters anymore; kids just text him now. He’s trying to adjust to that.
Santa’s reindeer fared no better with Rudolph and his iconic red nose replaced by a GPS system. And with the sleigh running off an electrical charge, Donner and Blitzen are looking for work too.
Mrs. Claus is economizing by repairing Santa’s old suit from last Christmas instead of making him a new one. She told him he had to tighten his belt.
Once the sleigh is loaded and Mrs. Claus waves him off on his long nighttime journey, he’ll face other bumps in the sky as well. As soon as he lands, he’ll need his passport or some other form of identification before he even thinks of going down a chimney. The TSA (Temporary Santa Association) has been notified that he is on his way and they are ready to pat him down the minute his bulging body hits the living room floor. His sack will go through the x-ray machine set up especially for him at every stop. He’ll still have to remove his belt, boots, hat, coat, gloves and suspenders.
Once cleared, the jolly ol’ man can leave those much dreamed about toys and munch on sugar cookies made just for him. When his work is finally done, he’ll take to the sky again (but not before going back through security), and wish a, “Ho! Ho! Ho! Merry Christmas to all, and to all a good night!”
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year from your friends at Ciao Italia!

This Blogger’s Books from
Ciao Italia Five-Ingredient Favorites: Quick and Delicious Recipes from an Italian Kitchen
by Mary Ann Esposito
Ciao Italia Slow and Easy: Casseroles, Braises, Lasagne, and Stews from an Italian Kitchen
by Mary Ann Esposito

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Dec
21

Tim BernersLee Says WikiLeaks Is Not Open Government Data

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Tim BernersLee Says WikiLeaks Is Not Open Government Data

Earlier this week, Tim Berners-Lee, the director of the World Wide Web Consotrium and inventor of the World Wide Web, expressed some of his views on WikiLeaks, putting them in context with his efforts on open government and open data. Last month, he wrote an important article in the Scientific American that called for support for continued open standards and neutrality on the Web. Embedded below is video of his answer to a question from the audience at the 2010 Information and Communication Technologies and Development Conference at the Royal Holloway University of London.
Berners-Lee was clear on one count: Open government data is data about a country which “is not personally identifiable information about individuals. It does not have privacy issues associated with it. And it does not military or state secrets.” That’s inline with the definition for open government that the Obama administration advanced in its directive last December, or the perspective that Berners-Lee provided at the first International Open Government Data Conference.
In the context of open government and WikiLeaks, Berners-Lee position appears clear: the data that constitutes the Iraqi War Logs, Afghan War Diaries or “Cablegate” does not represent open government. WikiLeaks could, perhaps, be said to have opened government data, but not to be a host for open government data.
Berners-Lee also addressed the question of transparency and the role of WikiLeaks itself in context, both of which have been contentious issues:
When we talk about transparency, we’re not talking about breaking confidentiality, breaking state secrets or military secrets. What’s funny is that people have focused on one individual who is part of the crowd of people involved in WikiLeaks as though they make the leaks. They didn’t make the leak. WikiLeaks, despite their name, do not make leaks. They just provide a service of putting things on the Web.
The presence of WikiLeaks also introduces a larger issue of anonymity online, which Berners-Lee considered:
There is an interesting question, which I don’t know the answer to at the end of the day, as to whether it is very, very important for somebody to be anonymous, or at the end of the day, it’s just very, very important for society as a whole to be able to remove somebody’s anonymity. I think both thing’s true…and they’ll…battle up eventually to occasionally ending up in the Supreme Court because both things are important.
Berners-Lee did not provide the audience with a clear way forward, driving home the complexity that free societies face in untangling how to preserve protections for the accountability that the press provides in the context of the disruption to institutions that the Internet continues to create.
The whistleblower idea is very important to democracy, for the overturning of repressive regimes. The idea that the press should be able to not reveal their sources, for example, is a very important principle, and the fact that people should be accountable for what they say, and that you can’t just go out there anonymously insulting people, libeling them, creating havoc, which then spreads uncontrolled [?] damage across the blogosphere without any kind of accountability. That’s an important principle too. Obviously these principles are in conflict. And we, as a society, have to work out rules which allow us to have norms on both sides of the line, which allow both principles to survive, and where they are in total conflict, have a way of resolving in each case. That’s my feeling I’ve been asked that question a few times.

Follow Alexander Howard on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/digiphile

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Dec
21

Washington Lobbyists and Prophets of Doom

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Washington Lobbyists and Prophets of Doom

Sidewalk prophets of doom and Washington lobbyists know the best time to hype an “end of the world” story is just before the world is scheduled to come to an end. But the sidewalks are littered with the placards of doomsayers whose predictions flopped.
That’s why industry lobbyists have been pushing so hard right now for a vote in the lame duck Senate to block EPA from doing its job to protect our health and welfare from the pollution that is driving global warming. And that’s why Texas, the Alone Star state, is going to a second court with the same flimsy tale of woe that left the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington unconvinced earlier this month.
EPA’s first steps to start reducing carbon pollution from the biggest new power plants and factories are scheduled to begin on January 2nd. So this is the last best time to claim the world is coming to an end. Because after New Year’s Day, it will be clear for all to see that the sun is still coming up each morning, that the juice is still flowing from our power plants, and that businesses big and small are still able to build new factories and create new jobs.
We’ve seen this movie, and we know how it ends. Over and over, doomsayers have claimed the Clean Air Act is about to kill the economy. But from 40 years of progress, we know we can have both cleaner air and a strong, growing economy with more good jobs. And we know that the benefits of the Clean Air Act exceed the costs by as much as 40-to-1.
Earlier this month, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected claims by Texas and industry trade associations that EPA’s modest requirements will block construction of new plants and strangle the economic recovery.
Remember, when you make claims like that in court, you have to prove them. But here’s what the court said on December 10th:
In fact, except in Texas, big new or expanded facilities will be able to get permits with “best available control technology” pollution limits for greenhouse gases in a timely way in every state, acting either on its own or with EPA’s assistance. Just as they are for other pollutants, those “BACT” emission limits will be bounded by what is technically and economically practical, and will reflect available and affordable control measures to limit increases in heat-trapping pollutants.
Texas’ problems are of the state’s own making. The state’s highest elected leaders are grandstanding to Tea Party types about supposedly unconstitutional federal intrusions into the sovereignty of Texas. Meanwhile, they’re hanging Texan companies out to dry. They’ve refused to change their own regulations to enable the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality to issue permits for carbon emissions to companies wanting to build big new and expanded facilities. And they’ve refused to cooperate with EPA, which is offering a back-up way to issue those permits until the State gets its act together.
Every other state has taken one of the available paths to keep new construction projects going unimpeded. Texas alone has refused. Instead, last week the governor and the attorney general went to a second court — the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans — with the same request to “stay” EPA’s actions that was rejected by the Court of Appeals in Washington.
The fact is that if there’s a “construction moratorium” in Texas in January, it will be the fault of the governor and the attorney general, not EPA.
Texas’ latest lawsuit is almost certain to be thrown out, because you don’t get to go shopping with the same arguments in a second court when you lose in the first.
Meanwhile, in Washington, the industry lobbyists were pulling out all the stops to convince the Senate that the world is coming to an end in January. In a fact-free, over-the-top two-page letter, the Chamber of Commerce and a hodgepodge of trade associations charged that EPA’s greenhouse gas measures will cause “a virtual freeze on new construction of manufacturing facilities or energy efficiency modifications to existing facilities.” The Industrial Energy Consumers of America chimed in to claim that the rules “are detrimental to private sector investment, economic growth and job creation and will delay US economic recovery” and will “encourage… companies to invest abroad rather than in the US.”
Senate efforts to block EPA’s greenhouse gas measures fell apart late last week, but we know we’ll see plenty of attacks on EPA and the Clean Air Act in the next Congress. By then, however, we’ll have real-world proof that the first steps to curb carbon pollution did not stop the construction of new facilities, big or small.
The doomsayers are trying so hard now because they know that the world will not come to end next year. If Congress just let’s EPA do its job, everything is going to be all right.

This post was first published on NRDC’s Switchboard blog.

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Dec
21

The Winter Solstice The Sun Is Born

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The Winter Solstice The Sun Is Born

It is from the state of original chaos, the elemental ether, the black void — The Great Uterine Darkness — that the old creatrix goddesses are said to have brought forth all that is. That the world started with the sacred spark of creative potential contained within the primordial womb is one of humanity’s oldest concepts. The visual symbol that represents the solar spark that makes all life possible, a dot enclosed within a circle, is also extremely ancient. Still in common use today, it is the astronomical notation for the sun.
Among the most archaic images of the sun is the brilliant radiance, the flaming aura that clothes the Great Goddess. The great Mother of the pre-Islamic peoples of Southern Arabia was the sun, Atthar, or Al-Ilat (later masculinized to become Allah). In Mesopotamia, She was called Arinna, Queen of Heaven. The Vikings named Her Sol, the old Germanic tribes, Sunna, the Celts, Sul or Sulis. The Goddess Sun was also known among the societies of Siberia, North America and Australia.
She is Sun Sister to the Inuit, Sun Woman to the Australian Arunta, Akewa to the Toba of Argentina. The sun has retained its archaic feminine gender in Northern Europe and Arab nations as well as in Japan. To this day, members of the Japanese royal family trace their shining descent to Amaterasu Omikami, the Heaven Illuminating Goddess, and display Her glowing image on their national flag.
According to legend, Amaterasu withdrew into a cave to hide from the irritating antics of Her bothersome brother, Susu-wo-no, the Storm God. Her action plunged the world into darkness and the people panicked. They begged, beseeched, implored the Sun Goddess to come back, but to no avail. At last, on the Winter Solstice, Alarming Woman, a sacred clown, succeeded in charming, teasing and finally yanking Her out, as if from an earthy birth canal, and reinstating on Her rightful celestial throne.
Other cultures see the Goddess not as the sun Herself, but as the mother of the sun. The bringer forth, the protector and controller, the guiding light of the sun and its cycles. According to Maori myth, the sun dies each night and returns to the cave/womb of the deep to bathe in the maternal uterine waters of life from which he is re-born each morning. The Hindu Fire God, Agni, is described as “He who swells in the mother.”
It is on the Winter Solstice, the day when the light begins to lengthen and re-gain power that the archetypal Great Mother gave birth to the sun who is Her son. The great Egyptian Mother Goddess, Isis, gave birth to Her son Horus, the Sun God, on the Winter Solstice. On the same day of the year, the Greek goddess Leta gave birth to the bright, shining Apollo; and Demeter, the Great Mother Earth Goddess, bore Dionysus. The shortest day was also the birthday of the Invincible Sun in Rome, Dies Natalis Invictis Solis, as well as that of Mithra, the Persian god of light and guardian against dark evil.
Christ, too, is a luminous son, the latest descendant of the ancient matriarchal mystery of the nativity of the sun/son. Since the gospel does not mention the exact date of His birth, the anniversary of His nativity was not celebrated by the early church. It seems clear that when the church, in the fourth century A.D., adopted December 25 as His birthday, it was in order to transfer the heathen devotions honoring the blessed birth of the sun to Him who was called “the sun of righteousness.”
The birth of the archetypal sun, the shining son of The Great Mother on the Winter Solstice brings forth the luminescence from Her dark womb and offers it as a gift of life to the world. This light that retrieves us from the dark of night, the pitch of winter, is a microcosmic recreation of the origination of the universe. The Winter Solstice, then, is an anniversary celebration of creation.
***
If you are in the New York City area, please join me for my 35th Anniversary Winter Soulstice Celebration. If you are not in New York, please join us in spirit!
“Reverence to Her: Keeping the Spirit Fires Burning” with Mama Donna Henes, Urban Shaman
Tuesday, December 21, 6:00 p.m. (rain or shine!)
Grand Army Plaza, Park Slope
Exotic Brooklyn, NY
718-857-1343
Free!
Join us as we drum back the sun. This solstice is an especially celestially auspicious occasion, as it is also the new cold moon and a total lunar eclipse. The last time there was such a propitious lineup was 1554! This is a family-friendly event, so kids are welcome. Please bring candles in glass holders and drums/percussion instruments.

