2010-09-30

Emanuel leaving White House on Friday -- Obama's chief of staff to begin campaign for Chicago mayor this weekend

White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel listens to President Barack Obama deliver remarks during a news conference in the East Room of the White House on Sept. 10.

story by NBC
photo by EPA

CHICAGO — Rahm Emanuel will resign as White House chief of staff on Friday. NBC News has confirmed that Pete Rouse, senior advisor to President Barack Obama, will be named as successor — likely on an interim basis.

It is still unclear who will take over the position permanently.

"The president will have a personnel announcement tomorrow," White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said in a press conference Thursday. "We will save the specifics for then."

Gibbs said the president has "complete loyalty and trust" in Rouse, though he wouldn't confirm Rouse had been tapped for the interim post.

Two people familiar with his plans, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they did not want to pre-empt Emanuel's announcement, told The Associated Press that he will return to Chicago over the weekend and begin touring neighborhoods on Monday.

"He intends to run for mayor," one of the people said.

Both people said they did not know when Emanuel would make an official announcement about his mayoral bid but that he would launch a website with a message to Chicago voters in the near future.

D.C. area unemployment up from year ago, remains lowest among large metro areas

story by Washington Post
written by V. Dion Haynes

The Washington area's unemployment rate remained the lowest among major U.S. metropolitan areas last month, despite a one-tenth percentage point increase, to 6.2 percent, compared with August 2009, according to data released Wednesday.

The area's monthly jobless rate, which is not seasonally adjusted, dropped slightly in August from the month before.

The August-to-August uptick continued a trend seen in July, when the rate of 6.3 percent was up from 6.2 percent the year before, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. In contrast, the national jobless rate for August dropped to 9.5 percent, down from 9.6 percent the year before, after remaining unchanged for July.

Economists see a dichotomy in the region's recovery: Even as the area experienced a year-to-year net gain of 20,000 jobs - with steady growth in federal government and professional and business services - the number of employed people during the 12-month period fell by 5,000, and the number of unemployed people climbed by 1,500.

To experts, this is more evidence that many job openings are being filled by people who have jobs or who are moving here from outside the region, not by unemployed people in the region.

The unemployment rate is "sort of fluffing around; it did improve from July," said John McClain, senior fellow at the Center for Regional Analysis at George Mason University. "Likely, the skills needed for those jobs [in federal government and contracting] don't match very well with the skills of unemployed people. We need to do a better job of training our workforce to match what jobs we have."

Washington had the lowest August unemployment rate among the 49 U.S. metropolitan areas with at least 1 million people, followed by Oklahoma City, at 6.3 percent. The major metropolitan region with the highest rate was Riverside-San Bernardino, Calif., at 14.8 percent.

Among large and small

Among large and small metropolitan areas, El Centro, Calif., had the highest rate, 30.2 percent. The area with the lowest was Bismarck, N.D., at 3.1 percent.

The Washington area job market moved into positive territory in April, when it began adding more jobs than it lost. That month, there was a net gain of 8,000 jobs from April 2009. The numbers mostly have been growing since then, with year-to-year gains of 16,000 in May, 22,000 in June and 40,000 in July.

Most sectors in the region showed job growth in August. Professional and business services added 12,000 jobs, compared with August 2009; the federal government, 18,000; and education and health services, 5,000.

Even sectors that were hit hard in the downturn are rebounding. Leisure and hospitality had an August-to-August net gain of 11,000 jobs, and retail gained 9,000 jobs.

Hhgregg, an appliance and electronics retailer, hired 600 people in July and August for 10 Washington area stores that it opened this month. Hhgregg officials said they hired numerous former Circuit City employees, who lost their jobs when the retailer went out of business last year.

"There are a lot of talented individuals who [were] not employed or [were] underemployed, and we were able to hire those individuals," said Jeff Pearson, hhgregg's vice president of marketing.

Construction in the region lost 1,000 jobs from August to August, but that was a big improvement from much of last year. "We are about to turn the corner in construction," and the numbers might become positive in the September job report, McClain said."That might bring down the unemployment rate in that unskilled sector."

Others said uncertainty still looms. Anirban Basu, chairman and chief executive of Sage Policy Group, a Baltimore economic and policy consulting firm, said the momentum in the region could reverse if consumers lose confidence next year. He said he is especially concerned that the region hasn't found enough jobs for its large base of low-skilled unemployed workers.

"We have been observing for a few decades now the bifurcation of society between haves and have-nots. The downturn magnifies the bifurcation by reducing demand for lower-skilled positions, while the economy disproportionately continued to provide jobs for the educated and skilled," Basu said.

Now there is a large "population of people depending on public assistance," he added. There "needs to be a community-wide effort to help people transition from dependence to independence."

Groups to rally for jobs, justice in Washington

story by the Associated Press


WASHINGTON -- Groups pushing for progressive policies plan are heading to the nation's capital for the "One Nation Working Together" rally Saturday October second.

The march is planned for Saturday at the Lincoln Memorial. Organizers say more than 400 groups - ranging from labor unions to faith, environmental and gay rights groups - are coming together to advocate for job creation, quality education and justice.

On their permit application, the groups have said they anticipate 100,000 people. The Metro transit system also is opening an hour earlier than usual on Saturday to accommodate the expected crowds.

The march comes with November's midterm elections just a month away.

Impact Record Pool in LA owner Danny "Fut" James dies at 59

Condolences to the family and friends of my friend DannyFutJames. Fut passed away at age 59 from complications from multiple myeloma, a form of cancer on Thursday night in Los Angeles. Fut was the founder of Impact Music Pool, one the country’s oldest and most influential music pools.

Fut was friend and colleague of mine and supplied records to me during my 80's/90's Mobile D.J. days and Fut will be greatly missed.

The memorial service is Thursday, October 7th at 11am, at West Angeles Church (North Campus), 3045 S. Crenshaw Boulevard, Los Angeles. In lieu of cards and flowers, donations should be made payable to Fut's sister, Kim James and in the subject line write” “Dannie James Memorial Service” and mail to: Tracy Kendrick, #220, 5042 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, California  90036.

Urbanbuzz contributed to this announcement.

Comedy/Drama Actor Tony Curtis dead at 85

story by AP

LAS VEGAS (AP) -- Tony Curtis molded himself from a 1950s movie heartthrob to a respected actor, showing a determined streak that served him well with such films as "Sweet Smell of Success," "The Defiant Ones" and "Some Like It Hot."


The Oscar-nominated actor died about 9:25 p.m. PDT Wednesday at his Henderson, Nev., home of a cardiac arrest, Clark County Coroner Mike Murphy said Thursday.

Curtis began in acting with frivolous movies that exploited his handsome physique and appealing personality, but then steadily moved to more substantial roles, starting in 1957 in the harrowing show business tale "Sweet Smell of Success."

In 1958, "The Defiant Ones" brought him an Academy Award nomination as best actor for his portrayal of a white racist escaped convict handcuffed to a black escapee, Sidney Poitier. The following year, he donned women's clothing and sparred with Marilyn Monroe in one of the most acclaimed film comedies ever, Billy Wilder's "Some Like It Hot."


His first wife was actress Janet Leigh of "Psycho" fame; actress Jamie Lee Curtis is their daughter.


Curtis struggled against drug and alcohol abuse as starring roles became fewer, but then bounced back in film and television as a character actor.

His brash optimism returned, and he allowed his once-shiny black hair to turn silver.

Again he came back after even those opportunities began to wane, reinventing himself as a writer and painter whose canvasses sold for as much as $20,000.

"I'm not ready to settle down like an elderly Jewish gentleman, sitting on a bench and leaning on a cane," he said at 60. "I've got a helluva lot of living to do."

"He was a fine actor ... I shall miss him," said British actor Roger Moore, who starred alongside Curtis in TV's "The Persuaders."

"He was great fun to work with, a great sense of humour and wonderful ad libs," Moore told Sky News. "We had the best of times."

Curtis perfected his craft in forgettable films such as "Francis," "I Was a Shoplifter," "No Room for the Groom" and "Son of Ali Baba."

He first attracted critical notice as Sidney Falco, the press agent seeking favor with a sadistic columnist, played by Burt Lancaster, in the 1957 classic "Sweet Smell of Success."

In her book "Kiss Kiss Bang Bang," Pauline Kael wrote that in the film, "Curtis grew up into an actor and gave the best performance of his career."

