Showing posts with label show. Show all posts
Showing posts with label show. Show all posts

Monday, April 7, 2014

Awkward Moment of the Day: Woman Tries to Pull a Truck in Heels on The Today Show

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Awkward Moment of the Day: Woman Tries to Pull a Truck in Heels on The Today Show

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Hunger Games no longer fiction: New reality show to strand contestants in wilderness while viewers send aid

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Hunger Games no longer fiction: New reality show to strand contestants in wilderness while viewers send aid

Saturday, March 29, 2014

Piers Morgan Ends Final CNN Show With Heartfelt Broadside Against America"s Gun Lobby (VIDEO)

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Piers Morgan Ends Final CNN Show With Heartfelt Broadside Against America"s Gun Lobby (VIDEO)

Hamas-CAIR Pressured ABC to Cancel Show that Creator Says was “Pro-Arab, Pro-Tolerance”

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Hamas-CAIR Pressured ABC to Cancel Show that Creator Says was “Pro-Arab, Pro-Tolerance”

Friday, March 28, 2014

The Young Turks Show Podcast March 27, 2014

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The Young Turks Show Podcast March 27, 2014

Hollywood Conservatives Claim IRS Harassment: Documents Show They Were Gaming the System

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Hollywood Conservatives Claim IRS Harassment: Documents Show They Were Gaming the System

Monday, March 24, 2014

Want To Scare Your Friends? Show Them This Chart

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Want To Scare Your Friends? Show Them This Chart

The Young Turks - Live Show 6pm-8pm EDT 3.24.14

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The Young Turks - Live Show 6pm-8pm EDT 3.24.14

Sunday, March 16, 2014

Exit polls show Crimea annexation wins 93% of vote while under Russian occupation


posted at 3:31 pm on March 16, 2014 by Ed Morrissey



Big surprise, eh? No one took this seriously before it took place, and no one will take it seriously after the votes are counted. No one, that is, except for the occupying power in Crimea that forced the referendum in the first place. Russia and its new puppet regional government on the peninsula are reported record turnout and a 93% vote for annexation to its former sovereign, while the US and West denounced the entire exercise as just a pretense for a land grab:


Supporters of Crimea’s attempt to secede from Ukraine and join Russia have flocked to vote in a referendum denounced by Kiev and Western powers.


Polls closed at 18:00 GMT and officials hailed a “record” turnout. Preliminary results were expected within hours.


A vast majority of voters interviewed by journalists backed secession. Many opponents boycotted the vote.



The White House has officially rejected the results and the referendum itself, saying it occurred under duress:


The White House says Sunday’s referendum on secession is contrary to Ukraine’s constitution.


The U.S. says the world won’t recognize the results of a vote held under what it says are “threats of violence and intimidation from a Russian military intervention that violates international law.”


A written statement from the White House calls Russia’s actions in Ukraine “dangerous and destabilizing.”


The U.S. is urging other nations to “take concrete steps to impose costs” against Russia.


Secession was expected to be approved overwhelmingly.



John McCain uses a better word than referendum, one which I have used purposefully all along:


“Look, it is a bogus thing. We used to call it plebiscite in the days of Hitler and Stalin. It is a done deal,” he said on CNN’s “State of the Union.”


McCain and the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine have a running bet on how lopsided the vote will be. McCain thinks the referendum will be approved with 70 percent of the vote. …


“The United States of America, first of all, has to have a fundamental re-assessment of our relationship with Vladimir Putin. No more reset buttons, no more tell Vladimir I’ll be more flexible,” he said.



He’s right, but it’s too late for that now. Putin has already taken his measure of the West. Expect the annexation to happen immediately — and then wait for the inevitable repeat in eastern Ukraine, too.




Hot Air



Exit polls show Crimea annexation wins 93% of vote while under Russian occupation

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

The Daily Show Goes to Iran

The Daily Show Goes to Iran
http://img.youtube.com/vi/QEDi-pMoA7M/0.jpg



Interview with Jason Jones and Tim Greenberg from The Daily Show with Jon Stewart on their trip to Iran. Produced, Written, and Edited by Sahar Sarshar Inter…




Read more about The Daily Show Goes to Iran and other interesting subjects concerning Top News Videos at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Saturday, March 8, 2014

Phil Davis on the Money Talk Show

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Phil Davis on the Money Talk Show

