Britain’s Got Talent 1st Semi Final Review

17 May, 2012 (15:37) | Uncategorized | By: admin

After seven weeks of auditions, we now have the first live BGT semi final and it’s time to face the mus…oh hold on.

Don’t stop me now, I’m having such a good time. Thanks Ant & Dec. Their intro really got me ready for the show…now bring it on.

After the announcement that there will be the first ever wildcard for the Final, we really got going.

First up was Zipparah Tafari with ‘that’ song. Great the first time we heard it and now it’s been   Jazzed up, it’s even better. Win or lose tonight Zipparah could be set for a top ten hit.

Jive Aces rocked us, literally, into the second performance. If they were playing at any event they would raise the roof with their quirky banana suits and energetic moves. Sadly most of the judges didn’t agree. Get them booked for your wedding do NOW. 

Next up was Lauren Thalia. Lovely family, lovely girl. Maybe too young just now but keep an eye on Lauren, a huge star of the future. 

Diversity, sorry I mean UWS (United We Stand) took to the stage and I’m sorry but a few years ago we would have been wowed, now it’s, well boring. 

Analiza Ching was someone I was looking forward to seeing, but it sadly passed me by. I’m not saying it was poor, but I’ve supported previous classical stars Escala and they are world’s above this. 

I hate being negative but I watch these shows, not just as a reality TV reviewer but as a talent agent director…please let the next act be good.

My prayers were answered with boy band The Mend. Cutting edge vocals Windows 7 serial key, excellent raw look.

There is a gap for these boys Microsoft Windows 7 Key, they could be the next East 17, a boy band with an edge. 

Just want to say that Simon Cowell should give me a job…as I’m writing this review Office Visio Key, he’s basically saying the exact same stuff.  Want a new t-shirt Mr Cowell?

Rachel Knowland followed The Mend, which was very hard to do after their rousing show. Rachel has a smooth vocal and looks stunning. I would sign her tomorrow.

Eighth up, was Midas act Ashleigh and her lovely dog Pudsey and, without being biased this was one of the, if not thee best thing I have ever seen. The work and dedication that must have gone in to this is beyond belief and Pudsey is adorable….and I’m a cat lover.

Final performance of the night, Only Boys Aloud. What a faultless, captivating performance. I love everything these guys stand for. 

Oh sorry there was a wild card thrown in tonight. The unknown singer Tulisa. Not sure if she will do very much….just joking Tulisa. Well done on the Number One single.

Now we have the nervous wait for the result…

The first act through to the Final was Ashleigh and Pudsey. 

The judges votes was tied between The Mend and Only Boys Aloud. The latter winning on the public vote.

What an entertaining first live show, roll on the second semi final. 

Mickey Mouse gives gay marriage thumbs up in Japan

17 May, 2012 (15:24) | Uncategorized | By: admin

JUST days after President Barack Obama came out in favour of gay marriage, another supporter of homosexual unions emerged in Japan: Mickey Mouse.

Despite their having no legal status, same sex couples are able to hold fairytale wedding ceremonies at hotels inside the popular Tokyo Disney Resort, including at the Cinderella Castle, a company spokeswoman said today.

News of the unions came to light when Koyuki Higashi, 27, inquired about marrying her female partner at the resort.

A member of staff who answered the call said there would be no problem with their marrying, provided they dressed "like a man and a woman" replica watches, Higashi wrote on her blog.

The staff member explained a same-sex wedding would create "repercussions" among visitors to the park if both brides were wearing wedding dresses or both grooms wore tuxedos replica watches, the blog added.

However, a few days later replica watches, the resort operator got back in touch to say their initial response had been wrong and gay couples were free to mix and match their attire.

"We have never refused an application for a same-sex wedding at hotels here," a spokeswoman at Milial Resort Hotels, a subsidiary of Tokyo Disney Resort, told AFP today.

"One of our staff members was mistaken when explaining about outfits for a same-sex wedding," she said.

But she added gay and lesbian couples were not allowed to exchange marriage vows at the onsite chapel "because of Christian teaching".

Homosexuality in Japan is widely accepted but not openly discussed.

Last week Obama became the first sitting US president to openly back same-sex marriage, an issue that sharply divides America.

Insight Salesforce’s plan for opulent campus a co

17 May, 2012 (15:07) | Uncategorized | By: admin

SAN FRANCISCO, May 11, 2012 (Reuters) — In early 2010, Marc Benioff, founder and chief executive of Salesforce.com, summoned several of his top real estate and finance executives to his San Francisco home to float a bold idea. He envisioned a world-class corporate campus to house the high-flying provider of online sales management tools, which employed more than 2,500 people in the city. Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff walks speaks to the crowd during his keynote address at the Dreamforce event in San Francisco, California in this August 31, 2011 file photo. REUTERS/Robert Galbraith

Soon after, Salesforce bought 14 acres of waterfront property for $278 million. The company hired acclaimed Mexican architects Legoretta + Legoretta, who created an elaborate, avant-garde design for an office complex that would marry luxurious executive perks with expansive public spaces.