Other prestigious films followed: Stanley Kubrick's "Spartacus," "Captain Newman, M.D.," "The Vikings," "Kings Go Forth," "Operation Petticoat" and "Some Like It Hot." He also found time to do a voice acting gig as his prehistoric look-alike, Stony Curtis, in an episode of "The Flintstones."

"The Defiant Ones" remained his only Oscar-nominated role.

"I think it has nothing to do with good performances or bad performances," he told The Washington Post in 2002. "After the number of movies I made where I thought there should be some acknowledgment, there was nothing from the Academy."

"My happiness and privilege is that my audience around the world is supportive of me, so I don't need the Academy."

In 2000, an American Film Institute survey of the funniest films in history ranked "Some Like It Hot" at No. 1. Curtis - famously imitating Cary Grant's accent - and Jack Lemmon played jazz musicians who dress up as women to escape retribution after witnessing a gangland massacre.

Monroe was their co-star, and he and Lemmon were repeatedly kept waiting as Monroe lingered in her dressing room out of fear and insecurity. Curtis fumed over her unprofessionalism. When someone remarked that it must be thrilling to kiss Monroe in the film's love scenes, the actor snapped, "It's like kissing Hitler." In later years, his opinion of Monroe softened, and in interviews he praised her unique talent.

In 2002, Curtis toured in "Some Like It Hot" - a revised and retitled version of the 1972 Broadway musical "Sugar," which was based on the film. In the touring show, the actor graduated to the role of Osgood Fielding III, the part played in the movie by Joe E. Brown.

After his star faded in the late 1960s, Curtis shifted to lesser roles. With jobs harder to find, he fell into drug and alcohol addiction.

"From 22 to about 37, I was lucky," Curtis told Interview magazine in the 1980s, "but by the middle '60s, I wasn't getting the kind of parts I wanted, and it kind of soured me ... But I had to go through the drug inundation before I was able to come to grips with it and realize that it had nothing to do with me, that people weren't picking on me."

He recovered in the early '80s after a 30-day treatment at the Betty Ford Center in Rancho Mirage.

"Mine was a textbook case," he said in a 1985 interview. "My life had become unmanageable because of booze and dope. Work became a strain and a struggle. Because I didn't want to face the challenge, I simply made myself unavailable."

One role during that era of struggle did bring him an Emmy nomination: his portrayal of David O. Selznick in the TV movie "The Scarlett O'Hara War," in 1980.

His health remained vigorous, though he did get heart bypass surgery in 1994.

Curtis took a fatherly pride in daughter Jamie's success. They were estranged for a long period, then reconciled. "I understand him better now," she said, "perhaps not as a father but as a man."

He also had five other children. Daughters Kelly, also with Leigh, and Allegra, with second wife Christine Kaufmann, also became actresses. His other wives were Leslie Allen, Lisa Deutsch and Jill Vandenberg, whom he married in 1998.

He had married Janet Leigh in 1951, when they were both rising young stars; they divorced in 1963.

"Tony and I had a wonderful time together; it was an exciting, glamorous period in Hollywood," Leigh, who died in 2004, once said. "A lot of great things happened, most of all, two beautiful children."

Curtis was born Bernard Schwartz in the Bronx in 1925, the son of Hungarian Jews who had emigrated to the United States after World War I. His father, Manny Schwartz, had yearned to be an actor, but work was hard to find with his heavy accent. He settled for tailoring jobs, moving the family repeatedly as he sought work.

"I was always the new kid on the block, so I got beat up by the other kids," Curtis recalled in 1959. "I had to figure a way to avoid getting my nose broken. So I became the crazy new kid on the block."

His sidewalk histrionics helped avoid beatings and led to acting in plays at a settlement house. He also grew to love movies. "My whole culture as a boy was movies," he said. "For 11 cents, you could sit in the front row of a theater for 10 hours, which I did constantly."

After serving in the Pacific during World War II and being wounded at Guam, he returned to New York and studied acting under the G.I. Bill. He appeared in summer stock theater and on the Borscht Circuit in the Catskills. Then an agent lined up an audition with a Universal-International talent scout. In 1948, at 23, he signed a seven-year contract with the studio, starting at $100 a week.

Bernie Schwartz sounded too Jewish for a movie actor, so the studio gave him a new name: Anthony Curtis, taken from his favorite novel, "Anthony Adverse," and the Anglicized name of a favorite uncle. After his eighth film, he became Tony Curtis.

The studio helped smooth the rough edges off the ambitious young actor. The last to go was his street-tinged Bronx accent, which had become a Hollywood joke.

Curtis pursued another career as an artist, creating Matisse-like still lifes with astonishing speed. "I'm a recovering alcoholic," he said in 1990 as he concluded a painting in 40 minutes in the garden of the Bel-Air Hotel. "Painting has given me such a great pleasure in life, helped me to recover."

He also turned to writing, producing a 1977 novel, "Kid Cody and Julie Sparrow." In 1993, he wrote "Tony Curtis: The Autobiography."

Statement by the President on the House Approval of the James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act

THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary

“We will never forget the searing images of September 11, 2001. And we will never forget the selfless courage demonstrated by the firefighters, police officers, and first responders who risked their lives to save others. In the face of unspeakable brutality and evil, these brave men and women demonstrated the enduring strength of our values and the American spirit. Many who survived did not emerge from the dust and debris unscathed, facing continuing health problems as a result of their service. The James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act would ensure that rescue and recovery workers, residents, students, and others suffering from health consequences related to the World Trade Center disaster have access to the medical monitoring and treatment they need. It is a critical step for those who continue to bear the physical scars of those attacks. I applaud the House for its support of this bill and for standing up on behalf of these heroes, who served our country in its time of greatest need. I look forward to Congress completing consideration of this legislation so I can sign it into law.”

2010-09-29

NAB takes radio's FM-on-cell phone quest to the public

story by Inside Radio

For the first time the National Associaltion of Broadcasters is taking radio's effort to convince wireless companies to put FM chips in mobile phones to the public. A new consumer-focused website http://www.radiorocksmyphone.com/ details what NAB sees as the benefits of radio-enabled cell phones and asks listeners to write their representatives in Washington expressing support for the idea. There's also an area that highlights the handfull of mobile phones that do include FM.

The wireless industry has yet to be convinced, however. The Consumer Electronics Association has responded by releasing a poll that shows eighty percent of the public doesn't support a government mandate requiring built-in radio tuners. That requirement is being floated as a potential provision in a settlement of radio's fight with the record industry over a performance royalty. CEA president/CEO Gary Shapiro says the results show there's little demand for radio-capable cell phones. "For those few consumers who want a radio in their mobile phones, manufacturers offer several dozen such devices that are already on the market," he adds. The CEA's national telephone survey was conduceted August 26-29 among a sample of 1,257 adults.

But the NAB conducted an online poll of its own which showed seventy-six percent of Americans would consider paying a one-time fee to add radio to their mobile phone. NAB executive BP Dennis Wharton says it is standing by the results of the survey done by Harris Interactive.

The debate seems odd to CTIA-The Wireless Association VP of government affairs Jot Carpenter who notes the marketplace indicates most consumers want music through smartphone applications, not built-in FM. "The market will judge whether NAB's message is effective," he says. "But no matter what that judgement is, there remains no reason for a government mandate requiring FM chips in wireless devices."

2010-09-28

Analysts weigh in on PNoy's (President Benigno Aquino III) first US trip

story by ABS-CBN News Channel
written by By Caroline J. Howard

MANILA, Philippines - President Benigno Aquino III brought home good news as he returned to the country from the US early Tuesday morning, his first overseas trip as the Philippines' chief executive.

The President announced he expects between 40,000 to 200,000 jobs from around US$2.4 billion in new investment opportunities.

Weighing in on the President's trip, two former government officials rated it a success.

Speaking on ANC's "The Rundown" on Monday night, former Finance Secretary Roberto de Ocampo gave Aquino a grade of 8 out of 10. As an academic, he teased, he always liked to leave the impression there is room for improvement.

"A presidential visit should be measured in terms of what its objectives were, and whether those were accomplished and what was tangibly brought back," de Ocampo said, noting that these included getting financial commitments, such as a grant from the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC), giving the international business community a sense of the Aquino administration's game plan for drawing investment, and engaging the overseas Filipino community in dialogue.

"The fact that there's US$434 million [from MCC], and that that's not a dream, is important. Looking at the list of companies he met with, there are fairly firm ones there," de Ocampo said, citing planned expansions by companies like J.P. Morgan and Hewlett-Packard in the Philippines, and the jobs such opportunities would create.