Seth Klarman On "Born Bulls", Bitcoin, & "The Truman Show" Market

With 40% of the portfolio in cash and having returned $ 4 billion to clients at year-end, Seth Klarman"s Baupost Group has "drawn the line in the sand" as they reflect on the diminished opportunities in the so-called "Truman Show" market we see today. In the face of mixed economic data and at a critical inflection point in Federal Reserve policy, Klarman notes, the stock market, heading into 2014, resembles a Rorschach test – "what investors see in the inkblots says considerably more about them than it does about the market." From "born bulls" to "worry genes" and from Bitcoin to flash-mob-speculation, "there is a growing gap between the financial markets and the real economy…and the overall picture is one of growing risk and inadequate potential return almost everywhere one looks… as every "Truman" under Bernanke’s dome knows the environment is phony."


Excerpted from Baupost Group"s Seth Klarman letter,


"Born Bulls"


In the face of mixed economic data and at a critical inflection point in Federal Reserve policy, the stock market, heading into 2014, resembles a Rorschach test. What investors see in the inkblots says considerably more about them than it does about the market.


If you were born bullish, if you’ve never met a market you didn’t like, if you have a consistently short memory, then stock probably look attractive, even compelling. Price-earnings ratios, while elevated, are not in the stratosphere. Deficits are shrinking at the federal and state levels. The consumer balance sheet is on the mend. U.S. housing is recovering, and in some markets, prices have surpassed the prior peak. The nation is on the road to energy independence. With bonds yielding so little, equities appear to be the only game in town. The Fed will continue to hold interest rates extremely low, leaving investors no choice but to buy stocks it doesn’t matter that the S&P has almost tripled from its spring 2009 lows, or that the Fed has begun to taper purchases and interest rates have spiked. Indeed, the stock rally on December’s taper announcement is, for this contingent, confirmation of the strength of this bull market. The picture is unmistakably favorable. QE has worked. If the economy or markets should backslide, the Fed undoubtedly stands ready to once again ride to the rescue. The Bernanke/Yellen put is intact. For now, there are no bubbles, either in sight or over the horizon.


But if you have the worry gene, if you’re more focused on downside than upside, if you’re more interested in return of capital than return on capital, if you have any sense of market history, then there’s more than enough to be concerned about. A policy of near-zero short-term interest rates continues to distort reality with unknown but worrisome long-term consequences. Even as the Fed begins to taper, the announced plan is so mild and contingent – one pundit called it “taper-lite” – that we can draw no legitimate conclusions about the Fed’s ability to end QE without severe consequences. Fiscal stimulus, in the form of sizable deficits, has propped up the consumer, thereby inflating corporate revenues and earnings. But what is the right multiple to pay on juiced corporate earnings? Pretty clearly, lower than otherwise. Yet Robert Schiller’s cyclically adjusted P/E valuation is over 25, a level exceeded only three times before – prior to the 1929, 2000 and 2007 market crashes. Indeed, on almost any metric, the U.S. equity market is historically quite expensive.


A skeptic would have to be blind not to see bubbles inflating in junk bond issuance, credit quality, and yields, not to mention the nosebleed stock market valuations of fashionable companies like Netflix and Tesla. The overall picture is one of growing risk and inadequate potential return almost everywhere one looks.


There is a growing gap between the financial markets and the real economy.


"Flash-Mob Speculation"


When it comes to stock market speculation, it’s never hard to build a “coalition of willing.” A flash mob of day traders, momentum investors, and the usual hot money crowd drove one of the best years in decades for U.S., Japanese, and European equities. Even with the ranks of the unemployed and underemployed still bloated and the economy barely improved from a year ago, the S&P 500, Dow Jones Industrial Average, and Russell 2000 regularly posted new record highs (45 for the S&P, 52 for the Dow, and 66 for the Russell) while gaining a remarkable 32.4%, 29.7%, and 38.8% including dividend reinvestment, respectively, in 2013. It was the best year for the S&P 500 since 1997… In the closing weeks of 2013, it was as if the strong gravitational pull of valuation had been temporarily suspended and stock prices had been launched by a booster rocket, allowing them to reach escape velocity. As with bull markets past, favored stocks started to become unmoored and unbounded.


"Speculative Froth" and Dot-Com 2.0


Whether you see today’s investment glass as half full or half empty depends on your age and personality type, as well as your “lifetime” of experiences in the markets and how you interpret them. Our assessment is that the Fed’s continuing stimulus and suppression of volatility has triggered a resurgence of speculative froth. Margin debt measured as a percentage of GDP recently neared an all-time high. IPO activity in 2013 was greater than it has been in years, with 230 offerings taking place, 59% more than last year and approaching 2007’s record of 288 transactions.