City leaders got behind the project, which promised to be the biggest office development in San Francisco in decades.

Then, this past February, just days before it was set to receive final approvals from the city, Salesforce abruptly pulled the plug.

The company’s stated reason for changing course was that the new campus would not be big enough for its growing workforce. But people closely involved with the ill-fated development paint a picture of an out-of-control project that lurched forward even in the face of stratospheric costs and tepid support among employees. Only a construction expert hired late in the planning process convinced Benioff that moving forward would be folly.

The canceled development has already cost Salesforce tens of millions of dollars, and the price tag could rise further if the Web-based software maker fails to find a ready buyer for the land it bought, according to recent regulatory filings.

The cancellation has also singed the company’s relationships with city officials, including San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee, who had touted the development as an economic boon and was stunned when it was suddenly abandoned.

A handful of real estate executives departed Salesforce in the aftermath, although the company would not confirm this was linked to the project. The cancellation also caused financial pain for some of the partners in the project, with one local contractor, for example, forced to lay off a dozen architects.

The episode fueled concerns about Benioff’s penchant for spending big to make a splash.

“The rule is somebody builds a big shrine to themselves and that usually is the end of the company,” said David Rudow, senior equity analyst with Thrivent Financial for Lutherans, a not-for-profit financial services firm that holds roughly $50 million worth of Salesforce shares.

“They should focus on developing software, expanding their market. All this focus on a fancy building doesn’t benefit customers in any way possible,” Rudow said.

Benioff rejected the notion that it had been a lavish, out-of-control venture.

“The campus was always the best option, and we were all excited about the campus,” Benioff said in an email to Reuters, adding that the cost “did not balloon” and was always forecast at $2 billion.

“There was no excess planned at the campus,” Benioff added. “We are very austere in our real estate operations. This is true in all of our offices today as well.”

Salesforce investors were relieved to see the company pull back, given that a number of companies over the years – including AOL Time Warner and CIT Group – have fallen into decline around the time they moved into expensive new corporate edifices.

“One does not typically abandon course at the 1-yard line after spending millions of dollars for the whole kit and caboodle and going 99 yards down the field,” said a person outside of Salesforce who worked on the project and spoke on condition of anonymity.

BRILLIANCE, BRASSINESS, BIG SPENDING

Benioff, 47, an imposing figure at 6 foot 5 inches, made his name in the 1990s as a young marketing star at Oracle Corp., where he forged a reputation for brilliance, brassiness and big spending.

After leaving Oracle to start Salesforce in 1999, he threw a launch party that famously featured the B-52s rock band and cost $600,000, even though the company barely had revenue at the time.

Since then, Benioff has become one of Silicon Valley’s most prominent figures Professional Tattoo Kits, traveling the world as a passionate evangelist for cloud computing, one of the hottest growth sectors in the technology industry.

And he has not lost his taste for a good show. At the Salesforce holiday party last December, acrobats poured champagne while suspended upside-down from chandeliers.

Salesforce reported an $11.6 million loss in its most-recent fiscal year and it forecasts another loss in the current year.

But shareholders say it is hard to fault Benioff, whose singular vision has been credited for the company’s surging top line year after year. Salesforce shares are trading at more than 12 times their 2004 IPO price.

For Benioff, the audacious campus project represented another long-term investment in the company’s growth that could instill a unified corporate culture and serve as a draw for employees, according to people outside the company who were familiar with his thinking.

Splashy headquarters like the “Googleplex” – Google’s corporate headquarters in Mountain View, California – can boost a firm’s public image and stand as a physical reminder of its business success. Apple, for one, plans to build an enormous ring-like structure resembling a spaceship to house 13,000 employees in a headquarters complex at Cupertino, California.

The Salesforce project began to take shape in late 2010, when the company bought the parcel in southeast San Francisco. The land was among the last vacant tracts in an area south of downtown known as Mission Bay, where a new University of California research center and a cluster of biotech companies have anchored a decades-long redevelopment effort.

In an anteroom near his third-floor office, Benioff soon set up a 15-foot-long model of his dream campus: office buildings covered in orange terra cotta and mesh-like purple skins that rose from the waterfront like geometric blocks.

A water taxi pavilion extended into the bay to receive commuters from a proposed ferry service; a planned parking structure featured a swimming pool and cabanas on its roof; and another pool shimmered on a patio outside Benioff’s future executive suite, according to two people who saw the model.

