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The code’s most direct challenge to al Qaeda is this: “Jihad has ethics and morals because it is for God. That means it is forbidden to kill women, children, elderly people, priests, messengers, traders and the like. Betrayal is prohibited and it is vital to keep promises and treat prisoners of war in a good way. Standing by those ethics is what distinguishes Muslims’ jihad from the wars of other nations.”
Rep. Steve King (R-IA) “skipped his son’s Saturday afternoon wedding in Iowa in favor of the contentious debate over the public insurance option and abortion funding,” Roll Call reports…
King added that voting against the bill was “the best gift I could give my son.”
- Rahm Emanuel on healthcare reform (via langer)
Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s investment bank, survivors of the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, are set to pay record bonuses this year.
The firms — the three biggest banks to exit the Troubled Asset Relief Program — will hand out $29.7 billion in bonuses, according to analysts’ estimates. That’s up 60 percent from last year and more than the previous high of $26.8 billion in 2007. The money, split among 119,000 employees, equals $250,400 each, almost five times the $50,303 median household income in the U.S. last year, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
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Wall Street Bonuses Rise as Big 3 May Pay $30 Billion (Update2) - Bloomberg.com
But don’t call it “class warfare”—after all, in warfare you need at least two parties fighting, and the top 1%’s been whipping our ass for decades now.
(via shorterexcerpts)
- Jason Fry, Of Search and Social Search
Boxer: Senate Has Votes To Block Stupak AmendmentOne of Congress’s foremost champions of abortion rights said on Monday that the controversial “bible-thumper’s” amendment would pass over her dead body. Clutching her chairman’s gavel like an avenging valkyrie, Senator Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) said that the Senate did not have the votes to add a more restrictive anti-abortion amendment to health care reform legislation.
Boxer stated that 60 votes would be needed to strip the current health care bill of its abortion-related language and that those 60 would be found in the Democrat-controlled Senate when hell itself freezes over. Boxer’s reading of the political landscape might seem like the hopeful spin of an left-coast Marin bra-burner. But it was seconded by a far less pro-choice lawmaker, Sen. Max Baucus (D-Mont.)
“She’s right about the hell freezing over thing,” sad the almost-Republican of an amendment which mirrored that offered by Rep. Bart Stupak (D-Mich.) in the House. “I doubt it could pass.”
“We had a deal,” Boxer said. “We had a goddamn deal. When we sat down to do health care, I thought there was an understanding that we would be abortion-neutral. In other words we wouldn’t change anything on abortion; that federal funds couldn’t be used but of course private funds could as long as this was legal. Roe v. Wade is the law of the land. These trifling assholes should face that fact.”
“Holla,” remarked Senator Diane Feinstein (D-Calif.), Boxer’s senate colleague in the California congressional delegation. “This is a pro-choice country. Deal.”
Once a Marine, always a Marine. If you come across an active duty Marine or the many veterans who served in the Marine Corp, say thank you today. Throughout our country’s history they have led whatever fight we may have been fighting they led the way. Agree or disagree with our foreign policy, the Marines deserve our admiration & appreciation today.
My father was a Marine. I have his Mameluke in the corner of my living room. It reminds me of what he did when he was my age. Younger, actually.
When my father graduated from college at 21 the Marine Corps immediately put him in charge of a 36 man platoon. Think about that.
When my father was 22 and a 2nd Lieutenant he defended a man at court martial. The defendant was facing 25 years of hard labor at Leavonworth for pulling a weapon on a superior officer. This was heavy stuff. My father had no legal training whatsoever. The man was convicted but received only a slap on the wrist: two months of hard labor and forfeited pay. The sentence was suspended indefinitely. The panel, in other words, agreed that while the man had pulled his weapon on a superior officer — a rather large no-no in the Marine Corps — that he was likely justified in doing so.
In 1962 while Officer of the Day (OOD) at the US Naval Base, Newport, Rhode Island, he came across a fire in the barracks. He received a commendation in 1962 which read in part: “Upon the arrival of the Fire Fighting Detail from these Barracks, and prior to the arrival of the Base Fire Department Trucks, you took charge of the aforesaid detail and proceeded to extinguish the fire.”
He was 23.
The world has changed, but the Corps continues to expect the best of young Marines and officers. Where else can you command 36 at 21, defend a man facing 25 years of hard labor at 22, and extinguish a fire at 23? There’s a reason why they say that once you’re a Marine you’re always a Marine. The Marines change people.
The military — the Marines in particular — are an amazing institution. And Marines are amazing people. They have a certain image — that of the Leather Neck, the hard-charging, take-no-prisoners, warrior. This is accurate. It’s also insufficient. Marines are surprisingly nice when it’s appropriate. It was the Marines who forced a revision of counter-insurgency doctrine in Iraq and Afghanistan because the Army was being too harsh. It was the Marines who began treating the local population with respect and triggered the Sunni Awakening. It was also the Marines who set the stage for this reversal of fortune with a punishing campaign in Fallujah.
It’s worth reading their history.
- The Associated Press: FBI reassessing past look at Fort Hood suspect (via retropolitics)
- Jay Rosen, Studio 20 @ Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute: Get with the times, Jay Rosen tells journos
- JON STEWART, mocking “Tea Party” protestors who compared healthcare reform to… the Holocaust, on The Daily Show (via inothernews)
- Matt Taibbi (via robot-heart-politics)
Earlier this month, Francis Ford Coppola, the director of “The Godfather” said at the Beirut Film Festival that “the cinema as we know it is falling apart.” He also predicted several of the studios would go out of business.
Of course, not all of your industry’s problems were caused by the Web. Hollywood has paid creators handsomely over the years and costs have skyrocketed. Then there’s the problem with Blu-ray. Iger noted that consumers aren’t upgrading their DVD collections with Blu-ray discs to the degree that the industry had hoped.
But if you’re really inclined to wag a finger, there is nothing disrupting your business more than the Internet. The MPAA has worked hard to force file-sharing sites out of business or push them to the Web’s fringes. At first, the studios tried to kill file sharing with lawsuits. Then they hired security firms, such as MediaDefender and MediaSentry, which promised to discourage file sharers by blocking or slowing the sharing process. None of that worked.
- Greg Sandoval, End of the world as Hollywood knows it (via tanya77)
“To: Charlize Theron, Hugh Jackman, Seth Rogen, Tina Fey, Steven Spielberg, Michael Mann, every actor, actress, screenwriter, costumer, best boy, cameraman, set designer, makeup artist, and agent—plus anyone else who makes their living in the film industry.
From: Greg Sandoval, CNET media reporter and film fan.
Re: Your livelihoodCut your spending. Save your money. Many of the revenue streams that have gushed into your industry for decades, some for nearly a century, are about to dry up. This will likely mean a period of belt tightening like you’ve never seen before.
The end is coming for DVDs, traditional movie rentals, and yes, much of your cable money will likely disappear.” (via CNET)
Finally got around to watching this. Jon Stewart as Glenn Beck. So good. He’s got all the mannerisms down.