Twitter, for example, surged from $ 26 to almost $ 45 on day one, and closed the year around $ 64. It was priced, after all, at only twenty times its projected 2015 revenue. One analyst suggests the profitless company might achieve $ 50 million of “adjusted” cash earnings this year, giving it a P/E of over 500. Some hedge and mutual funds are again investing in late-stage, pre-IPO financing rounds for hot Internet companies at valuations that only seem reasonable if the companies go public, soon, and at astronomical prices.


Amazon.com, with a market cap of $ 180 billion, trades at about 15 times estimated 2013 earnings, Netflix at about 181 times. Tesla Motors’ P/E is about 279; LinkedIn’s is 145. Even though Netflix now carries some original programming, we’re pretty sure we’ve seen this movie before. Some 23-year-olds have sold their startup internet companies for hundreds of millions of dollars, while the profitless privately-held Snapchat has turned down a $ 3 billion buyout offer.


In Silicon Valley, it seems that business plans – a narrative of how one intends to make money – are once again far more valuable than many actual businesses engaged in real world commerce and whose revenues exceed expenses.


Ominous Signs


In an ominous sign, a recent survey of U.S. investment newsletters by Investors Intelligence found the lowest proportion of bears since the ill-fated year of 1987. A paucity of bears is one of the most reliable reverse indicators of market psychology. In the financial world, things are hunky dory; in the real world, not so much. Is the feel-good upward march of people’s 401(k)s, mutual fund balances, CNBC hype, and hedge fund bonuses eroding the objectivity of their assessments of the real world? We can say with some conviction that it almost always does.


Frankly, wouldn’t it be easier if the Fed would just announce the proper level for the S&P, and spare us all the policy announcements and market gyrations?


Europe Isn"t Fixed


Europe isn’t fixed either, but you wouldn’t be able to tell that from investor sentiment. One sell-side analyst recently declared that ‘the recovery is here,’ a sharp reversal from his view in July 2012 that Greece had a 90% chance of leaving the Euro by the end of 2013. Greek government bond prices have nearly quintupled in price from the mid-2012 lows. Yet, despite six years of painful structural adjustments, Greece’s government debt-to-GDP ratio currently stands at 157%, up from 105% in 2008. Germany’s own government debt-to-GDP ratio stands at 81%, up from 65% in 2008. That doesn’t look fixed to us. The EU credit rating was recently reduced by S&P. European unemployment remains stubbornly above 12%. Not fixed.


Various other risks lurk on the periphery: bank deposits remain frozen in Cyprus, Catalonia seems to be forging ahead with an independence referendum in 2014, and social unrest continues to escalate in Ukraine and Turkey. And all this in a region that remains saddled with deep structural imbalances. As Angela Merkel recently noted, Europe has 7% of the world’s population, 25% of its output, and 50% of its social spending. Again, not fixed.


Bitcoin And Gold


Only in a bull market could an online “currency” dubbed bitcoin surge 100-fold in one year, as it did in 2013. The phenomenon spurred The Wall Street Journal to call it a “cryptocurrency” craze, with dozens of entrants. Bitcoin now has an estimated market “value” in excess of $ 6 billion, leaving alphacoin, fastcoin, gridcoin, peercoin, and Zeuscoin in its wake. Now most sell-side firms are rushing to provide research on this latest fad, while “bitcoin funds” are being formed. Recent recruitment e-mails to staff such a platform reassure that even though experience is preferred, it is not required.


While bitcoin is yet another bandwagon we are happy to let pass us by, the thinking behind cryptocurrencies may contain a kernel of rationality.


If paper currencies – dollars and yen – can be printed in essentially unlimited volumes, and just as with all currencies are only worth what recipients on any given day will exchange in goods or services, then what makes them any better than the “crypto” kind of money? The dollars and yen are, of course, legal tender issued by governments, but in an era in which governments are neither popular nor trusted, that is not necessarily a big plus.


Gold, at least, has been regarded as “money,” for thousands of years, and it is relatively stable and widely accepted store of value and medium of exchange. It’s a well-known monetary “brand.” It doesn’t exist only (or at all) in cyberspace, and it cannot be printed on the whim of authorities. Ironically and perplexingly, while gold, the hard money alternative to the printing press kind of money, dropped 28% in 2013, the untested and highly speculative bitcoin went completely through the roof.