The CEO liked Legoretta’s works, which included a towering community center at the University of California, San Francisco and a lavish beachfront home in Kona, Hawaii, built for retired financier Sanford Robertson, who sits on Salesforce’s board.

“I was taken by them,” Benioff told Reuters in an April interview, referring to Legoretta’s works. “The design was perfect.”

The campus was to be situated directly across the street from another project Benioff was deeply invested in: The University of California, San Francisco Benioff Children’s Hospital, which took that name after Benioff and his wife Lynne donated $100 million in 2010.

“There was a lot of momentum with the campus – the pictures, and the graphics, and the approvals,” Benioff said. “Every time we got one more approval, we kind of always came back and said, ‘Is this a good idea? This is a good idea.’ Let’s keep going.”

Some employees were less enthusiastic. In a 2010 survey of more than 3,000 Salesforce employees, a slim majority indicated that while they were excited by the campus concept, they preferred to stay in downtown office towers near public transportation, a person with direct knowledge of the poll said.

Benioff characterized the survey’s results as “50/50″ and described its purpose as “mostly just something to help us socialize the decision inside the company.”

“I felt the campus would be more aligned with our culture than (an) 80-story building,” Benioff said.

His enthusiasm and force of will were critical in overcoming concerns on the part of some city officials who were wary of how the broader community might view such a large corporate campus designed by an architectural firm known for unconventional concepts. Eventually, the city was assuaged by the inclusion of extensive public spaces within the development.

Planning documents reviewed by Reuters showed a campus design laden with both splashy touches and generous space set aside for public use.

In the atriums of one office building, four-story high waterfalls tumbled from the roof. Benioff personally proposed mounting an enormous television screen high over a large public plaza — dubbed the “Town Square” — to show programs including San Francisco Giants baseball games, a city official said.

Accented with palm and lemon-scented gum trees, the leafy campus was designed to host farmers’ markets and food trucks. An expansive gym, a child-care facility and several restaurants were intended to be partially open to the public.

TROUBLE BREWING

As Benioff pressed ahead, trouble was brewing behind the scenes.

Linda Jansen, who served as head of real estate at Salesforce from 2007 until earlier this year, questioned the practicality of the project from the start, arguing that offices scattered around the Bay Area made more financial sense, according to three people knowledgeable about the project.

Now a member of Google’s real estate team, Jansen could not be reached for comment.

When the Salesforce board approved the planned campus in late 2010 Tools Tattoo, a preliminary estimate placed the cost at roughly $750 per square foot (about $8,000 per square meter), according to a person with direct knowledge of the project.

That would have made it the most expensive office development in San Francisco history, said Colin Yasukochi, vice president of research at commercial real estate firm Jones Lang LaSalle.

Benioff maintained that the cost projection did not rise dramatically.

There were external pressures mounting on Salesforce last year as well. By November, Salesforce shares had fallen to $109 from a high of $160 in July, as analysts criticized the company for what was perceived as Benioff’s excessive spending on sales and marketing.

It was Fish who persuaded Benioff to back away from the project in early 2012, Benioff said. Fish had identified a massive vacancy at 50 Fremont, a modern office tower a block away from Salesforce’s current headquarters, and moved quickly to secure the deal.

Even as Salesforce signed the 50 Fremont lease in January, company representatives assured the city that it was fully committed to the Mission Bay campus.

But on February 28, Salesforce suddenly announced that it was suspending the project because the company was “going to need the square-footage before we can build it.”

‘CAUTION AND DISAPPOINTMENT’

The withdrawal blindsided San Francisco officials. In an interview, Mayor Ed Lee said he was taken aback by the project’s collapse.

“My first reaction was caution and disappointment that the investment that they made wasn’t able to get completed,” Lee said, but added that he was pleased the company will expand in downtown San Francisco.

Others were less polite. “The question is, as a publicly traded company, how did it get this far?” said a senior city official who asked not to be identified by name. “Nobody connected the dots — a really expensive campus, a public company with analysts and stock shareholders — and said, ‘This just doesn’t work.’”

The project’s cancellation sent some contractors reeling. Flad Architects Tattoo Machine Supplies, a local firm, laid off a dozen architects. Other contractors also cut jobs.

“When you’ve got a $2 billion project that dies on you instantly, it wouldn’t be difficult to say that it had an impact,” said Andrew Cunningham, a principal at Flad.

Salesforce has taken its lumps, too. In 2011, the company spent $33.8 million on interest and property taxes related to the land, according to the company’s annual report. The company also warned shareholders that its financial performance may be hurt if the company fails to “realize any benefits in connection with our purchase of undeveloped land in San Francisco.”

