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Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: longnshort who wrote (116404)10/27/2011 8:07:07 AM
From: tonto1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224717
 
Far left liberal Governor Brown has a new proposal...:

SACRAMENTO, Calif. – Gov. Jerry Brown will propose sweeping rollbacks to public employee pension benefits in California, including raising the retirement age to 67 for new employees who are not public safety workers and requiring state and local employees to pay more toward their retirement and health care, according to a draft of the plan obtained Wednesday by The Associated Press.

The governor will also propose Thursday a mandatory "hybrid" system in which future retirees would get their retirement from a guaranteed benefit and a 401(k)-style plan subject to market whims. For employees with at least 30 years of service, retirement benefits would aim to replace about 75 percent of an employee's salary through retirement funds and Social Security, according to the draft.

Read more: foxnews.com



To: longnshort who wrote (116404)10/27/2011 8:12:39 AM
From: tonto3 Recommendations  Respond to of 224717
 
Biden tries to retaliate against reporter who pinned him on his lunacy




October 25, 2011
Last week (10-21-11) we published an article in which we asserted that Vice President Joe Biden was being dishonest about why Obama's "Jobs Bill" should be passed. He contended that if the bill did not pass that "…murders, rapes and fires" would increase. We, along with many in the conservative media, challenged both the logic and the data behind Biden's assertion.

When Biden was asked about his assertions that crime would increase he popped off at the reporter, telling him "…don't screw with me…"

Over the weekend numerous publications, including Factcheck.org and the Washington Post published stories that showed conclusively that Biden's statistics were wrong. He had contended that crime went up in Flint, Michigan, where he was speaking, after the police force and fire departments were cut back. The evidence show just the opposite. Overall crime has continued a trend downward in Flint.

Now that Biden has ended up with egg on his face, his staff is trying to punish the reporter. Click here to read that story.

Commentary

This story illustrates much about the relationship between big name politicians and the Elite Media in Washington, and for that matter in Raleigh. There exists a set of "rules" that reporters must play by and if you don't play by those rules you get burned. Obama tried it with Fox News, refusing to take questions from that leading network. One rule is: "Don't ask an unexpected question that may embarrass a politician." That is exactly what this story reflects. But what we have noticed is that the same rules do not apply equally. When a conservative reporter sticks it to a politician that is something for retribution. But when an Elite Media reporter tries to trap a Republican presidential candidate about a sign painted on a rock twenty years ago, that the candidate had nothing to do with, that is fair game.

We suspect the way the game is played will not change because of this incident. And we also suspect that Biden will end up the loser in the pXXXXX contest with the media. He has already look like a whining wimp on this and it is only going to get worse the longer the pot keeps being stirred.

Biden was wrong. He was wrong factually. His logic was absurd. And his response to the incident was childish. No doubt that his staff thought their attempt to retaliate would not go reported. It's a new day folks.



To: longnshort who wrote (116404)10/27/2011 8:22:45 AM
From: lorne2 Recommendations  Respond to of 224717
 
Way to go hussein obama... :-(

Outside Cleveland, Snapshots of Poverty’s Surge in the Suburbs
By SABRINA TAVERNISE
Published: October 24, 2011
nytimes.com

PARMA HEIGHTS, Ohio — The poor population in America’s suburbs — long a symbol of a stable and prosperous American middle class — rose by more than half after 2000, forcing suburban communities across the country to re-evaluate their identities and how they serve their populations.

The increase in the suburbs was 53 percent, compared with 26 percent in cities. The recession accelerated the pace: two-thirds of the new suburban poor were added from 2007 to 2010.

“The growth has been stunning,” said Elizabeth Kneebone, a senior researcher at the Brookings Institution, who conducted the analysis of census data. “For the first time, more than half of the metropolitan poor live in suburban areas.”

As a result, suburban municipalities — once concerned with policing, putting out fires and repairing roads — are confronting a new set of issues, namely how to help poor residents without the array of social programs that cities have, and how to get those residents to services without public transportation. Many suburbs are facing these challenges with the tightest budgets in years.

“The whole political class is just getting the memo that Ozzie and Harriet don’t live here anymore,” said Edward Hill, dean of the Levin College of Urban Affairs at Cleveland State University.

This shift has helped redefine the image of the suburbs. “The suburbs were always a place of opportunity — a better school, a bigger house, a better job,” said Scott Allard, an associate professor at the University of Chicago who focuses on social welfare policy and poverty. “Today, that’s not as true as the popular mythology would have us believe.”

Since 2000, the poverty roll has increased by five million in the suburbs, with large rises in metropolitan areas as different as Colorado Springs and Greensboro, N.C. Over the decade, Midwestern suburbs ranked high; recently, the rise has been sharpest in communities the housing collapse hit the hardest, like Cape Coral, Fla., and Riverside, Calif., according to the Brookings analysis.

Nearly 60 percent of Cleveland’s poor, once concentrated in its urban core, now live in its suburbs, up from 46 percent in 2000. Nationwide, 55 percent of the poor population in metropolitan areas is now in the suburbs, up from 49 percent.

Poverty is new in Parma Heights, a quiet suburb of cul-de-sacs and clipped lawns, and asking for help can be hard. The Parma Heights Food Pantry, which began serving several dozen families a month in 2006, and now helps 260, draws a stream of casualties from the moribund economy. Many never needed food relief before.

Like Mary W., 59, who has worked all her life, most recently at a tire company in Cleveland, and was always the one to remind colleagues to donate to charity. Now she is the one who receives it.

When she first came to the pantry, “I cried my eyes out,” said Mary, who asked that her last name not be used because she did not want her children to know about her financial troubles.

At Vineyard Community Church in Wickliffe, another Cleveland suburb, Brent Paulson, the pastor, said he had to post an employee in the driveway the day the church’s food bank was open to coax people inside, they were so ashamed to ask for help.

In a sign of just how far the economic distress had spread, one volunteer saw his former boss come to the pantry, Mr. Paulson said.

The Cleveland Food Bank, which serves six counties, doubled its distribution between 2005 and 2010. “There’s this sense of surprise,” said Anne Goodman, the director, “this feeling that this has got to be a mistake. It has got to be a bad dream.”

Calls to the United Way social services hot line from suburban areas in northeast Ohio more than doubled from 2005 to 2010, outstripping the increase in cities. “We are seeing a rise in need in places we never expected it,” said Stephen Wertheim, director of the hotline, First Call for Help.




To: longnshort who wrote (116404)10/27/2011 1:08:09 PM
From: MJ  Respond to of 224717
 
Yes, a real 'transparent act by Biden and Obama' ----disrupt the nation nationwide------instill fear in America.