Saturday, December 17, 2011

Senate rejects 2 balanced budget amendments (AP)

WASHINGTON ? The Senate on Wednesday voted against changing the Constitution to require a balanced budget as Congress hit yet another dead end in its search for a way out of its fiscal morass.

Two proposals for balanced budget amendments were doomed by the partisanship that dominates Congress. All but one Republican voted against a Democratic measure, and every Democrat opposed the GOP-backed version. Amendments to the Constitution must be approved by two-thirds of the House and Senate and three-fourths of state legislatures.

With the votes, Congress fulfilled a commitment to take up balanced budget amendments that were part of the agreement last summer to raise the government's debt limit in exchange for $2 trillion in future spending cuts.

The House held its vote last month, falling 23 votes short of reaching the two-thirds majority.

Last month also marked the failure of the supercommittee, another product of the debt limit agreement, to come up with a course of action for making inroads into $1 trillion-a-year deficits and a national debt that has topped $15 billion.

Other efforts this year to "go big" on deficit reduction, including talks between President Barack Obama and House Speaker John Boehner and a bipartisan commission led by former Sen. Alan Simpson, R-Wy., and former Clinton White House chief of staff Erskine Bowles, also proved futile.

The inability of the 12-member bipartisan supercommittee to come up with a long-term deficit cutting plan reinforced the argument that only a balanced budget amendment could save Congress from its overspending habits.

"The only way that Congress will exercise the discipline to balance the budget is if the Constitution forces it to do so," said Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa, top Republican on the Judiciary Committee.

But opponents, led by Democrats and including the White House, said a balanced budget requirement could lead to drastic cuts to social programs when a poor economy reduces federal revenues and that Congress could end up ceding budget decisions to unelected federal judges if lawmakers can't agree over how to reach balance.

"I believe it would be a profound mistake for this country," said Senate Budget Committee chairman Kent Conrad, D-N.D. "I believe adopting this amendment would have and could have disastrous consequences for the economy and for the future strength of this nation."

Democrats were particularly critical of the Republican plan, sponsored by Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, that required a two-thirds majority of both chambers to raise taxes, three-fifths to raise the national debt, and stated that spending for any budget year could not exceed 18 percent of gross domestic product. Senate Budget Committee Democrats said federal spending hasn't fallen below 18 percent of GDP since 1966.

Hatch replied that "the votes we cast today will tell the American people whether we honestly acknowledge the fiscal crisis posed by a $15 trillion national debt and whether we are serious" about finding a cure." Congress "will not kick its overspending addiction alone," he said. "Congress needs some help, and the Constitution is the way to get that help."

The vote for the Hatch proposal was strictly along party lines, with 53 Democrats opposing it and 47 Republicans in support.

The vote for the Democratic measure, sponsored by Sen. Mark Udall, D-Col., was more lopsided, with only 20 Democrats and one Republican, Dean Heller of Nevada, voting for it.

Udall said he hoped his proposal would raise awareness among his colleagues "about the very serious consequences of government spending without accountability."

Udall's approach differed from Hatch's in that it had no caps on spending, did not require a supermajority to raise taxes, prohibited Social Security funds from being used to balance the rest of the budget and barred millionaires from getting tax cuts unless the budget was in surplus. Both provided for waivers in times of war and national emergencies.

While the president does not have a role in advancing constitutional amendments, the White House issued statements opposing both proposals. It said that instead of amending the Constitution members of both parties should "move beyond politics as usual and find bipartisan common ground to restore us to a sustainable fiscal path." It also warned that an amendment could also result in the hard decisions lawmakers should be making being handed to the federal courts.

The Senate came within one vote of approving a balanced budget twice in the 1990s, but it hasn't taken up the issue since the last vote in 1997.

Including the Bill of Rights, the Constitution has been amended only 27 times, the last time in 1992 with an amendment concerning congressional pay increases.

Forty-nine states ? all but Vermont ? have some form of balanced budget requirement. These generally apply only to operating budgets, allowing states to borrow for long-term capital investments. Cuts to the federal spending resulting from a balanced budget mandate could reduce federal grants to the states, making it harder for them to meet their budget goals.

The federal government has balanced its budget only six times in the past half-century, four times during Bill Clinton's presidency.

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Courtney Love To Be Evicted From New York Home

Courtney Love To Be Evicted From New York Home

Courtney Love may be evicted from her New York townhouse rental after painting the walls and setting it on fire! The singer was renting a [...]

