Daily Archives: December 11, 2012

Rachel Maddow Rips Conservative Media For Scamming Donors

Rachel Maddow

Rachel Maddow has no qualms about exposing the underbelly of the Right-Wing Super PAC scamming business and the Right-Wing media’s compliance.  This woman is awesome.  No wonder she’s beating brain dead Hannity in the ratings.

The Huffington Post

Rachel Maddow tore into members of the conservative media on her Monday MSNBC show for what she called “scamming” gullible members of their own party who donate to various Super PACs.

Maddow discussed how watchdog group Media Matters recently looked into conservative pundit Dick Morris’ Super PAC and found that some of his key expenditures included renting his own email list, which is operated by Newsmax Media.

“So your money … goes to Dick Morris, who apparently then pays it to Newsmax to send emails, and then Newsmax maybe just pays it back to Dick Morris to pay for the email addresses to which they just sent all of his emails,” Maddow said. “What these financial reports seems to indiciate is that donations to Dick Morris’ Super PAC substantially end up just going to Dick Morris.” She added that Morris’ Super PAC has been around for a couple of years “so maybe it doesn’t always look like a scam,” but that more and more “scammy-looking” arrangements have been coming to light — as in the case of the well funded Tea Party group Freedom Works.

Dick Armey, the man who helped build the conservative group, recently left and arranged an $8 million golden parachute for himself upon his departure, which raised some eyebrows. Then news broke that Freedom Works president Matt Kibbe allegedly used the group’s staff and funds to write part of his book. “So if you think about it, anyone donating to Freedom Works was effectively paying for the staff time and the resources to produce a project that just personally profited one of the people who works there,” Maddow said. “A scam.”

Maddow likened the situation to what she called Newt Gingrich’s “direct mail scam,” where he would give businesses fake awards, which gave them the opportunity to donate $5,000 to meet him. “Congratulations to you!” Maddow quipped. “Where is your check to me?”

She also compared the situation to what she called the “scammy campaign” where Mike Huckabee asked supporters to donate $2,500 to “help fund the battle” against Obamacare, which also went towards helping to keep Huckabee on TV to repeal Obamacare.

“Will having Mike Huckabee on TV repeal Obamacare? I’m checking with the constitution, but I don’t think so,” Maddow said. She later added, “If you are a person who has long been fascinated by how similar the conservative ‘be afraid’ direct mail that asks for money looks to the kind of direct mail that tries to scam your grandmother out of her savings … it is amazing to see, if you have been watching this over time … is how persistent this is.”

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Filed under GOP PAC Scams, Right Wing Internet Scams, Right-wing disinformation campaign

10 things you need to know today: December 11, 2012

 

The Week

 

Childhood obesity dips slightly, Cairo braces for dueling protests, and more in our roundup of the stories that are making news and driving opinion

