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Friday, October 1, 2010

NASA's Job Is Not Muslim Outreach, Or Is It?

Paging Robert GibbsThe NASA chief who caused an uproar over the summer when he said outreach to the Muslim world might be his "foremost" priority has embarked on a trip this weekend to Saudi Arabia. A NASA spokesman said...







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The good old days....seems like it was years ago. You could say this everyday if you wanted.

The good old days....seems like it was years ago. You could say this everyday if you wanted.


THE TRUTH AT LAST
This guy is probably looking for a new job about now. This is CNN????? This is a must watch (only 1.5 mins long) Even CNN is getting a belly full of Obama Lies. Did you see this one? CNN no less. Wow!!! Do not delete this one. Just 90 seconds! Pass this on quickly, it'll be taken off quickly. Obama may even be losing the sycophantic support of CNN. This could be the most important 1.5 minutes of your day. Please listen and distribute STAND-UP & SEND THIS TO EVERY AMERICAN NOW Semper Fi







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8 things you'll be paying more for soon

http://www.walletpop.com/blog/2010/09/30/10-things-youll-be-paying-more-for-soon/<br><div style="color:rgb(60%,60%,60%)">Sent with <a

(BN) Fed’s Dudley Says Further Easing Probably Warranted (Update3)

Bloomberg News, 

Fed's Dudley Says Further Easing Probably Warranted

Oct. 1 (Bloomberg) -- Federal Reserve Bank of New York President William Dudley said the outlook for U.S. job growth and inflation is "unacceptable" and that the Fed will probably need to take action to spur the recovery and avert deflation.

"We have tools that can provide additional stimulus at costs that do not appear to be prohibitive," Dudley, who serves as vice chairman of the Fed's policy-setting Open Market Committee, said today in a speech to business journalists in New York. "Further action is likely to be warranted unless the economic outlook evolves in a way that makes me more confident that we will see better outcomes for both employment and inflation before too long."

Dudley's remarks are one of the clearest signs that policy makers will start a second round of unconventional monetary easing as soon as the FOMC's next meeting Nov. 2-3. While other Fed officials voiced a range of views in speeches this week, Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said yesterday that the central bank has a duty to aid the U.S. economy as the jobless rate holds near 10 percent.

Purchases of more assets by the Fed are "pretty close to a done deal," said Stephen Stanley, chief economist at Pierpont Securities LLC in Stamford, Connecticut, and a former Fed researcher. The central bank is making the case that "unemployment is high, inflation is low, we need to start moving the needle in the right direction and even if it doesn't move it by a lot you just do it."

Fed's Evans

Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago President Charles Evans also said today he favors further monetary accommodation as "we still have a long road ahead before we catch up to the level of activity we would have achieved in the absence of a crisis, or any other shock." Evans doesn't vote on the rate-setting FOMC this year.

Lowering long-term interest rates by restarting purchases of Treasuries or mortgage debt would have a "significant" effect on the economy by supporting the value of homes and stocks, making housing and refinancing mortgages more affordable and reducing the cost of capital for businesses, Dudley, 57, said to a Society of American Business Editors and Writers conference.

"Both the current levels of unemployment and inflation and the timeframe over which they are likely to return to levels consistent with our mandate are unacceptable," Dudley said. "The longer this situation prevails and the U.S. economy is stuck with the current level of slack and disinflationary pressure, the greater the likelihood that a further shock could push us still further from our dual mandate objectives and closer to outright deflation."

Fed 'Not Happy'

Dudley's speech "just drove home the point that the Fed is not happy with the current rate of economic growth and the below-targeted rate of price inflation," said John Lonski, chief economist of Moody's Capital Markets Group in New York.

Lonski said he expects the central bank to announce bond purchases at its November meeting.

Responding to questions afterward, Dudley said he's not concerned the U.S. will relapse into recession and that he's expecting the current 2 percent growth to "gradually accelerate."

"What I'm less confident about is how fast we're going to get back to our objectives" of price stability and full employment, he said.

The yield on 2-year Treasury notes fell to a record low as a report showed U.S. manufacturing growth slowed. The 10-year note yield was little changed at 2.52 percent at 11:20 a.m. in New York, according to BGCantor Market Data. The 2-year note yield was little changed at 0.42 percent after earlier touching the record low of 0.4066 percent.

Buying Bonds

Paul Gifford, chief investment officer at 1st Source Investment Advisors in South Bend, Indiana, said he's been buying long-term bonds during the last two weeks because he's convinced the Fed will continue to stimulate the economy.

"I do believe the Fed has every intent to keep rates low and the market believes them," said Gifford, who manages $1 billion in fixed-income assets. "We continue to get weak economic data and if you see that continue then you'll see more Fed actions."

The risk that inflation expectations rise because of asset purchases can be countered by a "credible" plan from the Fed to exit the unprecedented stimulus with tools such as term deposit accounts, Dudley said. Also, "there is nothing to worry about" on expanding Fed exposure to higher short-term rates, he said.

Dudley said that $500 billion of purchases, for example, would add as much stimulus as reducing the Fed's benchmark rate 0.5 percentage point to 0.75 percentage point, depending on how long investors expect the Fed to hold the assets.

Another Option

Another option is for the Fed to announce an explicit inflation goal and then, if price increases are too slow, potentially aim to overshoot the goal in future years, he said. One risk is that investors may "mistakenly" conclude that the Fed was "tinkering with its long-run inflation objective," undermining the change in policy.

Dudley's comments differ from the FOMC's Sept. 21 statement that it's prepared to ease policy "if needed" to spur growth and achieve its mandate of stable prices and full employment.

The jobless rate has been above 9 percent since the worst recession since the Great Depression ended in June 2009. Inflation measures are "somewhat below" levels the FOMC judges consistent with its mandate, the Fed panel said in its statement last month.

Plosser and Lockhart

Dudley declined to comment on what he'll advocate at the next meeting or to predict its outcome. Some policy makers may not be on board: Philadelphia Fed President Charles Plosser said Sept. 29 that he doesn't see how additional asset purchases will help employment in the near term, while Dennis Lockhart of the Atlanta Fed said Sept. 28 that he hadn't made up his mind yet on easing policy.

"We've fleshed out the camps over the course of the week," Pierpont's Stanley said. "My sense is focusing on anyone other than Bernanke at this point is probably getting you off the ball" and "you can view a lot of what Dudley's saying almost as if he's a proxy for Bernanke."

To contact the reporters on this story: Scott Lanman in Washington at slanman@bloomberg.net Caroline Salas in New York at csalas1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Christopher Wellisz at cwellisz@bloomberg.net


(BN) Pentagon Losing Control of Bombs to China's Monopoly

Bloomberg News, sent from my iPhone.

Pentagon Losing Control of Bombs to China's Monopoly

Sept. 30 (Bloomberg) -- A senior manager at a company that churns out metals routinely used in U.S. smart bombs pauses in mid-sentence when his phone rings: a Wall Street stockbroker looking for information. He makes a note to have an assistant call back -- someone who is fluent in English, not just Chinese.

"It's a seller's market now," says Bai Baosheng, 43, puffing a cigarette in his office in Baotou, China, where his company sells bags of powder containing a metallic element known as neodymium, vital in tiny magnets that direct the fins of bombs dropped by U.S. Air Force jets in Afghanistan.

