Friday, October 31, 2008

HAPPY HALLOWEEN !!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Welcome to SCARE TIME!!!!!!!!!!............The scariest thing this year is the possibility that McCain/Palin will win the election!!!!!!!!!!!!.............It's not looking that way but it didn't look so good for the GOP in the last 2 elections either.......I don't put anything past them...........So PLEASE VOTE!!!!!!!!!.............as they used to say "vote early and vote often"............LOL...........So here are a few pics to celebrate the season..........ENJOY!!!!!!!!...........Sugar Rush here we come!!!!!!!!!!..........LOL...........PEACE............Scott







October 31:


1517 : Martin Luther posts 95 theses

On this day in 1517, the priest and scholar Martin Luther
approaches the door of the Castle Church in Wittenberg,
Germany, and nails a piece of paper to it containing the 95
revolutionary opinions that would begin the Protestant
Reformation.

In his theses, Luther condemned the excesses and corruption
of the Roman Catholic Church, especially the papal practice
of asking payment--called "indulgences"--for the forgiveness
of sins. At the time, a Dominican priest named Johann Tetzel,
commissioned by the Archbishop of Mainz and Pope Leo X,
was in the midst of a major fundraising campaign in Germany
to finance the renovation of St. Peter's Basilica in Rome.
Though Prince Frederick III the Wise had banned the sale of
indulgences in Wittenberg, many church members traveled to
purchase them. When they returned, they showed the pardons
they had bought to Luther, claiming they no longer had to
repent for their sins.

Luther's frustration with this practice led him to write the 95
Theses, which were quickly snapped up, translated from
Latin into German and distributed widely. A copy made its way
to Rome, and efforts began to convince Luther to change his
tune. He refused to keep silent, however, and in 1521 Pope
Leo X formally excommunicated Luther from the Catholic
Church. That same year, Luther again refused to recant his
writings before the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V of
Germany, who issued the famous Edict of Worms declaring
Luther an outlaw and a heretic and giving permission for
anyone to kill him without consequence. Protected by Prince
Frederick, Luther began working on a German translation of
the Bible, a task that took 10 years to complete.

The term "Protestant" first appeared in 1529, when Charles V
revoked a provision that allowed the ruler of each German
state to choose whether they would enforce the Edict of Worms.
A number of princes and other supporters of Luther issued a
protest, declaring that their allegiance to God trumped their
allegiance to the emperor. They became known to their
opponents as Protestants; gradually this name came to apply
to all who believed the Church should be reformed, even those
outside Germany. By the time Luther died, of natural causes,
in 1546, his revolutionary beliefs had formed the basis for the
Protestant Reformation, which would over the next three
centuries revolutionize Western civilization.

Buy The Best of History 2008
http://shop.history.com/detail.php?p=71746&pa=EMC-0000051

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

General Interest
1517 : Martin Luther posts 95 theses
http://www.history.com/tdih.do?action=tdihVideoCategory&id=5483
1926 : Houdini is dead
http://www.history.com/tdih.do?action=tdihArticleCategory&id=7067
1961 : Stalin's body removed from Lenin's tomb
http://www.history.com/tdih.do?action=tdihArticleCategory&id=5484

More Pro-Voter Legal Decisions in Swing States


Posted by Steven Rosenfeld at 4:54 PM on October 29, 2008.


Pennsylvania ordered to provide emergency paper ballots while the Justice Department backs away from White House request to push for Ohio voter files.
lawyerselection2004heade1

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There were two important legal decisions on Wednesday that should help voters in Pennsylvania and Ohio.

In Pennsylvania, a federal district court ordered Secretary of the Commonwealth Pedro Cortes, a Democrat, to provide backup paper ballots if at least half of the voting machines break down in a precinct. Voting rights activists had sued the state, saying the ballots were needed because of voting machine problems during the 2008 primary, particularly in low-income neighborhoods. The plaintiffs presented their testimony at an eight hour hearing Tuesday.

"This is a huge victory for the voters of Pennsylvania," said John Bonifaz, legal director for Voter Action and co-counsel for the plaintiffs. "This ruling will ensure that many voters across Pennsylvania will not be disenfranchised when voting machines break down on Election Day."

The court's opinion and order said:

If 50% of electronic voting machines in a precinct are inoperable, "paper ballots, either printed or written and of any suitable form," for registering votes (described herein as "emergency back-up paper ballots") shall be distributed immediately to eligible voters pursuant to section 1120-A(b) of the Election Code. Emergency back-up paper ballots shall be used thereafter until the county board of elections is able to make the necessary repairs to the machine(s) or is able to place into operation a suitable substitute machine(s).

The coalition that sued the state included Voter Action, the NAACP Conference of Pennsylvania, the Election Reform Network, The Public Interest Law Center of Philadelphia and other private attorneys.

Meanwhile, the New York Times is reporting that the Justice Department will not push the state of Ohio to reveal the names of voters "whose registration applications did not match other government databases."

"The decision comes about a week after an unusual request from President Bush asking the department to investigate the matter and roughly two weeks after the Supreme Court dismissed a case involving the flagged registration applications," the Times' Caucus blog reported.

Ohio election officials contacted earlier in the day by AlterNet said the same thing, noting that career attorneys at the Justice Department -- who either would be leaving the government or seeking to stay on during the next administration -- would not want to put their careers at risk by pursuing such an overtly partisan intervention, despite pressure from the White House and congressional Republicans.

The bottom line in both these developments is the rights of voters, particularly in swing states, appear to be trumping partisan considerations or known shortcomings of the voting machinery.

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How Much Damage Has Eight Years of Conservative Rule Done to Americans' Psyches?


By Mark Klempner, AlterNet. Posted October 29, 2008.


The Bush administration used a politics of fear to diminish our ability to think critically and to erode our capacity to love.

When I was a teen growing up in Schenectady, N.Y., during the early '70s, I had an alcoholic neighbor whose favorite saying was, "The trouble with people is that they are no damn good." I was friends with his son, and whenever I'd go over to hang out at his house, his father would sidle up to me as though we were in a cocktail lounge, put his hand on my shoulder, and mutter his cranky credo.

I didn't immediately make the connection between his soft-spoken, liquor-laced presentation and my own father's hard, locked-in mistrust of people and the world. But I realize now that if drink could have loosened my father's tongue, he probably would have said the same thing.

As a child, my father experienced the anti-Semitism of the Poles and then barely escaped the Holocaust, fleeing Warsaw with his family just one week before Hitler invaded. Still, that doesn't explain everything. Anne Frank, born five years after my father, got trapped in the same genocide he escaped. And yet, holed up in her hiding place with Nazis prowling the streets below, she wrote in her diary, "In spite of everything, I still believe that people are really good at heart."

I don't think she was naive. On the same page, she writes of feeling "the suffering of millions," of being able to hear the "ever approaching thunder, which will destroy us too." Yet she held onto her belief in the goodness of humanity.

Over the years I've come to realize how much our basic opinion about humanity has vast repercussions -- not only on our personal lives, but also on our politics. If you assume people are "no damn good," you will probably favor more police officers and prisons, and you may not see anything wrong with capital punishment. You will also favor fences, walls and barriers of all kinds, and believe that it is prudent and perhaps necessary to own a gun. It's likely you will have supported George W. Bush in his pre-emptive war against Iraq, maybe even after you learned that he depended on lies and deceptions to carry it out. After all, life is about choosing the lesser of two evils.

And what if you think that people are "really good at heart"? Though you may be a dove, you will not necessarily be a starry-eyed dreamer. Many of those making the most basic contributions to society fall into this category: nurses, teachers, social workers, counselors. These individuals typically believe that it's better to rehabilitate people than to lock them up, and that negotiation and diplomacy are better than the use of tactics of domination and the last resort of war. They see true peace and security arising from goodwill and generosity, and probably keep a good book rather than a gun by their pillow.

I don't mean to suggest that everyone falls solidly into one category or the other. We have all internalized both attitudes to some degree, and they vie for ascendancy, depending on what is happening in our lives, and in the larger world. In times of peace and harmony we find more people agreeing with Anne Frank. In times of suspicion and mistrust, such as we find ourselves facing now, my alcoholic neighbor's rant has the world's ear.

It's not because of the events of Sept. 11, 2001. Yes, 9/11 was a defining moment, but there were many ways we could have defined it. The way the Bush administration chose has made us more afraid and has given us more to fear. All the wonderful promise of a new millennium has been subsumed by alerts of yellow, orange and red.

There are many ways to make our country a safer and more secure place. As Samantha Collier, chief medical officer of HealthGrades, points out, far more people die each year from hospital errors than died when the Twin Towers fell. According to Collier, "The equivalent of 390 jumbo jets full of people are dying each year due to preventable, in-hospital medical errors, making this one of the leading killers in the United States."

But hospital errors, infant mortality, AIDS and a host of other threats have not been a priority for Bush. Nor does it seem they will be for McCain if he gets elected.


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Mark Klempner is a social commentator, historian and author of The Heart Has Reasons: Holocaust Rescuers and Their Stories of Courage. He would like to thank James McConkey and others who commented on an early version of this piece: Amy Denham, Paul Glover, Gerry McCarthy, Alice McDowell, Nicole Sault and Richard Silverstein.

How the Economy Is Affecting Your Sex Life


By Vanessa Richmond, The Tyee. Posted October 30, 2008.


Softening up, going down, losing firmness -- it seems sex and the economy have more in common than language.

Softening up, crashing, going down, failing to launch, losing firmness -- it seems sex and money, or at least libido and the economy, have more in common than language.

In "Sexual Recession" in Forbes this week, Dr. Ruth cautions that people anxious about diminishing investments or "looming pink slips should turn their attention to a side effect of the present economic tsunami: the way it's washing away the love lives of couples caught up in the rushing waters. Stress, depression and anxiety all wreak havoc on the libido."

She talks about one couple in which a man fears he'll lose his job, which is affecting his sense of manhood, and therefore his sexual desire. He didn't want to burden his wife with his problems, so didn't tell her about any of this. His wife interpreted his silence and lack of interest to mean he was having an affair. Dr. Ruth says there will be many such misunderstandings in this kind of economy, and many will lead to divorce, because without sex, relationships fail. She says the cures are good communication, and the French approach: "L'appetit vient en mangeant," which means, "your appetite comes as you eat." Basically, take your clothes off, get into bed together, and it'll all work out. Otherwise, the "failing financial systems will rob you of the profits of your relationships" too.

Laboring in 'Splitsville'

"Will the Market Kill Your Marriage" is Time's offering on the subject. "Recession and divorce, it is said, go together like carriage and horse." And those "who labor in Splitsville" have three theories as to why. "There's the lawyer theory, that money provides the soft fatty tissue that insulates the marital skeleton; once it's cut back and people get a good look at the guts of their relationship, they want out. And there's the marriage-counselor theory, that couples who were never quite on the same page in the checkbook finally get pushed off the ledger by endless bickering over their dwindling resources. And the therapist theory, that financial worries cause stress, stress can cause depression, and depression is a total connubial buzz kill." It also floats a few new theories: some lawyers say that as stock prices have plunged, they've received inquiries from business owners and investors "looking to unhitch now, with the idea that being poorer on paper will work to their advantage when dividing assets." Nice.

And one Cambridge University researcher has just done a study measuring the naturally occurring steroids in 17 British male traders over time and found high levels of testosterone during bull markets and of cortisol during volatility. "Cortisol helps the body deal with threatening situations. But prolonged exposure to it, as during a lengthy downturn, makes people irrationally fearful, so when confronted with neutral situations -- say, that their spouse would like the leaves raked -- they react as if threatened. In other words, men can get funny when they're losing money."

