When you’ve lost Howard Fineman…

Obama’s Naivete on Bipartisanship Has Finally Caught Up to Him

Howard Fineman, Senior Political Editor, The Huffington Post

Posted: December 1, 2010 01:37 PM

On the Hill yesterday, GOP aides privately could barely contain their contempt — and their amusement — at the president’s declaration of a dawn of bipartisan optimism.

They know that Obama already in effect has conceded on a two- or three-year extension of all tax cuts, and they are going to insist on that before considering anything else — which, in the end, they won’t.

Barack Obama and his crew have many good qualities. But that list does not include skill and guts at legislative combat with Republicans. They don’t seem to really know the enemy or the game they are in, and the president’s meager and glancing experience in the trenches of politics has caught up with him.

The Federal Reserve Fleecing of America

(11 am. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

$3.3 TRILLION went to purchase junk mortgage bonds from Deutsche Bank and Credit Suisse, the two largest European banks, but there is no money to help out long term unemployed Americans. When you hear about how the banks have repaid the $750 million that was loaned to the large American banks and financial services, ask when that $3.3 TRILLION will be paid back to reduce the deficit and stimulate the American economy.

This is why Bernanke opposed the Federal Reserve Audit:

Fed Opens Books, Revealing European Megabanks Were Biggest Beneficiaries by Shahien Nasiripour at Huffington Post

NEW YORK — The Federal Reserve on Wednesday reluctantly opened the books on its monumental campaign to save the financial system in the midst of the recent crisis, revealing how it distributed some $3.3 trillion in relief.



The data revealed that the Fed’s aid was scattered much more widely than previously understood. Two European megabanks — Deutsche Bank and Credit Suisse — were the largest beneficiaries of the Fed’s purchase of mortgage-backed securities. The Fed’s dollars also flowed to major American companies that are not financial players, including McDonald’s and Harley-Davidson, through unsecured short-term loans.

The measure, initiated in Jan. 2009 to stimulate the flow of credit and keep household borrowing costs low, led the nation’s central bank to purchase more than $1.1 trillion in mortgages packaged into the form of securities. The mortgage bonds are backed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the twin mortgage giants now owned by taxpayers.

Deutsche Bank, a German lender, has sold the Fed more than $290 billion worth of mortgage securities, Fed data through July shows. Credit Suisse, a Swiss bank, sold the Fed more than $287 billion in mortgage bonds.

The data had previously been secret. It was released Wednesday per the recently-enacted law overhauling the federal financial regulation. The Fed, ferociously backed by the Obama administration, fought lawmakers’ desire for full disclosure throughout the financial reform debate.

(emphasis mine)

Cenk Uygur reveals the key points of what has been revealed so far.

On This Day in History: December 2

This is your morning Open Thread. Pour your favorite beverage and review the past and comment on the future

Find the past “On This Day in History” here.

December 2 is the 336th day of the year (337th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 29 days remaining until the end of the year.

On this day in 2001, Enron filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in a New York court, sparking one of the largest corporate scandals in U.S. history.

An energy-trading company based in Houston, Texas, Enron was formed in 1985 as the merger of two gas companies, Houston Natural Gas and Internorth. Under chairman and CEO Kenneth Lay, Enron rose as high as number seven on Fortune magazine’s list of the top 500 U.S. companies. In 2000, the company employed 21,000 people and posted revenue of $111 billion. Over the next year, however, Enron’s stock price began a dramatic slide, dropping from $90.75 in August 2000 to $0.26 by closing on November 30, 2001.

As prices fell, Lay sold large amounts of his Enron stock, while simultaneously encouraging Enron employees to buy more shares and assuring them that the company was on the rebound. Employees saw their retirement savings accounts wiped out as Enron’s stock price continued to plummet. After another energy company, Dynegy, canceled a planned $8.4 billion buy-out in late November, Enron filed for bankruptcy. By the end of the year, Enron’s collapse had cost investors billions of dollars, wiped out some 5,600 jobs and liquidated almost $2.1 billion in pension plans.

Accounting practices

Enron had created offshore entities, units which may be used for planning and avoidance of taxes, raising the profitability of a business. This provided ownership and management with full freedom of currency movement and the anonymity that allowed the company to hide losses. These entities made Enron look more profitable than it actually was, and created a dangerous spiral, in which each quarter, corporate officers would have to perform more and more contorted financial deception to create the illusion of billions in profits while the company was actually losing money. This practice drove up their stock price to new levels, at which point the executives began to work on insider information and trade millions of dollars worth of Enron stock. The executives and insiders at Enron knew about the offshore accounts that were hiding losses for the company; however, the investors knew nothing of this. Chief Financial Officer Andrew Fastow led the team which created the off-books companies, and manipulated the deals to provide himself, his family, and his friends with hundreds of millions of dollars in guaranteed revenue, at the expense of the corporation for which he worked and its stockholders.

In 1999, Enron launched EnronOnline, an Internet-based trading operation, which was used by virtually every energy company in the United States. Enron president and chief operating officer Jeffrey Skilling began advocating a novel idea: the company didn’t really need any “assets.” By pushing the company’s aggressive investment strategy, he helped make Enron the biggest wholesaler of gas and electricity, trading over $27 billion per quarter. The firm’s figures, however, had to be accepted at face value. Under Skilling, Enron adopted mark to market accounting, in which anticipated future profits from any deal were tabulated as if real today. Thus, Enron could record gains from what over time might turn out to be losses, as the company’s fiscal health became secondary to manipulating its stock price on Wall Street during the Tech boom. But when a company’s success is measured by agreeable financial statements emerging from a black box, a term Skilling himself admitted, actual balance sheets prove inconvenient. Indeed, Enron’s unscrupulous actions were often gambles to keep the deception going and so push up the stock price, which was posted daily in the company elevator. An advancing number meant a continued infusion of investor capital on which debt-ridden Enron in large part subsisted. Its fall would collapse the house of cards. Under pressure to maintain the illusion, Skilling verbally attacked Wall Street Analyst Richard Grubman, who questioned Enron’s unusual accounting practice during a recorded conference call. When Grubman complained that Enron was the only company that could not release a balance sheet along with its earnings statements, Skilling replied “Well, thank you very much, we appreciate that . . . asshole.” Though the comment was met with dismay and astonishment by press and public, it became an inside joke among many Enron employees, mocking Grubman for his perceived meddling rather than Skilling’s lack of tact. When asked during his trial, Skilling wholeheartedly admitted that industrial dominance and abuse was a global problem: “Oh yes, yes sure, it is.”

 1409 – The University of Leipzig opens.

1755 – The second Eddystone Lighthouse is destroyed by fire.

1763 – Dedication of the Touro Synagogue, in Newport, Rhode Island, the first synagogue in what became the United States.

1775 – The USS Alfred becomes the first vessel to fly the Grand Union Flag (the precursor to the Stars and Stripes); the flag is hoisted by John Paul Jones.

1804 – At Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris, Napoleon Bonaparte crowns himself Emperor of the French, the first French Emperor in a thousand years.

1805 – Napoleonic Wars: Battle of Austerlitz – French troops under Napoleon Bonaparte defeat a joint Russo-Austrian force.

1823 – Monroe Doctrine: US President James Monroe delivers a speech establishing American neutrality in future European conflicts.

1845 – Manifest Destiny: US President James K. Polk announces to Congress that the United States should aggressively expand into the West.

1848 – Franz Josef I becomes Emperor of Austria.

1851 – French President Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte overthrows the Second Republic.

1852 – Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte becomes Emperor of the French (Napoleon III).

1859 – Militant abolitionist leader John Brown is hanged for his October 16th raid on Harper’s Ferry.

1867 – At Tremont Temple in Boston, British author Charles Dickens gives his first public reading in the United States.

1899 – Philippine-American War: The Battle of Tirad Pass, termed “The Filipino Thermopylae”, is fought.

1908 – Child Emperor Pu Yi ascends the Chinese throne at the age of two

1917 – An armistice was signed between Russia and the Central Powers at Brest-Litovsk and peace talks leading to the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk began.

1920 – Following more than a month of Turkish-Armenian War, the Turkish dictated Treaty of Alexandropol is concluded.

1927 – Following 19 years of Ford Model T production, the Ford Motor Company unveils the Ford Model A as its new automobile.

1930 – Great Depression: US President Herbert Hoover goes before the United States Congress and asks for a US$150 million public works program to help generate jobs and stimulate the economy.

1939 – New York City’s La Guardia Airport opens.

1942 – Manhattan Project: A team led by Enrico Fermi initiates the first self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction.

1943 – A Luftwaffe bombing raid on the harbour of Bari, Italy, sinks numerous cargo and transport ships, including an American Liberty ship, the John Harvey, with a stockpile of World War I-era mustard gas.

