Wednesday, December 22, 2010

The top five stories of the year for climate hawks

by David Roberts.

1. Cap-and-trade is dead

Cap-and-trade is deader than dead. Everyone in Washington officialdom knows that. Virtually no one in Washington officialdom understands how it would work or how much economists think it would cost, but they’re certain it’s bad, bad, bad and had to die.

 

Polluting industries and wealthy right-wing oligarchs, aided by a well-funded grassroots army, sympathetic conservative politicos, and a major cable TV news network, cast cap-and-trade as a plague of socialist cooties that would destroy the economy. The left’s Purist Brigade wove florid tales of corruption and plutocracy. The reality—a long, opaque, technocratic bill burdened with several high-profile side deals—inspired no one. All the passion, all the anger, was found on the side of opponents.


In the end, the bill was done in by a dysfunctional, sclerotic Senate. Its enemies were many, among them the miserable economy itself, but special contempt must be reserved for the Senate’s “moderates,” virtually all of whom have revealed themselves as temporizing invertebrates.

Despite the fond hopes of its critics on the left, cap-and-trade won’t likely be replaced with a carbon tax or a tax-and-dividend system or massive investments in R&D. Far more likely is that energy policy will limp along as it has for decades, an incoherent, inconsistent system of tax breaks and credits—an incumbent protection racket that is both ineffectual and a magnet for rent-seeking.

Climate hawks often forget that a majority of the country, a majority of legislators in both houses of Congress, and a majority of other countries in the world are on their side. It’s just that in America in 2010, that’s not enough.

2. The Senate is dead

In the 111th Congress, the Nancy Pelosi-led House of Representatives was extraordinarily productive, passing strong progressive legislation on everything from college loans to consumer credit protections to tobacco (and, oh yeah, climate change). Some major legislation, like health care and financial reform, went to the Senate to be weakened and made foul with deal-making. Other bills just went nowhere—withered and died from lack of consideration, with no debate and no vote. That sorry fate befell not only climate legislation but an incredible 419 other bills.

It’s not much of an exaggeration to say that the U.S. Senate is no longer a viable governing institution. The now-routine abuse of the filibuster—an historical accident, not a deliberate choice or a constitutional right—means that a lockstep minority, in many cases even a sufficiently truculent individual, can grind the entire institution to a halt. Just last week, Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) admitted that Republicans’ goal is to “run out the clock” ... and then complained about being forced to work through the holidays.

That mix of laziness, entitlement, and cluelessness is typical of an institution that has fallen profoundly out of touch with the average American. The median age in America is 37; in the Senate it’s 63—today’s Senate is the oldest ever. Roughly 1 percent of Americans are millionaires; the median wealth of a U.S. senator is nearly $2.38 million. Some 13 percent of Americans are black; there are no black senators. The institution has been utterly captured by the narrow perspectives and pecuniary interests of an entitled class.

Add functional oligarchy to procedural dysfunction and an already unrepresentative body becomes embarrassingly unequal to the country’s challenges. Earlier this year, David Obey (D-Wis.), one of the titans of the House, announced that he was leaving public life in disgust, saying “all I know is that there has to be more to life than explaining the ridiculous, accountability-destroying rules of the United States Senate to confused and angry and frustrated constituents.” Tell me about it.

———

Addendum: Sen. Tom Udall (D-N.M.) is the Senate’s leading champion for reform. He’s got a simple plan to fix the rules, which you can read about on his site. Here he is presenting it:

3. California zags

As national political tides pushed in the direction of ignorance and delay, California pushed back, reaffirming its commitment to a bright green future. Prop 23, which would have destroyed the state’s pioneering climate program, AB 32, was resoundingly rejected by voters. The campaign against Prop 23 had everything the national campaign for cap-and-trade lacked: a simple story of good guys vs. bad guys, competitive funding, and a coalition both broad and deep.

Not only did Golden Staters reject 23, they reelected climate champion Barbara Boxer and Governor Moonbeam himself, Jerry Brown, who’d been out of the governor’s mansion since 1983. They put green champ Gavin Newsom in the lieutenant governor’s office and gave a thumbs-up to Prop 25, which would give Cali’s legislature the long-overdue power to pass a state budget on a majority vote.

The only turd in California’s green punchbowl was the passage of Prop 26, which would put a supermajority requirement on any attempt to raise fees in the state—depending on who you ask, that might cripple efforts to implement AB 32.

Voters also rejected pot-legalizing Prop 19, so anti-23 campaigners weren’t able to spark up to celebrate their victory. Oh, who are we kidding, of course they did.

 

4. The BP Gulf oil spill kills energy reform

When the Deepwater Horizon oil rig exploded and sank, killing 11 workers and triggering the largest oil spill in U.S. history, nobody could have predicted what would follow ... except, perhaps, for the most soul-blackened cynic.

The spill triggered a collective wringing of hands that lasted exactly as long as the “spillcam” was on the teevee. Then it was gone, and it left not a ripple. There was no sustained uprising, no renewed environmental movement, and no demand for legislation.

It didn’t help that less than a month earlier, Obama had announced a bunch of new offshore drilling. That bit of political malpractice insured that he had full ownership of the Gulf spill, rather than blame being traced to the Bush administration’s abysmal mismanagement of the Minerals Management Service. It also didn’t help that his Oval Office speech on the spill was flat, boring, and included no call whatsoever for a broad legislative response.

Still. It’s pretty clear that BP was grossly negligent in the run-up to the spill (to say nothing of Transocean and Halliburton). The company and its PR/lobbying army worked relentlessly to downplay the disaster, including the amount of oil involved. Then they started jerking around affected residents. BP CEO Tony Hayward said, “I’d like my life back.” BP’s chairman of the board said, “We care about the small people.”

Um, America? What does it take to get you pissed off?

In the Senate, where offshore drilling was one of the sweeteners meant to attract Republicans and wavering Dems to a deal on climate legislation, the spill had the effect of making a bill less likely. Indeed, it appears likely that Congress will adjourn without doing anything at all about the biggest environmental disaster ever in the U.S. (At least the administration is suing BP. That’ll show ‘em.)

Much like Hurricane Katrina, the BP Gulf oil spill was going to “change everything” and instead changed, well, nothing. Will the next disaster be any different?