The Best/Worst One Night Stand

It's not just sex but love that gets less trade. This week, there's also a sad essay by Salon's Sarah Hepola in Nerve called "Up in Smoke: How the Financial Crisis Ruined my Love Life" about a one night stand she had with a transactional lawyer. In the morning, she had decided she would either marry this guy or never see him again. Three days later, with no phone call ("I have no qualms about calling men, but I had come to a place where it was simply more interesting for me to be pursued") she figured it was the latter.


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A Solar Gold Rush Is Spreading From California to New Jersey


By Dara Colwell, AlterNet. Posted October 30, 2008.


With new solar-powered movie theaters and factories, the solar industry is exploding. But how far can it take us toward a clean energy future?

Solar power is exploding in America, particularly in California. San Luis Obispo's Palm Theatre and Berkeley's Shotgun Players are now the first solar-powered theaters in the country; FedEx's distribution center in Fontana has a solar system covering 20,834 square feet; and Google's Mountain View campus boasts America's largest corporate solar installation. True to its pioneering spirit, California is leading the way -- but that's not to say other states aren't tagging quickly behind.

"California has a comprehensive approach to solar. We have an aggressive, proactive environment that allows legislators to go ahead and do things -- the mentality is definitely here," says Andrew McAllister, director of programs at the California Center for Sustainable Energy (CCSE), a nonprofit dedicated to facilitating clean energy technologies and practices. McAllister muses that the state's energy crisis several years ago, when deregulation led to unpredictable electricity prices, goaded California into collective action. "Worldwide, solar is still driven by policy more than any other factor, and what makes California attractive is its political commitment to taking the lead."

In America, most of the policies that affect the solar industry are created at the state level. California, which is now poised to become the world's second-fastest-growing solar market behind Germany, has a long pioneering history, which has fueled the solar industry as much as the state's abundant sunshine.

As proof, in 2005, the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) approved $300 million for statewide solar rebates, tripling the original sum in order to bolster the market; since its Million Solar Roofs program kicked off in 2006, California has installed more solar panels than in the previous 10 years combined; and in 2007, the state approved the California Solar Initiative, the country's largest solar energy policy to date, offering homeowners a rebate on top of the federal tax credit and plans to provide $2.8 billion toward solar incentives over the next decade.

Says Adam Browning, co-founder of Vote Solar Initiative, the San Francisco-based nonprofit established to bring solar energy to the mainstream, "It's a dynamic race, of course. California is working hard to expand support, and our utility companies have been much more accommodating and aggressive."

But other states are giving California a run for its money in an increasingly competitive solar market. Take Oregon, which has been proactive in welcoming renewable energy business thanks to the state's Business Energy Tax Credit (nicknamed "Betsy"), which covers 50 percent of all project costs -- the country's largest solar incentive. In August, Oregon's Department of Transportation announced plans to build a solar panel installation along a stretch of interstate, the first such project in the nation; in October, Germany's SolarWorld opened the largest solar factory in the Americas in Hillsboro; and in the same month, Sanyo began building its $80 million, 70-megawatt solar manufacturing facility in Salem.

Oregon isn't alone. There's New Mexico, with an abundance of arid land and sunlight, offering the perfect platform for large-scale solar thermal installation projects. New Mexico recently welcomed a project from Germany's Schott Solar, one of the world's leading solar companies, which has invested $100 million to build a solar equipment manufacturing plant outside Albuquerque. And Arizona, Colorado, Michigan, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania and New Jersey (which, according to solar energy research company Solarbuzz, is emerging as America's next solar-friendly state) are all heavily recruiting solar manufacturers, not to mention creating attractive incentives.

As proof of the industry's vitality, in October San Diego hosted the industry's largest event, Solar Power International, boasting its greatest turnout ever -- from a few hundred attendees in 2001 to 23,000 this year. "The buzz created in San Diego is highly indicative," says Vote Solar's Browning. "This is a dynamic time for the industry as a whole right now."


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Dara Colwell is a freelance writer based in Amsterdam.

Evangelicals and Rural Americans Are Breaking Big for Obama


By Robert S. Eshelman, Tomdispatch.com. Posted October 30, 2008.


A mass defection from the Republican Party may be underway in counties that were once GOP strongholds. Call it the reverse Bradley Effect.

There's clearly a new political landscape forming in the U.S. That's what the polls are telling us. It's not just that the first major-party black candidate for President is leading by significant margins in the national polls; it's not just that North Dakota, a state George W. Bush won in 2004 by 64%, is believed to be "in play"; it's not just that Virginia which, like North Dakota, was last carried by a Democrat in the sweep year of 1964, is, according to the most recent Washington Post poll and others, in the Obama camp by at least 8 points, or that he's leading in a remarkable number of states Bush took in 2004, or even that Democratic Senate and House candidates are making a run of it in previously ridiculous places.

Consider, instead, three recent polls in the context of the Bush years. Obama and McCain are now in a "statistical dead heat" among born-again evangelicals, those Rovian foot soldiers of two successful Bush elections, according to a recent survey; and the same seems to be true in Sarah Palin's "real America," those rural and small town areas she's praised to the skies. According to a poll commissioned by the Center for Rural Strategies, in those areas which Bush won in 2004 by 53%-41%, Obama now holds a statistically insignificant one point lead. To complete this little trifecta, Gallup has just released a poll showing that Jews are now likely to vote for Obama by a more than 3 to 1 majority (74% to 22%).

If present projections come close to holding, this could prove to be a rare reconfiguring or turning-point election -- as Wall Street expert Steve Fraser first suggested might be possible at TomDispatch way back in February 2007. If so, the Republican Party, only recently besotted by dreams of a generational Pax Republicana, might find itself driven back into the deep South and deep West for who knows how long, "an extremist rump, reduced to a few stronghold states and obsessed with causes that seem not to matter to the general public."

Among the remaining unknowns in this election, of course, are the intertwined issues of class and race. In this regard, few places have been more closely examined than parts of Pennsylvania, a battleground state in which polls show John McCain significantly behind, but which he must capture if he hopes to win this election, and a place where working-class, as well as possibly racist, "Hillary voters" were supposed to be especially strong. Ever since the primaries, reporters have been tromping the state in search of them. Today, TomDispatch has an interesting twist on such articles. We've sent a home-town boy back to Pennsylvania to offer a more personal view of the race there -- and the news isn't good for the future of the Republican Party. -- Introduction by TomDispatch editor, Tom Engelhardt

Meeting Myself in Bucks County

Pennsylvania in the Political (and Personal) Crucible
By Robert S. Eshelman

In 1991, at age 17, I fled Bucks County, an overwhelmingly white, working-class region in southeast Pennsylvania where I grew up. I left because the life of the working class was brutal and I wanted no part of it. I cringed at the racism and xenophobia that seemed to rise out of the anxieties of precarious labor. I desperately hoped there was some alternative to coming home each day looking as battered as did so many grown-ups I would catch staring blankly into TV screens or half-empty glasses of beer.


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Robert Eshelman's articles have appeared in The Brooklyn Rail, In These Times and The Nation.

Why Would Anyone Want to Stop You from Voting?


Posted by Staff, CitizenTube at 1:12 PM on October 29, 2008.


Video your vote and capture polling place problems.

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Video the Vote is a nonprofit organization that employs a network of citizen journalists to capture polling place problems on Election Day. The organization works on both an assignment desk and platform model: people can submit videos to their website, and Video the Vote also contacts individuals in their network and dispatches them to document troubles as they arise in precincts across the country. Already, they are documenting issues in machine technology glitches, and are seeing long lines at several polling places.

We're working with several Election Protection partners both to highlight issues in election fraud but also to encourage voters to document their voting experience no matter what the result. This will be the most-documented election in history, and we encourage people to submit their videos to our Video Your Vote channel on YouTube, at youtube.com/videoyourvote.

GOP Gov.'s Call for Early Voting Extension in Florida Works Best for Obama


Posted by Sam Stein, Huffington Post at 6:10 AM on October 29, 2008.


The Obama campaign is excited about Republican Gov. Charlie Crist's extension of early voting hour in Florida.

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The Obama campaign is, not surprisingly, ecstatic with the decision by Florida's Republican Gov. Charlie Crist to extend early voting hours in his state -- a decision that most every political observer predicts will help the Democratic nominee in this mega-swing state.

"We applaud Gov. Crist for responding to the overwhelming enthusiasm shown by Florida voters during this election season. To this point, an estimated 2 million Floridians have already cast a ballot over the last eight days," reads a statement from Florida Obama-Biden State Director Steven Schale. "It is critical that everyone who is eligible and eager to vote be able to participate and have their voice heard. And now with the extended hours, thousands more will have that opportunity."

Democrats were pining for Crist to make the move for days, reasoning that the limited amount of time for Floridians to cast early ballots would effectively limit the vote totals that were trending Obama's way. Indeed, the peculiarity of Crist's decision is why he -- a McCain ally -- made it in the first place. A Republican strategist in the state told Politico that, "He just blew Florida for John McCain."

The extension will mean that votes will be cast 12 hours a day, not eight. So far, George Mason University has calculated that more than 2 million Floridians have cast early ballots. Of that total, 44.7 percent have been for Democrats and 40 percent for Republicans. If Obama were to keep these margins through November 4th, it could create a distance between him and McCain that the Republican ticket can't overcome.

Observers in the Sunshine State said they weren't necessarily surprised by the Governor's decision even if it seemed likely to hurt his good-friend.

"It just reflects from the get-go that he has always been into expanding the electorate. It is consistent with his approach. I think he is just in touch with the kind of demographics that our state has," said Susan MacManus, a political science professor at the University of South Florida.

"I just think that Gov. Crist is a person who tries very hard to represent all of the people. And he knows that even if this is not of the best interest of Republicans, it is in the best interest of Florida as a state and as a whole," said Joyce Cusack, Democratic Leader pro tempore of the Florida House of Representatives.

But the practical implications of extending early voting were hard to dismiss. In addition to providing voters with a greater window of time to cast ballots around their work schedule, the move promises to help lesson lines on Election Day itself. And, while the Republican ticket traditionally is bolstered by absentee ballots, the general rule in this scenario is that the larger the vote totals the more likely it is that Obama can pull off the victory.

Crist, in a hasty arranged press conference Tuesday afternoon, hitched his decision to respecting the sanctity of the right to vote. "Many have fought and died for this right," said the McCain ally who has, this cycle, proved willing to buck his party's interest.

Schale echoed the refrain: "We encourage Floridians to continue casting their votes before Election Day, either at an early voting location or by mail, and to participate in this election - because voting is democracy in action."

UPDATE: Obama deputy campaign manager Steve Hildebrand, who was recently dispatched to Florida for the last weeks of the race, told the Huffington Post's Seth Colter Walls that the campaign sent a couple of go-betweens to speak to Crist about expanding the hours for early voting locations.

"We had a couple of key supporters make a suggestion to him, to advance the premise that Florida elections need to be run very smoothly," Hildebrand said. "And that three or four or five hour waits for people to vote is not a smooth process."

Hildebrand declined to identify the individuals who took the Obama campaign's message to the Governor, saying: "this was not a pressure deal by any stretch. The Governor was incredibly cooperative, and recognized that this was best for the election process."

AlterNet is a nonprofit organization and does not make political endorsements. The opinions expressed by its writers are their own.

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Sam Stein is a Political Reporter at the Huffington Post, based in Washington, D.C.

Obama Mocks Socialist Attacks: "I Shared My Toys in Kindergarten"


Posted by Steve Benen, Washington Monthly at 12:13 PM on October 29, 2008.


"By the end of the week, he'll be accusing me of being a secret communist because ... I shared my peanut butter and jelly sandwich."

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Barack Obama campaigned earlier in Raleigh, North Carolina, principally relying on the closing-statement speech he unveiled in Ohio on Monday. Today, however, he added a new paragraph.

"[B]ecause he knows his economic theories don't work, he's been spending these last few days calling me every name in the book," Obama said. "Lately, he's called me a 'socialist' for wanting to roll back the Bush tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans so we can finally give tax relief to the middle class. I don't know what's next. By the end of the week, he'll be accusing me of being a secret communist because I shared my toys in kindergarten. I shared my peanut butter and jelly sandwich."

