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In the News: Tentative Iran Nuclear Agreement Announced

Yesterday, a tentative agreement regarding Iran’s nuclear program was announced.

NPR: Deal Reached To Limit Iran’s Nuclear Program

Iran and six world powers have reached a preliminary agreement in Geneva on curbing Tehran’s nuclear program in exchange for some sanctions relief.

In a late-night statement from the White House, President Obama called the breakthrough “the most significant and tangible progress” with Iran since he took office. It calls for specific actions over the next six months, while negotations continue on a longer-term deal.

President Obama:



Statement By The President On First Step Agreement On Iran’s Nuclear Program

Good evening.  Today, the United States — together with our close allies and partners — took an important first step toward a comprehensive solution that addresses our concerns with the Islamic Republic of Iran’s nuclear program.  

Since I took office, I’ve made clear my determination to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon.  As I’ve said many times, my strong preference is to resolve this issue peacefully, and we’ve extended the hand of diplomacy.  Yet for many years, Iran has been unwilling to meet its obligations to the international community.  So my administration worked with Congress, the United Nations Security Council and countries around the world to impose unprecedented sanctions on the Iranian government.

These sanctions have had a substantial impact on the Iranian economy, and with the election of a new Iranian President earlier this year, an opening for diplomacy emerged.  I spoke personally with President Rouhani of Iran earlier this fall.  Secretary Kerry has met multiple times with Iran’s Foreign Minister.  And we have pursued intensive diplomacy — bilaterally with the Iranians, and together with our P5-plus-1 partners — the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Russia, and China, as well as the European Union.

Today, that diplomacy opened up a new path toward a world that is more secure — a future in which we can verify that Iran’s nuclear program is peaceful and that it cannot build a nuclear weapon.

(Rest of remarks below the fold)

Full Transcript


While today’s announcement is just a first step, it achieves a great deal.  For the first time in nearly a decade, we have halted the progress of the Iranian nuclear program, and key parts of the program will be rolled back.  Iran has committed to halting certain levels of enrichment and neutralizing part of its stockpiles.  Iran cannot use its next-generation centrifuges, which are used for enriching uranium.  Iran cannot install or start up new centrifuges, and its production of centrifuges will be limited.  Iran will halt work at its plutonium reactor.  And new inspections will provide extensive access to Iran’s nuclear facilities and allow the international community to verify whether Iran is keeping its commitments.

These are substantial limitations which will help prevent Iran from building a nuclear weapon.  Simply put, they cut off Iran’s most likely paths to a bomb.  Meanwhile, this first step will create time and space over the next six months for more negotiations to fully address our comprehensive concerns about the Iranian program.  And because of this agreement, Iran cannot use negotiations as cover to advance its program.

On our side, the United States and our friends and allies have agreed to provide Iran with modest relief, while continuing to apply our toughest sanctions.  We will refrain from imposing new sanctions, and we will allow the Iranian government access to a portion of the revenue that they have been denied through sanctions.  But the broader architecture of sanctions will remain in place and we will continue to enforce them vigorously.  And if Iran does not fully meet its commitments during this six-month phase, we will turn off the relief and ratchet up the pressure.

Over the next six months, we will work to negotiate a comprehensive solution.  We approach these negotiations with a basic understanding:  Iran, like any nation, should be able to access peaceful nuclear energy.  But because of its record of violating its obligations, Iran must accept strict limitations on its nuclear program that make it impossible to develop a nuclear weapon.

In these negotiations, nothing will be agreed to unless everything is agreed to.  The burden is on Iran to prove to the world that its nuclear program will be exclusively for peaceful purposes.

If Iran seizes this opportunity, the Iranian people will benefit from rejoining the international community, and we can begin to chip away at the mistrust between our two nations.  This would provide Iran with a dignified path to forge a new beginning with the wider world based on mutual respect.  If, on the other hand, Iran refuses, it will face growing pressure and isolation.

Over the last few years, Congress has been a key partner in imposing sanctions on the Iranian government, and that bipartisan effort made possible the progress that was achieved today.  Going forward, we will continue to work closely with Congress.  However, now is not the time to move forward on new sanctions — because doing so would derail this promising first step, alienate us from our allies and risk unraveling the coalition that enabled our sanctions to be enforced in the first place.

That international unity is on display today.  The world is united in support of our determination to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon.  Iran must know that security and prosperity will never come through the pursuit of nuclear weapons — it must be reached through fully verifiable agreements that make Iran’s pursuit of nuclear weapons impossible.

As we go forward, the resolve of the United States will remain firm, as will our commitments to our friends and allies — particularly Israel and our Gulf partners, who have good reason to be skeptical about Iran’s intentions.

Ultimately, only diplomacy can bring about a durable solution to the challenge posed by Iran’s nuclear program.  As President and Commander-in-Chief, I will do what is necessary to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon.  But I have a profound responsibility to try to resolve our differences peacefully, rather than rush towards conflict.  Today, we have a real opportunity to achieve a comprehensive, peaceful settlement, and I believe we must test it.