This Blogger’s Books from
The Queen of My Self: Stepping Into Sovereignty in Midlife
by Donna Henes
The Moon Watcher’s Companion: Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About the Moon, and More
by Donna Henes

Follow Donna Henes on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/queenmamadonna

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Dec
21

Give the Gift of Curiosity to a Child for the Holidays

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Give the Gift of Curiosity to a Child for the Holidays

There it was again–that word. I was reading an account of the acquisition of Newsweek magazine by Sidney Harman, “the 92-year-old-stereo-equipment magnate” in the January issue of Vanity Fair. The author of this article, John Heilpern acknowledged the cynicism that this acquisition has engendered–since Harman is elderly and since he has never worked in journalism before–concluding, nonetheless, that this could just succeed and marveling at Harman’s “clear-eyed” optimism.
What would he like inscribed on his tombstone? Heilpern asked Harman. “Still curious,” was Sidney Harman’s response. And that’s the word: curious.
I am an inveterate reader of biographies and even obituaries of the people I find fascinating. I can’t tell you how often that word is used to summarize these fascinating people’s life courses: curious.
A decade ago, I attended the 90th birthday of Chicago businessman turned philanthropist, Irving Harris. Speaker after speaker praised his successes in improving the lives of young children, especially those children most at-risk. After thunderous applause, Irving Harris rose to speak. He said just a few words, but they have stayed with me over the decade since. He said that he was born curious and that no one had ever taken that from him.
Curiosity was indeed a hallmark of Harris’ life. In his later years, he delved into studying the brain development of young children and then argued passionately and persuasively for a societal investment in young children before problems emerged, rather than waiting to trying to fix problems in children when they were older. His was truly a life of accomplishment and meaning.
If being curious is a key to living a life of accomplishment and meaning, it is striking to me how little attention we pay to promoting curiosity in children. When we talk about what we want for our children, we usually talk about wanting them to be smart, to be good people, to be happy. Few of us say that we want our children to be curious.
In fact, curiosity can even be seen as a pesky trait. Think about when toddlers and preschoolers get into the “what’s that” stage–when they can’t stop asking questions, wherever they are. How many of us have heard a parent–or been a parent–who has tried to quiet our children’s incessant questions.
Science is increasingly telling us how essential curiosity is to learning. It is also telling us what we have to do to promote curiosity in children.
First, Irving Harris was–as usual–correct. We are born curious. One can even think of this as a survival skill. We are curious about what’s new, what’s different in order to try to figure it out, even master it. Researchers in infant development use the drive of infants to explore what’s new as a way of differentiating and measuring what they have already learned and what they have yet to learn.
Second, Harris was right about something else. We can rob children of their inborn curiosity if we shut them up when they are asking questions. We can also rob them of their inborn curiosity if we supply the answers to their questions without then giving them opportunities to act like scientist and arrive at their own conclusions–with our help of course. The studies of Laura Schulz of MIT, one of the pioneering researchers on curiosity, have made this clear.
Schulz: Critical Thinking from Mind in the Making on Vimeo.
I think of my son when he commented offhand that boys were depicted more negatively on television than girls. Rather than ignoring his comment or giving him my opinion, we created a little experiment. He kept a notebook beside the TV so he could count up the time that boys were presented negatively (as too mean, as too aggressive, etc.) on TV compared with girls. His results indicated that he was correct–but, as we pointed out, his results indicated that boys were on TV shows more often than girls or at least in the shows he watched. And that led to a second and a third experiment.
It is the holiday season and many of us are probably rushing around, thinking of last-minute gifts for our children. My wish for the holidays is that in addition to any material gifts we give them, we also give them the gift of curiosity. By that I mean:
We help them pay attention to something they really want to learn more about;
We listen to their questions; and
We help them find ways to experiment to answer their own questions.
Curiosity is indeed a gift that keeps giving.

http://MindInTheMaking.org

http://FamiliesAndWork.org

Follow Ellen Galinsky on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/ellengalinsky

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Dec
21

South American Diary Chile More Than Miners Are Being Rescued

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South American Diary Chile More Than Miners Are Being Rescued

Brasilia, Brazil – Ol from the capital of Brazil! (I had to drop the
“h” when I flew in from Chile). My short South American trip is in
full swing, and my head is spinning — counter-clockwise, of course.
The thing that has turned my head is not the north-south dichotomy but
the way the familiar political line between left and right is blurred
down here. Again and again I’ve been struck with the ways that Chile
and Brazil, the two countries I’m visiting on this trip, have, on key
issues, transcended the tired division between left and right the
United States seems hopelessly mired in.
This isn’t to say, of course, that the traditional political spectrum
has magically ceased to exist down here, but both countries have
narrowed the range of issues to be hashed out in the left/right
sandbox and widened the range of issues that have become part of the
national agenda — beyond partisan gamesmanship. This is the exact
opposite of what has been going on in the United States.
In the U.S., there is now hardly an issue that is exempt from the
toxic left/right battles — not even a bill to take care of the health
of 9/11 first responders.
And in contrast to the assumption sweeping Washington that, as Tom
Friedman put it, “America is only able to produce ‘suboptimal’
responses to its biggest problems,” at virtually every stop on my
South American trip I’ve encountered the can-do optimism that has for
centuries been at the heart of the American dream.
It reinforced the feeling that a country’s spirit has less to do with
absolute conditions on the ground than with the perception of whether
things are getting better or worse. And in Chile and Brazil, the
perception is that things are definitely getting better. Indeed, a
2009 Gallup study found that Chileans and Brazilians expect that their
lives five years from now will be significantly better than their lives
today.
Chile is led by a president from the right, Brazil by a president from
the left. But both have transcended stereotypes and shibboleths in
order to tackle hard problems.
The first stop on my trip was Santiago, Chile, where I interviewed
President Sebastin Piera. Piera is a first in many ways — most
obviously, he’s the first right-wing president Chileans have elected
in the two decades since Pinochet. He’s a billionaire; the third
richest man in Chile; a former professor with a Ph.D. from Harvard
whose thesis was entitled “The Economics of Education in Developing
Countries”; and he relaxes by, among other things, skydiving and
flying helicopters.
We are only a few minutes into our interview in the blue room outside
his office, dominated by a huge painting by the Chilean surrealist
Matta, when he tells me: “By the end of this decade, we want Chile to
be the first country in South America to have eliminated poverty, to
have closed the gap in income between rich and poor, and to be
recognized as a developed — not a developing — economy.”
To achieve this, he is putting more resources into overhauling his
country’s education system. “Nothing is more important,” he told me.
Piera’s urgency is accentuated by the knowledge that, in keeping with
Chile’s constitution, he can only serve one term at a time. When, in
a conversation with his wife Cecilia Morel at lunch the following
day, I remark on his intensity, the First Lady laughs: “Yes, I know.
I’ve lived with it every day for 37 years! He recharges by working.
I, on the other hand, need silence and time by myself.”
Piera took office on the heels of a catastrophe. His inauguration
came less than two weeks after the devastating February 2010
earthquake and tsunami that killed over 500 Chileans, leveled or
severely damaged 4,000 schools, and left 2 million Chileans homeless.
Piera tried to put the devastation in perspective for me. “The
economic damage is equal to 18 percent of Chile’s gross domestic
product,” he said. “In comparison, the cost of Katrina was less than
one percent of America’s GDP.”
Seven months later, 33 miners became trapped in the San Jose mine — a
twist of fate that tested his leadership and became a defining moment
for his country and his presidency.
In the beginning, his advisers told him to keep his distance from the
disaster, lest he be too closely connected to what was almost
certainly going to be a tragic outcome. But Piera disregarded their
advice, listening instead to what, in uncharacteristic language for a
head of state, he describes as “my inner voice.” And he attacked the
crisis with his signature verve. When his experts offered him three
different strategies for rescuing the trapped miners, he ordered them
to do all three at the same time. “That,” he told me, “is what I
would do if it were my children in the mine.”
The triumphant rescue has helped rebrand Chile and Piera. When I
talked with rescued Chilean miner #21 Yonni Barrios (he was the one
with the wife and mistress both holding vigil outside the mine), he
said of the president: “I didn’t vote for Piera, but if he were
running again I definitely would. If it wasn’t for him, I wouldn’t be
alive.” I later asked Barrios what his New Year’s resolution is. “I
don’t make New Year’s resolutions anymore. I take life one hour at a
time.”
Piera’s outlook is more long-range — and unfailingly optimistic.
During our talk, he repeatedly used the phrase “the sky’s the limit”
when talking about Chile’s prospects. It’s a far cry from the Obama
administration’s fervent embrace of “politics as the art of the
possible.”
When I ask Piera about President Obama, he pauses for a moment then
tells me: “Life is tough — and you have to be tougher than life to
change the world.”
And Piera is intent on changing, if not the world, at least Chile.
And he’s willing to cross traditional ideological boundaries to do so.
If his focus on poverty makes him seem less like a conservative
businessman-turned-politician and more like a traditional South
American social democrat, he’ll tell you that’s only because you are
listening with tired ears. “We’ve got to move beyond the idea that
the public and private sectors are at odds,” he told me. “Government
has to lay the groundwork for private equity to productively invest in
things like education. It’s a partnership, not a battle.”
Piera has now been in office nine months and has wasted no time in
letting the country — and his own government — know that he’s
determined to get things done. In February, before he even took
office, at a press conference announcing his ministers, he gave each
of them a computer drive containing his policy goals, which he hung
around their necks.
It reminded me of the sticker Winston Churchill would place at the
top of urgent items: “ACTION THIS DAY.”
To avoid conflicts of interest, Piera required his ministers to step
down from any positions they held in private companies (although he’s
been criticized for taking too long to do the same). And to make sure
they stayed in touch with the people, he’s got each of his ministers
twittering, and has a young, energetic social media team that I met
with at the Palacio de La Moneda, where his office is.
But it’s not just on economic issues that Piera breaks the left/right
mold. In August, a regional commission gave the go-ahead for the
international company Suez Energy to develop a coal-fueled
thermoelectric power plant near a Chilean nature reserve.
Environmental groups protested. Piera intervened and scuttled the development.
And when I met with Antonio Patriota, Brazil’s incoming Foreign
Minister, he told me that Piera had “surprised everyone” when, soon
after taking office, he sided with Brazil and other countries in
pressuring Honduran President Porfirio Lobo, a conservative who
came to power in a military coup, to not attend a EU-Latin
America-Caribbean Summit. The assumption that Chile’s first
right-wing leader since Pinochet would side with Lobo was turned on
its head, with Piera saying he wouldn’t attend the conference if Lobo
was there, since he didn’t consider him the leader of “a legitimate
government.” (It’s worth noting that Chile, like the U.S., has since
recognized Lobo’s government.)
From the Palacio de La Moneda I went to Bellavista, the neighborhood
where Pablo Neruda lived. Over 30 years ago, I had read in Neruda’s
essay “Childhood and Poetry” a passionate summing up of empathy as a
guiding principle both for life and for politics.
“To feel the intimacy of brothers,” Neruda wrote, “is a marvelous
thing in life. To feel the love of people whom we love is a fire that
feeds our life. But to feel the affection that comes from those whom
we do not know, from those unknown to us, who are watching over our
sleep and solitude, over our dangers and weaknesses — that is
something still greater and more beautiful because it widens out the
boundaries of our being, and unites all living things.”
And this widening out of the boundaries of our being is what turns statecraft into soulcraft. And as Piera has so far demonstrated, it is definitely beyond left and right.
Next: a look at Brazil and why it may be time to rebrand the promise of upward mobility the South American Dream.