From time to time, over the course of the 20 or so months, Obama has demonstrated an ability to use humor very effectively. Greg Sargent noted earlier, "[This] kind of unforced mockery, even levity, tends to be a good indicator of genuine confidence in the outcome."

I think that's true, but I'd add that Obama seems to use humor, light mockery, and the occasional sarcasm even when he's less confident in the outcome. For months, regardless of circumstance, even during the primaries, when given a choice between delivering an angry response and a humorous one, Obama almost always prefers the latter.

One gets the sense that Obama's not mad at the Republicans; he just thinks they're ridiculous.

AlterNet is a nonprofit organization and does not make political endorsements. The opinions expressed by its writers are their own.

'Wow': Palin Goes Way Off the Reservation, Talks Losing and 2012


Posted by Booman, Booman Tribune at 7:29 PM on October 29, 2008.


People in the McCain camp must be livid.

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Update: ABC may have misrepresented Palin's quotes, as they are now backpedaling on this story. It looks like the McCain Campaign will have an actual reason to lash out at the media today.

Maybe the McCain campaign shouldn't have called Sarah Palin a 'diva' and a 'whack job'. You know, I don't think those insults sat very well with her.

Transcript of CNN's response:

Wolf Blitzer: And this just coming into the "Situation Room," the Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin now speaking out openly about her intentions in 2012 if, if she and John McCain were to lose this contest next Tuesday. In an interview with ABC News, Sarah Palin is now saying, she would be interested in remaining a serious national political figure, going ahead to 2012. She was asked what happens in 2012 if you lose on Tuesday, would you simply go back to Alaska? Elizabeth Vargas of ABC News asked her and Palin said this, and I will read it to you verbatim according to an ABC News transcript: "Absolutely not," Sarah Palin says. "I think that, if I were to give up and wave a white flag of surrender against some of the political shots that we've taken, that ... that would ... bring this whole ... I'm not doin' this for naught," and that is a direct quote from Sarah Palin. Clearly, leaving open the possibility that she would be interested in leading the Republican Party in 2012 if she and John McCain were to lose this presidential contest right now. Let's go to Dana Bash. She has been covering the McCain campaign reaction from the rather blunt statement from Sarah Palin that she would in fact be interested in leading the Republican Party going forward after Tuesday if they lose?
Dana Bash: I just got off of the phone, Wolf, with a senior McCain adviser and I read this person the quote and I think it is fair to say that this person was speechless. There was a long pause and I just heard a "huh" on the other end of the phone. This is certainly not a surprise to anybody who has watched Sarah Palin that she is interested in potentially future national runs, and she is being urged to by a lot of people inside of the Republican Party if they do lose, but it is an "if" and people inside of the McCain campaign do not want any discussion that has an "if" in front of it six days before the election, they don't want any discussion at all, any kind of hypothetical talk about running for the next time around. So certainly, this is not at least initially being received well inside of the McCain campaign.

Wolf Blitzer: I am not surprised, not surprised at all. It is one of those "wow, she is talking about 2012 if we lose," that is not supposed to be something that you say. You are supposed to say, "well, I'm not looking ahead, I'm not looking ahead only to Tuesday," and those are the talking points she's supposed to be saying, but she is obviously blunt and she is looking ahead if something were to happen on Tuesday that she wouldn't be happy with.

I don't blame Palin. Maybe she should have her aides call McCain a 'codger' and 'unhinged'.

AlterNet is a nonprofit organization and does not make political endorsements. The opinions expressed by its writers are their own.

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Booman is the proprietor of the Booman Tribune.

Sea-Level Rise Threatens Sydney Coast

»

by: Marian Wilkinson and Ben Cubby, The Sydney Morning Herald

photo
Aerial view of Sydney Harbor. Because of rising temperatures and sea levels, Australia faces serious threats that will strain its health and emergency resources departments. (Photo: Reuters)

Sydney's iconic beaches, coastal houses, commercial property and roads will be threatened by rising sea levels by 2050, while the city's temperature is expected to rise by at least 2 degrees, a new scientific study, launched by the Premier, Nathan Rees, reveals.

"Today, the science is in for Sydney," Mr Rees said yesterday as he proclaimed the influence of the climate sceptic and former treasurer Michael Costa at an end in NSW.

"The Costa era of ambiguity around this issue is over. Along with the rest of the NSW public, I recognise that climate change is a reality and that the NSW Government needs to prepare for it," the Premier said. "There is no longer a climate-change sceptic at the centre of government decision-making in this state".

The study commissioned by the NSW Department of Climate Change, and adopted by the Government, was carried out by the University of NSW and uses research from the United Nations' peak scientific body, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

It examines the effect of climate change on the greater Sydney metropolitan region from the Central Coast to Wollongong, along with other regions in rural NSW. The full state study is expected to be released in January.

"We've used world's best science to understand what will happen in different parts of this state so we can start planning now for the future," Mr Rees said. "We will all have to change the way we live to some degree."

The study finds that bushfires are likely to be more intense while rainfall may become more erratic, creating water shortages. But while winter rains decline, intense summer rain in parts of Sydney could increase flash flooding.

This, combined with higher temperatures, is expected to put the state's emergency services and health services under stress.

The study has enormous implications for urban planning, building standards and flood-risk mapping as well as agriculture. It finds by 2050 the expected sea level rise is likely to be 40 centimetres, reaching 90 centimetres by 2100. While the figure sounds deceptively small, a one-centimetre sea-level rise can cause erosion effects of up to one metre.

The projections would mean changes to the Sydney coastline, including the harbour, Parramatta River and the Georges River, said Professor Andy Short of the University of Sydney's coastal studies unit.

"Beaches with a low gradient like Narrabeen, Dee Why and Curl Curl are going to be the most heavily affected," he said.

This sea-level rise would also affect river estuaries and bays. As seawater invades estuaries, fish populations are likely to decline and water birds disappear.

A senior scientist with the Department of Climate Change, Peter Smith, told the forum, "Where you've got a hard promenade at beaches like Manly, you can expect a reduction in beach shape and the actual width of the beach. In some cases, beaches will possibly disappear."

The temperature rises, coupled with more erratic rainfall, are expected to hit southern NSW hardest, said Gary Allan, the project leader for climate risk management in the NSW Department of Primary Industries in NSW.

"In the Riverina, we have to consider the possibility of fairly significant change to agricultural practices as we have known them," he said.

Mr Rees said he would strongly support the federal Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme and bring forward spending on energy efficiency measures to cut greenhouse gas emissions that cause climate change.

He said a proposed $63 million energy efficiency program to help low-income households cut their emissions would start next month in Orange and Bathurst, and move to Sydney early next year.

The plan, which had been flagged by the previous climate minister, Verity Firth, will affect up to 200,000 people, including pensioners, public-housing tenants and Aborigines.

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Missing Denver Ballots Head to Voters' Mailboxes

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by: Myung Oak Kim, The Rocky Mountain News

photo
Sequoia voting machine. (File Photo)

The vendor for Denver Elections failed to print and ship more than 18,000 mail ballots - 7,000 more than originally thought - but the post office says all of them will be delivered to voters by Wednesday.

The mistake was discovered over the weekend after a local Postal Service official said Sequoia Voting Systems delivered slightly more than 10,000 ballots Oct. 16 from its Porterville, Calif., printing plant.

It was initally thought the order was about 11,000 ballots short - a problem that came to light after numerous complaints from voters who said they hadn't received their ballots.

A review of all ballot orders revealed the actual number of missing mail ballots is 18,055, said Denver Elections Director Michael Scarpello.

Sequoia printed them over the weekend and dropped them off Monday morning at the Denver mail processing facility.

U.S. Postal Service spokesman Al DeSarro said at least 90 percent of those ballots will be delivered to homes today [Monday], and the rest will reach mailboxes Wednesday.

Company spokeswoman Michelle Shafer said the mistake was "completely Sequoia's fault."

"There was a technical problem with the data file we used to prepare this batch of ballots for mailing that caused us to make this very unfortunate mistake."

Sequoia has had a troubled history with Denver elections.

In 2006, the company miscalculated return postage for thousands of mail ballots, understating the required postage by 24 cents. The company also transposed a 'yes' and 'no' answer for a question on thousands of ballots.

Sequoia's untested electronic pollbook crashed on Election Day, causing lines that lasted several hours. Up to 20,000 voters left polling places without casting a ballot. Denver scrapped that system after the election.

Shafer said her company is not focused on past problems.

"We are concerned about resolving this specific issue for Denver and working with them in preparation for Nov. 4, as well as making sure this situation never occurs again anywhere," she said.

Denver Clerk and Recorder Stephanie O'Malley said her office had "firm conversations" with Sequoia about the missing ballots and she will reconsider after the election whether to continue working with the company. Denver also may charge Sequoia for the cost of issuing replacement ballots to voters affected by the mistake.

Councilman-at-large Doug Linkhart said he's been frustrated with Sequoia's performance and voted against renewing the company's contract last summer.

"We've given them millions of dollars and it just doesn't seem like we're getting our money's worth," Linkhart said.

Sequoia has printed and shipped to the Postal Service more than 190,000 mail ballots for Denver in the past month. Denver Elections workers are now sending out mail ballots daily from their headquarters to accommodate new requests.

Voters who have already obtained a replacement ballot should discard the ballot that comes in the mail this week, elections officials said. Once a replacement ballot has been issued, or if someone voted a provisional ballot at the polls, any other ballot will be invalidated.

Roughly 1.6 million Colorado voters have requested a mail ballot for this election. Tuesday is the deadline for requesting a mail ballot be sent to your home. Early voting at polling places continues until Friday.

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Promises of Change

by: Bill Moyers Journal, t r u t h o u t | Programming Note

photo
Activists protest bailout plan in a street performance. (Photo: Joe Newman / Flickr)

PBS Airtime: Friday, October 31, 2008, at 9:00 p.m. EDT on PBS (check local listings here).

With just days left before Americans cast their votes, both candidates are still pledging "change" if elected, but can the stranglehold of money on politics be broken? Bill Moyers sits down with Joan Claybrook, president of Public Citizen, and Bob Edgar, president and CEO of Common Cause, to discuss how Beltway business as usual may stand in the way of real change in Washington.

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Appeals Courts Pushed to Right by Bush Choices

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by: Charlie Savage, The New York Times

photo
President George W. Bush with members of the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals. (Photo: Steve Helber / AP)

Washington - After a group of doctors challenged a South Dakota law forcing them to inform women that abortions "terminate the life of a whole, separate, unique living human being" - using exactly that language - President Bush's appointees to the federal appeals courts took control.

A federal trial judge, stating that whether a fetus is human life is a matter of debate, had blocked the state from enforcing the 2005 law as a likely violation of doctors' First Amendment rights. And an appeals court panel had upheld the injunction.

But this past June, the full United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit voted 7 to 4 to overrule those decisions and allow the statute to take immediate effect. The majority argued that it is objectively true that human life begins at conception, and that the state can force doctors to say so.

Mr. Bush had appointed six of the seven judges in the conservative majority. His administration has transformed the nation's federal appeals courts, advancing a conservative legal revolution that began nearly three decades ago under President Ronald Reagan.

On Oct. 6, Mr. Bush pointed with pride to his record at a conference sponsored by the Cincinnati chapter of the Federalist Society, the elite network for the conservative legal movement. He noted that he had appointed more than a third of the federal judiciary expected to be serving when he leaves office, a lifetime-tenured force that will influence society for decades and that represents one of his most enduring accomplishments. While a two-term president typically leaves his stamp on the appeals courts - Bill Clinton appointed 65 judges, Mr. Bush 61 - Mr. Bush's judges were among the youngest ever nominated and are poised to have an unusually strong impact.

