truesee's Blog

In 2009 the White House Underestimated the Economic Devastation in 2010 Democrats Paid the Price

Arianna Huffington

November 3, 2010 02:01 AM 

In 2009 the White House Underestimated the Economic Devastation, in 2010 Democrats Paid the Price

For all the hours of pre-election predictions and post-vote analysis, the 2010 midterms came down to a very simple truth: If unemployment were near double digits come November, Democrats would take a beating.

It is, and they have.

Exit polls found that nearly nine in ten voters believe the economy is in bad shape. The same percentage said they feel pessimistic about America's economic future. That's practically everyone!

And while a large majority of voters still believe that George Bush is to blame for getting us into this mess, they are clearly holding Obama accountable for not fixing it.

The Pottery Barn rule -- "you break it, you own it" -- was given a twist tonight. Turns out, sometimes even if you weren't the one who broke it, you own it. So it is with our broken economy. Bush broke it, but Obama, underestimating just how broken it is, owns it.

Indeed, the president laid claim to it back in July 2009 when, during a speech in Michigan, he strayed from his prepared text and said: "I love these folks who helped get us in this mess and then suddenly say, 'Well, this is Obama's economy.' That's fine. Give it to me!"

Many compared it to Bush's defiant "Bring 'em on!" And like that brash taunt, Obama's has doubled back to kick him in the butt.

He now owns an economy that 9 out of 10 people are unhappy with. Is it any wonder that they took their ire out on the Democrats?

With the "real unemployment" figures around 17 percent, it means almost no one in the country isn't being adversely affected by the economy -- or knows someone who is. And they were not going to be mollified by health care reform that doesn't kick in until 2014 and financial reform that isn't slowing down foreclosures or making borrowing money easier for small businesses.

As a result, voters no longer trust Democrats to fix things. Hard to believe, but Collier County in Florida, the county with the biggest unemployment jump in the country from March 2009 to March 2010, voted Republican.

Democrats still have the White House and still have the Senate, but they better do something about the economic devastation if they want to win back Collier County -- and the trust of the American people.

Entry #3,465

Woman has 4-foot pot plant growing in front yard

Jackson woman arrested for front-yard pot plant

 

Laurie Welch - Times-News writer

Magicvalley

Friday, November 5, 2010 1:05 am 

 

 

BURLEY — A Jackson woman faces felony drug charges after an anonymous tip led police to marijuana growing in her front yard.

Cassia County sheriff’s deputies and a Mini-Cassia Drug Task Force officer say they found 1.46 pounds of marijuana and 3 grams of white powder that tested positive for amphetamine at the home of Laurie M. Donald, 48. They also recovered various pipes, rolling papers and torches from the property.

Donald is charged with felony drug trafficking in marijuana, manufacturing a controlled substance, possession of a controlled substance and drug paraphernalia. She is scheduled for a preliminary hearing in Cassia County 5th District Magistrate Court at 9 a.m. Thursday.

Donald was released from the Mini-Cassia Criminal Justice Center on Tuesday, after her $5,000 bond was reduced from $25,000.

Court reports state that on Oct. 21, a deputy arrived at Donald’s home and knocked on her door, but no one answered.

As he was leaving he noticed a 4-foot-high marijuana plant at the southeast corner of her front yard.

A search warrant was issued for the home and police returned to Donald’s residence, although she was still not home. Deputies found her cell phone number and spoke with her, learning that she was in Jackpot, Nev.

By Oct. 26, police had still not made face-to-face contact with Donald.

A warrant was issued for her arrest on Oct. 29, when she was also taken into custody.

Entry #3,463

10-year-old girl gives birth

Nov 02, 2010
10-year-old girl gives birth in Spain
USA Today
04:52 PM

 

 

A 10-year-old Romanian girl has given birth in Spain, according to news accounts. The father is also a minor. Authorities don't consider it a case of rape, and officials are deciding whether the girl and her family can keep the child.

The baby, born last week in the southern city of Jerez de la Frontera, weighed 6 pounds, 4 ounces. Micaela Navarro, the Andalusia region's social affairs minister, said mother and child, whose gender was not revealed, are doing fine.

An official with the Spanish Justice Ministry in Madrid told the Associated Press that, under Spanish law, having consensual sex with someone under age 13 is classified as child abuse. But no criminal investigation is underway; it's not clear the underage father could be charged.

Time says the young mother is not the youngest on record.

Earlier this year, a 9-year-old schoolgirl in northeast China gave birth to a healthy baby boy. In 2008, another 10-year-old girl in Idaho, who got pregnant at age 9, carried a baby to term. And back in 1939, as Time reported, Lina Medina of Peru, became pregnant at the age of 5 years, 8 months, and became a mother by age 6 years, 5 months.