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Third World America: How Our Politicians Are Abandoning the Middle Class and Betraying the American Dream
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Dec
21

Green News Report December 21 2010 Audio

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Green News Report December 21 2010 Audio

TWITTER: @GreenNewsReport.
The ‘GNR’ is also now available on your cell phone via Stitcher Radio’s mobile app!.
IN TODAY’S RADIO REPORT: The Planet strikes back in 2010 — and packs a winter wallop; More Wikileaks: sneaky moves on biotech crops and climate negotiations; Evangelical Christianity’s War on Environmentalists begins; PLUS: Which is better — real or fake? (Christmas trees, we’re talking about Christmas trees!) …. All that and more in today’s Green News Report!
Got comments, tips, love letters, hate mail? Drop us a line at GreenNews@BradBlog.com or right here at the comments link below. All GNRs are always archived at GreenNews.BradBlog.com.
IN ‘GREEN NEWS EXTRA’ (see links below): Carcinogen found in drinking water of 31 U.S. cities; Ocean acidification may disrupt the marine nitrogen cycle; GM launches new electric hybrid car in US; New federal efforts to control Asian Carp insufficient: states; ‘Shark finning’ ban passes House; CA to launch cap-and-trade system; Investigative Journalist Greg Palast, busted by BP in Azerbaijan; EPA ethanol move slammed by auto, boat manufacturers; Mexico oil pipeline blast kills at least 28; Toxicologist says LA seafood may not be safe for children … PLUS: The Science of Cities: the future or a dead end? ….
‘Green News Report’ is heard on many fine radio stations around the country. For additional info on stories we covered today, plus today’s ‘Green News Extra’, please click right here…

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Dec
21

Repubs Latinos and Redistricting Some Hope for Dems Down the Road

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Repubs Latinos and Redistricting  Some Hope for Dems Down the Road

So, the new Census numbers are out, and the Rs look to benefit mightily. One of the most revealing takes was Dave Weigel’s breakdown of the states destined to gain Congressional seats vs. the party in control of the process — not so pretty for Dems.
At least for now. But remember, the Sun Belt states that gained population are doing so in part because of an increase in the number of people of Hispanic descent living within their borders, which may portend a political change down the road. As more Latinos move to Texas, Arizona, Florida, Nevada and similar states, the entire electoral math may shift, particularly if Republicans keep doing things like killing the DREAM Act — seats that are comfortably Republican after this year’s redistricting may be much more competitive a few years down the road. But that’s cold comfort for Democrats today — and don’t say you weren’t warned, again and again.
– cpd
Originally published on Epolitics.com

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Dec
21

BREAKING FCC breaks Obamas promise allows corporate censorship online with fake Net Neutrality

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BREAKING FCC breaks Obamas promise allows corporate censorship online with fake Net Neutrality

Minutes ago, the FCC passed new rules — written by corporations — that will end Net Neutrality. For the first time in history, the U.S. government approved corporate censorship of the Internet, putting the future of online free speech at risk. Unbelievably, the person leading the charge was Obama appointee Julius Genachowski (known in some circles as Judas GenaComcast for his historic sellout and notorious industry-friendly attitude).
These rules also violate President Obama’s campaign promise to protect Net Neutrality and appoint an FCC Commissioner who would do the same, but some media are reporting the corporate spin that this is a “Net Neutrality compromise.” The White House is trying to convince us this isn’t a sellout as well with their wholly supportive statement.
This is not a compromise and it doesn’t fulfill Obama’s campaign promise — not even close. There’s no such thing as half a First Amendment and no such thing as prohibiting “some” corporate censorship. In reality, these rules are what Senator Al Franken said they are:
Today was another historic sellout to big corporations by the Obama administration, not some kind of “win.” We need to set the record straight.
I’ve put together a page with three clear reasons why today’s rules are a sellout, allow corporate censorship, and end the Internet as we know it. I’ve also copied them below. Can you share this page with our friends so we can get the word out?
If you’re on Twitter, please click to share this: NEWS: @FCC breaks Obama promise, allows corporate censorship – no Net Neutrality rules. 3 things to know: http://bit.ly/eVKyWH @WhiteHouse
If you’re on Facebook, click here to spread the word.
Here’s why today’s rules are nothing but a sop to big business:
Corporate censorship is allowed on your phone: The rules passed today by Obama FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski absurdly create different corporate censorship rules for wired and wireless Internet, allowing big corporations like Comcast to block websites they don’t like on your phone — a clear failure to fulfill Net Neutrality and put you, the consumer, in control of what you can and can’t do online.Online tollbooths are allowed, destroying innovation: The rules passed today would allow big Internet Service Providers like Verizon and Comcast to charge for access to the “fast lane.” Big companies that could afford to pay these fees like Google or Amazon would get their websites delivered to consumers quickly, while independent newspapers, bloggers, innovators, and small businesses would see their sites languish in the slow lane, destroying a level playing field for competition online and clearly violating Net Neutrality.The rules allow corporations to create “public” and “private” Internets, destroying the one Internet as we know it: For the first time, these rules would embrace a “public Internet” for regular people vs. a “private Internet” with all the new innovations for corporations who pay more — ending the Internet as we know it and creating tiers of free speech and innovation, accessible only if you have pockets deep enough to pay off the corporations.
The FCC could have reclassified Internet as a communications service — reversing a Bush-era mistake — regulated greedy corporations like Comcast, Verizon, and AT&T with enforceable rules, and protected free speech online. But they didn’t — instead, they allowed these corporations to write their own rules.
It’s imperative the FCC’s action today isn’t seen as a “win” for Net Neutrality — the Internet is still unprotected from corporate abuse and we still have to fight until we truly win. So help us spread the word.
If you’re on Twitter, please click to share this: NEWS: @FCC breaks Obama promise, allows corporate censorship – no Net Neutrality rules. 3 things to know: http://bit.ly/eVKyWH @WhiteHouse
If you’re on Facebook, click here to spread the word.
I’m proud to work for the Progressive Change Campaign Committee

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Dec
21

We Are Not Scrooges

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We Are Not Scrooges

Ever been stuck in holiday traffic fighting to be stuck in a holiday cashier’s line so you can purchase low-priced presents on your high-balance Visa listening to high-volume holiday music and think, “Why am I doing this to myself?! I don’t even really LIKE Christmas. It’s just a scheme to get me to gain more weight AND gain more debt.”
When you’re broke, there’s nothing like Christmas to make you feel bad about yourself.
Nothing shatters one’s contentment more quickly than that ever-looping commercial in which a guy buys his wife a bow-wrapped $100K Lexus as a “surprise.” Every time it airs I think to myself, “My husband would have to put just that bow on layaway, and I’d still KNOW.”
But if you confess this deepest of secrets – this latent loathing of holiday “cheer” and the futile materialism of these now six weeks out of the year – someone inevitably hurls the accusation: What are you…a Scrooge?
Yes, Englishman Charles Dickens penned an American Classic. His A Christmas Carol, published in 1843, is now a staple of the season. It’s been re-made, re-hashed and re-imagined more times than John McCain’s political convictions. In the story a stingy old man hates Christmas until ghosts scare him into being generous. He ends up loving the holiday and all the trimmings.
However, Dickens unknowingly created a character who is now used as propaganda to quash all voices of Christmas Present dissent.
The dreaded: You are a Scrooge.
To which I say: No, I am not. If you read the tale, Scrooge is – wait for it – rich.
This is a widespread yuletide misnomer. It must be stopped now. I’m not even going to comment on Christ never envisioning his birthday plagued by obligatory tchotchke acquisitions; senseless seasonal slaughter of Douglas Firs; or the pointless battle about Wal-Mart greeters muttering “Happy Holidays” (a contraction of holy days) versus the more allegedly pious “Merry Christmas” to an indifferent public. Charles Dickens, an advocate for the poor, certainly never meant for Ebenezer Scrooge’s name to be applied to those with a paycheck the size of Bob Cratchit’s.
Bob Cratchit – Scrooge’s underpaid underling – is nice to people all year round even though he’s paid hardly anything. You know, Tiny Tim’s dad. That’s who 98% of Americans are.
We’re a nation of Bob Cratchits who are terrified of being Scrooges.
Yes, the difference between a venerable philanthropist and a charitable person – is a charitable person works for a living.
But we want the picture-perfect holiday gift-buying guidebook Christmas. So we fret, agonize and figure out a way. We create for ourselves unnecessary annual stress. And then it all goes on a credit card with interest paid perennially. All because we don’t want to be seen as a miser. We have to do Christmas, or we haven’t done something right.
Not giving on Christmas is a moral shortcoming. Or so we’re told. Not having money? A sin.
In a Dickensian reality, if we haven’t made enough money to fall in a certain tax bracket the Ghost of Christmas Past won’t even waste his time with us. Any apparitions 98% of us see are from the 90-proof in our eggnog. Holiday ghosts and specters – we’ll call them executive bonuses.
From Cratchit’s point of view he just worked hard, enjoyed his family and was pleasantly surprised when his boss had a change of heart.
The U.S. poverty rate is now at 14.3%. Our current unemployment is 9.3%. Our once robust middle-class is looking a little anemic. The vast majority of us are stretched thin. My point is: It’s time to lighten up…mainly on ourselves.
We are not Scrooges. We do, however, work for some (author’s note: except MY editor, of course).

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Dec
21

School Violence How the Philadelphia School District Failed Its Students

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School Violence How the Philadelphia School District Failed Its Students