They have arrived at a time when the appeals courts, which decide tens of thousands of cases a year, are increasingly getting the last word. While the Supreme Court gets far more attention, in recent terms it has reviewed only about 75 cases a year - half what it considered a generation ago. And Mr. Bush's appointees have found allies in like-minded judges named by Mr. Bush's father and Reagan.

Republican-appointed judges, most of them conservatives, are projected to make up about 62 percent of the bench next Inauguration Day, up from 50 percent when Mr. Bush took office. They control 10 of the 13 circuits, while judges appointed by Democrats have a dwindling majority on just one circuit.

David M. McIntosh, a co-founder and vice-chairman of the Federalist Society, said the nation's appeals courts were now more in line with a conservative judicial ideology than at any other time in memory.

"The level of thoughtfulness among sitting judges on constitutional theory and the role of judges is higher than certainly any other time in my life," said Mr. McIntosh, a former Reagan legal team member and Indiana congressman. "For somebody who has spent a lot of my life promoting those ideas, it's very encouraging to see."

The consequences of the evolving judiciary are only beginning to play out.

In the case of the 2005 South Dakota abortion law, the dissenters - including two Democratic appointees, a Reagan appointee, and a Bush appointee - portrayed the court's decision as a sharp change in direction.

The majority, they contended, had not only bypassed "important principles of constitutional law laid down by the Supreme Court" but also violated the appeals court's established standards for issuing preliminary injunctions.

The Eighth Circuit, with headquarters in St. Louis, now has the appeals courts' highest proportion of judges appointed by Republicans - 9 of its 11 judges. But while other circuits have also grown more conservative, none have yet produced a comparably startling outcome.

Appeals courts tend to change the law incrementally rather than in rapid shifts. They are constrained to follow Supreme Court precedent, and most of their work consists of unanimously disposing of routine cases.

Still, every year courts encounter some controversial cases in which they have greater discretion. In such circumstances, several studies have shown that judges appointed by Republican presidents since Reagan have ruled for conservative outcomes more often than have their peers.

They have been more likely than their colleagues to favor corporations over regulators and people alleging discrimination, and to favor government over people who claim rights violations. They have also been more likely to throw out cases on technical grounds, like rejecting plaintiffs' standing to sue.

Mr. McIntosh defended that record, saying the conservative judges are bringing a neutral application of the law to a judiciary that liberals had politicized. But Nan Aron of the Alliance for Justice, a liberal legal group, said Mr. Bush had "packed the courts" with "extremists" who share an agenda of hostility to regulations and the rights of women, minorities and workers.

"George W. Bush has made great strides in cementing the ultraconservative hold on the federal courts which began with Ronald Reagan in the 1980s, when he set out to impose his agenda on the country through his court appointments," Ms. Aron said.

Mr. Bush's commitment to moving the courts rightward has been important not only to elite conservative thinkers, but also to the social conservatives who have been his base of support.

His judicial selections set off fierce clashes with Senate Democrats. Until a compromise was brokered in 2005, Democrats blocked votes on several nominees for years. More recently, the Senate has not voted on Peter Keisler, a former Justice Department official who defended Mr. Bush's detainee policies. Still, most of Mr. Bush‘s nominees became judges. He is set to leave 15 vacancies; Mr. Clinton left 27.

Conservative and liberal legal activists alike are trying to motivate voters to view the balance of the judiciary as a major issue in the election. Senator John McCain, the Republican presidential nominee, has promised to appoint judges in the same ideological mold as Mr. Bush did, while Senator Barack Obama, a Democrat, has said he will select judges with greater "empathy" for the disadvantaged.

An Obama victory could roll back the Republican advantage on the appeals courts and even create a Democratic majority by 2013, according to a study of potential vacancies by Russell Wheeler of the Brookings Institution. But if Mr. McCain wins, Republicans could achieve commanding majorities on all 13 circuits.

The conservative effort to reshape the judiciary began as a backlash to a string of liberal court rulings in the 1960s and 1970s. Conservatives objected that judges were usurping the role of legislators and should strictly interpret the Constitution based its original meaning. Liberals countered that this approach was a mask for advancing conservatives' policy preferences.

The debate intensified when Reagan came to power. His administration scrapped the ad hoc, patronage-style process previous presidents had used and began vetting potential nominees to find those who shared its philosophy. After the first George Bush became president in 1989, his legal team continued that approach.

His son's 2000 victory revived those vetting practices and - with the participation of Mr. Bush's political adviser Karl Rove - escalated them.

The White House ended the American Bar Association's traditional role in evaluating potential nominees' qualifications. But the administration had other help: the Federalist Society, whose size and influence has rapidly grown since the 1980s.

The society does not formally suggest or vet nominees. Rather, through its conferences and publications, it enables lawyers to identify themselves as committed to a conservative judicial ideology, said Steven M. Teles, the author of "The Rise of the Conservative Legal Movement: The Battle for Control of the Law"

About 46 percent of Mr. Bush's appeals court judges are Federalist Society associates, according to an Alliance for Justice review.

A study in 2006 confirmed that the judges appointed by Republicans beginning with the Reagan administration are, as the Federalist Society's president, Eugene Meyer, put it, "a very different type of judge."

The study, overseen by Cass Sunstein, a Harvard Law School professor who is now an adviser to Mr. Obama, analyzed whether judges voted for a liberal or a conservative outcome in 20,000 appeals court cases. It found that as a group the appellate judges appointed by Presidents Dwight D. Eisenhower, Richard M. Nixon and Gerald Ford voted for a conservative outcome in 52 percent of their cases. Mr. Clinton's judges had an identical record.

By contrast, the appeals court judges appointed by Reagan and the two Presidents Bush took the conservative position in 62 percent of cases. And that number was larger in certain ideologically charged areas, like abortion, affirmative action, environmental protection and whether states have sovereign immunity from federal lawsuits.

Sheldon Goldman, a professor at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, said recent Republican judges had consistently nudged the law rightward in those cases where they could exercise some discretion. Over time, Mr. Goldman said, this can result in "enormous influence."

That said, Mr. Goldman cautioned that not all of the recent Republican appointees were cut from the same cloth. Some are true movement conservatives, comparable to Justice Antonin Scalia of the Supreme Court, he said, but others are moderate conservatives like Justice Anthony M. Kennedy.

Still, Michael Greve, an American Enterprise Institute scholar and longtime figure in the conservative legal movement, noted that even when the judges considered by his faction to be "truly spectacular appointments" were outvoted, they still served as informal "monitors" by flagging decisions that conservatives on the Supreme Court might overrule.

One such example is Michael W. McConnell, a member of the 10th Circuit, in Denver, a former Reagan legal team member who went on to become a respected legal academic known for questioning court-imposed barriers between church and state.

Judge McConnell's role in registering objections was illustrated by a First Amendment case last year. A Utah city had placed a donated monument of the Ten Commandments in a public park, but it rejected another group that wanted to place a monument to the tenets of its faith, the "Seven Aphorisms of Summum," in the same park. The Summum, a religious organization that promotes mummification, sued.

A trial judge and the appeals court ruled that a government might not discriminate between the two religious messages: If the city put the Judeo-Christian monument up, it also had to erect the Summum monument. Judge McConnell dissented, arguing that it should be fine for the city to accept only the monument whose message it favored.

A colleague accused Judge McConnell of taking an "unprecedented and dangerous" view that ignored "well-established" First Amendment principles. But the Supreme Court has accepted the city's appeal.

Another new conservative anchor is Jeffrey S. Sutton, on the Sixth Circuit, in Cincinnati. Before his appointment, Mr. Sutton, as state solicitor for Ohio, was a leading voice in the push to revive states' rights. He has continued that approach as a judge.

For example, Judge Sutton has opposed federal interference with death sentences imposed by state courts. Last summer, he called into question a ruling that ordered Ohio not to execute a mentally retarded man. A colleague, noting that the Supreme Court had outlawed the execution of retarded criminals, accused Judge Sutton of "efforts to stir controversy where none exists."

Still, Judge Sutton's support for states' rights is not without challenge. He led the 10-to-6 majority - which included seven appointees of Mr. Bush - that sided with the Republican Party this month after it sued Ohio's secretary of state, asking for a federal order changing the state's policy on verifying new voter registrations. The Supreme Court quickly reversed their ruling.

A third new conservative judge attracting attention is Brett M. Kavanaugh, a former legal aide to Mr. Bush. Last summer, Judge Kavanaugh, of the District of Columbia Circuit, dissented in a 2-to-1 decision upholding an accounting oversight board set up by Congress after the Enron scandal. He argued that because the board answered to the Securities and Exchange Commission instead of the president, it violated the Constitution under an expansive theory of executive power that was developed by the Reagan legal team and adopted by movement conservatives.

Still, even conservatives who generally share the same overall approach to the law have intellectual disagreements.

For example, Judge Janice Rogers Brown, a Bush appointee whose appointment was blocked for two years by Democrats, joined the opinion dismissing Judge Kavanaugh's concerns as an effort to "create constitutional problems where there are none."

Judge Brown, a former California Supreme Court judge who had given fiery libertarian speeches, disagreed with Judge Kavanaugh nine times out of 15 split decisions in which both participated, according to a New York Times review of the decisions.

Such disputes among conservatives demonstrate the difficulty of achieving major changes in legal doctrine. Despite the anguish expressed by liberals, "the big surprise for a lot of movement conservatives is how little has been accomplished through that kind of sustained effort over a generation," said Bradford Berenson, who helped vet judges as an associate counsel in the Bush White House from 2001 to 2003.

Still, Mr. Berenson said, the movement might have already accomplished something sweeping, if invisible: slowing the creative exercise of judicial power that was generating many new rights a generation ago.

"Maybe the progress we've made in the courts is best measured by the unknowable crazy things the courts did not do, rather than the things the courts did," he said. "The triumph of the conservative legal revolution is halting the progress of the liberal one."

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The Pornograph-izing of Sarah Palin


Posted by Cara, Feministe at 3:01 PM on October 29, 2008.


Strip club look alike contests and the 'Nailin Palin' porno by Hustler are not in good fun.

Via Sociological Images -- a truly great blog I discovered recently -- comes this story about a Sarah Palin lookalike contest held at Vegas strip club (oh, sorry, "gentleman's club"). Lots of bikinis, sexualized use of guns and sexism abound. You can view more photographs of the event here.

The saddest thing is that it's not the most offensive display of sexualized misogyny that has been directed a Palin. The sex doll came close, but I'd say that award goes "Naylin' Paylin," the Larry Flint pornographic film starring yet another Palin lookalike, the existence of which all of us should have seen coming.

There are two problems with both the porn film and this strip club contest, and neither one of them is about porn and stripping in general. The first issue is consent. Sarah Palin did not consent to having her image used in this way. Portraying her sexually like this without her consent is a violation -- and contrary to what many people apparently think, existing as a woman in public is not the same as consenting to use of your body as public property. This isn't satire or parody; it's just sexist and degrading.

Which brings us to the next issue. The entire reason that anyone gets to hide behind the parody and "all in good fun" arguments is precisely because portraying Sarah Palin sexually is intended to be mocking towards her. It's taking a powerful woman and working to make her non-threatening by turning her into a sexual object. And it's the very opposite side of the coin as calling Hillary Clinton ugly and denying her sexuality. Both reinforce the ideas that women exist to sexually pleasure men, and that sexuality is the only power we have (or should be allowed). Whether revoking or affirming that "power," the result is an attempt to render the woman inferior and powerless.

We still live in a world where women seemingly cannot be seen as sexual and at the same time be taken seriously. We still live in a world where sexuality itself is seen as degrading to women. That is the purpose of these types of exercises -- to debase Palin by reminding everyone that she (presumably) has a vagina and is therefore only good for fucking. I truly believe that if sex was not still viewed as inherently degrading to women, we wouldn't be seeing these sorts of displays at all.

