Camelot Ⅱ ? Do We Now Have A Cool President? · Bill Maher's RealTime

AEI, Al Qaeda, Ashcroft, Bremer, Britain, Broadcatching, Bush, Bush Apologists, California, Children, CIA, Coalition Provisional Authority, Consensus Journalism, Conservatism, Constitution, Corn, Debates, Democrats, District Of Corruption, Evolution, Framing, Freepers, Global Warming, Gonzales, Gootube, Guns, Habeas Corpus, Healthcare, Hillary, Immigration, Iran, Iraq, Jeff Gannon, Jeff Guckert, Kerry, Luntz, Media Landscape, Moonbats, New York, New York Herald Sun, Obama, Olbermann, Politics, Politics Rundown, Poverty, Republic_Party, Right-Wing Conspiracy, Rosie, Rumsfeld, Shiite, Soldiers, Sunni, Surge, Taxes, Tullycast, Vandenheuvel, veterans, War Criminals, web 2.0, Wingnuttia, Wolfowitz, Youtube

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tullyrider

TULLYCAST

Sarah Palin and the "You've Got To Be Kidding" Tour | Bill Maher | Nov 14 2008

ABC, Abrams, Addington, Ari Fleisher, Baker Botts, Bechtel, Beltway Groupthink, Beltway Journalism, Blackwater, Brown and Root, Byron York, Campbell Brown, Carlyle Group, Charlie Gibson, Cokie Roberts, Dan Senor, Dana Perino, David Brooks, Dick Cheney, Feith, George Stephanopoulos, George W. Bush, George Will, Grey, Halliburton, Hannity, Hume, Iraq, Joe Biden, John Yoo, Joseph Wilson, Karen Hughes, Kellog, Kristol, Libby, Limbaugh, Malkin, Maria Bartiromo, Matalin, Matt Cooper, Matt Drudge, Medved, Meet The Press, O'Reilly, Perle, PNAC, Politics, Prager, Rich Lowry, Rick Sanchez, Robert Luskin, Robert Novak, Roger Ailes, Rupert Murdoch, Sarah Palin, Scott McClellan, Smerconish, Tim Russert, Tony snow, Valerie Plame, Viveca Novak, Wall Street, William Kristol, Wolfowitz

uncletully

Legalize Marijuana Now To Save The Economy | Bill Maher's RealTime on HBO

401k, ABC News, bailout, Banks, Bin Laden, Bozell, Buffett, Chevy Chase Club, CIA, Colin Powell, Condi Rice, Credit, Credit Default Swaps, Dan Rather, David Iglesias, Dow Jones, Duke Zeiberts, Equity Market, FBI, Finance, FISA, Fournier, George Tenet, Gonzalez, Grover Nordquist, Guantanamo, Hedge Funds, Iran, Joe Klein, Judith Miller, Justice Department, K Street, Karl Rove, Katrina, Lee Atwater, Lehman. AIG, Lobbyists, Mary Mapes, Money Market, New York Times, NSA, Patriot Act, Politico, Retail Investors, Saddam, Stock Market, terrorism, The Palm, The Plank, Torture, Wall Street, Washington D.C., Watergate, Youtube

TULLYCAST 3

TULLYCAST 3

New Rules Patriot Edition | Bill Maher's RealTime November 14, 2008

AEI, Al Qaeda, Ashcroft, Bremer, Britain, Broadcatching, Bush, Bush Apologists, California, Children, CIA, Coalition Provisional Authority, Consensus Journalism, Conservatism, Constitution, Corn, Debates, Democrats, District Of Corruption, Evolution, Framing, Freepers, Global Warming, Gonzales, Gootube, Guns, Habeas Corpus, Healthcare, Hillary, Immigration, Iran, Iraq, Jeff Gannon, Jeff Guckert, Kerry, Luntz, Media Landscape, Moonbats, New York, New York Herald Sun, Obama, Olbermann, Politics, Politics Rundown, Poverty, Republic_Party, Right-Wing Conspiracy, Rosie, Rumsfeld, Shiite, Soldiers, Sunni, Surge, Taxes, Tullycast, Vandenheuvel, veterans, War Criminals, web 2.0, Wingnuttia, Wolfowitz, Youtube

TULLYCAST3

TULLYCAST3

Yankees Offer Pitcher C.C. Sabathia A Zillion Dollars

CC Sabathia, New York Yankees

New York Yankees Offer Contract to CC Sabathia, ESPN Reports

By Danielle Sessa

BLOOMBERG NEWS

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Nov. 14 (Bloomberg) — The New York Yankees offered free- agent CC Sabathia a contract that’s expected to be a record for a pitcher, ESPN reported on its Web site without saying where it got the information.