Benioff emphasized the company’s strong revenue performance. “The company is focused on top line growth and holding the land is immaterial to the company’s ability to grow,” he said in his email.

The model of the project that used to be near his office has been removed, but Benioff did not rule out a revival of the campus proposal.

“It doesn’t mean that at some point we can’t reactivate the project,” he said in his interview. “We continue to have the best possible working environment for employees, regardless what form that takes. And we want to have every option on the table for them.”

(Editing by Martin Howell and Will Dunham)

Mayday! Mayday! Mayday! Bankers Panic Over May D

17 May, 2012 (15:07) | Uncategorized | By: admin

“Mayday,” which is used as a distress signal and derives from the French “m’aider (“come help me”), is being given new meaning by Wall Street and its Bankers in response to the upcoming “May Day” Occupy national protests.

This May Day demonstration will be the largest of its kind in a half-century and will take place in cities across the U.S. On May 1, 2012, tens of thousands of people throughout the U.S. and the world — workers, students, immigrants, professionals, houseworkers — employed and unemployed alike – will take to the streets to unite in a General Strike against “a system that does not work for us.”

May Day is a holiday for the 99 percent. It is a day for people to come together, across all those lines which too often divide us — race, class, gender, religion — and challenge the systems that create these divisions.

The expected response from the City? Don’t expect ticker-tape.

Being aware of the financial community’s alarm and Mayor Bloomberg’s mindset, I sought out one of New York City’s most active volunteers (I was told she was “awesome” – and she is), Jackie DiSalvo, to determine the legitimacy of this hand-wringing and get a better idea of the “Occupy” side of this story.

I described to Jackie a recent Bloomberg Businessweek article titled “Wall Street Tracks ‘Wolves’ as May 1 Protests Loom” in which Brian McNary, a Pinkerton Global Risk director describes both Occupiers and the threat that “May Day” has for his banking clients and the need for “surveillance” of wild-eyed radicals.

“Banks cooperating on surveillance are like elk fending off wolves in Yellowstone National Park Tattoo Machine Supply,” he was quoted as saying… “While other animals try in vain to sprint away alone, elk survive attacks by forming a ring together,” he declared.

As a spokesperson for the OWS Labor Outreach committee and member of the planning committee for the Mayday Solidarity March Coalition, she could only shake her head and sigh. “May Day, and Occupy, are both examples and manifestations of non-violent civil protest.”

Pointedly, the extent to which Wall Street (and city government) will use their near-military police force to corral and subdue protestors will be the likely determiner as to how peaceful the protests will be.
(When I visited Union Square the other day for the student rally against $1 trillion in educational debt, there were close to 50 – FIFTY! – police cars surrounding the Park. If that is their response to several hundred people at a Student demonstration, what is in store for May 1?)

Are New York’s Finest the “Hessians” of today?

Britain, in the American Revolutionary War Tools For Tattooing, found it easier to go to German States to hire their armed military than to recruit their own citizens to fight an unpopular war. Wall Street must have taken note and put a more modern spin to this practice.

In 2010, JPMorgan gave the New York City Police Foundation the largest donation it has ever received — $4.6 million. They outfitted over 1,000 officers with state-of-the-art laptops and communications tools. Donations are large and ongoing from Wall Street to the cops to this day… and one has to ask — Is this not turning New York City’s police department into the largest de-facto privately funded anti-protest army in the United States?

Will justification for police violence be concocted, as exampled by the police and the military actions taking place even today against protestors in Greece, Spain and the Middle East? Will the suppression of the “American Spring” begin on May Day?

Planning for exactly that possibility, New York City’s Occupy has organized neighborhoods and sites into what it terms “Green, Yellow and Red” zones. The safest for protestors (from arrest and harassment) are designated green Tattoo Kits For Beginners, the more problematical as yellow, and the more risky as red.

Is Green, Yellow, Red the New Red, White and Blue?

What will be your choice on that day? Green? Yellow? Red? Will you even be on the streets? Will you choose not to go to work or to school? Will you take a day off from shopping? Or, will you wisely (?) stay above the fray and come home to turn on the news to watch your more committed fellow citizen exercising for you the right to free speech and assembly?

I wonder what color that latter choice would be…

Want more details? and

   

The Ridenhour Awards

16 May, 2012 (07:48) | Uncategorized | By: admin

In my last article for the The Huffington Post, I talked about how easy it is to make a difference. How the smallest of kindnesses can make a huge impact on another’s life; how even a few words can act as an invitation to a whole new world.

Timing is everything, they say. And on the day the article came out, my father extended to me one such invitation, to The Ridenhour Awards.

