ACORN Foe James O'Keefe Tried to Embarrass CNN's Abbie Boudreau on Porn-Strewn "Palace of Pleasure" Boat

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

It's hard to even know where to start with this one: James O'Keefe, the conservative filmmaker whose undercover videos essentially destroyed community organizing group ACORN, apparently attempted to lure CNN Correspondent Abbie Boudreau onto a boat potentially strewn with dildos and pornography, where he planned to faux-seduce her as hidden cameras filmed the whole thing.
Yes, you read that right.

CNN lays out the story here, and Boudreau herself explains what happened in the video below. Here's what happened: CNN had been working on a documentary about young conservative activists, O'Keefe among them; On August 10th, O'Keefe requested a private meeting with Boudreau, suggesting that he just wanted to talk because he was uncomfortable "about letting people into my sort of inner sanctum."

O'Keefe recorded the call without telling Boudreau, and emailed it to friends and colleagues. (It ultimately ended up in CNN's hands.) In the email, he said he was "getting closer" to getting to Boudreau and asked one colleague if "you think I could get her on the boat." Boudreau said later she had understood that she would be meeting with O'Keefe in his office.

When Boudreau showed up for the meeting in Maryland a week later, she was met by Izzy Santa, the executive director of O'Keefe's group, Project Veritas. A visibly nervous Santa asked to speak to Boudreau in the CNN correspondent's rented car, where Santa revealed that O'Keefe was attempting to set her up.

And what a setup it was. "Izzy told me that James was going to be dressed up and have strawberries and champagne on the boat, and he was going to hit on me the whole time," Boudreau recounts.
O'Keefe eventually emerged, and Boudreau had a brief discussion with him in which she said he did not have permission to film her; she declined to get on the boat, and soon left.

That was a good choice: According to a 13-page document titled "CNN Caper" about the plan obtained by the network, the "equipment needed" for the prank included "condom jar," "dildos," Alicia Keys music (though not Marvin Gaye because it is "too chiche)," lube, a ceiling mirror, posters and paintings of naked women, copies of Playboy and other pornographic magazines, Viagra pills, fuzzy handcuffs and a blindfold.

Also listed among the needed equipment are "hidden cams on the boat" and a "tripod and overt recorder near the bed, an obvious sex tape machine."

In an email expressing doubts about the operation, Santa wrote that O'Keefe "has staged the boat to be a palace of pleasure with all sorts of props, wants to have a bizarre sexual conversation with her."

The "CNN Caper" document laid out a message that O'Keefe would record in advance of the prank in which he would complain that CNN was planning "to portray me and my friends as crazies, as non-journalists, as unprofessional and likely as homophobes, racists or bigots of some sort."

For that reason, the script continued, O'Keefe would say, "I'm going to punk CNN. Abbie has been trying to seduce me to use me, in order to spin a lie about me. So, I'm going to seduce her, on camera, to use her for a video. This bubble-headed-bleach-blonde who comes on at five will get a taste of her own medicine, she'll get seduced on camera and you'll get to see the awkwardness and the aftermath."
The script was not written by O'Keefe, who emailed CNN to say he found "certain elements highly objectionable and inappropriate, and did not consider them for one minute following it." It was reportedly the work of Ben Wetmore, one of the young conservative activists tied to O'Keefe, who was among those charged earlier this year in an attempt to tamper with the office telephone system of Democratic Senator Mary Landrieu of Louisiana.

The "CNN Caper" document also said the group wanted to expose, in a different operation, the "big lie" under which CNN operates, including their bias against conservatives and "their own internal racism against whites" as well as minorities.

The section of the "Caper" document that addresses the Boudreau plan includes a mock script in which O'Keefe tries to seduce Boudreau and explains, "the joke is that the tables have turned on CNN."

"Using hot blondes to seduce interviewees to get screwed on television, you are faux seducing her in order to screw her on television." (Boudreau has a long and impressive resume.)

If there is fallout, the document says, "make sure to emphasize Abbie's name and overall status to help burden her career with this video, incident and her bad judgment in pursuing you so aggressively."

It continues that "if they go on the attack, you should point out the hypocrisy in CNN using the inherent sexuality of these women to sell viewers and for ratings, passing up more esteemed and respectable journalists who aren't bubble-headed bleach blondes and keep the focus on CNN."

Santa - the Project Veritas executive director who warned Boudreau about the operation - reportedly remains in the group's payroll, though she has had her responsibilities taken away from her.
READ MORE - ACORN Foe James O'Keefe Tried to Embarrass CNN's Abbie Boudreau on Porn-Strewn "Palace of Pleasure" Boat

Blackberry Playbook Tablet Announced

Monday, September 27, 2010



RMI announced their new tablet, the Blackberry Playbook, which ironically doesn't run the Blackberry operating system. Going up against the iPad is going to be tough enough. Can they do it with an entirely new operating system that will need developers to support it?


Given there was no hardware to show, this looks like a preemptive move by RIM to hopefully give current Blackberry owners pause before buying an iPad. They have indicated it will be available in "early 2011."

Powering the Playbook is QNX, an OS developed by QNX Software Systems. QNX is in the Unix family of operating systems. That may be a smart play on RIM's part as opposed to trying to do this with Blackberry 6.0. The Blackberry OS is getting old and it may be time for a rewrite to compete head to head with the likes of more modern platforms like iOS and Android. Both Palm and Microsoft started over for the same reasons. It will be interesting to see if Blackberry 7 or 8 has its roots in the QNX operating system lightened up a bit for the smartphone form factor.