1946 – The British Government invites four Indian leaders, Nehru, Baldev Singh, Jinnah and Liaquat Ali Khan to obtain the participation of all parties in the Constituent Assembly.

1947 – Jerusalem Riots of 1947: Riots break out in Jerusalem in response to the approval of the 1947 UN Partition Plan.

1954 – Red Scare: The United States Senate votes 65 to 22 to condemn Joseph McCarthy for “conduct that tends to bring the Senate into dishonor and disrepute”.

1954 – The Sino-American Mutual Defense Treaty, between the United States and the Republic of China, is signed in Washington, D.C.

1956 – The Granma yacht reaches the shores of Cuba’s Oriente province and Fidel Castro, Che Guevara and 80 other members of the 26th of July Movement disembark to initiate the Cuban Revolution.

1961 – In a nationally broadcast speech, Cuban leader Fidel Castro declares that he is a Marxist-Leninist and that Cuba is going to adopt Communism.

1962 – Vietnam War: After a trip to Vietnam at the request of US President John F. Kennedy, US Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield becomes the first American official not to make an optimistic public comment on the war’s progress.

 1970 – The United States Environmental Protection Agency begins operations.

1971 – Abu Dhabi, Ajman, Fujairah, Sharjah, Dubai, and Umm Al Quwain form the United Arab Emirates.

1972 – Gough Whitlam becomes the first Labor Prime Minister of Australia for 23 years.

1975 – Pathet Lao seizes power in Laos, and establishes the Lao People’s Democratic Republic.

1976 – Fidel Castro becomes President of Cuba replacing Osvaldo Dorticos Torrado.

1977 – The first World Series Cricket “supertest” match played between Australia and West Indies

1980 – Four U.S. nuns and churchwomen, Ita Ford, Maura Clarke, Jean Donovan, and Dorothy Kazel, are murdered by a death squad in El Salvador.

1988 – Benazir Bhutto is sworn in as Prime Minister of Pakistan, becoming the first woman to head the government of an Islam-dominated state.

1990 – A coalition led by Chancellor Helmut Kohl wins the first free all-German elections since 1932.

1993 – Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar is shot and killed in Medellin.

1993 – Space Shuttle program: STS-61 – NASA launches the Space Shuttle Endeavour on a mission to repair the Hubble Space Telescope.

1999 – Glenbrook rail accident near Sydney, New South Wales.

1999 – The United Kingdom devolves political power in Northern Ireland to the Northern Ireland Executive.

2001 – Enron files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

2008 – Thai Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat resigns after the 2008 Thailand political crisis.

Holidays and observances

   * Christian Feast Day:

         o Bibiana

         o Channing Moore Williams (Anglican Communion)

         o Chromatius

   * International Day for the Abolition of Slavery (International)

   * National Day (Laos)

   * National Day, celebrates the independence of United Arab Emirates from United Kingdom in 1971.

Morning Shinbun Thursday December 2




Thursday’s Headlines:

Manga, hip hop and high fashion: The world of Takashi Murakami

USA

Chicago takes wrecking ball to its final tower of violence

Accused whistleblower ‘just wanted to live a normal life’

Europe

Wikileaks: Russia branded ‘mafia state’ in recent cable

Ségolène Royal’s presidential announcement throws French Socialists into disarray

Middle East

US papers twist Iranian missile tale

Mubarak party’s landslide election win leaves a bitter taste

Asia

Karzai brothers risk wrath of US over release of Taliban fighters

Pakistan stares into a valley of death

Africa

Farms destined for poor went to Mugabe loyalists

Nigerian troops attack camps, rebels say scores killed

Latin America

Cartel arrests fail to curb drug trade

Fed aid in financial crisis went beyond U.S. banks to industry, foreign firms



By Jia Lynn Yang, Neil Irwin and David S. Hilzenrath

Washington Post Staff Writers

Thursday, December 2, 2010; 12:15 AM


The financial crisis stretched even farther across the economy than many had realized, as new disclosures show the Federal Reserve rushed trillions of dollars in emergency aid not just to Wall Street but also to motorcycle makers, telecom firms and foreign-owned banks in 2008 and 2009. The Fed’s efforts to prop up the financial sector reached across a broad spectrum of the economy, benefiting stalwarts of American industry including General Electric and Caterpillar and household-name companies such as Verizon, Harley-Davidson and Toyota. The central bank’s aid programs also supported U.S. subsidiaries of banks based in East Asia, Europe and Canada while rescuing money-market mutual funds held by millions of Americans.

Manga, hip hop and high fashion: The world of Takashi Murakami



By Laura Allsop for CNN

December 2, 2010  


The Asian art scene is increasingly a force to be reckoned with, but one man can claim to have put Japanese contemporary art on the map.

Tokyo-born Takashi Murakami is the man credited with marrying Japanese subculture with contemporary fine art and turning it into a global brand worth millions of dollars.

You will probably recognize his color-saturated, Manga-inspired canvases; his colorful take on the Louis Vuitton monogram for a range of accessories; or perhaps caught his short film directed by McG and starring actress Kirsten Dunst.

USA

Chicago takes wrecking ball to its final tower of violence



By David Usborne, US Editor Thursday, 2 December 2010

The racket of five decades – clamouring babies, yelling spouses and even the occasional crack of gunfire – are suddenly gone from Cabrini-Green, a high-rise apartment project near downtown Chicago that became a symbol of public housing gone awry. All will remain quiet now until the wrecker’s ball strikes.

Not that there is too much left of it, anyway. For several years, Chicago has been tearing down the unprepossessing red and white towers that stood a stone’s throw from the city’s wealthy heart and yet, spread over 72 acres, was the site of some of the most glaring poverty and shocking violence.

Accused whistleblower ‘just wanted to live a normal life’



Robert Booth, Heather Brooke and Steven Morris

December 2, 2010  


BRADLEY MANNING will wake up today at a military base in Virginia to his 190th day in custody, accused of passing more than 250,000 diplomatic cables to WikiLeaks.

Private Manning, 23, a US Army intelligence analyst brought up in the Oklahoma Bible belt and in Wales, is locked up with about six others in the marine-run facility in Quantico. He has had access to TV news and briefings from his lawyer, but little can have prepared him for the fury of the government over the cables leak.

Advertisement: Story continues below

Hillary Clinton, the Secretary of State, said it ”tore at the fabric of government” and pledged ”aggressive steps to hold responsible those who stole this information”. Republicans branded it terrorism..

Europe

Wikileaks: Russia branded ‘mafia state’ in recent cable

A senior Spanish prosecutor told the US Embassy in Madrid that Russia, Belarus and Chechnya had become virtual “mafia states”, new disclosures of classified material by Wikileaks show.

The BBC 2 December 2010  

A cable also questions whether Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin is implicated in the Russian mafia.

Another reveals that a powerful Ukrainian businessman told US officials he had ties to Russian organised crime.

The documents are among hundreds being released by the whistle-blower website.

On Wednesday the US online shopping giant Amazon reportedly blocked Wikileaks from its servers – a move welcomed by US officials.

Access to Wikileaks’ homepage was sporadic on Wednesday. The website had been using Amazon servers since its Swedish-based servers came under cyber-attack twice earlier this week.

Ségolène Royal’s presidential announcement throws French Socialists into disarray  

A truce over who will lead the Socialists in France’s 2012 presidential race has spectacularly collapsed after the maverick former candidate Ségolène Royal declared she was once again running.

By Henry Samuel, Paris

Miss Royal, 57, whom Nicolas Sarkozy defeated in 2007, jumped the gun on the Socialists’ official timetable by announcing well before the June 2011 deadline that she wished to seek the Socialist ticket. Party primaries are due in the autumn.

Her surprise announcement plunged the party into disarray and increased pressure on Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the current runaway favourite, to declare whether he will stand down as head of the International Monetary Fund to contest the French presidency.

Middle East

US papers twist Iranian missile tale  



By Gareth Porter  

WASHINGTON – A diplomatic cable from last February released by WikiLeaks provides a detailed account of how Russian specialists on the Iranian ballistic-missile program refuted the United States suggestion that Iran has missiles that could target European capitals, or intends to develop such a capability.

In fact, the Russians challenged the very existence of the mystery missile the US claims Iran acquired from North Korea. But readers of the two leading US newspapers never learned those key facts about the document.

Mubarak party’s landslide election win leaves a bitter taste

 

JASON KOUTSOUKIS

December 2, 2010


CHARGES of widespread vote rigging have marred parliamentary election results in Egypt that produced almost a clean sweep for the ruling National Democratic Party of President Hosni Mubarak.