The goal is to mock Palin's intelligence not by engaging with her foolish beliefs and ignorant rhetoric, but by pointing and saying "look, boobs!" or "I'd sure like to hit that!" And making her non-threatening isn't only dangerous politically when Palin is in fact in a position to potentially do a lot of harm; attempting to make her non-threatening in this way is dangerous to all women who hold power, who want to be taken seriously, and who dream of being able to be proud of their sexuality and brains all at the same time. An acknowledgment of female sexuality shouldn't be seen as mocking -- these portrayals of Palin only reinforce the idea that it is.

This is degrading to Sarah Palin, particularly as a woman, both because it ignores the right of consent and because the very intention is for it to be degrading. It's in no way a celebration of sexuality (since in order for it to be, it would by definition have to be consensual), but a ridicule. And in the end, all women are the butt of the joke.

AlterNet is a nonprofit organization and does not make political endorsements. The opinions expressed by its writers are their own.

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Cara blogs regularly at The Curvature and Feministe.

'Ten Commandments' of Non-Sexist Language for Reporting on Violence Against Women


By Sebastián Lacunza, IPS News. Posted October 23, 2008.


Journalists in Argentina are working to eliminate gender bias in their reporting.

BUENOS AIRES -- An organization of over 100 journalists in Argentina has drawn up ten "commandments" for news coverage of gender-based crimes, which include avoiding expressions like "crime of passion" and incorporating terms like "femicide."

The document, by the Argentine Network of Journalists for Non-Sexist Communication (PAR), has already been debated in forums and delivered to social and cultural associations and editorial offices. It will be publicly launched on Nov. 25, International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women.

Its aim is to combat "invisible discrimination, which is often unintentional, but occurs because it has become natural in daily life," Liliana Hendel, a psychologist and journalist for the subscription television news channel Todo Noticias, and one of the authors of the ten commandments, or decalogue, told IPS.

"We will uproot from our work the term 'crime of passion' to refer to murders of women who are victims of gender violence. Crimes of passion do not exist," says item three of the document, for example.

According to Hendel, "to call a murder a crime of passion is to presuppose that it is a consequence of love, because 'he loved her too much,' which distances it from the concept of crime."

She added that the idea of "love-sickness" hides the reality of a criminal who abuses power, to the extent that he owns a woman's life and can kill her." Statistics quoted by PAR indicate that in 99 percent of murders committed by spouses, lovers or partners, women are the victims.

The Network proposes terms like "femicide" (murders of women) or "feminicide" (crimes of humanity against women just because they are women). Other phrases recommended by feminist movements are "violence against women," "gender-based violence" and "sexist violence."

Consultation of female sources is stressed as a key to avoiding gender discrimination.

"Whether or not we are writing about gender issues, it is important to consult women lawyers, historians and women's groups about their views on events, which will inexorably help us to see what we cannot see because it seems so natural," Hendel said.

Among other evidence for sexism in news coverage, PAR mentions "detailed descriptions of what a woman was wearing or, in the case of murders committed by women, emphatic indignation because they go against 'maternal instinct,' which is a way of sacralising motherhood."

"There is an exaggeration of the association between motherhood and womanhood, and an underlying need for women to be good," the journalist said.

The decalogue was given a good reception in the different circles where it was presented, according to PAR. "Generally, it has been very well received. When one is not confrontational and does not play the role of victim, but describes facts and historical trends, the audience is receptive," said Hendel.

PAR was founded in 2006. It arose from the Artemisa portal, which provides news with a gender perspective, along the lines of the Mexican website for Women's Communication and Information (CIMAC).

The Network's annual meeting this year was held in the northwestern province of Salta, in June. The next meeting will be in the central province of La Pampa, in September 2009.


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Real National Security Begins at Home, Say Women Leaders


By Adele Stan, Media Consortium. Posted October 26, 2008.


The Pentagon sucks up 54 percent of the federal budget. Yet politicians rarely challenge it. It may take women to fix our defense priorities.

Times are tough. Wall Street has tumbled, and Main Street is squeezed. As housing values plummet and people lose income, governments are also feeling the pinch. Despite it all, there's one area of the federal budget that continues to grow: defense spending.

A growing chorus of women leaders are rising in protest, seeking to educate voters on the perils of a dangerously unbalanced set of priorities. From spending cuts in state budgets in such bread-and-butter areas as public health and sheltering the homeless, to a dangerous underfunding of port security and an exodus of first responders to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, women are seeing the Pentagon's growing share of the federal budget take a toll on the well-being of their own families. Yet an absence of women in the halls of power helps maintain the status quo, say activists, and a failure to enlist military women as allies in the cause of national security reform has held back the progressive funding agenda.

Women are paying attention to who's getting federal dollars, says Celinda Lake, the Democratic pollster who leads Lake Research Associates. In focus groups, says Lake, "we do have women volunteering ?that they wonder how we could find overnight all the money to fight a war and to bail out Wall Street, but we can't find enough money to provide national health care reform. And there's a lot of anecdotal evidence of that."

Meanwhile, in Washington, a consensus is building among defense experts that something needs to be done to straighten out those priorities for the very sake of what all that spending is supposed to buy us: real national security. While tax dollars are poured into the pockets of defense contractors for projects of debatable value or documentable waste, homeland security budgets are starved, leaving the nation vulnerable in the face of attack. Yet defense spending sops up more than half of the federal discretionary budget.

What's pie got to do with it?

At Women's Action for New Directions, field director Bobbie Wrenn Banks has taken to the road with a victual demonstration of the classic pie chart that WAND calls the Great American Pie project.

"We actually use a pumpkin pie ? literally, a pumpkin pie," Banks explains. "And we go into groups and we slice the pie; it represents the discretionary budget." The discretionary budget is the piece of the federal budget that gets negotiated between the president and Congress (unlike such programs as Social Security and Medicare, whose costs are mandatory expenditures). "And over half of that pie ? 54 percent of that pie ? that slice goes to the Pentagon," says Banks. "Then we have very small little slivers of pie that go to environmental concerns, income security, affordable housing..." And that doesn't even cover the costs of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, Banks says. Add in the nearly $200 billion that taxpayers have anted up for the wars in this year alone, and "we're spending nearly $700 billion a year on the military," she says.

Banks' pie show is headed this week to Mississippi, where she'll visit the district offices of Sen. Thad Cochran, the Republican ranking member of the appropriations committee.

Absent a pie-bearing visit from Banks herself, she advises women to take a look at an effort at reform outlined in the Unified Security Budget proposed by the left-leaning group, Foreign Policy in Focus (part of the Institute for Policy Studies), which looks at how the budget is divided among various security needs. "[W]hen you look at the overall security spending pie, it's just so staggeringly lopsided, because 90 percent of our security money goes to the offense, with a 6 percent slice of that pie going to? homeland security, and only a 4 percent slice going to (conflict) prevention." Prevention includes diplomacy, foreign assistance in the form of infrastructure-building, and activities such as those done by the Peace Corps.


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Thursday, October 30, 2008

October 30:


1938 : Welles scares nation


Orson Welles causes a nationwide panic with his broadcast of
"War of the Worlds"--a realistic radio dramatization of a Martian
invasion of Earth.

Orson Welles was only 23 years old when his Mercury Theater
company decided to update H.G. Wells' 19th-century science
fiction novel War of the Worlds for national radio. Despite his
age, Welles had been in radio for several years, most notably as
the voice of "The Shadow" in the hit mystery program of the
same name. "War of the Worlds" was not planned as a radio
hoax, and Welles had little idea of the havoc it would cause.

The show began on Sunday, October 30, at 8 p.m. A voice
announced: "The Columbia Broadcasting System and its
affiliated stations present Orson Welles and the Mercury
Theater on the air in 'War of the Worlds' by H.G. Wells."

Sunday evening in 1938 was prime-time in the golden age of
radio, and millions of Americans had their radios turned on.
But most of these Americans were listening to ventriloquist
Edgar Bergen and his dummy "Charlie McCarthy" on NBC
and only turned to CBS at 8:12 p.m. after the comedy sketch
ended and a little-known singer went on. By then, the story of
the Martian invasion was well underway.

Welles introduced his radio play with a spoken introduction,
followed by an announcer reading a weather report. Then,
seemingly abandoning the storyline, the announcer took
listeners to "the Meridian Room in the Hotel Park Plaza in
downtown New York, where you will be entertained by the
music of Ramon Raquello and his orchestra." Putrid dance
music played for some time, and then the scare began. An
announcer broke in to report that "Professor Farrell of the
Mount Jenning Observatory" had detected explosions on the
planet Mars. Then the dance music came back on, followed
by another interruption in which listeners were informed that
a large meteor had crashed into a farmer's field in Grovers
Mills, New Jersey.

Soon, an announcer was at the crash site describing a
Martian emerging from a large metallic cylinder. "Good
heavens," he declared, "something's wriggling out of the
shadow like a gray snake. Now here's another and another
one and another one. They look like tentacles to me ... I
can see the thing's body now. It's large, large as a bear. It
glistens like wet leather. But that face, it ...it ... ladies and
gentlemen, it's indescribable. I can hardly force myself to
keep looking at it, it's so awful. The eyes are black and
gleam like a serpent. The mouth is kind of V-shaped with
saliva dripping from its rimless lips that seem to quiver
and pulsate."

The Martians mounted walking war machines and fired
"heat-ray" weapons at the puny humans gathered around
the crash site. They annihilated a force of 7,000 National
Guardsman, and after being attacked by artillery and
bombers the Martians released a poisonous gas into
the air. Soon "Martian cylinders" landed in Chicago and
St. Louis. The radio play was extremely realistic, with
Welles employing sophisticated sound effects and his
actors doing an excellent job portraying terrified
announcers and other characters. An announcer reported
that widespread panic had broken out in the vicinity of
the landing sites, with thousands desperately trying to
flee. In fact, that was not far from the truth.

Perhaps as many as a million radio listeners believed that
a real Martian invasion was underway. Panic broke out
across the country. In New Jersey, terrified civilians
jammed highways seeking to escape the alien marauders.
People begged police for gas masks to save them from
the toxic gas and asked electric companies to turn off the
power so that the Martians wouldn't see their lights. One
woman ran into an Indianapolis church where evening
services were being held and yelled, "New York has been
destroyed! It's the end of the world! Go home and prepare
to die!"

When news of the real-life panic leaked into the CBS
studio, Welles went on the air as himself to remind listeners
that it was just fiction. There were rumors that the show
caused suicides, but none
were ever confirmed.

The Federal Communications Commission investigated
the program but found no law was broken. Networks did
agree to be more cautious in their programming in the future.
Orson Welles feared that the controversy generated by
"War of the Worlds" would ruin his career. In fact, the
publicity helped land him a contract with a Hollywood
studio, and in 1941 he directed, wrote, produced, and
starred in Citizen Kane--a movie that many have called
the greatest American film ever made.

Buy The Best of History 2008
http://shop.history.com/detail.php?p=71746&pa=EMC-0000051

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

General Interest
1938 : Welles scares nation
http://www.history.com/tdih.do?action=tdihVideoCategory&id=7066
1908 : Queen of American high society dies
http://www.history.com/tdih.do?action=tdihArticleCategory&id=5480
1975 : Juan Carlos assumes power in Spain
http://www.history.com/tdih.do?action=tdihArticleCategory&id=5481
1995 : Quebec separatists narrowly defeated
http://www.history.com/tdih.do?action=tdihArticleCategory&id=5482

OTHER NEWS



GREAT MOMENTS IN THE LAW

Knoxville News Sentinel - Jordan Triplett went for a morning pick-me-up from Starbucks and wound up with first-degree burns. Now, she's suing the Seattle-based coffee house empire for $250,000 in a Knox County Circuit Court lawsuit that blames Triplett's burns on a barista's lid snafu. . . The lawsuit alleges that the 23-year-old Triplett drove to a Starbucks on Kingston Pike on July 13 and bought coffee via the store's drive-through window. The lawsuit is silent on what Triplett ordered. . . "She experienced extreme heat radiating through the cup and protective cardboard sleeve," Isaacs wrote. "[She] balanced the extremely hot cup of coffee on her thigh with her hand on top of the cup as she pulled away from the window and negotiated a turn onto the roadway." Once on Kingston Pike, Triplett noticed "the lid of the coffee container was loose and not affixed properly," the lawsuit states. "Before Triplett could achieve a better grasp upon the cup, the lid dislodged from the cup, thereby causing scalding coffee to spill and splash onto [her] lap, right thigh and right hand," the lawsuit states. The coffee soaked through her denim jeans, causing her to cry out in severe pain, according to the lawsuit. She drove to a nearby friend's house and disrobed. "She discovered that she had severe blisters and burns on her hand, inner thigh and vaginal area," the lawsuit states.