Sabathia went a combined 17-10 with a 2.70 earned run average last season for the Cleveland Indians and Milwaukee Brewers. The 28-year-old left-hander won the 2007 American League Cy Young award and finished fifth in this year’s voting for the National League honor.

The New York Mets in February gave Johan Santana the biggest deal for a pitcher — a six-year, $137.5 million contract.

Yankees spokesman Jason Zillo declined to comment. Sabathia’s agent Greg Genske didn’t immediately return a phone call for comment.

To contact the reporter on this story: Danielle Sessa in New York at dsessa@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: November 14, 2008 17:36 EST

[Must See] Don Imus Calls Chris Matthews "Gutless" About Autism With RFK Jr.

Autism, Barack Obama, Big Pharma, Don Imus, Mercury Poisoning, Pharmaceutical Companies, Rahm Emmanuel, Robert F. Kennedy, Thimerosal

Part Twomeet_linus_big

TULLYCAST ALWAYS DELIVERS

TULLYCAST ALWAYS DELIVERS

BUSTED! White House Suffers Loss in Email Case

Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics, CREW, Executive Office, Federal Records Act, Judge Kennedy, Melanie Sloan, National Security Archive, President Geaorge W. Bush, White House

Rats. Inc.

cdi11

WASHINGTON — A federal judge on Monday ruled against the Bush administration in a court battle over the White House’s problem-plagued email system.

U.S. District Judge Henry Kennedy said two private groups may pursue their case as they press the administration to recover millions of possibly missing electronic messages.

Judge Kennedy rejected the government’s request to throw out the lawsuits filed by Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington and the National Security Archive.

The Bush administration had argued that the courts didn’t have the power to order the White House to retrieve any missing emails.

A document obtained by the Associated Press in August says the White House is missing as many as 225 days of email dating back to 2003.

The nine-page outline of the White House’s email problems invites companies to bid on a project to recover the missing electronic messages. The White House hasn’t said whether it has hired a contractor.

CREW executive director Melanie Sloan called the ruling “a clear victory for the American people. The Executive Office of the President does have to answer for the missing email.”

CREW and the National Security Archive are seeking a court order directing the archivist of the U.S. to ask that the attorney general initiate legal action under the Federal Records Act.

Copyright © 2008 Associated Press

Tough Times Complicate the Case for Buying Super Bowl Ads

Advertising, Media, Superbowl

With advertising rates for the Super Bowl running as high as $3 million for a 30-second spot, some marketers are wondering whether during these tough economic times they can afford the big game.

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FedEx, a loyal Super Bowl advertiser, still hasn’t decided if it will buy in. FedEx is concerned that shelling out big bucks — at a time when it’s “asking employees to do more with less” — will look “wrong,” says a person close to the company.

“Companies have to be mindful that jumping into the game can open them up to criticism,” this person says.

The Memphis, Tenn., package-delivery giant is holding out to see if it can get a bargain.

FedEx’s hesitation is raising eyebrows on Madison Avenue because it has advertised in 12 of the past National Football League championship games.

The company is also one of those that get extra mileage out of the game because its spots tend to be entertaining, and are widely anticipated. During the last Super Bowl, one FedEx ad featured an enormous carrier pigeon wreaking havoc in a city.

Advertisers taking a pass on Super Bowl XLIII altogether include beleaguered General Motors, which has been in 16 games, and Garmin Ltd., the maker of GPS devices, which had advertised in the past two games. A company spokesman for Garmin says its decision to sit out was “unrelated to the economy.”

Jumping into high-priced media deals can raise lots of image questions, say ad executives.