There’s been a lot of talk this year about how America’s schools are failing its children. That talk has focused primarily on two separate issues: 1) the quality of education and 2) bullying in schools. In the case of South Philadelphia High School in the Philadelphia School District, however, the school and its district failed on both fronts.
The following is a timeline of events that transpired over the last year at South Philadelphia High School and in the Philadelphia School District. Most of the links direct to posts by Angry Asian Man, who was our main source — and probably many others’ — on these events:
On December 3, 2009, 26 Asian students were attacked and beaten by a large group of their peers, mostly African American, throughout the school day at South Philadelphia High. 13 of the students who were attacked wound up in the hospital. There was already a history of violence against Asian students — many of them immigrants — at the school, whose student body is, according to current stats, 64.6 percent African American, 22.4 percent Asian American, 6.3 percent White, 5.8 percent Latino, and 0.8 percent Other, yet district officials were quick to dismiss that the December 3 attacks had been racially motivated.
After meeting with district officials following the attacks, a group of over 60 Asian students from South Philadelphia High remained unconvinced that their safety at school would be ensured and organized an eight day-long boycott. Wei Chen, a senior at the time, made this statement for the group:
During the boycott, the students asked to meet with Philadelphia School District Superintendent Arlene Ackerman about their safety concerns, but Dr. Ackerman refused, saying she would only meet with them on school grounds “where they belong.”
At the start of the new year, in January, the Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund interceded on behalf of the students and filed a civil rights violation complaint with the U.S. Department of Justice against South Philadelphia High School and the Philadelphia School District. The complaint revealed that the AALDEF had actually been working for over a year with various other groups to address the hostile environment towards Asian students that existed at the school:
In February, a little more than two months after the attacks, the Philadelphia Schools District commissioned a report on the violence that had occurred at South Philadelphia High School. Superintendent Ackerman called the report “thorough and comprehensive” and “fair.” But Helen Gym, a board member of Asian Americans United, a Philadelphia-based advocacy group, pointed out what appeared to be fairly obvious flaws in the report, all of which worked to deflect responsibility for the attacks from the school:
No review of the history of violence at SPHS: For more than a year, students and community advocates documented dozens of incidents of harassment and assaults on Asian immigrant students at the school. Yet, Judge Giles said he was directed to limit his investigation to only two days, December 2 and December 3rd. Only three sentences in the report (p. 28) reference prior violence at the school. The investigation also ignored documented efforts by students and community advocates to implement critical changes to address racially motivated violence at the school.
Limited interviews: The investigation only involved a fraction of the student victims and neglected the majority of victims, as well as other witnesses, school staff and community advocates who were at the scene on December 3. In a number of instances, those individuals interviewed expressed concern that they were denied a chance to tell their full stories and were cut off when they attempted to do so.
Limited attention to racial bias: While the investigation acknowledged the role of race in the assaults and harassment against Asian immigrant students, it does not recognize racial bias in the failure of the District to respond to that harassment and communicate with families and students. In particular, it does not address how the ongoing harassment of Asian immigrant students and the school’s failure to respond creates a hostile climate for Asian immigrant youth at South Philly.
Innuendo and rumors as deflection: I was particularly troubled by the use of innuendo and rumor to suggest that the events of Dec. 3 may have been gang-related. Two pages are devoted to references to gang activity despite the fact that no credible evidence was presented other than the suggestion that group activity is “reminiscent of a street gang conflict” (p. 5). In any investigation, it’s essential that innuendos, gossip and rumors be addressed and put to rest. It’s troubling that a stereotype of urban youth is so casually deployed in this report to deflect attention away from school accountability.
In April, another Asian student at South Philadelphia High School was assaulted, but the school district ruled that the student had been attacked “carelessly but unintentionally,” despite a conflicting witness account.
Before the start of the next school year, in August, the U.S. Department of Justice informed the Philadelphia School District that they’d found merit in the Asian students’ claims that they were singled out for abuse at South Philadelphia High School. From the Philadelphia Inquirer:
In a letter to the district, the Justice Department advised school officials to take steps to settle the matter. It was not immediately clear what form a settlement might take, though it would require the district to improve the treatment of Asian students, who say they have been mocked, harassed, and beaten at the school.
And then, finally, on December 15, 2010, one year and 12 days after 26 Asian students were assaulted at South Philadelphia High School, the Philadelphia School District reached an agreement with the Justice Department to address anti-Asian violence at the school. CNN reported on the details of the settlement:
The settlements require South Philadelphia High School to submit an anti-harassment action plan, and continue implementing policies and procedures to prevent harassment based on race, color and/or national origin…
The settlements, which hold the district responsible for implementation and oversight, resolve eight discrimination complaints alleging widespread harassment of Asian students at South Philadelphia High School.
While this settlement is a well-deserved victory for the Asian students of South Philadelphia High School and their tireless advocates, and it sets a precedent for effectively dealing with bullying and intimidation in our schools, one can’t help but look back on this yearlong fight, a fight that was courageously undertaken by a group of children, a fight for justice, fairness, and the very basic rights, and not be galled that it had to be a fight in the first place.
[CNN: Philadelphia school district agrees to measures to quell anti-Asian violence]

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Dec
21

Reapportionment Not Necessarily Good News for Republicans

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Reapportionment Not Necessarily Good News for Republicans

The just-released census data shows ten states losing Congressional seats: Illinois, Iowa, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, Ohio and Pennsylvania. Many of these are traditionally Democratic states, both in Presidential elections – where the number of electoral votes are determined by reapportionment – and elections for members of the House.
On its face, this would look to be bad news for Democrats – especially because the majority of the eight states that will gain seats in Congress are in the Sunbelt: Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Nevada, South Carolina, Texas, Utah and Washington.
The problem with this logic is that Republicans have a growing problem with minorities – and most of the population gain that led to the Congressional shift was among minorities – and especially among Hispanics.
Before they pop the Champagne corks, Republican strategists need only remember one of the chief take-aways from the Mid-term elections: Latinos saved the Senate for Democrats. Latinos in Nevada, California, Colorado and Washington provided the winning margin for Democratic Senate candidates – both on the strength of their heavily-Democratic performance and in increased turnout as a percentage of the electorate.
Of course Barack Obama’s victory in 2008 rested heavily on solid support among African Americans and Latinos – especially in states like California, Colorado, Florida, North Carolina, Nevada and Virginia. But the Latino part of that equation is even more important today, since Republicans have been driven by their Tea Party base to oppose immigration reform and to infuriate Latinos with their proposals to repeal the 14th Amendment and Arizona’s “papers please” law.
Republican defeat of the DREAM act last week only served to seal their fate with the Latino electorate. The DREAM act wasn’t even really about immigration reform, it was about simple justice. Young people who were brought to this country by no fault of their own and who were raised as Americans are being denied the ability to serve in the Armed Forces, to complete a higher education – to contribute to America – and are threatened with deportation to countries they barely know. They are Americans in every way – but without official documents. They are asking to be allowed to earn those documents – their citizenship – by serving in our Armed Forces or finishing at least two years of college. Yet Republicans filibustered the bill.
Well, you might say, it won’t matter how much Latino population growth impacts redistricting in states like Texas, Florida and Arizona – the Republican-controlled legislatures will draw the districts to benefit Republicans.
Not so fast. Democrats are not a protected class under the voting rights act. But Latinos and other minorities are. The Mexican American Legal Defense Fund – and the Federal Courts – will assure that the power of the growing Latino electorate is not diluted. That means that we could very well see an increasing number of Latino-dominated – Democratic – Congressional seats in much of the Sunbelt.
In Florida, the voters approved a Constitutional Amendment in the Mid-term election requiring that the legislature create districts without reference to partisan considerations. That will have a powerful impact on both Congressional and State Legislative Districts in 2012 – much to the benefit of Democrats.
Many of the losses of population in the Midwest and East are in more rural areas of these states. As a consequence, many of the lost districts – even where Republicans control redistricting — may inevitably be Republicans. And in states where Democrats control redistricting, like Illinois and New York, they will certainly be. In Illinois, for instance, expect to see the districts of Republicans Shimkus, Schock, and Johnson combined into two downstate districts.
When it comes to Congressional Districts the net effect of the new census data will certainly be no better than a wash for Republicans – and possibly a net plus for Democrats.
Nationwide, twelve seats will change hands. Here’s an initial estimate of the net pluses and minuses.
Gains:
Texas – 2 new Republican Districts, 2 new Democratic (Latino) Districts
Florida – 1 new Republican District, 1 new Democratic (Latino) District
Arizona – 1 new Democratic (Latino) District
Georgia – 1 new Republican District
Nevada – 1 new Marginal District
South Carolina – 1 new Republican District
Utah – 1 new Republican District
Washington – 1 new Democratic District
Losses:
Illinois – 1 fewer Republican District
Iowa – 1 fewer Marginal District
Louisiana – 1 fewer Republican District
Massachusetts – 1 fewer Democratic District
Michigan – 1 fewer Marginal District
New Jersey – 1 fewer Marginal District
Missouri – 1 fewer Marginal District
Pennsylvania – 1 fewer Marginal District
New York – 2 fewer Republican Districts
Ohio – 1 fewer Democratic District, 1 fewer Republican District
If that estimate proved to be correct, reapportionment will leave the electoral map with a net of three additional new solidly-Democratic Districts, one additional new solidly-Republican District, and a net loss of four Marginal seats.
Regardless of whether this estimate proves out through the redistricting process, the results of the census are certainly no slam dunk for Republicans in the House.
When it comes to the Presidency the loss of electoral votes in New York, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Iowa, Illinois — and potentially Ohio, Michigan and Pennsylvania – hurt President Obama’s electoral vote count. These losses total negative six electoral votes in likely-Democratic states and the loss of four in potential-Democratic states.
Losses in Louisiana and Missouri will likely cost the Republican candidate two electoral votes. So the net losses from the Democrats due to losses is ten electoral votes.
Additions in Washington and Nevada will most likely benefit Obama’s electoral vote math, bringing the net Democratic electoral vote loss to eight. That number could drop to six if Florida once again falls into the Democratic column in 2012.
All of this might affect the outcome of a very close Presidential election, but it is not likely to be dispositive of the outcome.
And over the next decade, the effect of redistricting could shift even further in the Democratic direction. Even a state like Texas that is – at the moment – dominated entirely by the Republicans – may soon experience a major Democratic resurgence. Thirty-seven percent of Texas residents are of Hispanic origin. Even now Texas is a majority-minority state. Yet both of Texas’ Republican Senators voted against the DREAM Act. As U.S. News and World Report notes today: “In part because of the Bush family’s moderation on race and immigration, Democrats failed at assembling (and getting to the polls) the kind of multi-racial coalition there that has proven successful in other states. But unless Jeb runs for president, the Bush era is over, at least for a generation.”
In sum, the Republicans have allowed the Tea Party hard core to trap them into an increasingly difficult political box canyon when it comes to Latinos and other minorities. The new census numbers are unlikely to help them escape.
Robert Creamer is a long-time political organizer and strategist, and author of the book: Stand Up Straight: How Progressives Can Win, available on Amazon.com.

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Dec
21

PLAY SKIP Five Albums You Should Have Played This Year

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PLAY  SKIP Five Albums You Should Have Played This Year

Which are the five albums you should have played this year? Take a listen, and decide for yourself.
What to Play, What to Skip
You’re busy people. You have shopping to complete and New Year’s resolutions to write. Who has time for Top 100 lists? Be honest, you’re lucky if you’ll listen to 10 new albums, much less 100. So let’s split the difference. Here are five albums that should have been on your playlist this year. There’s still time to download. I’ll be spending next week listening to them all. See you again on January 4. Thanks for reading this year. Here’s to discovering lots of great new music to play in 2011.
WATCH the Must Play Pick of 2010: Lost in the Trees.
PLAY: The Black Keys, “Brothers”
The Ohio duo has been channeling Delta blues dudes for almost 10 years. On “Brothers” they dig even deeper, spitting out 15 songs steeped in Motown, Memphis, and Muscle Shoals. The Black Keys have not only put Akron back on the musical map (no offense, Devo or Chrissie Hynde), but they’re also giving old school jams new school cred. In a world of Pro Tool-ed Bieberisms, thank God the Black Keys are winning by keeping it real.
WATCH the video for the Black Keys’ “Tighten Up.”
PLAY: Lost in the Trees, “All Alone in an Empty House”
This major-indie debut from North Carolina singer-composer Ari Picker and his symphonic band of folk gypsies has stayed in my pocket since its August release. In a crowded field of overly sensitive, plaid-wearing singer-songwriters, Lost in the Trees is verging on creating a new genre of music. Call it neoclassical folk or acoustic pops, because Lost in the Trees turns the coffeehouse into the orchestra pit. “All Alone in an Empty House” may keep folk and classical music alive for another hundred years.
WATCH the video for Lost in the Trees’ “Walk Around The Lake.”
PLAY: Danger Mouse & Sparklehorse, “Dark Night of the Soul”
Released in the middle of summer, “Dark Night of the Soul,” sounds even better in these short winter days. But Danger Mouse and the late Mark Linkous did not come together to wallow in darkness. These 13 songs — sung with 11 guest vocalists, ranging from the Pixies’ Black Francis to Suzanne Vega — refuse to blink in the face of life’s ups, downs, beauties, and tragedies. “Dark Night of the Soul” is sweet, idyllic, despondent, and full of worn-out rage.
WATCH Danger Mouse & Sparklehorse’s “Little Girl” (Featuring Julian Casablancas).
PLAY: Arcade Fire, “The Suburbs”
“The Suburbs” could spell the end or the beginning for Arcade Fire — their outsider status is now forever blown away by an album that’s an inspired, urgent, fresh, and instantly classic work from start to finish. Expect the copycats to come running and get ready for the backlash. They’re all jealous. They should be. “The Suburbs” is the best thing to ever come out of a clone home cul-de-sac.
WATCH the video for Arcade Fire’s “Ready to Start.”
PLAY: Kanye West, “My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy”
Damn, Kanye West doesn’t make it easy. Between his crazy tweets and televised outbursts, you could be forgiven for wanting to dismiss him as more of an attention seeker than an auteur. Wrong. Kanye can deliver the genius along with the crazy. And with “My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy,” West has given hip-hop its “Highway 61 Revisited.” It’s an album that reaches into decades of musical and literary history (and film, if you count his spellbinding “Runaway” short), studies it closely, then instantly renders it obsolete. No doubt, Kanye West is maddening. That’s the price of admission. The dude is also a stone cold artist.
WATCH Kanye West’s “Runaway” (video version) featuring Pusha T.