"The Truman Show" Market


Welcome to “The Truman Show” market. In the 1998 film by that name, actor Jim Carrey is ignorant of the fact that his life is a hugely popular reality show. His every action, unbeknownst to him, is manipulated while being broadcast to millions of TV viewers worldwide. He seemingly lives in an idyllic seaside community where the manicured lawns are always green and the citizens are always happy. These people are, of course, actors. The world Truman inhabits turns out to be phony: a gigantic sound stage created for a manufactured “reality.” As Truman starts to unravel the truth, his anger erupts and chaos ensues.


Ben Bernanke and Mario Draghi, as in the movie, are the “creators” who have manufactured a similarly idyllic, if artificial, environment for today’s investors. They were the executive producers of “The Truman Show” of 2013. A global audience sat in rapt attention before this wildly popular production. Given the U.S. stock market’s continuing upsurge, Bernanke is almost certain to snag yet another People’s Choice Award for this psychological “thriller.” Even in “The Truman Show,” life was not as good as this for investors.


But there is one fly in the ointment: in Bernanke’s production, all the Trumans – the economists, fund managers, traders, market pundits – know at some level that the environment in which they operate is not what it seems on the surface. The Fed and the Treasury openly discuss the aim of their policies: to manipulate financial markets higher and to generate reported economic “growth” and a “wealth effect.” Inside the giant Plexiglas dome of modern capital markets, just about everyone is happy, the few doubters are mocked and jeered, bad news is increasingly ignored, and markets go asymptotic. The longer QE continues, the more bloated the Fed balance sheet and the greater the risk from any unwinding. The artificiality of today’s markets is pure Truman Show. According to the Wall Street Journal (12/20/13), the Federal Reserve purchased about 90% of all the eligible mortgage bonds issued in November.


Like a few glasses of wine with dinner, the usual short-term performance pressures on most investors to keep up with the market serve to dull their senses, which makes it a bit easier to forget that they are being manipulated. But what is fake cannot be made real. As Jim Grant recently noted on CNBC, the problem is that “the Fed can change how things look, it cannot change what things are.” According to John Phelan, a fellow at the Cobden Centre in the U.K., “the Federal Reserve has become an enabler of the financial havoc it was designed (a century ago) to prevent.”


Every Truman under Bernanke’s dome knows the environment is phony. But the zeitgeist so so damn pleasant, the days so resplendent, the mood so euphoric, the returns so irresistible, that no one wants it to end, and no one wants to exit the dome until they’re sure everyone else won’t stay on forever.


A marketplace of knowing Trumans seems even more unstable than the movie sound stage character slowly awakening to reality. Can the clued-in Trumans be counted on to maintain their complicity or will they go off-script? Will Fed actions reliably be met with the desired response? Will the program remain popular? Could “The Truman Show” be running out of material? After all, even Seinfeld ended.


Someday, the Fed’s show will be off the air and new programming will take its place. And people will debate just how good it really was. When the show ends, those self-deluded Trumans will be mad as hell and probably broke as well. Hopefully there will be no sequels.


Someday


Someday, financial markets will again decline. Someday, rising stock and bond markets will no longer be government policy – maybe not today or tomorrow, but someday. Someday, QE will end and money won’t be free. Someday, corporate failure will be permitted. Someday, the economy will turn down again, and someday, somewhere, somehow, investors will lose money and once again come to favor capital preservation over speculation. Someday, interest rates will be higher, bond prices lower, and the prospective return from owning fixed-income instruments will again be roughly commensurate with the risk.


Someday, professional investors will come to work and fear will have come to the markets and that fear will spread like wildfire. The news flow will be bad, and the markets will be tumbling.



Six years ago, many investors were way out over their skis. Giant financial institutions were brought to their knees…


The survivors pledged to themselves that they would forever be more careful, less greedy, less short-term oriented.


But here we are again, mired in a euphoric environment in which some securities have risen in price beyond all reason, where leverage is returning to rainy markets and asset classes, and where caution seems radical and risk-taking the prudent course. Not surprisingly, lessons learned in 2008 were only learned temporarily. These are the inevitable cycles of greed and fear, of peaks and troughs.


Can we say when it will end? No. Can we say that it will end? Yes. And when it ends and the trend reverses, here is what we can say for sure. Few will be ready. Few will be prepared.