Time also writes that the mother told hospital staff that 10 years old is not considered young in Romania.

Entry #3,462

Woman tries to sell grandson for $30K

FDLE: Holly Hill woman tried to sell grandson for $30K

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement arrested 45-year-old Patty Bigbee on Friday on charges that she tried to sell her 12-week-old grandson.

Patty Bigbee The Florida Department of Law Enforcement arrested 45-year-old Patty Bigbee, of Holly Hill, on Friday after they said she tried to sell her 12-week old grandson. (Volusia County Branch Jail / November 5, 2010)

 

Jeff Weiner

Orlando Sentinel 9:47 p.m. EDT

Nov. 5, 2010

Authorities arrested a Holly Hill woman on Friday on charges that she tried to sell her 12-week-old grandson.

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement arrested 45-year-old Patty Bigbee, of Holly Hill, on Friday. Investigators said they arrested her about 4 p.m., when she met with a buyer in Daytona Beach.

Deputies announced later Friday that they'd arrested a second person connection with the case.

Lawrence Works, 42, of Holly Hill, was charged with being a principal to the illegal sale or surrender of a child. It's unclear what his connection is to Bigbee or the child.
 
The FDLE said the investigation began in October, when they said Bigbee approached an unidentified "third party," offering to sell the baby for $75,000.

Investigators say the buyer talked down the price of the infant to $30,000, which Bigbee agreed to accept. FDLE agents said they arrested Bigbee at the scene of the would-be transaction, turning the infant over to the Department of Children and Families.

Officials said the baby's mother is currently incarcerated on unrelated charges. Bigbee was booked into Volusia County Jail on charges of illegal sale or surrender of a child and communication fraud.

The FDLE said its investigation is ongoing. Officials described the buyer as a "confidential source."

A Department of Children and Families spokesman said the baby showed no outward signs of neglect or abuse and is "doing well."

Spokesman John Harrell said the baby will be subjected to a full physical screening. The FDLE initially said the baby was eight weeks old, but Harrell said the child was actually 12 weeks old.

He said the baby's mother had no history of child abuse or neglect.
Entry #3,460

Four cures for Obama's woes

Four cures for Obama's woes

Roland S. Martin, CNN Contributor

November 6, 2010

10:35 a.m. EDT

tzleft.roland.martin.cnn.jpg
 
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
 
  • Martin views first half of President Obama's term like the first half of a basketball game
  • To win in the second half, Martin says Obama team must make 4 key changes
  • Those include improving communication and going on the offensive, Martin says

 

Editor's note: Roland S. Martin is a syndicated columnist and author of "The First: President Barack Obama's Road to the White House." He is a commentator for TV One Cable network and host of a Sunday morning news show.

 

(CNN) -- The election results on Tuesday are a bitter pill for the president and his supporters to swallow. To be essentially routed by the Republican Party from top to bottom goes beyond humbling. It is a wholesale rejection of the Democratic Party, and by extension, many of the policies championed by President Obama.

So what world do we face now?

In many ways, I view the first half of President Obama's term like the first half of a basketball game, the president's favorite sport. Some things good, some bad, at times leading, but now, clearly losing at the half. And like any smart team leader, his job now is to go into the locker room and make some pivotal halftime adjustments.

Here are the four adjustments I think the president must make to regain his footing, get back in the game and lead his team to victory.

One. Team communication is a must. When a team is defending against the pick and roll, each player must communicate to know what the other is doing. That's basketball. Poor communication also hurts in politics.

By your own admission, Mr. President, you and your team have done a poor job communicating what you are doing, why you are doing it and what it will mean for the American people. You said on Jon Stewart's show that the American people don't know a lot of the things you have done. Well, that's not their problem, that's your problem. YOU have to make it clear and cut through.

Frankly, your communications team has been weak. They have missed or flubbed opportunities to make your case. Sir, you giving a great speech is one thing, but your communications team speaking persuasively to the American people on a daily basis is another, and that has to improve.

That leads me to the second issue, Mr. President. You have GOT to pass the ball. We often hear from your aides that no one is better at communicating the issues than you. That may very well be true. But just like in basketball, you CANNOT play all five positions.

In order for a team to win, that means every player must play their role and do their job. The business community has complained your administration is anti-business. So where is Gary Locke, the Commerce secretary?

Employment is issue No. 1, so where is Labor Secretary Hilda Solis? There's a foreclosure epidemic, so where is Housing Secretary Shaun Donovan? We've said before that Attorney General Eric Holder has had a straightjacket placed on him. Discussions about energy policy? I never see Energy Secretary Stephen Chu.