5. The U.N. climate process saves itself

The run-up to the Copenhagen climate talks in December 2009 set expectations absurdly high, with a frenzy of apocalyptic rhetoric (“the last chance to save humanity!”) and the attribution of almost magical powers to Barack Obama. When those talks dissolved into a farce of back-biting, secret meetings, and paralysis—limping out, just barely, with a non-binding, much-disputed set of commitments labeled an “accord”—many observers predicted that the U.N. climate process was done for good and that small groups like the G20 would be the site of any real progress.

Negotiators arrived in Cancun with Copenhagen weighing heavily on them, fully aware that another failure could mean the end of the effort entirely. To everyone’s surprise, and thanks in large part to the deftness and transparency of the Mexican negotiators leading the meetings, the process ended with something that looks like success. Modest success, yes. Success that leaves many tough questions unanswered, yes. But forward motion for a process desperately in need of it.

In coming years, after decades of rhetoric, the world’s nations will put in place practical, measurable policies. Pragmatism will replace poetry—a less inspiring foundation, but a sturdier one. In many ways, the U.N. climate process has undergone the same whiplash process as the Obama administration over the last two years: inflated expectations, bitter disappointment, and at last the resolve to press forward with slow, slogging, but steady steps.

Related Links:

Blue collar desert town goes green

Less energy, less pollution, and greater savings. Some dilemma.

Reducing (massive) fossil-fuel subsidies as key as carbon price in the climate fight



Source: http://feeds.grist.org/click.phdo?i=71d714a772118223d6cc579fa2c633f0

BUSINESS2.0 BYRON DORGAN CAFFERTY FILE CALIFORNIA

Obama Ends His Pardon Drought. Meekly.

Source: http://reason.com/blog/2010/12/05/obama-ends-his-pardon-drought

BLANCHE LINCOLN BOB BARR BOB BENNETT BOB CASEY

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

START Moves Ahead

By a 67-28 vote, the Senate just decided that the NEW START arms agreement with Russia will be brought to the floor for an up-or-down vote on ratification. And the votes appear to be there to ratify the pact.

Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2010/12/21/132236938/start-moves-ahead?ft=1&f=1014

GEORGE PATAKI GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS GEORGE VOINOVICH GEORGE W. BUSH

What Is the Future of Media?

What Is the Future of Media?
The second fall Perspectives features Daily Beast founder and editor Tina Brown; writer and political commentator Andrew Sullivan; and Jeff Jarvis, author of What Would Google Do?Moderated by Peter Beinart, the discussion will look at how electronic publishing and the Internet are changing the dissemination of news and information.
Date: Mon, 08 Nov 2010 00:00:00 -0800
Location: New York, NY, Prohnasky Auditorium, CUNY
Program and discussion: http://fora.tv/2010/11/08/What_Is_the_Future_of_Media_Andrew_Sullivan_Jeff_Jarvis_Tina_Brown_and_Peter_Beinart

Source: http://fora.tv/2010/11/08/What_Is_the_Future_of_Media_Andrew_Sullivan_Jeff_Jarvis_Tina_Brown_and_Peter_Beinart

CNN ELECTION CENTER CNN ELECTION EXPRESS CNN FACT CHECK CNN GRILL

Mr. wOw Considers Contentious Interviews

While liberals Maddow and Stewart bicker, W. stands firm on pro- book-buying stance

Mr. Wow | 11/14/2010 11:15 am

Mr. wOw has had big headaches recently. So big he has not been able to wrap his head around certain current events.�

Bad movies I’ve caught on cable haven’t helped.� I enjoy a good bad movie ? "Showgirls," "Valley of the Dolls," or "Secret Ceremony." But sitting through crap like "The Box" and "The Lovely Bones" just about did me in. "The Box" was simply sadistic. The low point for Cameron Diaz. "The Lovely Bones" left me screaming with frustration and with a new loathing of CGI. (I understand Source: http://www.wowowow.com/pov/mr-wow-contentious-interviews-jon-stewart-rachel-maddow-bill-oreilly-george-w-bush-lovely-bones-cameron-diaz-511624

IRVING KRISTOL ISRAEL ISSUES J. RANDY FORBES

Bishop Eddie Long's Church Linked to Alleged Financial Fraud

Filed under: ,

Bishop Eddie Long's Church Linked to Alleged Financial Fraud


Bishop Eddie Long
is in the media again, and not for good reason. Long and another Atlanta megachurch pastor, Gary Hawkins, have been linked to a mortgage company that is being investigated by federal authorities for allegedly stealing money from church members.

The company, Matrix Capital, has been allowed to hold financial seminars in the churches of both men, offering to help lower their mortgages in exchange for $1,500 payments. According to police, thousands of people paid money to Matrix but ended up filing bankruptcy and/or losing their homes.

Fred Lee, the proclaimed front man for the company, was allegedly able to convince quite a few church members to give him their money primarily because he addressed them within the confines of their joint church environment. The Secret Service and the DeKalb County Police are now investigating Lee.

In defense of Eddie Long, the church says that all his church did was provide a room for Lee to hold his seminars. Gary Hawkins was much more involved in supporting and promoting Lee by appearing on one of his videos, vouching for his credibility and integrity:

"I believe that, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that this man walks in great integrity," Hawkins said in a company video.

One of the church members told CBS Atlanta that it was the pastor's endorsement, which led her to trust Lee with her money. The woman claims she paid the money and later found out that she was in trouble with her mortgage because Matrix had allegedly never even made a phone call to the bank. She also claimed that Hawkins wouldn't answer her questions when she went to him about her problem.

When it comes to this particular financial scheme, a few thoughts come to mind.

First, there is no evidence that Eddie Long promoted Matrix Capital or Fred Lee, so he should not necessarily be accused of swindling anyone. At the very least, however, he is learning a valuable lesson about properly vetting anyone making financial arrangements with people who trust him.

It is clear that if Lee was involved in any kind of scam, he was able to take advantage of the trust induced by the deep relationship that members of the congregation had with their respective pastors.

Second, this incident serves as yet another lesson regarding how African Americans and our churches evolve as it pertains to complex financial relationships.

I am willing to bet that someone came in and offered money to gain access to the pastors' congregations, similar to the way Wells Fargo offered money to Tavis Smiley and black church leaders to allegedly sell predatory loans to members of urban communities.