To compete with the iPad the Playbook will need a rich library of apps and content. Music is not a big deal as many users already have their own collection of MP3 files. Books are another matter and helping out is Amazon, which has announced support of the Playbook with a Kindle app. As far as apps go, we'll have to wait and see how enthusiastically the developer community embraces the device. One thing the Playbook will be able to do that the iPad can't though is Flash.
READ MORE - Blackberry Playbook Tablet Announced

Segway Owner Dies in Segway Crash

Reuters
Jimi Heselden, who owned Segway, Inc.
 until his death on Sunday.
Call it irony, fate, or simply an accident: in Britain, the owner of Segway died over the weekend when he apparently drove one of the devices off a cliff near his home.

In West Yorkshire, police reported that James W. Heselden, 62, who took over control of the company earlier this year, accidentally steered the Segway off a 30-foot cliff and into a river while riding on his estate, about 140 miles from London. The exact cause of death is not yet established, the police said.

The Segway Human Transporter came to market in 2002 as the invention of Dean Kamen, an entrepreneur from New Hampshire who made his fortune after he created the first insulin pump for treatment of diabetes. At the time, Mr. Kamen said that the Segway would have an impact on society similar to that of the personal computer.

A Segway
The person-mover, priced at about $5,000, uses sophisticated gyroscopic technology as well as electronics and some software controls.

The rider essentially steers one by leaning fore and aft, and aiming to the left or right by pulling the handlebars; the company calls this “LeanSteer” technology. The Segway’s top speed is about 12 miles per hour, the company says.

In Britain, the Segway cannot be piloted on public roads or paths but only on private property. But they are legal in several European countries. In the United States, Segways are approved for limited use in many states, The Telegraph reports.

Celebrities, including Jackie Chan, adopted the Segway as an alternative transportation device for a time, although the Segway image took a hit in 2003 when President George W. Bush fell off of one.
READ MORE - Segway Owner Dies in Segway Crash

Peter Jackson threatens Hobbit shutdown

Peter Jackson said the film was "a big fat juicy target"

The Lord of the Rings director, who is the films' executive producer, said it faced being shut down or moved from its location in his native New Zealand.

In an open letter, Jackson said shifting the entire project to eastern Europe "could so easily happen".

Unions have urged actors not to work on the films due to the dispute.

'Movie drought'

A number of organisations based in the UK, Canada, Australia and the US have said the The Hobbit's producers have refused to negotiate a deal with them.

The International Federation of Actors said it was time for performers on The Hobbit to seek union contracts, adding that actors in New Zealand have "struggled on non-union contracts for some time".

Jackson said the wrangle was a "grab for power" and "an attempt by the "Australian bully-boy" to exert influence over New Zealand's film industry.

"It feels as if we have a large Aussie cousin kicking sand in our eyes... or to put it another way, opportunists exploiting our film for their own political gain."

Andy Serkis (left) and Sir Ian McKellen starred
 in The Lord of the Rings movies
Jackson said that he is not anti-union and "has always attempted to treat my actors and crew with fairness and respect".

He pointed out that Hobbit actors with no union representation are part of a profit-sharing pool.

The director made all three of the Lord of the Rings films and his screen adaptation of The Lovely Bones using New Zealand locations.

Jackson is expected to become the films' director after the departure of Guillermo del Toro due to concerns over delays - although a formal announcement has yet to be made.

But the two-movie project has not been given the financial go-ahead by Hollywood studios New Line and MGM.

Work was expected to start earlier this year but is now scheduled for a 2011 start.
READ MORE - Peter Jackson threatens Hobbit shutdown

Southwest's AirTran Deal Is Right On Point

The trouble with the aviating business sector is that anybody with a big enough chequebook, appetite for losses, and ego can open an airline business. So integration is always good, right?

Not for everybody. Purchasing AirTran Holdings ought certainly profit Southwest Airlines. Say only three-quarters of the advised annual synergies of $400 million are attained. Taxed & put at a multiple of 10 times, that would still be worth $1.4 billion, as is as AirTran's price tag.

It is the rest of the industry that should be concerned. Delta airways, for instance, suddenly confronts a rowdy new rival in its hometown of Atlanta. Southwest proclaims synergies on drawing in more passengers now that it can fly paths through the Atlanta hub and the smaller cities that AirTran serves.

Having filled a large hole in its meshing, Southwest ought take more market share as price-conscious passengers migrate toward it. It is also now dipping its toe in the international market.

The deal reflects the dominant position Southwest already has in domestic low-cost flight. Last year, it transported 55% of all U.S. low-cost carrier passengers, according to Goodbody Stockbrokers. Across the Atlantic, upstart Ryanair Holdings similarly faces a slowdown in its historically high growth rates as it reaches a saturation point in key European markets. That is a big reason why Ryanair now wants to branch out from its strategy of focusing on secondary airports to targeting primary hubs.

The larger airlines rely on attracting as many passengers as possible through their hubs to defray the high fixed costs that these carry. As more passengers are lured away to low-cost carriers serving an ever larger point-to-point network, so unit costs creep higher for the big boys, even as ticket prices come under pressure.
READ MORE - Southwest's AirTran Deal Is Right On Point

NFL Scores Week 3: One More Game to Go

NFL Scores and results calendar week 3 will be all over after tonight’s gamey between the Green Bay Packers and the Chicago Bears. As far as the other results go we’ve seen some surprises, like in week 2, but overall things started to settle.
Here are the scores after week three:


Seattle Seahawks 27 – San Diego Chargers 20
Arizona Cardinals 24 – Oakland Raiders 23
Indianapolis Colts 27 – Denver Broncos 13
Philadelphia Eagles 28 – Jacksonville Jaguars 3
St. Louis Rams 20 – Washington Redskins 16
Dallas Cowboys 27 – Houston Texans 13
Baltimore Ravens 24 – Cleveland Browns 17
Cincinnati Bengals 20 – Carolina Panthers 7
Pittsburgh Steelers 38 – Tampa Bay Buccaneers 13
Tennessee Titans 29 – Giants-New York 10
New York Jets 31 – Miami Dolphins 23
Atlanta Falcons 27 – New Orleans Saints 24
New England Patriots 38 – Buffalo Bills 30
Minnesota Vikings 24 – Detroit Lions 10
Kansas City Chiefs 31 – San Francisco 49ers 10
Don’t forget to watch tonight the clash between Packers vs Bears.
READ MORE - NFL Scores Week 3: One More Game to Go