The first step that we’ve taken today marks the most significant and tangible progress that we’ve made with Iran since I took office.  And now we must use the months ahead to pursue a lasting and comprehensive settlement that would resolve an issue that has threatened our security — and the security of our allies — for decades.  It won’t be easy, and huge challenges remain ahead.  But through strong and principled diplomacy, the United States of America will do our part on behalf of a world of greater peace, security, and cooperation among nations.

Thank you very much.


Sunday All Day Check-in for the Herd

  Make sure you let your peeps

  know where to find you!  


    PLEASE Do Not Recommend the check-in diary!
   

        Fierces on the Weather Critter Comment are obligatory welcome.

The morning check-in is an open thread posted to give you a place to visit with the meeses. Feel free to chat about your weather, share a bit of your life, grump (if you must), rave (if you can). The diarist du jour sometimes posts and runs, other times sticks around for a bit, often returns throughout the day and always cares that meeses are happy … or at least contented.

On weekends (and holidays), you may find the check-in thread earlier or later than normal because … it is the weekend! Moosies need their beauty rest:

For those new to the Moose, Kysen left a Moose Welcome Mat (Part Deux) so, please, wipe your feet before you walk in the front door start posting.

The important stuff to get you started:

– Comments do not Auto-refresh. Click the refresh/reload on your tab to see new ones. Only click Post once for comments. When a diary’s comment threads grow, the page takes longer to refresh and the comment may not display right away.

– To check for replies to your comments, click the “My Comments” link in the right-hand column (or go to “My Moose”). Comments will be listed and a link to Recent Replies will be shown. (Note: Tending comments builds community)

– Ratings: Fierce means Thumbs Up, Fail means Thumbs Down, Meh means one of three things: I am unFailing you but I can’t Fierce you, I am unFiercing after a mistaken Fierce … or Meh. Just Meh. (p.s. Ratings don’t bestow mojo, online behaviour does).

– The Recommended list has a prominent place on the Front Page because it reflects the interests of the Moose. When people drive-by, we want them to see what we are talking about: news, politics, science, history, personal stories, culture. The list is based on number of recs and days on the list. Per Kysen: “The best way to control Rec List content is to ONLY rec diaries you WANT to see ON the list.

– Finally, the posting rules for a new diary: “Be excellent to each other… or else

(Some other commenting/posting/tending notes for newbies can be found in this past check-in and, of course, consult Meese Mehta for all your questions on meesely decorum.)

You can follow the daily moosetrails here: Motley Moose Recent Comments.

~

Let the greetings begin!

~


Weekly Address: President Obama – Working with Both Parties to Keep the Economy Moving Forward

From the White House – Weekly Address

In his weekly address, President Obama says our economy is moving in the right direction. We have cut our deficits by more than half, businesses have created millions of new jobs, and we have taken significant steps to reverse our addiction to foreign oil and fix our broken health care system.

Transcript: Working with Both Parties to Keep the Economy Moving Forward

Hi, everybody.  Over the past couple months, most of the political headlines you’ve read have probably been about the government shutdown and the launch of the Affordable Care Act.  And I know that many of you have rightly never been more frustrated with Washington.

But if you look beyond those headlines, there are some good things happening in our economy.  And that’s been my top priority since the day I walked into the Oval Office.

After decades in which the middle class was working harder and harder just to keep up, and a punishing recession that made it worse, we made the tough choices required not just to recover from crisis, but to rebuild on a new foundation for stronger, more durable economic growth.

Five years later, we have fought our way back.  Our businesses have created 7.8 million new jobs in the past 44 months.  Another 200,000 Americans went back to work last month.

The American auto industry has come roaring back with more than 350,000 new jobs – jobs churning out and selling the high-tech, fuel-efficient cars the world wants to buy.  And they’re leading the charge in a manufacturing sector that has added jobs for the first time since the 1990s – a big reason why our businesses sell more goods and services “Made in America” than ever before.

We decided to reverse our addiction to foreign oil.  And today, we generate more renewable energy than ever, more natural gas than anybody, and for the first time in nearly 20 years, America now produces more oil than we buy from other countries.

We decided to fix a broken health care system.  And even though the rollout of the marketplace where you can buy affordable plans has been rough, so far, about 500,000 Americans are poised to gain health coverage starting January 1st.  And by the way, health care costs are growing at the slowest rate in 50 years.

And one more thing: since I took office, we’ve cut our deficits by more than half.  And that makes it easier to invest in the things that create jobs – education, research, and infrastructure.

Imagine how much farther along we could be if both parties were working together. Think about what we could do if a reckless few didn’t hold the economy hostage every few months, or waste time on dozens of votes to repeal the Affordable Care Act rather than try to help us fix it.