When we take money from anyone offering it, we find ourselves in the middle of some peculiar situations that can lead to very bad outcomes. Our hunger for resources in the black community becomes an incredibly unhealthy habit in a nation that is addicted to mass consumption. Black folks have to be more intelligent than that and realize that money should be a tool for your liberation, not a pathway to spiritual demise.

The final lesson to be learned from this debacle (which happens in churches all throughout America) is the importance of making careful decisions and not putting too much trust in anyone, even our spiritual leaders.

While it is tempting to presume that you should put your financial livelihood in to the hands of the man or woman who runs your church, the reality is that far too many pastors allow their lust for money to overwhelm their desire to protect you or your family. So, thinking for yourself is critical, for there will always be financial predators seeking to take advantage of people during desperate times like these.

Dr. Boyce Watkins is the founder of the Your Black World Coalition and the Athlete Liberation and Academic Reform Movement (ALARM). To have Dr. Boyce commentary delivered to your email, please click here.

 

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Source: http://www.bvblackspin.com/2010/12/20/bishop-eddie-longs-church-linked-to-alleged-financial-fraud/

BUDGETS AND BUDGETING BUSH ADMINISTRATION BUSINESS BUSINESS 2.0 MAGAZINE

State spox on START: 'It's time for the Senate to step up'

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is continuing her campaign to get the new START treaty ratified, making calls to members on both sides of the aisle on the Hill today.

Source: http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2010/12/20/5684686-state-spox-on-start-its-time-for-the-senate-to-step-up

CURT SCHILLING CYNTHIA MCKINNEY D.C. MADAM DALAI LAMA

wOw?s Question of the Week: If you were no longer married, would you marry or partner with a younger man?

Join Candice Bergen, Joan Ganz Cooney and Mary Wells in the conversation

Question of the Week | 11/10/2010 12:00 am

Candice_bergenSMSQ_0_1.jpgCandice Bergen: Okay. First, it’s about time THAT sexist taboo was done away with. Once it was addressed, it disintegrated fairly quickly. That said, if I were not so extremely old and happily married, I might partner with a younger guy — with the understanding that it would end badly … for me. And with the understanding that as I aged and withered and fattened, my anxiety would also increase. It wouldn’t be a relationship for sissies.

Source: http://www.wowowow.com/pov/question-week-candice-bergen-mary-wells-joan-ganz-cooney-marry-partner-younger-man-i-am-number-four-alex-ettyfer-510314

CNN FACT CHECK CNN GRILL CNN INTERNATIONAL CNN INTERNATIONAL NEWS

Monday, December 20, 2010

Are You Trying to Persuade -- or Showing Off?

 

He was asking for it. He repeatedly needled me and ridiculed libertarianism. I'd had enough.

For the next 12 minutes, I folded, spindled, and mutilated every comment he made, every argument he mustered, every belief he expressed.

My weapons and ammunition? Every fact, insight, and argument I had learned from Murray Rothbard, Ayn Rand, Ludwig von Mises, Henry Hazlitt, and the great libertarian thinkers. All delivered with devastating force and biting wit.

The results? Total destruction of his beliefs and arguments. Embarrassment and humiliation for him.

The consequences to me and libertarianism? He hated my guts for making him look bad. Most of the 30 people at the party felt sorry for him -- and angry with me. Not for what I said, but for how I said it. I turned off and burned off a lot of people -- who might well have been receptive and responsive to libertarianism.

This happened 25 years ago. I remember it like it happened yesterday.

What went wrong?

I showed off. "Look how much I know. Listen to how many books I've read. Look how bad I make you look. Listen how idiotic I make your beliefs sound. And, look around, all your friends are watching you get put in your place."

I showed off -- at his expense.

Maybe you've never done this. Perhaps you haven't unloaded on someone like I did. Or haven't done it as harshly as I did. Or maybe you haven't done it as publicly -- in front of the other guy's family, friends, or co-workers.

Maybe I was imitating or emulating Francisco d'Anconia's behavior at social events and parties in Atlas Shrugged.

I'm not sure.

Showing off at someone else's expense creates bad first impressions. And they linger and last.

Showing off at someone's expense can be exhilarating, exciting, and a rush. Some users find it attractive. Some find it addictive. But it harms the users -- and the used. The perpetrators -- and the victims. And it creates needless opposition to liberty.

Showing off at another person's expense will cost you dearly.

Profit from my embarrassing blunder.

Ask yourself: Do you want to show that you know more than other people? Do you want to prove you have read more than other people? Do you want to show that you are smarter than other people? Do you want to show off -- at someone else's expense?

Or do you want to persuade?


If you choose to persuade, check out Michael Cloud's acclaimed book Secrets of Libertarian Persuasion

Source: http://www.theadvocates.org/blog/187.rss

BENJAMIN HOOKS BENJAMIN NETANYAHU BENJAMIN TODD BEST COMPANIES

The Victorians: Time and Space with Richard J. Evans

The Victorians: Time and Space with Richard J. Evans
At the beginning of the nineteenth century, communication was slow, even relatively short journeys were uncertain and time-consuming, and people were dependant on the forces of nature for energy; this lecture charts the development of new modes of communication, from the railway to the radio, the telegraph to the telephone, the steamship to the motor-car and examines their efforts on perceptions of time and space.

For transcript and download versions of this lecture, please visit the event's page on the Gresham College website: The Victorians: Time and Space
Date: Mon, 13 Sep 2010 18:00:00 -0700
Location: London, Museum of London, Gresham College
Program and discussion: http://fora.tv/2010/09/13/The_Victorians_Time_and_Space_with_Richard_J_Evans

Source: http://fora.tv/2010/09/13/The_Victorians_Time_and_Space_with_Richard_J_Evans

GUAM GUANTANAMO GUANTANAMO BAY GULF OF MEXICO

Republicans regain majority in New York state senate

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Republicans will regain control of the New York State Senate in January after a Democrat on Monday lost a recount bid for his closely fought Long Island seat.