A generation after Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping made mastering neodymium and 16 other elements known as rare earths a priority, China dominates the market, with far-reaching effects ranging from global trade friction to U.S. job losses and threats to national security.

The U.S. handed its main economic rival power to dictate access to these building blocks of modern weapons by ceding control of prices and supply, according to dozens of interviews with industry executives, congressional leaders and policy experts. China in July reduced rare-earth export quotas for the rest of the year by 72 percent, sending prices up more than sixfold for some elements.

Military officials are only now conducting an inventory of where and how U.S. suppliers use the obscure but essential substances -- including those that silence the whoosh of Boeing Co. helicopter blades, direct Raytheon Co. missiles and target guns in General Dynamics Corp. tanks.

Warning Signs

"The Pentagon has been incredibly negligent," said Peter Leitner, who was a senior strategic trade adviser at the Defense Department from 1986 to 2007. "There are plenty of early warning signs that China will use its leverage over these materials as a weapon."

China may already be flexing its muscles amid a diplomatic spat with its East Asian neighbor Japan. China last week imposed a "de facto" ban on exports to Japan of the metals used in liquid crystal displays and laptop computers, Japanese Economy Minister Banri Kaieda said Sept. 28. That followed Japan's detention of a Chinese fishing boat captain whose ship collided with two Japanese Coast Guard vessels. Japan later released the man.

No such ban exists, China's Ministry of Commerce spokesman Chen Rongkai said.

New Factor

"What it does, clearly, is bring a new factor into the consideration of supply of critical materials," said Dudley Kingsnorth, director of Industrial Minerals Co. of Australia, a forecaster in Perth.

The U.S. Congress's investigative arm, the Government Accountability Office, in April warned of "vulnerabilities" for the military because of the lack of domestic rare-earth supplies. The House of Representatives Armed Services Committee will hold a hearing in October, the same month a Pentagon report on how to secure future supplies of the metals is due.

"The department has long recognized that rare-earth elements are important raw material inputs for many defense systems and that many companies in our base have expressed concern regarding the future availability of the refined products of these elements," Brett Lambert, director of the Pentagon's Office of Industrial Policy, said.

While two rare-earth projects are scheduled to ramp up production by the end of 2012 -- one owned by Molycorp Inc. in California and another by Lynas Corp. in Australia -- the GAO says it may take 15 years to rebuild a U.S. manufacturing supply chain. China makes virtually all the metals refined from rare earths, the agency says. The elements are also needed for hybrid-electric cars and wind turbines, one reason supply may fall short of demand in 2014 even with the new mines, according to Kingsnorth of Imcoa.

Doggy Day Care

Just how far U.S. manufacturing has waned is apparent at a factory in Valparaiso, Indiana, where dogs skitter across a bare concrete shop floor, their nails clicking. This brick plant on Elm Street once made 80 percent of the rare-earth magnets in laser-guided U.S. smart bombs, according to U.S. Senator Evan Bayh, a Democrat from Indiana. In 2003, the plant's owner shifted work to China, costing 230 jobs.

Now the plant houses Coco's Canine Cabana, a doggy day care the current tenants started to supplement sagging income from their machine shop. On most days dogs outnumber the 15 metalworkers, said Kathy DeFries, co-owner of Excel Machine Technologies Inc.

"When things got slow for manufacturing, we had this big empty shop floor," said DeFries, nuzzling a floppy-eared puppy. "It's a great stress reliever."

Expensive to Mine

The rare earths are chemically similar elements, with names such as yttrium and dysprosium. China has the largest share of worldwide reserves, about 36 percent, and the U.S. is second, with 13 percent, the U.S. Geological Survey says. While the elements aren't rare, they're less frequently found in profitable concentrations, expensive for Western producers to extract and often laced with radioactive elements.

China produced 120,000 tons, or 97 percent, of the world's 124,000-ton supply last year, according to the GAO. Half of that came from Baotou, said Kingsnorth. The raw elements have many applications. Neodymium is used by Chinese companies including magnet makers, who sell to U.S. suppliers of defense contractors.

Export Quotas

Export quotas and taxes for overseas buyers that the GAO says can reach 25 percent are pushing up prices of elements even in relatively large supply. For example, the cost of a kilogram of samarium powder, needed for the navigation system of General Dynamics' M1A2 Abrams tank, jumped to $34 in early September, from $4.50 in June, according to U.K. researcher Metal Pages Ltd.

The U.S. and the European Union consider Chinese restrictions on a range of raw goods part of a strategy to draw in higher-paying manufacturing jobs by making them cheaper to buy inside China. The export taxes violate World Trade Organization rules because China pledged to limit them to 84 product categories when it joined the trade group in 2001, said Terence Stewart, managing partner of Washington law firm Stewart & Stewart. In 2010, China had taxes on 329, he said.

The U.S. and the EU filed a WTO complaint over raw materials including bauxite and coke last year. China's commerce minister, Chen Deming, said Aug. 28 that the policies comply with WTO rules.

Some manufacturers in China are lobbying the ministry to back off the latest quotas because a dispute will disrupt the market, said Constantine Karayannopoulos, chief executive officer of Toronto-based Neo Material Technologies Inc., which has rare-earth production facilities in China.

Risk of Trade War

"It was very sudden and didn't give the industry any time to adjust," he said. "This quota action could risk a trade war."

For Western companies, China's policies are creating the real "unobtanium," the fictional mineral fought over in James Cameron's 2009 film "Avatar."

It's taking as long as 10 weeks to get neodymium magnets, double the previous wait time, said Joe Schrantz, group supply chain manager at Moog Inc. in East Aurora, New York. He said the company buys hundreds of thousands of magnets a year to make motors for cars, trucks and weapons including Raytheon's AMRAAM -- or Advanced Medium-Range Air-to-Air Missile -- and Boeing's Joint Direct Attack Munition, a tail fin kit for making precision-guided "smart" bombs out of ordinary weapons.

Rising Prices

Rising neodymium prices are forcing up the price of magnets, which typically cost between $2 and $30 apiece. That's having a "significant" effect on profit, and suppliers say costs will keep going up, Schrantz said. The company is considering buying blocks of raw material and storing it.

"If everybody does that, then it's going to get really crazy," he said.

Neodymium, a silvery metal, is essential in a magnetic alloy developed separately by engineers at General Motors Co. in Detroit and Sumitomo Special Metals Co. in Japan in the 1980s. The magnets are now in millions of stereo speakers, computer disk drives and motors.

In missiles, they replace a hydraulic system of pumps and fluids that was costlier and heavier. Motors in weapons like the JDAM might be three times as big without advanced magnets, said Todd Brewster, senior design engineer at Kollmorgen, a unit of Washington-based Danaher Corp. The JDAM has been used extensively in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Hybrid-Electric Motors

A Chinese supplier makes neodymium magnets for hybrid- electric motors the Navy is developing to cut fuel use of Arleigh Burke-class destroyers, according to the GAO. The agency also says Lockheed Martin Corp.'s SPY-1 radar on Aegis destroyers contains samarium-cobalt magnets that will need to be replaced over 35 years. China is virtually the only supplier of yttrium needed for laser gun sights in the General Dynamics Abrams tank, the U.S. Geological Survey says.

