Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Former Aspen homeless man in N.D. jail -

Remember last week when I posted the story of Aspen Colorado sending a homeless criminal to North Dakota...well it seems that the prophesy was fulfilled.
THANKS ASPEN!!!

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Writer:  Carolyn Sackariason
 
A former Aspen homeless man in trouble with the law here who was given a free bus ticket to North Dakota last week remained in jail in Williston, N.D. on Tuesday, held on a disorderly conduct charge.
 
Jimmy Baldwin Jr., 32, was arrested on Friday at about 7 p.m. after he allegedly urinated on the front of Whispers strip club in Williston. Baldwin, who was shirtless, was arrested for disorderly conduct and given no trespass warnings for that strip club, as well as another one called Heartbreakers, according to a report filed by the Williston Police Department.
 
He told officers that his hand was swelling up and claimed his foot was hurt, and wanted to go to the emergency room, according to the police report. He was cited and released on a personal recognizance bond.
 
Shortly after that incident, an employee at a funeral home called Williston police saying that he came upon Baldwin outside of the business, asking for an ambulance. Baldwin was brought to Mercy Medical Center where he refused treatment and was being disorderly in the ER, according to Williston police. He was transported to the Williams County jail and booked on a misdemeanor disorderly conduct charge.
 
Baldwin was given a free bus ticket through the Aspen Homeless Shelter, paid for by an anonymous donor, on Dec. 19, one day after he was arrested for disorderly conduct, menacing and possession of marijuana after allegedly causing a disturbance at the fire pit on the Cooper Avenue mall.
 
He was issued a summons and his first court appearance for those charges is scheduled for Jan. 17. Deputy District Attorney Richard Nedlin, who is prosecuting Baldwin in county court, said the misdemeanor charges will not be dismissed.
 
If Baldwin fails to appear in court, a judge will determine what his bond should be set at and will issue a warrant for his arrest. However, it would be an in-state warrant, meaning if Baldwin is arrested outside of Colorado, authorities will not be notified of his pending charges in Aspen, Nedlin said.
 
Baldwin has been cited numerous times by Aspen police, mostly for minor infractions like trespassing, disorderly conduct and drinking in public. Jim True, prosecutor for the city of Aspen, last Wednesday agreed to a 30-day continuance for Baldwin’s trial, which was scheduled for Dec. 21 after he pleaded not guilty to a trespassing count.
 
True said he plans to continue the case indefinitely.
 
“If he’s in town, he needs to show up [to municipal court],” he said. “If he’s not in town, I will continue it for another month. ... Right now, I’m just going to play it by ear.”
 
True said that Baldwin told him he had a friend in North Dakota who had a job for him in the oil fields but had no way of getting there.
 
Shortly after, Aspen Homeless Shelter director Dr. Vince Savage offered Baldwin a one-way ticket to the city of Williston, in northwestern North Dakota near the state’s “oil patch.” He has since defended the action, saying Baldwin wasn’t forced to leave Aspen and that he wanted to go there to try to start a new life. 
 
Regardless, the move set off a deluge of outraged people in North Dakota decrying that Aspen is using their state as a dumping ground for unwanted citizens. They also point out that the state is suffering from an acute housing shortage in the oil-producing region. Since the Aspen Daily News first reported Baldwin’s relocation on Dec. 21, the newspaper has received at least 70 letters to the editor from angry North Dakotans. 

http://www.aspendailynews.com/section/home/150950

Oil boom splits tiny North Dakota town

Just like everybody else around here, Fred Evans spent his life coaxing a good enough living out of the earth. He grew wheat, ran cattle and, during a couple of short-lived bursts of activity, worked on the drill rigs searching for oil across the northern prairie. 
 
But unlike his neighbors, Mr. Evans was convinced that the area would someday be home to an epic oil boom. For years he would approach others in the area offering to buy or lease the rights to drill on their land, often delivering his pitch at a time of need. More than a few, to their enduring regret, agreed. 
 
So it was with pure jubilation that Mr. Evans, who hides a businessman’s sensibility under a broad-brimmed cowboy hat and a stable of folksy aphorisms, watched one of the rumbling pump jacks on his property pulling up the oil that has made him a rich man.
 
“It’s like music,” he said, raising his voice over the noise. “Ka-ching, ka-ching, ka-ching.” 
 