In the weeks ahead, I’ll keep talking about my plan to build a better bargain for the middle class.  Good jobs.  A good education.  A chance to buy a home, save, and retire.  And yes, the financial security of affordable health care.  And I’ll look for any willing partners who want to help.

Because of your hard work and tough sacrifices over the past five years, we’re pointed in the right direction.  But we’ve got more work to do to keep moving that way.  And as long as I’m President, I’ll keep doing everything I can to create jobs, grow the economy, and make sure that everyone who works hard has a chance to get ahead.  Thanks, and have a great weekend.

Bolding added.

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Editor’s Note: The President’s Weekly Address diary is also the weekend open news thread. Feel free to leave links to other news items in the comment threads.


Saturday All Day Check-in for the Herd

  Make sure you let your peeps

  know where to find you!  


    PLEASE Do Not Recommend the check-in diary!
   

        Fierces on the Weather Critter Comment are obligatory welcome.

The morning check-in is an open thread posted to give you a place to visit with the meeses. Feel free to chat about your weather, share a bit of your life, grump (if you must), rave (if you can). The diarist du jour sometimes posts and runs, other times sticks around for a bit, often returns throughout the day and always cares that meeses are happy … or at least contented.

On weekends (and holidays), you may find the check-in thread earlier or later than normal because … it is the weekend! Moosies need their beauty rest:

For those new to the Moose, Kysen left a Moose Welcome Mat (Part Deux) so, please, wipe your feet before you walk in the front door start posting.

The important stuff to get you started:

– Comments do not Auto-refresh. Click the refresh/reload on your tab to see new ones. Only click Post once for comments. When a diary’s comment threads grow, the page takes longer to refresh and the comment may not display right away.

– To check for replies to your comments, click the “My Comments” link in the right-hand column (or go to “My Moose”). Comments will be listed and a link to Recent Replies will be shown. (Note: Tending comments builds community)

– Ratings: Fierce means Thumbs Up, Fail means Thumbs Down, Meh means one of three things: I am unFailing you but I can’t Fierce you, I am unFiercing after a mistaken Fierce, or Meh. Just Meh. (p.s. Ratings don’t bestow mojo, online behaviour does).

– The Recommended list has a prominent place on the Front Page because it reflects the interests of the Moose. When people drive-by, we want them to see what we are talking about: news, politics, science, history, personal stories, culture. The list is based on number of recs and days on the list. Per Kysen: “The best way to control Rec List content is to ONLY rec diaries you WANT to see ON the list.

– Finally, the posting rules for a new diary: “Be excellent to each other… or else

(Some other commenting/posting/tending notes for newbies can be found in this past check-in and, of course, consult Meese Mehta for all your questions on meesely decorum.)

You can follow the daily moosetrails here: Motley Moose Recent Comments.

~

Let the greetings begin!

~


The Daily F Bomb, Friday 11/22/13

Interrogatories

Where do you stand on the Kennedy assassination? Do you believe Oswald acted alone, or do you subscribe to one of the other theories floating around out there?

It’s Start Your Own Country Day again. What kind of topography would your country have? What kind of climate? What kind of government?

On Go For a Ride Day, describe your ultimate ride? Is it a plane, a train, an automobile? Perhaps a cool vintage motorcycle? Maybe even a horse?

Are you an out of the can cranberry sauce aficionado (like 90% of Americans) or do you like the REAL thing? (I think I may have revealed where I stand on this issue.)

Cell phone conversations on planes? Yea or Nay?

The Twitter Emitter

On This Day

In 1858, Denver, Colorado was founded.

In 1869, the last surviving clipper ship, the Cutty Sark, was launched from Dumbarton, Scotland.

In 1928, Ravel’s Boléro premiered at the  Paris Opéra.

In 1954, the Humane Society of the United States was formed to address animal cruelty on a national level.

In 1963, President John F. Kennedy was fatally shot in Dallas when his motorcade passed by the Texas Schoolbook Depository in Dallas. Also in the vehicle was Texas Governor John B. Connally, who was seriously wounded.

In 1975 – after the death of Francisco Franco (who is, reputedly, still dead), Juan Carlos was declared King of Spain.

In 2005, Angela Merkel won election as the first female Chancellor of Germany.

