Sunday, January 31, 2010

Howard Kurtz - Media Notes: Jon Stewart's Obama barbs on 'The Daily Show' are creating buzz - washingtonpost.com

It did seem odd to have a teleprompter for a meeting with 6th graders. Poor staff work, will hurt you, when you least expect it, I guess. 

Link: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/01/31/AR2010013102338.html?nav=rss_email/components (sent via Shareaholic)

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Op-Ed Columnist - Camus Fired Up - NYTimes.com

Formula Shows Why It's So Hard to Cut Jobless Rate - ABC News

'SNL' Takes On The State Of The Union (VIDEO)

Black Agenda Report: Obama's SOTU, more than a penny short | evildoer's Blog

Saturday, January 30, 2010

Bloggingheads: The Unchanged Tone - Video Library - The New York Times

Obama, Al Franken, Michael Moore, Glenn Beck, Tea Parties and Populism - WSJ.com

Think Progress » Fox Cuts Away From Obama-GOP Conversation In Order To Get A Head Start On Attacks: He Was ‘Lecturing’

Has there ever been another example of a major news network so completely becoming an advocate for one side and opponent of another, it is suppose to be covering?

Link: http://thinkprogress.org/2010/01/29/fox-obama-retreat/ (sent via Shareaholic)

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Education reform's 'Race to the Top' features some non-starters - washingtonpost.com

"Race to the Top" is President Obama's key education initiative. 

Link: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/01/29/AR2010012903405.html?waporef=obinsite (sent via Shareaholic)

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44 - Obama's Baltimore Q&A with House Republicans: the transcript

Friday, January 29, 2010

What Obama's speech means for policymakers - latimes.com

NYTimes.com: Jobless Turn to Family for Help

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US   | January 29, 2010
Jobless Turn to Family for Help
By MICHAEL LUO
When unemployment leads to borrowing from family and friends, the experience can be stressful.


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Obama's Question Time: An Amazing Moment - I'm definitely praying that Obama doesn't take another 12 month vacation.

"The moment President Obama began his address to Republicans in Baltimore today, I began to receive e-mails from Democrats: Here's an except from one of them: "I don't know whether to laugh or cry that it took a f$$@&$* year for Obama to step into the ring and start throwing some verbal blows... I'm definitely praying at mass on Sunday morning that this Obama doesn't take another 12 month vacation." Amen, brother

Link: http://politics.theatlantic.com/2010/01/the_moment_president_obama_began.php (sent via Shareaholic)

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A very productive Congress, despite what the approval ratings say - washingtonpost.com

"...Certainly, the quality of this legislative output is a matter of debate. In fact, some voters, including many independents, are down on Congress precisely because they don't like the accomplishments, which to them smack of too much government intervention and excessive deficits. But I suspect the broader public regards this Congress as committing sins of omission more than commission..."

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Obama Goes To GOP Lions' Den -- And Mauls The Lions

Way to go, PBO, as Chris Matthews just said you clearly are learning!

"...Whether it was chutzpah, political savvy, or both, it certainly was refreshing. Reporters were thrilled with the British Parliament-style exchange between president and lawmakers. The Atlantic's Marc Ambinder asked that forums like these be held monthly. The Nation's Chris Hayessuggested Obama next go before the progressive caucus. Ezra Klein of the Washington Postlabeled it "the most compelling political television I've seen...maybe ever. NBC's Chuck Toddadded: "The president should hold Congressional 'town halls' more often. Public needs to see this if they'll ever trust Washington again."

Link: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/01/29/obama-goes-to-the-gop-lio_n_442331.html?igoogle=1 (sent via Shareaholic)

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Campaign kickoff in New York


Prisoners of the Census news
for the week of January 29

The 2010 Census will count more than
2 million people in the wrong place.
How will your vote suffer?

 

Prison-Based Gerrymandering Campaign Off to Great Start in New York

by Peter Wagner

The campaign to end prison-based gerrymandering in New York State took a big step forward with a press conference and meeting in New York City. As the Albany Times Union summarized:

ALBANY -- Two Democratic state lawmakers joined forces with the Rev. Al Sharpton to support a bill Thursday requiring New York to count its prison inmates in their home communities rather than the districts where they're incarcerated.

The longtime U.S. Census Bureau guideline was denounced as "prison-based gerrymandering" by Sen. Eric Schneiderman, D-Manhattan, and Assemblyman Hakeem Jeffries, D-Brooklyn, who were joined by Sharpton and more than two dozen advocacy groups at a news conference at New York City Hall. "This is an injustice all across America," Schneiderman said. "We pass hundreds and hundreds of bills every year about highways and forestry and insurance and sewers. This bill is different. This bill is about justice."