Sure enough, money is flowing by the barrelful into Mountrail County, transforming a tiny community once proudly situated in the middle of nowhere into an unexpected oasis of prosperity at the heart of the nation’s biggest oil play. 
 
No other county in the state has had a bigger jump in the number of households earning more than $100,000, which spiked to 21 percent from 6 percent during the last decade, according to an analysis of census data. But much like the crude below, the benefits have spread unevenly, often as a result of decisions made long ago. 
 
As some residents find themselves cashing oil royalty checks worth tens of thousands of dollars a month or more, many of their neighbors are resigned to receiving almost nothing from the wells that pepper the landscape and even their own land — aside from the headaches that go with living in a boomtown.
 
Marlene Gunderson, who works alongside her husband and daughter at the county courthouse researching the ownership history of every acre of property for oil companies, stumbles across the names of neighbors who are receiving huge checks for mineral interests, though she has none herself. 
 
“That’s just the way life goes,” she mused. “Some people get. Some don’t.” 
 
As with any major boom — from real estate to tech stocks to natural resources — the sudden split between the winners and the witnesses has been painful. But this is happening in a small town, where proximity and familiarity make a sudden reordering all the more difficult. 
 
“It’s not all good,” said Leslie Anderson, who is among the lucky locals who sometimes make more from a single month of oil payments than he used to earn in a year of farming. “There are lots of families fighting that got along before.” 
 
After more than five years of oil-driven growth, Mountrail County, which a decade ago had shrunk to less than half its peak size before the Great Depression, registered an official population of 7,673 in the 2010 census, though local leaders believe there are thousands more. 
 
With the unemployment rate at only 1.3 percent, local sons and daughters are no longer leaving to find work.
 
And as the rest of the nation watched incomes drop or stagnate, in Mountrail County median income rose more than 50 percent in the last decade, the fifth-highest gain in the nation. Residents earned on average an additional $20,000, adjusted for inflation, according to an analysis of census data by Andrew A. Beveridge, a demographer at Queens College in New York. 
 
At one of the local banks in Stanley, the county seat, deposits have increased to $135 million from $43 million before the boom. But the new wealth is not always easy to spot. 
 
Residents say a culture of modest living means they don’t know for sure which of their neighbors are making money off oil, though they have suspicions. 
 
“I’m seeing people that have never owned a new vehicle in their life driving a new car,” said Wade Enget, a local lawyer, who estimated that about half the residents are receiving oil money. “People who never took a day off are going on vacation.” 
 
The main driver is the payments that residents receive for leasing mineral rights. In 2009, the most recent year statistics are available, the signing bonuses and the royalties paid for the oil extracted from private land totaled about $1 billion statewide, according to an industry-financed study by North Dakota State University. 
 
Though many of those checks go out of state — to the far-flung descendants of homesteaders or to companies that bought mineral rights — more than half stay in North Dakota, helping double the number of state residents earning more than $1 million a year. And the checks are likely to continue, said Lynn D. Helms, director of the state’s Department of Mineral Resources, citing estimates that the average well will pay about $10 million in royalties over three decades. 
 
Living in a simple trailer home, Lenin Dibble reveals few signs that he has suddenly become a wealthy man. A retired farmer and rancher, Mr. Dibble receives royalty checks of as much as $80,000 a month for his small share of mineral rights. To explain his frugal lifestyle, he pulled out a letter from his father, yellowed from the passage of half a century.
 
“When you get a few dollars in your pocket never advertise it,” he read. “And hold a conference before spending any of it.”
 
And as he finished, Mr. Dibble insisted he does not need any of the oil money, which he has been saving for his adult children, because Social Security and payments for leasing out his farmland were enough. What he and others in town notice more than the newfound money are the problems: locking the door to his house, taking the keys out of his car and seeing a quiet community where everyone knew everyone overrun by the bustle of strangers. 
 
“I wish it had never happened,” he said.
 
Because land and the rights to whatever lies beneath it can be sold separately in North Dakota, only about one in five royalty checks goes to the owner of the land where the oil is being extracted. Though some residents never acquired mineral rights when they bought property, the payday has been most distressing for those living on longtime family estates where the mineral rights were sold off, often for a tiny fraction of their current value. 
 