1. OBAMA AND BOEHNER FISCAL CLIFF TALKS INTENSIFY
President Obama and House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) have begun stepping up negotiations on avoiding the “fiscal cliff,” a series of deep spending cuts and expiring tax breaks that start taking effect in January. The White House and Boehner’s office held more negotiations on Monday to follow up on a meeting between Obama and Boehner over the weekend, even as Obama prepared to make a fresh pitch to American workers on Tuesday for his proposal to reduce the deficit — and avoid the fiscal cliff — with the help of tax hikes on the rich. People close to the talks say they have progressed over recent days, albeit slowly. Republicans appear resigned to accepting tax hikes and Democrats to swallowing reductions in Medicare spending in exchange — the haggling is over the details. [Reuters]
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2. CAIRO BRACES FOR DUELING PROTESTS OVER ISLAMIST CONSTITUTION
Nine Egyptians were injured on Tuesday as gunmen shot at people camping out in Cairo’s Tahrir Square to protest President Mohamed Morsi’s efforts to push through a constitution written by his Islamist supporters. Opposition leaders called for a fresh day of massive street demonstrations to persuade Morsi to postpone a planned Dec. 15 referendum on the constitution. The protesters planned to converge on Morsi’s presidential palace. Cairo police braced for possible clashes with counter-demonstrators, as the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood was reportedly pushing for two “million-man” marches — with the slogan, “Yes to legitimacy” — in support of Morsi and the referendum. [BBC]
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3. CHILDHOOD OBESITY EASES IN CITIES
After rising for decades, childhood obesity rates inched down between 2007 and 2011 in several major U.S. cities, including New York and Los Angeles, according to a report by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The improvement was small — just 5.5 percent in New York and 3 percent in L.A. — but health experts said it was still significant, as it offered hope that the childhood obesity epidemic might finally be reversing course. “It’s been nothing but bad news for 30 years,” says New York City health commissioner Dr. Thomas Farley, “so the fact that we have any good news is a big story.” [New York Times]
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4. NAVY IDENTIFIES SEAL KILLED IN RESCUE
The Navy has released the name of a Navy SEAL who was killed in a Sunday rescue mission to free an American doctor, Dr. Dilip Joseph, who was being held by the Taliban in Afghanistan. Petty Officer 1st Class Nicolas Checque, 28, died of combat-related injuries, the Navy said in a statement. Dr. Joseph was abducted last Wednesday. U.S. General John Allen, commander of NATO-led foreign forces in Afghanistan, said he ordered the rescue after intelligence suggested Joseph was “in imminent danger of injury or death.” [Reuters]
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5. MANDELA RESPONDING TO TREATMENT IN HOSPITAL
Former South African president Nelson Mandela is responding well to treatment for a recurring lung infection, the national president’s office said on Tuesday. Mandela, 94, checked into a military hospital near the country’s capital, Pretoria, on Saturday, triggering widespread speculation and concern over the health of the revered anti-apartheid icon. The government took charge of Mandela’s care after the chaos that resulted from a stay at a public hospital in 2011 — journalists and curious citizens swarmed the hospital — but now reporters and many in the public are upset that few details are being released on his condition. [Associated Press]
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6. HSBC TO PAY RECORD $1.9 BILLION FINE
British bank HSBC will pay a record fine of $1.9 billion to settle charges of money-laundering, it was widely reported on Monday. The settlement stems from accusations that the bank used the U.S. financial system to carry out billion-dollar transfers for sanctioned countries like Iran and drug cartels in Mexico. HSBC is just the latest multinational bank to be punished for helping Iran. On Monday, Standard Chartered, Britain’s second-largest bank, agreed to pay $327 million to settle charges of doing business on behalf of Iranian clients. [New York Times]
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7. WOMAN CONVICTED OF KILLING FLORIDA LOTTERY WINNER
A Florida woman was convicted Monday for the murder of Abraham Shakespeare, a central Florida man who won millions in a 2006 lottery. Dorice “Dee Dee” Moore “got every bit of his money,” said Assistant State Attorney Jay Pruner in closing arguments. “He found out about it and threatened to kill her. She killed him first.” Judge Emmett Battles sentenced Moore to mandatory life without parole, calling her “the most manipulative person” he had ever seen, and describing her as “cold, calculating and cruel.” [Associated Press]
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8. KIDS’ APPS COLLECT PERSONAL DATA
Sixty percent of randomly selected mobile applications designed for children collect personal information — including location data and phone numbers — without the permission of the young users’ parents, the Federal Trade Commission reported on Monday. The FTC is launching investigations into whether app companies are violating the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act or the Federal Trade Commission Act. The agency is urging gatekeepers such as Apple and Google to do more to police app developers. “While we think most companies have the best intentions when it comes protecting kids’ privacy,” FTC chairman Jon Leibowitz said, “we haven’t seen any progress when it comes to making sure parents have the information they need to make informed choices about apps for their kids.” [Guardian]
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9. STRAUSS-KAHN, MAID SETTLE SUIT
Former International Monetary Fund chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn and New York City hotel maid Nafissatou Diallo have signed a settlement related to the sexual-assault lawsuit she brought against Strauss-Kahn in August 2011. The suit stemmed from a May 2011 encounter between the two in New York’s Sofitel Hotel in which Diallo alleged that Strauss-Kahn, once a contender for the French presidency, forced her to perform oral sex on him and tried to rape her when she arrived to clean his suite. Strauss-Kahn said that what happened with Diallo was a “moral failing,” but it was consensual. He resigned his position at the IMF, and countersued Diallo for defamation after she filed her civil suit when criminal charges against Strauss-Kahn were dropped. The details of the settlement announced on Monday were not made public. [Associated Press]
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10. RIVERA FANS HOLD VIGIL
Fans of Mexican-American singer Jenni Rivera held a vigil outside her California home, mourning her apparent death in a Sunday plane crash in Mexico. “I think it’s a nightmare. It can’t be true,” one fan told a local TV station. “We love her songs, we love her music. We will never forget her,” fan Claudia Lopez said. Despite reports that there were no survivors, Rivera’s relatives said they still thought there was a chance that reports of her death were wrong. “We still have hope that she’s alive,” Pedro Rivera Jr., the singer’s brother, told the Press-Telegram. “It’s a 95 percent chance that she’s dead, but we have that belief because we don’t have a body. They found clothes. They found shoes, but they didn’t find any DNA.” [Los Angeles Times]