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/Reuters/PoliticsNews/~3/BHttGRRzp-4/idUSTRE6BJ5OL20101220

IRAQ IRELAND IREPORT IRVING KRISTOL

Judge Declares Federal Healthcare Plan (Partly) Unconstitutional

healeyb writes "In a surprise move, US District Judge Henry E. Hudson issued a ruling today that the universal healthcare law that was pushed through by the Obama administration is unconstitutional. Specifically, he invalidated the section of the law that requires all citizens to purchase healthcare insurance, arguing that it does not fall under the purview of Commerce Clause of the Constitution, as has been asserted by the government. The ruling represents the first major setback for President Barack Obama on an issue that will likely end up at the Supreme Court. Two other courts have shot down challenges to the law."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotPolitics/~3/8l_O7_988k8/Judge-Declares-Federal-Healthcare-Plan-Partly-Unconstitutional

GARY HERBERT GARY LOCKE GAVIN NEWSOM GAZA

Quote of the Day

"We take turns sleeping."

-- Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, quoted by the New York Times, when asked during his annual telethon who runs the country when he and President Dmitri Medvedev are sleeping.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/PoliticalWire/~3/_OJDnFeB4dQ/quote_of_the_day.html

IDAHO ILLINOIS IMMIGRATION IN

Paul says he won't subpoena Fed, immediately

Republican Congressman Ron Paul, the new head of the subcommittee that oversees the Federal Reserve, said on Sunday he will seek greater transparency.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/40739907/ns/business/

JAMES CARVILLE JAMES CLAPPER JAMES CLYBURN JAMES DOBSON

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Education Panel: The Future Starts Here

Education Panel: The Future Starts Here
At a pivotal time of transition and crisis for the state, PPIC -- in partnership with leading corporate and philanthropic partners -- will host a conference on California's future. This all day event includes keynote speeches and expert panels on education, climate change, the economy, and governance.

Moderator: John Fensterwald, Educated Guess

Linda Darling-Hammond, Stanford University
Michael Hanson, Fresno Unified School District
Theodore (Ted) Mitchell, California State Board of Education
David Sanchez, California Teachers Association
Date: Tue, 07 Dec 2010 00:00:00 -0800
Location: Sacramento, CA, Sheraton Grand Hotel, PPIC
Program and discussion: http://fora.tv/2010/12/07/Education_Panel_The_Future_Starts_Here

Source: http://fora.tv/2010/12/07/Education_Panel_The_Future_Starts_Here

CAMPBELL BROWN: ELECTION CENTER CANADA CANDY CROWLEY CAPITOL

A talk with Galina Tachieva, author of ?The Sprawl Repair Manual?

by Sarah Goodyear.

Driving the highways and byways of America’s endless exurbs and suburbs can be pretty depressing. Strip mall after megamall after subdivision after strip mall fans out from every city in the country—with much of that development sitting vacant or in foreclosure. Even the sprawl has sprawl these days.

It’s a problem even if you’re a dedicated suburbanite. Commutes are long and congested, office space sits vacant, and green space gets eaten up to build new malls and developments as the old ones become obsolete.

So, can this mess be fixed?

That’s the question Galina Tachieva tackles in her recent book, The Sprawl Repair Manual. Tachieva is partner and director of town planning at Duany Plater-Zyberk & Company in Miami, Fla.—the firm of urbanist eminence Andrés Duany.

Tachieva, who is originally from Bulgaria, said she wrote the book because she saw an urgent need for a toolkit that could be used by planners, developers, and government officials in their efforts to build more livable communities. The book is filled with specific examples and illustrations of how to take places like abandoned malls, with their oceanic parking lots, and turn them into mixed-use developments where people can live, work, and shop in pleasant surroundings.

I talked with Tachieva recently about the vanishing promise of suburbia, the opportunities created by the foreclosure crisis, and the vexing problem of Florida. This is an edited version of our conversation.

Q. When people start talking about increasing density, there is often a defensiveness from people who live in suburbs and like what suburbs represent. They think that somehow their way of life is under attack by people who advocate greater density.

A. Yes. That’s very clear, and that’s why we wanted to make the case for sprawl repair as a kind of method which will enhance people’s lives. We will provide amenities for the people who will live there. Appropriate places—whether they are malls, shopping centers, large commercial parks. If the method is explained basically as a process of improving their access to things in daily life—the simple shopping needs or whatever the daily needs are of a person—this will alleviate the situation. Right now, basically, the big promise of suburban living is lost, especially with the foreclosures and everything.

Q. Why do you think that sprawl repair is such an important issue for planners and for communities?

A. It was a topic that I have been studying and researching for a while. Our office has been working on retrofitting projects and sprawl for quite a while. The current economic conditions led me to this idea that this is now a very convenient time, a very good time, actually, to put together a more systematic, more comprehensive approach, a kind of comprehensive method for sprawl repair.

Q. You talk about the economic opportunities that the foreclosure crisis has created. At the same time, it seems like people have less and less money to do big projects. Financing has become very difficult for a lot of developers. How do you see those things balancing out?

A. Of course, right now it’s very difficult to even think about any large project. However, there is a whole range of tools which are prepared for very different economic conditions and for very different scales. That is why the whole method is structured from the bigger picture of the region going all the way down to the community scale and all the way down to the block or the building, to be able to respond to different economic conditions.

It might be a government, regional organization, or municipality thinking about their future development as a larger place, as a region. Or it might be a developer who can maybe intervene in one block, who can actually take advantage of some of the foreclosures—maybe acquire a block of some of these foreclosed properties, and do something on a much smaller scale. And all the way down to the single building. People are thinking about the second generation of some of these suburban building sites coming through the next cycle.

Q. I was looking at the single-family subdivision section—the idea of say, taking these backyards of McMansions and putting townhomes in there. It looks very appealing on paper to someone like myself, but how can you sell people who want McMansions on that idea?

A. First, can we point out some examples how it was done in the past. Most of them are abandoned properties or foreclosed properties. They will be acquired as a group, let’s say. So it’s an opportunity for a neighborhood which is actually going down to do something different. It’s like a tool that they can use. This is number one.

In a good economic situation, this can also be something to be contemplated. In Boston, there are many big McMansions which are converting into multifamily, with some families in the back on the same block. The real estate prices were actually very high. This example was inspired by a real situation, but with the opposite economic situation, when the real estate prices were very high. The desirability of the place was so high that it made sense to develop a different model. Some of these townhouses have underground parking, because it was worth doing.

Q. So you’re seeing a real appetite for sprawl repair when you go out and talk to people.

A. Absolutely. I see a big opportunity because people want to retire in their own places. They want to stay in their communities. They don’t want to move out. These people are in suburbia, they are in second and third generation development. What are we going to do? Displace them? Tell them to go to the city? No.