Born on This Day

1648 – Pierre Patel the younger, French painter (d. 1707)

1744 – Abigail Adams, First Lady of the United States (d. 1818)

1787 – Copley Fielding, British painter (d. 1855)

 photo CopleyFielding.jpg

1788 – Albertus-Jonas Brandt, Dutch fruit and flower painter (d. 1821)

1808 – Thomas Cook, British travel entrepreneur (d. 1892)

1819 – George Eliot, British novelist (d. 1880)

1849 – Christian Rohlfs, German artist (d. 1938)

Christian Rohlfs photo ChristianRohlfs.jpg

1860 – Cecilio pla y Gallardo, Spanish painter (d. 1934)

 photo CecilioplayGallardo.jpg

1864 – Wilhelm List, Austrian painter (d. 1918)

1893 – Harley J. Earl, American automobile designer (d. 1969)

1899 – Hoagy Carmichael, American composer (d. 1981) (+ a lot of Constance Bennett/Cary Grant:)

1920 – Anne Crawford, British actress (d. 1956)

1921 – Rodney Dangerfield, American comedian and actor (d. 2004)

1924 – Geraldine Page, American actress (d. 1987)

1932 – Robert Vaughn, American actor

1940 – Terry Gilliam, American-English actor, director, and screenwriter

1941 – Jesse Colin Young, American musician

1943 – Billie Jean King, American tennis player

1946 – Aston Barrett, Jamaican bass player and songwriter (The Wailers Band and Bob Marley & The Wailers)

1947 – Rod Price, English guitarist (Foghat) (d. 2005)

1950 – Steven Van Zandt, American musician and actor

1950 – Tina Weymouth, American musician (Talking Heads, Tom Tom Club)

1958 – Horse, Scottish singer and songwriter

1961 – Mariel Hemingway, American actress

1967 – Mark Ruffalo, American actor and anti-fracking activist

1984 – Scarlett Johansson, American actress

Died on This Day

1658 – Abraham van Cuylenborch, Dutch painter (b. 1610)

1718 – Blackbeard (Edward Teach), British pirate (b. 1680)

1726 – Anton Domenico Gabbiani, Italian painter (b. 1652)

 photo AntonDomenicoGabbiani.jpg

1781 – Jan Ekels the elder, Dutch painter (b. 1724)

1843 – Pieter Frans de Noter, Belgian architectural painter (b. 1779)

1886 – William Bliss Baker, American painter (b. 1859)

 photo WilliamBlissBaker.jpg

1890 – Frank Buchser, Swiss painter (b. 1828)

 photo FrankBuchser.jpg

1911 – Valentin Alexandrovitch Serov, Russian painter (b. 1865)

 photo ValentinAlexandrovitchSerov.jpg

1916 – Jack London, American writer (b. 1876)

1937 – Philip de Laszlo, Hungarian painter (b. 1869)

 photo PhilipdeLaszlo.jpg

1943 – Lorenz Hart, American lyricist (b. 1895)

1955 – Shemp Howard, American actor (b. 1895)

1963 – Aldous Huxley, English author (b. 1894)

1963 – C. S. Lewis, Northern Irish author (b. 1898)

1980 – Mae West, American actress and writer (b. 1893)

 photo MaeWestTippling-1.jpg

1986 – Scatman Crothers, American actor (b. 1910)

1988 – Luis Barragán, Mexican architect (b. 1908)

1992 – Sterling Holloway, American actor (b. 1905)

1993 – Anthony Burgess, British author (b. 1917)

1997 – Michael Hutchence, Australian singer (INXS) (b. 1960)

Today is

Stop the Violence Day

Antarctic Day

Go for a Ride Day

National Start Your Own Country Day

National Cashew Day (the web is divided 50/50 as to this being on the 22nd or 23rd)

National Cranberry Relish Day

Humane Society Anniversary Day


Friday Coffee Hour: Check In and Hangout for the Herd

Good morning, Moosekind. TGIF! Hope it has been a good week for everyone.


  PLEASE Do Not Recommend the check-in diary!
 

        Recs on the weather jar comment are still welcome.

 photo Fridaymorningcoffeehour_zpsba607506.jpg

Friday Coffee Hour and check-in is an open thread and general social hour. Come back when time allows through the day – the conversation continues.

It’s traditional but not obligatory to give us a weather check where you are and let us know what’s new, interesting, challenging or even routine in your life lately. Nothing is particularly obligatory here except:

Always remember the Moose Golden (Purple?) Rule:

Be kind to each other… or else.

What could be simpler than that, right?

 photo coffee15_zpsba913659.jpg


U4ME: Utahns For Medicaid Expansion Rally

IMG_3887

Utah is one of the remaining states still “undecided” about Medicaid Expansion.  Utahns For Medicaid Expansion,  chaired by a doctor in private practice (Ray Ward) has taken on the task of organizing us to support Medicaid Expansion despite our do-as-little-as-possible governor and totally useless legislature.  

Professional photo:

chrisdetricksltribu4me

Chris Detrick for the Salt Lake Tribune.

I first discovered this event in my church bulletin.  I shared it in some FB groups and was asked for an event page, which I found.  I really wanted to go and support it, but I am kind of freaked out in crowds.  I also have a habit of not leaving my home a lot unless it has something to do with my kids.  I was blessed to sleep well a couple nights in a row and woke up headache-free on Wednesday morning, so I went.  I remembered what Yoda said, “There is no try, there is only do or do not.”  