The High Elections Commission said yesterday the NDP had won 209 of the 221 parliamentary seats decided in the first round of voting held last weekend.

The representation ot the Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt’s main opposition group, in the 508-member People’s Assembly fell from 88 to zero after it failed to win any seats, but the party will contest 27 seats in run-off elections to be held on Sunday.

Asia

Karzai brothers risk wrath of US over release of Taliban fighters

Afghan President and sibling accused of undermining deterrent by pardoning insurgents  

By Julius Cavendish in Kabul Thursday, 2 December 2010

Afghan President Hamid Karzai and his powerful brother are among a number of senior Afghan figures to be accused of ordering the release of high-ranking Taliban fighters so often that the insurgents now run a commission to secure their freedom.

According to Reuters news agency, the practice is so widespread as to counteract the deterrent effect of capture, and pits Mr Karzai and his coterie directly at odds with the Nato strategy in Afghanistan.

Even though Mr Karzai and his Western allies espouse a political solution to the war in Afghanistan, analysts say that releasing prisoners in such large numbers actually reduces the chances of a settlement.

Pakistan stares into a valley of death

 

By Syed Saleem Shahzad  

ISLAMABAD – Pakistan’s military headquarters has decided in principle to mount a military operation in the North Waziristan tribal area before the start of the Taliban’s summer offensive in Afghanistan next year.

The decision has been taken at a point that Washington has dropped any idea of dialogue with the Taliban, preferring to rely solely on brute force – a sudden shift in policy that Pakistan refers to as changing horses in midstream.

At the same time, Pakistan’s political leadership refuses to take ownership of the North Waziristan operation, leaving the armed forces alone to decide on its strategy. tegy.

Africa

Farms destined for poor went to Mugabe loyalists  



BILL CORCORAN in Cape Town  

THE ZIMBABWEAN president Robert Mugabe and his closest allies control just under half of the farms taken from white farmers since the country’s so-called land-reform programme began 10 years ago, a new investigation claims.

Published yesterday by Zim Online, an independent online newspaper, the report said that rather than benefiting the poor black masses, 40 per cent of the farms taken during the land invasions are in the possession of 2,200 senior Zanu-PF party loyalists.

Since Zimbabwe’s land-reform programme began in 2000, 14 million hectares of prime agricultural land have been taken from an estimated 5,000 white farmers, supposedly for redistribution to the poor black masses disenfranchised under colonial rule.

Nigerian troops attack camps, rebels say scores killed



Dec 2, 2010 1:20 AM | By Sapa-AFP

“We have not taken a casualty count from the operation yet in the three camps,” Colonel Timothy Antigha, a spokesman for the military’s Joint Task Force, told AFP.

“An unspecified number of people may have been killed during the operation, but anybody who was killed was a criminal because innocent people do not live in camps.”

Latin America

Cartel arrests fail to curb drug trade  



By ELLIOT SPAGAT, MARTHA MENDOZA

CALEXICO, California – On a sleepy boulevard of motels and fast-food joints near the Mexican border, police stopped a car with a broken tail light. In the trunk, an officer found a trash bag containing 48 pounds of narcotics, and in the driver’s pocket, scraps of paper scrawled with phone numbers.

Almost four years later, a grave Eric Holder called his first news conference as the U.S. attorney general and announced where those phone numbers had led – to a sweeping investigation called Operation Xcellerator, which produced the largest-ever federal crackdown on Mexico’s Sinaloa drug cartel, with 761 people arrested and 23 tons of narcotics seized..

Ignoring Asia A Blog

The First Night of Hanukkah

Photobucket

The Hanukkah Story

In 168 B.C.E. the Jewish Temple was seized by Syrian-Greek soldiers and dedicated to the worship of the god Zeus. This upset the Jewish people, but many were afraid to fight back for fear of reprisals. Then in 167 B.C.E. the Syrian-Greek emperor Antiochus made the observance of Judaism an offense punishable by death. He also ordered all Jews to worship Greek gods.

Jewish resistance began in the village of Modiin, near Jerusalem. Greek soldiers forcibly gathered the Jewish villages and told them to bow down to an idol, then eat the flesh of a pig – both practices that are forbidden to Jews. A Greek officer ordered Mattathias, a High Priest, to acquiesce to their demands, but Mattathias refused. When another villager stepped forward and offered to cooperate on Mattathias’ behalf, the High Priest became outraged. He drew his sword and killed the villager, then turned on the Greek officer and killed him too. His five sons and the other villagers then attacked the remaining soldiers, killing all of them.

Mattathias and his family went into hiding in the mountains, where other Jews wishing to fight against the Greeks joined them. Eventually they succeeded in retaking their land from the Greeks. These rebels became known as the Maccabees, or Hasmoneans.

Once the Maccabees had regained control they returned to the Temple in Jerusalem. By this time it had been spiritually defiled by being used for the worship of foreign gods and also by practices such as sacrificing swine. Jewish troops were determined to purify the Temple by burning ritual oil in the Temple’s menorah for eight days. But to their dismay, they discovered that there was only one day’s worth of oil left in the Temple. They lit the menorah anyway and to their surprise the small amount of oil lasted the full eight days.

This is the miracle of the Hanukkah oil that is celebrated every year when Jews light a special menorah known as a hanukkiyah for eight days. One candle is lit on the first night of Hanukkah, two on the second, and so on, until eight candles are lit.

“I Think We Elected a Republican”

(10 am. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

David Dayen @ FDL:

We’ve officially gone around the bend.

OFA Tries to Get Supporters to Write Letters to the Editor Praising a Federal Worker Pay Freeze

From Gaius Publius at AMERICAblog

The Fix is in on tax cuts.

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Everybody in the city knows that the president has essentially agreed to accept a two- or three-year extension of tax cuts for all Americans, including the wealthiest.

It seems that this [working] group [with senators and Tim Geithner, etc.] is designed to come to the conclusion that they know they’re already supposed to come to and then give it back to the president.

The Republicans are going to make a big show of being reasonable by reluctantly giving up on their desire to extend the tax cuts for the wealthiest into infinity. And they’re going to be the reasonable ones here, so they’re going to claim, by just agreeing to two or three years. And the president’s going to accept it.

And how do we know we are being sold out by this Republican in Democratic garb?  Just take a look who Obama has sent to negotiate the terms of surrender.

Obama Appoints Geithner, Lew to Seek Tax Deal With GOP

However, in one sign of action, Obama said he appointed Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and budget director Jack Lew to work with congressional Republicans and Democrats to come up with a deal on taxes in the next couple of days.

If no agreement is reached before Congress breaks for the holidays, taxes on all Americans would increase, a new year shocker that would increase pressure on Washington to act.

Immediately following the meeting, congressional Republicans said the discussion with President Barack Obama was a positive one in which both sides agreed to spend more time working together and finding common ground on tax and other tough issues.

The majority of Americans are so screwed.

Prime Time

Broadcast?  Feh.  Not much on cable either.  You could read a book or take a nap.

If you could’ve found out what Rosebud meant, I bet that would’ve explained everything.

No, I don’t think so; no. Mr. Kane was a man who got everything he wanted and then lost it. Maybe Rosebud was something he couldn’t get, or something he lost. Anyway, it wouldn’t have explained anything… I don’t think any word can explain a man’s life. No, I guess Rosebud is just a… piece in a jigsaw puzzle… a missing piece.

Later-

Dave in repeats (11/18).  Jon has Sting, Stephen Michelle Rhee (ugh).  Conan hosts Joel McHale, Tim Gunn, and Cake.

BoondocksBitches to Rags.

As Charles Foster Kane who owns eighty-two thousand, six hundred and thirty-four shares of public transit – you see, I do have a general idea of my holdings – I sympathize with you. Charles Foster Kane is a scoundrel. His paper should be run out of town. A committee should be formed to boycott him. You may, if you can form such a committee, put me down for a contribution of one thousand dollars.

Zap2it TV Listings, Yahoo TV Listings

Evening Edition

Evening Edition is an Open Thread

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 Russian fury on eve of World Cup vote

by Rob Woollard, AFP

46 mins ago

ZURICH (AFP) – Last-ditch lobbying for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups cranked into overdrive Wednesday as Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin launched a thinly veiled attack against England’s bid on the eve of the vote.

The five countries battling for the 2022 football extravaganza — Australia, the United States, South Korea, Japan and Qatar — showcased their bids one last time in presentations at FIFA headquarters in Zurich.

Meanwhile, high-powered delegations from countries slugging it out for the 2018 tournament were engaging in frenzied politicking with the climax to the scandal-tainted vote less than 24 hours away.

2 Putin slams anti-FIFA ‘smears’ on eve of World Cup vote

by Rob Woollard, AFP

Wed Dec 1, 10:56 am ET

ZURICH (AFP) – Last-ditch lobbying for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups cranked into overdrive Wednesday as Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin launched a scathing attack on England’s bid on the eve of the vote.