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Thank You Shirl-ee May: A Love Story
Shawn Amos
In the Name of Love: Africa Celebrates U2
Various Artists

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Dec
21

Because No One Else Is Saying it Lost Was the Best Show of 2010

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Because No One Else Is Saying it Lost Was the Best Show of 2010

Typically, Lost starts its season in February and returns the following year at the same month — give or take. Since the groundbreaking series ended its run last May (with an emotionally solid finale in my book), it hasn’t really sunk in that there won’t be any more original episodes — until now. In other years around this time, we’d start seeing sneak peaks of the upcoming season on ABC and start speculating on what the heck was going to happen next on the island. Those days are gone, and for the first time since Jack Shepard closed his eyes for the last time in May, it’s set in.
As I began writing my list of favorite television shows of the year, I instantly placed Mad Men in the number one slot. In its fourth season, the drama really hit its stride creatively and displayed the best acting — and that’s saying a lot — that Jon Hamm and the cast has done thus far. That said, I couldn’t shake Lost and the survivors of Oceanic Airlines. The series featured some of the most bizarrely engaging storylines of all-time, and the most-layered and beloved characters — lead or supporting — ever. It’s a testament to the creators and writers that this show, which left you with boatloads of more questions than answers, rarely pissed you off to the point you’d given up on it. Sure, some viewers did just that but for those who stuck with it, the payoff was well worth the wait. It’s hard to find a series who had a stronger final season in the history of television. Yeah, I’m bold.
Anyway, below are my top five shows of the year followed by the fifteen best performances, top ten moments, and five unsung heroes (they don’t get the accolades they deserve) I saw on the small screen. I’m just another guy with another opinion so – of course – I’d love to hear yours, and feel free to try to convince me to give “Broken Bad” another try.
My Five Best Shows in 2010
1.Lost
2.Mad Men
3.Modern Family
4.The Walking Dead
5.Parks & Recreation
My 15 Best Performances on TV in 2010
1.Jon Hamm, Mad Men
2.Terry O’Quinn, Lost
3.Ty Burrell, Modern Family
4.Ted Danson, Bored to Death
5.Sofia Vergara, Modern Family
6.Hugh Laurie, House
7.Matthew Fox, Lost
8.Elisabeth Moss, Mad Men
9.Chris Colfer, Glee
10.Steve Carell, The Office
11. Jane Lynch, Glee
12.Tina Fey, 30 Rock
13.Chris Pratt, Parks & Recreation
14.Tracy Morgan, 30 Rock
15.Martin Short, Damages
Ten Best Moments on TV
1. Lost Finale
2. Betty White hosting SNL
3. Chris Colfer in Glee’s “Grilled Cheesus” episode
4. Don Draper’s out-of-left-field engagement on Mad Men
5. Hugh Laurie’s performance in last year’s House season finale
6. Jimmy Fallon’s Emmy opening number
7. Conan O’Brien’s return on TBS
8. The entire Modern Family Halloween episode
9. December’s Neighborhood brawl on Desperate Housewives (Only in the unintentionally funny category)
10. Ted Danson faking a urine test on Bored to Death
Five Unsung Heroes in TV
1.Lisa Edelstein, House
2.Jared Harris, Mad Men
3.Josh Holloway, Lost
4.Craig Robinson, The Office
5.Nick Offerman, Parks & Recreation

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Sweet ‘Stache: 50 Badass Mustaches and the Faces Who Sport Them
by Jon Chattman, Rich Tarantino