“There are only two reasons people sold,” said Roger Cymbaluk, a prominent real estate broker in nearby Williston. “One, they didn’t know what they were worth; two, they were desperate.” 
 
Some used mineral rights in lieu of cash to settle debts during hard times — trading some acres to banks to satisfy a mortgage. Others sold them to savvier industry veterans after oil was first discovered six decades ago, which is why an outsize portion of the royalty checks for North Dakota oil head each month to Texas. 
 
Stanley Wright, who used to sell farm equipment in Stanley, described how he took a substantial loss — and suffered the wrath of his wife — when he allowed two farmers to pay him with mineral acres. Now that the gamble has paid off decades later, he wrestles with guilt over his windfall. His eyes well up and his hands start to shake as he insists he never took advantage of anyone. “Minerals in those days weren’t worth anything,” he said. 
 
In recent decades, people have been more reluctant to sell, though offers keep coming. For those landowners who do not own the mineral rights, the usual compensation has been a few thousand dollars for the disruption of hosting an oil rig. Even with the dust, noise and traffic, the most frustrating part is watching the wells on his property earning money for other people, said Mark Ellis, a farmer and rancher. 
 
“It’s more interesting when you’re getting a piece of it,” he said. 
 
Living just down the road from where the skeleton of a one-room schoolhouse still stands, Mr. Evans, 73, is unapologetic, if vague, about his success, which he said resulted from decades of groundwork. 
 
Now he is described variously by neighbors as the richest man and the biggest crook in Mountrail County. Some of them recounted visits during which Mr. Evans tried to offer them deals they believed were designed to take advantage of their ignorance or misfortune. Several noted that even his sisters took him to court in a dispute over family mineral rights. 
 
Mr. Evans, who calls himself “a Podunk from farm country,” brushes it all aside. “I’m definitely not a fortune teller,” he said. “But I just knew this thing would take off. I’ve been wrong other times, but I felt it.” 
 
This article, "A Great Divide Over Oil Riches," first appeared in The New York Times.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Nothing like a good ol' fashioned cartel to jack up prices and screw the consumer

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Eight state attorneys general announced a $538 million settlement with electronics makers Tuesday over allegations of price-fixing in LCD panels.
 
Florida attorney general Pam Bondi said in a statement that electronics manufacturers including Hitachi (HIT), Sharp (SHCAY) and Samsung had "organized the conspiracy at the highest levels of their organizations in various secret meetings and telephone conversations."
 
The companies are accused of colluding to fix prices for thin film transistor LCD panels, which are used in a variety of consumer products including computer screens and flat-panel televisions.
 
The New York attorney general's office said that up to $501 million of the settlement announced Tuesday "will be available for partial refunds" for consumers in 24 states and Washington, D.C., who purchased qualifying products between 1999 and 2006. 
 
http://money.cnn.com/2011/12/27/news/lcd_panels_settlement/index.htm?iid=HP_LN&hpt=hp_t2

The Mightiest Nation

A MUST READ!  
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Once upon a time there was a country that was very small and, on the whole, very good.
 
Its citizens were proud and independent and self-reliant and generally prosperous. They believed in freedom and justice and equality. But, above all, they had faith. They had faith in their religion, their leaders, their country and themselves.
 
And, of course, they were ambitious. Being proud of their country, they wanted to make it bigger. First they conquered the savage tribes that hemmed them in. Then they fought innumerable wars on land and sea with foreign powers to the east and west and south. They won almost all the battles they fought and conquered foreign lands.

It took many generations, but at last the good, little country was the richest, mightiest nation in the whole, wide world -- admired, respected, envied and feared by one and all.
 
"We must remain the mightiest nation," said its leaders, "so that we can insure universal peace and make everyone as prosperous and decent and civilized as we are."
 
At first, the mightiest nation was as good as its word. It constructed highways and buildings and pipelines and hygienic facilities all over the world. And for awhile, it even kept the peace.
 
But being the mightiest nation in the world, its leader was the mightiest man in the world. And, naturally, he acted like it.
 
He surrounded himself with a palace guard of men chosen solely for their personal loyalty. He usurped the powers of the Senate, signing treaties, waging wars and spending public funds as he saw fit.
 