The millennials, they will still be attracted to Manhattan and the big, vital places. However, they may not be able to afford these places. My son is dying to go to Manhattan. But guess what? He works in Columbus. Columbus is not the worst place he can be. He wants to be in Manhattan, but his livelihood is in Columbus. The smaller places, the suburbs, third and second generation, they need to have these opportunities. And it will happen because the market will require it.

Q. A friend of mine who lives in Florida said to me, “Ask her if she can fix Florida.”

A. Florida is a very interesting example. Of course, it’s the ultimate example of sprawl, the poster child. We have been trying to fix Florida for 30 years, you can reply to your friend.

In Florida, even with all the stuff that has been done in terms of sprawling in a big way, there was also very aggressive thinking about how to fix things. Actually in Florida, there are a whole range of retrofits which are being implemented. Downtown Kendall here in Miami is one big example. Mizner Park, which is in Boca Raton, is the first mall transformation.

There is already historical precedent in Florida, so it’s not going to be difficult either from a regulatory point of view, nor from the point of view of convincing people, because the best thing to do is show them examples. When they have an example, they see it built, they’re like, oh, this is what you mean. It’s not just the density. It’s the nice street—your kids will have a place to go to the theater, you can live there, work there, everything is in close proximity. I believe that there is a good future in Florida.

It’s not going to be only Florida to fix. I’m going to a conference in Rome—they are looking at fixing their suburbs. They are sick and tired of the congestion and the sprawling characteristics.

Q. They just don’t have the amount of land that we have.

A. Yes. Here we had a big party.

Q. I was recently in Las Vegas and was surprised to find myself in a neighborhood that’s not like what I think of in Las Vegas, a new neighborhood that has very interesting designs. They have roundabouts. There was a mall with a Starbucks, for instance, on the perimeter of the lot, and the parking inside behind that, the supermarket behind. We sat at the Starbucks and people were walking their dogs up and down the sidewalk, clearly coming from their residences. It was pretty interesting to see in a brand-new neighborhood.

A. They have the idea of what people want, what people need. They just have to look around and see what people will want in the future. I think that they will be doing it. It’s still moving slowly—it’s like a big machine that has to turn around - but it’s happening all around the country. It’s very, very obvious that it’s already setting in the public consciousness that our ways of doing things are probably over, and we have to be more aggressive and more forward-thinking, do the right thing this time around. When you see this tremendous waste, you wonder: Where’s the common sense in doing this? So hopefully, we can think of an optimistic future, even though it’s hard to imagine it.

Related Links:

Who will own the smarter cities of the future?

Follow-up on Seattle’s proposed deep-bore tunnel

Seattle’s impending car-centric mega-tunnel: a chat with urbanist Cary Moon



Source: http://feeds.grist.org/click.phdo?i=ea2964885e89033286005c4ff57811ac

BRAD SHERMAN BREAKING NEWS BRIAN BAIRD BRIAN MORAN

NBC/WSJ poll: Obama down but not out

US President Barack Obama makes his way onto the stage for the signing ceremony for the Claims Resolution Act of 2010 in the South Court Auditorium of the Eisenhower Executive Office Building December 8, 2010, next to the White House in Washington, DC.After his party?s midterm losses and with the unemployment rate still hovering around 10 percent, President Barack Obama might be down. But he?s far from out ? especially when it comes to his prospects for re-election in 2012.


Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/40687410/ns/politics-more_politics/

BARCLAYS PLC BARNEY FRANK BARON HILL BART STUPAK

Senate Votes To Repeal 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell'

The Senate voted 65-31 on Saturday to overturn the ban on gays serving openly in the military. The measure now goes to President Obama, who made repeal of the 17-year-old policy a campaign promise in 2008.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2010/12/18/132164172/-dont-ask-dont-tell-clears-vital-hurdle?ft=1&f=1014

FLASH VIDEO PLAYER FLORIDA FORT HOOD FORTUNE

Young farmers need help from the USDA?and the next Farm Bill

by Lindsey Lusher Shute.

More and more Millennials are rejecting Cubicleville and instead opting for hands-on professions, including farming—and not a minute too soon. 

Over the last hundred years, the number of young people in agriculture has steadily declined, from 1.8 million principal farm operators in 1910 to just 118,000 today, according to the USDA’s Agricultural Census. As of 2007, for each farmer under 35, there were six over sixty-five. Since 2002 there’s been a slight uptick in the number of farmers (not just the principals) between the ages of 25 and 34, but the overall number of farmers under 35 increased by only 2,000.

Unless an agricultural revival and major policy change begins now, the numbers of farmers will certainly shrink: the Wisconsin Department of Agriculture estimates that 500,000 farmers will retire in the next 20 years.

And that’s why U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack recently called for 100,000 new farmers, and some of the few uncontroversial elements of the last Farm Bill were the handful of programs and provisions for new and beginning farmers. The government offers Beginning Farmer and Rancher Development Program grants (which provide funds for universities and nonprofits to train farmers) as well as direct loans to farmers to operate their farms or buy land.

The problem is, many young farmers say that they don’t know about these programs, are disqualified because of existing rules, or receive misinformation at the local level that prevents them from participating.

At the recent Young Farmers Conference at the Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture in New York, the speakers at a special policy workshop organized by the National Young Farmers’ Coalition, which I lead, shared their experiences with Farm Bill programs and ideas for change.

Loanerous terms

Cara Fraver of Quincy Farm was disappointed that she and her partner, Luke Deikis, were turned down for a Farm Service Agency (FSA) loan when they were looking to purchase land to start an organic CSA farm this year. The FSA makes low-interest loans to beginning farmers to operate, buy, or make a down payment on farm land, but the pair was disqualified because they lacked three years’ of experience operating a farm business. Instead, Cara and Luke had spent their last three farm seasons working at other CSA farms, saving money, and developing a business plan.

The USDA requires that loan recipients participate in the business operations of a farm for three years before applying for a loan to ensure a “reasonable prospect of success” for a farm. Applicants must prove that they were “more than a laborer” at the farms they’ve worked at by showing checks that they signed for the farm, bills addressed to them, or a written statements from the principal farmer describing their role on the farm.