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Dec
21

2010 A Jerry Brown Odyssey

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2010 A Jerry Brown Odyssey

“Everyone thought we were the Bad News Bears up against the New York Yankees. But we pulled it out.”
– Anne Gust Brown, referring to her husband’s campaign against billionaire Meg Whitman, in her introduction of Governor-elect Jerry Brown’s victory speech. Brown won in a landslide.
In the long and winding road that is Jerry Brown’s life, there has been no shortage of odysseys. But with 2010 drawing to a close, and Brown confronting one of the greatest crises of governance seen in a modern state, it’s worth looking at this particular one.
Governor-elect Jerry Brown’s 2010 hopeful yet austere victory speech at the Fox Theater in Oakland on November 2, 2010. Backed by students from his two charter schools, the Oakland School for the Arts and the Oakland Military Institute, Brown is introduced by First Lady-to be (and more) Anne Gust Brown.
A year ago at the holiday parties of the smart political set, Brown was seen as the most likely next governor of California. He’d cleared the field for the Democratic nomination and his Republican rivals, though loaded with money, didn’t seem all that formidable.
But early this year, the conventional wisdom changed. Billionaire Meg Whitman, making good on her promise to spend more than any other individual in the history of American politics, was inundating the airwaves. The media, mostly stiffed by Whitman herself, was hyping her megabucks consultants and staff, and every one of their tech-heavy moves, as an awesome political machine.
Moving hard to the right, as expected, to win the Republican nomination, Whitman nonetheless moved into a statistical dead heat with Brown, who had led her by nearly 30 points in the fall of 2009.
Most of the media and political community in California, always overly impressed by very big money, alternated between screaming in alarm at the rise of Whitman and exulting in her looming victory.
Brown had raised, and was continuing to raise very big money, over $37 million in all, but couldn’t go toe to toe with Whitman over the fateful period between the June primary and Labor Day weekend. If he tried to, he’d lose a war of attrition against Whitman, whose campaign resources, both personal and corporate, were essentially unlimited.
With Brown choosing to ignore the hysterical chorus, keeping his powder dry in a Zen rope-a-dope strategy, Whitman’s plan was to blow him away while he was off the air, building a 12 to 15-point lead that he couldn’t make up after Labor Day.
But three things happened in this crucial period.
First, Brown cagily executed a series of statements and actions keeping him very much in the public eye. (As his brilliant mother Bernice told his sister Kathleen, then the state treasurer, in the early ’90s, state attorney general is the best office from which to run for governor.)
Second, Whitman became overexposed. And exposed as a dishonest candidate with dishonest advertising in the plethora of consultant-driven messages she unleashed. (It’s important to keep in mind that consultants, who are also vendors, don’t make more money by telling a politician to do less.)
Third, Brown got by with a little help from his friends in labor. It was never as big an effort as initially advertised, ironically by an independent expenditure committee that got the most media hype but did the least. But the California Working Families group, headed by consultants Roger Salazar and Larry Grisolano, keyed a larger, in many respects makeshift, effort that nonetheless pinned important labels on Whitman.
By the time Brown started ramping things up on Labor Day weekend, he was still running even with Whitman. Her summer-long offensive had failed.
Though Brown’s initial advertising required some adjustment, by the end of September, and the advent of the first debate, he had moved into a slight lead over Whitman. Then came Nicky Diaz, Whitman’s longtime illegal immigrant housekeeper, unceremoniously fired last year when she asked the billionaire for help with her legal status.
“Our state is in a real mess,” Brown declared in this key TV ad in his landslide-winning election campaign, promising not to sugarcoat the problems facing California’s state government.
Whitman already had a huge problem on illegal immigration from the primary. With a poor record on Latino hiring at eBay, Whitman had embraced comprehensive immigration reform as a means of appealing to Latino voters. But rival Steve Poizner launched a devastating, unending attack on her in the primary, forcing her to move far away from her earlier position. After the primary, she tried to pretend that hadn’t happened, launching a megabucks effort to try to con Latino voters into believing she was really for them. Her hypocrisy was already beginning to backfire. Then her hypocrisy was squared by the emergence of Diaz.
With younger Democrats becoming more comfortable with Brown the more they got to know him, he had been headed for an eight point win. That turned into a landslide.
Brown beat Whitman, 54% to 41%, with a whopping 1.301 million-vote margin, in the process winning more votes than any gubernatorial candidate in American history.
Senator Barbara Boxer, who beat ex-Hewlett Packard CEO Carly Fiorina, 52% to 42%, won by 1.001 million votes. Remember when the California Senate race was supposed to be a great opportunity for a Republican takeover?
Round 8 of Ali-Foreman, the legendary “Rumble in the Jungle” in Zaire 1974. The younger and more powerful George Foreman was the aggressor throughout the first seven rounds while the older yet highly conditioned Muhammad Ali played rope-a-dope.
The turnout was big, too, the biggest since 1994, nearly 60%. So much for the supposedly non-existent Democratic and labor GOTV program, not to mention the vaunted Republican program, which never really materialized despite many media reports touting it.
Now Brown, the inveterately youthful veteran pol, who is much more like the ancient yet ever regenerated and mischievous Doctor in Doctor Who than the wizened wizard Gandalf of the ponderous Lord of the Rings, has a massive crisis of governance on his hands.
It’s nothing he and his longtime friends and advisors hadn’t expected.
When I spoke with Tom Quinn and Lucie Gikovich, two of Brown’s oldest friends and advisors, the day after the election at Brown’s converted warehouse headquarters in Oakland, they were in a contemplative mood. But they knew it couldn’t last.
Quinn is Brown’s longest standing advisor, dating back to 1969. He was Brown’s campaign manager when he won his first public offices and was first elected governor in 1974, and served in his cabinet with an environmental portfolio as head of the Air Resources Board, which today is in charge of California’s landmark climate change program. Now he’s in the media business and, along with Anne Gust Brown, is one of the governor-elect’s two most important advisors.
Gikovich was Brown’s confidential secretary during his first terms governor and flew out from Washington for his election to an historic third term.
Both reminisced about Brown’s first campaign headquarters, even funkier than the current one. It was at Sunset and Vine in Hollywood. The previous tenant had left behind many cans of pornographic films, which the campaign, probably wisely, decided against selling.
How was the victory in 1974 different from that of 2010? For one thing, Quinn and Gikovich agreed, they were more ambitious when they were younger (and less ambitious than the young staffers milling about). For another, the situation today is more daunting.
Their old colleague from Brown’s first gubernatorial campaign, former Governor Gray Davis, agreed in a later phone conversation. He joined Brown’s team after the 1974 Democratic primary. Brown had been impressed by Davis after meeting him at candidate forums, Davis having run a fruitless campaign for state treasurer against the legendary Jesse Unruh.
As Brown has conducted a semi-stealthy transition, one thing is for sure. The Era of Limits, which Brown famously/notoriously proclaimed in the ’70s, has returned.
By a very large margin, billionaire Meg Whitman Whitman ran more negative advertising than any non-presidential candidate in American history while being buried in a Brown landslide. By the end of the campaign, she was simply non-credible outside the right wing.
Last week he conducted his second “civic dialogue” event on the state’s chronic budget crisis, this time at UCLA. Brown noted that voters are both skeptical and conflicted about government. They want to avoid reductions in services but they don’t seem to want to raise taxes.
“We’re in a dilemma as a society,” Brown said.
The format was similar to the previous Wednesday’s event in Sacramento, with Brown and a team of high-ranking experts on the stage — including past and future state budget director Ana Matosantos, state Treasurer Bill Lockyer, and state Controller John Chiang — laying out the dire fiscal situation, and hundreds in attendance asking questions and making statements.
The difference this time was the emphasis on education, and the fact that most of the Legislature was not in attendance. Many of those who were present serve on school boards, are parents, or work in education.
When the crowd applauded as Brown began, he warned that they might not be applauding after he unveils his first budget proposal on January 10th.
California already ranks near the bottom of the nation’s states in spending per student. And the state’s student-to-staff ratios are also near the bottom. The state is 49th in students per teacher, 49th in students per counselor, 47th in students per administrator, and 50th in students per librarian.
When state Treasurer Bill Lockyer, toward the end of the event, which ran over two hours in length, noted that education is the key to economic performance by recounting that just a matter of decades ago Jamaica, Nigeria, and Singapore were all on the same economic footing, Brown quipped that he has a biography of Singapore leader Lee Kuan Yew which he hasn’t gotten around to reading. But he vowed that if he had Lee’s authority, there would be great change in California. He was joking, of course.
Brown campaigned with his fierce rival for the 1992 Democratic presidential nomination, former President Bill Clinton, at UCLA.
Then he said that, nonetheless, when his budget comes out, anyone reading it should sit down first. And that anyone driving should make sure their seatbelt is fastened.
Noting as he did in the first event that the budget crisis began over a decade ago, Brown emphasized a search for understanding rather than blame. Brown seeks to get all the players on the same page in discussing the crisis and its solutions. If you can agree on the framework, Brown believes, solutions are much more likely. Brown also seeks to educate the public through the media. Polling shows, as I’ve said for quite awhile, that voters are very confused about their state government and hold many contradictory and wildly misinformed points of view.
But the news media hasn’t reported many of the facts, which is a major reason why the public is ignorant. In fact, I didn’t see a lot of reporting of budget realities in the stories on Brown’s forum to highlight those budget realities.
“It’s very hard to get any agreement if there’s no consensus on what the underlying facts are,” Brown noted.
Contrary to what most voters believe, as state budget director Matosantos and the others pointed out, 71.1% of the state government’s general fund expenditures actually go to fund local government and its services. Only 13.3% goes to state operations. 6.7% goes to debt service, 5.3% to the state’s universities, and 3.6% to public pension systems.
The state employee payroll is only $9.2 billion, not quite a third of the budget deficit, so bashing state employees is not the solution.
In any event, two-thirds of the state employee payroll is in corrections, in large part because of the prison build-up that has been so popular at the polls.
Absent permanent budget solutions, cuts, revenues, or both, large budget deficits will persist for years.
That’s true even with the slow-building economic recovery. The UCLA forecast is that unemployment will drop below 11% next year; it’s 12.4% now. But it’s a slow-growth recovery without a new economic boom, such as greentech. We’ve had the bubbles, in real estate and dot-coms, and they haven’t lasted.
Fox News talkers tried hard to change the subject from Whitman’s gross hypocrisy on illegal immigration to a crusade to have her former housekeeper deported.
The global recession absolutely devastated state revenues, which totally undercut Schwarzenegger’s nascent reforms. And the state government responded with three budgets in a row relying heavily on short-term solutions and solutions that did not materialize. In fact, over three-quarters of the budget solutions of the past three years fall into those categories.
But the hocus-pocus of politicians is matched by the dangerous fantasies of ideologues.
California is not one of the highest tax states in America. Actually, it ranks 15th in taxes and fees compared to other states, and is less burdensome than most of its Western neighbors.
And California state government is not flooded with employees. California actually ranks fourth lowest in the nation in the ratio of state employees per 10,000 residents.
Brown is playing it close to the vest as to precisely what he will do.
Which hasn’t stopped speculation.
What is certain is that there will be more cuts. There is no way around that. It’s also certain that popular programs can’t be salvaged with a cuts-only approach.
Perhaps some of these programs, which make up the bulk of state spending, can be devolved back to the local level, where the services are actually delivered. Perhaps their people can take responsibility for specific decisions to fund or not fund.
For California, alone among the large states in America, is in a straightjacket of governance. Part of it is due to the two-thirds requirement to raise taxes while only a majority is needed to cut or create a loophole. (These “tax expenditures” are greater than half the state budget, and are hardly examined after they are enacted.) Another part is due to the hyper-partisanship that afflicts Sacramento. Two implacable forces face off on most occasions, the anti-government faction and the ultra-government faction.
For a distressingly lengthy period of time, Whitman’s utterly absurd “plan” was taken seriously in the media.
So, since the late ’90s, beginning with Republican Governor Pete Wilson cutting the car tax, we’ve seen every bit of revenue and more used for spending or tax cuts.
And now, like Texas and most other states, California has a big budget deficit. And since state government, unlike the federal government, can’t run big deficits or print money — something that presidents from Ronald Reagan on, with the exception of Bill Clinton, have done as a matter of routine — California has a crisis of political dysfunction.
Even though it is the world’s eighth largest economy, as big as those of New York and Texas combined.
As Lockyer and Stephen Levy, director of the Center for the Continuing Study of the California Economy, point out, California’s demise is more than a bit exaggerated.
Thirty years ago, general fund expenditures totaled about $7.43 for every $100 of personal income. In the 2009-10 fiscal year, that ratio was almost $2 less, at $5.52 for every $100 of personal income. In the current fiscal year, per capita general fund expenditures will total $2,246, less than the $2,289 spent 10 years ago and roughly equal to the inflation-adjusted level of 15 years ago.
From 2000 to 2009, the number of businesses per capita in California held steady, while the number dropped slightly in Texas, Arizona and Nevada.
The state’s high unemployment rate, which is nonetheless lower than that of neighboring Nevada, frequently touted as the supposed beneficiary of California’s demise, is due in large measure to this being “a bleak time for the construction industry. Construction spending in California declined from $100 billion in 2005 to $40 billion last year, as we went from building 200,000 new homes a year to fewer than 40,000 and the state lost more than 600,000 construction-related jobs.”
Despite its problems, California has had strong economic growth over the past decade. As Levy and Lockyer point out: “From 1999 to 2009, the state’s GDP rose by 27.2%. That’s better growth than in the U.S. as a whole, which saw GDP growth of 20.2%, or in Texas, where GDP grew by 25.9%.”
And California is getting more than half the nation’s venture capital investments, more than it was getting at the beginning of the last decade.
Perhaps this more balanced perspective, recognizing that the state’s government is within a few realignments and less than one percent of GDP of being flush, is why Brown seems undaunted by a daunting situation.
Last Tuesday night in Sacramento, Brown accepted the award of his late father’s induction into the California Hall of Fame from Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, who referred to Governor Pat as the “builder of modern California.”
For his part, the once and future governor said that the term that most brought to mind his father is “go-getter,” which Brown implicitly applied to Schwarzenegger, a quintessential go-getter whose job approval rating has moved back up from the low 20s this past summer to 32% in the latest Public Policy Institute of California poll, as well as the other Hall of Fame inductees.
Brown framed his candidacy in March, saying he has “an insider’s knowledge” and “an outsider’s mind.” He will need both to succeed in the dysfunctional culture of California’s Capitol.
Brown then told an amusing anecdote about the time he took his father to a monastery, where the former governor was thoroughly bored by the silence and meditation.
Having gone on vacation with Pat Brown, I can only imagine.
Schwarzenegger referred to the once and future governor’s father as the “builder of modern California.” Which indeed he was, in many respects, with the universities, highways, and water systems we still rely on today.
For his part, Jerry Brown recalled his dad as a “go-getter,” whose imperative was to “just keep going, keep pushing.”
“I once took him to the monastery,” he recalled. “He got so bored and so restless. He did not like meditating.”
It’s clear now that Jerry Brown, for all his penchant for meditation and analytical thinking, is his own sort of go-getter. As we’ve seen with his patience in the campaign just past, he doesn’t act simply to be active, as he once might have done. He acts when it’s time to act.
That sense of timing will be critical as Brown moves forward. On the one hand, he confronts a very serious crisis. On the other hand, it is a ridiculous crisis. Such is life.
You can check things during the day on my site, New West Notes… www.newwestnotes.com.

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Dec
21

Deutsche Bank to pay over $554m in tax shelter probe

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Deutsche Bank to pay over $554m in tax shelter probe
  • Deutsche Bank will pay 554m (360m) after admitting criminal wrongdoing in helping rich people shelter from US taxes.
    The sum includes the amount of taxes and interest that the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) was unable to collect.
    Federal prosecutors and the Justice Department said a non-prosecution agreement required the bank to continue co-operating.
    It must also allow an outside expert to make sure it does not do it again.
    Deutsche's tax evasion took place between 1996 to 2002.
    Its payment to US authorities follows a settlement prosecutors reached with the Swiss bank, UBS, which paid 780m in fines for helping clients hide their accounts from the IRS.
    Deutsche's 554m payment also includes a civil penalty of more than 149m.
    The bank said it was pleased the investigation had been resolved.
    A statement said: “Since 2002, the bank has significantly strengthened its policies and procedures as part of an ongoing effort to ensure strict adherence to the law and the highest standards of ethical conduct.”
    It added that it had already set aside the money and the settlement would, therefore, not have any impact on current net income.
    Recent figures from Deutsche Bank showed it made a third-quarter loss, which was linked to its planned purchase of Deutsche Postbank.
    It reported a pre-tax loss of 1.2bn euros (1.66bn; 1.05bn) in the quarter, hit by a 2.3bn-euro charge connected to the Postbank deal.
    Excluding the Postbank costs, net profit for the quarter was 1.1bn euros.

    Source:BBC

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    Dec
    21

    New Start nuclear arms treaty headed for ratification

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    New Start nuclear arms treaty headed for ratification
  • The New Start nuclear treaty between the US and Russia has cleared a key procedural hurdle in the US Senate and now looks set to be ratified.
    Senators voted to end debate on the issue, clearing the way for a final vote on the treaty, set for Wednesday.
    Ratification would be a victory for President Barack Obama and the Democrats, who have pushed hard for it.
    Some Republican senators oppose the treaty on a variety of grounds, though Mr Obama has called it crucial.
    “We are on the brink of writing the next chapter in the 40-year history of wrestling with the threat of nuclear weapons,” Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman John Kerry, a Democrat, said after the vote.
    The 67 votes in favour of the parliamentary motion to end debate puts the treaty above the threshold needed for ratification at the final ballot, and Mr Kerry said he expected as many as 70 votes.
    “In our nation's security interest we need a New Start treaty now,” Republican Richard Lugar told reporters, dismissing the calls from others in his party to hold more hearings next year.
    The would trim US and Russian arsenals to 1,550 deployed nuclear warheads – a cut of about 30% from a limit set eight years ago. It would also allow each side visually to inspect the other's nuclear arsenal to verify how many warheads a missile carries.
    The previous missile treaty expired more than a year ago, and Mr Obama and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev signed the New Start pact in April.
    For the treaty to take effect, it needs the votes of two-thirds of the US Senate, or 67 if all 100 senators are present.
    Top Republicans, including Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, John McCain and Jon Kyl, have said they oppose the treaty.
    They and other Republicans have lodged several procedural complaints, including an objection to Democratic efforts to hold a vote before the end of the year, and say they oppose non-binding provisions they say would hinder US development of missile defence technology.
    Meanwhile, some analysts have suggested Republicans oppose the treaty for political ends, seeking to deny Mr Obama a crucial foreign policy accomplishment.
    Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has warned the treaty would be scrapped if Republicans succeeded in altering its form from the document signed in April.
    On Monday, Adm Mike Mullen, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, sent a letter to congressional leaders on Monday urging them quickly to ratify the agreement, becoming the latest in a series of senior military and civilian national security officials to back it.

