Showing posts with label Actually. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Actually. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

8 Crazy Hollywood Inventions That Actually Exist

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8 Crazy Hollywood Inventions That Actually Exist

Friday, March 28, 2014

Congressman: President̢۪s Push To End Data Collection, Will Actually Increase Collection


posted on Mar, 28 2014 @ 09:49 AM




“It actually expands the scope of collection, of unconstitutional collection. It is called the “End Bulk Collection Act.” It is like we are in some dystopian future where government calls a bill something that has the opposite affect of what title is.” says Rep. Amash.


The major point brought up by the Congressman is that despite the name “End Bulk Collection”, the bill does not to end collection of data, rather it shifts the responsibility of collection from the NSA to private phone companies.


“They are going to transfer where the phone data is collected so that it is not stored by the government but it is instead stored by the phone companies. Where it is stored is not really the main problem.”




Congressman: President’s Push To End Data Collection, Will Actually Increase Collection

Seems like every bill in Congress now is named exactly opposite what it does.


Dystopian future in deed.


I cry for my country.




AboveTopSecret.com New Topics In Breaking Alternative News



Congressman: President’s Push To End Data Collection, Will Actually Increase Collection

Monday, March 17, 2014

Ex-governor and ex-con Edwin Edwards is actually going to run for Congress

Former Louisiana Governor Edwin Edwards and his wife Trina Scott attend a luncheon where Edwards announced his run for congress in Baton Rouge, Louisiana March 17, 2014. Edwards, the 86-year-old former governor of Louisiana who served an eight-year prison term on racketeering charges, announced on Monday that he will seek election to the U.S. Congress from Louisiana
Edwin Edwards (D) announces his bid for Congress, with his wife, Trina Scott, at his side


After playing games for months, former governor, ex-con, and D-list reality TV show star Edwin Edwards has decided to run for Congress—at the age of 86:

“I acknowledge there are good reasons I should not run. But there are better reasons why I should,” Edwards said.

The 86-year-old Silver Fox, known for his memorable, often shocking quotes and the nearly nine years spent behind bars on extortion, fraud and racketeering charges, made the announcement at a meeting of the Press Club of Baton Rouge on Monday (March 17).



Among the many “good reasons” Edwards would have for not running is the fact that Louisiana’s 6th Congressional District—open because GOP Rep. Bill Cassidy is running for Senate—is almost implacably Republican. State lawmakers redrew the lines a few years ago to make the seat much redder, and it obliged by going 66-32 for Mitt Romney. Edwards, a Democrat, is almost the definition of a larger-than-life figure, but even though he always retained a strong measure of popularity in spite of (or perhaps a little bit because of) his law-breaking ways, he’ll be hard-pressed to overcome this district’s demographics.

Still, Republicans haven’t exactly assembled a very impressive field to replace Cassidy, and there are few political figures as unpredictable as Edwards. For now, though, we’re maintaining our rating of Safe Republican for this race, but at the very least, Edwards is always entertaining. This contest probably will be, too.




Daily Kos



Ex-governor and ex-con Edwin Edwards is actually going to run for Congress

Saturday, March 8, 2014

When Tweeting Your Dinner is Actually Cool

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When Tweeting Your Dinner is Actually Cool

Saturday, March 1, 2014

Conspiracy Theory | Super Mario Bros 3 actually never happened?!



I joined Maker Studios & so can you! Click here to see if your channel qualifies for RPM Network/Maker Studios http://awe.sm/t3Wp8 this theory is a little di…
Video Rating: 4 / 5



Conspiracy Theory | Super Mario Bros 3 actually never happened?!

Monday, February 17, 2014

A Montana School Just Fired a Teacher for Getting Pregnant. That Actually Happens All the Time.

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A Montana School Just Fired a Teacher for Getting Pregnant. That Actually Happens All the Time.

Sunday, February 2, 2014

GoDaddy Body Builder Super Bowl Commercial Actually Makes Sense This Year (VIDEO)

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GoDaddy Body Builder Super Bowl Commercial Actually Makes Sense This Year (VIDEO)

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

The Odds Of Actually Keeping Your New Year"s Resolution

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The Odds Of Actually Keeping Your New Year"s Resolution

Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Sick of “Love Actually”? Read a romance novel!

“Love Actually” is not about romance. When Chris Orr made this point in The Atlantic, the Internet exploded with briefs for and against. Having watched “Love Actually” for the first time to see what all the fuss was about, I have to say that I think Orr is correct. Also, the film is terrible.