The five countries battling for the 2022 football extravaganza — Australia, the United States, South Korea, Japan and Qatar — showcased their bids one last time to voters at FIFA headquarters in Zurich.

Meanwhile, high-powered delegations from the countries slugging it out for the 2018 tournament were engaging in frenzied lobbying with the climax to the scandal-tainted looming less than 24 hours away.

3 Frenzied lobbying as World Cup D-day looms

by Rob Woollard, AFP

Wed Dec 1, 8:06 am ET

ZURICH (AFP) – The frenzied race for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups entered the home straight on Wednesday as rival bids prepared to make final presentations on the eve of the scandal-tainted election.

The five countries battling for the 2022 football extravaganza — Australia, the United States, South Korea, Japan and Qatar — were to showcase their bids in 30-minute pitches to voters at FIFA headquarters in Zurich.

High-powered delegations from England and other countries slugging it out for the 2018 tournament meanwhile were engaging in frantic last-ditch lobbying before making their own presentations on Thursday.

4 Lawyer slams ‘persecution’ as Interpol hunts WikiLeaks chief

by Danny Kemp, AFP

1 hr 32 mins ago

LONDON (AFP) – The lawyer of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange said Wednesday his client was being persecuted for publishing embarrassing US diplomatic cables as Interpol called for his arrest over rape accusations.

As Washington tried to calm new outbursts of anger from world leaders over the leaks, France-based Interpol said it had alerted all member states to arrest Assange, who is wanted in Sweden on allegations of sex crimes.

Assange’s mother said she did not want her son “hunted down”, while his lawyer in London suggested the alert issued by the global police body could be linked to the “bellicose” US reactions over the dumping of the classified documents.

5 ‘Sarkozy the American’ mulled troops for Iraq: WikiLeaks

by Dave Clark, AFP

Tue Nov 30, 6:43 pm ET

PARIS (AFP) – Even before his election, President Nicolas Sarkozy convinced the US he was the most pro-American French leader since the war and even discussed sending French troops to Iraq, leaked cables showed.

The French daily Le Monde, citing a trove of stolen diplomatic cables given to it by the activist website WikiLeaks, said Sarkozy wooed US diplomats in Paris long before taking office in 2007 and convinced them he was a firm ally.

“Sarkozy is the French politician who most supports the role of the United States in the world,” the US embassy in Paris wrote in a 2006 portrait of the right-wing minister shortly before he announced his presidential run.

6 Arrest warrant for WikiLeaks chief as chaos spreads

AFP

Wed Dec 1, 10:14 am ET

PARIS (AFP) – Interpol called Wednesday for the arrest of WikiLeaks’ shadowy founder as the site’s release of secret US cables laid bare international concerns over the safety of Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal.

France-based Interpol said it had alerted all member states to arrest Julian Assange, who is wanted in Sweden for “probable cause of suspected rape, sexual molestation and unlawful coercion”.

Assange’s mother said she did not want her son, who has denied the charges, “hunted down”.

7 German EON offloads ‘milestone’ Gazprom stake

by Simon Sturdee, AFP

Wed Dec 1, 12:38 pm ET

BERLIN (AFP) – Germany’s EON said Wednesday it had sold its 3.5-percent stake in Russian gas giant Gazprom, a holding once hailed as a “milestone” in Moscow and Berlin’s growing commercial ties.

EON, the world’s largest private utilities group, said it would raise 3.4 billion euros (4.4 billion dollars) from selling 2.7 percent in Gazprom to state-owned Vnesheconombank (VEB) and 0.8 percent on the stock market.

The stake in the world’s largest gas firm was held by EON’s subsidiary EON Ruhrgas, which built up a 6.4-percent interest between 1998 and 2003 before exchanging 2.9 percent for a stake in the Yuzhno-Russkoye gas field in Russia.

8 Rugby chiefs to use Olympics as ‘calling card’

by Luke Phillips, AFP

Wed Dec 1, 12:02 pm ET

DUBAI (AFP) – The inclusion of rugby sevens at the 2016 Olympic Games will act as a “calling card” to grow all forms of the game on a global level, the sport’s governing body said Wednesday.

The abbreviated form of rugby union, a high-octane game featuring seven-a-side teams competing in pool action before progressing to a knock-out stage, was accepted by the International Olympic Committee for the Rio Games.

And Mark Egan, head of development at the International Rugby Board (IRB), said sevens was ideal for growing the shortened game and full 15-a-side rugby, for both men and women.

9 South Africa’s anti-AIDS drugs reach a million people

by Tabelo Timse, AFP

Wed Dec 1, 1:12 pm ET

DRIEFONTEIN, South Africa (AFP) – A million people are now receiving anti-AIDS drugs in South Africa, a country with the world’s heaviest HIV infections, Deputy President Kgalema Motlanthe said on Wednesday.

“More than 200 000 new patients have been initiated on ARV’s since April this year, bringing a total number to one million,” Motlanthe told a public gathering to mark World AIDS Day in the eastern province of Mpumalanga.

Motlanthe said more public health institutions were now providing treatment, with more nurses trained to administer ARV (anti-retroviral) drugs.

10 End to gay ban poses little risk for military: Pentagon

by Dan De Luce, AFP

Tue Nov 30, 6:15 pm ET

WASHINGTON (AFP) – A Pentagon study issued Tuesday said ending a ban on gay soldiers serving openly would create no serious problem for the US military, as the White House pressed for repealing the law.

The long-awaited report said that a “solid majority” of troops expressed no objection to the change, though members of combat units had more misgivings.

The study, which the White House hopes will pave the way for Congress to lift the ban, concluded the risk “to overall military effectiveness is low” if the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” law is repealed.

11 Eurozone debt crisis deepens

AFP

Tue Nov 30, 6:03 pm ET

PARIS (AFP) – The financial cloud hanging over the eurozone darkened Tuesday, with the euro falling and Italy hit by rising borrowing rates as EU measures to control sovereign debt left investors uncertain and anxious.

The euro fell under 1.30 dollars for the first time since mid-September, dropping at one point to 1.2969 dollars from 1.3121 dollars late Monday. The single currency later edged back up to 1.2982 dollars.

Upward pressure intensified on 10-year borrowing rates for countries seen at risk of needing a rescue after Greece and Ireland, with attention focused on Spain, a potentially much bigger problem for the EU.

12 Islamists, secular party withdraw from Egypt poll run-off

by Samer al-Atrush, AFP

Wed Dec 1, 1:15 pm ET

CAIRO (AFP) – The Muslim Brotherhood and the secular Wafd party both withdrew on Wednesday from Egypt’s election after a crushing first-round defeat by the president’s ruling party in a poll marred by alleged fraud and violence.

The move left barely any opposition to contest the second round of the parliamentary poll and dealt another blow to the credibility of the vote after Egypt came in for heavy criticism from its US ally and human rights groups.

The Muslim Brotherhood won a fifth of the seats in the 2005 election but failed to secure a single one in Sunday’s ballot.

13 Giant scarf knitted for Peru’s missing

by Bayly Turner, AFP

Wed Dec 1, 11:00 am ET

AYACUCHO, Peru (AFP) – A clutch of women knitting together is a familiar, friendly sight in the Peruvian highlands, a region prized for its wool where traditional, home-knitted outfits are part of everyday clothing.

But the women in Ayacucho share more than a love of knitting. They are the bereaved mothers, sisters and widows of some of the tens of thousands of men who went missing in what they call “The War”.

Each one is working on a panel roughly the size of an A4 sheet of paper to remember their “disappeared” loved ones. The panels are then pieced together in an enormous scarf, a work in progress that already measures 350-metres (yards) long and went on show in Lima for the first time last week.

14 Deficit panel recalibrates, seeks more support

By Kevin Drawbaugh and Donna Smith, Reuters

18 mins ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – A presidential commission trying to balance the U.S. budget on Wednesday softened a proposed tax overhaul to win broader support for its bold plan to slash the $1.3 trillion federal deficit.

The plan faced an uphill struggle to win sufficient backing to trigger a congressional vote. Even if that happens, analysts predict Congress won’t take substantive steps to reduce the deficit this year.

Changes made to the plan included dropping a proposal to kill the popular mortgage interest tax deduction, as had been recommended on November 10. The revised version proposed a limited, 12 percent mortgage interest tax credit.

15 Geithner and lawmakers debate Bush-era tax cuts

By Kim Dixon, Reuters

2 hrs 5 mins ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – President Barack Obama’s top economic advisers and key leaders in Congress haggled over how to extend low Bush-era tax rates on Wednesday, seeking to break a political deadlock and prevent taxes from rising next year.

