Friday, May 25, 2012

President Obama Accuses Mitt Romney of ‘Cow-Pie Distortion’ on Debt, Deficits

 

DES MOINES, Iowa –  On his first visit back to the Iowa state fairgrounds since the 2008 campaign, President Obama tonight used a grassroots rally to launch sharp new attacks against rival Mitt Romney over the debt and deficit and vigorously defend his own handling of the same. The venue holds symbolic value for Democrats because it was here, in August that Romney made his now-famous declaration that “corporations are people, my friend.” Obama thrust the Republican candidate’s unflattering moment front and center early on. “The worldview that Gov. Romney gained from his experience as a financial CEO explains something. It explains why the last time he visited these same fairgrounds, he famously declared ‘corporations are people,’” Obama said, drawing loud boos from the crowd of 2,500. “That’s what he said, that’s what he called them,” Obama added. “It also explains why, when a woman right here in Iowa shared a story of her financial struggles, he gave her an answer out of an economics textbook.  He said, ‘Our productivity equals our income.’  Let me tell you something: We believe in the profit motive. We believe that risk-takers and investors should be rewarded. That’s what makes our economy so dynamic. But we also believe that everybody should have opportunity.” Ahead of the event, Obama’s re-election campaign circulated a video of Romney’s Iowa State Fair remarks, all aimed at bolstering their claim that the former private equity executive was a wealth-seeker who put investors’ interests ahead of the middle class.   Several of the campaign’s major, multi-state TV ad buys – each of which have included Iowa – have touched on the same theme. Obama offered his most spirited attacks on Romney over his claims about the burgeoning federal debt and record-high deficits that have been incurred over the past three and a half years. “They’ve got the nerve to go around saying that they’re somehow going to bring down the deficit,” he said, referring to Romney’s budget blueprint. “Economists who’ve looked at his plan say it would swell our deficits by trillions of dollars, even with the drastic cuts he’s called for [on] things like education, agriculture and Medicaid. “He promises to do that on day one,” Obama added, referring to the new Romney TV ad by the same name.  “We don’t need that. That’s going backwards. We’re going forwards.”  “Forward” is Obama’s re-election campaign slogan. Romney, on his most recent visit to Des Moines earlier this month, argued that Obama has presided over a “prairie fire of debt,” and told voters, “Every day we fail to act we feed that fire with our own lack of resolve.” His campaign and the Republican National Committee have also stressed that during Obama’s first term, $5 trillion was added to the debt, which now exceeds $15.6 trillion. “A president who broke his promise to cut the deficit in half by the end of his first term has no standing when it comes to fiscal responsibility. By the end of this year, President Obama will have presided over a record-shattering four consecutive trillion-dollar deficits and added an historic amount to our national debt,” said Romney spokesman Ryan Williams. “When you listen to President Obama’s campaign speeches, it’s as if he’s forgotten that he’s been president for nearly four years and has a record to defend. President Obama has proven beyond all doubt that he is not serious about fixing our country’s spending problem.” Offering a rebuttal tonight, Obama said that his administration has taken fiscal issues seriously, attributing high deficits to the “depth of the recession.” He said Romney’s claims were divorced from reality. “I know Gov. Romney came to Des Moines last week worried about a ‘prairie fire of debt.’ That’s what he said: ‘Prairie fire,’” Obama said. “But, you know, he left out some facts. His speech was more like a cow-pie distortion.” “I don’t know whose record he twisted the most, mine or his,” he added. Obama argued that the pace of federal government spending during his tenure has been the slowest of any president in 60 years. “By the way, it’s like the Republicans run up the tab and then we’re sitting there and they’ve left the restaurant,” he said. “Why did you order all those steaks and martinis?” The president said Romney’s budget – which includes new tax cuts for wealthier Americans – would not be the deficit slayer he claims it would be. “Oh, by the way, something else he hasn’t told you is how he’d pay for a new $5 trillion tax cut,” Obama said.  “That’s like trying to put out a prairie fire with some gasoline.” Obama claims his plan would cut the deficit by $4 trillion over 10 years through a combination of spending cuts and tax hikes. SHOWS: World News

Government to Present DNA Evidence in Clemens Case

 