“With this much money on the line it can be a negative reflection on a company, especially if they are cutting back staff or getting a government bailout,” says Steve Lanzano, chief operating officer at MPG North America, a media-buying unit owned by Havas.

General Electric‘s NBC had sold most of its Super Bowl ad inventory by early September, prior to the meltdown on Wall Street. Because the economy had been soft for most of the year, many in the industry were surprised by the brisk pace of sales. Advertisers gobbled up the available slots even though NBC raised its price sharply, compared with the previous Super Bowl, for which News Corp.‘s Fox got about $2.7 million for 30 seconds of commercial time. (Advertisers who buy multiple slots and fourth-quarter space typically get discounts).

NBC is in better shape than Fox was during the past recession. In 2002, Fox, whose parent also publishes The Wall Street Journal, had about 10% of its ad time unsold just two weeks before the game.

NBC seems to have experienced some slowing of demand over the past few weeks. It says it now has about eight ad slots left to fill. That’s roughly the same number that were left in September.

The Super Bowl has shown no signs of flagging in the ratings. This year’s nail-biter between the New York Giants and the New England Patriots drew 97.4 million viewers, the biggest TV audience for a U.S. sporting event.

Ads appearing in the game seem to get more advance publicity every year, helping to offset the price tag.

Advertisers on next year’s broadcast include Anheuser-Busch, CareerBuilder.com, Hyundai Motor, PepsiCo, Viacom‘s Paramount Pictures, Cars.com and Coca-Cola.

The peacock network has also lured some new marketers to the Feb. 1 game in Tampa, including Pedigree, the dog-food brand owned by Mars. Even Monster.com, the online job site owned by Monster Worldwide, is currently in talks to jump back into the game after sitting out the past few years, according to people familiar with the matter.

“As of now, we have not committed to the Super Bowl,” says a spokesman for Monster.

“Companies realize that it’s even more important in a challenging economy to deliver their message in front of the largest audience they’ll see all year,” says a spokesman for NBC.

Still, marketers and ad executives say it is a tough call to make during hard times. E*Trade Financial knows exactly how nerve-racking the Super Bowl decision can be.

This past February, the New York company jumped into the game even though its stock price had plummeted more than 80% over the course of the year; the word “bankruptcy” was floated by analysts. Some consumers were pulling their accounts from the online broker.

“There were some people internally who said, ‘is this wise?'” says Nick Utton, chief marketing officer of E*Trade. Mr. Utton says he decided to do Super Bowl ads because he felt that it would ultimately show confidence in the brand.

But executives crossed their fingers: if the campaign wasn’t well-received, the criticisms wouldn’t be limited to “lackluster creative.” They would be about “irresponsible corporate spending.”

Luckily for E*Trade, its ads got a favorable reception, resulting in a 32% increase in newly opened and funded brokerage accounts during the week following the Super Bowl, the company said. And even though it is still hurting, it says it will be returning to the game. E*Trade is tightlipped on what the ads will look like, but it’s likely its talking baby will be back.

Write to Suzanne Vranica at suzanne.vranica@wsj.com

Lobbyists Jonesing U.S. Treasury For Helping Of Sweet Bailout Pie

Barack Obama, community banks, Congress, Henry Paulson Jr, Lobbyists, Treasury Department, U.S. Treasury

International Herald Tribune

12lobby550

IHT DOT COM

DEELICIOUS!!

Lobbyists swarm the U.S. Treasury for a helping of bailout pie

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

WASHINGTON: When the U.S. government said it would spend $700 billion to rescue the American financial industry, it seemed to be an ocean of money. But after one of the biggest lobbying free-for-alls in memory, it suddenly looks like a dwindling pool.

Many new supplicants are lining up for an infusion of capital as billions of dollars are channeled to other beneficiaries like the American International Group, and possibly soon American Express.

Of the initial $350 billion that Congress freed up, out of the $700 billion in bailout money contained in the law that passed last month, the Treasury Department has committed all but $60 billion. The shrinking pie — and the growing uncertainty over who qualifies — has thrown Washington’s legal and lobbying establishment into a mad scramble.

The Treasury Department is under siege by an army of hired guns for banks, savings and loan associations and insurers — as well as for improbable candidates like a Hispanic business group representing plumbing and home-heating specialists. That last group wants the Treasury to hire its members as contractors to take care of houses that the government may end up owning through buying distressed mortgages.