    Source:BBC

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    Dec
    21

    Asking and Telling Since 1975

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    Asking and Telling Since 1975

    December 18 was an historic day: The Senate finally followed the House to repeal the discriminatory “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” law. On this vote, Congress lived up to the values that lesbian, gay and bisexual servicemembers swore to defend.
    The fight against discrimination in the military has been long — longer, by far, than the 17-year-old DADT law. Lambda Legal began to fight back with a lawsuit in 1975 and over the years, we have been proud to represent many members of the military including Margarethe Cammermeyer, Joseph Steffan, Dusty Pruitt and Copy Berg. This year, we filed a friend-of-the-court brief in a legal challenge brought by Log Cabin Republicans, arguing that the impact of DADT extends far beyond those in uniform, to include lesbian, gay and bisexual adults and youth who must contend with the consequences of the discriminatory messages perpetuated by “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.”
    But last weekend, we all heard a new message from the halls of Congress: A majority of the members of the House and Senate declared an end to discrimination based on sexual orientation in America’s military. The President is eager to end the policy. A huge barrier to equality crumbled.
    Congress is just catching up to the public on this issue. An overwhelming majority of Americans supports letting lesbian and gay troops serve openly and with honor. And the recent survey of military personnel and their families shows an overwhelming majority — 90 percent — are not concerned about serving alongside someone who is openly lesbian or gay.
    We congratulate the many lesbian and gay servicemembers who risked or sacrificed their careers to fight for justice; the many LGBT advocacy groups and allies who fought together; and the members of Congress who voted for fairness.
    Many battles for equality in our family relationships, at work or in school, and in all aspects of our lives still lie ahead. The U.S. military is the largest single employer in the country and if it can end discrimination in its hiring and retention practices, so can every other employer in the country. Many LGBT people live in states with no explicit state protections against discrimination. We should enact a national Employment Nondiscrimination Act without further delay that includes protections against discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, gender identity and expression for all servicemembers and workers.
    As progress is made, the inequalities that remain seem all the more indefensible. For example, once DADT is ended, lesbian and gay members of the military will be able to serve openly and with honor – but their spouses and loved ones may not be recognized or receive equal services or benefits because of the discriminatory consequences of the so-called Defense of Marriage Act. DOMA must also be repealed.
    We still have a lot of work to do. But today, we feel stronger and more hopeful. We all fought for change, and we won it.

    Follow Kevin Cathcart on Twitter:
    www.twitter.com/lambdalegal

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Dec
    21

    Exclusive Interview with Tron Director Joe Kosinski

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    Exclusive Interview with Tron Director Joe Kosinski

    When director Joseph Kosinski got the assignment to create the science fiction film Tron: Legacy, he had a lot to prove. A commercial and feature film director best known for his computer graphics and computer generated imagery he got famous for such CGI related television commercials as the “Starry Night” commercial for Halo 3 and the award-winning “Mad World” commercial for Gears of War.
    Born in May 1974, the former Iowan was barely aware of the movies when the original TRON was released, but like a lot of his generation, he grew up on comics and video games. Having moved to Los Angeles, his professional career had its first boost when a graphic novel he was creating, Oblivion, stirred the interest of Disney. Then Warner Brothers engaged him to direct a remake of the sci-fi thriller Logan’s Run.
    In making this big-screen debut with Disney’s Digital 3-D Tron: Legacy, a sort-of sequel to 1982′s original, he had to comprehend the first film, incorporate its star Jeff Bridges, apply all the most fantastic state-of-the-art effects and make a coherent enough story that would both serve the fans of the original and newcomers who had never seen it. Apparently he succeeded well enough since Tron: Legacy won the week’s sales figure sweepstakes grossing $67 million on its opening weekend.
    Q: With a legacy film like this there is a responsibility on your shoulders; how does it feel?
    JK: The first film pushed the envelope in so many ways technically, visually and conceptually, so I felt like in doing this movie I would have to push this film in all the same ways to live up to that first film. In every choice we tried to choose the most ambitious path possible.
    Q: This legacy with actor Jeff Bridges, star of the original TRON, puts another responsibility on you, especially in having the director of the previous movie as your producer. How does that feel — the strain, the stress, and the drama.
    JK: Getting Jeff on board was my first goal, and once I did, I felt a lot better. I approached him three years ago, before we had a script, before I even shot a test piece for the studio. I knew that having an actor of his caliber was important to be at the center of this movie when you’re taking people to this other world. So Jeff was the first part of the equation.
    Then my second meeting was with Steve Lisberger, the director of the original TRON, and he could not have been more gracious in what he saw his role in making the film would be and how he wanted to support me and be there for anything I would need. It was incredible.
    It was great having him as a producer on the movie as well. He gave me access to his archives of the first film, so I got to see the original sketches that [French graphic novel creator] Moebius did for the first movie, which was really cool.
    Q: Are you a big comic book fan? A Moebius fan?
    JK: I remember his books, but for me, my big inspiration was [futuristic illustrator] Syd Mead; he was a god. He was the man.
    Q: Do you see this as sort of a classic mythological story or were you trying to figure out some new angles to good, bad, and evil, right and wrong, madness and sanity?
    JK: Yeah I think it’s a TRON twist on a classic mythical story. It’s a father and son story, but it’s also has an interesting triangle of characters. You’ve got Kevin Flynn, his biological son in Sam Flynn, but also got this digital son in Clu. And it was that triangle of relationships that to me, was something that hadn’t been done before.
    Q: You’re not making a romantic comedy or a dog story; it’s sci-fi. Was sci-fi inevitable in your life?
    JK: For me science-fiction is a genre with no limits. I have a background in design and I love the idea of kind of creating these worlds and showing people things they’ve never seen before. So for me it seems like a good place to be working right now.
    Q: What’s your favorite? I am asking about the obvious inspirations, but I also want to hear about the literary ones, the comic books, and the games. Are you a games boy?
    JK: I grew up at the arcades in the ’80s like everyone else who was born at my time. So my gaming years were putting quarters into Galaga and Pole Position and those kind of games. I’m not an X Box or a Play Station 3 kind of guy.
    Q: Are you a science-fiction book reader?
    JK: As a kid I was a pretty voracious reader because that’s what you did but lately not so much. Now it’s all kind of image making.
    Q: Who do you consider your godfathers in terms of the graphics, the visuals and technology?
    JK: Stanley Kubrick, Ridley Scott, and Steven Spielberg of course. Raiders of the Lost Ark was the movie that blew my mind as a seven-year-old kid.
    Q: Are you a tech geek as well in terms of exploring the limits of technology and where it’s going? Are you a favor of a silicon/carbon interface?
    JK: I was the kid who was hanging out at the Mac store in the late 1980s rather than playing in little league. I was on Mac Paint when the first version came out, so I’ve always been a tech geek, always trying to push technology, but always trying to do something creative with it.
    Q: Would you snort nano-bots to alter your body and mind? To make you live longer so you could make more movies to think of new ideas? That is, If you had that option.
    JK: Absolutely. I would do it. You’ve got a connection? You’ve got a line on something like that?
    Q: I’m working on it. When it came to coming up with this story, how much of it was this fixed idea? You have a responsibility to an older story but then you had to figure out how to diverge from it; at the same time you want to draw audiences so tell me about the conceptualizing…
    JK: I promised the studio two things: I’d deliver them a father/son story at the heart of this film, but also I would create something that didn’t rely on seeing the first movie to appreciate it. That was the challenge with this movie — to make sure that there’s this kind of human relationship at the center of it, but also to try to capture a whole new audience and get them up to speed on the world of TRON so that they know everything they need to know in the first 10 minutes of the movie. That was a challenging thing.
    Science-fiction films are tough enough with exposition when you’re trying to explain the rules of the world, but on top of that we’re trying to catch people up with 28 years of back story. So that certainly was a challenge and required a lot of work, especially on those opening scenes, to make sure that people go into this movie knowing everything they need to know. This is a movie where you’re going to have to pay attention to everything that’s said, because it all comes at you pretty fast.
    Q: who had that idea of going from the 2D real world to 3D Tron world?
    JK: We got that idea from The Wizard of Oz. It’s not my own. I always admired how The Wizard of Oz went from black and white to color when Dorothy got pulled in, so for me it felt like 3D was an amazing opportunity to kind of do the same thing.
    Q: Alright, why Daft Punk for the soundtrack?
    JK: I’ve been a huge fan of them for years and knew that there was a level of musicianship to their music that went beyond typically dance music. Obviously, they’re huge TRON fans, as you can tell just from seeing them, so I approached them very early in the process.
    We had breakfast, talked about our favorite movies, favorite film composers, and it was clear that we shared this desire to create a new kind of film score. A classic film score with classic melodies and themes, but we wanted to combine orchestral and electronic music in a way that hadn’t been done before.
    Q: You’ve had opportunities to do other remakes. What is it about the idea of remaking or building on a past cinematic legend that excites you?
    JK: I think that’s more of a function of what studios are willing to take bets on these days. They love the idea of having a built in audience on any property, and those movies of the ’70s and ’80s provide that. TRON, we should just note in the story that it’s not a remake it’s a stand alone sequel. We’re building on the story of the original.
    Q: You have lots of science-fiction ideas of your own or writers you want to pick from if you have your druthers?
    JK: Yeah, I’m actually working on a project right now called Oblivion, which is based on a story I wrote and the script is being written by William Monahan, who won the Oscar for The Departed a couple of years ago. He’s just finishing up the first draft as we speak.
    Q: What about taking some other classic science-fiction and doing it, like the stories Alfred Bester or J.G. Ballard or somebody like that?
    JK: I’d love to. It would be great to go back and bring some of these unfilmable stories to life because now anything’s possible. I’m also working with Disney on a reimagining of the movie The Black Hole, I don’t know if you remember that.
    Q: I love The Black Hole. I have it on DVD. What about your namesake — I assume you’re not related to Jerzy Kosinski?
    JK: I am not.
    Q: Not a bad namesake to have — maybe you’ll be making a Jerzy Kosinski book into a film. Or do you have literary pretensions?
    JK: Someone already did Being There, and it’s hard to top that film, so I don’t know how I could do any better than that.
    Q: What about branching out? In doing commercials you’ve got a variety of narratives you’ve worked with. Where will you go from here?
    JK: I don’t know, we’ll see. Obviously this is the big push is to get the word out there about TRON: Legacy, but after the first of the year we’ll see which one of these projects I’m working on catches first.
    Q: Were you anxious when you got this project? It’s great to finally get that feature out of the way, that first feature, but it is a lot on you for a first feature.
    JK: Yeah most people you try to do that first movie somewhere where no one would see it and kind of get it out of the way, but it doesn’t’ look like I’m going to be able to do that with this movie. It seems like it’s going to be out there in the spotlight.
    I feel very lucky and honored to have gotten the opportunity to make this movie and I’m really proud of the cast and crew that worked on it. Obviously a movie like this takes thousands of people to work on it. It’s not a one man job by any means, it’s a huge group of people, and I’m really proud of the movie and proud of the work they’ve put into it.
    Q: What’s it like to live with a movie for so many years? Are you neurotic now?
    JK: It’s a crazy process. There’s a point in the middle of it where you’re a year and a half into it and you still have a year and a half to go where it feels like it will never end. My wife had a baby boy for days after I finished shooting and now he’s 17 months old and the movie is still not out yet, which is insane.
    Q: Finally, what do you think about the irony of having something as opposite as TRON possibly could be with True Grit out there at the same time? TRON, True Grit; they kind of fit together there in a sense but it must blow you away. Have you seen it?
    JK: I have seen it and Jeff is fantastic in both movies. Everyone should see both of them for sure.
    Q: It’s funny — you’ve got two very opposite genres at least in terms of setting. How do you feel about Westerns?
    JK: I love Westerns. I actually was thinking as I made TRON I treated the world inside like a Western. I mean I kind of thought of our movie as that. It’s like light cycles instead of horses. But yeah it’s great. I think they go well together; it’s a good one-two combo.
    Q: You’re going to have to get to Coen brothers to come see the movie.
    JK: I’d love to see what they think.