"It's amazing how this issue seems to have caught the country off guard," said U.S. Representative Mike Coffman, a Colorado Republican who was a U.S. Marine Corps infantry officer. He noted that China's capabilities have expanded significantly since 2001, when the U.S. Army canceled plans to buy Chinese-made berets under pressure from Congress. "How ironic is that we were concerned about berets?"

Jon Kasle, a spokesman for Raytheon of Waltham, Massachusetts, said his company hasn't experienced supply shortages. Spokesmen for Bethesda, Maryland-based Lockheed Martin; General Dynamics, of Falls Church, Virginia; and Chicago-based Boeing declined to comment. "There is a particular need to focus on rare-earth minerals," said Alexis Allen, spokeswoman for the Aerospace Industries Association, an Arlington, Virginia-based lobby group for defense contractors. "The Department of Defense should consider many alternatives to reliable access."

Stockpile

One option is to stockpile the metals with allies. Since 1994 the Pentagon has sold off excess raw materials for $7 billion.

Another is subsidies of U.S. manufacturing. The U.S. House of Representatives approved yesterday a proposal by Representative Kathy Dahlkemper, a Pennsylvania Democrat, that would set up a research and development program at the Department of Energy to help U.S. rare-earth manufacturers such as Molycorp with measures including loan guarantees. To become law the bill, which cleared the House on a 325-98 vote, must have a matching Senate version and be signed by the president. Currently there is no such measure.

While Molycorp plans to mine almost 20,000 tons of rare earths annually by late 2012, it doesn't yet have the capacity to refine the raw elements into metals.

'No Substitute'

Complicating matters is that even the Pentagon has been unsure of its own needs. Stephen Luckowski, chief of materials manufacturing and prototype technology at the U.S. Army's Picatinny Arsenal in New Jersey, told participants at a February conference in Cleveland that it took him a month to learn that rare-earth metals are in the nose of the Excalibur missile, and he still wasn't certain of the exact supply route. Luckowski, a metallurgist, was sure the Army needed the rare earths. "That may be a case where you have no substitute," he said.

China's dominance in the materials comes as it scours the planet for resources to feed its economy, which is expanding more than 10 percent this year while the U.S. struggles with an almost 10 percent unemployment rate. The country has been snapping up oilfields, buying copper mines and investing in wind power. China is also expanding its military, developing an aircraft carrier, nuclear-powered submarines and ballistic missiles, the Pentagon said in an August report.

Deng's Quotation

In the lobby of Bai's company, a unit of state-owned Baotou Iron & Steel Group Co., a now-famous 1992 quotation by Deng is emblazoned in pink marble. It reads: "The Middle East has oil, and China has rare earths." A May interview with Bai is regularly interrupted by calls from stockbrokers, analysts and fund managers looking to learn more about the company.

"Because export quotas are limited, we basically can choose our clients; we are no longer compelled to sell to just about anybody who comes knocking," said Bai, who handles investor relations for Inner Mongolia Baotou Steel Rare-Earth Hi-Tech Co. The shares have more than doubled in the past year, reaching 72.72 yuan on Sept. 29, giving the company a market value of $8.8 billion.

The company is especially proud of the samarium-cobalt magnets used in the Shenzhou 7 space capsule that lifted Chinese astronauts into space in 2008. They were developed at the nearby Baotou Research Institute of Rare Earths.

Environmental Costs

The export restrictions compensate for the heavy environmental toll, said Zhang Anwen, vice secretary of the Chinese Society of Rare Earths, a group of researchers in Beijing. "It's unfair for the U.S. to be pointing fingers at China now," he said. "To undo the damage done to the earth, we need to return the vegetation, increase water flow and treat the ground. It's an extremely costly repair."

Deng set China on its path with a 1986 initiative whose goals included acquisition of technology in "exotic materials" such as rare-earth metals, new energy compounds and high- capacity engineering plastics, according to a U.S. House of Representatives committee report.

That year Zhu Weiheng, an electrical engineer at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, wrote a report to Chinese officials suggesting they control exports of rare-earth minerals because of their high value in manufacturing. Zhu had studied at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and in 1965 designed a motor for China's first satellite, the East is Red. Later he spent part of Chinese leader Mao Zedong's Cultural Revolution under arrest as a suspected spy.

'Real Revolution'

By the early 1980s, Zhu was testing samples of neodymium iron boron, the alloy perfected by engineers at GM and Sumitomo. Two Chinese research institutes also developed it, said Zhu, 91. "It was a real revolution," he said.

In 1990, Zhang Hong, the Chinese academy's deputy director of technology, visited Magnequench, a GM unit in Indiana that used a spinning wheel to quench, or cool, the molten alloy into flakes to make magnets. Five years later, a group including then state-owned San Huan New Materials and Hightech Inc. agreed to buy Magnequench.

The Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, a cross-agency board that reviews foreign takeover deals, allowed the purchase partly because the partners agreed to keep open facilities in the U.S.

Shipped to China

The company opened a new plant in Tianjin in 1998 and shut a former GM operation in Anderson, Indiana, four years later. Magnequench also purchased and later closed the factory in Valparaiso, where Kathy DeFries now boards dogs for $5 an hour. That plant's tools were shipped to three San Huan operations in China, according to Shannon Song, a Beijing-based executive at Magnequench.

"What they were basically doing was replicating the production lines in China," said Leitner, the former Pentagon official.

Indiana's Bayh and Hillary Clinton, now U.S. secretary of state, both cited Magnequench as an example of the U.S. losing jobs and expertise to China. In the 1990s a dozen U.S.-based suppliers of magnets employed 6,000 people. Today there are four, employing 500, said Ed Richardson, vice president of Thomas & Skinner Inc. in Indianapolis, one of the survivors.

Business Decision

The plant closures were a business decision after the technology bust in 2000 hurt sales, Song said. Most of the Valparaiso factory's business came from computer makers; defense was a minor share, she said. In 2001, labor costs in Anderson averaged $7.32 per kilogram of neodymium powder on top of $10.07 in direct production overhead, she estimates. In 2003 in Tianjin, labor costs were 16 cents and overhead $3.20.

"It was a question of letting the ship sink or doing something to cut the operating cost," she said.

Toronto-based AMR Technologies Inc. bought Magnequench in 2005 and renamed the merged company Neo. The company's shares rose to C$4.92 yesterday from as little as C$1.05 in early 2009.

San Huan, now known as Beijing Zhong Ke San Huan High-Tech Co., went public in 2000. Sales have risen more than fourfold, from 371 million yuan that year to 1.6 billion yuan in 2009. The stock has almost tripled in the past year, reaching 17.14 yuan on Sept. 29.

God and Magnets

"God created the universe from nothing and organized it with the help of a magnet," the company declares on its website, in English and Chinese.

Shares of Aluminum Corp. of China Ltd. rose 18 percent over the past two days in Shanghai trading after its parent announced a plan to invest at least 10 billion yuan ($1.5 billion) to build a rare earth production base in Jiangxi province with a local partner.