Even with the right level of experience, the FSA loan approval process is proving too slow for farmers looking to buy land in competitive real-estate markets. Benjamin Shute, of Hearty Roots Farm in the Hudson Valley, considered applying for a loan to purchase land in his town, but needed to put in an offer on a farm before FSA could respond to his application. FSA doesn’t offer pre-approval, meaning that farmers can’t quickly bid on a property. Without pre-approval, loans are only useful in slower markets or in a situation where an existing farm owner can afford to be patient with a potential buyer.

Deer prudence

Another way the Farm Bill seeks to help beginning farmers is by reserving program funding for beginning farmers. One such program is the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) that pays up to 90 percent of the cost of conservation structures and the implementation of good management practices. Five percent of EQIP funds are reserved for new and beginning farmers.

Recalling the experience building a deer fence with EQIP funds on her farm in Connecticut, Dina Brewster of The Hickories sees room for improvement. Dina needed three-quarters of a mile of fence to keep her fields of organic vegetables and fruit safe from local deer. After fronting $50,000 to build the fence, she became snared between competing USDA rules—those that made her farm certified organic and another set that suggested she maintain her fence with Round-up, a broad spectrum herbicide that is not on the organic list.

The conflict put the 90 percent reimbursement that she was promised—a business-breaking $45,000—in jeopardy. Only after weeks of calls and letters to the agency did she get final approval and a check in the mail. Dina was thankful for the fence, but exhausted by the experience.

Are you listening, Mr. Vilsack?

The National Young Farmers’ Coalition hopes that USDA staff brought back these farmers’ stories to the Secretary of Agriculture. If he wants to see 100,000 new American farmers in the next few years, improving existing programs for young and beginning farmers can’t be overlooked.

Get off your ass alert: Interested in farming? Try volunteering on an organic farm first through WWOOF.

Related Links:

Feeding our wood stove in winter

FarmHack celebrates ‘resourceful farming with found materials’

Chicago has got it growing on



Source: http://feeds.grist.org/click.phdo?i=77931fe391546080c21661fab9ab723f

DGA DHS DIANNE FEINSTEIN DICK CHENEY

The Black Male: Re-Imagined

Source: http://fora.tv/2010/12/06/The_Black_Male_Re-Imagined

CHRISTOPHER DODD CHRISTOPHER HILL CHUCK DEVORE CHUCK HAGEL

Saturday, December 18, 2010

ABC's Nightline Anti-Gun Report "Guns & Booze"

By DustinsGunBlog

ABC Nightline recently aired a segment covering Restaurant Carry with the title of "Guns and Booze." With a title like that, they were certainly off to a good start on their standard anti-gun spin.

At the end of the segment, they even tried to "prove" that when you draw your gun from a concealed holster you're more likely to have less accurate aim, by having a man shoot with slow measured shots on the first target, then drawing his gun and shooting a group of shots in rapid succession at a second target, then comparing the two target groupings. Pure genius.

Kudos to Nikki Goeser for managing to get in many excellent points on our side of the issue.

Source: http://www.opposingviews.com/i/abc-s-nightline-anti-gun-report-guns-booze

DEMOCRATS DENNIS BLAIR DENNIS KUCINICH DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE

Ron Paul to Chair Monetary Policy Subcommittee

Source: http://reason.com/blog/2010/12/09/ron-paul-to-chair-monetary-pol

DON\'T ASK DON\'T TELL DONALD BERWICK DONALD RUMSFELD DONALD TRUMP

DREAM Act Fails

Senate Democrats could muster only 55 votes in support of the DREAM Act, "a measure that would have created a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants who were brought to this country as children," the Washington Post reports.

"Under Senate rules, Democrats needed 60 votes to overcome Republican opposition to the bill. The House of Representatives had passed the measure earlier this month, 216 to 198."

"The irony of the DREAM Act's failure is that it had strong bipartisan support at the start of the administration, and advocates believed it could generate momentum for more controversial policy changes."

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/PoliticalWire/~3/w_v3qAfYZR8/dream_act_fails.html

ARLEN SPECTER ARNE DUNCAN ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER AT

Wonderfest 2010: The Lives of Stars with Ken Croswell

Wonderfest 2010: The Lives of Stars with Ken Croswell
This program was recorded at the 12th Annual Wonderfest, the San Francisco Bay Area Festival of Science.

Wonderfest's broad goals are best described by its mission statement: Through public discourse about provocative scientific questions, Wonderfest aspires to stimulate curiosity, promote careful reasoning, challenge unexamined beliefs, and encourage life-long learning.

Wonderfest achieves these ends by presenting series of scientific events to the general public. At most of these events, pairs of articulate and accomplished researchers discuss and debate compelling questions at the edge of scientific understanding.
Date: Sun, 07 Nov 2010 13:00:00 -0800
Location: Berkeley, CA, Stanley Hall, Wonderfest
Program and discussion: http://fora.tv/2010/11/07/Wonderfest_2010_The_Lives_of_Stars_with_Ken_Croswell

Source: http://fora.tv/2010/11/07/Wonderfest_2010_The_Lives_of_Stars_with_Ken_Croswell

ACORN ADAM PUTNAM ADRIAN FENTY ADS

China's Influence Widens Nobel Peace Prize Boycott

c0lo writes "Not only did China decline to attend the upcoming Nobel peace prize ceremony, but urged diplomats in Oslo to stay away from the event warning of 'consequences' if they go. Possibly as a result of this (or on their own decisions), 18 other countries turned down the invitation: Pakistan, Iran, Sudan, Russia, Kazakhstan, Colombia, Tunisia, Saudi Arabia, Serbia, Iraq, Vietnam, Afghanistan, Venezuela, the Philippines, Egypt, Ukraine, Cuba and Morocco. Reuters seems to think the 'consequences' are of an economic nature, pointing out that half of the countries with economies that gained global influence during recent times are boycotting the ceremony (with Brazil and India still attending)."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotPolitics/~3/2IIjDQZSTRE/Chinas-Influence-Widens-Nobel-Peace-Prize-Boycott

CARLA BRUNI CARLSON CARLY FIORINA CAROLINE KENNEDY

GM Loses Money On Every Volt Built

thecarchik writes "Doug Parks, vehicle line executive for the 2011 Chevrolet Volt, GM's range-extended electric vehicle, confirmed Tuesday that the company loses money on every Volt it sells. The expensive 16-kilowatt-hour battery pack, which likely costs GM somewhere between $8,000 and $12,000, is clearly too expensive to let the company build hundreds of thousands of Volts right away. Just 10,000 Volts will be built in 2011, though GM is working to increase that number. GM plans to chip away incrementally to lower the costs of the specialized components in the Volt, especially the power electronics. The price of consumer lithium-ion cells has fallen 6 to 8 percent annually since their 1989 launch; the large-format cells in automotive packs seem likely to follow the same curve and as costs are lowered the Volt may stop being a loss for the company."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotPolitics/~3/9AQX5WlYa1A/GM-Loses-Money-On-Every-Volt-Built

DECISIONS AND VERDICTS DEDE SCOZZAFAVA DEFICIT DEFINE POLITICS

Friday, December 17, 2010

L.A.'s REAP: City Rent-Control Laws a License to Steal?