More here: http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/-depth/09/28/10/analysts-weigh-pnoys-first-us-trip

Phillipines President Benigno Aquino III US visit reaps $2.8-B

story by abs-cbn news

MANILA, Philippines - As tycoon Manolo Lopez puts it, President Benigno Aquino III (photo foreground to the right) is bringing home not just hotdogs and In-n-Out burgers but real accomplishments, specifically, $2.8 billion in investments and aid for the Philippine economy after a 7-day working visit to the United States.

Speaking before a town hall town hall meeting in California, Aquino said his working visit has been a fruitful one in terms of generating jobs for Filipinos and getting financial aid for poverty-alleviation projects in the Philippines. This includes a $434 million (P20 billion) grant from the US-run Millennium Challenge Corporation that helps developing countries reduce their levels of poverty as long as they meet performance criteria on the rule of law and democratic principles.

"Regarding the accomplishments, there's jobs generation, a very substantial number of jobs that we're bringing home. The dollar value of the investments that are coming in, just 3 firms, from the others that we talked to -- will be bringing in plus the Millennium Grant in the neighborhood of $2.8 billion. That will help us grow our economy and get better governance going," Aquino said before a live studio audience.

Aquino refused to give himself a grade for his accomplishments during his 7-day working visit in the US, saying that he had been taught by his parents - the late Sen. Ninoy and former President Cory Aquino - to be humble.

"Mahirap munang mag-grade dahil tinuruan ako ng magulang ng humility, maging humble. Baka ang tatay at nanay ko nanonood sa akin ngayon, baka batukan ako kung tayo'y magyabang," he said.

Last Thursday, Aquino invited foreign businessmen from around the world to invest in the Philippines, declaring it open for business once again.

He told foreign business stakeholders at the Citibank Economic Conference in New York City, that measures to promote a conducive business atmosphere in the country are slowly being realized. Among these measures are the simplification of the process of establishing business, improving infrastructure and relaxing regulations on air travel to and from the country.

He said a crackdown on tax evaders aimed at plugging the leaks in revenue collection has resulted in 7 tax evasion cases in just two months.

“Let me be crystal clear, to achieve our social goals, it is imperative that we in the Philippines create a climate for private enterprise to profit and thrive. And this is what we have begun to undertake,” he said.

Aquino said the local stock market has hit an all-time high while the recent global peso bond offering raised $1 billion for the Philippines, with the issue being 13 times oversubscribed.

“I invite you to come see for yourselves what we’re doing to make sure that the Philippines is once again open for business,” the President said.

More here: http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/-depth/09/28/10/analysts-weigh-pnoys-first-us-trip

Radio’s cume is fine, but AQH is falling.

briefing by Inside Radio


Radio still reaches 239 million Americans each week, but a more crowded media landscape is increasingly leading to lower Time Spent Listening. According to a new Veronis Suhler Stevenson (VSS) analysis of Arbitron listening data, the medium will see a sixth consecutive average quarter hour drop in 2010.



2010-09-27

Former Solar Records Dick Griffey Has Passed

Dick Griffey

One of the best ever in Urban music Dick Griffey passed away Friday at the age of 72, following complications from quadruple bypass surgery. Griffey was the founder of SOLAR Records in the late '70s and helped launch careers of Babyface, "L.A." Reid, Jody Watley and many others. Griffey had also been Talent Coordinator for Soul Train.




NFL Hall of Famer retired Oakland Raider George Blanda passes away

story by MSNBC
written by Gregg Rosenthal
George Blanda, one of the toughest and most unique players in NFL history, has passed away.

Blanda was the league's all-time leading scorer when he retired in 1976 after 26 seasons as a quarterback/place-kicker. A first-ballot Hall of Famer, Blanda played with the Chicago Bears, Houston Oilers, and finally with the Oakland Raiders. He won AFL titles with the Oilers in 1960 and 1961.

Blanda started out as just a kicker in Chicago, but he became a record setting quarterback in Houston. He's perhaps best known for being the most improbable Player of the Year award winner (then called the Bert Bell Award) in history at age 43.

Cut at the beginning of the 1970 season and 12 seasons after his first retirement, Blanda went on an insane five-week run where he either replaced Raiders quarterback Daryle LaMonica to lead the Raiders to a comeback victory or kicked a winning or tying field goal. Every single week.

The book America's Game describes how Blanda's story in 1970 broke normal boundaries. He was on the cover of Sports Illustrated, Time, and Newsweek. He was joked about by Johnny Carson. He symbolized a new kind of life after 40.

"We are deeply saddened by the passing of the great George Blanda," the Raiders said in a statement. "George was a brave Raider and a close personal friend of Raiders Owner Al Davis."

Blanda is the placekicker on the All-Time AFL Team and didn't retire until he was 48 years old. He was 83. We sent our thoughts to the Blandas and his extended football family.

REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT AT SIGNING OF THE SMALL BUSINESS JOBS ACT

THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary
________________________________________________________________________________________________

East Room
1:47 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you, everybody. (Applause.) Please have a seat. Thank you very much. Thank you so much. I am thrilled to be here on what is an exciting day.

I want to begin by recognizing the members of Congress who fought so hard to pass this bill on behalf of America’s small businesses. A lot of work was involved in this, obviously, but there are a few folks who are here on stage I want to make sure to acknowledge.

First of all, my dear friend -- and my senator -- from the great state of Illinois, Senator Dick DurbIn. (Applause.) A champion for businesses in Louisiana and around the country, Senator Mary Landrieu is here. (Applause.) A champion of small businesses, Senator Maria Cantwell of Washington is here. (Applause.) And one of the deans of the Senate, and as thoughtful a person about industry and manufacturing as you’ll find -- Senator Carl Levin of Michigan. (Applause.)

From the House side, we've got Representative Melissa Bean -- also my neighbor from Illinois. (Applause.) And Congressman Al Green from Texas is in the house. (Applause.)

We've got a couple of governors here -- Governor O’Malley of Maryland, and somebody who has been working so hard on behalf of the great state of Michigan -- we are proud of what she’s been doing because it’s really hard work in Michigan right now. But Governor Granholm I think, coming to the end of her term, has just done outstanding work and I want to acknowledge her. (Applause.)

We've also got some mayors in the house -- and I'm not sure if they’re all here, but I'm going to go ahead and announce them: Mayor Coleman of Columbus, Ohio; Mayor Dickert from Racine, Wisconsin; Mayor Foxx from Charlotte, North Carolina; Mayor Pawlowski of Allentown, Pennsylvania; and Mayor Ravenstahl -- whose Steelers won last night -- from Pittsburgh. (Applause.) Give them all a big round of applause. (Applause.)

Finally, I want to thank members of my administration who are with us, including our Small Business Administrator and just a terrific advocate for small businesses, Karen Mills is here. Please give her a big round of applause. (Applause.) And our Treasury Secretary, Tim Geithner -- (applause) -- as well as one of my top economic advisors, Gene Sperling, who worked so hard to get this legislation done. (Applause.) Where’s Gene? There he is back there. (Applause.)

And most of all, I want to thank and welcome all the small business owners from across the country who have come to the signing of this bill, many of whom, over the course of the last several months, I've had a chance to meet. I visited their facilities, everything from -- I've seen trucks to pizza to websites to signs. (Laughter.) And we’ve talked about how essential it is that we got this bill done; that it was critical that we cut taxes and make more loans available to entrepreneurs.

And so, today, after a long and tough fight, I am signing a small business jobs bill that does exactly that. (Applause.) It’s good news. It’s good news. (Applause.)

This is important because small businesses produce most of the new jobs in this country. They are the anchors of our Main Streets. They are part of the promise of America –- the idea that if you’ve got a dream and you’re willing to work hard, you can succeed. That’s what leads a worker to leave a job to become her own boss. That’s what propels a basement inventor to sell a new product, or an amateur chef to open a restaurant. It’s this promise that has drawn millions to our shores and made our economy the envy of the world.

Yet, along with the middle class, small businesses have borne the greatest brunt of this recession. They -- you -- were hit by a one-two punch. The downturn has meant people are spending less, so there’s less demand. And the financial crisis made it difficult for small businesses to get loans.

So when I took office, I put in place a plan -- an economic plan to help small businesses. And we were guided by a simple idea: Government can’t guarantee success, but it can knock down barriers to success, like the lack of affordable credit. Government can’t replace -- can’t create jobs to replace the millions that we lost in the recession, but it can create the conditions for small businesses to hire more people, through steps like tax breaks.