Lindsay Lohan Wears $1200 Shoes to Jail

Lohan's top accessory was not her hand-cuffs this Friday when she went to jail, it was a pair of $1200 Christian Louboutin high heel shoes.. Plus James Franco's poor acting skills and Alicia Silverstone heading back to work in today's Daily 411.
READ MORE - Lindsay Lohan Wears $1200 Shoes to Jail

PENNY DREADFUL- It Takes 1.7 Cent To Make A Penny

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Several years ago, Walter Luhrman, a metallurgist in southern Ohio, discovered a copper deposit of tantalizing richness. North America’s largest copper mine—a vast open-pit complex in Arizona—usually has to process a ton of ore in order to produce ten pounds of pure copper; Luhrman’s mine, by contrast, yielded the same ten pounds from just thirty or forty pounds of ore. Luhrman operated profitably until mid-December, 2006, when the federal government shut him down.
The copper deposit that Luhrman worked wasn’t in the ground; it was in the storage vaults of Federal Reserve banks, and, indirectly, in the piggy banks, coffee cans, automobile ashtrays, and living-room upholstery of ordinary Americans. A penny minted before 1982 is ninety-five per cent copper—which, at recent prices, is approximately two and a half cents’ worth. Luhrman, who had previously owned a company that refined gold and silver, devised a method of rapidly separating pre-1982 pennies from more recent ones, which are ninety-seven and a half per cent zinc, a less valuable commodity. His new company, Jackson Metals, bought truckloads of pennies from the Federal Reserve, turned the copper ones into ingots, and returned the zinc ones to circulation in cities where pennies were scarce. “Doing that prevented the U.S. Mint from having to make more pennies,” Luhrman told me recently. “Isn’t that neat?” The Mint didn’t think so; it issued a rule prohibiting the melting or exportation of one-cent and five-cent coins. (Nickels, despite their silvery appearance, are seventy-five per cent copper.) Luhrman laid off most of his employees and implemented his corporate Plan B: buying half-dollars from banks and melting the silver ones (denominations greater than five cents aren’t covered by the Mint’s rule); mining Canadian five-cent coins (which were a hundred per cent nickel most years from 1946 to 1981); and lobbying Congress.
Luhrman’s experience highlights a growing conundrum for the Mint and for U.S. taxpayers. Primarily because zinc, too, has soared in value, producing a penny now costs about 1.7 cents. Since the Mint currently manufactures more than seven billion pennies a year and “sells” them to the Federal Reserve at their face value, the Treasury incurs an annual penny deficit of about fifty million dollars—a condition known in the coin world as “negative seigniorage.” The fact that the Mint loses money on penny production annoys some people, because one-cent coins no longer have much economic utility. More than a few people, upon finding pennies in their pockets at the end of the day, simply throw them away, and many don’t bother to pick them up anymore when they see them lying on the ground. (Breaking stride to pick up a penny, if it takes more than 6.15 seconds, pays less than the federal minimum wage.)
Various people have proposed various remedies, one of which is to get rid of pennies altogether. This is a step that many countries have taken with their least valuable coins—among them the United States, which stopped making half-cents in 1857, when a half-cent, by almost any measure, had significantly more purchasing power than a dime does today. There are problems, though. One is that many people are quite attached to one-cent coins. Another is that some people fear that merchants in a penny-free economy, when making change on cash purchases, might be more inclined to round up than to round down, thus penalizing consumers. A third is that eliminating pennies would increase our reliance on nickels, which now cost almost ten cents to manufacture and so generate even more negative seigniorage, per coin, than pennies do. What is to be done?