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Dec
    21

    On Christmas Cards and Seasons Greetings

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    On Christmas Cards and Seasons Greetings

    I’m thinking of tweeting my holiday cheer in 2011 on Twitter: Wishing you a Merry Christmas or Have a Happy Holiday Season!
    Done under a minute. Definitely in less than 140 characters.
    After all, I’m a married mom and freelance writer. Busy doesn’t even begin to describe my days and nights. When I’m not following up with editors on pitches and assignments, I’m navigating the obstacle course between being Betty Crocker and Cruella De Vil–thankfully, got rid of the white streak–to my husband and naughty-and-nice son, oh, and I almost forgot, struggling to write a memoir on the side.
    Twitter here I come.
    But hang on. In the era of electronic mass e-mailed Christmas cards and posted on Facebook Season’s Greetings (my stream started mid-December, with early holiday posts smacking of the same urgency as to which celebrity was spotted at Starbucks), I realize that I actually take a certain, albeit sadistic, pride in laboriously handwriting some 50 or so holiday cards each year.
    I attend to this cumbersome yet dedicated task while trimming a tree, cooking up a storm, attending school recitals, shopping for gifts, lugging home sacks of coal. Really, I even sent an annual Christmas card for years to our old cleaning lady in England, until I was informed she had died.
    The real reason I do this is more complicated. After all, it’s not especially green or useful. If anything, it’s carbon-blazing and time-consuming. But as a first generation immigrant (my heritage is Iranian and I was born in London), who has lived all over the place, I undergo this seasonal ritual to let faraway friends or dispersed family know that I haven’t forgotten them, that they remain dear to me, and that I can make this minor effort to do something more than update my status or hit send.
    But even I have certain card-inal rules.
    1.I don’t send cards to family I’m going to see over the holidays.
    2.I buy pretty but inexpensive cards (Target has a line I like).
    3.I keep greetings simple and faith-appropriate.
    4.If I’m writing to anyone with kids, I put in the children’s names in birth order if I recall them.
    5.I never include form newsletters (nothing I do is that interesting and I find them impersonal).
    6.I do try to add a personal line or two.
    7.I never send premade cards with a picture of my kid (I may pop in a picture of him once in a while).
    8.The folks I miss some years, I do my best to cover them the next.
    9.I don’t worry about my appalling handwriting; I just get the job done.
    10.I keep extra cards handy to reciprocate to those who send me one, unless it’s from Brooks Brothers or the Hyundai dealership!
    So I guess when I started this blog, I jumped the mouse. I’ll reserve the right to write my cards in 2011 the old-fashioned way, though I might tweet about it.
    Happy Holidays!

    Follow Charlotte Safavi on Twitter:
    www.twitter.com/CharlotteSafavi

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Dec
    21

    The Giving Pledge Dangerous Implications For Democratic DecisionMaking

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    The Giving Pledge Dangerous Implications For Democratic DecisionMaking

    This is the second and final part of a series of posts that looks at why I am skeptical that The Giving Pledge will have the kind of impact many people are saying it will. In Part I, I explored how the pledge is likely to have an extremely small impact on total giving, and how little money will likely benefit underserved communities.
    Below, I look at how giving by billionaire philanthropists has typically been limited in its effectiveness and has dangerous implications for democratic decision-making.
    Billionaire philanthropy has real limits and risks.
    Billionaires don’t typically like to share power.
    Some forward-thinking foundations share power with communities by including grantees or the constituent perspective on their boards. Others share power by giving most of their grants in the form of unrestricted general operating support so that the leaders of the nonprofits can best decide how to spend the money.
    But most billionaire philanthropists don’t follow these practices. The current trend in philanthropy is to develop highly specific theories of change around narrowly defined issues, and then to look for nonprofits that can carry out the foundation’s plan. It’s often called “strategic philanthropy.” In this approach, the billionaires and their families get to decide what the problems are facing communities and how best to solve them.
    “What’s wrong with that? It’s their money,” you might ask.
    First, it’s not entirely their money. Dollars donated by millionaires and billionaires should be thought of as partially public dollars. Given our current tax code, most gifts by the ultra-wealthy are subsidized at the 35 percent level by other taxpayers. A foundation created with a $1 billion gift is really $650 million from the donor and $350 million from the tax-paying public. When tax-exempt donations are made, the U.S. Treasury forgoes revenue, and other taxpayers pay higher rates to make up the difference.
    Second, there are real risks for democracy when we allow billionaires to have undue influence on public institutions. It has been well documented how the charitable choices of the ultra-wealthy are influencing government policy in this country and around the world. For just one example, look to an opinion piece in the Chronicle of Philanthropy, where education historian Diane Ravitch explains, “A foundation’s offer of a multimillion-dollar grant is enough to cause most superintendents and school boards to drop everything and reorder their priorities.”
    Third, having billionaires tightly control the decision-making process is not optimally effective, for three reasons.
    Overwhelming evidence from groups like Grantmakers for Effective Organizations and the Center for Effective Philanthropy shows that when nonprofits receive unrestricted support, they have greater impact. That’s because the people closest to the problems, those running nonprofits, often have important insights about how to find solutions. So to increase impact, billionaire pledge-takers would be wise to give more unrestricted funding.
    Research by theorist Scott Page demonstrates that diverse groups make better decisions, so a foundation that has a diverse board is likely to be more effective than a foundation with a small board that includes only the donor and a few members of his or her family. Advisory committees are a good half-way step, but there is no substitute for truly sharing power by adding community perspectives to the board of trustees.
    Another way billionaires often fall short of being optimally effective is that they tend to favor technocratic approaches to solving social problems. Yet, as philanthropy expert Michael Edwards points out in his latest book, many of the most pressing challenges we face are not best addressed with a business-oriented approach. Thorny social problems require investments in civil society and social justice, not technocratic business-driven solutions. Unfortunately, despite the fact that it is well documented that foundation investments in advocacy, community organizing and civic engagement have an incredibly high return on investment, few high-net-worth donors currently focus on promoting social justice in these ways.
    Happily, a few of the billionaire donors who have taken the pledge are leaders in social justice giving. Herb and Marion Sandler are among them — they’re big supporters of grassroots community organizing. Jean and Steve Case, too, have devoted more than 30 percent of their foundation’s grant dollars to social justice causes, primarily by investing heavily in civic engagement. But these donors are the exception rather than the rule among billionaire philanthropists.
    What’s needed to mitigate these risks and limitations is for billionaire pledge-takers to recognize that donors, taxpayers and nonprofits are really all partners in pursuit of the common good. We all have certain rights and responsibilities in this partnership. And as true partners, we need to share power. If signers of The Giving Pledge think about their philanthropy in this way, it will help democratize their work and lead to better results.
    (For more critiques of strategic philanthropy, check out these posts from Sean Stannard-Stockton, Susan Berresford and William Schambra.)
    Final Thoughts
    The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. once noted, “Philanthropy is commendable, but it must not cause the philanthropist to overlook the circumstances of economic injustice which make philanthropy necessary.”
    As I stated up front, all things considered, I’m glad the Gateses and Mr. Buffett started The Giving Pledge. It’s better for our nation and the world to have billionaires giving to charity than to leave vast amounts of their wealth exclusively to their kids. I hope this initiative inspires bolder giving from billionaires, millionaires and the rest of us.
    But it’s not just the amount of giving that matters. The quality of the giving matters, too.
    Thus far, The Giving Pledge has been silent on these questions of quality, following a politically safer route that says implicitly that all charitable giving is noble and of equal value. But that’s just not true. The choices philanthropists make determine to what extent the common good is served by their generosity. We should all hope they make good choices.

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Dec
    21

    The liberal divide recovery vsrevenge

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    The liberal divide recovery vsrevenge

    A tenured professor might not notice it. Nor would a television talk show host. A single parent driving a 12-year-old Toyota between two jobs will definitely see it and appreciate it. A two percent cut in the Social Security payroll tax means much for many in the Democratic party’s liberal base.
    They are keenly interested in the fine print in the tax-cut compromise President Obama reached with Republicans. They like refundable tax credits for children, tuition help and other items Republicans routinely reject. These liberal Democrats are not always articulate and are more practical than theoretical. Unlike liberal Democrats and Tea Party Republicans in Congress, they don’t believe that compromise equals surrender. They belong to the working class, not the chattering class. They are more interested in recovery than revenge.
    Revenge against rich Americans and their heirs and heiresses is an understandable emotion for liberal Democrats in Congress. Perhaps it was a form of post-election denial, acting as though Democrats had 70 Senate seats and a huge House majority. When Obama and Republican Senate leader Mitch McConnell announced a tax-cut deal, the House Democratic caucus roared dissent by voice vote. A few days later, House Democrats voted 139-112 for the compromise. The Senate vote was 81-19. This deal made itself because Congress is not good at a game of chicken. Democrats did not wish to raise taxes during a recession. Republicans, despite their Scrooge-and-Marley reputation, did not want to mark the Christmas season by denying an extension of unemployment benefits.
    Republicans have made protecting the rich their priority since the second administration of Ulysses S. Grant. Millionaire idolatry was never more evident than in this Congress. Strengthen the military? Not until millionaires see their tax cut coming. A treaty to help avoid nuclear war? Not until millionaires can alert their counting houses. A bill to assist heroic 9-11 responders? Not until Uncle Sam’s check clears.
    When Eugene McCarthy served on the Senate Finance Committee in the 1960s, he explained the GOP’s tax philosophy with a metaphor from his boyhood on a Minnesota farm: “Republicans believe in feeding the sparrows by feeding the horses.”
    Ronald Reagan knew how to package his tax cuts. Borrowing a phrase from Jack Kemp,
    he called Democrats “the party of envy.” In the cultural divide between the latte left and the lunchbucket left, the media-academic argument often dismisses the American dream as a corporate scheme. Democratic attempts to raise the estate tax often meet working-class resistance. Many a merchant thinks his shop will eventually be worth millions.
    Working-class Democrats, including many who will benefit from 99 weeks of extended unemployment payments, are familiar with the Bible story about a man who “went out early in the morning to hire laborers into his vineyard.” The workers agreed to a penny a day. He hired more as the day wore on, says St. Matthew’s Book 20. At payment time the first-hired workers “murmured against the good man of the house, saying, ‘These last have wrought but one hour, and thou hast made them equal unto us, which have borne the burden and heat of the day.’ But he answered one of them, and said, ‘Friend, I do thee no wrong: didst not thou agree with me for a penny? .. . . .So the last shall be first, and the first last, for many are called but few are chosen.” John F. Kennedy made tax cuts popular, saying “A rising tide lifts all boats.” In 1962, he also said “Life is unfair.” The two sentiments are not contradictory.
    Numbers, rather than emotion, will matter in 2012, when Congress votes again on extending the tax cut. Democrats, for their own good, must focus on economic recovery. They need to shed the rhetoric of revenge and offer a simple math test. Can Republicans document how many jobs they have created by making millionaires richer? Has the upper-bracket tax cut lowered the deficit? The record of the Bush tax cuts in 2001 suggests Republicans will lose that argument.
    On “Meet the Press” Sunday, Vice President Biden said “We will be able to make the case much more clearly that spending $700 billion over 10 years to extend tax cuts for people whose income averages well over a million dollars does not make sense.” He endorsed the number pushed by Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York to raise the taxable number from $250,000 to $1 million, a vividly clear line.
    The working class, too busy to begrudge, is also skeptical of “soak-the-rich” schemes and other flavors of pie in the sky. Income inequality is a legitimate concern of the academic-activist left, but the remedy lies in economics, not polemics.
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    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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