That’s why we cut taxes for small businesses eight times. We passed a new tax credit for companies that hire unemployed workers –- which is benefiting several of the people with us here today. Guy Brami, from Gelberg Signs, is here in Washington. And he’s making use of this tax break after he hired six workers. Cherrelle Hurt, who runs the As We Grow Child Care and Learning Center in Virginia, has been able to add three new employees.

We also increased the exemption on capital gains taxes for key small business investments to 75 percent. We passed a tax cut so companies could immediately write off more expenses like new equipment. And as part of health reform, 4 million small business owners could be eligible this year for a health care tax credit worth perhaps tens of thousands of dollars.

Our economic plan has also helped to free up credit, supporting nearly 70,000 new loans to small businesses through expanded SBA lending. This includes some of the business owners who are here today, like Joe Fugere of Tutta Bella Pizzeria in Seattle. I still haven’t tasted the pizza, but he promises I’m going to get some at some point. (Laughter.)

We also waived fees on SBA loans to save folks money on payments. And the emergency steps we took to stabilize the financial system helped to get credit flowing again.

So all told, these steps have made a real difference. But as far as we’ve come, everybody in this room understands we’ve still got a long way to go. I don't have to tell folks here that small businesses still face hardships, and it’s still too difficult for many creditworthy small business owners to get loans. So there is more we can do to help them grow and to help them hire. And that’s why I began fighting for months to pass this jobs bill –- the most significant step on behalf of our small businesses in more than decade. And once I sign it, it’s going to speed relief to small businesses across this country right away.

So let me just outline what’s in here. First, on top of the eight tax breaks we’ve already passed, we’re adding eight more, which will accelerate more than $55 billion in tax relief over the next year to businesses across the country. Capital gains taxes will be completely eliminated for key investments in small businesses –- driving capital to as many as one million small firms across America –- and, by the way, honoring a promise that I made as a candidate for President.

Four and a half million small businesses and individuals will be immediately -- will be eligible to immediately write off more expenses. And that may benefit Ruth Glesser, who is here today and who is opening another restaurant in Alexandria, Virginia.

Two million self-employed Americans will be able to receive a new deduction for health insurance. And we’re also increasing the tax break for anyone looking to open up a business. That’s a $10,000 deduction to help entrepreneurs afford what can often be pretty discouraging start-up costs, because our future prosperity in part depends on whether or not we are creating an environment in which folks can test new ideas, bring new products to market, and generate new businesses.

And that’s not just a challenge for government. It’s a challenge that requires businesses, and leaders, and universities, others to seek out new ways to promote entrepreneurship across this country.

Now, the second thing this bill does is we’re going to make more loans available to small businesses. Right now, there is a waiting list for SBA loans more than 1,400 names long. These are people who are ready to hire and expand, who’ve been approved by their banks, but who’ve been waiting for this legislation to pass. Well, when I sign this bill, their wait will be over. (Applause.) Their wait will be over. Virtually every person on that list will receive the loan they need in a matter of weeks.

Several of the small business owners standing with me today are on this list, including Tony Scovazzo of AJS Consulting Engineers. Where’s Tony? Raise your hand. Tony is right here. (Laughter.) With Tony’s loan, he’ll be able to buy new office space and hire three people to do energy-efficient HVAC work. Terry Dunlap of Tactical Network Solutions -- Terry, raise your hand. Terry is on the list. He plans to use his loan to hire as many as five more people.

Noel and Glen Mouritzen are also here. They’ll be able to use a loan to set up a repair shop for helicopters and hire four or five workers. Herb Caudill is on this list. And Herb’s company, Caudill Web, has a good problem: They’ve got more work than they can accept. So with this loan from SBA, he’ll be able to bring one or two new web programmers and designers to take on some new projects.

On top of these loans that will be freed up right away, we’re also more than doubling the size limits of the most popular SBA loans -- like the ones that have benefited many of the business owners who are with us here today. Plus, through this bill, we’ll take other steps to promote lending. And this includes our new Small Business Lending Fund designed to help Main Street banks lend to Main Street small businesses across this country. And this bill will also encourage additional private sector lending through innovative efforts at the state level to promote small business and manufacturing -- efforts that have too often been constrained by state budget cuts.

So this law will do two big things: It’s going to cut taxes, and it’s going to make more loans available for small business. It’s a great victory for America’s entrepreneurs. (Applause.) It is a great victory for America’s entrepreneurs.

Now, I have to admit, I regret that this bill –- which was based on ideas from both Democrats and Republicans, and drawing support from business groups that don't normally support me -- (laughter) -- I regret that this was blocked for months by the Republican minority in the Senate, and that needlessly delayed this relief. But I do want to thank the two Republican senators who bucked this partisanship to help pass this bill, and, obviously, I want to thank all the Democrats who worked so hard to get it passed.

At this difficult time in our country, it’s essential that we keep up the fight for every job, for every new business, for every opportunity to strengthen this economy. That's what’s being done at the state level by Governor Granholm and Governor O’Malley and governors all across the country. That's what’s being done by the mayors who are here today, who are fighting day-in, day-out, to help start new businesses that can bring prosperity to their communities.

We’ve got to keep moving forward. That’s why I fought so hard to pass this bill. And that’s why I’m going to continue to do everything in my power to help small businesses open up and hire and expand. And that’s why, with these small business owners standing with me today, I am extraordinarily proud to sign this bill into law. (Applause.)

(The bill is signed.)

THE PRESIDENT: This is the tricky part. (Laughter.) You start running out of letters. (Laughter.) There you go. It’s done. (Applause.)

END 2:04 P.M. EDT

SMALL BUSINESSES GET BOOST FROM JOBS BILL SIGNED INTO LAW TODAY



WASHINGTON, DC – House Majority Whip James E. Clyburn (D-SC) today released the following statement after the President signed into law H.R. 5297, the Small Business Jobs Act, legislation to expand much needed lending to millions of small businesses and offer tax incentives to help them grow, hire, and fuel our economy. The bill is fully paid for over 10 years and will not add to the deficit.

“America’s small businesses are the engines of our economy creating two-thirds of the new jobs over the last 15 years. Today they get a much-needed boost from the Small Business Jobs Act. Without adding to the deficit we are implementing measures to create 500,000 jobs, unleash $300 billion in lending and offer more than $12 billion in tax incentives to help small businesses grow, hire, and fuel our economy.

BACKGROUND ON THE SMALL BUSINESS BILL SIGNING TODAY

The White House
Office of the Press Secretary

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

September 27, 2010

Today, President Obama will sign the Small Business Jobs Act, a bill that will give our nation’s small businesses support and incentives to help them grow and hire. The bill includes a series of small business proposals that the President put forth earlier this year, and small businesses will start benefiting from the bill on day one.

The President will be joined at the signing today by a group of small business owners who will benefit from the new legislation, some of whom the President has previously met with as he fought to pass this bill (their bios are below). He will also be joined by Small Business Administrator Karen Mills, Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, and Members of Congress. The signing is today at 1:45 pm ET in the East Room at the White House. The signing is open press.

The Small Business Jobs Bill Will Provide Immediate Support for Small Businesses:

The bill immediately extends successful SBA Recovery Act provisions, meaning that within a few days, it will restart the SBA’s Recovery lending, beginning with the more than1,300 small businesses that have been waiting to get the credit they need – with thousands more benefitting in the coming weeks.

And the bill includes eight new small business tax cuts – all effective as of Monday, and applying to small businesses’ taxes for this year – providing an immediate incentive for businesses to make new investments and expand.

For example:

· if you are a small business and you buy new equipment, you can immediately write off the first $500,000 of your investments;
· if you are one of over one million eligible small businesses, key long-term investments in your company will be subject to zero capital gains taxes;
· if you are an entrepreneur and take a chance on a new idea, you can deduct the first $10,000 of your start-up costs;
· and if you are self employed you can deduct 100 percent of the cost of health insurance for you and your family from your self-employment taxes.

MORE DETAILS:

Eight Small Business Tax Cuts – Effective Today, Providing Immediate Incentives to Invest: The President had already signed into law eight small business tax cuts, and on Monday, he is signing into law another eight new tax cuts that go into effect immediately.

1. Zero Taxes on Capital Gains from Key Small Business Investments: Under the Recovery Act, 75 percent of capital gains on key small business investments this year were excluded from taxes. The Small Business Jobs Act temporarily puts in place for the rest of 2010 a provision called for by the President – elimination of all capital gains taxes on these investments if held for five years. Over one million small businesses are eligible to receive investments this year that, if held for five years or longer, could be completely excluded from any capital gains taxation.