America’s assortment of circulating pocket change is anything but immutable. Colonial-era settlers initially had no coins (or bills) of their own. They therefore depended heavily on barter, and conducted cash transactions with British coppers and other foreign coins, especially Spanish reals. (The “dollars” mentioned in Article I of the Constitution were actually eight-real coins, also known as pieces of eight.) British silver coins were scarce in America because Britain, which had little domestic access to precious metals and hoped its colonists would soon get busy shipping treasure in the opposite direction, forbade their export. In 1702, the alchemy-obsessed master of the British Royal Mint, Isaac Newton, melted down and minutely analyzed the coins of a number of countries to determine their exact content. The results of Newton’s assay were used, among other things, to set the bewildering, constantly shifting exchange rates that were a part of daily commercial life in England and America in the early eighteenth century.
Congress created the Mint in 1792, and its original headquarters, in Philadelphia, was the first government building to be erected under the authority of the Constitution. The first U.S. coins, produced that year, were silver “half dismes,” or half-dimes. They were worth a twentieth of a dollar and may have been manufactured, at least in part, from silverware donated by President and Mrs. Washington. The first U.S. coins to circulate widely were probably one-cent pieces struck in 1792 or 1793. They were made of pure copper, and were slightly larger in diameter than a Sacagawea dollar and about half again as heavy. The first Lincoln cent was minted in 1909, on the hundredth anniversary of Lincoln’s birth. It replaced the Indian-head cent, and was the first circulating American coin to be stamped with the likeness of a real, identifiable person. It was made of bronze and weighed about twenty-five per cent more than the cent we use today.
The scarcity of one metal or another has prompted sporadic crises in American coin production. In 1943, the Mint, hoping to preserve copper for military uses, experimented with a number of materials, including Bakelite, before settling on galvanized steel. These coins were prone to rust, especially near the edges, and were so unpopular that in 1944 the Mint went back to using copper, much of it from spent shell casings. Enough steel cents were made, however, that they were still turning up twenty years later, when I made a brief go at coin collecting. (I had all three versions—from the Mints in Denver, Philadelphia, and San Francisco.) In the early seventies, when the value of the copper in a penny had risen to almost a penny, the Mint produced about a million and a half Lincoln cents made of aluminum. Congress rejected that idea, and the Mint destroyed all the aluminum coins, except for a dozen samples that were kept by congressmen and others. Possessing these coins, which are dated 1974, is against the law, since they are considered by the Mint to be purloined government property; one of them—which numismatists refer to, ominously, as the Toven Specimen—is thought to be held by heirs of a Capitol police officer.
The most significant shift in the metal content of American coins occurred in 1965. The price of silver had risen so high that some bank employees were asking to be paid in change, and Congress passed a law that required the Mint to stop using silver in almost all coins. The new, silver-free coins were of the “sandwich” variety still used today; they have a pure-copper core and thin top and bottom layers made of a copper-nickel alloy. Sacagawea dollars and the new Presidential dollars also have copper cores, with a coating of manganese brass.
Coin denominations higher than five cents don’t present the same seigniorage challenge that pennies and nickels do, at least for the time being; a dollar coin, for example, costs only about twenty cents to make. In 2006, the Mint cleared $750 million on revenues of $2.3 billion, so it’s in no immediate danger of violating its obligation not to spend more on manufacturing coins than it receives, from the Federal Reserve and other coin consumers, for manufacturing them. (Last year, the Mint sold some eight hundred and seventy-two million dollars’ worth of non-circulating coins and medals to collectors and to people who like to keep savings in precious metals.) Nevertheless, Edmund Moy, the Mint’s director since 2006, worries about long-term trends in metals prices, and he and his staff have asked Congress to allow the Mint to periodically adjust the content of coins on its own, without going through the time-consuming process of seeking specific legislation. Congress probably won’t give Moy everything he wants, but the problem is unlikely to go away, since demand for base metals is strong all over the world.
In January, I fulfilled a long abandoned schoolboy ambition by taking a field trip to watch coins being manufactured, at the Mint in Philadelphia. On arrival, I was required to empty my pockets of change, to make it easier for the Mint’s police force to determine later whether I had tried to smuggle anything out. Then I met John M. Mercanti, a substantial, bearded middle-aged man, who is the Mint’s supervisory design and master tooling development specialist, and is identified by a sign on his office door as the Big Cheese. “My wife laughs at me, but I pick up pennies,” he said. “To me, a penny is a work of art that a lot of time and effort have gone into, and I’m not just going to let it lie on the sidewalk. It becomes a personal thing.”
New coins begin in Congress, which sets the themes, the metal content, and other details in consultation with the Mint and various interested parties, including coin collectors and historians. Next, the designs are created by Mercanti’s staff of six in-house artists and a larger group of freelancers. For about a century, the Mint’s sculptors have made eight-inch prototypes from clay and other materials, after which a machine called a Janvier transfer engraver has rendered those images onto coin-size metal dies. Now the Mint is moving toward an entirely digital system. I met Joseph Menna, a young staff artist who earned a master’s degree at the New York Academy Graduate School of Figurative Art, and he let me try his virtual-engraving tool, which looked like a dentist’s drill and gave realistic tactile feedback as I slashed away, on a computer tablet, at the face of James Madison. One of the biggest challenges of coin design is portraying realistic-looking three-dimensional facial features on a metal surface that is nearly flat. This difficulty explains why the faces on coins are almost always shown in profile: doing so keeps noses recognizable. The 2006 nickel, which features a likeness of Jefferson and was sculpted by Menna’s former colleague Donna Weaver, is the first circulating U.S. coin to have a forward-facing portrait; it is considered by coin aficionados to be an engraving tour de force.
After I had finished defiling Madison’s face, Tim Grant, the Mint’s public-affairs manager, led me down a staircase to the production floor, which was vast, clean, and noisy. Once specialists have turned coin designs into working dies, coin manufacturing proceeds much as it did in President Washington’s day, adjusted for technology. A machine punches coin-size blanks, called planchets, from long coils of sheet metal, and another machine, in a process called upsetting, gives each planchet a raised rim. (All coins have this rim; without it their surface features would make them unstackable.) Another machine then stamps designs onto both sides simultaneously, one planchet at a time. “To make a penny takes thirty-five tons per strike,” Grant said, as I ran my hand through a bin of warm, new coins. “We can make about a million pennies from one set of dies.” All this happens very quickly. The U.S. Mint took more than two years to manufacture its first million coins; the Philadelphia Mint now makes that many every forty-five minutes or so.
Conveyor belts feed finished coins into large, box-shaped bags made of white-and-blue plastic webbing. Grant and I watched as workers loaded a number of these bags, each of which weighed more than a ton, onto trucks, for shipment to Federal Reserve banks. The trucks had nondescript markings—a superfluous precaution, probably, since robbing one would be a chore: a typical Mint bag full of pennies contains only about four thousand dollars’ worth, yet you’d need a forklift to move it to the back of your getaway vehicle.
As I watched new pennies spewing from the Mint’s stamping machines, I couldn’t help wondering about the fate of all the pennies that had gone before them. The average life span of American pocket change is thirty years. During the past thirty years, the U.S. Mint has produced something like a half trillion coins, most of them cents, yet the Mint estimates that only about three hundred billion coins are currently in circulation. This estimate is probably high, since it includes coins that haven’t budged from their coffee cans in years. Even so, the missing change is worth billions. Where is it? Except in rare cases, old coins, unlike old banknotes, aren’t withdrawn from circulation by the Federal Reserve. People simply mislay them, eventually, in one way or another, and in most cases they disappear as permanently as if they had been dropped into the sea. Pocket change leaks from the economy the way air leaks from a balloon, and most of what leaks is pennies.
In November, 1989, Representatives James A. Hayes, of Louisiana, and Jim Kolbe, of Arizona, having had just about enough of all this, introduced the Price Rounding Act. Its purpose was to phase out the penny by requiring that all cash transactions be rounded to the nearest five cents. The bill was actively opposed by Americans for Common Cents, a lobbying organization that had been founded specifically to defeat the legislation. A.C.C.’s main funding came from Jarden Zinc Products, which is one of the nation’s largest producers of zinc, and which has supplied the U.S. Mint with penny planchets since 1982.
