Saturday, November 30, 2013

Biden Trying to Show US Still Focused on Asia


It’s up to Vice President Joe Biden to show that the U.S. effort to focus more on Asia hasn’t fizzled out.


Biden is set to arrive Monday in Tokyo on a trip to Asia. The region is watching carefully to see how committed the Obama administration is to increasing America’s influence there.


Biden will meet with leaders in Japan, China and South Korea.


He’ll try to show that while the administration has paid great attention to Mideast flare-ups and dealt with a series of domestic distractions, the U.S. still intends to be a Pacific power.


At the same time, several disputes among Asian nations seem to be boiling over, threatening instability in the region. And now China has declared a new maritime air defense zone over the East China Sea.


© Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.




Newsmax – Politics



Biden Trying to Show US Still Focused on Asia

Massachusetts seeks 10-yr ban on gas fracking after series of Texas quakes



Published time: November 30, 2013 11:09

Reuters/Shannon Stapleton

Reuters/Shannon Stapleton




An environmental committee at Massachusetts Statehouse has approved a bill, imposing a 10-year ban on fracking for natural gas. The move comes as a wave of earthquakes in Texas has raised new concerns over the controversial drilling technique.


The Massachusetts fracking moratorium bill is designed to protect the state’s drinking water from possible contamination and thus “ensure that the health and prosperity of our communities is maintained,” according to one of the legislation’s sponsors, Northampton Democratic state Rep. Peter Kocot, cited by AP.


To become law, the temporary ban on fracking has yet to be approved by the lawmakers and signed by the Democratic Governor, Deval Patrick.


The Massachusetts legislative move was taken on Friday, the day after Texas was stuck by a 3.6 magnitude earthquake, one in a row of similar episodes during the last three weeks. The finger of blame is being pointed at fracking. The series of small earthquakes caused no casualties, but left local Texas residents fearing worse could be in store.


Fracking is a drilling technique that involves injecting chemical-laden water deep into the ground, exploding it and then pumping it back, together with the gas released as a result of the blast. The water is then separated from the gas and is disposed of by being injected back into the ground.


The smell of chemicals preceded the series of Texas tremors, according to Rebecca Williams, a resident in the town of Azle, which was affected by the most powerful earthquake so far in the series.


We could not figure out where the chemicals were coming from,” Williams told RT. “Then we started having the earthquakes. The earthquakes seemed to be getting stronger. When the 3.6 one happened I tried to get up and run downstairs and my house was shaking so bad, I could not even run.


Williams is sure the cracks in the walls of her house are a direct result of the fracking practices. Meanwhile, in the neighboring Denton County, an anti-fracking activist, Tara Linn Hunter, links her own aggravated health problem to the drilling.


We all live at the foot of a gas well in my town,” she told RT. “The biggest effect it had on me personally is asthma. Nebulizers, inhalers are part of my daily life and that’s become increasingly worse in the five years I’ve lived in this town.


Hunter says 40 percent of energy in Denton comes from wind and most locals would like the practice to expand, but that’s unlikely to happen soon, as some of the “city council members have ties to the oil and gas industry”, according to the activist.  


This attitude is shared by Calvin Tillman, the former mayor of Dish, Texas, now an environmental activist, who believes that the oil and gas lobby in Texas is more powerful than in any other state.


I think the oil and gas industry has done all they can do to prevent the renewables from getting a foothold here in the state of Texas,” Tillman told RT. “You know for me to put a solar panel on my house I have to go through a significant permitting process. However, if I want to drill a gas well in my back yard it could probably get done in the afternoon.”


Texas had listed nearly 6,000 oil and gas fracking wells on FracFocus, an industry fracking disclosure site as of March 2012, according to SourceWatch.org.


Supporters of fracking insist that the practice is safe, helps to keep energy prices lower and secures the US’s energy independence.




RT – USA



Massachusetts seeks 10-yr ban on gas fracking after series of Texas quakes

WWI "sacred soil" ceremony in London






























Scenes from the procession and ceremony marking the “sacred soil” arrival



A ceremony has taken place in London to mark the arrival of “sacred soil” from 70 World War 1 battlefields in Belgium.


The soil is going to be laid at a memorial garden marking the 100th anniversary of WW1 in 2014.


The soil, collected by British and Belgian schoolchildren and put into 70 sandbags, arrived on the Belgian Navy frigate Louisa Marie on Friday.


It went on a ceremonial procession through London before reaching its last resting place at Wellington Barracks.


On arrival in London, the Louisa Marie moored alongside HMS Belfast and the soil was transferred to the British light cruiser.


The bags were loaded onto the gun carriage of the King’s Troop Royal Horse Artillery along with a crucible of soil from all the battlefields.


It was escorted by mounted members of the Household Cavalry from the Life Guards and the Blues and Royals, and mounted officers from the Metropolitan Police.