My background is in psychology and the arts. And while I am passionate about human rights, social justice, and political integrity, I participate in those worlds more passively than actively. Until yesterday afternoon. When I was front and center for the celebration of men and women who have dedicated their lives to these efforts.

The Ridenhour Awards — presented annually by The Fertel Foundation and The Nation Institute — honor men and women for acts of truth-telling that protect the public interest, promote social justice, and illuminate a more just vision of society. Four awards, presented for courage, literature, documentary film Buy Bandage dresses, and truth-telling, celebrate the spirit and contribution of Ron Ridenhour, whose 1969 letter to Congress and the Pentagon describing the horrific events at My Lai — the infamous massacre of the Vietnam War — brought the scandal to the attention of the American public and the world.

Hearing the speeches of this year’s recipients, as well as the moving words of those introducing them, was a reminder of the indomitable spirit of human beings Cheap Chloe Dresses, of our ability to overcome adversity and injustice and more — to sacrifice comfort in order to make a difference, regardless of the personal cost. Unlike so many of us armchair warriors, these men and women don’t merely point out what is wrong with the world. They do whatever it takes to make it right, even when the odds and others are determinedly positioned against them.

Thank you to everyone at Fertel, The Nation, and Project on Government Oversight for your important and impactful work. And for the reminder that we all — regardless of what we do for a living — have the choice, and the ability, to put others before ourselves and to bravely risk everything in order to make a real difference.

And to my father… thank you for including me in what matters to you. And for making such a big difference — in so many ways — in my life.

Officially OfficialBMW Concept 5 Series ActiveHybr

15 May, 2012 (14:47) | Uncategorized | By: admin

BMW Concept 5 Series ActiveHybrid – Click above for high-res image gallery

BMW is expanding its hybrid lineup down the model range to the recently introduced 5 Series sedan with a new concept that debuts Monday at the Geneva Motor Show. The new Concept 5 Series ActiveHybrid will likely transition to a production model sometime in 2011. This will be the third different hybrid powertrain variant introduced by BMW following the two-mode system in the ActiveHybrid X6 and the mild hybrid system in the AcitveHybrid 7 Series.

The 5 Series uses a new derivative of the modular mild hybrid system from the larger 7. The 15 kilowatt electric motor from the 7 has been upgraded to a full 40 kW for the smaller sedan. That will allow the hybrid 5 Series to function as a full hybrid Tattoo Supplies, operating in electric-only mode at city speeds. Unlike the twin-turbo V8 used in the earlier hybrids, the 5 uses the 300-horsepower twin-scroll turbo inline-six available in the 535i. A clutch between the engine and motor allows them to be disengaged for electric drive.

A larger battery pack than the 7 Series Hybrid is mounted in the trunk, but BMW has not yet specified if the 5 is using a nickel metal hydride battery like the X6 or a lithium battery like the 7. Chances are it will be the latter in order to minimize intrusion on the cargo capacity.

BMW has incorporated a variety of new strategies into the hybrid control, such as monitoring the navigation route to anticipate what is coming up and to make maximum use of the electric drive. At this point Tattoo Supplies, BMW is not giving specifics on the efficiency of the new hybrid except to say that it should improve on the standard model by more than 10 percent.

Related GalleryBMW Concept 5 Series ActiveHybrid 5
[Source: BMW]

Wrong Harry

14 May, 2012 (00:58) | Uncategorized | By: admin

CWA head Harry Hopkins

President Obama’s $825 billion economic-stimulus package needs a lot less PWA and a lot more CWA.

The PWA was the Public Works Administration, led by Harold Ickes Sr. The CWA was the Civil Works Administration, led by Harry Hopkins. Both were New Deal agencies created in 1933 to get Americans quickly back to work at a time when unemployment reached 25 percent, its highest point in U.S. history. The PWA failed. The CWA succeeded.

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The strategy behind Obama’s stimulus bill resembles that of the PWA. Like the stimulus, the PWA tackled unemployment indirectly by spending money largely through private contractors. That handicap—worsened by Ickes’ cautious-to-a-fault management style—resulted in only $110 million of the program’s authorized $3.3 billion getting spent during the program’s crucial first year. Frustrated by Ickes’ poky pace, Roosevelt yielded to the pleas of his relief administrator, Harry Hopkins Cheap Karen Millen Dresses, to help get unemployed workers through the coming winter by putting them directly onto the federal payroll. Roosevelt had been reluctant to create a federal work program for fear of alienating organized labor. Hopkins overcame that worry by pointing out that Samuel Gompers, founder of the American Federation of Labor, had in 1898 proposed essentially the same idea. Roosevelt diverted not quite one-third of Ickes’ PWA budget to Hopkins’ CWA with the goal of putting to work 4 million people. As a percentage of the population, that would be the equivalent of putting 10 million people to work today. In his first weekly radio address, Obama pledged that the stimulus package would “save or create 3 to 4 million jobs over the next few years.” (His budget director estimates that 75 percent of the money will be spent within 18 months.) Hopkins got there within two months.

