Category Archives: National

Arnold Schwarzenegger Mocks Sarah Palin On Twitter (PICTURE)

While flying to Asia last night, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger took some time to poke fun at Sarah Palin via Twitter. As you can see from his tweet below, Schwarzenegger flew over Anchorage, Alaska and failed to see Russia, which Palin infamously said she could see from her house during the 2008 presidential election. He also included a photo of himself looking for country out of his plane’s window, below. Although the reference is two years stale, at least we know now that Schwarzenegger is hip to all the best Palinisms.

Read more: Schwarzenegger Palin, Palin Twitter Joke, Twitter, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Funny Pictures, Palin Mocked on Twitter, Schwarzenegger Makes Palin Russia Joke, Sarah Palin, Schwarzenegger Palin Tweet, Schwarzenegger Makes Palin Russia Joke on Twitter, Schwarzenegger Mocks Palin, Palin Russia From My House, Comedy News

University Of Kansas Chancellor Says Probe No Role In Athletic Director Lew Perkins’ Exit

LAWRENCE, Kan. — The chancellor at the University of Kansas says the abrupt retirement of athletic director Lew Perkins was not connected with a federal investigation into a ticket scam.

Chancellor Bernadette Gray-Little spoke with The Associated Press on Thursday.

Read more: University of Kansas, Lew Perkins, Ticket Scam, The Midwest, Lew Perkins Retires, Bernadette Gray-Little, College News

Robert Puentes: Will Obama’s Plan for Fixing America’s Transportation Infrastructure Be Enough?

President Obama’s plan for fixing America’s badly-worn transportation infrastructure is not, as some critics have asserted, simply throwing more taxpayer money down the rabbit hole.

In fact, if implemented correctly, it could not only help us make up for a lot of lost time re-building a critical component of our economy, make us more competitive in the global marketplace, and serve as economic “game-changer,” a fundamental re-orientation of how we structure long-range industrial policy.

Right now, most people are focused on jobs. U.S. unemployment rose to 9.6 percent in August, and for the construction industry, that figure is 17 percent, nearly double. What’s worse, those numbers may continue upward when the money from the first stimulus package runs out. In short, far too many Americans are not going back to work tomorrow.

Rebuilding our third-rate transportation infrastructure will also help us catch up with established competitors like Germany and up-and-coming players like China, Brazil, and India. Those nations are investing in their economies and their future competitiveness by putting money into modern ports, freight rail, and other infrastructure. Right now, there are serious question about whether U.S. infrastructure can deliver the level of service American businesses need.

Finally, there is the matter of practical policy. The latest extension of our nation’s transportation law runs out at the end of this year. In this toxic political environment, it may be impossible to get a renewal, which could force a shutdown of the program, as was the case earlier this year, and put thousands of existing jobs in jeopardy. Washington must show leadership now.

An effectively-designed infrastructure initiative can stabilize and strengthen our economy beyond the current crisis. Smart investments can generate productive, sustainable and inclusive growth. A strategy of “invest and reform” would ensure that infrastructure investments were driven by market logic, factual evidence, and performance rather than the greatest short-term political reward.

Does President Obama’s plan do all these things?

The good news–there are several key reforms that promise to change the way transportation infrastructure projects are funded and chosen on the federal, state, and metropolitan levels: A merit-driven National Infrastructure Bank could be the vehicle for green-lighting projects that have the highest return on investment, rather than the greatest political reward. Another round of projects that support bottom-up decision-making linking transportation, housing, energy, and environmental concerns. A program for transportation modeled after the Education Department’s Race-To-The-Top initiative that could instill meaningful reforms on the state level, where most decisions are made.

The investments in high-speed rail and next-generation air traffic control are important in that they begin to shift focus away from small-bore spending to the kind of transformational investments the federal government should be focusing on. Linking high speed rail to the rest of the transportation program will help us begin to think of these siloed investments as a holistic system.

Obviously, the big challenge is how to get this done. Effective transportation policy in the U.S. does not lack for good, practical ideas. It lacks funding, or, more accurately, it lacks interest in raising taxes to generate the funding. Most of what the president proposed is traditionally funded by the tax on gasoline. But as driving declines, and as more fuel-efficient cars mean we’re consuming less gas, there’s much less money overall.

President Obama has taken any gas tax increase off the table, proposing instead to repeal the domestic manufacturing deduction for oil and gas production. This may be enough to fund parts of the president’s plan, but it is short of the comprehensive package we need.

We need to hear more about what the administration’s priorities are for the long-term reauthorization of the transportation law. Again, there is no shortage of ideas. There’s a draft bill in the House, and likely to be one in the Senate. Three national commissions have weighed in on this.

We need to know how the program–largely the same framework used to build the interstates a couple of generations ago–will be updated to reflect the realities of 21st century metropolitan America.

Finally, we need a frank conversation about how we’re going to pay for all this, and then to exercise the will to do that. A jump start now is no good if we stall again down the road.

Read more: Infrastructure, Obama Infrastructure, Economic Stimulus Package, Stimulus, Barack Obama, Transportation, Politics News

PG&E’s Market Cap Drops $1.2B On Calif Pipeline Fire – Wall Street Journal


NEWS.com.au
PG&E's Market Cap Drops $1.2B On Calif Pipeline Fire
Wall Street Journal
NEW YORK (Dow Jones)–PG&E Corp. (PCG), the owner of the natural-gas pipeline that exploded in a suburb of San Francisco, lost nearly $1.18 billion in market capitalization Friday as the fire in California
PG&E Gas Line Blast Kills at Least Four, Destroys 38 HomesBloomberg
Gas official says explosion cause still not clearThe Associated Press
Four Known Dead In San Bruno BlastMyStateline.com
Los Angeles Times (blog) –Voice of America –The Washington Independent
all 2,681 news articles »

Wall Street Journal Launching Book Review

NEW YORK — The Wall Street Journal is set to launch a weekly book review section this month, even as newspapers across the country cut back on book coverage.