The route of the procession passed Tower Bridge, St Paul’s Cathedral, Trafalgar Square, Whitehall, Horse Guards Parade, The Mall and Buckingham Palace.


It was blessed in a ceremony at the Guards’ Chapel at Wellington Barracks – near Buckingham Palace – and will be placed into the ground at the Flanders Fields Memorial Garden


The soil will be placed “at the heart” of the garden where the words of John McCrae’s famous poem, In Flanders’ Fields, will be inscribed.


With the sound of Jerusalem playing in the background, the youngest member of the Friends of the Guards Museum emptied a ceremonial casket of soil into the memorial garden – which will open to the public next year.


The sandbags of soil were placed at the entrance of the Guards’ Chapel and will be added to the garden later on Saturday.


More than 1,000 British and Belgian schoolchildren were involved in collecting 70 bags of soil from the battlefields this summer.


The Guards Museum – which funded the project with help from public donations and corporate sponsors, including a contribution from the Government of Flanders – described the £700,000 project as “unprecedented” and “historic”.


Museum curator Andrew Wallis said the garden would stand as a “tangible demonstration of the bond between Britain and Belgium”.


The process of bringing the soil to the UK began on Armistice Day with a ceremony at the Menin Gate, attended by the Duke of Edinburgh.




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WWI "sacred soil" ceremony in London

Black Friday Chaos Exposes Americans’ Weakness for Perceived Savings

Black Friday Chaos Exposes Americans’ Weakness for Perceived Savings
http://isbigbrotherwatchingyou.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/1d950__nsa_spying__Screen-Shot-2013-11-30-at-12.30.53-PM.png


Prison Planet.com
November 30, 2013


As long as Americans continue being suckered by the savings spectacle that is Black Friday, the country will continue down the road towards full-on technocratic enslavement.


Meanwhile, the federal government busily readies the next attacks on the Second Amendment, free speech, the freedom of the press and liberty.


RELATED: Proof: Gun Registration Leads To Confiscation


RELATED: Walmart Ejects Customer For Filming Violent ‘Black Thursday’ Mobs


RELATED: Insane Black Friday Video: Women Get Into Stun Gun Fight Inside The Mall


Friday’s Infowars poll showed more readers stayed out of stores this past Black Friday.


Black Friday Chaos Exposes Americans Weakness for Perceived Savings Screen Shot 2013 11 30 at 12.30.53 PM


This article was posted: Saturday, November 30, 2013 at 2:07 pm









Prison Planet.com




Read more about Black Friday Chaos Exposes Americans’ Weakness for Perceived Savings and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

How the Republican Tempest Over the Affordable Care Act Diverts Attention from Three Large Truths

How the Republican Tempest Over the Affordable Care Act Diverts Attention from Three Large Truths
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Having failed to defeat the Affordable Care Act in Congress, to beat it back in the last election, to repeal it despite more than eighty votes in the House, to stop it in the federal courts, to get enough votes in the Supreme Court to overrule it, and to gut it with outright extortion (closing the government and threatening to default on the nation’s debts unless it was repealed), Republicans are now down to their last ploy.


They are hell-bent on destroying the Affordable Care Act in Americans’ minds.


A document circulating among House Republicans (reported by the New York Times) instructs them to repeat the following themes and stories continuously: “Because of Obamacare, I Lost My Insurance.” “Obamacare Increases Health Care Costs.” “The Exchanges May Not Be Secure, Putting Personal Information at Risk.”


Every Republican in Washington has been programmed to use the word “disaster” whenever mentioning the Act, always refer to it as Obamacare, and demand its repeal.


Republican wordsmiths know they can count on Fox News and right-wing yell radio to amplify and intensify all of this in continuous loops of elaboration and outrage, repeated so often as to infect peoples’ minds like purulent pustules.


The idea is to make the Act so detestable it becomes the fearsome centerpiece of the midterm elections of 2014 — putting enough Democrats on the defensive they join in seeking its repeal or at least in amending it in ways that gut it (such as allowing insurers to sell whatever policies they want as long as they want, or delaying it further).


Admittedly, the President provided Republicans ammunition by botching the Act’s roll-out. Why wasn’t HealthCare.gov up and running smoothly October 1? Partly because the Administration didn’t anticipate that almost every Republican governor would refuse to set up a state exchange, thereby loading even more responsibility on an already over-worked and underfunded Department of Health and Human Services.


Why didn’t Obama’s advisors anticipate that some policies would be cancelled (after all, the Act sets higher standards than many policies offered) and therefore his “you can keep their old insurance” promise would become a target? Likely because they knew all policies were “grandfathered” for a year, didn’t anticipate how many insurers would cancel right away, and understood that only 5 percent of policyholders received insurance independent of an employer anyway.