The current economic downturn has yet to bring us near the depths of the Great Depression, but the situation is dire. The official unemployment rate now stands at 7.2 percent, a figure that rises to more than 13 percent when you add in people who’ve given up looking for work and people working part-time only because they can’t find full-time work. The economy shed more jobs last year than in any single year since 1945. “Three to 4 million jobs over the next few years”? With the country currently losing half a million jobs each month, that won’t be fast enough.

The CWA moved more swiftly than the PWA in part because of the difference in temperament between Hopkins and Ickes. Ickes was so fearful that the PWA would appropriate funds to an unworthy or scandalous project that he dotted every I and crossed every T before spending a nickel. The advantage to this approach in the long run was that it led to many significant projects, including New York’s Triborough Bridge. The disadvantage was that it didn’t create jobs quickly. Hopkins’ anxieties were focused on the prospect that the CWA would fail to provide a sufficient number of jobs to the people who desperately needed them. Better to get the money out the door, Hopkins believed, and to address any irregularities immediately as they came up. The CWA’s field investigators Christian Audigier Clothes sale, who included journalists Lorena Hickock and Martha Gellhorn, helped keep Hopkins on the right track. The CWA’s programs were further scrutinized by Roosevelt’s friend Frank Walker, who as president of the National Emergency Council supervised all the president’s new alphabet agencies, and by Army Lt. Col. John C.H. Lee (at the direction of the War Department). Both men were deeply impressed by Hopkins’ leadership. “I’d pay little attention to those who criticize the creation of CWA or its administration,” Walker reported to Roosevelt after touring CWA projects around the country. “You have every reason to be proud.” Lee, a military engineer, had the reputation of a hanging judge—serving later as one of Dwight Eisenhower’s top generals during World War II, he earned the nickname “John Court House Lee.” Yet Lee had nothing but admiration for Hopkins’ “loose fluidity of organization” and marveled that Hopkins had in two months enlisted as many people as the Army had in 18 when the U.S. entered World War I. The CWA even won praise from Kansas Gov. Alf Landon, Roosevelt’s future Republican opponent in the 1936 presidential election. “This civil-works program is one of the soundest, most constructive policies of your administration,” Landon wrote FDR, “and I cannot urge too strongly its continuance.”

The PWA’s poor performance relative to the CWA was more than just a matter of being ruled by the wrong Harry. Structurally, the CWA was much better able than the PWA to mobilize quickly because it could avoid the cumbersome process of putting contracts out to bid and all the other obstacles to swift action that arise with public-private partnerships. (Government by contract was popular then, and remains so today, because it allows a politician to create the semblance of government action without expanding the government work force. It also caters to the public’s belief that the private sector is more capable, an illusion punctured by recent scandals surrounding Blackwater and other U.S. contractors in Iraq.) Hopkins enjoyed immediate carte blanche to apply directly the apparatus of the federal government. He shifted staff from the federal relief program he’d headed up, seized tools and equipment from Army warehouses, and cut checks through the Veterans Administration’s vast disbursement system. The CWA laid 12 million feet of sewer pipe and built or made substantial improvements to 255,000 miles of roads, 40,000 schools, 3,700 playgrounds, and nearly 1,000 airports (not to mention 250 Cheap Herve leger strapless,000 outhouses still badly needed in rural America). Most of the jobs involved manual labor, to which most of the population, having been raised on the farm, was far more accustomed than it would be today. But the CWA also provided considerable white-collar work, employing, among others Cheap Chloe Dresses, statisticians, bookbinders, architects, 50,000 teachers, and 3,000 writers and artists. (“Hell, they’ve got to eat like other people Herve Leger sale,” Hopkins noted matter-of-factly.) This was achieved with a remarkable minimum of overhead. Of the nearly $1 billion—the equivalent today of nearly $16 billion—that Hopkins spent during the CWA’s five-month existence, 80 percent went directly into workers’ pockets and thence stimulated the economy by going into the cash registers of grocers and shop owners. Most of the rest went to equipment costs. Less than 2 percent paid for administration.