It seems the only Cabinet members who have free reign to speak are Arne Duncan at Education, Hillary Clinton at State, Bob Gates at Defense and to some degree, Kathleen Sebelius at Health and Human Services. Mr. President, those may be your starters, but you need to play the bench, too. Let them engage, take some fire, deliver some blows and show folks that they are in this battle with you. There simply is no way one player can take on the opposing team all by himself.

Three. Go on the offensive. A running team knows when to push the ball up-court, hoping to put their opponent on their heels and run them out of the gym. There has been a passive attitude emanating from your administration.

Sir, when the other team continues to drive the lane and score on you, sometimes you have to deliver a few hard fouls to get their attention and send a signal. You must do the same.

Your opposition is emboldened by ripping you to shreds. Only rarely has your team engaged in the kind of fighting that can get your opponents' attention quickly. This isn't time to keep taking hits and act like they wont stick.

Mr. President, those body blows have stuck. Your White House is holding back the Democratic National Committee. It's time to let it go. Let them foul hard, be aggressive. If you don't, your opponents will do whatever they want with you, and you'll be on the losing side in two years.

Four. You've got to be the true team leader, like Michael Jordan. Magic Johnson. Oscar Robertson. Bill Russell. Hakeem Olajuwon. Kobe Bryant. When times got tough, their teammates looked to them for inspiration, energy and guidance. Right now, your teammates, the broad coalition of millions who put you into office, are confused by the conflicting messages sent out by your administration.

In many ways, this movement has been abandoned. Young folks, African-Americans, Hispanics and so many others are waiting to be engaged, to be put to work and to work with you to achieve victory. But if you're standoffish, don't talk to them regularly, don't inspire them, your agenda will never resonate with them, and you'll have a team in disarray, not knowing what to do. You want to be a transformational figure like Ronald Reagan, but that means leading your movement and keeping the members involved.

For all sports fans, and President Obama knows this, no game is won in the first or second quarter. Yes, you can fall behind and look seemingly out of it. But until the clock reads zero, zero, zero, there is always time to rebound. Mr. President, I'm often asked whether you will win a second term. Frankly, we don't know. But what I do know is that right now, you are behind and in desperate need of a second-half comeback to have any shot in 2012.

The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Roland S. Martin.

Entry #3,459

Donovan McNabb looking at a one-and-done season

Donovan McNabb looking at a one-and-done season with Mike Shanahan and the Washington Redskins

Gary Myers 
Saturday,November 6th 2010, 4:26 PM

Mike Shanahan (r.) benches Donovan McNabb last week in Detroit with the Redskins trailing the Lions by six with 1:50 remaining.

Sancya/AP; McIsaac/GettyMike Shanahan (r.) benches Donovan McNabb last week in Detroit with the Redskins trailing the Lions by six with 1:50 remaining.

Donovan McNabb was benched at halftime by Eagles coach Andy Reid during a 2008 game in Baltimore. Any time that happens to an established quarterback, especially one who has taken his team to a Super Bowl, it is unexpected and humiliating.

McNabb was the starter again the following week and responded by leading the Eagles to the NFC Championship Game for the fifth time in his career.

But what happened to him last Sunday, in just his eighth game for the Redskins, was not only embarrassing, but could lead to a one-and-done season for McNabb in Washington.

McNabb is having a mediocre year, but did not deserve to be disrespected by Mike Shanahan last week in Detroit. Shanahan not only benched McNabb with the Redskins down by just six with 1:50 remaining, but he benched him for Rex Grossman.

Rex Grossman?

Grossman, one of the most maligned quarterbacks of the last 10 years, had not taken a snap this season and threw nine passes for the Texans last year. On his first play, he fumbled and the Lions took it back for a touchdown.

Shanahan tried to first explain the benching by saying Grossman was more familiar with running the two-minute offense.

Grossman's offensive coordinator in Houston was Shanahan's son, Kyle, who is now the Redskins' offensive coordinator. Grossman
did not run the two-minute offense in a game in Houston.

Then on Monday, Shanahan said McNabb did not have the "cardiovascular endurance," to run the two-minute offense. He had been bothered by a hamstring injury and didn't take a full turn in practice the previous week. But these excuses are pretty lame, even if McNabb's conditioning at the end of the Super Bowl nearly six years ago was questioned after Philly's hurry-up offense had no sense of urgency.

Plenty of big-name quarterbacks have been benched at some point in their careers: Joe Montana, Terry Bradshaw, Phil Simms, Kurt Warner, Drew Brees, Boomer Esiason, Drew Bledsoe, Danny White and Kerry Collins, to name just a few.

But benched with 1:50 left down six, and for a QB who has stood around for 58 minutes? Hard to recall that ever happening. Obviously, there are larger issues here. Shanahan supposedly has not been happy with McNabb, who has seven TDs and eight INTs. The Redskins have already lost on the road to the Rams and Lions and are not taking advantage of a weak year in the NFC.