2. Extension and Expansion of Small Businesses’ Ability to Immediately Expense Capital Investments: The bill increases for 2010 and 2011 the amount of investments that businesses would be eligible to immediately write off to $500,000, while raising the level of investments at which the write-off phases out to $2 million. Prior to the passage of the bill, the expensing limit would have been $250,000 this year, and only $25,000 next year. This provision means that 4.5 million small businesses and individuals will be able to make new business investments today and know that they will earn a larger break on their taxes for this year.

3. Extension of 50% Bonus Depreciation: The bill extends – as the President proposed in his budget – a Recovery Act provision for 50 percent “bonus depreciation” through 2010, providing 2 million businesses, large and small, with the ability to make new investments today and know they can receive a tax cut for this year by accelerating the rate at which they deduct capital expenditures.

4. A New Deduction of Health Insurance Costs for Self-Employed: The bill allows 2 million self-employed to know that on their taxes for this year, they can get a deduction for the cost of health insurance for themselves and their family members in calculating their self-employment taxes. This provision is estimated to provide over $1.9 billion in tax cuts for these entrepreneurs.

5. Tax Relief and Simplification for Cell Phone Deductions: The bill changes rules so that the use of cell phones can be deducted without burdensome extra documentation – making it easier for virtually every small business in America to receive deductions that they are entitled to, beginning on their taxes for this year.

6. An Increase in the Deduction for Entrepreneurs’ Start-Up Expenses: The bill temporarily increases the amount of start-up expenditures entrepreneurs can deduct from their taxes for this year from $5,000 to $10,000 (with a phase-out threshold of $60,000 in expenditures), offering an immediate incentive for someone with a new business idea to invest in starting up a new small business today.

7. A Five-Year Carryback Of General Business Credits: The bill would allow certain small businesses to “carry back” their general business credits to offset five years of taxes – providing them with a break on their taxes for this year – while also allowing these credits to offset the Alternative Minimum Tax, reducing taxes for these small businesses.

8. Limitations on Penalties for Errors in Tax Reporting That Disproportionately Affect Small Business: The bill would change, beginning this year, the penalty for failing to report certain tax transactions from a fixed dollar amount – which was criticized for imposing a disproportionately large penalty on small businesses in certain circumstances – to a percentage of the tax benefits from the transaction.

Extension of Successful SBA Recovery Loan Provisions— Immediately Supporting Loans to Over 1,300 Small Businesses : With funds provided in the bill, SBA will begin funding new Recovery loans within a few days of the President’s signature, starting with the more than 1,300 businesses – with loans totaling more than $680 million – that are waiting in the Recovery Loan Queue.

· In Total, Extension of Provisions Which Have the Capacity to Support $14 Billion in Loans to Small Businesses: Extending these Recovery loan enhancements – which increase guarantees for SBA’s largest loan program (the 7(a) program) to 90% and reduce fees for the 7(a) and 504 program – has the capacity to support $14 billion in lending to small businesses. Already, SBA Recovery loan provisions have supported $30 billion in lending to over 70,000 small businesses.
· Within Coming Weeks, the Bill Will Allow SBA to Support Larger Loans As Well: The bill also increases the maximum loan size for SBA loan programs, which in the coming weeks will allow more small businesses to access more credit to enable them to expand and create new jobs. The bill:

o Permanently raises the maximum loan size for the SBA’s two largest loan programs, increasing maximum 7(a) and 504 loan size from $2 million to $5 million and the maximum 504 manufacturing related loan size from $4 million to $5.5 million.

o Permanently raises the maximum loan size for SBA microloans, increasing it from $35,000 to $50,000 and strengthening a critical tool for entrepreneurs and business owners in underserved markets to access start-up capital.

o Temporarily raises the maximum loan size for SBA Express loans from $350,000 to $1 million, providing greater access to working capital loans that small businesses use to purchase new inventory and take on their next order – allowing them to create new jobs.

· Treasury Is Working to Quickly Implement the Small Business Lending Fund and State Small Business Credit Initiative: In addition to these SBA provisions, Treasury is working to quickly implement two new programs designed to support private-sector lending to credit-worthy small businesses, and expects to release further details in the coming weeks concerning applications for these programs.

o The Small Business Lending Fund would make available $30 billion in capital to small banks with incentives to increase small business lending, potentially supporting several multiples of that amount in new credit.

o The State Small Business Credit Initiative will support at least $15 billion in new lending by strengthening state small business programs – many of them facing budget cuts – that leverage private-sector lenders to extend additional credit.

2010-09-26

For blacks, the Great Migration north was a declaration of independence

Book Review by Paula J. Giddings of the Washington Post

Book: THE WARMTH OF OTHER SUNS The Epic Story of America's Great Migration by Isabel Wilkerson --- Random House

For African Americans, restriction of movement has long had profound meaning -- and never more so than after the end of slavery. The flight of 6 million Southern blacks to the North between 1915 and 1970 was, as Isabel Wilkerson writes in "The Warmth of Other Suns," "the first mass act of independence by a people who were in bondage in this country for far longer than they have been free."
Much has been written about the push and pull of oppression and opportunity that drove blacks north and how this mass movement changed the political, economic and social landscape of American cities. Blacks not only brought their muscle and creative talents to the North but also, as some highly touted studies contend, distinct and dysfunctional behaviors that created the intractable poverty and crime that turned cities into ghettoes.

Wilkerson, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist whose own family made the trek north, puts a different face on what is known as the Great Migration. Those who made the momentous decision to leave the "Old Country," as writer James Baldwin called the South, were as diverse and determined as those who passed through the way stations of Ellis Island.

"They took work the people already there considered beneath them," Wilkerson writes. "They tried to instill in their children the values of the Old Country while pressing them to succeed by the standards of the New World they were in." In other words, black migrants shared a common culture that was animated by the promise and possibility of the American dream.

The author tells the migration story through the portraits of three people whose sojourns began in the 1930s and '40s: George Swanson Starling, a Florida fruit-picker who found his way to Harlem; Robert Joseph Pershing Foster, a Louisianan and Morehouse College graduate who went to Los Angeles to establish his medical practice; and Ida Mae Gladney, a married-at-16 Mississippi sharecropper who settled in Chicago.


In some ways, all three found what they were looking for. Starling, who abandoned Florida to escape retribution after he organized fellow fruit-pickers, found work as a train attendant; he gleefully advised passengers of their right to sit in desegregated coaches and reveled in the wondrous Harlem life of the 1940s. The charming and ambitious Foster, a surgeon who began his career collecting urine samples door to door for an insurance company, built a lucrative practice that included such clients as the musician Ray Charles (who wrote a song about him). Gladney, whose family of five had been crammed into a cabin in Mississippi's backwoods, found work as a nurse's aide and became a blue-collar, churchgoing homeowner with enough space for her and her husband's multigenerational family.

However, personal triumph was accompanied by pain and tragedy -- the seeds of which were not brought from the South but awaited the migrants in the North. Foster's relentless climb up the social ladder, in part an effort to compensate for the racial humiliation he met in California, created psychological wounds that alienated him from his wife and family. Two of Starling's children became addicted to drugs in a deteriorating Harlem. And soon after the Gladneys moved into their home, whites fled the neighborhood, eventually relegating the area to urban blight and forcing Ida to live out her old age as "an eyewitness to a war playing out in the streets below her."

And yet, as becomes clear in this extraordinary and evocative work, the refusal to be captives in the South may have saved their lives -- and perhaps their souls. "If all of their dream does not come true," wrote the Chicago Defender, a newspaper that beckoned Southern blacks early in the migration, "enough will come to pass to justify their actions."

Paula J. Giddings is the Elizabeth A. Woodson Professor of Afro-American Studies at Smith College and the author of "Ida, A Sword Among Lions: Ida B. Wells and the Campaign Against Lynching."

Maggot Brain "Live" by The Fundadelics featuring Guitarist Michael Hampton in Houston 1978



comments below:

THE1FUNKMASTER

1 year ago 12 I sit here earsurtbating engulfed in molteninzed funk from eons past I am regurgitating mental latitudes possessed by buger nodules infesting my exasperated pusse filled skull. Urinating warm maggot slim into the cup I willingly drink from Funkadelic has reaffirmed my faith in the existence of intergalactic funk. Brain dripping with spastic earjaculations skull funked for the vibratory sin say funs of it . Gornerretic flesh pussing forth scabs of funkyfested maggot doo doo course my veins.


atlast2000

3 months ago I'm only 24 and I've heard this song my entire life and the story behind it is a very amazing story. It was recorded in two takes George Clinton told him to play the first part of the song like he found out his mother died. Then play the second half as if you found out shes still alive. You can hear the story and emotion through his guitar.


indigopuntaalta

6 months ago does anybody knows how he did that "volume effect" at 6:18 ?? sory for my english, i hope you people can understand..such a beautifull songgggggggggg its adictive.