When little countries far away rebelled, he sent troops without so much as a by-your-leave. And the mightiest nation became engaged in a series of long, costly, inconclusive campaigns in far away lands. So some disillusioned soldiers refused to obey orders and some sailors mutinied, even though the leader raised their pay. And in some places the mightiest nation hired mercenaries to do its fighting.
 
And because it was the richest nation, it worshiped wealth and the things wealth bought. But the rich grew richer and the poor grew poorer through unfair tax laws. And in the capital 1 in 5 were idle and on welfare.
 
When the poor grumbled, they were entertained by highly paid athletes and the firing of expensive rockets into the air which sometimes fizzled. But the poor often rioted and looted and burned in their frustrated rage.
 
Many citizens lost faith in their old religion and turned to Oriental mysticism. And the young, wearing long hair and sandals, became Jesus freaks. Bare-breasted dancers, lewd shows and sex orgies were increasingly common. And the currency was debased again and again to meet the mounting debts.
 
Worst of all, the citizens came to learn their leaders were corrupt -- that the respected palace guard was selling favors to the rich and sending spies among the people, creating fear and distrust.
 
So it was that the people lost faith. They lost faith in their leaders, their currency, their rockets, their postal system, their armies, their religion, their laws, their moral values, their country and, eventually, themselves.
And, thus, in 476 A.D., Rome fell to the barbarians and the Dark Ages settled over Western civilization.
 
Moral. For what is a nation profited if it shall gain the whole world and lose its own soul.
 
(This column appeared in The San Francisco Chronicle on May 27, 1973).

Monday, December 26, 2011

Americans Demonstrate Changed Attitudes Towards Poverty Since the 2008 Economic Crisis

If you are poor, chances are it is your own fault. At least that's what Americans thought in 2001. In a National Public Radio poll from that year, about half of those surveyed said the poor are not doing enough to pull themselves out of poverty.
 
Now, one would think that since the recent economic crisis predictably has led to increased poverty people would start blaming circumstances more than the poor. This has not been the case in the United Kingdom. A recently published survey shows that Brits over time have become more likely to blame poor people themselves for their financial trouble. From 1986 to 2009, the proportion of people who attribute poverty to laziness and lack of willpower has grown to a little under 30 percent, with the proportion blaming "injustice in our society" conversely falling.
 
People's attitudes towards poverty to some extent determine sentiments about health care, welfare benefits, and other collective interventions. Not surprisingly, the UK study found that more and more Brits believe government benefits are too high.
 
In the United States, the picture is, perhaps surprisingly, a bit more nuanced. The 2001 NPR poll shows that attitudes about welfare at that time were determined by the income of the person asked. Those who made more than twice the poverty level were almost twice as likely as those closer to being poor to say that welfare recipients had easy lives and could do very well without the benefits if only they tried.
 
This difference is significant. Since household income has been declining over time (and proportionally fewer individuals earn more than twice the poverty level), the silver lining of the 2008 crisis might be that more Americans start seeing poverty for what it is: not something anyone "deserves." This could even help bring about more coherent anti-poverty policies when politicians, many of whom seem to want to appeal to the "poor people are lazy" sentiment as a way to obtain votes, realize their constituents understand reality better than they do.

And poverty is, in fact, becoming reality for more and more people in the United States.

In 2010 more people were recorded as living in poverty than in any of the previous 52 years for which rates have been published: 46.9 million (representing 15 percent of the population). About 17.2 million households were registered as food insecure for that same year, meaning they didn't have consistent dependable access to enough food. This, again, is the highest number ever recorded in the United States. Even percentage-wise, poverty rates in 2010 were the highest they had been since 1993.

And poverty is not just something people "are," something that might be inconvenient and often frustrating (though it surely is both of those things in copious amounts).

Poverty is a very real obstacle to exercising human rights, bringing with it substandard housing, under-resourced schooling, lack of health care, and at times unsafe neighbourhoods, as well as many other disadvantages. Children are particularly affected, since years of poorer quality education and potentially unhealthy living has consequences that to some extent continue even after a family pulls out of poverty -- which only some ever do.

And not only is poverty an obstacle to exercising rights. It is also, in many cases, caused by rights violations. Four million more women than men live in poverty, and both African-Americans and Hispanics are over-represented amongst the poor. In 2010, women earned 77 cents to every dollar earned by men. For black women that figure is 68 cents, for Hispanic women 59. Unemployment rates fluctuate enormously according to sex, race, and marital status. Women constitute 65 percent of all part-time workers.