The lobbying frenzy worries many traditional bankers — the original targets of the rescue program — who fear that it could blur, or even undermine, the government’s effort to stabilize the financial system after its worst crisis since the 1930s.

Among the most rattled are community bankers.

“By the time they get to the community banks, there may not be enough money left,” said Edward Yingling, the president of the American Bankers Association. “The marketplace is looking at this so rapidly that those who have the money first may have some advantage.”

Adding to the frenzy is the possibility that the next Congress and White House could change the rules further. President-elect Barack Obama has added his voice by proposing that the struggling automakers get U.S. government aid, which could mean giving them access to the fund — something the Treasury secretary, Henry Paulson Jr., has resisted.

Despite the line outside its door, the Treasury is not worried about running out of money, according to a senior official. It has no plans to ask lawmakers to free the second $350 billion of the rescue package during the special session of Congress that could begin next week.

That could limit the pot of money available, at least until the next Congress is sworn in next January. Meanwhile, the list of candidates for a piece of the bailout keeps growing.

On Monday, the Treasury announced it would inject an additional $40 billion into AIG, amid signs that the government’s original bailout plan was putting too much strain on the company. American Express won approval Monday to transform itself into a bank holding company, making the giant marketer of credit cards eligible for an infusion.

Then there is the National Marine Manufacturers Association, which is asking whether boat financing companies might be eligible for aid to ensure that dealers have access to credit to stock their showrooms with boats — costs have gone up as the credit markets have calcified. Using much the same rationale, the National Automobile Dealers Association is pleading that car dealers get consideration, too.

“Unfortunately, I don’t have a lot of good news for them individually,” said Jeb Mason, who as the Treasury’s liaison to the business community is the first port-of-call for lobbyists. “The government shouldn’t be in the business of picking winners and losers among industries.”

Mason, 32, a lanky Texan in black cowboy boots who once worked in the White House for Karl Rove, shook his head over the dozens of phone calls and e-mail messages he gets every week. “I was telling a friend, ‘this must have been how the Politburo felt,’ ” he said.

The congressional bailout law gave the Treasury broad authority to decide how to spend the $700 billion. Under the terms of the $250 billion capital purchase program announced last month, cash infusions are available to “qualifying U.S. banks, savings associations, and certain bank and savings and loan holding companies, engaged only in financial activities.”

That definition has grown to include private banks and insurers like Allstate and MetLife, which own savings and loans. It may also encompass industrial lenders like GE Capital and GMAC, the financing arm of General Motors, provided they win approval to reclassify themselves as a bank or savings and loan holding company.

The Treasury set a deadline of Friday for institutions to apply for capital investments, which has meant a grueling few weeks for already overworked officials like Mason.

“Jeb is like the customer service agent at Verizon when the power lines go down,” said Robert Nichols, president of the Financial Services Forum, a trade group for big institutions like Citigroup, Fidelity and Allstate Insurance, some of which have received U.S. government money.

The influential independent and community bankers group, which represents smaller institutions, won an extension of the deadline for privately held banks while the Treasury considers a way for them to participate in its program as well.

The Treasury, several industry executives said, wants to avoid too strict a definition of eligible institutions, in case the Obama administration decides it wants to tweak the requirements for an investment, or even overhaul the rescue program.

Several lobbyists said the Treasury’s model contract acknowledges the possibility that Congress could impose new requirements on recipients of the money, and some Democratic lawmakers have talked about further restricting executive compensation, shareholder dividends or other uses of the money as part of the deal.

“We are like a tenant signing a lease contract with the landlord where the landlord can come back and change the terms after the fact, and in fact we are going to have a new landlord in a couple of weeks,” said Yingling of the bankers association.

The first wave of lobbying came in early October when Paulson announced the plan to buy troubled mortgage-related assets from banks. The Treasury said it would hire several outside firms to handle the purchases, and would dispense with U.S. contracting rules.

Law and lobbying firms that specialize in government contracting fired off dispatches to clients and potential clients explaining opportunities in the new program. Capitalizing on the surge of interest, several large firms, including Patton Boggs; Akin Gump; P & L Gates; Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson; and Alston & Bird, have set up financial rescue shops.