But there’s really no good excuse. The White House should have anticipated the Republican attack machine.


The real problem is now. The President and other Democrats aren’t meeting the Republican barrage with three larger truths that show the pettiness of the attack:


The wreck of private insurance. Ours has been the only healthcare system in the world designed to avoid sick people. For-profit insurers have spent billions finding and marketing their policies to healthy people – young adults, people at low risk of expensive diseases, groups of professionals – while rejecting people with preexisting conditions, otherwise debilitated, or at high risk of heart disease, diabetes, and cancer. And have routinely dropped coverage of policy holders who become seriously sick or disabled. What else would you expect from corporations seeking to maximize profits?


But the social consequences have been devastating. We have ended up with the most expensive healthcare system in the world (finding and marketing to healthy people is expensive, corporate executives are expensive, profits adequate to satisfy shareholders are expensive), combined with the worst health outcomes of all rich countries — highest rates of infant mortality, shortest life spans, largest portions of populations never seeing a doctor and receiving no preventive care, most expensive uses of emergency rooms.


We could not and cannot continue with this travesty of a healthcare system.


The Affordable Care Act is a modest solution.  It still relies on private insurers — merely setting minimum standards and “exchanges” where customers can compare policies, requiring insurers to take people with preexisting conditions and not abandon those who get seriously sick, and helping low-income people afford coverage.


A single-payer system would have been preferable. Most other rich countries do it this way. It could have been grafted on to Social Security and Medicare, paid for through payroll taxes, expanded to lower-income families through Medicaid. It would have been simple and efficient. (It’s no coincidence that the Act’s Medicaid expansion has been easy and rapid in states that chose to accept it.)


But Republicans were dead set against this. They wouldn’t even abide a “public option” to buy into something resembling Medicare. In the end, they wouldn’t even go along with the Affordable Care Act, which was based on Republican ideas in the first place. (From Richard Nixon’s healthcare plan through the musings of the Heritage Foundation, Republicans for years urged that everything be kept in the hands of private insurers but the government set minimum standards, create state-based insurance exchanges, and require everyone to sign up).


The moral imperative.  Even a clunky compromise like the ACA between a national system of health insurance and a for-profit insurance market depends, fundamentally, on a social compact in which those who are healthier and richer are willing to help those who are sicker and poorer. Such a social compact defines a society.


The other day I heard a young man say he’d rather pay a penalty than buy health insurance under the Act because, in his words, “why should I pay for the sick and the old?” The answer is he has a responsibility to do so, as a member the same society they inhabit.


The Act also depends on richer people paying higher taxes to finance health insurance for lower-income people. Starting this year, a healthcare surtax of 3.8 percent is applied to capital gains and dividend income of individuals earning more than $ 200,000 and a nine-tenths of 1 percent healthcare tax to wages over $ 200,000 or couples over $ 250,000. Together, the two taxes will raise an estimated $ 317.7 billion over 10 years, according to the Joint Committee on Taxation


Here again, the justification is plain: We are becoming a vastly unequal society in which most of the economic gains are going to the top. It’s only just that those with higher incomes bear some responsibility for maintaining the health of Americans who are less fortunate.


This is a profoundly moral argument about who we are and what we owe each other as Americans. But Democrats have failed to make it, perhaps because they’re reluctant to admit that the Act involves any redistribution at all.


Redistribution has become so unfashionable it’s easier to say everyone comes out ahead. And everyone does come out ahead in the long term:  Even the best-off will gain from a healthier and more productive workforce, and will save money from preventive care that reduces the number of destitute people using emergency rooms when they become seriously ill.


But there would be no reason to reform and extend health insurance to begin with if we did not have moral obligations to one another as members of the same society.


The initial problems with the website and the President’s ill-advised remark about everyone being able to keep their old policies are real. But they’re trifling compared to the wreckage of the current system, the modest but important step toward reform embodied in the Act, and the moral imperative at the core of the Act and of our society.  


The Republicans have created a tempest out of trivialities. It is incumbent on Democrats — from the President on down — to show Americans the larger picture, and do so again and again.




Robert Reich




Read more about How the Republican Tempest Over the Affordable Care Act Diverts Attention from Three Large Truths and other interesting subjects concerning Opinion Columns at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Ron Paul on The Alex Jones Show:Driving Ben Bernanke Crazy!



Alex welcomes back to the show Texas Congressman and former Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul. Paul’s bill, H.R. 1207, the Federal Reserve Transpare…



Ron Paul on The Alex Jones Show:Driving Ben Bernanke Crazy!

Beavis & Butthead Save The World: Documentary



Mike Judge invited Alex Jones to his Austin Tx home for a one on one interview. Mike covered the current IRS scandal, Alex’s epic interview on Piers Morgan, …
Video Rating: 4 / 5



Beavis & Butthead Save The World: Documentary