If it’s not about romance, though, then what is this movie, billed as “the ultimate romantic comedy,” actually about? That’s easy. It’s about romantic comedies — or, more generally, about movies. In fact, “Love Actually” is positively obsessed with its own movieness; with spectacle, performance and audience. Set in the holiday season, the narrative opens by encouraging the audience to visit an airport and see all the people greeting each other — “love actually is all around,” the voice-over insists, meaning that love is visible, and encouraging you (and you, and you) to turn your holiday travels into a rom-com in miniature. Watch people as if they are in a movie, the voice-over insists; they are all performing love and affection for your emotional and aesthetic pleasure. And then, of course, watch the movie to teach you how to watch life. “Love Actually” does not eschew authenticity, as Noah Gittell suggests. Rather, it presents the movie itself as authenticity, the lens through which to view the world.


Continue Reading…






    








Salon.com



Sick of “Love Actually”? Read a romance novel!

Friday, November 15, 2013

Where Does General Tso Chicken Actually Come From?



Part 2 of the TED Radio Hour episode Misconceptions.


About Jennifer 8. Lee’s Talk


Journalist Jennifer 8. Lee talks about her hunt for the origins of familiar Chinese-American dishes — exploring the hidden spots where these two cultures have combined to form a new cuisine.


About Jennifer 8. Lee




I really kind of came to understand that what I’d been experiencing in New York restaurants on the Upper West Side was not Chinese… at all.





Journalist Jennifer 8. Lee is the author of the book The Fortune Cookie Chronicles. Her fascination with American Chinese food led her to research and write the book, in which she solves some of the mysteries around this indigenous cuisine, including such questions as: “Who is General Tso and why are we eating his chicken?” and “Why do Jews eat Chinese food on Christmas?” She is currently working on a documentary based on her book.




Arts & Life



Where Does General Tso Chicken Actually Come From?

Saturday, November 2, 2013

Bees Are Actually Just Stressed?

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Bees Are Actually Just Stressed?

Friday, November 1, 2013

Tech Giants Throw Weight Behind Legislation Which Would ACTUALLY Rein In NSA Spying


Washington’s Blog
November 1, 2013


The head of the Senate Intelligence Committee – NSA shill Diane Feinstein – introduced a Trojan Horse of a bill today which pretends it reins in the NSA, but would actually legalize bulk surveillance on Americans.


But the tech giants just threw their support behind a real reform bill.  Specifically, Google, Apple, Microsoft, Yahoo, Facebook and AOL put their support behind the USA Freedom Act … the bill introduced by Senator Leahy and Congressman Sensenbrenner to start reining in the NSA for real.


The tech giants aren’t supporting the bill out of the goodness of their hearts, but because cooperating with the NSA has cost them tens of billions of dollars. And see this.


This article was posted: Friday, November 1, 2013 at 5:59 am


Tags: domestic spying, government corruption, technology










Infowars



Tech Giants Throw Weight Behind Legislation Which Would ACTUALLY Rein In NSA Spying

Friday, September 13, 2013

Stimulus II: The Best Case for an Economic Sequel Actually Comes from Hollywood


Wikimedia Commons

It might not make up for R.I.P.D. (it’s Men-in-Black … with ghosts!), but Hollywood has done something worthwhile lately. It’s reduced our debt burden. 


Now, remember, it’s not the size of our debt that matters. It’s the size of our debt compared to our income — our GDP. And even that really only matters insofar as lenders think it does. Semi-mythical bond vigilantes might revolt over higher debt levels, and demand higher interest rates. Or they might just be the bogeymen of James Carville’s imagination. There are plenty of countries that have run up big debt-to-GDP ratios without paying more to borrow — and sometimes less. That’s what happens when the economy slumps, and there’s a flight to safety. Japan, of course, has borrowed more than 200 percent of its GDP during its lost decade and a half, but its 10-year borrowing costs have tumbled to 0.73 percent. Now, higher debt levels are associated with lower growth, but, as Reinhart and Rogoff’s L’Affaire Excel reminds us, it’s only that — an association. It isn’t clear which way the causation runs. And no, there aren’t any magic red debt lines either.


So what does this have to do with Hollywood? Well, the Bureau of Economic Analysis recently revised how it calculates GDP to include intangible things like R&D spending and movie or television royalties. Add it all up, and our GDP is actually 3 percent bigger than we previously thought it was. Woohoo.