EvilWitDaKronic

8 months ago insane. so beautiful! does anyone know if that sound at 4.51 is intentional? if so, what kind of effect is it, sounds like a loud scream.


mrmike2002

8 months ago I saw Mike Hampton play this at MSG in NYC 1978 and 1979. No one has ever came close to this man - NO ONE


mtopper66

11 months ago I thought Eddie Hazel was untouchable on the studio version, but I see the group brought someone in just as stellar to replace him by this time. This truly did just tear my mind open into a million pieces.  Still recovering...


sammjm1967

1 year ago 3 If this tune does NOT send chills up your spine, bring tears to your eyes, or touch your soul...you are truly missing out.


Timesplitter14

1 year ago The way he's dressed, the way he holds his guitar, and the lighting in the room make the whole thing look unreal.    Simply stunning


fonkhead

2 years ago 11 mother earth is pregnant for the 3rd time.....

2010-09-25

President Obama's Weekly Address: Crossroads on the Economy

Why Mitchell said ‘no’: Hamas is not ready to be ‘engaged’

story by Aljazeera
written by Ramzy Baroud

One key difference between Hamas and its rival, the Fatah movement in the West Bank, is that Hamas is accountable to a much more complex set of priorities and expectations. While Fatah is effortlessly co-opted, Hamas remains confined by ideological standards and the stringiest political space. Although, on one hand this represents Hamas’ greatest strength, on the other it shows just how truly arduous is its political undertaking.

The difference is relevant in light of the resumption of talks between Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Washington, followed by another round of talks in the Middle East. Both once more raised the question: can Israel and Fatah achieve peace without Hamas’ involvement?

The question itself can be interpreted in more ways than one. Dan Murphy, writing in the Christian Science Monitor on September 16, asked: Can ignoring Hamas lead to Israeli-Palestinian peace? Murphy, unlike many in the US media, had enough insight to see the issue as worthy of discussion. His use of the word ‘ignoring’, however, is greatly misguided.

“But there's a crucial missing element that will undoubtedly trouble the Israeli-Palestinian talks as they move ahead. Gaza, the Palestinian enclave ruled by the Islamist Hamas movement, is not at the table,” Murphy wrote. With that he offered his version of what not ‘ignoring’ Hamas requires. Far from ‘engaging’ the party, it simply means placing Gaza, that lonely enclave ruled by Islamic Hamas, on the table.

Gaza, however, is not merely one issue among many. It represents the heart of the matter. The Gaza Strip was placed under siege due to the Hamas’ victory in the 2006 parliamentary elections, which robbed Abbas and his movement from any legitimacy in holding negotiations with Israel. The suffocating siege on that resilient and overcrowded strip was Israel’s attempt at quashing what could have been a promising democratic experience, with the potential to inspire many more democratic revolutions in the Middle East. Israel’s action was supported by the US and much of Europe, as well as some Arab countries.

Yet, considering the layers of meaning that Gaza and Hamas represent in any future settlement in the Middle East, it seems utterly bizarre that U.S. President Obama’s Middle East envoy, George Mitchell, answered with a simple “no” when he was recently asked whether Washington will reach out to Hamas.

“No” seems both too simple and too harsh, considering the gravity of the situation. Even if the U.S. administration wishes to write off Palestinian democracy altogether, one would think that a sensible foreign policy would at least wrangle with the Hamas dilemma. The Obama administration cannot be serious about a lasting peace while continuing to play the same nonsensical good guys/bad guys, carrot and stick political games that were also employed by Bush.

On the other hand, the resumption of talks between Fatah’s Abbas and Israel is a blessing in disguise for Hamas. Very few in the Middle East, and even fewer Palestinians will see in Abbas a legitimate and representative leader. If anything, Abbas’ constant appearance with the very Israeli leader who is robbing Palestine’s land and subjugating and exacting racist laws against its population will further diminish his discredited profile. Naturally, Abbas’ political loss is Hamas’ gain.

In fact, it was this very ‘peace process’ that destroyed late Palestinian leader Yasser’s Arafat’s political resume. It tarnished his reputation and split his party. Arafat is remembered fondly because of his last stance and death under Israeli siege in Ramallah. His political failure through the years, however, gave Hamas its real birth as a mainstream political movement. Abbas is simply boosting Hamas’ already high political stocks. His future failures will deposit even more credit into Hamas’ account.

But that too represents a serious challenge to Hamas. Politically isolated abroad, physically besieged and constantly derided by the media, Hamas can hardly use its rising political profile among Palestinians, or translate its gains into any tangible returns in or outside Palestine. Abbas knows this fully, which explains his interest in Israel maintaining its siege on Hamas and Gaza. Netanyahu understands this as well, which explains his government’s insistence on holding still, despite the PR disaster that Gaza has earned his country. The U..S also fully agrees, thus Mitchell’s callous, yet telling “no” regarding a possible engagement with Hamas.

Abbas, despite his authority’s lack of legitimacy and shrinking popularity among Palestinians, remains the best option of a ‘Palestinian leadership’ as far as the US is concerned. He is flexible, both morally and politically. His Authority’s bread and butter are US funds and U.S.-Western political validation. Abbas gleaned from the Gaza experience that popular democracy is worthless in the age of draconian sieges and Blitzkriegs. In fact he used both the siege and the Israel war on Gaza to strengthen his political stance and to bargain with the U.S. But his language and action will remain predictable.

While ‘engaging’ Hamas, however that is interpreted, is the only right option if the US is truly interested in locating a legitimate Palestinian leadership, Hamas is likely to prove a much tougher bargainer. Not only is Hamas ideologically grounded – based on firm nationalistic and religious dictates – but its target audience is not just a few heads of states. Hamas’ audience is Palestinians at home and abroad, Arab and Muslim populations and to lesser degree civil societies elsewhere. This is a complex demographic, which requires an articulate political thinking and language, which Hamas is not yet able to offer.

Fatah under Arafat was held accountable largely to Arab governments, and later to the US and Western donors. At the same time, it valiantly resented Israeli pressures. Under Abbas, Fatah is held accountable to all the above with little resentment. While Hamas factors all of these players into its political calculation, it is also liable to its commitment to its Palestinian constituency as incorruptible, uncompromising and committed to resistance.

In order for Hamas to become politically manageable, from the US point of view, it would have to depart from these commitments, and become as politically flexible, predictable and controllable as Fatah and Abbas. The US can only work with a weak Palestinian leadership which it can easily manipulate. Hamas, thus far, doesn’t fit the criterion, thus the lack of any prospect of ‘engagement’, and the continued betting on Abbas and Netanyahu, despite the predictable - and possibly disastrous - outcome of their talks.


-- Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story.

Japan rejects apology on China boat row

story by CNN

Tokyo, Japan (CNN) -- Japan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs says relations with China are "extremely important," but Beijing's demand for an apology and compensation over the detention of a Chinese fishing boat captain is "completely groundless and is utterly unacceptable for Japan."

The statement Saturday went on to assert Japanese jurisdiction over the islands where the captain was detained and declared that the dispute was handled in accordance with Japanese law.

Zhan Qixiong was detained earlier this month after his trawler collided with Japanese vessels near disputed islands in the East China Sea. He was freed on Friday.

Earlier, Satoru Sato, a spokesman for the Japanese Foreign Ministry, made similar statements to Japan's Kyodo news agency in response to China's apology demand.

Despite this call for an apology, China's Foreign Ministry said in a statement that the two sides should resolve the problems through dialogue and consultation, according to Chinese state media.

Zhan was accused of obstructing Japanese public officers while they performed their duties, China's Xinhua news agency said.

He arrived home safely on Saturday, according to Xinhua.

"We decided to suspend the charges in consideration of the Japan-China relationship," the Japanese prosecutor in the case said.

The arrest tensions between the two countries, with Beijing accusing Japan of "unlawful and invalid" arrest of the captain and his crew of 14, according to Xinhua.

China considers the Diaoyu Islands and most of the South China its property, disputing neighboring countries' claims.

In Japan, the islands are known as the Senkaku. The clash over territorial waters and islands -- and the natural resources that go with them -- is a flash point in the Asia-Pacific region.