To be sure, everyone is ultimately responsible for how they deal with their circumstances, and some individuals pull out of poverty despite multiple odds stacked against them. But many more do not. This is not because poverty is inevitable. It is because it generally requires support for health care, education, housing, anti-discrimination initiatives, and other interventions at least partially sponsored by the government. Without addressing the growing poverty in the United States through collective action based on human rights, chances are that if you are poor you will stay poor. Through little fault of your own.

Published first at RHRealityCheck.org.

Members of Congress grew richer as most Americans became poorer

Of course they did.  They were looking out for their own interests...the Banks...Wall Street...Insurance Companies...Military Contractors...etc.  This is what America is...CORPORATISM at its worst.  

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Largely insulated from the country’s economic downturn since 2008, members of Congress — many of them among the “1 percenters” denounced by Occupy Wall Street protesters — have gotten much richer even as most of the country has become much poorer in the last six years, according to an analysis by The New York Times based on data from the Center for Responsive Politics, a nonprofit research group. 
 
Congress has never been a place for paupers. From plantation owners in the pre-Civil War era to industrialists in the early 1900s to ex-Wall Street financiers and Internet executives today, it has long been populated with the rich, including scions of families like the Guggenheims, Hearsts, Kennedys and Rockefellers.

READ MORE...MSNBC.COM
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45793299/ns/politics-the_new_york_times/#.TvlYkBXfX2s

Friday, December 23, 2011

I'm Rich Bitch! Romney Refuses to Release Tax Returns.

I'M RICH BITCH!!!
Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Mitt Romney, a multimillionaire who is by far the wealthiest of the Republican presidential candidates, said he has no plans to release his income tax returns if he wins his party’s nomination.
  
Romney, whose most recent disclosure in August estimated his personal wealth as high as $250 million, said yesterday he had already released extensive financial information and had no “current plans” to make his tax returns public.
  
If the former Massachusetts governor wins the nomination and sticks to his plan, he would be one of the only presidential nominees in the last three decades to withhold his income tax return. While income tax information is private and there is no legal obligation to disclose it, presidents and nominees for the office have done so routinely since the 1970s.
  
“We follow the tax laws, and if there’s an opportunity to save taxes, we -- like everybody else in this country -- will follow that opportunity,” Romney told reporters in Lancaster, New Hampshire, according to a partial transcript of his remarks provided by his campaign.
  
“Down the road, we’ll see what happens if I’m the nominee,” he added, saying that while he had no “immediate plans” to release tax returns, “that may change in the future.”
  
President Barack Obama’s re-election campaign swiftly criticized Romney on the issue.
 
“Why does Governor Romney feel like he can play by a different set of rules?” Ben LaBolt, Obama’s campaign spokesman, said in a statement. “What is it that he doesn’t want the American people to see?
  
Previous candidates have disclosed their returns so Americans could be aware of potential conflicts of interest and gauge whether a candidate had gamed the tax system to their advantage.”
  
Then-Republican presidential nominee George W. Bush and his running mate, Dick Cheney, were exceptions in 2000, both releasing only partial returns. In 2003, in advance of their re- election bid, they released their full returns.
  
Massachusetts Senator John F. Kerry, Bush’s Democratic opponent in 2004, also released part of his wife’s tax return after his campaign came under pressure to disclose details of her personal fortune, which was helping to fund his bid. Kerry, who had released his own full return, released portions of the tax return of Teresa Heinz Kerry -- heiress to a fortune estimated at $500 million -- three weeks before the election.
  
Romney has drawn criticism for appearing out of touch with ordinary Americans because of his affluence, particularly after a rhetorical flourish he used in a Dec. 10 televised debate in which he offered Texas Governor Rick Perry a $10,000 wager while defending his health-care record.
  
Obama’s campaign and Romney’s Republican primary opponents ridiculed him for the bet. He has also come under scrutiny for the way he earned his fortune -- as head of the private equity firm Bain Capital LLC, where he bought and sold companies to make money for investors and sometimes eliminated jobs in the process.
 
Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich of Georgia suggested last week that Romney might return the money he made “bankrupting companies and laying off employees over his years at Bain.”
  