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, who is leading negotiations for the White House with budget director Jack Lew, said participants had a “civil, constructive discussion” but he would not talk about where those talks were heading.

“We went through everything on the table,” Geithner told reporters. “We also agreed, this is very important, that we are not going to characterize the discussions in the room.”

16 Special report: How BP’s oil spill costs could double

By Tom Bergin, Reuters

Wed Dec 1, 8:28 am ET

LONDON (Reuters) – Last month, BP increased by $8 billion the financial provisions it was taking for the Gulf of Mexico oil spill; the company’s shares rose. Better-than- expected underlying profits and upbeat comments from new Chief Executive Bob Dudley were taken by the market as a sign the company had turned the corner and would soon return to pumping out steadily rising dividends.

Key to this sanguine outlook is confidence that the new estimate of the total cost of the spill — $40 billion — will be sufficient. “We think that $40 billion adequately provisions for the liabilities that are outstanding so far,” said Mark Lacey, Fund Manager at Investec Global Energy Fund. Paul Mumford, fund manager at Cavendish Asset Management, went further, saying the provision is likely to be overly conservative: “You might well find that you get provision write-backs,” he said, hinting the bill could be lower.

That optimistic view may turn out to be true. BP executives have said this is their “best estimate” of costs, adding they could turn out lower. But history shows there is ample scope for nasty surprises from BP. The London-based oil giant — last year it was the biggest non-state controlled oil and gas producer in the world — has so far consistently underestimated the scope and potential cost of the Gulf spill. It also has a track record of low-balling disasters, including the fatal Texas City refinery blast in 2005. Not only has the company underestimated the cost of repairing equipment and ecosystems in the past, it has also made overly optimistic assumptions about legal challenges.

17 Russia’s Putin warns West over missile defense: report

By Steve Gutterman, Reuters

Wed Dec 1, 8:38 am ET

MOSCOW (Reuters) – Prime Minister Vladimir Putin told CNN television that Russia would deploy nuclear weapons and “strike forces” if it were shut out of a Western missile shield, adding punch to a warning from President Dmitry Medvedev.

In an interview with Larry King taped on Tuesday, Putin also said the WikiLeaks scandal was “no catastrophe” and told the United States not to meddle with Russian elections.

Putin said missile threats against Europe must be tackled jointly — a reference to an agreement reached at a November 20 Russia-NATO summit to cooperate on missile defense. Plans are sketchy and Russia has warned it wants an equal role.

18 U.N. climate talks seek to define rich, poor duties

By Timothy Gardner and Gerard Wynn, Reuters

Tue Nov 30, 7:05 pm ET

CANCUN, Mexico (Reuters) – Climate negotiators at U.N. talks in Mexico on Tuesday struggled over proposals that would abolish a two-decade divide between rich and poor on scrutiny of greenhouse gas emissions.

Developed countries say fast-growing emerging economies led by China, which has become the top carbon emitter, have to do far more to curb their emissions. Many poor nations oppose changing a 1992 U.N. convention that obliges the rich to lead.

“I can guarantee you that this will be a controversial issue,” Artur Runge-Metzger, a senior European Union negotiator, said at the November 29 to December 10 talks in a Caribbean resort.

19 Military study gives green light to end gay ban

By Phil Stewart and Ross Colvin, Reuters

Tue Nov 30, 6:51 pm ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The Pentagon unveiled a study on Tuesday that predicted little impact if the U.S. military ended its ban on gays, bolstering President Barack Obama’s push to get Congress to repeal “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” by year-end.

Gay rights activists swiftly applauded the study, which dismissed or minimized concerns among some U.S. lawmakers and up to a third of the military about ending the policy.

Obama called for swift action by Congress, where he faces stiff opposition from Senate Republicans who are threatening to block him..

20 Portugal under the gun as borrowing costs rise

By Sergio Goncalves, Reuters

Wed Dec 1, 10:22 am ET

LISBON (Reuters) – Debt-ridden Portugal suffered another blow on Wednesday when its borrowing costs rose sharply in a government Treasury bill auction, but officials insisted the country could survive without an international bailout.

All the 500 million euros in 12-month T-bills on offer in the auction were sold. But yields rose to a euro lifetime record of 5.281 percent from 4.813 percent two weeks ago, demonstrating sagging investor confidence in the Iberian nation which is now in the frontline of the euro zone debt crisis.

“Should bond yields not ease soon, there is a significant chance of Portugal being the next country having to seek an EU bailout,” said Diego Iscaro, an economist at IHS-Global Insight in London.

21 Social Security cuts are part of deficit plan

By ANDREW TAYLOR, Associated Press

55 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Divisions remain within President Barack Obama’s deficit commission on politically explosive budget cuts and slashes in Social Security benefits, even as the panel’s co-chairmen go public with a revised plan to tame the runaway national debt.

The new plan by co-chairmen Erskine Bowles and Alan Simpson, to be unveiled Wednesday, faces an uphill slog. Resistance is certain, not only because of the idea of raising the Social Security retirement age, but also because of proposed cuts to Medicare, curtailment of tax breaks and a doubling of the federal tax on a gallon of gasoline.

Though the plan appears unlikely to win enough bipartisan support from the panel to be approved for a vote in Congress this year or next, Bowles has already declared victory, saying he and Simpson have at least succeeded in initiating an “adult conversation” in the country about the pain it will take to cut the deficit.

22 Deficit panel split; painful package in doubt

By ANDREW TAYLOR and TOM RAUM, Associated Press

6 mins ago

WASHINGTON – A painful package of spending cuts and tax increases drew sharp challenges from both the left and right on President Barack Obama’s deficit commission Wednesday, putting approval in doubt. However, both parties’ Senate budget point men embraced the plan, and even opponents called it a starting point for efforts next year to control the nation’s ballooning debt.

“It’s a template that gives people an opportunity to start discussing what we have to do to get our fiscal house in order,” said Rep. Xavier Becerra, a California Democrat on the panel who hasn’t said whether he’ll support the package.

The 18-member bipartisan commission could vote on the plan Friday. But as Wednesday’s meeting demonstrated, the co-chairmen, Democrat Erskine Bowles and Republican Alan Simpson, face a difficult chore in rounding up the 14 votes needed to officially send the plan to Congress for consideration.

23 GOP says it’ll block bills until tax cuts extended

By JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS, Associated Press

56 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Senate Republicans threatened Wednesday to block virtually all legislation until expiring tax cuts are extended and a bill is passed to fund the federal government, vastly complicating Democratic attempts to leave their own stamp on the final days of the post-election Congress.

“While there are other items that might ultimately be worthy of the Senate’s attention, we cannot agree to prioritize any matters above the critical issues of funding the government and preventing a job-killing tax hike,” all 42 GOP senators wrote in a letter to Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev. The 42 signatures are more than enough to block action on almost any item he wishes to advance.

The threat does not apply to a new arms control treaty with Russia that is pending, since it would be debated under rules that differ from those that apply to routine legislation. President Barack Obama has made ratification of the pact a top priority.

24 Lawmakers stand firm on taxes as talks start

By STEPHEN OHLEMACHER, Associated Press

Wed Dec 1, 12:48 pm ET

WASHINGTON – Democrats and Republicans are working to reach a deal to extend Bush-era tax cuts that expire at the end of the year, but neither side is budging as negotiations begin in earnest.

Even as they talk, House leaders are planning to hold a politically charged vote Thursday to extend middle-class tax cuts while letting taxes for the wealthy rise.

The bill, even if it passes the House, stands no chance in the Senate. Nevertheless, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said he is considering holding a similar vote.

25 Obama: No offshore drilling in East Coast waters

By BRENDAN FARRINGTON and MATTHEW DALY, Associated Press

57 mins ago

WASHINGTON – In a reversal, the Obama administration said Wednesday it will not pursue offshore drilling off the East Coast of the U.S. and the eastern Gulf of Mexico.

A senior administration official told The Associated Press that because of the BP oil spill, the Interior Department will not propose any new oil drilling in waters off the East Coast for at least the next seven years.

President Barack Obama’s earlier plan – announced in March, three weeks before the April BP spill – would have authorized officials to explore potential for drilling from Delaware to central Florida, plus the northern waters of Alaska. The new plan allows potential drilling in Alaska, but officials said they will move cautiously before approving any leases.

26 Citing BP, Obama rejects East Coast oil drilling

By MATTHEW DALY and BRENDAN FARRINGTON, Associated Press

14 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Pointing to the BP blowout and risks of a new environmental disaster, the Obama administration reversed itself Wednesday and promised not to pursue offshore drilling in the eastern Gulf of Mexico or anywhere else along the nation’s East Coast.