Alston & Bird, for example, highlights its two biggest stars — former Senator Bob Dole and former Senator Tom Daschle. Dole “knows Hank Paulson very well” and has been “very helpful” with the financial rescue groups, said David Brown, an Alston & Bird partner involved in its effort.

“And of course, Senator Daschle is national co-chair of the Obama campaign,” Brown added, noting that because Daschle is not a registered lobbyist, his involvement is limited to “high level advisory and strategic advice.”

Ambac Financial Group, in the relatively obscure bond insurance business, never needed lobbyists before, said Diane Adams, a managing director. But its clients persuaded the company to hire two Washington veterans — Edward Kutler and John O’Rourke — who helped arrange a recent meeting with Phillip Swagel, an assistant Treasury secretary. “We haven’t really asked for much in the past,” Adams said.

Initially, the banks reacted coolly to the prospect of the government taking direct stakes in them. They worried about restrictions on executive pay, and whether there would be a stigma attached. In conference calls with industry groups, Mason helped explain the Treasury proposal — a job he and his colleagues did well, judging by the change of heart among banks.

“The biggest surprise was how quickly it went from ‘I don’t need this,’ to ‘How do I get in?’ ” said Michele Davis, the head of public affairs at the Treasury, who is Mason’s boss.

Underscoring the many ways companies can take part in the rescue fund, the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce and other Hispanic business groups met with Paulson to push for minority contracts in asset management, legal, accounting, mortgage services and maintenance jobs, like plumbing and masonry.

“They are going to need a lot of folks in minority communities that are able to service their own communities,” said David Ferreira, head of government relations for the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce.

As the automakers have pushed for U.S. government help, the trade groups for car dealerships and even boat dealerships are pressing their own cases. They argue that showrooms are feeling a squeeze between higher borrowing costs to finance their inventory and slowing consumer sales to move it out the door.

“We have been encouraged by reports that Secretary Paulson is looking to broaden the program,” said Mathew Dunn, head of government relations for the National Marine Manufacturers Association.

On Friday, the automobile dealers sent Paulson a letter urging him to keep them in mind.

“A well-capitalized, financially sound dealer network is essential to the success of every automobile manufacturer,” wrote Annette Sykora, a car dealer in Slaton, Texas, and the chairwoman of the National Automobile Dealers Association. “Any government intervention should include provisions to preserve the viability of dealers.”

Some , Mason said, had called him even though they did not have any clients looking to get into the program or worried about its restrictions. They were merely seeking intelligence on which industries would be deemed eligible for assistance. He suspects they were representing hedge funds that wanted to trade on that information.

Real Web 2.0: The Wikipedia Family

IBM, web 2.0, Wikibooks and Wikiversity

IBM DOT DOM

Enrich your Web site with the lesser-known fruits of the Wikimedia project

vectors_in_bluekezdetail

Uche Ogbuji (uche@ogbuji.net), Partner, Zepheira, LLC

04 Nov 2008

You know Wikipedia, but do you know of the dozens of related sites that provide user-generated content that is just as valuable? Many of the related sites under the Wikipedia umbrella are very useful to Web developers. Learn how to enrich your information space with resources beyond Wikipedia, including examples of widgets applying data from these sites.

Wikipedia ranks as one of the most popular and well-known Web sites ever. Everyone from kids looking to get a leg up on homework to Web developers tapping the power of user-generated content makes Wikipedia the first stop. But in terms of useful information, Wikipedia is merely the centerpiece of a much larger setting. The Wikimedia Foundation is the organization that runs Wikipedia, and much more. Its home page says: “Imagine a world in which every single human being can freely share in the sum of all knowledge. That’s our commitment.” That’s a big claim, and it takes more than one even gigantic encyclopedia to fulfill it. You’re probably aware that there are numerous language versions of Wikipedia. (I was surprised and gratified to find the respectable number of Wikipedia articles in Igbo, my father tongue.) But do you know how often useful information is present in other languages that has not been translated to English? Have you heard of Wiktionary, Wikinews, Wikibooks, Wikisource, Wikiversity, and the like? Have you considered some of the benefits you could gain for your Web project by tapping into this vast pool of information? In this article I’ll show you around the greater Wikimedia and present code that helps your own site’s users “freely share in the sum of all knowledge”.