Word of the captain's release quickly followed the arrest of four Japanese nationals in China.

The four are being investigated for entering a military zone without authorization and videotaping military targets, Chinese state media said.

Neither country linked the captain's case with the arrest of the four Japanese nationals.

2010-09-24

Troubled Times: When Mark Zuckerberg's Inspiring, Courageous Generosity Is Not Good Enough

commentary by Adriana Huffington - owner of the Huffington Post

Sign of the Times, Part One:

No sooner did word leak out that Mark Zuckerberg will appear on Oprah today to announce a donation of $100 million to the Newark public school system than the media long knives were unsheathed.

According to the naysayers, the Facebook CEO was making the donation to counteract the negative depiction of him in The Social Network as, in the words of the New York Post, "a conniving backstabber who may have stolen the idea for his social networking site."

Or he was making it "as a way to ward off any negative stigma" arising from his new standing on the Forbes 400 as America's 35th wealthiest person. New York magazine called it "the PR move of the month."

Even the Wall Street Journal, which called the donation "generous, courageous, and inspiring" said: "Mr. Zuckerberg may be young. But he already has learned a lot about the offsetting PR value of philanthropy."

So the $100 million donation to Newark's crumbling public schools is not in and of itself the story? The story is figuring out the motivation behind it? Is this what we have come to? Can you think of anything more ridiculous?

I really don't care why Mark Zuckerberg is donating $100 million of his own money that will make a profound difference to the lives of Newark's children. I care very much that it's being done -- that one of America's worst school systems will be getting a massive infusion of funds.

The stats couldn't be more troubling: despite spending $22,000 a year per student, the graduation rate in Newark hovers around 50 percent; only 1 out of 5 Newark students who do graduate go on to a four-year college; over 85 percent of Newark students who go on to community college need remedial help in English and math.

So let's skip the dime store Freud and celebrate Zuckerberg's game-changing gift.

Sign of the Times, Part Two:

Zuckerberg's donation is an example of the kind of big, bold steps that are needed in these troubled times -- as is Newark mayor Cory Booker's attempt to tackle the chronic failure of his city's schools head on by demanding greater local control of the state-run schools and working on raising a matching $100 million from others concerned about the crisis in education.

Zuckerberg and Booker -- who will appear together on Oprah -- are demonstrating that we all need to bring a sense of urgency to the problems we are facing and make ourselves part of the solution.

Zuckerberg could have given $10 million and still gotten a load of good PR. Instead he's giving $100 million.

I spent the morning at the Clinton Global Initiative, announcing the commitments being made in the Science, Technology, Education, and math (STEM) category and then moderating a panel on Technology and Democracy (one of the panelists, Pierre Omidyar, had made commitments totaling $55 million to promote government transparency globally and mobile technology in developing countries). Before the first session, I talked with President Clinton and Robert S. Harrison about the need to hold a domestic CGI to address all the growing needs here at home.

Among the roughly 300 commitments expected to be made at this year's event (as reported by Reporters Uncensored's Maura Kelly on HuffPost), were $60 million to replace the stoves that produce the smoke that takes the life of a woman or child somewhere in the world every 16 seconds, and a commitment from Procter & Gamble to provide 2 billion gallons of drinkable water a year -- a move that will save a life every hour of every day.

The problems we face are enormous. But so is the amount of available money, energy, creativity, caring and dedication to making things better.

So let's keep the long knives in their scabbards.

P.S. On Monday, Oprah did a show about Waiting for Superman, the powerful new documentary about the failure of America's education system. The show included the film's director Davis Guggenheim, Bill Gates, Chancellor of Public Schools for Washington D.C. Michelle Rhee, and John Legend. On today's show, along with the announcement from Zuckerberg and Booker, Oprah is going to feature her viewers' reaction to the film. Hello, America's schools? The zeitgeist is calling!

Jacques Rogge says give India a chance

LONDON: India's potential for hosting future Olympics should not be written off before giving embattled New Delhi organizers a chance to pull off the Commonwealth Games with a "last-ditch" effort, IOC president Jacques Rogge said in an interview Friday.

Rogge said that he hopes India can come through, just as Greek organizers overcame "doomsday scenarios" to stage the successful 2004 Athens Olympics despite severe construction delays and political wrangling.

The International Olympic Committee leader will travel to New Delhi next week to attend the October 3 opening of the Commonwealth Games, which were put at risk this week by filthy conditions at the athletes' village, a pedestrian bridge collapse and health and security concerns.

The chaotic preparations have seemingly doomed India's hopes of bidding for the 2020 Olympics, but Rogge said it was too early to rule the country out.

"I think I can hardly make a judgment before the games have even started," Rogge said. "Let's give them the chance to prove they can stage good games. It would be with a last-ditch effort and it probably would be costly, but let's hope they can fulfill that.

"Hopefully the Indians can pull out a last-ditch effort like the Greeks have done," he said.

The Commonwealth Games, an Olympic-style multi-sports event bringing together more than 7,000 athletes from 71 countries and territories, was meant to underline India's emergence as an Asian power on the world stage and serve as a platform for an Olympic bid.

"It's far too premature to discuss this," Rogge said. "This is something that has to be seen by the Indians themselves. There is no doubt they will make an analysis of the games. They will have to see if their original intentions can be kept or not."

Corruption scandals, delays in getting facilities ready and squalid conditions at the athletes' village have turned the event into an embarrassment for India - even raising the prospect of the games being called off or of teams refusing to attend.

The situation eased on Friday, however, as international games officials said conditions had improved and teams started arriving.

"It's difficult to have a view before the games have started," Rogge said. "There is always a difference between the reality and the anticipation and perception. We had doomsday scenarios in Athens, and these were absolutely very good games.

"The Greeks were able to pull out a very good effort. They were very, very good games at the last moment, so this could happen in Delhi."

Australian Olympic Committee president John Coates told reporters in Sydney on Friday that India should never have been awarded the Commonwealth Games. He said the Commonwealth Games Federation lacked the resources to monitor the progress of games preparations in New Delhi and to ensure construction deadlines were met.

Rogge defended CGF leaders for their oversight of the games. "They have issued warnings on a regular basis," he said. "(CGF President) Michael Fennell and (CEO) Mike Hooper are very experienced sports leaders. I don't know where the potential issues came from. Is it in the chain of command? You can only have a judgment on that after the games."

India's troubles have underlined the potential risks of taking major sporting events to developing countries.

The IOC voted last year to award the 2016 Olympics to Rio de Janeiro, taking the games to South America for the first time.

Africa has never hosted the Olympics, but South Africa is now pushing forward with a 2020 bid after successfully staging the World Cup this year. Durban is the likely candidate. Cape Town finished third in the 1997 vote for the 2004 Olympics.

"I think South Africa has already proven to be able to stage major events like the FIFA World Cup and rugby and cricket world championship," Rogge said. "The Olympics would be of another magnitude of course. But I think South Africa proved a very good show in July."

Three Radio Broadcasting groups face $1 threshold

announcement from Inside Radio

After months of rallying, radio stocks have fallen back from their April high point. While the overall stock market has come back somewhat in recent weeks, radio stocks have largely not participated. Three stocks now fail to comply with the $1 share price requirement set by the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq.

2010-09-23

Statement by the President on the DISCLOSE Act Vote in the Senate

THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary
_______________________________________________________________________________________

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 23, 2010

“I am deeply disappointed by the unanimous Republican blockade in the Senate of the DISCLOSE Act, a critical piece of legislation that would control the flood of special interest money into our elections. Today’s decision by a partisan minority to block this legislation is a victory for special interests and U.S. corporations – including foreign-controlled ones – who are now allowed to spend unlimited money to fill our airwaves, mailboxes and phone lines right up until Election Day. And it comes at the expense of the American people, who no longer have the right to know who is financing these ads in an attempt to influence an election for their preferred candidate. Wall Street, the insurance lobby, oil companies and other special interests are now one step closer to taking Congress back and returning to the days when lobbyists wrote the laws. But despite today’s setback, I will continue fighting to ensure that our democracy stays where it belongs -- in the hands of the American people.”

CLYBURN STATEMENT ON GOP AGENDA


WASHINGTON – House Majority Whip James E. Clyburn (D-SC) today commented on the House Republican agenda.