Romney said on Dec. 18 that if he wins the nomination, he knows that a photo in which he appears grinning with other Bain executives posing with cash spilling out of their hands, jackets and mouths will come back to haunt him. Some Democrats refer to the 1980s-era image as the “Gordon Gekko” photo, referring to the antihero in the 1987 film “Wall Street” whose character is the personification of greed run amok.
  
Romney said on “Fox News Sunday” that if he is the nominee, he expects that free enterprise will be “on trial” in his contest with Obama.
  
The Democratic National Committee yesterday launched a website, www.whatmittpays.com, that calls attention to the 15- percent tax rate -- far lower than the 35 percent the wealthiest Americans owe on their income -- that executives at private- equity companies like Bain pay on their investment profits, known as “carried interest.” Obama has proposed closing what critics call the “carried interest loophole,” which also benefits hedge-fund managers.
  
“Want to know why Mitt Romney won’t release his tax returns?,” the Democrats’ site says. “Well, one of the reasons is that he probably pays less taxes than you do.”
  
After Romney made his latest comments, R.C. Hammond, a spokesman for Gingrich, contacted reporters unprompted to declare that if the former House speaker became the nominee, he planned to release his income tax returns.
  
--Editors: Leslie Hoffecker, Robin Meszoly
To contact the reporter on this story: Julie Hirschfeld Davis in Washington at jdavis159@bloomberg.net.
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Mark Silva at msilva@bloomberg.net


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yrBfPLUm5so

THE ROAD I MUST TRAVEL

Lyrics:
Well I climbed the seven summits
And I swam the seven seas
But the road I must travel
Its end I cannot see
I fought in the jungles
And I fought in the streets
But the road I must travel
Its end I cannot see
Once I had a reason
Don't know what it could be
But the road I must travel
Its end I cannot see
Well I sang to myself
That I want to be free
But the road I must travel
Its end I cannot see

I walked the empty desert
And I was burned in the heat
But the road I must travel
Its end I cannot see
I crossed the frozen wasteland
And in the bitter cold did freeze
But the road I must travel
Its end I cannot see
And I will knock on every door
For I do not have a key
And the road I must travel
Its end I cannot see
Well I sang to myself
That I want to be free
But the road I must travel
Its end I cannot see

They shot a man in Soho
Couldn't guess his age
I found his empty journal
I filled up every page
I called up my state senator
They said he wasn't there
The secretary took my name
And man she sounded scared
So I counted my misfortunes
I added up the blame
I picked through all the garbage
I checked off all the names
I read in the newspaper
They'd questioned all my friends
They hoped that they could find me
Before I struck again
Well I sang to myself
That I want to be free
But the road I must travel
Its end I cannot see

So when thirsty I will drink
When hungry I will steal
But the road I must travel
Its end I cannot see
So tonight I walk in anger
With worn shoes on my feet
But the road I must travel
Its end I cannot see
And I will sing to myself
That I'm gonna be free
But the road I must travel
Its end I cannot see

There's a sign along the highway
But it's too dark now to read

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Destroying the American Dream

Destroying the American Dream - by Stephen Lendman

Corporate greed and profits over people priorities launched nationwide Occupy Wall Street protests in hundreds of US cities for change.

Mindless of growing public rage, political Washington keeps cutting vital social benefits needing increases during hard times.

With real unemployment approaching 23%, earlier cuts affected:

• Pell Grants help for college tuitions;

• federal wages;

• the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) to help impoverished families have heat in winter;

• the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP);

• community healthcare centers;

• nonprofit health insurance cooperatives;

• HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and other disease prevention programs;

• WIC (Women, Infants, and Children) grants to states for supplemental foods, healthcare, and nutrition education for low-income families;

• Head Start, providing comprehensive education, health, nutrition, and parent involvement services to low-income families with children;

• the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (targeted earlier with more coming), providing food stamps for poor households;

• community development block grants for housing, overall reducing HUD's budget by $1.1 billion;

• Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) first-responder funding;

• energy efficiency and renewable energy programs;

• Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) clean/safe water and other projects;

• National Institutes of Health (NIH) medical research;

• the National Park Service;

• vital infrastructure and transportation needs; and

• other non-defense discretionary spending.