McNabb is in the final year of his contract. When Shanahan traded a 2010 second-round pick and either a third- or fourth-round pick in 2011 to Philly on April 4 for McNabb, he not only didn't extend his contract, but made a serious effort to get into position to draft Oklahoma QB Sam Bradford, who went first overall to St. Louis.

Clearly, McNabb is on a one-year trial. Shanahan is taking McNabb for a test drive.

But Shanahan undermined McNabb's ability to lead this team. How can McNabb trust him? Will it happen again? Unless McNabb plays lights-out the second half of the season, I find it hard to believe he will be back in Washington next year.

Possible landing spots: If Brad Childress, who was McNabb's offensive coordinator in Philly, doesn't get fired by the Vikings, he could sign him to replace Brett Favre in 2011; McNabb has a home in the Phoenix area and the Cardinals are wasting their time with Derek Anderson and Max Hall; there was even speculation last week about the Bears trading disappointing Jay Cutler after the season to Shanahan, who coached Cutler his first three seasons in Denver, and then the Bears signing McNabb, who is from Chicago.

The Redskins are off Sunday. It's McNabb vs. the Eagles again next week. He will start. The issue is will he finish?

THE GREATEST

 
NFL Films' top five players of all-time in its top 100 series: Jerry Rice, Jim Brown, Lawrence Taylor, Joe Montana and Walter Payton. My top five: Brown, Taylor, Montana, Rice, Payton. But you could put those five in any order and not go wrong.

Entry #3,458

School janitor forces city workers to renovate his properties

Theodore Roosevelt school janitor has gall to use city workers on his properties

Joe Jackson, Meredith Kolodner and Rachel Monahan
DAILY NEWS WRITERS
Saturday, November 6th 2010, 4:00 AM

Trifon Radef walks from his home Thursday. The school janitor is accused of forcing city employees to work on his properties.

Mecea for NewsTrifon Radef walks from his home Thursday. The school janitor is accused of forcing city employees to work on his properties.

A brazen school janitor is accused of forcing city workers to renovate his nine Queens properties on weekends in exchange for overtime pay, sources told the Daily News.

Trifon Radef, who raked in more than $170,000 last year as a custodial supervisor at Theodore Roosevelt High School in the Bronx, even had an official punch-in clock in his basement, said one staffer who worked for Radef for eight years.

The Office of the Special Commissioner of Investigation has been probing Radef since a January 2010 complaint, Education Department officials confirmed yesterday.

"The taxpayers pay for everything. Forget about it. He gets away with it until somebody says something," said the worker, who, like his colleagues, requested anonymity. "I was getting paid like I work in the school, $30 per hour."

Several workers told The News employees had done tiling, painting, carpentry, plumbing and landscaping for Radef on weekends and evenings dating back to 2000.

"I didn't think anything about it - he was the boss, and I worked for him," one of the custodians said.

Workers said they were paid just as they would have been for working at a school - and one even said there was an official time clock in the basement.

City records show Radef and his wife, Betty, own nine homes in Glen Oaks and Floral Park and have renovated them in recent years.

The workers say Radef rents out the properties and sent them to buy supplies like paint with taxpayer money.

"What could I do? He was the boss. You couldn't refuse," said a custodian who worked for Radef for three years. "I needed the money. I have family."

Staffers say they were recruited from schools where Radef worked: Roosevelt, Truman High School and Junior High School 158 in Queens.

Sources also said Radef is being investigated for paying friends for no-show jobs at Roosevelt.

Radef, who refused to comment when approached outside his Glen Oaks home, pulled in $226,234 in the 2008-09 school year due to retroactive raises and an additional janitorial assignment.

One former Roosevelt employee said he was laid off recently and blames the way Radef spent the custodial budget at the school.

"He said there was no more money, but we know he's been using it for his houses," he said.



Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/education/2010/11/06/2010-11-06_you_pay_for_his_rental_fixups_school_janitor_has_gall_to_use_city_workers_on_his.html#ixzz14VEFzkNr

Entry #3,454

Bank robber who tried to escape by bicycle gets prison

Bank robber who tried to escape by bicycle gets prison
 

The Associated Press

(11/05/10 16:37:58)

An Anchorage man has been sentenced to prison for robbing a Wells Fargo branch bank and then fleeing the scene on a bicycle.

 

He was caught shortly after crashing his getaway bike into a police car.

Christopher Todd Mayer was sentenced to 6 1/2 years in federal prison on Friday.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Kyle French says the 47-year-old man robbed an Anchorage branch of the bank on May 27 and took $1,731.

Mayer was arrested a short distance from the bank after speeding away on a bike.

Police say Mayer crashed his bike into a patrol car, slid across the hood and took off running but was detained half a block away five minutes after the robbery.

Entry #3,452