The only serious obstacle the CWA encountered is the same one that President Obama would face today: politics. Republicans and conservative Democrats in Congress screamed bloody murder about Roosevelt’s dalliance with state socialism—Republicans like Landon who were willing to admit a government program might actually work were as rare then as they are today—and the segregationist Georgia Gov. Eugene Talmadge was apoplectic to learn that black laborers were being paid as much as white ones. Once winter had passed, Roosevelt, worried that the controversy would cost him Democratic seats in the coming midterm congressional elections, ordered Hopkins to shut the CWA down. Hopkins promptly and uncomplainingly did so. A year later, though, Roosevelt recognized his error and put Hopkins in charge of the Works Progress Administration (later the Work Projects Administration). Over its life, the WPA would create, on the model of the CWA, more than 8 million jobs, which today would be equivalent to creating more than 20 million.

Let’s hope that the current economic crisis won’t worsen to the point that the U.S. needs a government program on that scale. But if it does Buy Christian Audigier Clothing, please don’t say the job can’t be done. In his inaugural address, President Obama said, “The question we ask today is not whether our government is too big or too small but whether it works.” That may presage a departure from Republican orthodoxy (“government is the problem”) and Democratic surrender to it (“the era of big government is over”). If government can do the job best, let it.

REPORTPorsche to share platforms with VW, possibly

14 May, 2012 (00:57) | Uncategorized | By: admin

2010 Porsche 911 Turbo – Click above for high-res image gallery
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Can you image a VW-badged Panamera? What about a 911-based product from Wolfsburg? It could happen according to Porsche CEO Michael Macht. Autocar reports that Macht says, “Porsche needs to become a strong pillar of VW,” and part of that means sharing platforms and components. The two companies have been on a rocky collision course towards merging for years Buy Chloe Dresses, and now that the deal is all but done, the business of identifying synergies between the two companies is on.

Porsche apparently is not worried about diluting its brand image by sharing platforms with VW Cheap Bandage dresses, even if that includes the iconic 911. What they won’t be sharing Buy Herve leger strapless, however Replica BCBG Dresses, is engines. Macht made it clear that “Engine development is a core value for Porsche.” At the moment Christian Audigier Clothes sale, the only Porsche model with an engine that wasn’t developed in-house is the V6-powered Cayenne.

Putting aside your feelings about whether or not Porsche sharing its platforms with VW is a good idea, what are some positive results that can be imagined? A Panamera-based Phaeton? A 911-based Audi speedster? A Boxster-based production version of the VW Concept BlueSport?

Related Gallery2010 Porsche 911 Turbo
[Source: Autocar]

Out of Sight

14 May, 2012 (00:56) | Uncategorized | By: admin

The New York Timesleads with a look at how very little is known about many of the people who have died while detained by immigration authorities. The NYT obtained a list through a Freedom of Information Act request and reveals that 66 people died while in immigration custody from January 2004 to November 2007. USA Todayleads with figures that show welfare rolls rose in 27 states in the last six months of 2007. This marks a reversal since the numbers had been steadily decreasing for more than a decade. “When the economy starts to tank, that’s when our business starts growing,” the chief of eligibility for Nevada’s welfare agency said.

The Los Angeles Timesleads with a look at how health care will provide voters in November with an issue on which the Republican and Democratic presidential contenders offer very different proposals. Although all the candidates say they want more Americans to have access to affordable health insurance Replica Karen Millen Dresses, their strategies on how to get there offer a stark choice, ultimately because “they view the problem differently.” The Washington Postleads with the latest he-said/she-said from the campaign trail as the candidates campaigned furiously before the critical Tuesday primaries in Indiana and North Carolina. The Wall Street Journal leads its world-wide newsbox with a look at how Sen. Barack Obama has gone back to addressing voters in a more intimate setting. Even though the large rallies draw lots of people, they don’t necessarily help him gain new voters, and Obama’s campaign now sees the arena-style events as one of the main reasons why he lost the popular vote in Texas.

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Although the list obtained by the NYT “is the fullest accounting to date of deaths in immigration detention,” the document “raises as many questions as it answers” because there are few details on the list, and the information is “often unreliable.” Once a person gets detained by immigration authorities, it is notoriously difficult for friends and family members to get information Replica Karen Millen Dresses, “even when they die.” The NYT followed up on a few of the deaths and finds family members who still have questions about how or why their loved ones died. Some families say they weren’t told when a detainee became sick, and one woman says she only found out her husband had died several weeks after the fact. Critics, including several lawmakers, are calling for greater oversight of a system that has ballooned in size over the past few years.

Both of the Democratic presidential contenders made an appearance on the Sunday-morning talk-show circuit. Sen. Barack Obama once again had to discuss his former pastor, while Sen. Hillary Clinton had to answer questions about her stance on Iran, but they both frequently came back to the issue that has dominated the rhetoric in the last days before the Tuesday primaries: the gas-tax holiday. Obama continued to characterize the holiday as a political “gimmick.” When Clinton was asked whether she could name an economist who agreed with her on the holiday, she said, “I’m not going to put in my lot with economists.” And then, in a not-so-veiled reference to Obama DKNY Clothing sale, she said that “elite opinion is always on the side of doing things that really disadvantage the vast majority of Americans.”