Of course, higher GDP means a lower debt-to-GDP ratio. As you can see in the chart below from the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, our debt burden is about 2.5 percentage points lower than we thought it was before — 72.5, and not 75, percent. (Compare the red and orange lines).



Who cares? No really, who cares? Markets certainly don’t. It’s not as if a little lower debt-to-GDP ratio has made us any more creditworthy. After all, our long-term budget outlook hasn’t changed any. Our debt has just shifted down a bit.


And that’s kind of a profound point. Think about it in reverse. If a one-time downshift in our debt hasn’t made us any more creditworthy, then a one-time upshift in our debt won’t make us any less creditworthy either. And what’s a one-time upshift in our debt? A stimulus. As Paul Krugman points out, the 2009 stimulus wasn’t a temporary program that became permanent — it faded away too soon and too fast.  And a new stimulus would eventually fade away too. Okay, but would another couple percentage points of GDP of stimulus really matter? Yes, very much so. Krugman’s back-of-the-envelope calculation is that filling the output gap would only add about 4 percentage points to our debt-to-GDP ratio — while hopefully keeping the long-term unemployed from becoming unemployable, and making the investments we need today to keep growing tomorrow. Not bad for something that would only slightly increase our interest payments today, but not the market’s fears of our fiscal tomorrow.


For once, Hollywood isn’t making a sequel. It’s showing us that we should — a new stimulus. 


That’d be waaay better than R.I.P.D. 2.


 






    








Master Feed : The Atlantic



Stimulus II: The Best Case for an Economic Sequel Actually Comes from Hollywood

Sunday, September 8, 2013

Global warming? No, actually we’re cooling, claim scientists


Hayley Dixon
London Telegraph
September 8, 2013


A cold Arctic summer has led to a record increase in the ice cap, leading experts to predict a period of global cooling.


There has been a 60 per cent increase in the amount of ocean covered with ice compared to this time last year, they equivalent of almost a million square miles.


In a rebound from 2012′s record low an unbroken ice sheet more than half the size of Europe already stretches from the Canadian islands to Russia’s northern shores, days before the annual re-freeze is even set to begin.


The Northwest Passage from the Atlantic to the Pacific has remained blocked by pack-ice all year, forcing some ships to change their routes.


Full story here.


This article was posted: Sunday, September 8, 2013 at 5:29 am









Prison Planet.com



Global warming? No, actually we’re cooling, claim scientists

Friday, August 23, 2013

They Actually Expect Us To Have Faith In These Financial Markets After This Week?


NASDAQ MarketSite TV studio - Photo by Luis Villa del CampoWhat in the world is happening to our financial markets?  Trading on the Nasdaq was halted on Thursday for more than 3 hours, and the only formal explanation that we got was that it was a “technical issue”.  On Tuesday, Goldman Sachs made thousands of “erroneous trades” that are now being canceled.  If those trades had not been canceled, it could have cost Goldman “hundreds of millions of dollars” according to the Wall Street Journal.  How nice for them that they get a “do over”.  When Knight Capital made a similar “trading error”, they were not so fortunate.  Our financial system has become completely and totally dependent on computers, and that means that it is extremely vulnerable.  After what we have witnessed this week, how can they actually expect us to have faith in these financial markets?  And what happens if these “technical issues” get even worse?


The stoppage on the Nasdaq on Thursday was unprecedented.  Trading in literally thousands of stocks and options was halted.  Big names like Apple, Netflix, Intel and Facebook were affected.


As of right now, officials are not telling us what caused the “technical issue”, but there are rumblings that hacking was involved.


And the Nasdaq would hardly be the first exchange to be hacked.  In fact, according to NBC News, about half of all the security exchanges around the world were hacked last year.


USA Today is suggesting that a group of Iranian hackers known as “Cyber Fighters of Izz ad-Din al-Qassam” may be responsible for what happened to the Nasdaq.  Apparently they have been quite active since last September…


The first wave of denial-of-service attacks attributed to the Cyber Fighters of Izz ad-Din al-Qassam began last September and lasted about six weeks. Knocked offline for various periods of time were Wells Fargo, U.S. Bank, Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase & Co. and PNC Bank.


The second wave commenced in December and lasted seven weeks, knocking out mid-tier banks and credit unions.


And a third wave of high-powered denial-of-service attacks commenced in March targeting credit card companies and financial brokerages.