Because I was nervous about crowding (it was the last interim day before the lege opens in january so there were all kinds of hearings) I left early. Like, an hour early for a 10-minute drive 😉  Reporters and legislators were tweeting about the crowds all morning!  

And someone graciously left for lunch and gave me their east-capitol drive parking space! Then I was so early someone (Dr. Ray Ward)  found me and made me volunteer. I helped people fill out postcards. I stayed at the tables and they protected me from the crowds. I heard hardly any of the speakers.  I saw my pastor and lots of friends from church.  I met ballerina x, my state rep Brian King, a couple other twitter friends, and more people from U4ME and USARA.  I even took a couple photos, and took photos of other people with their cameras for them.  People wanted to pose with the signs.  

Besides my personal experience above, I wanted to share a couple quotes from local news and give you those links if you want to explore this more.  

There was speaker after speaker from a range of organizations.  Nonprofits like the pediatrician’s association, many other medical professionals, recovery community, women’s groups, including the LWV (League of Women Voters), various advocates for the poor, and many faith leaders in official clothing.  

Utahns rally to push Medicaid coverage for more people

An expansion, envisioned by the Affordable Care Act but deemed voluntary for states by the U.S. Supreme Court, would cover an estimated 123,000 uninsured Utahns. Analyses show it would bring billions in federal funding to the state during the next 10 years, create jobs and reduce the charity-care burden on hospitals.

Herbert has said he will not make a decision until 2014, allowing him to confer with lawmakers – while Republican lawmakers remain opposed, concerned about future costs. There’s no deadline for deciding, though states that drag their feet risk forgoing federal funding and delaying coverage.

 Trib also has a photo gallery.

Hundreds rally in support of expanding Medicaid in Utah

Many at the rally said the government programs that have helped them until now will no longer be available on January 1 because the ACA assumed an expanded Medicaid program would be universally available.

Jennifer Ericksen is on a program called the Primary Care Network that pays for four prescriptions a month.  “But PCN expires in January,” Ericksen said. “I require life-sustaining medications multiple times a day.”

Utahns Rally for More Medicaid Coverage

The letter was signed by more than 100 faith leaders in the state from different religious groups, though notably absent was anyone representing the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Steve Klemz, Pastor for Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church, says it is a moral issue to provide health coverage for more than 123,000 uninsured Utahns.

Republican Senator Brian Shiozawa stood with many Democratic state representatives who attended the rally. Shiozawa – who is also an emergency room doctor – insisted that the expansion of Medicaid should not be a partisan issue.

“This is an issue that should cross party lines, and it’s something that we need to work together on and we shouldn’t be divided on. There are patients every day that I treat or cannot treat because they don’t have insurance, they won’t come in because they don’t have that access,” Shiozawa says.

IMG_3883

Diarist’s nonprofessional photo.  

In closing, it is my opinion that the governor wants to accept this, because of the financial sense, and moral issues of offering coverage.  Also, the legislature does not want the governor to sign it and will probably try to pass a bill saying he may not.  I don’t know what will shake out from that.  Also, if the LDS church would issue a statement of support I think it would all go more smoothly.  

Other lessons, although there may be more later:  It’s good to leave my regular routine once in a while.  It’s good to make a difference where I can.  And even if the governor bails, everyone supporting U4ME is doing the right thing now.  

IMG_3886

Please do not use this diary for LDS bashing.  There are many fine LDS Dems and Republicans, and non-political people, supporting this.  And the LDS church does not issue statements on many items.  


News and Views: Found on the Internets – Thursday, 11/21 UPDATE: Filibuster nuked.



A series of tubes filled with enormous amounts of material

Privilege has its privileges …

Rep. Trey Radel To Take Leave Of Absence, Get Treatment

Just hours after pleading guilty on Wednesday to a misdemeanor charge of cocaine possession, Rep. Trey Radel (R-FL) announced that he would take a leave of absence from Congress and seek treatment to deal with his problems.

After entering his guilty plea in Washington, D.C. Superior Court on Wednesday, Radel was sentenced to one year of supervised probation and ordered to pay a $250 fine to a victims’ compensation fund. If he successfully completes the probation, the court would then dismiss the case.

Read More: Pelosi Takes Shot At GOP Food Stamp Policy After Radel Drug Charge

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) said Tuesday that she hoped drug charges against Rep. Trey Radel (R-FL) could “humanize” Republicans’ approach to food stamps.

Speaking at a BuzzFeed Brews event, Pelosi noted that when Radel allegedly purchased cocaine from an undercover federal agent on Oct. 29, the buy came “on the heels of the Republicans voting to make sure that everybody who had access to food stamps was drug tested.”

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Good news from Massachusetts …

Massachusetts State Senators Approve Nation’s Highest Minimum Wage

The Massachusetts state Senate passed a bill on Tuesday that would raise the state’s minimum wage to $11 an hour and ensure future automatic increases tied to inflation. If it were to pass the state House and be signed into law by the governor, it would be the highest state minimum wage in the country.