New cuts will sustain Wall Street, militarism, favoritism, waste, fraud, and other rewards for Washington's usual special interests. They'll benefit at the expense of ordinary people losing out.

Bootstraps and Blackface

If I were a Black kid...

I am always amazed by middle-class white people who feel that pulling oneself out of poverty is as easy as pulling up your bootstraps, studying harder, taking advantage of all the "free things" and "benefits" available to them, and succeeding in this wonderful meritocracy we supposedly live in.  Read the racism at:
http://www.forbes.com/sites/quickerbettertech/2011/12/12/if-i-was-a-poor-black-kid/

Republican FAIL!

Boehner announces deal with Reid on end to payroll tax impasse

Man shoots at mouse, hits roommate; another roommate arrested for rape

An absolute WTF moment...
========================================================================

A 34-year-old man has been arrested for investigation of multiple counts of sex abuse against a 13-year-old girl.

The four-month relationship was discovered after a bizarre incident at the man's house in which one of his housemates was shot by a third housemate who was reportedly trying to shoot a mouse in his kitchen with a 9mm handgun, according to investigators.


Paul Daniel Kunzler, 34, was arrested Tuesday for investigation of rape of a child, sodomy of a child and sexual abuse of a child.

Paul Daniel Kunzler was booked into the Salt Lake County Jail for investigation of two counts of rape of a child, three counts of sodomy of a child and three counts of sexual abuse of a child.

The string of events began to unfold about 2 a.m. Tuesday when police were called to a house on a report of an accidental shooting. Officers arrived to discover that a man who was in the bathroom had accidentally been shot in the chest by his 27-year-old housemate who was shooting at a mouse in the kitchen with a handgun, said Taylorsville Police Sgt. Tracy Wyant.

The bullet went through a wall and struck the 28-year- old man while he was in the bathroom.

"After the gun was fired, both the roommate and Paul heard a scream," Wyant said.

The victim was taken to a local hospital in serious condition. He was later upgraded to stable condition. Alcohol was involved in the incident, Wyant said.
During an ensuing search of the house, officers found a 13-year-old girl hiding in a basement closet, Wyant said. The girl told police she had sneaked out of her house without her father's knowledge to see Kunzler, according to a jail report.

After further questioning, investigators learned Kunzler and the 13-year-old had been having a relationship for four months. The two had met through a common friend, Wyant said.

It was not known Wednesday whether any of Kunzler's three housemates were aware of the relationship.


Man shoots at mouse, hits roommate; another roommate arrested for rape | ksl.com

Romney Says He'd Deport Obama's Uncle

Personally, I would deport Romney on behalf of my tribe and the rest of indigenous Americans.  

 

Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney says he would deport President Barack Obama's uncle, who police said was arrested in August for drunken driving near Boston and is an illegal immigrant.

In an interview with Boston radio host Howie Carr on Wednesday, Romney said "yes" when asked if Onyango Obama should be deported. Romney at first did not recognize the name, but said the nation's immigration laws should be enforced. 

Onyango Obama is the 67-year-old half-brother of the president's late father. His case is pending in Framingham, Mass., District Court. 

He was initially held without bail on a detainer from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials on allegations he violated an order to return Kenya issued 20 years ago but has since been released.

The Most Insanely Violent Cartoon Ever (Is About the Bible)

http://www.cracked.com/blog/the-most-insanely-violent-cartoon-ever-is-about-bible/

I REALLY approve this message...

Rick Perry has gotten people talking about his ad again. In a 30-second ad released in Iowa on Wednesday, Perry’s wife Anita tells the “old-fashioned, American” story of her marriage—but her husband’s entrance in the ad has everyone buzzing. “I married my high school sweetheart,” Anita Perry says. “We grew up in small towns, with Christian values, and we know Washington D.C. could use some of that.” After she describes her husband’s time in the Air Force, he jumps in from nowhere to say “I’m Rick Perry, and I really approve this message.” The ad landed the same day that Mitt Romney released an ad starring his wife, Ann, who says “if you really want to know how a person will operate, look at how they live their life”—a direct hit on Newt Gingrich.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Now they dump their chattle in North Dakota too?

A homeless man in Aspen who has had numerous run-ins with the law received an early Christmas gift Monday: a bus ticket to North Dakota.
  