Sharpton said the Census Bureau currently "uses people's bodies to vote against their interest." He called fighting the policy "the voter rights and the civil rights issue of this year in the state of New York."

Read the rest of the article Inmate census rule criticized Bill proposes counting prisoners in their home communities instead of where they're jailed by Bryan Fitzgerald, Albany Times Union January 29, 2010.

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Prison town says census count cost funds

by Peter Wagner, January 20, 2010  

While it is important that everyone be counted in the Census for reasons of both democracy and funding, I’ve long argued that where incarcerated people are counted has only a very minor affect on funding.

Most federal funding is block grants to states, meaning that the federal government gives each state money based on their total population, the states are then free to distribute it as they see fit within their own borders. For block grant purposes it does not matter, therefore, where in a state an incarcerated people is counted. Most other funding programs are quite sophisticated and are calculated in ways that directly or indirectly ignore the prison population. For example, federal funds intended for low-income schools are based on the number of low-income children in the Census or the number of students in the school’s discounted lunch program. Here again, funding is unaffected by any miscount of the incarcerated population in the state.

So while the prison miscount has a severe impact on elections, the impact on funding in rural prison-hosting areas tends to be minor, and it is non-existent in urban high-incarceration communities.

Occasionally, however, we discover examples where there is a financial cost to a community that has its population padded with prison populations. Anamosa, Iowa pays extra money to county dump because the fee is calculated on a per-capita basis, with its prison population included. Prison towns in Connecticut pay an increased regional public health fee because their incarcerated populations are included in their total population count. In Ohio, artificially inflating the town of Grafton would have forced the town to become a city, which would force it to raise taxes and offer unnecessary state-mandated-services, so the town successfully lobbied the state to change the definition of “city” so that the prison miscount would not burden the town.

Another example comes out of Connell, Washington, where the expanded state prison could put the town’s population over 5,000, forcing it to add additional city council seats and making it ineligible for certain state programs aiding smaller towns. The legislature is considering a fix:

Rep. Joe Schmick, R-Colfax, is sponsoring the House version of a bill that would allow cities to choose whether to include inmates in their population.

Sen. Mark Schoesler, R-Ritzville, who’s sponsored the Senate version of the bill, said counting inmates used to benefit cities because they received money from the motor vehicle excise tax on a per capita basis.

When the fear of the impact of funding is alleviated, the people, and their representatives in the legislature, can clearly see that the potential harm to democracy is much larger than any possible impact to funding. In some places, counting incarcerated people as residents of the prison brings a small benefit. In other places, it brings a small cost. In either case, the amount is small. Whether there is a net financial benefit or cost, however small, to these towns, the problem really starts with the Census Bureau.

Until the Bureau starts counting incarcerated people as residents of their home addresses, these kinds of small ad hoc solutions are the only option left for small towns. That said, the most urgent thing to fix in Washington is where incarcerated people are counted, for the sake of the state’s democracy. The democratic ideas of equal representation require that Washington adjust the Census count for redistricting purposes. As the Washington State Constitution reminds us:

“no person shall be deemed to have gained a residence by reason of his presence or lost it by reason of his absence, … while confined in any public prison…” (Art VI, Section 4.)

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In this issue


Other news

Legislation page

We recently updated our list of legislative efforts to end prison-based gerrymandering around the country, and drafted two different types of model legislation. One model creates a system for restoring the state’s incarcerated population to its correct location, and the second is an interim strategy to prevent districts with prisons from using the prison population to enhance their influence beyond their numbers.

Prison Inmates, Redistricting and the 2010 Census

New fact sheet from the Non Profit Voter Engagement Network.

Select counties and cities that adjust Census data to correct for the prison miscount

New fact sheet from Prison Policy Initiative.


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NYTimes.com: Revival in PC Sales Lifts Microsoft's Earnings

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TECHNOLOGY   | January 29, 2010
Revival in PC Sales Lifts Microsoft's Earnings
By REUTERS
Microsoft said its earnings for the quarter jumped 60 percent, helped by a rebound in personal computer sales.


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NYTimes.com: March of the Peacocks

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OPINION   | January 29, 2010
Op-Ed Columnist:  March of the Peacocks
By PAUL KRUGMAN
Our budget problems won't be solved with gimmicks like a temporary freeze in nondefense discretionary spending.


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NYTimes.com: The Perot Option

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OPINION   | January 29, 2010
Op-Ed Columnist:  The Perot Option
By DAVID BROOKS
Advisers to the president should remind him that though he may not be a billionaire with a huge ego, he has self-esteem - and should use it.


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