In the last few days, Clinton has been increasing her populist rhetoric in order to make Obama seem an out-of-touch elitist who doesn’t understand the problems of regular Americans. The NYT says that as the Tuesday primaries approach, “the candidates were a study in contrasts.” Clinton seems to be getting angrier as she talks about how working-class Americans are constantly suffering at the hands of people who couldn’t care less about them. For his part, Obama is striking a more conciliatory tone, trying to appeal to Democrats who may like Clinton but mostly just want to win back the White House in November. In a separate Page One piece, the NYT takes a look at how the warrior attitude that Clinton is displaying on the trail also highlights why she’s such a divisive figure.

Reviewing the Sunday talk-show appearances, the NYT’s Alessandra Stanley says the programs “provided an arresting tableau of the reversal of fortunes in the Democratic race.” While Clinton appeared “forceful DKNY Clothes sale, confident and at times even frisky,” Obama “looked grave and dispirited.”

The NYT and USAT both front new polls that show how much Obama’s standing has been hurt in the past few weeks. The NYT says that while most Americans think Obama handled the controversies regarding the Rev. Jeremiah Wright appropriately Hale Bob Dresses sale, almost half thought he denounced his former pastor because it would help him politically rather than because of actual disagreements. And even though 24 percent of voters say the issue would affect their vote in November, 44 percent said it would be important to “most people you know.”  For its part, USAT’s poll gives even worse news to Obama because, for the first time in three months, it shows Clinton with more support from Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents. (USAT helpfully mentions that other polls continue to show Obama in the lead.) And while Obama used to beat Clinton by wide margins on the question of who would be a stronger candidate against McCain, the former first lady is now ahead by five points. The one piece of good news for Obama is that voters still see him as more honest, and the NYT poll says “an overwhelming majority” see the gas-tax holiday as political pandering.

The NYT fronts word that U.S. officials believe Hezbollah militants are training Shiite militias in Iran. This information apparently came from captured militia members and was given to the Iraqi government, but it’s not clear whether the issue was discussed when Iraqi leaders traveled to Tehran last week. Although U.S. officials say the training is overseen by the Quds Force of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard, the instructors are from Hezbollah.

Meanwhile, it’s not really clear whether the Iraqi government believes Iran is arming and training Shiite militias. The LAT does a good job of explaining the confusion by noting that yesterday it seemed like the Iraqi government was taking distance from the American claims of Iranian involvement when it announced that a committee had been set up to investigate. But a few hours later, the Iraqi government spokesman said his comments had been misinterpreted. He said the proof of Iranian involvement is there, and the committee is tasked with compiling the evidence so it can be presented to Tehran.

The LAT fronts an interesting piece that looks at how more Chinese companies are choosing to set up shop in the United States. Several states are working hard to promote themselves and are offering plenty of incentives. The strategy seems to be working Replica DKNY Clothing, and more Chinese investors are deciding that it makes economic sense to expand into the United States, despite higher labor costs.

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Volkswagen dropping Scirocco R32 in favor of Sciro

13 May, 2012 (11:58) | Uncategorized | By: admin

Click above for a high-res gallery of the 2009 Volkswagen Scirocco

It’s just a matter of time before Volkswagen begins offering a hotter, harder version of the new Scirocco Fake Blancpain Watches, and according to CAR, the range-topping three-door will be packing the same 265-hp Fake Oris Watches, 2.0-liter turbo as the Audi S3. The VW Scirocco R20T will be heavily influenced by the Scirocco GT24 racer that campaigned at the Nurburgring earlier this year Best place to buy Replica U Boat Watches, but without the vented hood Romain Jerome Replica Watches, massive rear wing and aggressive front splitter. The sprint to 60 should be easily dispatched in under six seconds and a top speed of 155 mph is almost assured. Grippier seats and a stiffer ride that makes use of V-Dub’s active suspension system are likely part of the package Replica Chaumet Watches, and sales are expected to begin abroad in January for around £25 Wholesale Replica Panerai Watches,000. An R32 variant packing the VR6 is likely off the drawing board due to emissions and fuel economy, and if VW is actually considering bringing the Scirocco to the U.S., the R20T would be the perfect variant to distance itself from the equally competent GTI.

Related Gallery2009 Volkswagen Scirocco
Related GalleryVolkswagen Scirocco GT24
[Source: CAR]