Federal lawmakers have pushed for a minimum wage hike for the whole country, with President Obama recently coming out in favor of a $10.10 an hour wage, something that Democrats introduced in March but was unanimously shot down by Republicans.

A federal hike enjoys strong support, with one poll showing 80 percent in favor of a raise to $10.10, including two-thirds of Republicans, and another showing 76 percent support a $9 wage, including nearly 60 percent of Republicans.

Bad News for the Currently Hungry: Food Stamp Cuts Leave Rural Areas, And Their Grocers, Reeling

(More news under the fold …)

What’s this, Scottie? Did the Tea Party intimidate you?? …

Scott Walker Backtracks On Immigration Reform

Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (R) appeared to back away from his support for a pathway to citizenship during an appearance on Morning Joe on Wednesday, telling the Huffington Post’s Sam Stein that he only supports “fixing the legal immigration system, not going beyond that”.

Read about the truly unintimidated:  UNINTIMIDATED.org The bullies won’t get us down

The Solidarity Sing Along, the longest running singing protest in history, has endured over two and a half years of Governor Scott Walker’s attempts to stifle dissent in the Wisconsin Capitol. It all started on March 11, 2011, when a few people gathered to sing songs of resistance near the bust of Fighting Bob La Follette. The Sing Along grew as citizens became more and more aware of Scott Walker’s full-blown attack on all that Wisconsin holds dear. As public voices were being shut out of hearing rooms, and corporate-sponsored legislation was being passed in the middle of the night, voices were being raised in the Rotunda. The people sang songs of peace, songs of justice, songs of solidarity.[…]

The story of the Solidarity Sing Along is now being told through the words and photographs of the people who lived it. Unintimidated: Wisconsin Sings Truth to Power includes a first-person account written by SSA participant Ryan Wherley, interwoven with photographs of people who have faced citations, harassment, threats, and arrests, and yet keep coming to the People’s House to express their dissent. The story isn’t over. The people continue to sing joyously, as they have each weekday from noon to 1 p.m. since that first day long ago.

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Today in Affordable Care News …

3 Signs That Obamacare Is Slowing Health Care Spending

The three years since the Affordable Care Act passed — 2011, 2012 and 2013 — have seen the slowest growth in health care spending since 1965, when the statistic began being consistently tracked, according to a new White House report.

When a reporter asked if Obamacare was responsible for 20 to 40 percent of the reduction in the rate of growth, [chairman of President Obama’s Council of Economic Advisors Jason] Furman,  said that “those aren’t unreasonable numbers.”

“The slowdown in health costs is indisputable,” he said. “A very important part of the story is structural, and a very important part of that structural story is the Affordable Care Act.”

Read More: Medicaid Enrollment Is Brisk Despite HealthCare.gov Troubles

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In Congress …

Gillibrand Continues Push For Military Sexual Assault Bill (VIDEO)

Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) said Sunday that she is moving forward with her original bill that addresses sexual assault in the military, and that she is optimistic about the prospects of her legislation.

Despite a split in the Senate over how to address sexual assaults in the military, Gillibrand is confident that she will surpass the more than 50 votes she currently has in the Senate to pass her bill.

Read More: Reid Supports Gillibrand’s Military Sexual Assault Bill

Read More: McCain Faults Gillibrand’s Lack of “Background or Experience” in Military Sex Assault Fight

Read More: Military Commanders Have Already Failed Assault Victims — Why Trust Them Again?

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Filiblustering? Or finally getting serious? …

Harry Reid Threatens ‘Nuclear Option’ — And Soon

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid on Tuesday threatened to “go nuclear” on filibuster reform in his strongest terms yet, one day after Republicans completed a triple-filibuster of President Barack Obama’s most high-profile judicial nominees.

“I’m considering looking at the rules,” said the Nevada Democrat. “All this [talk of the] sacred nature of the filibuster — I think what we need, and the American people want, is to get things done around here. I’m not talking about changing anything dealing with the Supreme Court or dealing with basic legislation. I am talking about executive nominations.”

Read More: Feinstein Comes Out For Filibuster Reform Via ‘Nuclear Option’

Read More: With Nominees Stalled, Democrats Reprise Filibuster Threat

Opinion: Charlie Pierce: A Call To Democrats To Stop Sitting Back On This Business With Judges

Opinion: Politico: Nuke ‘Em, Harry: Why Democrats Should Kill the Filibuster

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BONUS Story: Paul Ryan’s new anti-poverty plan!!

(and you thought he didn’t care about “the poors” … shame on you!!!)

Extreme Makeover: Paul Ryan Wants You To Believe He Will Help The Poor

The Washington Post’s Lori Montgomery reports on “an ambitious new project” Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) plans to roll out next year: “an anti-poverty plan to rival his budgetary Roadmap for America’s Future in scope and ambition.”