 


 


 





    





Zero Hedge



Seth Klarman On "Born Bulls", Bitcoin, & "The Truman Show" Market

Saturday, March 1, 2014

The Daily Show: 2/25/14 in :60 Seconds

The Daily Show: 2/25/14 in :60 Seconds
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Ukrainian protests take to the square, authorities apprehend a notorious drug lord, and Michio Kaku references President Obama’s BRAIN Initiative.
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Friday, February 28, 2014

"90s documents show Clinton health care concerns








FILE – In this Oct. 30, 2013 file photo, former President Bill Clinton speaks in Charlottesville, Va. The National Archives plans to release about 4,000 pages of previously confidential documents involving former President Bill Clinton’s administration. Some of the topics include the president’s health care task force and the 9/11 Commission Report. The papers could shed light on Clinton’s presidency and provide insight into a future presidential candidate: former first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton. (AP Photo/Steve Helber, File)





FILE – In this Oct. 30, 2013 file photo, former President Bill Clinton speaks in Charlottesville, Va. The National Archives plans to release about 4,000 pages of previously confidential documents involving former President Bill Clinton’s administration. Some of the topics include the president’s health care task force and the 9/11 Commission Report. The papers could shed light on Clinton’s presidency and provide insight into a future presidential candidate: former first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton. (AP Photo/Steve Helber, File)





FILE – In this Jan. 27, 2014 file photo, former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks in New Orleans. The National Archives plans to release about 4,000 pages of previously confidential documents involving former President Bill Clinton’s administration. Some of the topics include the president’s health care task force and the 9/11 Commission Report. The papers could shed light on Clinton’s presidency and provide insight into a future presidential candidate: former first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, File)













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WASHINGTON (AP) — Bill Clinton’s aides were concerned early in his presidency about his health care overhaul effort, led by his wife, that never passed and a need to soften the image of Hillary Rodham Clinton, according to documents released Friday. Mrs. Clinton now is a potential 2016 presidential contender.


The National Archives released about 4,000 pages of previously confidential documents involving the former president’s administration, providing a glimpse into the struggles of his health care task force, led by the first lady, and other priorities such as the U.S. economy and the North American Free Trade Agreement.


Hillary Clinton’s potential White House campaign has increased interest in Clinton Presidential Library documents from her husband’s administration during the 1990s and her own decades in public service. A former secretary of state and New York senator, Mrs. Clinton is the leading Democratic contender to succeed President Barack Obama, though she has not said whether she will run.


Friday’s documents included memos related to the former president’s ill-fated health care reform proposal in 1993 and 1994, a plan that failed to win support in Congress and turned into a rallying cry for Republicans in the 1994 midterm elections. As first lady, Hillary Clinton chaired her husband’s health care task force, largely meeting in secret to develop a plan to provide universal health insurance coverage.


White House aides expressed initial optimism about her ability to help craft and enact a major overhaul of U.S. health care.


“The first lady’s months of meetings with the Congress has produced a significant amount of trust and confidence by the members in her ability to help produce a viable health reform legislative product with the president,” said an undated and unsigned document, which was cataloged with others from April 1993. The document urged quick action, warning that enthusiasm for health reform “will fade over time.”


But the documents also showed the growing concerns among Clinton’s fellow Democrats in Congress. Lawmakers, it said, “going to their home districts for the August break are petrified about having difficult health care reform issues/questions thrown at them.”


Administration officials also wanted to distance Hillary Clinton from a staff meeting on the touchy subject of making health care cost projections appear reasonable. Top aides wrote an April 1993 memo saying pessimistic cost-savings projections from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office were “petrifying an already scared Congress.”


“CBO has the very real potential to sink an already leaking health reform ship,” said the memo, signed by Clinton aides Chris Jennings and Steve Ricchetti, the latter now a top aide to Vice President Joe Biden. A White House and congressional meeting meant to “align budget assumptions with CBO” would be “all staff,” the memo said, so “we do not believe it appropriate that Mrs. Clinton attend.”


By September 1993, Mrs. Clinton acknowledged the obstacles in a Capitol Hill meeting with House and Senate Democratic leaders and committee chairs. “I think that, unfortunately, in the glare of the public political process, we may not have as much time as we need for that kind of thoughtful reflection and research,” the first lady said, citing “this period of challenge.”