Roger Clemens' genetic makeup helped make him one of the most successful pitchers in baseball history. Now prosecutors hope that Clemens' own DNA will help them convict him of a federal crime. The government is expected to show test results Friday in Clemens' perjury trial that link the former pitcher's DNA to a used needle and other medical waste that also tested positive for steroids. Forensic scientist Alan Keel, who spent the last half-hour of testimony Thursday giving jurors a brief genetics lesson, returns to the stand to testify about the genetic tests he did for the government. Chief prosecution witness Brian McNamee, Clemens' former strength and conditioning coach, testified earlier that he saved the needle and other materials from an alleged steroids injection of Clemens in 2001 and then turned them over to federal authorities in 2008. On Thursday, two experts testified that the materials tested positive for steroids. Clemens is on trial for allegedly lying to Congress in 2008 when he denied using performance-enhancing drugs. While it will be a significant moment when the government places both the steroids and Clemens' DNA on the drug needle, the defense indicated early on it wouldn't contest that the needle had both on it. But Clemens' lawyer Rusty Hardin said in his opening statement that the defense will contend that McNamee put the steroids in the needle after injecting Clemens and that the coach in fact had used the needle to inject Clemens with vitamin B12. AP Former Major League Baseball pitcher Roger Clemens, center, arrives at federal court in Washington in Washington, Thursday, May 24, 2012. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak) Clemens has maintained for years that he received B12 shots and the local anesthetic lidocaine but not performance-enhancing drugs. Another defense lawyer, Michael Attanasio, tried to push that theory by posing a hypothetical question to one of the government's expert witnesses, Jeremy Price, who once worked at the nonprofit Anti-Doping Research laboratory. Price testified Thursday that he found steroids but no trace of B12 or lidocaine on the saved items. So Attanasio asked: If he had a syringe with B12, used it, cleaned it out and then put in steroids, would the test reveal the B12? Price said he didn't know. Thursday's main headliner was former major league outfielder-first baseman David Segui, who recalled that in a 2001 phone conversation, McNamee "mentioned that he had kept darts to get his wife off his back." Prosecutors hope that will bolster McNamee's testimony that he saved the medical waste to allay his wife's fears he would take all the blame if the drug use was discovered. "He mentioned that the relationship between Brian and Roger had put stress on his married life. ... Coming and going ... leaving at the drop of a hat to go train," Segui said. Segui, who has acknowledged using performance-enhancing drugs during his 15-year career with seven teams, wasn't allowed to say that "darts" means "needles." Despite a couple of spirited appeals by prosecutor Gilberto Guerrero, U.S. District Judge Reggie Walton ruled that the jurors would have to make that assumption themselves — unless McNamee were to return to the stand to explain. When Guerrero made a second run at the judge, Walton chided the prosecutor. "I'm not the court of appeals," the judge said. "I made my ruling. So I don't reverse myself." Segui, who became friends with McNamee when they met in Toronto during the 1999 season, also wasn't allowed to relate a second, similar "darts" conversation because he couldn't remember when it happened.

HP and Autonomy: A Clash of Cultures

 