The sites

Here is a quick summary of the sites in the Wikimedia family, besides the well-known Wikipedia.

Wiktionary

Wiktionary is the dictionary counterpart of Wikipedia. Many have expressed skepticism of the practicality of an open content encyclopedia, and it would seem to be an even more daunting task for a much less glamorous endeavor such as a dictionary. The French version is the largest, in terms of the number of “good” entries, closely followed by the English one, which has by far the most overall entries and edits. After that it’s a significant drop to the Turkish version, but there are nine language versions with at least 100,000 “good entries”, and many versions with close to that number, adding up to an astonishing body of work. Some of the versions grew by using robots to import entries from free sources, such as the French Wiktionary, which includes many entries copied from old, freely licensed dictionaries, such as the Dictionnaire de l’Académie française. Many Wiktionary entries include translations to other languages, so another trick is to bulk-import translations listed in other language versions. Entries range from stubs with no real content (obviously these are not classified as “good” entries) to rich entries that include etymology, examples of use, pronunciation (in phonetic alphabet and sound files), cross references, synonyms, antonyms, variant grammar forms, translations, and even appearance analyses from important textual bodies such as Project Gutenberg.

Wikinews

Wikinews is an outlet for articles on news and current events, with the idea that people knowledgeable of events and involved in events can collaboratively fill in the relevant pages. The guidelines are that stories should be written from a neutral point of view. Wikinews can include stories, multimedia reports, interviews, and more. Coming soon is Wikimedia Radio, eventually to be a constant streaming audio broadcast of various programs and news, drawn largely from Wikinews and other Wikimedia projects. Naturally, Wikinews coverage tends to be slanted towards regions and topics with many interested contributors, which does not lend itself to being comprehensive. In addition, Wikipedia’s popularity means that there are usually rapid updates to its articles, even at a pace suitable for news articles, which has often stolen thunder from the Wikinews project.

Wikibooks and Wikiversity

The obvious expansion of an encyclopedia article is to a full book on the topic, and this is the domain of Wikibooks. It includes Wikijunior, a collection of text for children and child education, which might become its own full project soon. Wikiversity was also once a subsection of Wikibooks, which has become a full Wikimedia site. Wikiversity encourages learning in a group or community setting, with participants editing learning project pages in accompaniment to any hands-on activities that support understanding. Organized into faculties, it focuses on all the many support resources that combine with textbooks in an educational setting. Wikibooks hosts the textbooks and also supports collaborative community development, with outlines of Wiki pages getting expanded piecemeal into full books. Books and faculties range from learning languages to computer science, from organic chemistry to law. Educators in the biological sciences should also take note of Wikispecies, a taxonomic directory of life forms, like a modestly structured Wikipedia of organisms.

Wikisource

Working back from all these secondary information sites to original documents, Wikisource, also known as The Free Library, gathers source texts, annotations, translations, and supporting materials. The texts can be works of fiction or non-fiction, historical records, civic documents, or anything else noteworthy and free from copyright restrictions.

Wikiquote

Wikiquote is an open reference site for quotations from history and culture, in multiple languages. There has been some recent controversy about Wikiquote, with some arguing it should be disbanded due to objectionable content and copyright violations. Some think quotes should be added to the role of Wikisource. Many others, however, think that if there are any content issues at Wikisource, the community should first at least try to resolve these before taking the drastic step of disbanding a wiki. Certainly there seems no likelihood that this will happen any time soon.

Wikimedia Commons

Wikimedia Commons is a companion site for the Wikimedia family that hosts images, video, audio, and any other free media files. It’s a large repository, containing millions of files. It’s also intended to be a cultural repository of such media and seeks to further this through categorization and recognition of notable images.

Working across Wikimedia

The breadth and height of activity in the Wikimedia space opens up many opportunities for cross-pollination and useful applications beyond what the foundation itself provides. This is the spirit of Web 2.0. Users can take presently unintegrated streams of open data and turn them into fresh applications beyond the imagination or ambition of the original publishers.

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