The pullout section is part of an expanded Saturday edition set to appear in the next couple of weeks. The newspaper’s daily book review, called Bookshelf, will continue unchanged.

Read more: New York Times Book Review, The Wall Street Journal, Rupert Murdoch WSJ, Wall Street Journal Online, Wsj, Rupert Murdoch Wall Street Journal, Wall Street Journal, Rupert Murdoch, Books News

Unemployment Rate To Remain High, Many Jobs Aren’t Coming Back, Economists Say

The U.S. economy will eventually rebound from the Great Recession. Millions of American workers will not.

What some economists now project — and policymakers are loath to admit — is that the U.S. unemployment rate, which stood at 9.6% in August, could remain elevated for years to come.

Read more: Jobs, Unemployment, Unemployment Rate, Economy, Business News

Earl Ofari Hutchinson: “Obama Hates America”

The ‘Obama Hates America’ theme is not hyperbole. It has been relentlessly played for all it’s worth from the second that then Democratic presidential candidate Obama announced in February 2007 that he would seek the White House. It almost certainly will be played hard again in the days leading up to the ninth anniversary of the 9/11 terror attacks.

Obama’s one little step that could feed the wacky line is not telling yet where and how he’ll commemorate the day. This in itself supposedly is enough to show that the president disrespects, minimizes, or is cavalier about the hallowed day. It’s none of those things. But it’s just another in the pile of supposed anti-American sins that Obama is guilty of. The nutty knock of Obama-as-America-hater is driven in part by ignorance, in part by politics, and in bigger part by race. The ignorance behind the attack line is easy to understand, and predictable. His name, the birth certificate flap, his frequent statement’s touting religious respect and tolerance for Muslims, and his refusal to flaunt and wave around his very private and personal expression of his Christian faith fuel the stupidity and suspicion about who and what he really is.

The politics behind the attack line is just as comprehensible. The line was set by presidential rival John McCain and run hard with by Sarah Palin VP pick during the campaign. McCain dropped veiled hints that Obama was a far out left liberal who was soft on terrorism, the Iraq war, and the Patriot Act enforcement. The implication was that once in the White House he’d give away the company store to America’s sworn enemies.

Palin skipped the hints. She practically roared that Obama pals around with terrorists, left dictators, and commies. And that an Obama win would mean a left-wing takeover of the country. McCain’s hint was shrugged off, and Palin’s hit was outright mocked, ridiculed, and laughed at by much of the media. But millions didn’t laugh. They actually believed that Obama fit easily somewhere between Osama and Castro. Polls continued to show that those that said that Obama was an alien and a closet subversive hovered in the low double digit figure. In the past month, the same polls show that the number who say that about him has doubled, and they all aren’t’ Palin clones and cheerleaders. A lot of Independents and Democrats say the same thing.

Then there’s the unstated; and that’s race. There’s always been a deep feeling among many whites that African-Americans are inherent rebels against America’s institutions and values. During the late 1960’s that feeling took off. The mass civil rights demonstrations, protests, the black power surge, and the urban uprisings turned the myth of permanent black rebellion into the myth of black radicalism. This is and always has been nonsense. Yet, when facts crash hard against ingrained beliefs, and especially beliefs fueled by racial loathing, it’s no contest which will win out.

So it won’t make much difference whether Obama picks the World Trade Center site, the Pentagon, Arlington Cemetery, or the moon, to commemorate 9/11. His name, his religious tolerance, his race, and the relentless GOP smear machine have created the perfect storm to tag Obama as the president that hates America. The tweets from Palin, right-wing bloggers, and talk show gabbers snidely implying that Obama’s is that are probably already typed out and ready to go on 9/11 and beyond.

Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. He hosts a nationally broadcast political affairs radio talk show on Pacifica and KTYM Radio Los Angeles.

Read more: 9/11, Gop, President Obama Soft on Terrorism, Barack Obama Race, African-Americans, John McCain, Sarah Palin, 9/11 Anniversary, Politics News

Laptopitis? College Students Susceptible To New Ailment

A new medical condition is lurking on campus, in coffee shops and even in your own bedroom. Chances are, you’re not immune either.

“Laptop-itis” is a term coined by Kevin Carneiro, assistant professor of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine.

Read more: Laptopitis, Daily Kansan, Laptop Pain, Laptop Disease, The Midwest, Laptop Sickness, College News

Lost Male Drivers Waste $3,000 In Gas, Study Finds

(Sept. 3) — Men waste more than $3,000 in fuel costs because they refuse to ask for directions when lost, according to a British study released as motorists across the U.S. prepare to load up their cars for the long Labor Day weekend.

Read more: Gas Prices, Lost Drivers, Transportation, Travel News

Vatican: stoning in Iran adultery case ‘brutal’ – The Associated Press


msnbc.com
Vatican: stoning in Iran adultery case 'brutal'
The Associated Press
VATICAN CITY — The Vatican raised the possibility Sunday of using behind-the-scenes diplomacy to try to save the life of an Iranian widow sentenced to be stoned for adultery. In its first public statement on the case, which has attracted worldwide
Vatican says in touch with Iran over stoning caseAFP
Vatican may intervene to save Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani in Iran from 'brutal New York Daily News
Iran Stoning Woman 'Faces 99 Lashes'Sky News
CNN –Reuters Africa –The Guardian
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