If you cut Mike Lynch, the ousted CEO of Autonomy, the U.K.’s largest software company, he would probably bleed numbers. He studied engineering at Cambridge University and obtained a PhD in mathematical computing. He is a fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering, the author of a number of academic papers on the subject of Pattern Recognition and Signal Processing. The man replacing him, Bill Veghte, has of Bachelor of Arts in East Asian studies. Between graduating from Harvard and now he included two decades at Microsoft, where he was Senior Vice President for the Windows business, and was responsible for the business strategy, sales and marketing across Windows. News that Mr. Lynch is to leave the company that he founded in 2005 and sold to Hewlett Packard in 2011 for $10.2 billion has shocked some, but even the most cursory glance at HP’s past shows it isn’t a company famous for the longevity of its CEOs. They are the high-tech embodiment of Lady Bracknell. “To lose one CEO may be regarded as a misfortune. To lose six looks like carelessness,” as she might have said. Indeed, HP CEO Meg Whitman (CEO #6 since 2005) said at the analyst call where Mr. Lynch’s departure was announced, said, “This is a movie I have seen before.” The obvious question is, what movie? Dawn of the Living Dead? If you look at the four of its last five acquisitions, including Autonomy, the incumbent CEO hasn’t lasted very long. HP acquired Fortify, a security software company in September 2010. On Apr. 4, 2012, AlienVault, another security company, announced the appointment of “Former President and CEO of HP Fortify” John M. Jack to its board. In May 2011 HP bought Printelligent. Rob Wellman, who was CEO from January 2008, left in October 2011. Vertica, a real-time analytics platform, was bought by HP on Feb. 14 2011. CEO Chris Lynch left in March 2102. HP’s most recent acquisition, the Aachen-based Hiflex, was run by Stefan Reichhart. He now runs the marketing department. Famously, HP also bought Palm for $1.2 billion in April 2010.  In December 2011 it effectively shuttered the company, putting Palm’s operating system, WebOS, into the open source community and triggering a fire sale when it sold off Palm’s $300 tablet for as low as $99. “It’s very common and very natural for entrepreneurs to move on following an acquisition, particularly when the day to day operations of the business become a bigger factor.,” an HP spokesman said. So what made Mr. Lynch think it was going to be any different? In an exclusive interview with The Wall Street Journal Europe at the time of the acquisition, Mr. Lynch said that the reason he allowed the company he co-founded to be acquired by HP was because of “an alignment of values” between him and the then CEO of HP (CEO #5 since 2005) Leo Apotheker, the former CEO of Germany’s SAP. “Autonomy is a highly profitable and globally respected software company, with a well-regarded management team and talented, dedicated employees,” Mr. Apotheker said at the time of the acquisition. After his 11-month tenure, how did Mr. Apotheker’s replacement, Ms. Whitman view that team? It is hard to know, but it isn’t too hard to guess what that team thought of their new boss. Sushovan Hussein (President), Steve Chamberlain (CFO), Pete Menell (CTO), Nicole Eagan (CMO), Andy Kanter (COO) and Martina King (head of Aurasma) all left the company. According to people familiar with the matter, “there was a clash of cultures. Mike was not acquired by Meg [Whitman]. The panorama for them was very different. The premise was to ring-fence autonomy. It was only when HP’s mastodon processes came into play it became increasingly harder and harder to maneuver.” A spokesman for HP wouldn’t comment on the resignations nor on whether Mr. Lynch was offered any other position within HP, nor would he comment on the lack of a valedictory message from Ms. Whitman. What next for Mike Lynch and Autonomy? It is alleged—he wouldn’t confirm it— that his personal take on the acquisition was around $800 million, so he isn’t going to be signing on at the unemployment office. The HP spokesman said that Autonomy was a key part of HP’s future strategy. “We are very bullish about Autonomy,” he said. He wasn’t able to say if the personnel cull that was taking place across HP (27,000 employees, or 8% of its workforce) would also affect Autonomy. At heart there are two problems. The first, that all-too-familiar story of a large company buying a much smaller one and then finding it hard to keep the entrepreneurial flame alive; and secondly, HP’s struggle to find a role. According to John Madden, principal analyst at Ovum: “So as of now we’ve seen the major pieces of Meg Whitman’s restructuring and operations plan – the key missing piece is her long-term company vision and strategy, which hopefully will be revealed to an anxious customer base soon. “Even with this restructuring, the question still remains: Just what kind of company does HP want to be next year, three years, five years from now?”

Showbiznest: Kansas TV Stabbing Incident

 

It is incredibly strange that this man did this. He actually called the station's news director on the lobby phone. During the phone call he complained that Department of Veterans Affairs mishandled his case. What this has to do with the TV station is hard to know, but perhaps the man wanted to bring media attention to his case by getting it on TV. Of course, what he did next went way too far. He threw a lamp through the glass doors, and ran down the halls of the station brandishing a knife as employees ran from him. Unfortunately, he was able to stab two employees, but they were not seriously injured, which is good news. While this man may have wanted to bring attention to his problems with the VA, a TV station stabbing was not the best way to do it. Now he will be in trouble, and have legal problems to deal with in addition to whatever is going on with the VA. It must have been scary inside WIBW-TV on Wednesday morning. Thank goodness employees were able to hold this man down until police arrived to arrest him because more people could have been injured or killed during the stabbing if it had gone on longer without the employees stepping in to stop him.