An anonymous person bought the ticket for Jimmy Baldwin. That state is experiencing an energy boom and has the nation’s lowest unemployment rate, and the idea behind the ticket is to allow Baldwin to find work in the oil- or gas-drilling fields.
  
But the ticket also helps to alleviate the burden he and a handful of other homeless men have placed on police and the local court systems, said Aspen Homeless Shelter director Dr. Vince Savage.
  
Baldwin, 32, was to appear in Aspen municipal court today for a trial. He had pleaded not guilty to a trespassing count after a recent arrest.
  
City prosecutor Jim True said he will ask that the case be continued for three months to see what transpires with Baldwin’s relocation.
  
Baldwin was dropped off at the Glenwood Springs bus station Monday night. Savage said he wasn’t sure whether Baldwin got on a bus that night or Tuesday morning.

Read more...

University of Douchbagery?

The 10 Most Hipster Campuses

College Magazine has released a list of the 10 Most Hipster Campuses. They arrived at their top 10 by factoring a school's location, how many awards their college radio station has earned, what their fashion programs are like, how their liberal arts and fine arts programs stack up, whether or not they offer sustainable and vegan-friendly eating, and the number of boutiques and thrift stores nearby.

Where NOT to attend college:
  1. New York University -- New York, NY
  2. Fashion Institute of Technology -- New York, NY
  3. Emerson -- Boston, MA
  4. RISD -- Providence, RI
  5. Parsons The New School for Design -- New York, NY
  6. University of California, Los Angeles -- Los Angeles, CA
  7. University of California, Berkeley -- Berkeley, CA
  8. Yale -- New Haven, CT
  9. Carnegie Mellon -- Pittsburgh, PA
  10. Georgetown University -- Washington, DC
http://www.collegemagazine.com/editorial/1911/The-10-Most-Hipster-Campuses

WATCH OUT GRAMS!!!

Deadly Shoulder Massager Relaxes, then Strangles!!!

By Linda Dahlstrom MSNBC - If you think you’ve found the perfect gift for Grandma, and it happens to be a ShoulderFlex massager, buy her something else quick. It turns out to be a device that can lull users into a relaxed state -- and then strangle them.

The Food and Drug Administration issued an alert on Wednesday warning that hair and necklaces can get caught in the massager and cause strangulation. One person has died and another nearly did, according to the FDA.

Dr. Michelle Ferrari-Gegerson, a 37-year-old Florida woman, was found dead by her husband last Christmas Eve after her leather necklace got tangled in the device, reported the Miami Herald.

“The ShoulderFlex Massager poses serious risks,” said Steve Silverman, director of the Office of Compliance in the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health, in a statement. “Consumers should stop using this device, health care providers should not recommend it to their patients and businesses should stop distributing and selling the device.”

The device was recalled in August, but the manufacturer, King International, went out of business and the FDA discovered that it didn’t properly alert stores that sell the massager. A quick Internet search reveals that the product is still available at several online web sites.

The FDA is so concerned about the device that it recommends not just throwing it away, but dismantling it before you do so that no one else could ever use it. “The massage fingers should be removed and disposed of separately from the device,” according to the alert. “The power supply should be disposed of separately, as well.”

The French have no teeth...eat too much cheese...and rolled over for Adolf.  I think Turkey can handle their missive.  You go Erdogan!

“This proposed law targets and is hostile to the Republic of Turkey, the Turkish nation and the Turkish community living in France,” Tayyip Erdogan, the Turkish Prime Minister wrote in a letter to French President Nicolas Sarkozy, Reuters reports. During a Saturday news conference, Mr. Erdogan suggested that France ought to investigate her own role and actions in colonial Africa, including Rwanda."

France Condemns Turkey Over Armenian Genocide.

Arab Winter?


I wonder if the US has been working with the Egyptian police to consolidate their newfound power?








Brutal Egypt security force beat woman unconscious ( shocking, very graphic ) SHARE

Bank of America Settles for $335 Million in Latino Discrimination Lawsuit

Latinos should be thanking BOA for its blatant racism...now they don't have sub-prime mortgages to worry about.  I hope they use the settlement cash to open bank accounts in Mexico instead of lining the pockets of Wall Street bankers.  Check out the story...

Bank of America Settles with Latinos