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Blog EntryAug 5, '11 4:00 PM
for everyone

I bought LG 50PJ550 Plasma on the 26 Dec 2010 -online. I received the tv on the 29th Dec. 2010 from purolator. I just got back to my home from my trip.

I opened my tv today and the styrofoam protection boxes inside were all broken. The frame of the tv from the top is broken. I am so frustrated and need a resolution to this as soon as possible. Due all respect, I was very disappointed :(

Hopefully I can get a reply from somebody at the DELL.

 

Thank you in advance,

Sincerely,

Your customer

Source: http://en.community.dell.com/thread/19802009.aspx

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Release Time: 
For Immediate Release
Location: 
James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

12:08 P.M. EDT

        MR. CARNEY:  Hello, everyone.  Back by popular demand, because we're grooming him to be my successor, we have the Transportation Secretary, Ray LaHood, who will talk to you again about an unfortunate situation where, because of a refusal of Congress to compromise and do something it has done without any problem 20 times in the past how many years -- five years, seven years -- there are now 70,000 Americans out of work.  At a time when we should be creating jobs, growing the economy, decisions by Congress are throwing people off the job.

        And with that, I give you the Secretary of Transportation, Ray LaHood.

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  Well, good noontime, everybody.  I think all of you in this room know that the last thing the administration wants is a Republican to be their spokesman, so I'm not auditioning for Jay's job, okay.  (Laughter.)  

        When it comes to creating jobs, members of Congress give a lot of great speeches.  We've heard a lot of great speeches from members of Congress about creating jobs.  They talk the talk, but they have not walked the walk.  Their speeches ring very hollow to 4,000 FAA employees who are furloughed.  Their speeches about jobs ring very hollow to 70,000 construction workers who are not working, right in the middle of the construction season, on construction projects all over America.  

        I was at one of those construction sites a few days ago at LaGuardia Airport, and I met with these unemployed construction workers.  They're ready to go to work.  They're ready to complete the work taking down the tower at LaGuardia.  And there are construction workers all over America that are ready to go to work.  This is their season.  This is the time when they make their money for their families so they can pay their house payments, they can buy food, they can make their car payments.

        And for members of Congress to give speeches about jobs and then go on their vacations while construction workers have vacated their jobs rings very hollow.  Members of Congress could easily have put 74,000 construction workers and FAA employees back to work.  But instead, they went on vacation.  Congress turned a blind eye to these workers and their families.

        The shutdown of the FAA is now in its 12th day.  With members of Congress on vacation, this means they are leaving these 74,000 workers without a paycheck, without an ability to pay their mortgages, to pay their rent, to make their car payments, to take their own families on vacation for at least six weeks.

        Airport construction projects around the country worth $11 billion are sitting idle.  And as I said, we're smack-dab in the middle of the construction season.  This is no way to run the best and the safest aviation system in the world, and it's no way to get America's economy moving again.

        I want to just say, parenthetically, in addition to the $11 billion worth of construction projects, $1 billion in uncollected taxes will not go to the federal treasury.  Now, you’ve heard all the great speeches on debt and deficit for the last how many weeks about how everybody is concerned about debt and deficit.  Well, the way to tackle part of the debt and deficit is to have this $1 billion in taxes collected, which it won’t be.  

        Congress needs to come back, resolve their differences, compromise, and put our friends and neighbors and colleagues back to work.  They should not leave 74,000 people hanging out there, without jobs, without a paycheck, until September.

        And I’m happy to take questions.

        Q    Mr. Secretary, you said -- you noted you were a Republican member of Congress, and Speaker Boehner’s office, one of your former colleagues, said today they’re ready for a deal, but it’s a Democrat, it’s Jay Rockefeller in the Senate who’s blocking this.  So why hasn’t the President gotten on the phone to him and figured this out?

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  I’ll let Jay talk about what the President does or does not do.  I’ll tell you what I’ve been doing.  I’ve been talking to members of Congress.  I’ve been talking to them for the last two weeks, since this started.  And one of the things I’ve told them, which they know, is this is the thing that really makes the public mad, that Congress can’t do their job.  When ordinary citizens around the country hear that their friends and neighbors ought to be working on a construction site at an airport and they’re not because Congress couldn’t do their work -- this is what infuriates the American people.  

        Congress should have passed a clean bill, could have passed a clean bill.  I urged them to pass a clean bill.  They can still do it.  Congress can still do it.  The adjournment resolutions that they have passed allows them to come back every four days in the House and pass legislation.  They could do it.  I’m asking Congress to come back and do for the American people what they’ve been talking about:  Put 75,000 people back to work in good-paying jobs.  That’s what Congress should do.  Take a little detour from their own vacation, come back to Washington, and pass a clean bill.

        Q    House Republicans are very clear that they will not change anything to do with union organizing, what Senate Democrats see as union busting and basically a payoff to Delta Airlines.  What do you say to that?

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  What I say is, do what you’ve done on 20 other occasions, in some instances in very short period of time: Pass a clean bill.  That’s what they’ve done on 20 other occasions.  

        Look it, when the House passes a bill and the Senate passes a bill, there are always these disputes.  There are always these controversies.  On 20 other occasions, Congress did not hold hostage 75,000 people.  What they did is they passed a clean bill.

        Congress could come back -- they could come back today or tomorrow or next Monday or next Tuesday -- pass a clean bill, as they’ve done on 20 other occasions.  People go back to work.  They resolve their disputes, whatever they are, whatever the disputes are.  That's the way legislation gets passed.  It’s gets passed by compromise.  It gets passed by people sitting down at a table, working out their differences.