A group of U.S. investors led by Denver-based private equity firm Resource Capital Funds wants to challenge China's dominance by restoring the fortunes of Molycorp, the largest supplier of rare earths for much of the last century. Its mine, west of Las Vegas in California's Mojave Desert, shut eight years ago, under pressure from Chinese competitors and regulatory scrutiny of wastewater spills.

Molycorp, based near Denver, says it needs $511 million to refurbish and expand. It raised $379 million in its July share sale, and has applied for a $280 million loan guarantee under a U.S. Department of Energy program for "innovative technologies." The shares have almost doubled, closing at $26.73 yesterday from $14 in July.

Joshua Trees

Costs of environmental compliance will be steep, Molycorp warns in a filing that says it spent $3 million last year alone. Beyond a 300-foot-deep open pit, John Benfield, manager of quality assurance, points to a valley sheltering Joshua trees where slurry left after processing ore will be pumped and harden like concrete.

The trees, protected under California law, will be given new homes after their precise positions are measured with compasses. Their bark burns in the desert sun without the right orientation. Even so, only 20 percent of replanted trees survive, Benfield said.

The company will keep processing costs to $1.26 per pound, half the average in China, by recycling more water and using a single acid to separate elements, said Mark Smith, Molycorp's CEO. Molycorp is also negotiating with potential partners to alloy metals and turn them into neodymium magnets in the U.S., creating as many as 900 jobs.

"It was a very, very strategic move that the Chinese made," he said. "They created a very, very large number of jobs for the citizens of China. We ought to be looking at executing that exact same strategy here in this country."

To contact the reporters on this story: Peter Robison in Seattle on robison@bloomberg.net Gopal Ratnam in Washington at gratnam1@bloomberg.net .

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Melissa Pozsgay in Paris at mpozsgay@bloomberg.net Gary Putka in Boston on gputka@bloomberg.net .

Find out more about Bloomberg for iPhone: http://m.bloomberg.com/iphone/



Ariz. Border Sheriff: Obama’s ‘Got His Hands Wrapped Around Our Throat' | CNSnews.com

Found this interesting link on the Drudge Report:

Ariz. Border Sheriff: Obama's 'Got His Hands Wrapped Around Our Throat' | CNSnews.com

http://cnsnews.com/news/article/76108

Code for Stuxnet super-worm that’s attacking Iranian computers contains Jewish cultural references

Hmmmmmm.


Rick Sanchez just e-mailed to say, "I knew it." That use of the word "Myrtus" — which can be read as an allusion to Esther — to name a file inside the code is one of several murky clues that have emerged as computer experts try to trace the origin and purpose of the rogue [...]

Read this post »








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Obamacare working as planned? Health Insurance companies leaving the market

RWB News: If the plan was to put America on a government ran healthcare system Obamacare is doing a great job taking us there.

Several businesses like McDonalds are reporting they can not implement the new mandates included in Obamacare and remain a viable business finacially. In a memo McDonalds warned federal regulators that it could drop its health insurance plan for nearly 30,000 hourly restaurant workers unless regulators waive a new requirement of the U.S. health overhaul…..we can't survive and do the mandates as listed…pretty clear memo.

Earlier last month it was reported that several insurance companies would be dropping all health insurance plans that included coverage for children. I know I know, Those big mean insurance companies are just out to make money. When the monstrosity they call Obamacare was passed no one had read it. Remember Nancy Pelosi's motto "we have to pass it so you can see what is in it". Well it looks like businesses and Insurance Companies are finally seeing "what's in it" and don't like what they are seeing.  I know it is hard for a liberal or a member of the "new" democratic party to believe the main goal of a business is to "survive". Common sense 101 says "when a business survives they can keep people employed and sometimes even hire more people". When they see something that may keep them from "surviving" they have to make adjustments or die.

Principal Financial Group said Thursday that it will leave the medical insurance business, further reducing competition among health insurers in Iowa. The company, based in Iowa, provides coverage to about 840,000 people who receive their insurance through an employer (guess those people don't fall into the category of "If you like your insurance you can keep it").  The Chairman of Principle is on record saying "The medical business continues to be one that undergoes rapid change, which would mean investing additional capital into the business to be able to offer competitive products.  For us, that just does not make sense."

So we have big businesses saying they are be forced to drop health insurance for thousands of people if this bill is not changed, we have insurance companies dropping children because they can't afford the new regulations in Obamacare and "survive" and smaller insurance companies going out of business because of the "change" that is coming.  So if businesses take away healthcare coverage for their employees and insurance companies start dropping coverage for children where do they all go? You will have a choice of a few "major" private insurance  companies that you probably won't be able to afford or you can stand in line at a government healthcare clinic while your spouse waits in the government cheese line. Common Sense 101! Repeal and Replace Obamacare!!


As reported by the NY Times

The Principal Financial Group announced on Thursday that it planned to stop selling health insurance, another sign of upheaval emerging among insurers as the new federal health law starts to take effect.

The company, based in Iowa, provides coverage to about 840,000 people who receive their insurance through an employer.

Principal's decision closely tracks moves by other insurers that have indicated in recent weeks that they plan to drop out of certain segments of the market, like the business of selling child-only policies. State regulators say some insurance companies are already threatening to leave particular markets because of the new law. And some regulators in states like Maine and Iowa have asked the Obama administration to give insurers more time to comply with some of the new rules.

"What you're seeing is the beginning of some serious math and some posturing," said Len Nichols, a health economist and policy expert at George Mason University. While some insurers, like Principal, are choosing to leave the business rather than make the necessary investments to stay, others may be simply trying to delay some of the new rules or overturn them, he said.

McDonald's recently asked federal officials for an exemption to rules that would ban the kind of health plans many of its restaurant workers have, because the existing policies sharply limit coverage. The McDonald's push was first reported by The Wall Street Journal on Wednesday night. A McDonald's spokeswoman declined to comment on that report, and the company has denied any intention of dropping coverage for its employees.

Read the rest of the story: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/01/health/policy/01insure.html?_r=2&scp=1&sq=principal&st=cse

swenbwr







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Obama Administration Admits to Inviting FBI Terror Suspect to White House For

Last Friday FBI agents raided the homes of far left activists in Chicago and Minneapolis who are linked to the Marxist FARC terrorists and Islamic radicals as part of a terrorism investigation.

The home of radical Hatem Abudayyeh in Chicago was raided in the terror sweep.

Radical Hatem Abudayyeh protested against Israel in Chicago in January 2009. (Daylife)

Hatem Abudayyeh is the executive director of the Arab American Action Network (AAAN). Hatem Abudayyeh has been with the Arab American Action Network (AAAN) since 1999, and was appointed Executive Director in 2003. The Arab American Action Network was founded by former PLO operative and close Obama family friend Rashid Khalidi. Obama was a director of the Woods Fund from 1994 through 2001, when the board approved a $40,000 grant to the Arab American Action Network.

In 2003 Barack Obama was an honored guest at a dinner sponsored by the AAAN for former PLO-operative Rashid Khalidi. During the dinner a video was taken that shows Barack Obama celebrating with members of this Palestinian group who are openly hostile towards Israel. Barack Obama even gave a toast to a Rashid Khalidi at this going away party. The LA Times will not release the video from this Jew-bashing dinner.