 

 

 

'Dark Knight Rises' TV Spots: A Lighter Side Of Batman -

 

As the "Dark Knight" prepares to rise, two new TV spots that hit the Web on Thursday (May 24) let us in on the lighter side of the series closer, which, until now, has been deathly serious. Christopher Nolan's Batman films have never been all doom and gloom. Though they are known for their gritty tone and dark aesthetic, Nolan has never been afraid to throw in some humor (albeit dark humor) to lighten the mood. The first two TV spots for "The Dark Knight Rises" pack in a few of those familiar moments, including one of Catwoman doing what she does best: burgling. The first 30-second commercial focuses primarily on Bruce Wayne's return. After going on the run because of the events surrounding Harvey Dent's death, Wayne needs to resurrect the Batman, and he reaches out to the man who made all his bat-gadgetry possible, Lucius Fox, with Morgan Freeman making a welcome return. Selina Kyle (a.k.a. Catwoman), portrayed by Anne Hathaway, holds the spotlight in the second spot, which plays up the teasing dynamic between the famous cat burglar and the Batman. Having talked and danced briefly at the masquerade ball we've already seen in a few trailers, Bruce goes to fetch his Lamborghini from the valet. Unfortunately, Wayne's "wife" got to it first. Additionally, a handful of hi-res stills from the film have appeared over at Batman-News.com, featuring Joseph Gordon-Levitt's John Blake and an interesting look at Batman, Catwoman and Bane in an industrial complex, presumably before a fight seen in the trailer. With a little less than two months to go until the film's release, "The Dark Knight Rises" is shaping up to be a movie not only worthy of its series, but one that deserves a fever pitch of anticipation. Check out everything we've got on "The Dark Knight Rises."

Thursday, May 24, 2012

memorial day, fantasia, neil diamond,etan patz,fleet week,sixers,gi joe retaliation,jillian michaels,facebook stock 15, chernobyl diaries 16

 