In 1990, A.C.C. enlisted Raymond E. Lombra, an economics professor at Pennsylvania State University, to make an academic case for preserving one-cent coins at a Senate Banking Committee hearing on the Price Rounding Act. Lombra, after studying prices at a retail store, had concluded that rounding cash transactions would be more likely to raise consumer expenditures than to lower them. He testified that eliminating pennies would “impose a significant and regressive rounding ‘tax’ on the American public”—about six hundred million dollars annually, or, at the time, a little more than two dollars per American. He also said that any putative productivity gains from eliminating cent coins were “an illusion,” since “cash-register clerks would not suddenly be free to stock shelves or clean stores if the penny were no longer in circulation.”
Lombra and A.C.C. prevailed, and the Price Rounding Act was tabled out of existence. In July, 2001, Kolbe—this time alone, Hayes having retired—tried again. His new bill, the Legal Tender Modernization Act, played a supporting role in an episode of “The West Wing”: Sam Seaborn, the White House deputy communications director (played by Rob Lowe) is given the task of coming up with a plausible-sounding excuse that President Bartlet (played by Martin Sheen) can use in declining to support the Legal Tender Modernization Act (played by the actual bill), and he settles on the fact that the Speaker of the House is from Abraham Lincoln’s native state. The bill’s opponents in real life also included Lincoln-loving people from Illinois, along with people who hold “penny drives” for charity, people who would prefer that everything remain the way it is now, and, of course, Americans for Common Cents. The bill went nowhere. Kolbe tried one more time, in 2006, when the price of zinc was at a record high and inflation had further eroded the penny’s minimal purchasing power—again without success. He retired the following year, leaving Congress without an active penny-hater.
In 2001, Lombra published a paper in the Eastern Economic Journal, in which he elaborated on a number of the ideas that he had introduced in his congressional testimony a decade before. The direct and indirect effects of the “rounding tax,” he wrote, would be “no less than $1.5 billion over five years and $2.5 billion over a decade,” estimates that he described as “conservative.” Yet Lombra’s analysis was highly selective. Consider, after all, the opportunity cost of storing billions of dollars’ worth of small coins in dresser drawers, often for decades, and then losing track of them entirely. This taxlike penalty is self-imposed, since no law prevents anyone from filling his pockets with pennies before leaving the house, but even people who do use small change bear the burden of lugging it around and sifting through it—the old-lady-with-a-coin-purse problem, which has doubtless been slowing checkout lines since the Lydians invented coinage, in 500 B.C. or so. Nor is it clear that merchants, who have to cover the considerable cost of handling, sorting, transporting, and redeeming excess change, would invariably abuse a rounding system. When I was in Washington visiting the executive director of A.C.C., I made three small purchases in the gift shop of my hotel and noticed that the cashier avoided handling pennies on all three occasions, and twice rounded in my favor. We were both happy to keep bothersome metal disks out of the transaction.
Even if retailers consistently fudged in their own favor, rounding’s impact on individual consumers today would be imperceptible. For one thing, rounding would apply only to the final five cents, no matter how high the price: a $1.98 purchase would be rounded up two cents; so would a $1001.98 purchase. Americans have taken this sort of thing in stride for years. Sales taxes are rounded when assessing them results in fractional cents, and most consumers don’t even try very hard to avoid A.T.M. fees, which are far more costly than any form of rounding. Besides, the growing percentage of transactions that are handled by credit card, PayPal, and other non-cash media wouldn’t be subject to rounding at all.
A modern penny simply isn’t worth enough to worry about. In 1940, an average one-pound loaf of bread sold for eight cents, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. That means that a penny in those days bought enough bread to make a good-sized sandwich. These days, a penny doesn’t buy much more than a bit of crust. Accurately comparing monetary values (and bread loaves) across decades is impossible, but by almost any economic measure a 1940 penny had more purchasing power than a modern quarter does; in 1940, then, consumers got by, quite contentedly, without the equivalent of our penny, nickel, or dime. And many people continue to get by without these coins today, since in the actual marketplace consumers tend to treat the quarter as the smallest meaningful denomination.
In that 2001 episode of “The West Wing,” the Sam Seaborn character states that the only coin-operated machines that accept pennies anymore (apart from automated tollbooths on highways in Illinois) are “those coin-wrapping machines people buy to get rid of pennies.” Since 1992, there has actually been one more: change-redeeming machines owned by the company Coinstar—which people also use to get rid of pennies. Coinstar’s founder, Jens Molbak, got the idea for his company while considering his own mounting collection of unredeemable change, in his dormitory room at the Stanford Graduate School of Business. A senior vice-president at Coinstar—Molbak himself retired in 2001—told me, “Jens interviewed some people outside supermarkets, and realized that a ton of them had hordes of coins sitting at home in jars or shoeboxes, too, and nobody really wanted to deal with them. He needed a project for a class, so he did some research and discovered a business. Now, everybody always says, Why didn’t I think of that?” Today, Coinstar’s kiosks can be found in more than fifteen thousand supermarkets and other locations, including the lobbies of some banks.
Coinstar charges most of its customers 8.9 per cent of any amount they feed into a machine. The fact that consumers happily pay this considerable fee suggests that they wouldn’t be bothered by the vastly smaller penalty that rounding to the nearest nickel might entail. Of course, eliminating cents would also eliminate the middleman—in this case Coinstar, which annually processes about forty billion coins, more than half of which are pennies. Not surprisingly, therefore, Coinstar has been an advocate of preserving pennies. Since 1998, the company has conducted an annual currency poll, which always shows that Americans still love pennies and would prefer to continue getting rid of them by collecting them for months or years and then paying Coinstar to put them back into circulation, instead of getting rid of them once and for all by having the Mint stop making them.
Whether or not the United States ever does drop the penny, Congress will presumably have to do something about the nickel, which now costs almost a dime to make. That won’t be easy. Tinkering with the metal content of the nickel is more challenging than tinkering with that of the penny, because nickels are used in vending machines and vending machines distinguish real coins from slugs by measuring size and weight. The modern five-cent piece was introduced in 1866, and was made of the same copper-nickel alloy that is used today. Its weight was set at exactly one gram per cent, and it therefore memorializes a moment in American history when the United States was thinking somewhat seriously about adopting the metric system. The nickel still weighs five grams—nearly as much as a quarter, and heavy enough that it is almost guaranteed to generate negative seigniorage, no matter what alloy it’s made from.
One solution to this problem would be to replace the nickel with an updated version of the coin that the nickel itself replaced, back in 1866. Frank Lucas, who is a Republican congressman from Oklahoma, a lifelong coin collector, and a potential inheritor of Jim Kolbe’s anti-penny mantle, told me, “I think we need to assess stepping back from the nickel, the five-cent piece, and consider readopting the traditional five-cent coin, the old half-dime.” Lucas’s version would be smaller in diameter than a dime, and weigh half as much—not light enough to blow away in a strong breeze, though almost.
An even simpler solution might be to get rid of five-cent coins altogether—along with the penny, of course. This idea may not be as radical as it sounds. In 2006, in an initiative called Change for the Better, New Zealand eliminated its five-cent coins, and dramatically reduced the size and weight of its ten-, twenty-, and fifty-cent coins. It had already stopped making one- and two-cent coins, in 1989, and had replaced one-dollar and two-dollar notes with coins, in 1991. This total transformation of the country’s currency was received with calm pragmatism by most New Zealanders—even though the lowest-denomination coin in the new system, the redesigned ten-cent piece, is worth about eight American cents at the current rate of exchange.
Canada, too, has streamlined its currency. It has stopped printing one- and two-dollar notes, and officials are considering further changes. Last year, economists at the Desjardins Group, an association of Canadian credit unions, published a study that strongly advocated the elimination of the Canadian one-cent coin, which would most likely be followed by the elimination of the five-cent coin as well. The study makes many references to the experience of New Zealanders. It also gets in several digs at foot-dragging Americans: “Canada does not have to follow their example. After all, American society is very conservative, particularly with its symbols (for example, the U.S. did not adopt the metric system and has not replaced the dollar bill with a dollar coin).” This sort of slur from an (alleged) ally probably isn’t worth going to war over, especially now that its money is sometimes worth more than ours. But we could still strike back, by doing Canada—and New Zealand—one better: we could get rid of dimes, too.
READ MORE - PENNY DREADFUL- It Takes 1.7 Cent To Make A Penny