While the proposal is still light on details, Ryan’s advisers promise “kinder, gentler policies to encourage work and upward mobility.” Ryan will stress volunteerism and working through existing federal programs. The new focus is a shift, Montgomery notes, that may be particularly critical for the Wisconsin congressman, who “rose to prominence as the author of an austere budget blueprint that calls for privatizing Medicare and sharply slowing federal spending on the poor.” […]

Overall, the House Republican budget’s vast spending reductions are overwhelmingly aimed at low-income Americans, so much so that nearly two-thirds of its cuts would come from poverty programs that aid the neediest people in the nation. That would mean steep reductions for child care, Head Start, job training, Pell Grants, housing, energy assistance, Supplemental Security Income (SSI), and Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF), or welfare.

Oh, wait … I misread that! It is not an “anti-poverty” plan but an “anti-poor people” plan. Sorreeeeeeee!

And here is one more impoverished idea from a guy who is morally bankrupt:

Ryan’s views on poverty are inspired by his Catholicism. “You cure poverty eye to eye, soul to soul,” he says. “Spiritual redemption: That’s what saves people.”

Charlie Pierce weighing in on the “New” Paul Ryan: Once Upon A Time, There Was A Zombie-Eyed Granny Starver:

Paul Ryan is an opportunistic hack who never has earned a dime outside of the government-quasi-government bullshit industrial complex. He cares less about the poor than he does about Medicare, which he would like to shred, so that it no longer wrecks old people by keeping them alive. It should be noted that, ever since Ronald Reagan proved you could kick the poor and crush the middle class and still get elected, as long as you did it with a smile and were charmingly dim about it, the Republican party has come out with something like this latest scam every time the general electorate catches on to the fact that modern conservatism is growing nostalgic for the economic and social order of the 1880’s. There is nothing new in Republican charlatanism, not even Paul Ryan.

That is part of a lengthier piece by Charles Pierce and I recommend reading the entire thing. His conclusion:

All those years when my money and the money of millions of other Americans were helping this already well-off young man hold body and soul together while he went through college, how come his incentive wasn’t damaged by all the taking he was doing? How come he wasn’t crippled by “dependency”? How come his work ethic survived long enough to guarantee that he would never draw anything but a government salary for the rest of his life? How come, as a congressman, on my dime, he hasn’t felt the slow, stultifying hand of government strangling his individual initiative? How come the only people all this quasi-mystical horse-pucky applies to are the people too poor for Paul Ryan’s party to care about? If I do nothing for the rest of my career here than point out what a complete fake this guy is, while embarrassing the fatheads who still take him seriously, I will die a happy blogger.

Go get ’em, Charlie!



Feel free to share your own news stories in this open thread.



The Daily F Bomb, Thursday 11/21/13

Interrogatories

It’s False Confession Day! Tell us something really good that you didn’t really do.

You can tell we’re in the lead up to Thanksgiving. What kind of stuffing do you like? Do you prefer it cooked in or outside of the bird?

Do you smoke? If not, did you ever? How hard was it to quit? (this could be a repeat question)

It is also Use Less Stuff Day. If you combine the first two words, you get Useless Stuff Day. Do you have any Useless Stuff to get rid of? What’s keeping you?

Bonus question stolen from Chris Hayes’ show last night: If you were President, who would you give the Presidential Medal of Freedom to?

The Twitter Emitter

On This Day

In 1783, Jean-François Pilâtre de Rozier and François Laurent, Marquis d’Arlandes, made the first untethered hot air balloon flight over Paris.

In 1789, with their ratification of the Constitution, North Carolina became the 12th state.

In 1877, Thomas Edison announced his invention of the phonograph, a machine that would record and play sound.

 photo Edisonsphonograph.jpg

In 1905, Albert Einstein’s paper, Does the Inertia of a Body Depend Upon Its Energy Content?, revealing the relationship between energy and mass, was published in the journal Annalen der Physik. This gave us the mass-energy equivalence formula E = mc².

In 1922, Rebecca Latimer Felton of Georgia became the first female United States Senator.

In 1927, striking coal miners were attacked with machine guns by men who were either the state police dressed in civilian clothes or the security hired by the mine owners. This came to be called the Columbine Mine Massacre. Six strikers were killed, and dozens more were injured.

In 1964, the upper level of the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge, connecting Brooklyn with Staten Island, opened to vehicular traffic. At that time, it was the longest suspension bridge in the world.

In 1986, Oliver North and his secretary Fawn Hall began shredding documents that implicated them in the illegal sale of weapons to Iran and channeling the proceeds to help fund the Nicaraguan Contras.