By Denise A Justin

Controller Wendy Greuel says in 2009-10 the L. A. Housing Department collected $43.1 million in two funds under the City’s rent-control program.

Carol Knapp got her law degree and became a property-rights advocate for landlords subject to the City’s rent-control program, under which, she states, “they have become victims of R.E.A.P. at the hands of the Los Angeles Housing Department (LAHD).”

Knapp, a retired school psychologist, has never been in R.E.A.P. (Rent Escrow Account Program) herself, but her goal is to end what she calls a brutal program which targets Mom and Pop landlords. Knapp claims that R.E.A.P.’s purpose is not to provide safe, affordable housing but to allow the City to ‘legally’ swindle property from owners for the benefit of crony developers.”

She writes in a compelling article, “The 7 Deadly Sins of REAP”, “Although I have not yet sat for the bar, I am working under the license of civil rights attorney Lee Grant, Esq. to fulfill my 23-year desire to stop the LAHD from continuing to abuse us.”  (City Watch LA) http://citywatchla.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=4210&Itemid=75

The City of Los Angeles makes a lot of money from landlords through its Rent Stabilization Ordinance (RSO) and Systematic Code Enforcement Program (SCEP), enforced by LAHD, according to an audit of the Housing Department released by Controller Wendy Greuel on December 14, 2010:

“The SCEP fund was created in 1998, in order for LAHD to inspect the nearly 780,000 rental units in the City of Los Angeles every three years to ensure that they are in compliance with City laws .The RSO fund was created in 1979 in response to the passage of Proposition 13, to regulate the amount a landlord is allowed to increase the rent each year. In fiscal year 2009-10, the two funds collected $43.1 million.” http://controller.lacity.org/stellent/groups/electedofficials/@ctr_contributor/documents/contributor_web_content/lacityp_012861.pdf

Helping the “victims of REAP”

Encino attorney Lee Grant has practiced law in Los Angeles for 32 years. He and Knapp are currently fighting for the rights of four clients whose “crime” was owning rental property in the city of Los Angeles. Two are women; one is 94 years old and the other 85. (Landfield, et al v the City of Los Angeles)

The 94-year-old lost her property through foreclosure because the Los Angeles Housing Department  LAHD) put her well-kept three-unit building into its Rent Escrow Account Program (REAP) after they targeted it for citations (with which she complied) and then later added claims of  “further deficiencies.” 

Knapp explains, “The Los Angeles rent-control ordinance allows REAP to lower the rent up to 50% and then confiscates it, thereby preventing owners from paying their mortgages, repairs and other financial obligations.”  

http://lahd.lacity.org/lahdinternet/REAPUMPInformationforOwners/tabid/304/Default.aspx

Falling into REAP

How does a property owner get into R.E.A.P?  It’s set forth under Sec. 151.07, of the L.A. Municipal Code, entitled, AUTHORITY OF THE DEPARTMENT AND THE COMMISSION TO GRANT INDIVIDUAL RENT ADJUSTMENTS, and in interminably convoluted subsections of Sec. 162.   

REFERRAL TO REAP (Eff. 4/16/01) basically states that any City or County agency or any tenant may refer any building or residential unit  for inclusion in REAP  if: (1) The building or unit is the subject of one or more Orders; (2) The period allowed by the Order for compliance, including any extensions, has expired without compliance; and (3) The violation affects the health or safety of the occupants, or, if the unit is subject to the RSO, the violation results in a deprivation of housing services, or a habitability violation. http://www.amlegal.com/nxt/gateway.dll?f=templates&fn=default.htm&vid=amlegal:lamc_ca

While it is incumbent on local government agencies to order compliance for violations of health/safety/building codes and take appropriate action, does the City have the right to literally take control of the property itself and divert any income derived from it into City accounts; thus, impeding the owner’s ability to pay obligations and accomplish what is required?  

Knapp and Grant claim the four plaintiffs/class representatives in this suit complied with all legitimate orders, but were put in REAP anyway for various additional alleged violations. These include code sections over which the LAHD has no authority, e.g. lack of building permits--for buildings predating current requirements and where no health/safety violations exist.  Three of the five plaintiffs were criminally prosecuted, despite timely compliance.

They also contend a major part of the problem for owners who fall into R.E.A.P. is that the city requires the inspection-ordered repairs be completed within 30 days but is haphazard about sending Orders to Comply and other notices. Thus, the time to comply is truncated or eliminated and the City often places properties in R.E.A.P. in violation of other due-process laws and its own internal policies, creating an indefensible situation for the property owner who did not receive timely notices or may not have received them at all.

In fact, the LAHD webpage entitled, “WHAT CAN AN OWNER EXPECT FROM BEING PLACED INTO REAP?” verifies some pretty scary stuff:

  • Tenants may pay their rents to LAHD
  • Rental income may be reduced up to 50%
  • No annual rent increases for 12 months after the property is removed from REAP
  • Eviction Restrictions
  • $50 Charge per unit per month while in REAP
  • $201.50 charge for each LAHD inspection
  • Landlords are required to pre-pay for two Annual SCEP Inspections ($338.00) when the property is removed from REAP.
  • Tenants may apply for their deposited rental funds for relocation or repairs.
  • Notice of REAP will be recorded against your property’s title.
  • The recording may restrict a refinance or sale of the property.   www.lahd.lacity.org

The “domino effect” of REAP—Unintended or Part of the Plan?

Carol Knapp explains another disturbing consequence of this plan, “REAP and its partner in crime, RRP (Rent Reduction Program), allow the city to reduce the rent by as much as 50% if the tenant agrees to pay the (reduced) rent to the City instead of to the owner, thus often providing an incentive for tenants to cause damage themselves.”