The meetings also showed that Mrs. Clinton was doubtful that a health care law with a universal mandate — requiring people to carry health insurance — would be approved. “That is politically and substantively a much harder sell than the one we’ve got — a much harder sell,” she told congressional Democrats in September 1993.


In 2007, when she ran for president, Clinton made the “individual mandate” a centerpiece of her “American Health Choices Plan,” requiring health coverage while offering federal subsidies to help reduce the cost to purchasers.


The health care overhaul signed into law by Obama in early 2010 carried a mandate that all Americans must obtain health insurance or pay a fine.


The documents also include detailed media strategy memos written as aides tried to soften Mrs. Clinton’s image.


Her press secretary, Lisa Caputo, encouraged the Clintons to capitalize on their 20th wedding anniversary as “a wonderful opportunity for Hillary” and also suggested she spend more time doing White House events celebrating first ladies of the past.


Placing Clinton in a historical context “may help to round out her image and make what she is doing seem less extreme or different in the eyes of the media,” Caputo wrote in a lengthy August 1995 memo about courting better press coverage as the president looked toward re-election.


Caputo also proposed the “wild idea” of having Clinton do a guest appearance on a popular sitcom of the day, “Home Improvement.”


Other documents offered a glimpse into the juggling of priorities early in Clinton’s first term and administration concerns after Republicans took control of the House and Senate in the 1994 elections.


A July 1993 memo shared among Clinton’s advisers sought guidance on how the administration should focus its attention on three major priorities: health care reform, the passage of the North American Free Trade Agreement and an initiative aimed at “reinventing government.”


“The president has repeatedly promised that health care will come after the economic package passes,” the memo from Clinton advisers Rahm Emanuel, Bob Boorstin, Mark Gearan and others said. “Surveys indicate that health care remains the second or third priority (behind job creation) for the vast majority of voters, but also that people fear reform is just another promise to be broken.”


“Our core supporters are rapidly losing patience and could block passage by throwing their support to alternative plans,” the memo warned.


Following the midterm losses, Clinton policy adviser William Galston wrote in January 1995, before the president’s State of the Union address, that the public had “not given up on the Clinton presidency.” But he warned the annual speech before Congress “may well be our last chance for a very long time to command the attention of the people as a whole. We cannot hold anything back.”


The new documents offer only glimmers of Clinton’s internal national security deliberations. The most detailed material, contained in files from then-national security speechwriter Paul Orzulak, show top Clinton officials wrestling with how to deal with China’s emergence as a world financial power.


Notes from an undated meeting with National Security Adviser Samuel “Sandy” Berger show Berger pushing for China’s membership in the World Trade Organization despite concerns about human rights abuses.


A series of emails pertaining to the 9/11 Commission’s research into Clinton-era handling of al-Qaida attacks were all apparently withheld by Archives officials, citing national security and confidential restrictions. The only memo released was a single July 1998 email about whether to send a high-ranking diplomat to Minnesota with a presidential message to greet ailing Jordanian King Hussein. “Sounds like too much crepe hanging,” said a dismissive official.


___


Associated Press writers Stephen Braun, Henry C. Jackson, Connie Cass in Washington and Jill Zeman Bleed in Little Rock, Ark., contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



"90s documents show Clinton health care concerns

Clinton files show worries over health care bill



The Clinton Presidential Library released a batch of roughly 4,000 pages of previously-secret White House documents Friday, fueling questions about how history could affect the presidential ambitions of former first lady and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.


Several topics covered in Friday’s release relate to Mrs. Clinton, including records from the Health Care Task Force she headed and from her press office in the White House.



The papers include internal musings by White House aides, including a warning that there was “great disquiet” on Capitol Hill about whether the Clintons understood the legislative process needed to enact the health care reform package known as the Health Security Act.


(PHOTOS: Hillary Clinton’s 50 influentials)


In an unsigned memo from April 1993, an aide recommended that both Bill and Hillary Clinton hold three “working dinners” with Democratic leaders to hear their concerns.


“To restate the obvious: While the substance is obviously controversial, there is apparently great disquiet in the capitol over whether we understand the inter-activity between reconciliation and health, procedurally, and in terms of timing and counting votes for both measures,” the memo stated. “We need strategic agreement among ourselves and. between us and the Hill on timing and process. This can work, but it will come apart if we don’t get these pieces right.”


The memo also warned that “there is great concern that CBO is going to screw us on savings, etc. just as it did on the budget.” It asked, “Do we have a Reichauer [sic] strategy?” – an apparent reference to Robert Reischauer, then -director of the Congressional Budget Office.