No Arms, No Legs- No Worries

Friday, September 24, 2010

READ MORE - No Arms, No Legs- No Worries

Lindsay Lohan Sent Back to Jail After Failing Court-Mandated Drug Test

Bothered actress Lindsay Lohan came back to jailhouse Friday after a adjudicate sentenced her to rest in detention for about a month for a failed court-mandated drug test.


Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Elden S. Fox refused bail bond for Lohan following weeks of supposition about her destiny. Fox had released a indorsement for Lohan’s apprehension earlier this week, commanding her to appear in courtroom Friday morning time.


Sept. 24: Lindsay Lohan arrives at a court hearing in Los Angeles after failing a
court-mandated drug test.
Bailiffs manacled Lohan at once after the hearing, which endured less than 10 minutes at the Beverly Hills courthouse. A 2nd hearing is scheduled for October 22.


Lohan's father, Michael Lohan, stated "Oh God" as his girl rose, looked at her lawyer and was manacled.
Fox would not listen to arguments for bail from Lohan's attorney, Shawn Chapman Holley.


It is Lohan's third jail stint for a three-year-old drug and drunken driving case filed after a pair of high-profile arrests in 2007.




She's out of rehab and jail, but is she ready to reclaim her spot on top. 
  


These two may be frenemies but they're more alike than they'd like to admit!
Her previous stays at a women's jail in a Los Angeles suburb lasted 84 minutes and 14 days. In both cases, she was released from jail early due to overcrowding.


POLL: Is Lindsay Using Her Little Sister to Keep Money Flowing?


The judge said probation officials are reviewing Lohan's compliance with other aspects of her probation, which included frequent meetings with counselors.


Holley was not immediately available for comment. Court spokesman Allan Parachini said she remained in the courtroom to confer with Lohan.


Looking somber and wearing black and white clothing, the actress arrived 10 minutes early for the morning hearing. Cameras were not allowed inside the courtroom, and media lined the area outside awaiting the news.


It was the "Mean Girls" star's first appearance before Fox, who had said at a previous hearing he would sentence her to a month in jail for each drug test she skipped or failed.