FUN FACTS ABOUT LIECHTENSTEIN

Strange Maps - The tiny, obscure alpine principality of Liechtenstein seems to exist as mainly a repository of arcane distinctions:

- At 160.4 sq. km (62 sq. mi), Liechtenstein is one of the smallest independent countries in the world (#189 out of 194 according to Nationmaster).

- In Europe, however, it is one of the bigger mini-states; San Marino, Monaco and Vatican City are smaller.

- But Liechtenstein is the smallest German-speaking country in the world, in population as well as size (there are only about 35,000 Liechtensteiners). It is also the only German-speaking country not to recognize officially any other language next to German

- It is also the smallest country bordering more than one other country; Liechtenstein is hemmed in by Switzerland to the west, and Austria to the east.

- The country took its name from the dynasty that ruled it (usually it's the other way round). The dynasty got its name from somewhere, of course, i.e. faraway Castle Liechtenstein ("bright stone") at the edge of the Wienerwald, south of Vienna.

- By disbanding its 80-man strong army in 1868, Liechtenstein may have been the first country in the (modern) world without an organized military force.

- Prince Franz I (born 1853, ruled 1929-1938) was married to a Viennese noblewoman of Jewish descent - probably the only Jewish crowned head in Europe, an especially poignant position in those especially anti-semitic times. Franz I abdicated in 1938 because he couldn't bear the thought of the Nazis invading while he was on the throne. As it happened, they respected the principality's neutrality (although the local Nazi sympathizers agitated against Franz I's wife).

- After World War II, Liechtenstein offered asylum to 500 Russian soldiers who fought on the German side - a staggeringly high number, considering the small population had difficulties feeding itself. Argentina eventually agreed to take them in.

- During the Cold War, all Liechtensteiners were forbidden entry into Czechoslovakia, which had nationalized huge tracts of land formerly held by the Liechtenstein dynasty.

- Although landlocked, Liechtenstein's lenient banking regulations have made it such a fiscal paradise that it is often included in the top lists of 'offshore' tax havens.

- In 2003, the ruling prince Hans-Adam threatened to leave the country if he lost a referendum on expanding his powers. He won, making Liechtenstein the only European country in modern history where the monarchy's power increased. The prince can now veto laws and dismiss governments - making the principality the closest thing present-day Europe has to an absolutist monarchy.

BREVITAS

OUTLYING PRECINCTS

Hendrik Hertzberg, New Yorker
- Sarah Palin, who has lately taken to calling Obama "Barack the Wealth Spreader," seems to be something of a suspect character herself. She is, at the very least, a fellow-traveler of what might be called socialism with an Alaskan face. The state that she governs has no income or sales tax. Instead, it imposes huge levies on the oil companies that lease its oil fields. The proceeds finance the government's activities and enable it to issue a four-figure annual check to every man, woman, and child in the state. One of the reasons Palin has been a popular governor is that she added an extra twelve hundred dollars to this year's check, bringing the per-person total to $3,269. A few weeks before she was nominated for Vice-President, she told a visiting journalist-Philip Gourevitch, of this magazine-that "we're set up, unlike other states in the union, where it's collectively Alaskans own the resources. So we share in the wealth when the development of these resources occurs."

The first-year total annual returns for the S&P 500 have tended to be higher when a Democrat is sent to the White House, according to a nearly 60-year analysis of S&P 500 returns by members of the Zero Alpha Group. Since 1948, the S&P 500 Index has gained 16 percent under a Democratic president as compared to 11 percent with a Republican in the White House. In fact, six of the seven first full years after the election of a president since 1952 to have had negative returns featured Republicans in the White House starting a first or second term in office. However, any value for investors associated with this "White House effect" is less clear when additional information is added to the equation. For example, four of the seven "down" first years for Presidential terms took place when Democrats controlled Congress.

Barack Obama will make his fourth appearance as a guest on "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart" on Wednesday, October 29 at 11:00 p.m. (ET/PT

ORWELLANDIA

Guardian, UK -
Every police force in the UK is to be equipped with mobile fingerprint scanners - handheld devices that allow police to carry out identity checks on people in the street. The new technology, which ultimately may be able to receive pictures of suspects, is likely to be in widespread use within 18 months. Tens of thousands of sets - as compact as BlackBerry smartphones - are expected to be distributed. . . To address fears about mass surveillance and random searches, the police insist fingerprints taken by the scanners will not be stored or added to databases.

CORPORADOS

Reuters -
In a study conducted in Florida, researchers found that drugstores in the poorest areas charge more, on average, for four widely used prescription medications than do pharmacies in wealthier neighborhoods. . . Across the board, the researchers found, the four drugs were priced highest in the poorest ZIP codes, averaging 9 percent more than the average for the state. Independent pharmacies charged an average of 15 percent more for each of the drugs than the statewide average, but there was little geographic variation in the prices chain drugstores charged.

JUSTICE & FREEDOM

Lisa Rein, Washington Post -
The 53 political activists wrongly classified as terrorists by the Maryland State Police may bring lawyers to review their files and take home copies, the agency said in a sudden shift in policy. State police spokesman Gregory Shipley issued a brief news release on the policy change an hour before the activists were scheduled to protest in front of the agency's headquarters in Pikesville. Over the past month, activists were notified that they could view the criminal intelligence files that police gathered on them in 2005 and 2006 under the administration of former governor Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. (R). But they were told they could not bring a lawyer or make copies before police purge the information from state and federal databases that track terrorism . . . A top aide to Gov. Martin O'Malley (D) said the outcry from the activists and the American Civil Liberties Union of Maryland quickly reached the governor and Attorney General Douglas F. Gansler (D), who met with police Superintendent Terrence B. Sheridan to discuss a more open policy.

WORLD

Tim Whewell BBC -
The BBC has discovered evidence that Georgia may have committed war crimes in its attack on its breakaway region of South Ossetia in August. Eyewitnesses have described how its tanks fired directly into an apartment block, and how civilians were shot at as they tried to escape the fighting. Research by the international investigative organisation Human Rights Watch also points to indiscriminate use of force by the Georgian military, and the possible deliberate targeting of civilians. Indiscriminate use of force is a violation of the Geneva Conventions, and serious violations are considered to be war crimes. The allegations are now raising concerns among Georgia's supporters in the West. British Foreign Secretary David Miliband has told the BBC the attack on South Ossetia was "reckless". He said he had raised the issue of possible Georgian war crimes with the government in Tbilisi.

ECO CLIPS

Rick Friedman, NY Times -
Thoreau died in 1862, when the industrial revolution was just beginning to pump climate-changing greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. In 1851, when he started recording when and where plants flowered in Concord, he was making notes for a book on the seasons. Now, though, researchers at Boston University and Harvard are using those notes to discern patterns of plant abundance and decline in Concord - and by extension, New England - and to link those patterns to changing climate.

Their conclusions are clear. On average, common species are flowering seven days earlier than they did in Thoreau's day, Richard B. Primack, a conservation biologist at Boston University, and Abraham J. Miller-Rushing, then his graduate student, reported this year in the journal Ecology. Working with Charles C. Davis, an evolutionary biologist at Harvard and two of his graduate students, they determined that 27 percent of the species documented by Thoreau have vanished from Concord and 36 percent are present in such small numbers that they probably will not survive for long. . .

LA Times - With eight scorchers over 90 degrees this month, Los Angeles has been in the midst of the second-hottest October since 1877, according to climate records.

STORES THAT RECYCLE

MEDIA

NY Times -
After a century of continuous publication, The Christian Science Monitor will abandon its weekday print edition and appear online only. The cost-cutting measure makes The Monitor the first national newspaper to largely give up on print. John Yemma, editor of The Monitor, said it was "making a leap that most newspapers will have to make in the next five years." The Monitor's home page on the Web. The new online focus will allow the paper to keep eight foreign bureaus open. Enlarge This Image Melanie Stetson Freeman/The Christian Science Monitor. . .
The Monitor is an anomaly in journalism, a nonprofit financed by a church and delivered through the mail. But with seven Pulitzer Prizes and a reputation for thoughtful writing and strong international coverage, it long maintained an outsize influence in the publishing world, which declined as its circulation has slipped to 52,000, from a high of more than 220,000 in 1970.

HEALTH & SCIENCE

NY Times
- Since April, [polio] outbreaks have been found in 10 countries beyond the 4 in which polio is considered endemic - Afghanistan, India, Nigeria and Pakistan. And in those four countries, the number of cases is more than double the number found by this time in 2007. In Africa, cases have been found as far south as Angola and as far east as Ethiopia. Each detected case implies another 200 cases with few or no symptoms, experts say.

FURTHERMORE. . . .

Annals of Imporobable Research -
"Are Women Really More Talkative Than Men?", Matthias R. Mehl, Simine Vazire, Nairán Ramírez-Esparza, Richard B. Slatcher and James W. Pennebaker, Science, vol. 317, no. 5834, 2007, p. 82 ( http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.1139940). The authors, who are variously at the University of Arizona, at Washington University and at the University of Texas, report that: Women are generally assumed to be more talkative than men. Data were analyzed from 396 participants who wore a voice recorder that sampled ambient sounds for several days. Participants' daily word use was extrapolated from the number of recorded words. Women and men both spoke about 16,000 words per day.

Fark - TSA announces that it has won the war on large containers of liquid, and that passengers will again be able to replenish their dehydrated husks on airplanes starting next year

CRASH TALK



Financial Times - Public pension funds in US states are facing their worst year of losses in history, exacerbating existing funding shortfalls and putting pressure on state governments to shore them up. In the nine months to the end of September, the average state pension fund lost 14.8 per cent, according to Northern Trust, a fund company. The loss has grown since, as financial markets slumped further in October. The previous highest loss for state funds was 7.9 per cent for the full year in 2002. California's Calpers, the US's biggest pension fund, last week reported a loss of 20 per cent of its assets, or more than $40bn, between July 1 and October 20 this year. State and local pension funds comprise a patchwork of 2,700 funds that manage $1,400bn on behalf of 21m employees, including teachers, firefighters and other municipal workers. About 40 per cent are underfunded, meaning that they would not be able to pay the future pensions that employees have been promised. . .

Evening Standard, UK - The depth of the recession was revealed as truck maker Volvo admitted demand across the continent has crashed by 99.7% as it took orders for just 115 new lorries in the last three months. That compares to orders totaling 41,970 in the third quarter of 2007. Global orders for Volvo slumped 55% in the last three months while Scania, of which Volvo has majority control, said its western Europe truck orders collapsed by 69%.

LA Times - As the economy worsens, Americans are eating out less, and more at home, to save money. With less foot traffic, businesses are seeing their sales and profits plummet -- and their expenses rise. . . Calabasas-based Cheesecake Factory Inc. on Thursday reported a 36% drop in third-quarter earnings, to $11.8 million from $18.5 million, because of higher costs and a 4.8% decline in sales at restaurants open at least a year. . . NPD Group, a market research company, said in its annual "Eating Patterns in America" report that restaurant meals now cost on average about three times what it takes to make a similar meal at home. When people do eat out, they are going to quick-serve and fast-food restaurants more often, according to the NPD report released last week.