The decision was hailed in Florida, which depends on tourists drawn by the state’s white beaches, but criticized by the oil industry, which said the administration was stifling crucial U.S. energy production and costing recession-battered jobseekers golden opportunities for new work.

The administration had backed a major expansion of offshore drilling earlier this year, in part to gain support for comprehensive climate legislation in Congress, one of President Barack Obama’s top legislative goals.

27 European police on alert for Wikileaks founder

By RAPHAEL G. SATTER and MALIN RISING, Associated Press

58 mins ago

LONDON – Swedish officials ratcheted up the pressure on WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange on Wednesday, asking European police to arrest him on rape allegations as his organization continued to embarrass the Obama administration with a stream of leaked diplomatic cables.

The 39-year-old Australian computer hacker disappeared from public view after a Nov. 5 press conference in Geneva. He has spoken publicly only through online interviews, while a statement from his lawyer said the Australian was being persecuted by Swedish officials who are seeking his arrest on allegations of rape, sexual molestation and unlawful coercion.

Sweden’s Director of Public Prosecution Marianne Ny said that a European arrest warrant had been issued for Assange in connection with the allegations. London-based lawyer Mark Stephens complained that Assange had yet to receive formal notice of the allegations he faces – something he described as a legal requirement under European law – and said that Assange had repeatedly offered to answer questions about the investigation, to no avail.

28 Holidays about survival as jobless benefits end

By TOM BREEN, Associated Press

26 mins ago

Shawn Slonsky’s children know by now not to give him Christmas lists filled with the latest gizmos. The 44-year-old union electrician is one of nearly 2 million Americans whose extended unemployment benefits will run out this month, making the holiday season less about celebration than survival.

“We’ll put up decorations, but we just don’t have the money for a Christmas tree,” Slonsky said.

Benefits that had been extended up to 99 weeks started running out Wednesday. Unless Congress approves a longer extension, the Labor Department estimates about 2 million people will be cut off by Christmas.

29 Starry starry starry night: Star count may triple

By SETH BORENSTEIN, AP Science Writer

10 mins ago

WASHINGTON – The universe may glitter with far more stars than even Carl Sagan imagined when he rhapsodized about billions upon billions. A new study suggests there are a mind-blowing 300 sextillion of them, or three times as many as scientists previously calculated. That is a 3 followed by 23 zeros. Or 3 trillion times 100 billion.

The estimate, contained in a study published online Wednesday in the journal Nature, is based on findings that there are many more red dwarf stars – the most common star in the universe – than once thought.

But the research goes deeper than that. The study by Yale University astronomer Pieter van Dokkum and Harvard astrophysicist Charlie Conroy questions a key assumption that astronomers often use: that most galaxies have the same properties as our Milky Way. And that conclusion is deeply unsettling to astronomers who want a more orderly cosmos.

30 Study says even being a bit overweight is risky

By STEPHANIE NANO, Associated Press

8 mins ago

NEW YORK – Lugging around a few extra pounds? One of the largest studies to look at health and weight finds that you don’t have to be obese to raise your risk of premature death. Merely being overweight carries some risk, too.

Obesity increases the risk of death from heart disease, stroke and certain cancers. But whether being merely overweight contributes to an early death as well has been uncertain and controversial. Some research has suggested being a little pudgy has little effect or can even be a good thing.

The latest research involving about 1.5 million people concluded that healthy white adults who were overweight were 13 percent more likely to die during the time they were followed in the study than those whose weight is in an ideal range.

31 Fed ID’s companies that used crisis aid programs

By JEANNINE AVERSA, AP Economics Writer

11 mins ago

WASHINGTON – The Federal Reserve revealed details Wednesday of trillions of dollars in emergency aid it provided to U.S. and foreign banks during the financial crisis.

New documents show that the most loan and other aid for U.S. institutions over time went to Citigroup ($2.2 trillion), followed by Merrill Lynch ($2.1 trillion), Morgan Stanley ($2 trillion), Bank of America ($1.1 trillion), Bear Stearns ($960 billion), Goldman Sachs ($620 billion), JPMorgan Chase ($260 billion) and Wells Fargo ($150 billion). Many of the individual loans they took were worth billions and had short durations but were paid back and renewed many times.

Merrill Lynch was later acquired by Bank of America, while Bear Stearns collapsed and was sold to JPMorgan.

32 Putin opts out of helping Russia’s World Cup bid

By RAF CASERT, AP Sports Writer

1 hr 11 mins ago

ZURICH – With Prime Minister Vladimir Putin pulling out of helping Russia’s 2018 World Cup bid, Wednesday’s frantic last day of politicking was left to other leaders, princes, actors and models to work their charm on the 22 voters.

Putin’s withdrawal and allegation that the bidding process had turned into an “unfair competition” following scandals targeting FIFA dented Russia’s stature as a favorite to host the event.

England continued to lead the sporting diplomacy, with Prime Minister David Cameron, Prince William and David Beckham seeking to sway FIFA’s executive committee for their 2018 bid.

33 FCC preparing to vote on network neutrality rules

By JOELLE TESSLER, AP Technology Writer

Wed Dec 1, 7:52 am ET

WASHINGTON – Federal regulators are moving ahead with a plan to prohibit phone and cable companies from blocking or discriminating against Internet traffic flowing over their broadband networks.

Julius Genachowski, chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, will outline his proposal for so-called “network neutrality” rules in a speech on Wednesday. Despite Republican opposition in Congress, Genachowski plans to bring his proposal to a vote by the full commission before the end of the year.

Net neutrality rules were one of the Obama administration’s top campaign pledges to the technology industry and have been among Genachowski’s priorities since he took over the FCC more than a year ago.

34 In WikiLeaks wake, whistle-blower bill set to pass

By RICHARD LARDNER, Associated Press

Wed Dec 1, 10:33 am ET

WASHINGTON – Following the latest baring of U.S. secrets on the Internet, Congress is poised to pass legislation giving employees in the most sensitive government jobs a way to report corruption, waste and mismanagement without turning to outside organizations like WikiLeaks.

President Barack Obama is expected to sign the bill, which supporters say will discourage leaks of classified information. The legislation would allow intelligence agency whistle-blowers to raise concerns within their agencies instead of giving classified materials to WikiLeaks or other outlets, which is illegal.

Without protections spelled out in law, whistle-blowers risk being fired or demoted for informing their chains of command about misconduct, according to Tom Devine, legal director at the Government Accountability Project. That leaves no alternative to anonymous – and potentially damaging – leaks unless whistle-blowers are willing to jeopardize their careers, he said.

35 NY pilot expands organ recovery to at-home deaths

By SAMANTHA GROSS, Associated Press

Wed Dec 1, 1:20 pm ET

NEW YORK – Families choosing whether to donate a loved one’s organs usually have days to grapple with their decision, all while the patient lies hooked up to machines in a hospital bed.

But they would have only about 20 minutes to make the choice in a new pilot program meant to recover organs from patients who die at home.

That’s roughly how long a team of organ specialists will have after a cardiac-arrest patient is declared dead to arrive at the home, check a donor registry, determine medical eligibility, obtain a family member’s consent and get the person into a specialized ambulance.

36 Ill. Senate approves civil unions for gay couples

By CHRISTOPHER WILLS and CARLA K. JOHNSON, Associated Press

9 mins ago

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. – Gay rights advocates celebrated Wednesday as the Illinois Legislature voted to legalize civil unions, although some wondered whether the measure that the governor is expected to sign will make it easier or harder to someday win approval of same-sex marriage.

The state Senate approved the legislation 32-24, sending it to Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn. It passed despite complaints from some senators that civil unions threaten the sanctity of marriage or increase the cost of doing business in Illinois.

After Quinn signs the measure, gay and lesbian couples will be able to get official recognition from the state and gain many of the rights that accompany marriage – the power to decide medical treatment for an ailing partner, for instance. Illinois law will continue to limit marriage to one man and woman, and the federal government won’t recognize the civil unions at all.

37 Steele, absent from debate, factor in RNC race

By PHILIP ELLIOTT, Associated Press

44 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Although absent from the hotel ballroom and his name largely unspoken, Republican National Committee chairman Michael Steele and his tenure at the helm of the GOP’s central committee dominated Wednesday’s debate among candidates who want to replace him.

At the first public forum for those pursuing the chairmanship, party fundraising played prominently in the discussion that took place on stage between a U.S. flag and a “Don’t Tread on Me” banner popular among tea party activists. Four potential future chairs criticized the RNC but steered clear of naming the polarizing incumbent chairman and his record-breaking spending.

“The party under his leadership failed to raise the major donor money it is going to require to defeat Barack Obama,” said Gentry Collins, who headed the powerful political department of the RNC and is now weighing a campaign for chairman.