Courtney Love To Be Evicted From New York Home Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News

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Friday, December 16, 2011

South Pole Discovered, December 14, 1911

Map of Amundsens journey, from Scientific American, Vol. CVI, No. 12, March 23, 1912. Image: SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN

One hundred years ago today the South Pole was reached by a party of Norwegian explorers under the command of Roald Amundsen. The existence of the pole had been known, but the inhospitable landscape presented a barrier until Amundsen?s party made the dangerous trek across ice and snow to stand at the geographical South Pole on this day a century ago.

One of Amundsen?s competitors, Robert Falcon Scott and his party, achieved a different kind of fame: they arrived on January 17, 1912 to find they were second in the race to fame, and they perished on their way back north.

News of Amundsen?s achievement was telegraphed to the world on March 7, 1912, on his return to Hobart, Australia.


From Scientific American, Vol. CV1, No. 11, March 16, 1911
The Discovery of the South Pole

It is much too early to give any critical account of Capt. Roald Amundsen's achievement. Many weeks must elapse before we are in complete possession of all his data. Yet even the laconic account, which he has cabled to the press, throws a flood of light on the mystery of Antarctic geography. Amundsen seems to have collected enough evidence to substantiate the theory that the great chain of mountains which extends almost uninterruptedly from Alaska to Patagonia finds its continuation in a ridge connecting Victoria Land and King Edward VII Land, and which, in honor of his queen, he has named "Queen Maude's Range."

The ice barrier, which had proved for a century and a half a formidable obstacle to Antarctic exploration, is found to terminate in a bay, lying between the southeast mountain range running from South Victoria Land and a range which is probably a continuation of King Edward the VII Land and which extends in a southwesterly direction. Contrary to his original plan, Amundsen despatched one of his officers, Lieut. Prestud, to survey the Bay of Whales and the great ice barrier and to explore King Edward VII Land, of which practically nothing is known. No doubt the spur of competition played its part in unfolding the secrets of the last unexplored frigid region of the earth.

Amundsen and his party at the geographic South Pole, December 14, 1911.
CREDIT: PHOTO COURTESY OF NORWEGIAN-U.S. SCIENTIFIC TRAVERSE OF EAST ANTARCTICA

No less than four other expeditions were in the Antarctic regions at the time while Amundsen was forcing his way south. Besides Amundsen's, there was the Japanese expedition under Lieut. Shirase, which had to retreat to Australia last spring in order to replenish its supply of dogs, and which Amundsen says landed on January 16th at the Bay of Whales, two weeks before he sailed for home; Dr. Mawson's Australian expedition, for which $215,000 had been raised up to November 1st last, and which was to land three parties between Cape Adare and Gaussberg; the German expedition under Lieut. Filchner in the "Deutschland," elaborately equipped with wireless, magnetic, and meteorological apparatus, full of the hope of establishing a base southwest of Coats Land in as high a latitude as possible; and lastly, Capt. Scott's English expedition in the "Terra Nova," which left New Zealand in November, 1910, badly damaged by stormy weather; so badly, indeed, that the necessary repairs and the cost of making good the stores that had been lost seriously depleted the resources of the party.

Amundsen seems to have been helped by exceptionally favorable weather conditions. To be sure, there were storms, but not those frightful hurricanes which thwarted Shackleton. It was cold, so cold that the dogs suffered visibly; yet the average temperature was no lower than that in many an inhabited part of Canada. Amundsen himself states that part of his journey was much like a pleasure trip--"excellent ground, fine sledging, and an even temperature." The glaciers and crevasses make detours necessary, yet, despite them, progress was remarkably rapid. The party climbed up 2,000 to 5,000 feet in a day. Throughout much of his journey Amundsen covered entirely new ground. Therefore he will bring back absolutely new information of Antarctic geography. He made up his mind that he would reach the plateau on which the Pole is situated by another route than that of Beardmore Glacier. Luck, instinct, experience, call it what you will, the new route proved easier than that which either Shackleton or Scott took on their expeditions. To that comparatively easy route, coupled with exceptionally favorable weather, may be attributed Amundsen's success.

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Howard Stern: A 'terrible' choice for America's Got Talent? (The Week)

New York ? The shock jock just signed on to judge the upcoming season of the family-friendly NBC reality competition ? and critics are divided on the hire

Is Howard Stern the next Simon Cowell? NBC is hoping that the reliably provocative shock jock will bring that magically surly Cowell touch to America's Got Talent, its hit summer reality competition. The network announced Thursday that Stern will replace Piers Morgan as judge on the show's upcoming season. It's a costly hire ? NBC will reportedly pay Stern $15 million and fork over another $10 million to move production to New York to accommodate his schedule ? and some critics are questioning its wisdom, considering the raucous radio personality's polarizing reputation. Will NBC regret this move?