(Also on POLITICO: Clinton defends Obamacare)


Another line in the memo warned that then-House Speaker Tom Foley’s “relations with the Democratic Caucus, especially the freshmen, are remarkably bad.”


The health care reform effort ultimately bogged down in Congress and was declared dead by Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell in September 1994.


POLITICO reported Tuesday that about 33,000 pages of records withheld as confidential advice given to President Clinton or exchanged among his top advisers, along with information about candidates for appointments to federal office, were still unavailable to the public even though the legal basis to withhold them under the Presidential Records Act ran out in January 2013 — 12 years after Clinton left office.


(WATCH: Reince Priebus: ‘Truckload’ against Hillary Clinton)


A White House official said Tuesday that lawyers there had approved release of about 25,000 of the 33,000 previously-withheld pages.


The remainder of the roughly 25,000 pages are expected to be posted online in the next couple of weeks. The White House has extended the deadline on the additional 8,000 pages until March 26, the National Archives said earlier this week.


The larger body of records includes legal memoranda about the Whitewater investigation and other independent counsel investigations. Those files do not appear to be among those being released Friday.


(PHOTOS: Stars line up for Hillary Clinton 2016)


The list of files disclosed Friday suggested they would touch on how Clinton’s team dealt with foreign policy crises, as well as Al Qaeda strikes that preceded the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.


However, the only new document released in the 9/11-related file pertained not to that event, but to a decision not to send an additional note or gift to King Hussein of Jordan when he was at the Mayo Clinic being treated for cancer that would claim his life a few months later.


“Sounds like too much crepe hanging,” a Clinton aide wrote, recommending against the step.


A variety of Al Qaeda-related documents remain withheld on grounds that they’re classified for national security reason.


(Also on POLITICO: Hillary’s no slam dunk in 2016)           


The roughly 33,000 pages of still-secret records accumulated through early last year as records from the Clinton Library were requested under the Freedom of Information Act or processed as part of systematic efforts to disclose records of most interest to historians and the public. Archvists reviewing the records marked the pages involved as exempt, but with an eye to releasing them after the 12-year waiting period ended.


It’s still unclear precisely why the records were tied up for more than 13 additional months. The process requires the National Archives, which runs the library, to give notice to the former president and current president. Their representatives ordinarily have 30 days to clear the records for release or declare an intention to withhold them under executive privilege. However, that period can be extended.


Aides to Obama and Clinton said this week that no assertion of executive privilege was made for records in the cleared batch of 25,000 pages. No final decision appears to have been made on the remaining 8,000 pages.


(WATCH: ‘Hillary papers’ reporter speaks out)


A Clinton aide said that aides to the former president cleared the larger batch of documents for release immediately on Monday, just after getting word from Obama’s attorneys that the White House had signed off on disclosing the records.


Under an executive order Obama signed in 2009, a former president can object to disclosure by asserting executive privilege. Obama could then concur and block release of the records, or disagree and move towards release. Either way, such a dispute could end up in court.


That’s just what happened in 2001, when about 70,000 pages of records from President Ronald Reagan’s White House hit the same 12-year mark and were slated for disclosure. Ultimately, Reagan asserted executive privilege over just 74 pages. A judge upheld the assertion.


Obama’s White House vowed that his executive order would speed disclosure of even sensitive files at presidential libraries. However, with respect to the previously-withheld records now beginning to emerge, the pace is well behind that for comparable records of President George H.W. Bush. They started to come out days after the 12-year mark was hit in 2005.


David Nather contributed to this report.




POLITICO – TOP Stories



Clinton files show worries over health care bill

Jeffrey Toobin - Supreme Court Afraid of The Daily Show w/ Jon Stewart - CNN - 2-24-14

Jeffrey Toobin - Supreme Court Afraid of The Daily Show w/ Jon Stewart - CNN - 2-24-14
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2-24-14 – Discussing his latest piece in the New Yorker magazine, CNN legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin scolded the United States Supreme Court for continuing to …
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Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Freak Show Interviews -- Short E. Dangerously

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Freak Show Interviews -- Short E. Dangerously

Saturday, February 22, 2014

WikiLeaks Julian Assange launches talk show on RT - Latest News

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WikiLeaks Julian Assange launches talk show on RT - Latest News

NYC"s 30% Tax Break Lures "The Tonight Show" Home


“The Tonight Show” made its return to New York City with a splashy opening sequence showcasing Grand Central Terminal, the Chrysler Building, Lincoln Center and Jimmy Fallon’s glamorous new studio at Rockefeller Center — a fitting tribute to the place that helped foot the bill.