38 2 cleared, 1 guilty in white supremacists case

By DAVE COLLINS, Associated Press

1 hr 22 mins ago

HARTFORD, Conn. – A federal jury on Wednesday acquitted two men and convicted a third in what prosecutors said was a conspiracy by white supremacists to sell grenades and guns to a purported national supremacist group member, who was really a government informant.

The jury at the U.S. District Court in Bridgeport found Kenneth Zrallack, 29, of Ansonia and David Sutton, 46, of Milford not guilty of conspiracy charges. Alexander DeFelice, 33, of Milford, was convicted of several conspiracy and weapons charges.

Federal prosecutors said Zrallack is the leader of the Connecticut-based Battalion 14 white supremacist group, formerly known as the Connecticut White Wolves. Officials said DeFelice is a Battalion 14 member who knows how to make explosives, while Sutton, who is black, has known DeFelice for years but isn’t a white supremacist.

39 Opening statements given in AIM murder trial

By NOMAAN MERCHANT, Associated Press

2 hrs 39 mins ago

RAPID CITY, S.D. – After years of delays and legal wrangling, a murder trial began Wednesday for a man accused of shooting an American Indian Movement activist 35 years ago on South Dakota’s Pine Ridge reservation.

During his opening statement, South Dakota Attorney General Marty Jackley recounted for jurors what investigators believe happened in the three days leading up to the December 1975 slaying of Annie Mae Aquash. He told them the defendant, John Graham, 55, shot her because the activist group’s leaders thought she was a government informant.

Graham’s attorney, John Murphy, countered in his opening statement that the prosecution lacked a murder weapon, fingerprints or other physical evidence to link Graham with Aquash’s killing or the site of her death.

40 Millions of men grow mustaches for cancer effort

By MEGHAN BARR, Associated Press

2 hrs 41 mins ago

CLEVELAND – The scraggly patch of blond hair on Zak MacDonald’s upper lip is a source of mockery among his co-workers in this testosterone-laden office, where the art of growing a mustache has become a full-blown competition.

Scanning the cubicles, there are several handlebars and respectably bushy mustaches. The most prominent even rival the collage of famous ‘staches displayed on the wall, including Tom Selleck’s iconic facial hair. Much to his chagrin, though, MacDonald’s is not among them.

“As you can tell, we’re 22 days in and there’s not a whole lot happening up in the ‘stache area,” he admitted, rubbing a hand over his lip. “But you know, God knows I’m trying.”

41 Crop bounty spurs construction boom at elevators

By ROXANA HEGEMAN, Associated Press

Wed Dec 1, 10:26 am ET

LARNED, Kan. – A construction boom has been under way at grain elevators across the Great Plains, where farmers have grown more corn and opted to keep more of the grain to meet the demand from ethanol plants.

Storage capacity at the nation’s federally licensed grain elevators is at an all-time high, but there’s still not enough in states like Kansas and Nebraska, where millions of bushels of grain have been piled up outside elevators at risk of damage from foul weather.

Low interest rates have made it less expensive to build elevators, and commodity markets have encouraged farmers to store crops during the harvest glut to wait for better prices later in the season. The result has been a busy year for construction, most of it at existing elevators that are expanding.

42 Nissan’s electric car a trendsetter

By ANN M. JOB, For The Associated Press

Wed Dec 1, 10:07 am ET

Nissan’s Leaf plug-in electric hatchback is an endearing car for people who don’t mind metering their mileage, planning ahead and sometimes tapping the electricity at a friend’s home while sharing dinner.

The first all-electric car offered in the United States by a mainstream auto manufacturer since the early days of the automobile, the new-for-2011 Leaf has seats for five, a roomy, straightforward interior and a surprisingly solid, stable feel.

Best of all for consumers who worry about the nation’s oil consumption and the environment, the Leaf is rated at 99 miles per gallon of gasoline equivalent by the federal government for combined city and highway driving.

43 1970s LA Skid Row killings conviction overturned

By LINDA DEUTSCH, AP Special Correspondent

Wed Dec 1, 5:11 am ET

LOS ANGELES – Three decades after Los Angeles courts were rocked by a scandal involving lying jailhouse informants the issue has come back from the dead with an appellate court reversal of a high profile murder case tainted by a lying snitch.

A three judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ordered the lower court Tuesday to either grant a new trial or release from prison a man who had been presumed to be the “Skid Row Stabber” who killed homeless men in the 1970s.

The court overturned two murder convictions and the life sentence of Bobby Jo Maxwell who has been imprisoned since 1979. The judges said Maxwell was convicted in 1984 on the basis of a jailhouse snitch’s lies.

44 Trial to start in ’75 slaying on SD reservation

By NOMAAN MERCHANT, Associated Press

Wed Dec 1, 3:22 am ET

RAPID CITY, S.D. – After years of delays and legal wrangling, a murder trial begins Wednesday for the man accused of shooting an American Indian Movement activist 35 years ago on South Dakota’s Pine Ridge reservation.

Prosecutors say John Graham, a Southern Tutchone Indian from Canada, and two other activists kidnapped and killed Annie Mae Aquash in late 1975 because AIM leaders believed she was a government spy. Graham, 55, faces first- and second-degree murder charges and a potential life sentence. He has continued to maintain his innocence.

Aquash’s slaying has become synonymous with AIM and its often violent struggles with federal authorities during the 1970s. Family members and observers have said Graham’s trial could help to answer lingering questions about why Aquash died and who ordered her killing.

45 Residents show support for Ore. mosque after fire

By JEFF BARNARD, Associated Press

Wed Dec 1, 12:16 am ET

CORVALLIS, Ore. – Steady rain Tuesday didn’t stop people from attending a candlelight vigil in support of an Islamic center targeted by an apparent hate crime after a teen who occasionally worshipped there was accused of planning mass killings in Portland.

Hundreds of residents of this small college town came out for the vigil at the Salman Alfarisi Islamic Center.

Elizabeth Oettinger, senior minister of the First Congregational Church United Church of Christ, said a number of religious leaders organized the event to show support for the Muslim community after the center’s office was set on fire Sunday.

46 AP Enterprise: Guards shown watching inmate attack

By REBECCA BOONE, Associated Press

Tue Nov 30, 9:30 pm ET

BOISE, Idaho – The surveillance video from the overhead cameras shows Hanni Elabed being beaten by a fellow inmate in an Idaho prison, managing to bang on a prison guard station window, pleading for help. Behind the glass, correctional officers look on, but no one intervenes when Elabed is knocked unconscious.

No one steps into the cellblock when the attacker sits down to rest, and no one stops him when he resumes the beating.

Videos of the attack obtained by The Associated Press show officers watching the beating for several minutes. The footage is a key piece of evidence for critics who claim the privately run Idaho Correctional Center uses inmate-on-inmate violence to force prisoners to snitch on their cellmates or risk being moved to extremely violent units.

47 Lesbian nurse expects Air Force reinstatement

By GENE JOHNSON, Associated Press

Tue Nov 30, 7:28 pm ET

SEATTLE – A lesbian flight nurse who was discharged under the military’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy said Tuesday she hopes to be reinstated to the Air Force Reserve in December.

A federal judge ruled two months ago that Maj. Margaret Witt’s firing advanced no legitimate military goals and thus violated her rights. He ordered her to be reinstated, and while the Air Force filed an appeal last week, it did not seek a stay to block Witt from rejoining her unit at Joint Base Lewis-McChord while the appeal proceeds.

Though the Department of Justice could still seek such a stay, it informally told Witt’s legal team Monday that it probably won’t, one of Witt’s lawyers said.

A Big Day in Economics News

Two of the major Washington based stories are extension of the Bush Tax Cuts for the wealthiest 2% on which the best policy from an economic standpoint is to let them all expire and replace them with Obama Tax Cuts for those consumers hardest hit by the Financial Depression and most likely to spend them so that as poor a tool as Tax Cuts are there is at least some increase in Aggregate Demand.

Simply extending any of the Bush Tax Cuts has ABSOLUTELY NO STIMULATIVE EFFECT WHATSOEVER, this is money people already have and have had for 10 years now.  Continuing it will NOT make consumers more likely to spend it- they already are.

The fact that this is also the best political policy makes it unlikely that the Obama Administration and the Institutional Democratic Party will adopt it.  Indeed the best “bi-partisan” compromise we can seem to hope for is tying it to extension of unemployment benefits (which are one of the most stimulative transfer payments, but not at all as economically productive as investment in infrastructure).