But of course the Iranians have not been the only ones hacking financial institutions.  According to Gartner banking security analyst Avivah Litan, some “profit-minded hackers” have had quite a bit of success attacking U.S. banks…


More recently, a copycat group of profit-minded hackers has conducted denial-of-service attacks against certain U.S. banks as a smoke screen to divert attention while they execute an Ocean’s 11-style wire transfer fraud.


Litan earlier this month blogged about that caper. These bad guys, she says, set into motion sophisticated denial-of-service attacks that overwhelmed pretty sturdy bank network security. While tech staff labored manually to get the banks’ websites back into service, the crooks scrambled behind the scenes to extract funds from a bank employee’s privileged account, which they had gained access to.


Instead of getting into one customer account at a time, the criminals used the employee’s account to control the master payment switch for wire transfers, and moved as much money as they could from as many accounts as possible for as long as possible, Litan reports.


“Considerable financial damage has resulted from these attacks,” says Litan.



However, let’s certainly not blame all of the “technical issues” in the financial markets on hackers.  What happened to Goldman Sachs on Tuesday appears to be very much their own fault


A programming error at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. caused unintended stock-option orders to flood American exchanges this morning, roiling markets and shaking confidence in electronic trading infrastructure.


An internal system that Goldman Sachs uses to help prepare to meet market demand for equity options inadvertently produced orders with inaccurate price limits and sent them to exchanges, said a person familiar with the situation, who asked not to be named because the information is private. The size of the losses depends on which trades are canceled, the person said. Some have already been voided, data compiled by Bloomberg show.



Of course if those trades had made hundreds of millions of dollars for Goldman they would have been allowed to stand.


But because Goldman was about to lose hundreds of millions of dollars authorities worked very rapidly to start “breaking” those trades.


This is just another example that shows how much of a joke our financial system has become.


Wall Street has become a massive computerized casino, and at some point this fraudulent house of cards is going to come crashing down hard.


The seeds for all of this were planted back in the late 1990s.  The Glass-Steagall Act was repealed and the big banks started to go hog wild.


And according to an absolutely shocking memo uncovered by investigative reporter Greg Palast, a certain U.S. Treasury official was at the heart of the plot to make this possible…


When a little birdie dropped the End Game memo through my window, its content was so explosive, so sick and plain evil, I just couldn’t believe it.


The Memo confirmed every conspiracy freak’s fantasy: that in the late 1990s, the top US Treasury officials secretly conspired with a small cabal of banker big-shots to rip apart financial regulation across the planet. When you see 26.3 percent unemployment in Spain, desperation and hunger in Greece, riots in Indonesia and Detroit in bankruptcy, go back to this End Game memo, the genesis of the blood and tears.


The Treasury official playing the bankers’ secret End Game was Larry Summers. Today, Summers is Barack Obama’s leading choice for Chairman of the US Federal Reserve, the world’s central bank.



If Summers and U.S. Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin had not been working so hard for the benefit of the big banks, we might not be facing a quadrillion dollar derivatives bubble today…


The year was 1997. US Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin was pushing hard to de-regulate banks. That required, first, repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act to dismantle the barrier between commercial banks and investment banks. It was like replacing bank vaults with roulette wheels.


Second, the banks wanted the right to play a new high-risk game: “derivatives trading”. JP Morgan alone would soon carry $ 88 trillion of these pseudo-securities on its books as “assets”.


Deputy Treasury Secretary Summers (soon to replace Rubin as Secretary) body-blocked any attempt to control derivatives.


But what was the use of turning US banks into derivatives casinos if money would flee to nations with safer banking laws?


The answer conceived by the Big Bank Five: eliminate controls on banks in every nation on the planet — in one single move. It was as brilliant as it was insanely dangerous.



To learn more about how they used the WTO to transform the global financial system into a gigantic casino, head on over and read the rest of Palast’s outstanding article right here.


And you know what is truly frightening?


Larry Summers appears to be Barack Obama’s top choice to become the next chairman of the Federal Reserve.


That statement should send chills up your spine.


The truth is that Larry Summers should not even be running a Dairy Queen, much less the most powerful financial institution on the planet.


If Larry Summers becomes the next head of the Federal Reserve, it will be an unmitigated disaster.


But it looks like that is exactly what we are going to get.


We are rapidly heading toward the next major global financial crisis, and on top of everything else we will probably have Larry Summers running things soon.


What a nightmare.



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The Economic Collapse



They Actually Expect Us To Have Faith In These Financial Markets After This Week?