An unconventional 30 percent tax credit aimed at luring “Tonight” away from California after four decades is reportedly saving NBC more than $ 20 million a year.


The network said that while the show relocated to New York for creative reasons the move wouldn’t have been possible without the tax credit.


New York’s mayor believes the show’s relocation was a triumph with wide-ranging benefits.


“Bringing ‘The Tonight Show’ back to our city means we’re bringing more than a hundred jobs to hard-working New Yorkers, and giving travelers another great reason to visit,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio.


Others are less certain of the show’s benefit — or the need to use a tax incentive to lure it back.


“We’re going to change our tax policy — in the heaviest-taxed city and state in the country — to get another late night show in Manhattan?” asked E.J. McMahon, head of The Empire Center for Public Policy, a non-partisan think tank. “Even the money that they bring is a rounding error in the New York City economy.”


“Other industries don’t get 30 percent credit,” he continued. “It’s because it’s a glamorous industry.”


The tax incentives were inserted into the state budget by Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s administration in early 2013 as NBC was debating dropping the show’s then-host, Jay Leno, for Fallon and potentially leaving Los Angeles to return to New York, where the show started in 1954.


The language of the 30 percent annual tax credit was remarkably specific: It would only benefit a show that had filmed at least five years in another state before moving to New York (check), spends at least $ 30 million in production costs (check) and films in front of a studio audience of at least 200 people (check). In other words: “The Tonight Show.”


Cuomo’s team has downplayed the idea that the credit was specifically for “Tonight,” though Kenneth Adams, commissioner of the New York State Department of Economic Development, said this week that changed were made to “attract these long-running, high-budget productions to New York State.”


While NBC did not release financial stats for the new “Tonight” production, The Hollywood Reporter estimated the 30-percent credit would yield the network an annual savings of $ 22 million, based on the show’s recent annual production budget of more than $ 75 million.


An NBC spokesman said the network anticipates creating nearly 250 new staff jobs and then another 300 or so “indirect jobs” — such as tour guides — and hundreds more part-time jobs. The show’s arrival is just the latest in a filmmaking boom in New York City that dramatically increased under de Blasio’s predecessor, Michael Bloomberg. Twenty-nine TV shows in the 2013-14 season have filmed in the city as well as dozens of movies and several late night talk shows, including those hosted by David Letterman, Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert.


All told, the television and movie industry created $ 8.2 billion in direct wages in New York state last year, trailing only California’s $ 17 billion. The growing industry in New York has been helped by a tax incentive program, which is capped at $ 420 million for all productions filming statewide. By comparison, California’s is $ 100 million, Florida’s is $ 119 million and Louisiana’s is $ 229 million.


“The tax incentives game is played by a lot of states and some have used it more than others,” said Sam Craig, director of the Entertainment, Media and Technology program at New York University. “But it’s not just that: New York City has made it much easier to shoot films here by making it easier to get permits and block off streets.”


Craig said the return of an iconic show such as “Tonight” has a “psychic impact that’s hard to quantify” that is good for civic pride as well as a more tangible one.


“Even if the tax credit saves NBC $ 20 million, the show’s production costs are still pumping, in one way or another, $ 50 million into the economy,” said Craig, who couldn’t recall another show-specific tax break.


The show’s pride in returning home has been obvious. Fallon, a New York native, made it clear he wanted to stay. The show’s producer, Lorne Michaels, told The New York Times last week that “it simply never came up that we would move to Los Angeles.” And during its premiere episode, the show placed U2 on the roof of Manhattan’s GE Building to showcase the city’s skyline as well as the band’s music.


“We’re at the world famous ‘Top of the Rock’ atop Rockefeller Center, 70 stories above the city,” Fallon roared as the band kicked in. “I couldn’t think of a better way to show off our beautiful city.”


© Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.




Newsmax – America



NYC"s 30% Tax Break Lures "The Tonight Show" Home

Friday, February 21, 2014

Records show Fed on edge during darkest days of 2008 crisis



Outgoing U.S. Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke participates in a discussion at the Brookings Institution in Washington January 16, 2014.


Credit: Reuters/Gary Cameron




Reuters: Economic News



Records show Fed on edge during darkest days of 2008 crisis