Not only was Hatem Abudayyeh's radical organization given $40,000 by Barack Obama and the Woods Fund but his organization also collected nearly half a million in taxpayer money.

Today the Obama Administration admitted that Abudayyeh was invited to the White House in April for a press briefing to Arab-American leaders.
Josh Gerstein at the Politico reported:

An Arab-American activist who attended an outreach session at the White House complex in April had his Chicago home raided by the FBI last week and appears to be a focus of an unfolding federal terrorism-support investigation.

Hatem Abudayyeh, who serves as executive director of the Arab-American Action Network, took part in a meeting for Arab-American leaders held in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on April 22, according to appointment data posted on the White House website.

"He attended a briefing held by the Office of Public Engagement on April 22, 2010, to update members of the Arab-American community on issues of their concern," White House spokesman Shin Inouye said.

The guest list for the event was drafted by the Arab-American Institute. Inouye said President Barack Obama did not take part in the session, which appears to have involved more than 80 people…

…The warrant and subpoena suggest the probe, which is being run by U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald in Chicago, is focusing on illegal support for terrorist organizations, particularly by a Minnesota-based group called the Freedom Road Socialist Organization. PFLP, FARC and Hezbollah are designated as terrorist groups by the U.S. government. A spokesman for Fitzgerald's office declined to comment on the probe.

Abudayyeh has not been charged with any crime, nor do the court documents made public by targets of the searches make any explicit allegation of ties between the Chicago activist and any of the groups.

The White House briefing Abudayyeh attended was organized by the Arab-American Institute in connection with its annual dinner and related events, AAI President James Zogby said Friday.

"Each year we do a leadership summit of our institute leadership also of leadership from the Arab-American network. That is a network of Arab –American community and social service organizations and the group in Chicago is one of the network members and so they were invited," Zogby said. "We did, as part of the weekend, a White House briefing and Hatem was included as part of the network."

Zogby said the national network Abudayyeh's group is part of works on domestic issues, such as immigration reform and civil liberties. "I know Hatem is active on those issues in Chicago. He's very much a part of immigration reform coalitions there. That that would have been the purpose of the network's inclusion in this meeting," Zogby said…

A lawyer for Abudayyeh, Jim Fennerty, said he was not aware of his client's White House visit. Asked if the investigation into Abudayyeh was underway at the time of his White House visit in April, Finnerty said, "We only became aware of [the probe] when people got their houses raided and search warrants carried out…..I think the grand jury started sitting a year ago though." The lawyer said the investigation may extend back to protests held in connection with the Republican National Convention in St. Paul, Minn., in 2008.

Fennerty said he believed his client was being targeted because of his anti-war activism. On the Israeli-Palestinian issue, the attorney said Abudayyeh supports "a single, secular democratic state," not the two-state solution endorsed by the U.S.

In a 2006 interview with Fight Back News, an outlet run by Minneapolis activist Kelly, Abudayyeh seemed to disagree rather strenuously with at least some of the U.S. government's use of the "terrorist" label.

"The U.S. and Israel will continue to describe Hamas, Hezbollah and the other Palestinian and Lebanese resistance organizations as 'terrorists,' but the real terrorists are the governments and military forces of the U.S. and Israel," Abudayyeh said. "The vast majority of the world sees and understands this, and are in full support of Lebanese, Palestinian and worldwide resistance to Israel and the U.S.'s naked aggression, war, imperialism and occupation."

Fennerty said he was surprised to hear Abudayyeh was invited to a White House event. "He runs like a social-welfare office that helps people get citizenship, apply for benefits, welfare if they're entitled to it," the lawyer said.

According to a bio on the AAAN website, Abudayyeh has been affiliated with the group since 1999 and took over as executive director in 2003.

Abudayyeh's White House visit was noted Thursday by several conservative websites, including the Gateway Pundit blog at First Things magazine.

Abudayyeh's group, AAAN, briefly drew attention during the presidential campaign following reports that a foundation on whose board Obama served donated $40,000 to the group for "community organizing" in 2001. Conservative critics said the group and Abudayyeh have promoted anti-Israeli views. AAAN officials said the organization is strictly focused on local community issues and doesn't get involved in international politics.

In 2003, Obama spoke at an AAAN-sponsored farewell dinner for Rashid Khalidi, a professor who was decamping from the University of Chicago to Columbia. During the 2008 campaign, the Los Angeles Times obtained a video of the event and reported that Obama lavished praise on Khalidi, who once served as a spokesman for the Palestinian Liberation Organization. Other speakers at the event railed against Israeli policies.

Late in the 2008 campaign, Republican nominee Sen. John McCain attacked the Times for failing to make the video public. The newspaper said it obtained the video on the condition that it not be released publicly.

Previously:
FBI Raids Home of RNC Leftist Activist As Part of Terrorism Investigation
FBI Raids Home of Obama Associate & Radical AAAN Leader in Terrorism Sweep








Sent from my iPhone

Bin Laden Threatens Mumbai-Style Terrorist Attacks on the West

Okay, update to my previous post, "Two British Brothers 'At Heart' of al-Qaeda Plot to Launch Mumbai-Style Terrorist Attacks on the West."

At Fox News, "
U.S. Officials: Bin Laden Believed to Be Involved in European Plot":

Senior Al Qaeda leaders, including Usama Bin Laden, are believed to be behind efforts to mount a Mumbai-style attack on Westerners in European cities, a senior U.S. intelligence official told Fox News, though it's not clear how deeply involved Bin Laden was in the plot.

The news comes on the same day that Bin Laden released an audio recording in which he depicts the Pakistani government as uncaring and calls for the creation of a new relief organization to help Muslims after this summer's devastating floods.

The emerging details of the European plot point to coordinated shooting sprees or attacks and kidnappings in Britain, France and Germany -- tactics much favored by Al Qaeda. The plot was moving forward with dual national citizens, who had Pakistani and European passports, the official told Fox News, adding that Western officials intended to disrupt the plot by publicly exposing it.

Another senior U.S. official told Fox News that there is "some evidence within the intelligence community that Bid Laden was involved in plotting this foiled attack."
More at the link.

See also Long War Journal, "
Report: Osama bin Laden ordered Mumbai-style attacks in Europe."







Sent from my iPhone

Hypocrisy Alert: Mexico Builds Border Fence on Its Southern Border

http://gatewaypundit.firstthings.com/2010/10/hypocrisy-alert-mexico-builds-border-fence-on-its-southern-border/
Posted by Jim Hoft on Friday, October 1, 2010, 3:40 PM

Are you aware that Mexico is erecting a fence on their southern border?
Via Fox Nation -
Reporting from Guatemala City, Danilo Valladares of the Inter-Press Service (IPS) notes that there will be one more barrier for Guatemalan immigrants in their trek to the United States. In addition to dodging dangerous drug traffickers and immigration officials, the latest obstacle is emerging: a wall between Guatemala and Mexico.
According to the head of customs for Mexico’s tax administration, Raul Diaz, the Mexican border state of Chiapas is constructing a wall along the country’s southern border with Guatemala, along the river Suchiate which divides the countries. Diaz says the purpose of the wall is to prevent the passage of contraband, but admits, “It could also prevent the free passage of illegal immigrants.”
According to Mexico’s National Commission on Human Rights (CNDH), 500,000 people from Central America cross into Mexico illegally every year — the vast majority of them attempting to reach the United States. In addition, smugglers reportedly use the Suchiate River to move goods across the international border without paying duty taxes.
Just as Mexican authorities have opposed more strict border enforcement and the construction of a border fence along the U.S. border with their country, Mexico is now receiving a great deal of criticism from Guatemalan officials.
You can almost smell the hypocrisy, can’t you?
As Russ Vaughn at American Thinker points out so succinctly, “When it comes to shameless hypocrisy, it appears the mendacious Mexicans could teach even the duplicitous Democrats a few things.”
Exactly.