The actress wasn't present for that hearing, which was held hours after her release from rehab.
READ MORE - Lindsay Lohan Sent Back to Jail After Failing Court-Mandated Drug Test

J'cans in Tampa say Observer for Buju


TAMPA, Florida – Amid a flurry of rumours that Buju Banton has been freed,  the Jamaican community here has one piece of advice: follow the Jamaica Observer.
The Observer is the only Jamaican newspaper with a reporter covering the trial here at the Gibbons US Court where Banton, real name Mark Myrie, is nervously awaiting a verdict on charges of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute five kilograms or more of cocaine.
The jury is continuing its deliberations ahead of a verdict expected later today.
Our reporter at the trial, Paul Henry, will bring you further updates when confirmed news is available. You can follow us via our websitewww.jamaicaobserver.com or Twitter @jamaicaobserver.com.
At the time of writing, Buju is the sixth most popular trending topic on Twitter worldwide.
READ MORE - J'cans in Tampa say Observer for Buju

Top 10 Murphy's Laws


Murphy must never had thought that his everyday assertion would someday turn into law! Murphy's Laws represent the erring nature of masses & actions. Here are top 10 list of Murphy's Laws by News, Trends & Media Reports. A different scoop for the readers by us.


Law # 1
If something can go wrong, it will.


Law # 2
If anything simply cannot go wrong, it will anyway.


Law # 3
Left to themselves, things tend to go from bad to worse.


Law # 4
Matter will be damaged in direct proportion to its value.


Law # 5
The chance of the bread falling with the buttered side down is directly proportional to the cost of the carpet.


Law # 6
The buddy system is essential to your survival; it gives the enemy somebody else to shoot at.


Law # 7
Technology is dominated by those who manage what they do not understand.


Law # 8
The opulence of the front office decor varies inversely with the fundamental solvency of the firm.


Law # 9
Tell a man there are 300 billion stars in the universe and he'll believe you. Tell him a bench has wet paint on it and he'll have to touch to be sure.


Law # 10
The first myth of management is that it exists.
READ MORE - Top 10 Murphy's Laws

Republicans present "Pledge to America" agenda

Thursday, September 23, 2010



(Reuters) - Republicans in the House of Representatives, forecast to do well in November's congressional election, presented a "Pledge to America" campaign agenda on Thursday to create jobs, cut taxes and shrink government.

Boosted by voter disappointment at President Barack Obama's handling of high unemployment and the budget deficit, the Republicans look set to pick up dozens of seats in the House, with a real chance to win back control from the Democrats.

Opinion polls show Democrats should keep hold of the Senate but with a weaker majority.

Dressed in open-necked shirts, the Republican House leaders unveiled their manifesto at a hardware store in Sterling, Virginia, near the U.S. capital.

"Republicans have heard the American people," said John Boehner, the party's leader in the House. "We are very serious about implementing our pledge."

While short on specifics, the plan calls for $100 billion in savings per year by scaling back federal spending to 2008 levels -- with exceptions for the elderly and U.S. troops -- and ending government control of mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

With the Republican announcement, much of which was leaked to the media on Wednesday, battle lines for the November 2 election have become clearer.

The Republicans, who lost control of Congress in 2006, aim to cut the projected $1.3 trillion deficit with immediate spending reductions. But they also call for tax cuts that would make paring the deficit more difficult.

Democrats are more cautious about spending reductions now, fearing that could stifle an already slow economic recovery.

Under pressure from the conservative Tea Party movement to slash the size and cost of government, the Republicans promised to repeal Obama's landmark yet unpopular overhaul of the U.S. healthcare system and eliminate unspent funds from his $814 billion economic stimulus program.

A senior Obama aide warned this week that pulling back on federal spending too soon could harm the recovering economy and rattle investors.

"If you try to tighten the belt right now, I think you would spook markets in a substantial way," Austan Goolsbee, chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, told the Reuters Washington Summit on Wednesday.

The Economic Policy Institute, a liberal-leaning thinktank, estimated the new Republican plan would reduce the deficit by 5.5 percent but cause gross domestic product to shrink by 1.1 percent, leading to a loss of 1.1 million jobs.

ALL ABOUT MESSAGE

Losing the Democratic majority in the House would crimp Obama's domestic agenda.

He is unlikely to sign into law many, if any, reforms proposed by House Republicans. But they set markers in what could be a rough fight in the final two years of Obama's term if Republicans do as well as predicted in November.

The Republican manifesto gave few details about how to balance the federal budget and revamp the troubled Social Security retirement program.

"This is more about message than what may become law," said Dan Ripp of Bradley Woods & Co, a private firm that tracks Washington for institutional investors.

"And it is the right message," he said. "I think part of the reason that the market has been trending upward (in recent weeks) is it reads a Republican sweep, which is going to put the brakes on what the Obama administration has been doing."

Some fear political gridlock after the election.

Congress has yet to agree on whether to extend tax cuts brought in under former President George W,. Bush.

Most Democrats want the cuts to be extended only for the first $200,000 of a person's income, saying the country cannot afford to continue tax cuts for higher earners.

Republicans want the lower rates renewed for all Americans, regardless of income, and say that losing the cuts would hurt small businesses and job creation just as the economy is recovering from its worst recession since the 1930s.

In their agenda, Republican House leaders vowed to stop "job killing tax hikes" and allow small business owners to take a tax deduction equal to 20 percent of their business income.

The Economic Policy Institute said the spending cuts sought by Republicans would fall particularly hard on education, scientific research and transportation projects.

"Representative Boehner's plan to drive job growth would actually slow economic growth for years to come," it said.

The Republican agenda is reminiscent of "The Contract with America" that House Republicans announced on the steps of the Capitol in 1994, although the presentation was less grand.