6. memorial day 7. fantasia 8. neil diamond 9. etan patz 10. fleet week 11. sixers 12. gi joe retaliation 13. jillian michaels 14. facebook stock 15. chernobyl diaries 16. bethenny frankel 17. udonis haslem 18. bill clinton 19. revenge 20. bodega 6. memorial day 7. fantasia 8. neil diamond 9. etan patz 10. fleet week 11. sixers 12. gi joe retaliation 13. jillian michaels 14. facebook stock 15. chernobyl diaries 16. bethenny frankel 17. udonis haslem 18. bill clinton 19. revenge 20. bodega 6. memorial day 7. fantasia 8. neil diamond 9. etan patz 10. fleet week 11. sixers 12. gi joe retaliation 13. jillian michaels 14. facebook stock 15. chernobyl diaries 16. bethenny frankel 17. udonis haslem 18. bill clinton 19. revenge 20. bodega 6. memorial day 7. fantasia 8. neil diamond 9. etan patz 10. fleet week 11. sixers 12. gi joe retaliation 13. jillian michaels 14. facebook stock 15. chernobyl diaries 16. bethenny frankel 17. udonis haslem 18. bill clinton 19. revenge 20. bodega 6. memorial day 7. fantasia 8. neil diamond 9. etan patz 10. fleet week 11. sixers 12. gi joe retaliation 13. jillian michaels 14. facebook stock 15. chernobyl diaries 16. bethenny frankel 17. udonis haslem 18. bill clinton 19. revenge 20. bodega 6. memorial day 7. fantasia 8. neil diamond 9. etan patz 10. fleet week 11. sixers 12. gi joe retaliation 13. jillian michaels 14. facebook stock 15. chernobyl diaries 16. bethenny frankel 17. udonis haslem 18. bill clinton 19. revenge 20. bodega 6. memorial day 7. fantasia 8. neil diamond 9. etan patz 10. fleet week 11. sixers 12. gi joe retaliation 13. jillian michaels 14. facebook stock 15. chernobyl diaries 16. bethenny frankel 17. udonis haslem 18. bill clinton 19. revenge 20. bodega 6. memorial day 7. fantasia 8. neil diamond 9. etan patz 10. fleet week 11. sixers 12. gi joe retaliation 13. jillian michaels 14. facebook stock 15. chernobyl diaries 16. bethenny frankel 17. udonis haslem 18. bill clinton 19. revenge 20. bodega 6. memorial day 7. fantasia 8. neil diamond 9. etan patz 10. fleet week 11. sixers 12. gi joe retaliation 13. jillian michaels 14. facebook stock 15. chernobyl diaries 16. bethenny frankel 17. udonis haslem 18. bill clinton 19. revenge 20. bodega 6. memorial day 7. fantasia 8. neil diamond 9. etan patz 10. fleet week 11. sixers 12. gi joe retaliation 13. jillian michaels 14. facebook stock 15. chernobyl diaries 16. bethenny frankel 17. udonis haslem 18. bill clinton 19. revenge 20. bodega 6. memorial day 7. fantasia 8. neil diamond 9. etan patz 10. fleet week 11. sixers 12. gi joe retaliation 13. jillian michaels 14. facebook stock 15. chernobyl diaries 16. bethenny frankel 17. udonis haslem 18. bill clinton 19. revenge 20. bodega 6. memorial day 7. fantasia 8. neil diamond 9. etan patz 10. fleet week 11. sixers 12. gi joe retaliation 13. jillian michaels 14. facebook stock 15. chernobyl diaries 16. bethenny frankel 17. udonis haslem 18. bill clinton 19. revenge 20. bodega 6. memorial day 7. fantasia 8. neil diamond 9. etan patz 10. fleet week 11. sixers 12. gi joe retaliation 13. jillian michaels 14. facebook stock 15. chernobyl diaries 16. bethenny frankel 17. udonis haslem 18. bill clinton 19. revenge 20. bodega 6. memorial day 7. fantasia 8. neil diamond 9. etan patz 10. fleet week 11. sixers 12. gi joe retaliation 13. jillian michaels 14. facebook stock 15. chernobyl diaries 16. bethenny frankel 17. udonis haslem 18. bill clinton 19. revenge 20. bodega 6. memorial day 7. fantasia 8. neil diamond 9. etan patz 10. fleet week 11. sixers 12. gi joe retaliation 13. jillian michaels 14. facebook stock 15. chernobyl diaries 16. bethenny frankel 17. udonis haslem 18. bill clinton 19. revenge 20. bodega 6. memorial day 7. fantasia 8. neil diamond 9. etan patz 10. fleet week 11. sixers 12. gi joe retaliation 13. jillian michaels 14. facebook stock 15. chernobyl diaries 16. bethenny frankel 17. udonis haslem 18. bill clinton 19. revenge 20. bodega 6. memorial day 7. fantasia 8. neil diamond 9. etan patz 10. fleet week 11. sixers 12. gi joe retaliation 13. jillian michaels 14. facebook stock 15. chernobyl diaries 16. bethenny frankel 17. udonis haslem 18. bill clinton 19. revenge 20. bodega 6. memorial day 7. fantasia 8. neil diamond 9. etan patz 10. fleet week 11. sixers 12. gi joe retaliation 13. jillian michaels 14. facebook stock 15. chernobyl diaries 16. bethenny frankel 17. udonis haslem 18. bill clinton 19. revenge 20. bodega 

Warren gets frustrated with press asking her to prove heritage

 

One thing is clear: embattled Massachusetts Senate candidate Elizabeth Warren isn’t happy that she is still being asked about her claimed Native American heritage. It’s the fourth week in a row that the press in Boston has been pressing Warren for answers. In a video captured by Fox 25 on Thursday, Warren appeared frustrated that reporters in Brookline asked her for proof of her minority claims. It was her first public appearance in more than a week. She tried dodging the questions at first. Asked to put the Native American heritage questions to rest, Warren responded: “Middle class families are getting hammered.” But when pressed about why she once claimed minority status but doesn’t identify that way anymore, she responded: “I have answered these questions. I am going to talk about what’s happening to America’s families.” “Scott Brown has hammered on my family, at the same time that… middle class families are also getting hammered,” she said. Warren has struggled to prove her claims of American Indian ancestry, other than saying she knows of it through family lore. Critics have accused her of claiming minority status in the past to gain an unfair advantage when applying for jobs.