BREAKING: Rick Sanchez Fired From CNN

http://gatewaypundit.firstthings.com/2010/10/breaking-rick-sanchez-fired-from-cnn/


Posted by John Schulenburg on Friday, October 1, 2010, 4:14 PM
After lashing out at “the Jews” last night, CNN actually did something right for a change…
Mediaite reported:
CNN released this statement today:
“Rick Sanchez is no longer with the company. We thank Rick for his years of service and we wish him well.“
They will broadcast CNN Newsroom from 3-5pm for the foreseeable future.
Ext Question: If Rick Sanchez said “Christians” instead of “Jews” and “Rush Limbaugh” instead of “Jon Stewart”, would he still have been fired? Somehow I doubt it.

Iowa’s third largest health insurer cuts 1,500 jobs, exits health insurance business

http://redwhitebluenews.com/?p=5812

Iowa’s third largest health insurer cuts 1,500 jobs, exits health insurance business

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RWB News: The fewer health insurance companies, the less health insurance competition.  The spiral begins.
As posted on DesMoinesRegister.com
Principal Financial Group said Thursday that it will leave the medical insurance business, further reducing competition among health insurers in Iowa.
Principal will transfer the renewal rights for its health insurance customers in Iowa and 30 other states to UnitedHealthcare over the next 36 months.
The move will guarantee that all Principal health insurance customers will be able to get a quote for a new policy despite pre-existing conditions, said Iowa Insurance Commissioner Susan Voss.
The decision means the disappearance of the third-largest health insurer in Iowa at a time when half a dozen other small insurers have told the Iowa Insurance Division that they also plan to quit selling health insurance in Iowa.
The health insurance industry is consolidating, Voss said, driven by a combination of market forces and increased government regulation.
UnitedHealthcare, of Minnetonka, Minn., is owned by publicly traded UnitedHealth Group, one of the nation’s largest private health insurers and the second-largest health insurer in Iowa after Wellmark Blue Cross and Blue Shield.
Principal said about 1,500 jobs in its medical insurance unit, including about 650 in the Des Moines area, will be eliminated in the next three years. About 150 of those cuts will be made within the next 30 days.
Principal has about 14,000 employees worldwide and about 7,000 workers in the Des Moines area.
The insurer said some employees could be hired by UnitedHealthcare; others will find jobs within Principal. Severance and outplacement assistance will be available.
Neither company said whether money would change hands in the deal. Officials at both insurers declined to say whether UnitedHealthcare would pay Principal for the right to renew Principal policies as they come due during the next three years.
Principal will continue to offer vision, dental and disability policies.
The move will free $100 million to $120 million of capital that can be used to expand other parts of Principal’s business, said Principal’s Dan Houston.
He said the company decided to quit the health care business because it was not growing as fast as three other areas where Principal wants to commit resources – the retirement industry, where Principal is the largest administrator of 401(k) plans in the nation; institutional asset management; and international operations.
New federal and state regulations were not a big factor in the decision, Houston said, although he added that the health insurance industry will “continue to be under the shadow of a lot of regulatory matters” for at least the next five years.
If Principal stayed in the business, it faced significant new investments, said Principal Vice President Mary O’Keefe. “The health insurance industry increasingly requires scale,” she said. The company believes that money could be better spent in other areas, O’Keefe said.
Wellmark spokesman Rob Schweers said he doubted Principal’s exit from the market would affect his company much, because more than 90 percent of Principal’s health insurance business is in other states, while Wellmark focuses on Iowa and South Dakota.
Also, he said, Principal does not sell individual health policies or Medicare supplement plans, which are significant parts of Wellmark’s business.
Principal handles health insurance for about 14,000 businesses with about 830,000 employees and dependents, said Houston, president of Principal’s retirement, insurance and financial services division.
UnitedHealthcare executive Dan Kueter declined to say how many Principal customers the company believes it can convert to UnitedHealthcare.
The company’s products and services in Iowa are similar to Principal’s, but the company’s national network is much larger, said Kueter, chief of UnitedHealthcare’s operations in Iowa and central Illinois. Nationally, he said, the company’s network includes 600,000 doctors and other health professionals, 5,000 hospitals and 60,000 pharmacies.
If UnitedHealthcare re-news all Principal customers, the insurer will increase its business in Iowa by 55 percent, to annual premiums of $323 million. Wellmark has $2.1 billion in premiums, according to 2009 data from the Iowa Insurance Division. That does not include fees the companies receive for administering self-insured plans for large corporations.
Principal’s nationwide health insurance premiums amounted to $1.6 billion in 2009. If all those customers renew with UnitedHealthcare, they will increase the company’s nationwide business by 5 percent, pushing total premiums to $33.6 billion.
Insurance Commissioner Voss said Principal’s share of Iowa’s health insurance market has been declining for several years.
Principal said the decision will negatively affect earnings this year because it will cut off a source of income. As a result, third-quarter operating results will be down 3 to 4 cents a share and full-year results will be down by 18 to 20 cents a share, the company said.
The companies announced the agreement Thursday morning before the markets opened. Principal shares lost 3 cents to close at $25.92. UnitedHealth shares gained 1 cent to close at $35.12.
Original Post:  http://www.desmoinesregister.com/article/20101001/BUSINESS/10010350/1001/NEWS/Principal-cuts-1-500-jobs-exiting-health-business
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Feds Dropping Charges Against al Qaeda Linked Man

http://mypetjawa.mu.nu/archives/204183.php

October 01, 2010

Feds Dropping Charges Against al Qaeda Linked Man

This is why you don't send lawyers to a battlefield. It's hard enough prosecuting the ones here in the US, let alone sending in Marines to gather evidence in Kandahar:
Federal prosecutors have asked a judge to drop charges against the Afghan-born brother-in-law of Osama bin Laden's bodyguard, saying a key overseas witness was unavailable to testify. The decision was a striking reversal in the case against Ahmadullah Sais Niazi, who had been accused by prosecutors of lying about his ties to terrorist groups on his citizenship application.
The government alleged in court papers that Niazi was a dangerous threat who had spoken of jihad, traveled to Pakistan to meet with a high-ranking al-Qaida leader, and associated with the Taliban and a terrorist organization called Hezb-e-Islami, which fights international and U.S. troops in Afghanistan.
Thanks to Kenny. Related: Afghan National Arrested in CA for Ties to al Qaeda
OC Man Discussed Jihad, Domestic Terror: CAIR Angered
Good News: Al Qaeda Sympathizer and in-law of Top bin Laden Lieutenant Makes Bail in CA
OC Muslims More Worried About Profiling than Little Things, Like Terror Supporters in their Midst
US Muslim Coalition Warn They Will Boycott FBI
CA Man with Terror Connections Linked to Money Laundering Scheme