 

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Rove returns to Fox after 27-day absence

That didn’t take long.  I had hoped his hiatus was more permanent,  but after all, he is Karl Rove…

Politico

He’s back — Karl Rove returned to Fox News on Monday night for his first appearance in 27 days.

The Fox News contributor, who was reportedly benched from the cable network, was back on the air Monday on “Special Report with Bret Baier.” Rove, who appeared alongside Democratic consultant and fellow Fox News contributor Joe Trippi, discussed the implications of the looming fiscal cliff.

“Gentlemen, welcome back,” Baier said after introducing the pair.

“Good to be back,” Trippi replied.

Rove did not say anything to address his return.

Last week, New York’s Gabe Sherman reported that Fox News president Roger Ailes told staffers to keep the main faces associated with the election — namely, Rove and Dick Morris — off the air for a while. According to the report, producers were ordered to get permission before booking either pundit.

Rove was last on Fox News on Nov. 13, when he appeared on “Hannity” to discuss government regulations. The Nov. 13 “Hannity” show also marked fellow Fox News contributor Morris’s last appearance on the network. Trippi, meanwhile, was last on Fox News on the Nov. 30 edition of “Happening Now.”

During Monday night’s “Special Report,” Rove suggested several ideas to deal with the fiscal cliff and tax policy, including capping itemized deductions at $25,000 or at $50,000. He also said “it’s going to be very hard to get the Republican caucus to go for rates. They’ve offered revenues — they said, look, okay, fine, you won the election. We’ll give you the $800 billion, but let’s find it in a way that has less of an economic impact.”

As the eight minute segment wrapped, Baier told the pair, “Gentlemen, we will do it again. Thanks very much.”

Rove has no upcoming Fox News appearances listed on his website.

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Filed under Fox News, Karl Rove

Top Ten News Stories of 2012 That Turned into Jokes

Very funny.  Thanks Will Durst

Alternet

2012 should not under any circumstances be confused with the Top Ten Legitimate News Stories of 2012. They are as different as red satin cummerbunds and Liar’s Dice. Duck liver and Spanish moss. Matched pearl necklaces and motorcycle handlebars.

For those of you itching to point out that some stories, especially those involving death, destruction, devastation and disaster are not proper subjects for this sort of fanciful folderol; way ahead of you. Totally agree. Exactly why the Aurora, Colorado movie theater massacre, Hurricane Sandy, Jerry Sandusky and the movie John Carter failed to make the cut.

Also left off the list are a few of the fiendishly frivolous footprints despoiling the sands of this annum horribilis such as Lindsay Lohan’s continuing struggles with sobriety, that curious craze called Gangnam Style, the introduction of the iPhone 5 and Facebook’s roller coaster IPO.

That said; here they are, the key stories from the past year providing the purest opportunities for major mocking and scoffing and taunting as determined by the executive council of the Comics, Clowns, Jesters & Satirists Union.  Me.

10. Donald Trump. Assumes figurehead post of Birther Movement. Then refuses to shut up all year long including several embarrassing tweets on Election Day. An ever- gushing political comedy material fountain with all the grace and elegance of tumbling dumpsters.

9. First Presidential Debate. Turned what was becoming a slam- dunk into a horse race. 70 million Americans tuned in. But for some unknown reason, President Obama was not among them.

8. The entire GOP primary campaign. Party plays Candidate Whack- A- Mole for five months. Everybody takes turns beating Romney like a red headed stepchild, including some folks who aren’t even running.

7. London Olympics. Ann Romney’s horse Rafalca competes in Dressage. Event where the horse and the rider perform predetermined movements. Like interspecies dancing. Which you would think would be illegal in Utah. But horse fails to medal and probably gets shipped home strapped to the fuselage of a 747. McKayla Maroney remains unimpressed.

6. Vice Presidential Debate. Joe Biden goes all Malarkey on Paul Ryan. Two words- decaf. Bold Choice Ryan blames Obama for GM plant closing in 08. Fails to implicate POTUS in fall of the Roman Empire. But just barely.