“Whatever the Republicans may call their plan, if implemented, would inflict a ‘Plague on Americans’—A plague on American workers by protecting tax loopholes that allow companies to send good-paying jobs overseas; a plague on the American economy by piling $700 billion on to the deficit to give tax cuts to millionaires and billionaires; a plague on our children and grandchildren by privatizing Social Security, turning it from a guaranteed benefit into a guaranteed gamble; a plague on American families by repealing the Patient’s Bill of Rights and benefits under health reform; and a plague on American taxpayers and consumers by repealing the protections under Wall Street reform.

“Our country is just starting to get well again. We can’t afford to suffer the same failed ideas of the past.”

New GOP Contract focuses on taxes, spending, security

story by The Hill
written by Molly K. Hooper 

The Republicans’ new Contract With America, which will be unveiled officially on Thursday, calls for a crackdown on government spending, repeal of the healthcare reform law and extension of all the expiring Bush tax cuts.

There is an anti-Washington theme throughout the House GOP’s “Pledge to America.” In many ways, Republicans are running on a change message, a mantra that helped elect President Obama and bolster Democratic majorities in Congress two years ago.

The pledge, provided to media outlets Wednesday afternoon, states, “Politicians in Washington have imposed an agenda that doesn’t reflect the priorities of the people. What’s worse, the most important decisions are made behind closed doors, where a flurry of backroom deals has supplanted the will of the people.”

The document tackles job creation, “out-of-control” spending, “the government takeover of healthcare,” transparency and homeland security, among other issues.

Economic and fiscal matters are highlighted, while social issues — a staple of President George W. Bush’s 2004 reelection campaign — are not.

While the pledge on page 1 promises to “honor families, traditional marriage, life and the private and faith-based organizations that form the core of our American values,” there are few specific proposals.

In the healthcare section, House Republicans address the use of tax dollars for abortion, calling Obama’s executive order on the matter “inadequate.”

But for the most part, the pledge homes in on the No. 1 issue for voters: the economy.

The document quotes former Democratic President John F. Kennedy, who said, “An economy constrained by high tax rates will never produce enough revenue to balance the budget, just as it will never create enough jobs.”

The word “spending” is stated 47 times in the document, but “earmarks” — an issue that divides Republicans — is not mentioned.

Republicans lambaste the economic stimulus package, climate change bill, the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), government waste and what they claim are 3,833 pages of federal regulations to implement healthcare reform.

Bush, who signed TARP into law, is referenced in passing only twice.

Meanwhile, Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s (D-Calif.) management of the lower chamber is strongly criticized.Republican leaders state that they, unlike Democratic leaders, will “ensure that bills are debated and discussed in the public square by publishing text online at least three days before coming up for a vote in the House of Representatives. No more hiding legislative language from the minority party, opponents and the public. Legislation should be understood by all interested parties before it is voted on.”

Democrats ripped the Republican pledge, mocking it as a package of old ideas that they say put the economy in a deep recession.

Thursday’s unveiling will come 16 years after then-Rep. Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) released the House GOP’s Contract With America. Weeks later, Republicans won control of Congress.

In order to win the House, the GOP would need to pick up a net of 39 seats in November. Democrats won 30 seats in 2006 and picked up another 24 in 2008.

House Republican leaders are scheduled to discuss their pledge on Thursday at the Tart Lumber Co., a family-owned small business in Sterling, Va.

The effort is the culmination of four months of a GOP “listening” tour that started with a Web-based program called America Speaking Out (ASO).

House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio) tasked Chief Deputy Whip Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) as chairman of the project, which involved dozens of member-held town hall meetings, outreach to advocacy and interest groups and monitoring of ideas and solutions on the ASO website.

ASO Vice Chairman Rep. Peter Roskam (R-Ill.) called the pledge “robust action-items for today.”

Members of the GOP conference were allowed to view the document in Boehner’s office on Wednesday afternoon before they discussed the final product at a closed-door meeting that evening.

GOP leaders opted to hold a more subdued rollout of their pledge than Gingrich’s 1994 event on Capitol Hill, which included hundreds of Republican lawmakers and candidates.

Unlike 1994, the new contract will not be signed by GOP officials and does not call for term limits or a balanced budget amendment.

House Democrats agreed not to hold votes Thursday morning in order to give Republicans time to present what they call their “governing agenda.”

House GOP Whip Eric Cantor (Va.), Conference Chairman Mike Pence (Ind.), Conference Vice Chairwoman Cathy McMorris Rodgers (Wash.), Boehner, McCarthy, Roskam and Reps. Frank Wolf (Va.), Jason Chaffetz (Utah), Marsha Blackburn (Tenn.), Bill Cassidy (La.), Mac Thornberry (Texas) and Jeb Hensarling (Texas) are scheduled to attend.

Members are slated to hold a press conference at 10 a.m. after a “roundtable” discussion with small-business owners.

2010-09-22

PATIENT’S BILL OF RIGHTS PROTECTIONS IN FULL EFFECT TOMORROW -- read below



WASHINGTON – House Majority Whip James E. Clyburn (D-SC) today released the following statement touting the consumer protections that go into effect on Thursday, September 23, under the Patient’s Bill of Rights that are part of the Affordable Care Act.

“For far too long insurance companies stood between patients and their doctors when it came to making important health decisions. But thanks to the Affordable Care Act approved earlier this year, starting tomorrow there will be new protections in place that we call the Patient’s Bill of Rights—young people will be able to stay on their parent’s insurance until age 26, children will no longer be denied coverage based on a pre-existing condition, insurance companies cannot revoke your coverage if you get sick, and there are no more lifetime limits on what insurance will cover.

“Republican have made it clear that one of their top priorities is a repeal of the health reform law and these critical benefits that come with it. With millions of Americans counting on these reforms, we cannot afford to turn back the clock and put the insurance companies back in control of patient’s health.”

Shark Busts Through Cage

Check out this great MSN Video: Shark Busts Through Cage

Titanic sunk by steering mistake

story by Reuters
photos by AFP and Reuters

LONDON – The Titanic hit an iceberg in 1912 because of a basic steering error, and only sank as fast as it did because an official persuaded the captain to continue sailing, an author said in an interview published on Wednesday.

Louise Patten, a writer and granddaughter of Titanic second officer Charles Lightoller, said the truth about what happened nearly 100 years ago had been hidden for fear of tarnishing the reputation of her grandfather, who later became a war hero.

Lightoller, the most senior officer to have survived the disaster, covered up the error in two inquiries on both sides of the Atlantic because he was worried it would bankrupt the ill-fated liner's owners and put his colleagues out of a job.

"They could easily have avoided the iceberg if it wasn't for the blunder," Patten told the Daily Telegraph.

"Instead of steering Titanic safely round to the left of the iceberg, once it had been spotted dead ahead, the steersman, Robert Hitchins, had panicked and turned it the wrong way."


Patten, who made the revelations to coincide with the publication of her new novel "Good as Gold" into which her account of events are woven, said that the conversion from sail ships to steam meant there were two different steering systems.

Crucially, one system meant turning the wheel one way and the other in completely the opposite direction.
Once the mistake had been made, Patten added, "they only had four minutes to change course and by the time (first officer William) Murdoch spotted Hitchins' mistake and then tried to rectify it, it was too late."

Patten's grandfather was not on watch at the time of the collision, but he was present at a final meeting of the ship's officers before the Titanic went down.

There he heard not only about the fatal mistake but also the fact that J. Bruce Ismay, chairman of Titanic's owner the White Star Line persuaded the captain to continue sailing, sinking the ship hours faster than would otherwise have happened.

"If Titanic had stood still, she would have survived at least until the rescue ship came and no one need have died," Patten said.

The RMS Titanic was the world's biggest passenger liner when it left Southampton, England, for New York on its maiden voyage on April 10, 1912. Four days into the trip, the ship hit an iceberg and sank, taking more than 1,500 passengers with it.

Big changes in Black media usage.

briefing from Media Audit

In what it calls “a dramatic shift in media behavior,” the Media Audit reports the average African American spends 4 hours and 21 minutes per day online — 10% more than the amount of time for all U.S. adults. That’s impacting how much radio is consumed.

South Sudan plans repatriation



story and video by Al Jazeera

As diplomats and activists express concern about the slow pace of logistics for south Sudan's referendum on succession, the southern government is planning to repatriate millions of refugees displaced during the civil war.  The region, which is autonomous from the central government in Khartoum, wants the refugees to vote in January's referendum.  The vote is a key part of the 2005 peace agreement that ended the war which led to 2 million deaths, according to aid agencies.  Al Jazeera's Haru Mutasa travelled to Sindirun Lugara village in southern Sudan and spoke to families who have already started returning.