Born on This Day

1694 – Voltaire, French philosopher (d. 1778) (with a real quote hover)

 photo voltaire.jpg

1724 – Jan Ekels the elder, Dutch painter (d. 1781)

1761 – Dorothea Jordan, British actress (d. 1816)

1821 – Jean-Baptiste Robie, Belgian flower painter (d. 1910)

1883 – Jean Hippolyte Marchand, French painter (d. 1941)

1891 – Karl Hubbuch, German painter (d. 1979)

 photo KarlHubbuch.jpg

1898 – René Magritte, Belgian painter (d. 1967)

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1899 – Jobyna Ralston, American actress (d. 1967)

Jobyna Ralston Harold Lloyd photo JobynaRalstonandHaroldLloyd.jpg

1902 – Isaac Bashevis Singer, Polish American author, Nobel laureate (d. 1991)

1904 – Coleman Hawkins, American musician (d. 1969)

1912 – Eleanor Powell, American actress and dancer (d. 1983)

1922 – María Casares, Spanish-born actress who had a distinguished career in France, starring in such classics as Les Enfants du paradis  and Orphée. (d. 1996)

1927 – Joseph Campanella, American actor

1937 – Marlo Thomas, American actress

1940 – Dr. John, American musician

1941 – Juliet Mills, British actress – daughter of Sir John and sister of Hayley, her biggest hit this side of the pond was in The Nanny and the Professor.

1944 – Harold Ramis, American actor/director

1945 – Goldie Hawn, American actress

1960 – Brian Ritchie, American musician (Violent Femmes)

1968 – Alex James, English bassist (Blur)

1984 – Jena Malone, American actress

Died on This Day

1717 – Jean-Baptiste Santerre, French painter (b. 1658)

 photo Jean-BaptisteSanterre.jpg

1730 – François de Troy, French portrait artist (b. 1645)

 photo Franc3270oisdeTroy.jpg

1849 – François-Marius Granet, French painter (b. 1775)

1874 – Mariano Fortuny, Spanish painter (b. 1838)

1907 – Paula Modersohn-Becker, German painter (b. 1876)

 photo PaulaModersohn-Becker.jpg

1909 – Peder Severin Krøyer, Norwegian-Danish painter (b. 1851)

 photo PederSeverinKroslashyer.jpg

1924 – Florence Harding, American First Lady (b. 1860)

1927 – Laurits Regner Tuxen, Danish painter (b. 1853)

1933 – Frederick Hollyer, English photographer (b. 1837)

1941 – Georges Morren, Belgian Impressionist painter (b. 1868)

1945 – Robert Benchley, American writer and actor (b. 1889)

1969 – Norman Alfred Lindsay, Australian painter (b. 1879)

1995 – Peter Grant, British rock manager and actor (b. 1935)

1999 – Quentin Crisp, British writer and actor (b. 1908)

2006 – Robert Lockwood, Jr., American blues guitarist (b. 1915)

Today is

False Confession Day

World Hello Day

World Television Day

National Stuffing Day

Gingerbread Day

Beaujolais Nouveau Day

Great American Smokeout

Use Less Stuff Day


Thursday Morning Herd Check-in

  Make sure you let your peeps

  know where to find you!  

   


    PLEASE Do Not Recommend the check-in diary


        Fierces on the Weather Critter Comment are obligatory welcome.

The morning check-in is an open thread posted to give you a place to visit with the meeses. Feel free to chat about your weather, share a bit of your life, grump (if you must), rave (if you can). The diarist du jour sometimes posts and runs, other times sticks around for a bit, often returns throughout the day and always cares that meeses are happy … or at least contented.

For those new to the Moose, Kysen left a Moose Welcome Mat (Part Deux) so, please, wipe your feet before you walk in the front door start posting.

The important stuff to get you started:

– Comments do not Auto-refresh. Click the refresh/reload on your tab to see new ones. Only click Post once for comments. When a diary’s comment threads grow, the page takes longer to refresh and the comment may not display right away.

– To check for replies to your comments, click the “My Comments” link in the right-hand column (or go to “My Moose”). Comments will be listed and a link to Recent Replies will be shown. (Note: Tending comments builds community)

– Ratings: Fierce means Thumbs Up, Fail means Thumbs Down, Meh means one of three things: I am unFailing you but I can’t Fierce you, I am unFiercing after a mistaken Fierce, … or Meh. Just Meh. (p.s. Ratings don’t bestow mojo, online behaviour does).

– The Recommended list has a prominent place on the Front Page because it reflects the interests of the Moose. When people drive-by, we want them to see what we are talking about: news, politics, science, history, personal stories, culture. The list is based on number of recs and days on the list. Per Kysen: “The best way to control Rec List content is to ONLY rec diaries you WANT to see ON the list.

– Finally, the posting rules for a new diary: “Be excellent to each other… or else

(Some other commenting/posting/tending notes for newbies can be found in this past check-in and, of course, consult Meese Mehta for all your questions on meesely decorum.)

You can follow the daily moosetrails here: Motley Moose Recent Comments.

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Let the greetings begin!

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