Ground Zero Mega Mosque Audaciously Diabolical Design:

http://atlasshrugs2000.typepad.com/atlas_shrugs/2010/10/ground-zero-mega-mosque-design-pentagons-and-jewish-stars.html

Ground Zero Mega Mosque Audaciously Diabolical Design:
Pentagons, Crosses, Jewish Stars

More observations on the diabolically audacious design of the Ground Zero mega mosque revealed this week. I thought this was a very good observation on the dreaded Ground Zero mega mosque; it Raufgazm2 was left in the Atlas comment section by TieDye:

Regarding the visual design of the facade of the mosque: Yes, there are many Stars of David, and as well, there are pentagons. They are stylized, but definitely there: the "clusters" of very thick framework within the design are all groupings of pentagon shapes.
Also, the "dip" in the roofline has the eye seeing two buildings, and the varying light and darker areas do give the impression of smoke - all this besides the sloped rows of Stars of David.

And hasn't anyone else wondered why these islamists chose this particular view for their news release?  Not just looking at the building - the eye is looking UP at an angle at the perceived height - just as were the most familiar photos of the towers of the World Trade Center.

Finally - considering what this building is, and where it is to be - there is not even the smallest possibility of the visual impression being coincidental.  And no such "mistakes" would just "happen" to occur.  This is so obviously a deliberate islamic victory design that I would venture the further possibility that if each and every one of those tiny-to-large openings, and/or design "lines" were counted, the total would reflect the total number of those slaughtered on 9/11/01.
In Islam, symbolism is all-important. Yes, the presence of the big sky ...... allah FUBAR :)

 

Study: ObamaCare will make doctor shortage 50% worse by 2015

http://hotair.com/archives/2010/10/01/study-obamacare-will-make-doctor-shortage-50-worse-by-2015/

Study: ObamaCare will make doctor shortage 50% worse by 2015

posted at 1:36 pm on October 1, 2010 by Ed Morrissey
printer-friendly

More good news on what we found out about ObamaCare after its passage comes from two different sources today.  First, a new study by the Association of American Medical Colleges and reported by Reuters shows that the bill will have a big impact on an expected shortage of physicians over the next few years — by amplifying it:
The U.S. healthcare reform law will worsen a shortage of physicians as millions of newly insured patients seek care, the Association of American Medical Colleges said on Thursday.
The group’s Center for Workforce Studies released new estimates that showed shortages would be 50 percent worse in 2015 than forecast.
“While previous projections showed a baseline shortage of 39,600 doctors in 2015, current estimates bring that number closer to 63,000, with a worsening of shortages through 2025,” the group said in a statement.
The artificial cap on reimbursements — a form of price-fixing — will be the main culprit.  With education becoming more and more expensive, physicians need to recoup their investment in it from plying their trade.  Unfortunately, government reimbursement schedules will force payments down through the entire industry, making specializations in areas that have Medicare or Medicaid implications much less attractive.  Those who can choose specialties will be more likely to go into cosmetic surgery, Lasik, and other areas where third-party payer structures are not an issue.
Speaking of third-party payers, another insurance company has called it quits ahead of the ObamaCare mandates.  Six more Iowa companies may follow suit soon, too.  Principal also cut 1500 jobs in Iowa, a rather sensitive state for those wishing to win re-election to the White House:
Principal Financial Group said Thursday that it will leave the medical insurance business, further reducing competition among health insurers in Iowa.
Principal will transfer the renewal rights for its health insurance customers in Iowa and 30 other states to UnitedHealthcare over the next 36 months. …
The decision means the disappearance of the third-largest health insurer in Iowa at a time when half a dozen other small insurers have told the Iowa Insurance Division that they also plan to quit selling health insurance in Iowa.
The health insurance industry is consolidating, Voss said, driven by a combination of market forces and increased government regulation.
The problem for policyholders is that United will have different offerings than those provided by Principal.  While they cannot be denied on the basis of pre-existing conditions, United will have the right to set its own terms for this risk pool, and given the upcoming mandates, those terms are likely to be less friendly than those offered by Principal.  In fact, it would have to be — otherwise, Principal wouldn’t have had to give up the business in the first place.
“Consolidation” means that smaller insurers will get squeezed out of the market.  Those insurers played significant roles in the health-insurance sector by offering plans to niche markets that suited their consumers better than one-size-fits-all plans offered by larger outfits.  As in most cases, heavy government intrusion boosts the biggest players in markets by eliminating their smaller competition, whose scale makes it difficult if not impossible to handle mandates and remain competitive.
Lost jobs.  Less choice. Shortages.  Higher costs.  Destruction of smaller businesses.  These are all the things that are in ObamaCare, and now that it’s been passed, everyone can find them … the hard way.

Administration may propose raising fuel efficiency standard to 62 mpg by 2025

http://thehill.com/blogs/e2-wire/677-e2-wire/122115-administration-proposes-possible-62-mpg-fuel-standard

Administration may propose raising fuel efficiency standard to 62 mpg by 2025

By Darren Goode - 10/01/10 12:57 PM ET
The Obama administration is proposing to raise federal fuel efficiency standards for cars and light trucks to at least 47 miles per gallon and to as much as 62 mpg by 2025.
The proposal, which is still in its early stages, could end up being a consolation prize for environmental activists who are still smarting over the collapse of a comprehensive climate bill in Congress.


The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) and Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) are filing a notice Friday indicating they will issue a joint proposed rule next year that will require an increase in fuel efficiency anywhere in that range starting with 2017 vehicle models.

It also includes a proposed range for reducing carbon emissions from tailpipes of between 3 to 6 percent annually, according to environmental activists who have been briefed by administration officials. “We think the administration’s proposal shows a lot of promise,” said Roland Hwang, transportation director of the Natural Resources Defense Council. “Of course we’re urging the administration to take advantage of this huge opportunity."

Dave McCurdy, the head of the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, said in a statement that the potential range in fuel efficiency and carbon reduction limits “are based on very preliminary and incomplete data at this point, and inevitably will change as more information is brought to the process.”

Friday's notice of intent is merely the first of several steps the administration will take before a final rule is issued in July 2012. There will be a second notice of intent issued by Nov. 30 that will more directly examine the impact the proposed fuel efficiency and carbon reduction range would have on automakers.

The administration plans to issue an actual proposed rule in September of next year.

Federal fuel efficiency and carbon reduction standards for cars and light trucks were implemented earlier this year for model years 2012 through 2016. Starting in 2012, automakers must improve the average fuel economy of their light-duty vehicles roughly 5 percent annually and reduce tailpipe emissions by 5 percent. The average fleetwide fuel efficiency standard in 2016 will be roughly 34 mpg.

Green groups argue that the low end of the range — 47 mpg and a 3 percent improvement in carbon tailpipe emissions — is not enough, and are pushing for the top end of the proposed range.