In a domino effect, the reduced income and the fact that the City has de facto taken over the property, destroys the owner’s ability to qualify for a loan which would fund the repairs. This was the case for Grants’ 94-year-old client. 

The REAL reason for REAP?

Grant states that he and his legal assistant, Carol Knapp, have accepted the case pro bono,  “…because otherwise these victims would have no way to protect their rights against the assault of the “landgrabbers” in the public and private sectors.” “The LAHD’s “modus operandi” in REAP cases is to financially cripple targeted housing providers so they often cannot adequately defend themselves….” (Landfield, et al v City of Los.Angeles)

He believes there is a definite reason why the City targets certain rental-property owners in low-income areas. The procedures as applied by REAP are anything but “fair,” alleges the complaint, “and are, in fact, used to harass and intimidate owners, particularly in geographic locations designated to receive government funds; e.g., Community Redevelopment Project Areas  and Business Improvement Districts.

Grant contends the goal of R.E.A.P.  is not at all to help the landlord save the money needed for the City-required repairs, “Too many result in bankruptcy or foreclosure. Often the properties are then sold to large developers—possibly friends, supporters of politicians—who  purchase the property and redevelop it with new apartment or condominium projects, often receiving special height or density exemptions and corporate welfare subsidies for ‘purchase and rehabilitation.”

Other “property grabs” by the City?

Ignoring or steamrolling property-owners’ rights appears to be the new standard operating practice in Los Angeles. If you think Grant and Knapp may be creating a conspiracy theory involving LAHD to defend irresponsible apartment owners, take a look at the viewpoint of someone not in the rental industry. 

 LA Neighborhoods United founder, Cary Brazeman, is currently organizing city property owners to defend against a different type of property takeover.  Brazeman bought four full-page ads in the Los Angeles Daily News, which warned of the proposed Community Plan Implementation Overlay (CIPO).

He states, " ... the Mayor's planning department, at their sole discretion, will be able to override existing zoning by allowing taller buildings, bigger buildings and different uses in neighborhoods across the city under the changes.”

He told the LA Weekly on October 12, 2010, “... A small group of local officials, lobbyists and developers has worked to subvert the zoning code for their own selfish interests."  http://blogs.laweekly.com/informer/2010/10/   daily_news_zoning_advertisemen.php

On December 9, Brazeman and LA. Neighbors United, also filed a lawsuit for an injunction against the City. http://www.laneighbors.org/PDF/WeSueBecauseWeLoveLA.pdf

Fighting City Hall in federal court

Knapp and Lee Grant’s first case was filed in the U. S. Central District Court March, ’09, but Los Angeles city attorneys convinced the federal judge that the four plaintiffs had to first go to state court, so they did. 

Superior Court Judge Richard O’Brien recently dismissed the case, thus allowing it to return to federal court. Carol Knapp believes his decision was made, “...not to thwart us, but to help us.    He did what I asked in the Prayer for Relief: send us back to federal court so we can proceed to trial.” 

However, there has been one really disturbing development.  The case was reassigned to federal court in Orange County.  Knapp suspects that the City had some influence in this, “To me this is BLATANT manipulation by the powers that be to change the legal outcome.  I want THIS to be publicized because it is outrageous. O.C. is too far away. It's a change of venue for NO REASON.”    www.fairhousingcoalition.com

Where’s the Fifth Amendment when we need it?

If you think, “This can’t happen in America!” take a look at the Los Angeles City Council agenda most any day and you’ll see the list of  properties being “removed” from REAP. There is no list of the hundreds NOT removed. (On December 17, 2010, properties are just being released which were “accepted” into REAP as early as 2000.) www.lacity.org 

Thus, the purported goal of City rent control laws, which is to provide rentals for the economically challenged, is increasingly not the end result.  Bill Hooey, who heads the apartment-owners’ group,  Fair Housing Coalition says, “The Housing Department’s tactics are destroying the older buildings that accommodate low-income renters and leaving unprecedented numbers of  homeless on the streets of Los Angeles.” www.fairhousingcoalition.com

The Fifth Amendment provides that no American shall be deprived of his/her property without due process of law; and private property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation.  Has the City of Los Angeles crossed the line with REAP? 

What’s really happening?  Are RSO, RRP, SCEP and REAP, administered by LAHD just acronyms for a benign effort to control rents and eliminate health/safety risks in “slum” apartment buildings? Or, could they really be, as asserted by Attorney Lee Grant and Carol Knapp, thinly disguised excuses to steal from the “little guy/gal” and fill the City coffers?   

Source: http://www.opposingviews.com/i/l-a-s-reap-city-rent-control-laws-a-license-to-steal

GAO GARY HERBERT GARY LOCKE GAVIN NEWSOM

Friday music blogging: The Secret Sisters

by David Roberts.

The Secret Sisters are Lydia and Laura Rogers, a duo based in Muscle Shoals, Alabama. Their sweet voices and old-time sensibility caught the interest of the legendary T-Bone Burnett, who took them under his wing, produced their record, and started a label purely to release it.

He also brought in a bunch of old Nashville session musicians to play behind them, using instruments and recording methods from the 1950s. The result is an unabashed throwback and a consistent pleasure. There’s a bit of genteel NPR-ishness to it, sure. They’ll probably play it in Starbucks. But whatever—you’ll pry my love of pretty harmonies out of my cold, dead hands. Or ears, rather.

This tune is called “Why, Baby, Why.”

Related Links:

Friday music blogging: Trampled by Turtles

Friday music blogging: Girl Talk

Friday music blogging: Daft Punk (Tron)



Source: http://feeds.grist.org/click.phdo?i=47adf8c0aebea39f18a21d75c292fa15

ALBERTO GONZALEZ ALEX CASTELLANOS ALEXANDER HAIG ALEXI GIANNOULIAS

Flashback Friday: On This Day In 2007, Lieberman Endorses McCain For President

On this day in 2007, Joe Lieberman, the Democratic nominee for VP in 2000, endorses Republican Sen. John McCain for president.

Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/itsallpolitics/2010/12/17/132142499/flashback-friday-on-this-day-in-2007-lieberman-endorses-mccain-for-president?ft=1&f=1014

ELIOT SPITZER ELIZABETH EDWARDS EMBARGOES AND ECONOMIC SANCTIONS ENERGY