Another story out of Washington is the Catfood Commission meltdown.  Clearly there aren’t 14 votes for the Chairmen’s Mark, and no progress has been made on compromise.  Bowes-Simpson is essentially unchanged and all the initial objections still apply, the most fundamental of which is that it subsidizes Tax Cuts for Corporations and the Wealthy at the expense of neccessary Government Services (and one of those is Social Security which is not even part of the deficit).

Unfortunately Simpson is probably correct that Republicans will simply pull out the most pernicious, greedy, and hurtful ideas and push them.

Another Big Fail by Barack Hussein Obama and his confederacy of dunces and conservatives.

Anyway the best reporting I’ve seen so far (though I did sleep in) is at Firedog Lake and as a service I’ve collected some of their Front Page stories on the subject.  The one I think gives the best overview is Scarecrow’s.

dday has some pieces on the FDL News Desk that have not yet been Front Paged (though I’m sure they will be).  One on the Catfood Commission-

And others on the Tax Cuts-

Punting the Pundits

“Punting the Pundits” is an Open Thread. It is a selection of editorials and opinions from around the news medium and the internet blogs. The intent is to provide a forum for your reactions and opinions, not just to the opinions presented, but to what ever you find important.

Thanks to ek hornbeck, click on the link and you can access all the past “Punting the Pundits”.

Sen. Kristen Gillibrand: Time to Listen to Our Military and Repeal DADT

This is a historic week in our quest to strengthen our armed forces and secure equality for all Americans.

Today, the Pentagon has released its yearlong study of how to implement repeal of the corrosive “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy. This report makes it unambiguously clear that the risk of repeal on military effectiveness is minimal, that any risks can be addressed by implementing the report’s recommendations, and that a clear majority of active duty servicemen and women have no problem with repeal. It should come as no surprise that the men and women who serve bravely in our military don’t care about the sexual orientation of their fellow servicemembers, they just want to serve their country proudly and believe others should be able to do the same.

Bob Herbert: Broken Beyond Repair

You can only hope that you will be as sharp and intellectually focused as former Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens when you’re 90 years old.

In a provocative essay in The New York Review of Books, the former justice, who once supported the death penalty, offers some welcome insight into why he now opposes this ultimate criminal sanction and believes it to be unconstitutional.

Katrina vanden Heuvel: Among the wealthy, a new voice for fiscal sacrifice

President Obama’s discussion Tuesday with leaders of both parties about the expiring Bush tax cuts comes at a time when a growing chorus of progressives and other reasonable-minded Americans have been ramping up pressure on the White House to allow the cuts for millionaires to end – as intended – at the end of the year. Last week that chorus was joined by a group of unlikely, albeit welcome new singers: the millionaires themselves.

Paul Krugman: Ireland and the Euro: Is It Time to Part?

This is the way the euro ends. Not with a whimper, but with a bank run.

OK, I’m overstating the case – we are still a long way from Ireland’s exiting the euro. But in thinking about the ongoing Irish mess, I realized we are drifting closer to the kind of scenario I wrote about earlier this year during the Greek debt crisis.

I used to be a full believer in the economist Barry Eichengreen’s theory of euro irreversibility: no European nation can even discuss leaving the euro because the anticipated devaluation will lead people to move deposits to other euro-zone banks, leading to the mother of all bank runs. But I’ve been reconsidering this stance, because while the Eichengreen argument explains why nations should not plan on leaving the euro, what if the bank runs and financial crisis happen anyway? In that case, the marginal cost of a nation’s leaving the euro falls dramatically, and in fact, the decision may effectively be taken out of policy makers’ hands.

Dana Milbank: Slurpee Summit full of empty calories

A large 7-Eleven Slurpee has upward of 550 calories, 142 grams of carbohydrates, and 0 grams of protein.

So it is appropriate that the first meeting between President Obama and Republican leaders since the election would be called the “Slurpee Summit” – a thing of no nutritional value. The name, embraced by Obama, refers to his line during the campaign about how Republicans stood on the sidelines, “sipping Slurpees,” while Democrats pushed the economy out of a ditch.

The Slurpee Summit on Tuesday produced precisely what everybody knew it would: nothing but an agreement to keep talking about areas of disagreement. Indeed, the two sides couldn’t even agree on logistics for the empty-calorie summit.

Timothy Karr Comcast Busted: New Tolls for Netflix Aren’t All You Should Worry About

In the past 24 hours Comcast has been exposed committing blatant abuses of its power over all things media.

The New York Times reported last night that the cable giant has threatened to block popular online movie service Netflix unless the company that streams its films paid new and extortionate tolls. Earlier in the day, Comcast was caught red-handed trying to smother the marketplace for competitive Internet modems designed for use on its network — a violation of fundamental Net Neutrality principles that allow you to choose what devices you want to use.

These are just the latest domino in a history of abuse by a company determined to become the 21st century’s media gatekeeper. If Comcast gets away with these violations, it will be the beginning of the end of the experiment in information democracy called the Internet. What more reason does the Federal Communications Commission need to step up — for once — and protect the openness that is central to a better, more participatory and diverse media.

Taken as a whole, these abuses show us what a media monopoly looks like in the Internet age — one company, consolidating its media power to squash competitors, to stifle innovation and free speech, and to gouge consumers.

Amy Goodman: WikiLeaks and the End of U.S. ‘Diplomacy’

By Amy Goodman

WikiLeaks is again publishing a trove of documents, in this case classified U.S. State Department diplomatic cables. The whistle-blower website will gradually be releasing more than 250,000 of these documents in the coming months so that they can be analyzed and gain the attention they deserve. The cables are internal, written communications among U.S. Embassies around the world and also to the U.S. State Department. WikiLeaks described the leak as “the largest set of confidential documents ever to be released into the public domain [giving] an unprecedented insight into U.S. government foreign activities.”

Critics argue, as they did with earlier leaks of secret documents regarding Iraq and Afghanistan, that lives will be lost as a result. Rather, lives might actually be saved, since the way that the U.S. conducts diplomacy is now getting more exposure than ever-as is the apparent ease with which the U.S. government lives up (or down) to the adage used by pioneering journalist I.F. Stone: “Governments lie.”

Eugene Robinson: Tough Times for Superpowers

The secret U.S. diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks leave one overriding impression: It’s hard out there for a superpower.

As of Monday, fewer than 250 of a promised 251,287 confidential State Department messages had been made public. Perhaps somewhere in that enormous trove is evidence to the contrary, but what we’ve see thus far shows that post-Cold War rumors of American global hegemony are vastly overstated. If ever there was a time when being a superpower meant never having to say you’re sorry, that time is long gone.

The headline-grabbing catty personal assessments of world leaders revealed in the cables are juicy but not really surprising. I mean, it’s highly entertaining to read about Libyan dictator Moammar Gaddafi’s many and varied eccentricities-his fear of flying, his reluctance to stay above the first floor of hotels, his dependence on a Ukrainian nurse described as a “voluptuous blonde” who alone “knows his routine.” But Gaddafi has been daffy for a long time.The secret U.S. diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks leave one overriding impression: It’s hard out there for a superpower.

As of Monday, fewer than 250 of a promised 251,287 confidential State Department messages had been made public. Perhaps somewhere in that enormous trove is evidence to the contrary, but what we’ve see thus far shows that post-Cold War rumors of American global hegemony are vastly overstated. If ever there was a time when being a superpower meant never having to say you’re sorry, that time is long gone.

The headline-grabbing catty personal assessments of world leaders revealed in the cables are juicy but not really surprising. I mean, it’s highly entertaining to read about Libyan dictator Moammar Gaddafi’s many and varied eccentricities-his fear of flying, his reluctance to stay above the first floor of hotels, his dependence on a Ukrainian nurse described as a “voluptuous blonde” who alone “knows his routine.” But Gaddafi has been daffy for a long time.

Richard Reeves: Dr. Strangelove Redux

NEW YORK-And now a quote that could come from Dr. Strangelove:

“A lot of people fear artificial intelligence. I will stand my artificial intelligence against your human any day of the week and tell you that my A.I. will pay more attention to the rules of engagement and create fewer ethical lapses than a human force.”

That is from John Arquilla, executive director of the Information Operations Center at the Naval Postgraduate School. “Dr. Arquilla,” reports The New York Times, “argues that weapons systems controlled by software will not act out of anger and malice and, in certain cases, can already make better decisions on the battlefield than humans.”

Aren’t we lucky that software never makes mistakes?

Dr. Arquilla, a Stanford product and a true patriot, I’m sure, is one of the most dangerous men in the world. And there are many more like him. He is one of the best and the brightest who think they are advancing science and are in the business of reducing the pain of war by substituting robots and other electronic killers for actual human beings. Their philosophy is that machines don’t get angry like soldiers do, so they make better decisions than actual men and women on the ground. Their goal is to make starting wars more easy than, say, the Constitution of the United States intended.

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