This is a "terrible choice": Sure, hiring Stern brings NBC "a good amount of built-in publicity," says Dorothy Pomerantz at Forbes. But he could "turn out to be a big waste of money." To begin with, market polling shows that nearly two-thirds of the public has a negative opinion of Stern. And, demographically speaking, his existing fan base isn't likely to watch such a wholesome TV show each week. "One has to wonder why NBC is making such a risky move with one of its few hit shows."
"Why Howard Stern is a terrible choice for NBC"

Actually, it could be a great move: It's a gamble, certainly, says Aly Semigran at Entertainment Weekly. But a smart gamble for NBC. If it pays off, "Stern could turn out to be one of the best reality TV judges on television." Simon Cowell is the clear precedent ? someone who is "disliked for his brashness and beloved as a staple of reality TV." Stern could be just what America's Got Talent needs: A judge who has that complicated "hate/love to love/hate" relationship with the audience.
"Howard Stern as an AGT judge: News that makes you want to watch? or avoid the show for good?"

And the morality police need not worry: Concerns that Stern may prove too R-rated for America's Got Talent are being blown out of proportion, says Amanda Dobbins at New York. "Anyone wondering how on earth Howard Stern will make it through an hour of network television without running afoul of censors" needs only look at fellow AGT judge, Sharon Osbourne. The typically foul-mouthed Brit has managed to stay family-friendly since joining the series in its second season. No doubt that Stern could pull it off, too.
"Howard Stern is your new America's Got Talent judge"

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MegaUpload Goes Through with Record Label Lawsuit Over Mega Song Censorship [File Sharing]

Remember that support video for MegaUpload with all the A-List stars? It's been yanked from the Internet because according to Universal's DMCA request, New Zealand artist Meg Gin Wigmore didn't consent to involvement in the project. There were also rumors that Will.i.am issued his own DMCA for the video. Turns out it's all bullshit. More »


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[OOC] The world after

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Leaders turn down heat on shutdown talk (Politico)

On the eve of a possible government shutdown, the top congressional leaders tamped down their rhetoric and tried to reassure skeptics that their differences can be resolved at the eleventh hour.

Striking a much different note than a day before, leaders from both parties conceded that the differences over a bill to keep the government funded through next year and a separate plan to extend the payroll tax holiday were resolvable.

Continue Reading

Kady, Allen on shutdown fight

?We?ve done enough, Mr. President, back and forth, the Republican leader and me, staking out our positions, and our positions are fairly clear to the American people,? Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) said Thursday morning. ?We?re going to try ? during the next few hours ? to work toward resolving some of the outstanding issues.?

The clear decrease in temperature on Capitol Hill left hope that Congress could adjourn without creating a pre-Christmas crisis.

In remarks at the White House Thursday, President Barack Obama also sought to get things moving before the weekend on the payroll tax and government funding bill.

?Congress should not and cannot go on vacation before they have made sure that working families aren?t seeing their taxes go up by $1000,? said Obama, whose own Hawaiian vacation is looming. ?There?s no reason the government should shut down over this.?

Reid said he had a productive conversation with Senate Appropriations Chairman Daniel Inouye (D-Hawaii) on Thursday morning and added that there are only a ?few issues still outstanding? that are ?really small in number.? House Appropriations Chairman Hal Rogers (R-Ky.) told POLITICO that negotiators were ?close? to a compromise, saying the end game will become clear at some point Thursday afternoon.

Reid also said it would be a ?mistake? for the House to move on its own bill and called for the two chambers to pass a $1 trillion conference report funding a host of federal agencies, saying he expected the Senate was moving Thursday to resolve the remaining concerns.

?We hope that we can come up with something that would get us out of here at a reasonable time in the next few days,? Reid said.

Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) agreed.

?We?ve been in useful discussions about how to wrap the session up,? McConnell said. ?We hope to be able to pass a combination of appropriation bills and we are working hard to resolve the remaining differences on the payroll tax extension and the related issues that are important to both sides. And we?re confident and optimistic we?ll be able to resolve both on a bipartisan basis.?

Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), who is famously calm, matched his Senate counterparts? calm with his own zen.

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