Chris Carey, Bailout Sleuth - At least 27 banks have agreed to sell stakes in themselves to the Treasury Department under a federal plan to inject capital into the financial system. The newest list of recipients includes Capital One Financial Corp. a big credit-card issuer based in McLean, Va.; Washington Federal Savings, a thrift in Seattle that recently reported its first quarterly loss in history; and Saigon National Bank, a small bank in Southern California which targets that region's ethnic Vietnamese.

James McCusker, Everett Herald - In the coming months, the most likely cause of mortgage defaults will not be interest rates but job losses. The housing market today is more sensitive to economic fluctuations not only because of the subprime mortgages but also because of the dominance of the two-income homebuyer.

The use of two incomes to qualify for a mortgage allows buyers to scale up their home purchase. But because there are two individuals, it also raises the probability that one or the other will experience a job loss or reduction in hours and income when the economy turns down.

The net result of this is that despite the economic rescue actions taken thus far, the economic slowdown itself ensures that the housing sector will be under pressure for some time. Its problems are not going to go away because the Treasury Department's actions have brought interbank lending back to life.

Exactly what the federal government should do about the housing issue is a matter of considerable debate. We should remember that its goal in purchasing mortgage-backed debt was to put the banks back on their feet and free up the credit system. A homeowner who is encountering mortgage payment problems, though, doesn't need more credit, at least not in the usual sense.

Michel Chossudovsky, Global Research - Russia's foreign minister Sergei Lavrov has announced that Brazil, Russia, India and China will "coordinate efforts in overcoming the financial crisis". The statement suggests that the four countries will confront the dominant US-UK-EU alliance, which personifies Western banking interests, at the forthcoming Summit in Washington. . . Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said earlier this month the crisis had shown the BRIC nations would be "the locomotive of the world economy in coming years."

Telegraph, UK - Several Moscow city center restaurants are now refusing to accept cards in a move not seen since Russia's last financial crisis almost a decade ago. Some automated teller machines at Sberbank, the country's biggest state-owned bank, have also stopped accepting cards from other banks. Several electronics and mobile phone stores said they no longer accepted credit card purchases. Over the weekend, Aeroflot, the biggest Russian airline, announced it had stopped taking credit cards payments for flights except from a handful of banks.

Christina Rexrode, Charlotte Observer - As the economy slows and unemployment rises, consumers are defaulting on credit-card payments more often. . . U.S. banks charged off 5.47 percent of all credit card loans in the second quarter, according to the Federal Reserve, representing some $50 billion that they'll likely never collect. That's up from 3.85 percent the year before. . .

WATCHING THE COUNT



Brad Blog - We've been reporting on the ES&S iVotronic touch-screen voting machines which are flipping votes from Democratic candidates to others in, so far, at least four states. . . Unfortunately, it's not just the error-prone, hackable, wholly unverifiable iVotronics from ES&S which are failing. Error-prone, hackable and wholly unverifiable Direct Recording Electronic (DRE, usually touch-screen) voting systems made by Hart InterCivic, Diebold and Sequoia Voting Systems are also having the same problems across the country. And the Democrats, who have the most to lose, continue to do nothing about it. . .

We posted a video of a WV county clerk demonstrating the vote-flips on the ES&S iVotronic and suggesting that the problem was due to touch-screen calibration issues on the machine. The video then shows the clerk inserting a cartridge into the machine to recalibrate it, after which the machine still misrecords a vote.

We also pointed out that it doesn't matter what the screen (or even "paper trail" that some of them have) displays. The computer can record any vote it wants, any way it wants, despite what the voter is shown.

While recalibration has been ordered in many of these cases, there is no way that any touch-screen voting machine should ever have a cartridge inserted into it, for any reason, by anybody, after it's already been programmed for an election. That is the very moment these machines are the most vulnerable to malicious software and other forms of tampering and attack. That recalibration is being advised where these problems have occurred --- instead of complete removal from service, to be replaced by paper ballots --- is insane.

We have seen absolutely no sign that the DNC and Barack Obama attorneys have done anything to take appropriate action on these matters up until now. . .

Speaking of Diebold, this in on Tuesday from another part of Texas, El Paso County, as reported by the local NBC affiliate KTSM, NewsChannel 9: "Newschannel 9 received a complaint from one voter who says he tried to vote straight ticket Democrat. But when he reviewed his finished ballot he noticed that all votes were cast for Republicans.

"El Paso county election administrator Javier Chacon says the machines are user-friendly but mistakes can happen. Chacon says make sure you don't have anything hanging off your clothing or wrists that could inadvertently change your vote. If you want to be more precise you can ask for a stylus pen to cast your vote."

EFFI, Finland - A fully electronic voting system was piloted in the Finnish municipal . . . Electronic Frontier Finland had criticized the pilot program for years, recently releasing a report on its deficiencies. Today, the Ministry of Justice revealed that due to a usability issue, voting was prematurely aborted for 232 voters. The pilot system was in use in three municipalities; this amounts to about 2 per cent of the electoral roll. Seats in the municipal assemblies are often determined by margins of only a couple of votes.

It seems that the system required the voter to insert a smart card to identify the voter, type in their selected candidate number, then press "ok", check the candidate details on the screen, and then press "ok" again. Some voters did not press "ok" for the second time, but instead removed their smart card from the voting terminal prematurely, causing their ballots not to be cast.

A federal judge in Ohio says homeless voters can use their sleeping bench as their address and that provisional ballots can't be cancelled if the error was made by a poll worker.

ABANDON GUN CONTROL

WHY THE DEMOCRATS NEED TO ABANDON GUN CONTROL

Hal Herring, High Country News -
For two decades, many liberals have thrived on despising the NRA and its members. Those who believe in gun control often hold enormous prejudice against those who don't. But there are already reams of laws pertaining to the use, abuse, purchase and sale of firearms. What new regulations would the gun-controllers create, and how would they work to address the problem of gun violence? Do they want to prohibit private ownership of firearms altogether? Many would like to ban handguns, without considering just what this would entail, what inequities of power would result, and what new, potentially dangerous, powers would have to be awarded to government to accomplish it. . .

According to Dave Workman, the senior editor of Gun Week, a publication of the Bellevue, Wash.-based Second Amendment Foundation, "The Clinton-era 'assault weapons ban' was more symbolic than anything else. The reason it was so overwhelmingly supported by the gun control movement was because it represented a federal ban on firearms based on cosmetic circumstances - what they looked like - not on their lethality. It was to condition the public to accept a piecemeal destruction of the Second Amendment."

Workman believes there was much to learn from the Clinton election. "When George H. W. Bush took the gun vote for granted in 1992, most of the gun owners voted for Ross Perot, or else they sat it out," he says. The election of Clinton, though, and what followed, cemented the gun voters' dislike of the Democratic Party. The Brady Law went into effect in 1993, and the "assault weapons ban" passed a year later. That was enough, says Workman, for the gun voters to see "how this was all going. They mobilized and threw out many of the Democrats, costing them control of Congress (in 1994)." The National Rifle Association first endorsed a presidential candidate - Ronald Reagan - in 1980, but gun politics as we know them today were born in 1994.

Since then, the gun vote has gone to the Republicans, and that is not expected to change anytime soon, even with pro-gun Democrats like Montana's Gov. Brian Schweitzer or Sen. Jon Tester gaining prominence.

HOW THE GOP AND MEDIA MISLED PUBLIC

HOW THE GOP AND MEDIA MISLED PUBLIC ABOUT ACORN & SUBPRIME LOANS

Eileen Markey, City Limits Weekly - Now that the country is deep into the quaking aftermath of that dream, turned nightmare, fingers are being pointed at ACORN and other community organizations that encouraged mortgage lending in low-income communities. The argument, much heard of late in conservative outlets such as the Wall Street Journal's editorial page, Rush Limbaugh's influential radio show, and the pages of the National Review, is that grassroots groups, empowered by the Community Reinvestment Act, bullied banks into making irresponsible loans in low-income neighborhoods. . .

That's not how fair lending advocates in NYC remember it. "I never heard anybody from the legislative side or the community side saying they wanted crappy loans," said Jim Buckley, executive director of University Neighborhood Housing Program, a nonprofit that grew out of the 1970s movement to encourage broader lending, and has been warning about the dangers of risky loans practices and Wall Street's embrace of them since the beginning of the decade.

In fact - according to a string of 1999 and 2000 reports in American Banker, a 173-year-old publication calling itself "the leading information resource serving the banking and financial services community" - ACORN was an outspoken, consistent advocate for exactly the kinds of regulations that experts across the political spectrum now agree could have prevented the global economic crisis.

On August 4, 2000, American Banker reported on ACORN protests at nationwide offices of Lehman Brothers - the investment bank that went bankrupt last month because of its investment in over-valued mortgage-backed securities:

"Acorn members said they want Lehman and other investment banks to sign a code of ethics, pledging to adhere to 'best practices' in the mortgage lending business. Though the banks are not lenders, the group argues that they provide capital and financial support to abusive lenders by buying and securitizing their loans.

'They have to look at the terms of the loans they are funding and say they won't buy or securitize loans with unconscionable terms,' said Bertha Lewis, executive director of Acorn in New York. 'These secondary market players can see what kind of loans these are. They must refuse to buy loans from predatory lenders.'"

ACORN's campaign to get investment banks to adopt best practices for the mortgages they bought was aimed at drying up the secondary market for the toxic mortgages now at the bottom of the fallen financial house of cards. If investment banks didn't buy the shady loans, predatory lenders wouldn't receive the capital to make such loans, ACORN reasoned.

Ten days later, on August 14, 2000, as banks congratulated themselves for making more loans to minorities than the previous year, American Banker reported that ACORN voiced skepticism about the meaning of Home Mortgage Disclosure Act data:

"ACORN questioned whether the reported growth in lending was due to subprime loans, which may be cause for alarm, said ACORN National President Maude Hurd. 'Not all loans are equal. We have seen too many mortgage companies prey on black and Latino homebuyers, taking advantage of their desire to share in the American dream by overcharging them. Without knowing the specific breakdown of what kind of loans people were getting, it's hard to say what these numbers really show,' she said."

But ACORN and other proponents of the Community Reinvestment Act - the 1977 law requiring banks to lend in all communities from which they receive deposits - did promote a fairly nuanced message. They lobbied for more quality lending in low-income and minority communities while also calling for more stringent regulation of the kind of non-bank lenders like Countrywide that fueled the mortgage crisis. Campaigns by ACORN and like-minded groups including the Chicago-based Neighborhood Training and Information Center sought to shrink the risky-mortgage business by pressuring investment banks not to buy the debt, and also pushed for changes in the way banks measured creditworthiness so that people with lower credit scores could be eligible for decent mortgages from real banks.

"A lot of this did not have to happen, and there were groups out there including ACORN that were sounding the alarm," said Ismene Speliotis, executive director of NY ACORN Housing, in an interview last week. But many investment banks, busy making oodles by investing in the sub-prime mortgages, didn't heed the warning.

In May 2000, Brooklyn ACORN member Gloria Waldron testified before a hearing on predatory lending held by the House Banking and Financial Services Committee. Seven years before terms like mortgage-backed securities, pre-payment penalties and securitization entered the vocabulary of a nation struggling to understand the financial meltdown, Waldron told Congress to adapt the Community Reinvestment Act to keep pace with the changing financial landscape. "Wall Street investment banks are not just passive financiers of abusive lending practices. In their eagerness to enjoy the large profit margins offered by subprime loans, they fueled the enormous growth of the industry," she said.

In 2001, Speliotis recalls, representatives from ACORN and the state and city comptrollers' offices which manage New York's massive investment portfolio met with investment banks operating in the secondary market. The advocates and regulators urged the banks not to invest in subprime mortgages from companies like Countrywide. "We begged them to sign on to best practices, to really do due diligence. We begged them. They basically said we were crying wolf," Speliotis said. "They weren't looking back to see what they were buying in detail."