A joint cost analysis by EPA, NHTSA and the California Air Resources Board (CARB) shows that, if the 62 mpg mandate were implemented, the average price increase for vehicles would be between $2,800 to $3,500 in 2025, according to one activist. But that extra cost would be paid back with fuel savings within three to four years, the activist said.

CARB participated in the cost analysis because California has its own landmark tailpipe emissions and fuel efficiency standard.

A notice of intent for fuel efficiency and carbon reduction standards on heavy-duty vehicles is expected to be issued later this month.

Administration officials are doing a round of briefings Friday on the proposed fuel efficiency and carbon reduction ranges.

Officials on the call with environmental groups were Gary Guzy, deputy director of the White House Office of Environmental Quality; Margo Oge, EPA’s transportation and air quality chief; NHTSA Chief Counsel O. Kevin Vincent; and an aide to White House climate and energy czar Carol Browner. They briefed others Friday as well, including labor groups and automakers.

Tens of thousands of jobs Obama claimed he created are now gone because the $5 billion in stimulus funds that paid the wages have been used up

http://redwhitebluenews.com/?p=5775

Tens of thousands of jobs Obama claimed he created are now gone because the $5 billion in stimulus funds that paid the wages have been used up

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RWBNews:  As we reported here http://redwhitebluenews.com/?p=4971 thousands of jobs were going to disappear.  They were temp jobs created by stimulus funding.  They weren’t paying for themselves, they were manufactured jobs that were paid for by our taxes and the funds have run out.  The majority of those jobs are now gone.  Just like our tax money that they haven’t even collected from us yet that they used to pay for those jobs with.  What kind of numbers game is the Administration going to play next week to hide this?  Every week, before they release the current unemployment and jobless rates, they re-calculate the number from the week before, enabling them to doctor the current number and hide the facts.
By Tami Luhby for CNNMoney.com http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Tens-of-thousands-lose-cnnm-3509483947.html?x=0&sec=topStories&pos=5&asset=&ccode=
Tens of thousands of low-income workers lost their jobs Thursday as a stimulus-subsidized employment program came to an end.
About a quarter of a million people in 37 states were placed in short-term jobs thanks to a $5 billion boost to the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. States used about $1 billion to provide subsidized employment, with the remaining funds going to cash grants, food programs, housing assistance and other aid.
About half the jobs were summer employment for youth and the rest were for disadvantaged parents. Each state configured its initiative differently. Some covered all the workers’ wages for a few months, while others paid for a portion of their salary.
With the program expiring, many of the adults have been told not to report to work anymore. And it won’t be easy for them to find a new position at time when the unemployment rate continues to hover at 9.6%
“They are just joining the millions of other people looking for permanent work,” said Elizabeth Lower-Basch, senior policy analyst at the Center for Law and Social Policy, an advocacy group known as CLASP.
The TANF jobs initiative was one of several stimulus initiatives that ended Thursday. Also running out are a $2 billion subsidized child care program and a $2.1 billion boost for Head Start, an early learning program for needy children.
Limping along
State officials and advocacy groups have been lobbying Congress to extend the jobs program and other Recovery Act measures, but federal lawmakers have shown little appetite to do so.
A handful of states will continue to operate the programs for another few months, but most of those will be downsized considerably.
Illinois announced earlier this week that it will continue the program with state funds for up to two months in hopes that Congress will provide more money for it. The state has placed more than 26,000 workers at more than 5,000 private, non-profit and government employers.
“The best way to make our economy stronger is to put people to work,” said Gov. Pat Quinn. “It is good for families, small business owners and businesses.”
The TANF jobs program is among the few stimulus initiatives that have been embraced by Republican governors. Mississippi’s Haley Barbour, who headed the Republican National Committee in the mid-1990s, praised the effort.
The “program will provide much-needed aid during this recession by enabling businesses to hire new workers, thus enhancing the economic engines of our local communities,” Barbour said when the initiative launched last year.
South Carolina, Texas and Minnesota — all headed by Republican governors — plan to continue their programs either in a smaller form or for a few months, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.
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Government-run, taxpayer-funded, anti-poverty programs do not work

http://usactionnews.com/2010/10/government-run-taxpayer-funded-anti-poverty-programs-do-not-work/

average American taxpayer forks over $4800 a year to the IRS to be redistributed in the interest of people who pay no taxes and may not even be employed.

by Chuck Rogér at Clear Thinking

EXCERPTS:
Notice what the title of the table points out. With 2010 “anti-poverty spending” at nearly double the 2000 level, you’d think that “poverty” would have been reduced. Yet as the graph shows, redistribution of taxpayer cash to poor recipients as has more than doubled since 1962. The graph also shows that redistributed taxpayer dollars allocated to “anti-poverty” health care have exploded since the 1960s. By these measures, “anti-poverty spending” does nothing to reduce poverty.
Referring again to the table, allow me to point out that at $647.5 billion of “anti-poverty spending,” the average American taxpayer forks over $4800 a year to the IRS to be redistributed in the interest of people who pay no taxes and may not even be employed. [That's $647,000,000,000 divided by 135,000,000 taxpayers.] Of course, in reality, higher earners are robbed of much more than $4800 and lower earners less. Bottom line is that taxpayers are paying a lot of money for lousy results.
November 2nd is the most important date for Americans in 150 years.

Chicago Muslim, Shaker Masri, Indicted for Material Support to a Foreign Terrorist Organization

http://atlasshrugs2000.typepad.com/atlas_shrugs/2010/10/chicago-muslim-shaker-masri-indicted-for-material-support-to-a-foreign-terrorist-organization.html

Chicago Muslim, Shaker Masri, Indicted for Material Support to a Foreign Terrorist Organization

The enemy among us.
I am sure Christiane Amanpour is working feverishly to book Masri on her panel on Islam in America, to explain why this is all our fault (or Israel's fault, at the very least).
Chicago Man Indicted for Allegedly Attempting to Provide Material Support to a Foreign Terrorist Organization FBI (hat tip Davida)
CHICAGO—A Chicago man who was arrested last month for allegedly planning to travel to Somalia and engage in fighting with a foreign terrorist organization, was indicted on the same charges by a federal grand jury, Patrick J. Fitzgerald, United States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois, and Robert D. Grant, Special Agent-in-Charge of the Chicago Office of the FBI, announced today.
Shaker Masri, 27, who lived in Chicago’s Gold Coast neighborhood, was indicted on one count of attempting to provide material support to al Shabaab, a designated foreign terrorist organization, and one count of attempting to provide material support by use of a weapon of mass destruction outside the United States. He will be arraigned at a later date in U.S. District Court.
Masri was arrested on Aug. 3 by members of the Chicago FBI’s Joint Terrorism task Force (JTTF), just hours before he was scheduled to leave Chicago en route to Somalia. Since then, he was ordered detained in federal custody without bond.
According to a criminal complaint filed at the time his arrest, Masri, a U.S. citizen, began espousing increasingly violent views to an individual he befriended in early 2009, and later began to openly express a desire to participate in a “jihad” and to fight against what he characterized as “infidels.” During the weeks before his arrest, Masri began to actively plan a trip to Somalia, where he hoped to join the specially designated terrorist group al Shabaab and commit a suicide attack targeting “infidels,” the complaint alleged.

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