That manifesto helped them win control of the House during the second year of Democrat Bill Clinton's presidency.
READ MORE - Republicans present "Pledge to America" agenda

Current Twitter trends: Deathly Hallows Trailer, Uniqlo Lucky Line, Jupiter, Commonwealth Games

Warner Brothers has formally issued a fresh preview for the much-awaited Harry Potter motion picture, Harry Potter & the Deathly Hallows & Twitter users are aroused about the new subsequence.

Microbloggers are twirping links to the preview (http://harrypotter.warnerbros.com/) advertising "Deathly Hallows Trailer" into the top emplacement on Twitter's most discussed matters on the dawn of September 23.

"UNIQLO LUCKY LINE" is in 2nd grade as shoppers tweet their emplacement in the Japanese appareling brand's virtual shopping line to try and win prizes.

In third, fourth and fifth places are the memes "#ihatewhenpeople," "#okimlying" and "#namesomethingawful."

"Jupiter" is bringing in an appearance on Twitter and in the night sky as the planet comes closer to the earth than it has in around 50 years.

"For u junior astronomers out there jupiter is visible in the night sky tonight..b/c it is currently in alignment w earth and the sun," and "According to Google Sky, that sparkly dot next to the Moon-as seen from Honolulu-is Jupiter overlapped with Uranus," tweet microbloggers looking up to the heavens.

"CWG," short for the Commonwealth Games, is trending in seventh place as Twitter users discuss increasing concerns over CWG participants' health and safety at the event. "Commonwealth" is also trending in tenth place.

The Dutch word for good morning ("Goedemorgen") is back in the charts at number eight and is joined by the Italian term for good morning, "Buongiorno," in ninth place.

The top 10 most talked about topics on Twitter on September 23 at 7:30 AM GMT are:

Deathly Hallows Trailer (new)
UNIQLO LUCKY LINE (new)
#ihatewhenpeople (new)
#okimlying (new)
#namesomethingawful (-3)
Jupiter (new)
CWG (+2)
Goedemorgen (re-entry)
Buongiorno (new)
Commonwealth (new)
READ MORE - Current Twitter trends: Deathly Hallows Trailer, Uniqlo Lucky Line, Jupiter, Commonwealth Games

Gunbroker and Ebay Website Used To Sell Stolen Goods

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Many of Rogers County houses were breached into during the past week in Oklahoma city. Rogers County Sheriffs Investigators pronounced that Jason Conrad Lewis was accountable for the burglaries.

He was apprehended during the past week on Tuesday & data from the apprehend has led agencies to a house inhabited by Patrick & Karri Medlin. A search warrant was put out and the police force determined a lot of the stolen goods.

In that house, which they searched, they discovered stolen cash with a lot of motorbike parts, saddlebacks, a welding machine, and loads of stolen arms.

Rogers County Sheriff, Scott Walton, explained that the discovering of the stolen goods were a direct consequence from the apprehension of Lewis.

As per Walton, Lewis had stolen all this stuff & it was sold on internet sites such as Gunbroker and Ebay by the Medlin’s.
READ MORE - Gunbroker and Ebay Website Used To Sell Stolen Goods

Dancing with the Stars’ 2010: Jennifer Grey Remembers Patrick Swayze

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

As mentioned today earlier in a webcast on a website, the trendy reality TV show “Dancing with the Stars” made a come back past night with the super stars of its 11th season. However, rehearsals for the first show proved way too emotional for Jennifer Grey the “Dirty Dancing” star. Jennifer parrtnered up with Derek Hough for this dance performance.

As per a recent report at the dailymail.co.uk, Jennifer Grey, who is 50 years old – starred in 1987, in a hit movie, with the late Patrick Swayze – came on the dancefloor and performed a Viennese waltz dance to Otis Redding’s song “These Arms of Mine,” during the first episode on the last night.

However, when Jennifer listened to the song during the rehersal – which appeared on the “Dirty Dancing” soundtrack – she went was too emotional. The footage that was recorded before the 1st show, the actress broke down in tears as she remembered her co-star Patrick. Patrick died in 2009 of cancer.

Jeniffer explained her dance partner, Derek, that this song reminded her of the old dance partner, Patrick. “It took me back in a time capsule, and I was with Patrick,” she exoressed about the song. But when it was the live show however, she was very professional and did not let these emotions affect her performance. Her score 24 out of 30 was very very impressive.
READ MORE - Dancing with the Stars’ 2010: Jennifer Grey Remembers Patrick Swayze

Bridge Fire Suspends Commuter Train Service In New York

Monday, September 20, 2010

Serving on New York’s Metro-North railway line from Grand Central has been restored afterward a fire at the 138th Street bridge over the Harlem River was controlled.

Servicing has restarted with “sprinkled delays” of as long as 15 minutes, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority stated now in an e-mailed assertion.

“The fire is under control and two of four tracks on the 138th Street Bridge have been restored,” as per the electronic mail. “We continue to assess any damage on the remaining two tracks and its impact, if any, on the PM peak service.”

Servicing on the Hudson, Harlem and New Haven railway lines was inactive after a fire below the bridge was accounted at 11:45 a.m. today, Marjorie Anders, a spokeswoman for the Metro-North service, said today in a ring interview.

The fire could have been set out by the blowup of a transformer next to the rail, Anders aforementioned. The bang geared up fire to wooden stilts intended to protect against damage from boat hits, she said.

“When they said ‘fire,’ that was scary,” said Mary Ann Magnano, a adjourned 63-year-old at Grand Central who was goingnorthward White Plains station. “But everything is clear now. No one seemed too panicked. It’s looking fine. They’ve been keeping us updated.”

Transit functionaries do not yet acknowledge whether the blowup sullied the bridge’s metallic construction, Anders said. Metro-North serves well approximately 135,000 commuter trains each day, she said.
READ MORE - Bridge Fire Suspends Commuter Train Service In New York

 
 
 
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