In 2002 ACORN was an enthusiastic supporter of New York state's anti-predatory lending law, which the Center for Responsible Lending praised as ahead of the curve in recognizing the dangers of securitization. The law went into effect on April 1, 2003. But a ruling by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency four months later exempted national banks from compliance with state predatory lending laws. Then-Attorney General Eliot Spitzer, along with members of New York's Congressional delegation, ACORN, the Neighborhood Economic Development Advocacy Project and the New York Public Interest Research Group condemned the exemption and urged the federal regulator to reconsider. It did not. . .

A January 2008 study by Traiger & Hinckley, a New York law firm specializing in CRA compliance issues, found banks covered by CRA that lent to poor people in formerly redlined neighborhoods "were substantially less likely than other lenders to make the kinds of risky home purchase loans that helped fuel the foreclosure crisis." The study used Home Mortgage Disclosure Act data from 2006 to compare CRA banks' performance with that of other lenders in the nation's 15 largest metropolitan areas.

NY ACORN Housing had similar results in the mortgages it helped procure for low-income New Yorkers. "Banks that stuck to their fixed-rate, prime loans – they are not experiencing foreclosure at the same rate," said Speliotis. It's not that ACORN didn't push banks to lend in low-income areas. They did, aggressively - but they pushed lenders for quality, fixed-rate loans based on documentation of what borrowers really could pay, she said. NY ACORN Housing counsels 2,000 potential homebuyers a year. In marked contrast to the unregulated mortgage companies and brokers who approved risky loans, Speliotis' group only ends up putting 200 of those potential buyers into home mortgages - 1 in 10 applicants.

"We beg people, basically: Be patient. We don't want to see you in default counseling a year from now," said Speliotis. "The banks used to accuse us of holding people back, keeping them from the American dream. Now we're accused of selling them on bad loans," she said ruefully. After negotiating mortgages with CRA-regulated banks, NY ACORN Housing stays with new homeowners to track their performance. Through intense homebuyer education, loan counseling and follow-up support, NY ACORN Housing says it has a record it is proud of.

"Our default rate in New York is zero," Speliotis said. "Zero."

DUMBING DOWN STUDENTS

STUDY SUGGESTS NO CHILD LAW MAY BE DUMBING DOWN STUDENTS

Laura Clark, Daily Mail UK - Bright teenagers are a disappearing breed, an alarming new study has revealed. The intellectual ability of the country's cleverest youngsters has declined radically, almost certainly due to the rise of TV and computer games and over-testing in schools. The 'high-level thinking' skills of 14-year-olds are now on a par with those of 12-year-olds in 1976. The findings contradict national results which have shown a growth in top grades in SATs at 14, GCSEs and A-levels.

The intelligence of Britain's youth is being dumbed down, which experts say is down to television and video games. Posed by model. But Michael Shayer, the professor of applied psychology who led the study, believes that is the result of exam standards 'edging down'.

His team of researchers at London's King's College tested 800 13 and 14-year-olds and compared the results with a similar exercise in 1976.

The tests were intended to measure understanding of abstract scientific concepts such as volume, density, quantity and weight, which set pupils up for success not only in maths and science but also in English and history.

One test asked pupils to study a pendulum swinging on a string and investigate the factors that cause it to change speed. A second involved weights on a beam.

In the pendulum test, average achievement was much the same as in 1976.

But the proportion of teenagers reaching top grades, demanding a 'higher level of thinking', slumped dramatically.

Just over one in ten were at that level, down from one in four in 1976.

In the second test, assessing mathematical thinking skills, just one in 20 pupils were achieving the high grades - down from one in five in 1976.

Professor Shayer said: 'The pendulum test does not require any knowledge of science at all. 'It looks at how people can deal with complex information and sort it out for themselves.'

He believes most of the downturn has occurred over the last ten to 15 years.

It may have been hastened by the introduction of national curriculum testing and accompanying targets, which have cut the time available for teaching which develops more advanced skills.

Critics say schools concentrate instead on drilling children for the tests.

'The moment you introduce targets, people will find the most economical strategies to achieve them,' said Professor Shayer.

A study found the high-level thinking skills of 14-year-olds are now on par with a 12-year-old in 1976. . .

Professor Shayer believes the decline in brainpower is also linked to changes in children's leisure activities.

The advent of multi-channel TV has encouraged passive viewing while computer games, particularly for boys, are feared to have supplanted time spent playing with tools, gadgets and other mechanisms. . .

Previous research by Professor Shayer has shown that 11-year-olds' grasp of concepts such as volume, density, quantity and weight appears to have declined over the last 30 years.

Their mental abilities were up to three years behind youngsters tested in in 1975.

His latest findings, due to appear in the British Journal of Educational Psychology, come in the wake of a report by Dr Aric Sigman which linked the decline in intellectual ability to a shift away from art and craft skills in both schools and the home.

Dr Sigman said practical activities such as building models and sandcastles, making dens, using tools, playing with building blocks, knitting, sewing and woodwork were being neglected.
Yet they helped develop vital skills such as understanding dimension, volume and density.

Last month an Ofsted report said millions of teenagers were finishing compulsory education with a weak grasp of maths because half of the country's schools fail to teach the subject as well as they could. Inspectors said teachers were increasingly drilling pupils to pass exams instead of encouraging them to understand crucial concepts.

ECONOMY TRASHER GREENSPAN GOT HIS START WITH AYN RAND

ECONOMY TRASHER GREENSPAN GOT HIS START WITH AYN RAND

Devilstower, Daly Kos - In 1966, Ayn Rand collected a series of essays into the book, Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal. Twenty of the essays in the were written by Rand. The rest came from a trio of Rand's acolytes, followers who had already been writing the newsletter of her "Objectivist" cult for more than a decade. Among these were three essays from a member of Rand's inner circle; an economic advisor and dropout from the graduate economics program at Columbia -- Alan Greenspan.

Greenspan was such a close friend of Rand's, that she passed him manuscript pages of Atlas Shrugged while the book was being written. He paid rapt attention to her tale of mysterious genius John Galt -- brilliant engineer, physicist, philosopher, and organizer. Galt, who shows the world who is really in charge by leading a rebellion of industrialists against laws that interfere with their companies, was in perfect agreement with the essays that Greenspan was writing at the time. In those essays, Greenspan rails against the "statists" and their desire to blame failures leading to the Great Depression on greed and unsafe lending practices. Instead, says Greenspan, the economy was experiencing a "mild contraction" which would have amounted to nothing, had the government not overreacted. Greenspan also attacks the "welfare state" and its schemes to "confiscate the wealth of the productive members of society."

When John Galt leads his own inner circle of polymath geniuses to abandon the working classes and form a objectivist paradise, Greenspan must have cheered.

The essays Greenspan contributed to the 1966 collection, like the rest of the book, praised the idea of unfettered, unrestricted, unregulated, laissez-faire capitalism. Sure, there were problems in the system as it existed at the time, but those problems were not the fault of capitalism. Real capitalism, pure capitalism, had never been tried. Under pure capitalism, there would be a complete "separation of capitalism and state," and the resulting markets would be self-governing and self-correcting. It was only the intrusion of regulations into the system that brought on instability and immorality. Kick government out, and the system would not only flourish, but express the innate reasoning and positive force of selfishness.

Chief disciple Greenspan carried this torch for the next half-century and beyond. Pro-business conservatives (not surprisingly) found great comfort in a philosophy that said squeezing every dime out of the system was not only fair, but the only moral solution. Not long after the publication of his essays in Rand's book, Greenspan was invited to become an advisor to the Nixon administration. When Ford replaced Nixon, Greenspan became the chair of the Council of Economic Advisors. And when Reagan took power, Greenspan was no longer the voice crying in the wilderness, he was the very center of the establishment. Objectivism and Conservatism had united in Market Fundamentalism, and that force was on a jihad against regulation of any kind.

For the next thirty years, Greenspan would cheer the deregulation of the S&Ls and join John McCain in trying to protect Charles Keating from regulators. He would praise the deregulation of energy trading, and assure everyone that companies like Enron were pointing the way to greater efficiency and lower consumer prices -- and collect the 2000 "Enron Prize" in exchange. He would urge not only the creation of credit default swaps, but applaud their lack of regulation and invisibility in the system. He would argue against oversight, against limits on CEO pay, and for the increasingly complex systems by which banks generated new instruments of credit.

No one person did more to spread Rand's message of unregulated markets, unconstrained free trade, and unlimited power for corporate officers than Alan Greenspan.

DEPARTMENT OF GOOD THINGS


Charles Hynes, NY Daily News - The Red Hook Community Justice Center is the first multi-jurisdictional community court in the nation. The Justice Center, a collaborative effort between the Kings County District Attorney's Office, the Center for Court Innovation and the Office of Court Administration, was developed as a response to tragically high levels of crime, unemployment and general community disorder that the Red Hook neighborhood experienced in the 1980s and early 1990s. . .

The Justice Center houses an innovative, problem-solving court. The Criminal Court alone adjudicates about 4,000 cases annually. Although physically located in Red Hook, the court covers the misdemeanor cases arising in three police precincts - the 72nd, 76th and 78th. The cases range from such quality-of-life offenses as graffiti, trespass, and unreasonable noise to driving while intoxicated, prostitution, drug possession, assault and domestic violence.

Embracing the philosophy that public safety and crime reduction are not achieved by incarcerating nonviolent offenders, the prosecutors at Red Hook strive to administer justice with common sense and compassion.

Whenever possible and appropriate, they use rehabilitative, educational and preventive measures with an ultimate goal of reducing recidivism. The sentences can include drug, alcohol and mental health treatment, vocational counseling, GED classes, anger management, batterer's programs, performing community service, restitution, mediation, youth groups, groups specially designed for prostitutes and those offenders who patronize them, defensive-driving classes and more.

When crafting sentences, prosecutors strive to address the needs of the victim, to recompense the community and to offer the defendant services that are likely to reduce the odds of reoffending. Therefore, sentencing often involves a combination of sanctions and services. Jail sentences are sought for violent offenders and for career criminals who decline to accept alternative sentencing.


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The Arctic icecap is now shrinking at record rates

ARCTIC ICECAP MELTING IN WINTER AS WELL AS SUMMER

Times, UK - The Arctic icecap is now shrinking at record rates in the winter as well as summer, adding to evidence of disastrous melting near the North Pole, according to research by British scientists.

They have found that the widely reported summer shrinkage, which this year resulted in the opening of the Northwest Passage, is continuing in the winter months with the thickness of sea ice decreasing by a record 19% last winter.

Usually the Arctic icecap recedes in summer and then grows back in winter. These findings suggest the period in which the ice renews itself has become much shorter.

Dr Katharine Giles, who led the study and is based at the Centre for Polar Observation and Modelling at University College London, said the thickness of Arctic sea ice had shown a slow downward trend during the previous five winters but then accelerated.

She said: "After the summer 2007 record melting, the thickness of the winter ice also nose-dived. What is concerning is that sea ice is not just receding but it is also thinning."

MORNING LINE



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ROLLING AVERAGES
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LARGER MAP


National
  • Obama has a 6 point lead, three short of the best he's had this campaign
  • Obama is 163 electoral votes ahead of McCain with 111 undecided.
  • Obama has 295 electoral votes, 25 more than needed
Democrats
  • Dems could pick up 3-9 Senate seats
  • Dems in House could pick up as many as 12 to 40 seats
  • Dems pick up as many as 1 governorships or lose 1

Note: Polls are based on past behavior. Thus in an election that is attracting large numbers of new or normally inactive voters, polls may be off by an unusual amount. In the primaries, for example, even the best polls were off by 2-4 points more than statistical error. If there is a high turnout in the general election, it would not be surprising for Obama to receive three or more points more th