5. Barack Obama comes out in support of gay marriage. Emerges from his own personal policy closet like a butterfly emerging from a conflicted cocoon.

4. Mitt Romney vows to get rid of Big Bird losing him pivotal pre- adolescent vote.

3. Democratic National Convention. Specifically Bill Clinton laying out the precise reasons why America should re-elect as President… Bill Clinton.

2.  Republican National Convention. Specifically Clint Eastwood upstaging the nominee’s acceptance speech by getting into an argument with an empty chair. Which he proceeded to lose. Probably upset him so badly he rushed back to the hotel room where he got into a squabble with his armoire.

1. Mitt Romney. All the charisma of a plastic picnic fork with three of the tines snapped off. May have run the worst campaign ever. And that includes New Coke, McCain/ Palin and France in 39.

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Poll Truthers Now In Charge Of Figuring Out What Went Wrong For Republicans

Good luck with that, GOP…

BuzzFeed Politics

According to a report in Politico the RNC has launched an official review committee to figure out what went wrong and what worked in 2012. But during the election, two of its members — former Bush spokesman Ari Fleischer and Republican committeeman Henry Barbour — pushed the narrative that the polls were skewed, and Mitt Romney would ultimately prevail.

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Filed under GOP Cluelessness, GOP Myopia

SEAL team Six member killed in Afghanistan rescue operation was from Pennsylvania

SEAL Member Killed in Rescue

The Washington Post

The Pentagon has identified the Navy SEAL killed during the weekend rescue mission in Afghanistan as Petty Officer 1st Class Nicolas D. Checque of Monroeville, Pa.

A Defense Department statement says the 28-year-old Checque died of combat-related injuries but gave no further details of the mission. He was among members of SEAL Team Six, which freed an American doctor abducted by the Taliban.

It is the same team that killed Osama bin Laden last year, but it’s unclear whether Checque was on the bin Laden mission.

Officials in Afghanistan say Dr. Dilip Joseph of Colorado Springs, Colo., was rescued in eastern Afghanistan. The military says the adviser for Colorado Springs-based Morning Star Development was abducted last week and rescued after intelligence showed he was in imminent danger of injury or possible death.

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Anonymous Announces Wikileaks Alternative (VIDEO)

I’m not sure what to make of Anonymous.  I do know that they have piqued my curiosity…

Addicting Info

Love it or hate it, Wikileaks has become entrenched in popular culture. By releasing what are otherwise secret documents, Wikileaks has changed the world. But the repeated attacks on the group has exposed weaknesses of its centralized operation and have driven a wedge between it and previously allied groups, such as the hactivist collective Anonymous. And with Wikileaks founder and spokesman Julian Assange a wanted man, the days of Wikileaks have always been numbered.

But, as with the attacks on Napster, the attacks on Wikileaks did not crush the customers of the service. Instead, it restructures the operation, changing from a centralized agency to a de-centralized. Napster became replaced by bittorrent, and now Anonymous has announced its replacement for Wikileaks, a service they call TYLER.

The issues between Wikileaks and Anonymous go back to the financial problems forced upon Wikileaks after its finances were cut off. In order to continue functioning, Wikileaks had to begin to demand payment. This in turn added liabilities to Wikileaks and its supporters. Facing the added pressure, and the proven liability of the single target to focus efforts against the access of information, Anonymous took the same approach as taken several times before: decentralize. So began Anonymous’s “Project Mayhem” which has produced TYLER:

Now instead of a single target, every single machine connected to Tyler will become a hub. Millions of machines, all churning over and handling the data. It is a nightmare scenario for any group or agency seeking to hide its secrets. No longer will there be a large rat to target, but millions of scurrying cockroaches, any single survivor enabling the reconstruction of the entire network.

The actions against Wikileaks have, instead of prevented the leaking of sensitive data, now made the leaking of that data now a trivial occurence, done by anyone in a matter of minutes, all in complete anonymity. The concerns over another Bradley Manning, being held for releasing secret documentation, are almost trivial, since  it will be next to impossible to track when the next Private Manning comes along. It has now become no longer a matter of if, but when.

The Anonymous TYLER system, the culmination of years of work for the hactivist collective, stands poised to change the rules of not only the internet, but of society itself. The age of state secrets, of corporate lies, can not continue with the bright light of TYLER to shine on them. This is a disruptive technology, you cannot fight it, only adapt to it.

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