        There’s been a long -- you heard me say this last time -- a long, rich history in this town of compromise.  That's what needs to be done.  Compromise.  Pass a clean bill.  Work out your differences.

        Q    Secretary LaHood, is there anything that the President can do?  Is there any executive action that the President can do, any emergency action?

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  You’ll have to ask Jay about that.  You know what, I’m working hard right now --

        Q    Do you know, as Secretary, of any emergency action that can be taken to remedy this situation or to help all these people who are out of work in the interim?

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  I’ll let Jay answer that.

        Mike.

        Q    Mr. Secretary, can I follow on my question?

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  Well, let me take a question from Mike, and then I’ll come back.

        Q    There is specific action that analysts have told our transportation reporters, which is that the President can grant you, the Secretary, the authority to shift funds, and that would help out the FAA.  Is that something that you would do or would consider doing?

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  What I want done --

        Q    -- the President’s authority --

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  What I want done is what Congress has done on 20 other occasions:  Send 75,000 people back to work, pass a clean bill, and work out your differences.  They’ve done it.  They know how to do it.  They’ve done it in a short period of time.  That's what they need to do.  This is not fair to these people.  These are people that work hard.  These are people that are right in the middle of the construction season.  There’s no reason that Congress can’t do this.

        Q    Would the President be willing to give you that authority?  Could you or Jay answer that?

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  I’m not going to speak to --

        MR. CARNEY:  I will take that --

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  Let me just get a couple other people, okay?  Yes.

        Q    Thank you, Mr. Secretary.  You've talked about the impact on the 75,000 people and their jobs.  The American public trying to follow this sort of sees this as a labor dispute.  I’m wondering if you could put this into terms for the American people.  How does this dispute affect them in terms of flights, in terms of safety?  Does this have a broad impact on the American people?

        SECRTARY LaHOOD:  Yes.  The way it affects the American people is this:  Their friends and neighbors are out of jobs.  

        Now, look it, I used to represent a rural district.  My hometown is Peoria.  I still have a home there.  People on Main Street in Peoria get this.  They know that when their friends and neighbors are out of work that hurts everybody.  And for politicians to run around Washington, as they’ve done for the last seven months, and talk about creating jobs, putting people back to work -- this is not the way to do it.

        The American people see the fallacy in these very hollow speeches.  If Congress really believes in the words that they're saying about jobs, creating jobs, putting people back to work, stop your vacation, come back to Washington, pass a clean bill.  

        People get this, because it’s hurting their friends and neighbors.  To me, people understand this.  They really do.  And it’s easily fixable.  It’s been fixed 20 times.  It’s easily fixable.

        Q    The President gave a lot of ground in these debt talks, backing off major, major pledges.  Do you think Democrats ought to give up on this rural airport subsidy, which is small --

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  I think what Congress ought to do is pass a clean bill.

        MR. CARNEY:  And I’ll take issue with the premise.  (Laughter.)

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  Yes, sir.

        Q    Isn’t -- I mean, with how Republicans have been, I guess from your perspective, unwilling to compromise, why not have the President give the authority to do -- to move some funds around on your own?  I mean, does that make sense?

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  All of my efforts are to persuade Congress to pass a clean bill, and to try and keep the morale at the FAA high.  And that’s -- when I went to LaGuardia, I met with unemployed construction workers.  These people are hurting.  They really are.  They can’t apply for unemployment yet and they’re without paychecks.  They don’t know at the end of the day whether they’re going to be able to make their next mortgage payment, car payment.  Their kids, in about 30 days, are going to be starting school.  There obviously are costs incurred by people with their children starting school.  This is why people shake their heads when they think about Congress.

        Q    But if Congress is willing to leave as they did, doesn’t that speak more than their words in the sense of that they’re not willing to compromise -- whichever side is right or wrong -- not willing to compromise?

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  Well, I mean, there is a way for Congress to pass a bill today.  

        Q    But they left.

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  I know they did.  That’s why I’m here.  I’m calling them back.  Come back to Washington.  Leave your vacations.  (Laughter.)  Just for a couple hours.  Come back, Congress.  Help your friends and neighbors get back to work.

        Yes, ma’am.

        Q    But if your message here is that whatever action is necessary should be taken to bring those people back, and if Congress -- if Congress isn't going to do this, then would you accept the authority -- would you accept an order by the President -- presidential authority to take this action if executive action --

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  I’m thinking 24/7 about how to get our people back to work.  I’m thinking 24/7 about getting Congress back here.  I’m thinking 24/7 about our 4,000 people who are without a paycheck, and without a paycheck now for two weeks.  And that’s where my time and energy is.

        Sam.

        Q    Reports yesterday had you saying that you urged the Senate to pass the House bill.  Is that still your position even though --

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  My position today is, since both houses are in pro forma session, is Congress come back, and in pro forma, they could pass a clean bill.  That’s my message today.  

        Yesterday it was different, Sam, because the Senate was still in and I was trying to persuade them to do something different.  Today, both houses are in pro forma.  Come back, pass a clean bill.  That’s the easiest way to fix this.

        Bill.

        Q    So the Leader of the House is John Boehner, the Leader of the Senate is Harry Reid.  Have you talked to them and asked them to come back?  They’re the ones that have to call Congress back, right?

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  Absolutely, Bill.  I talked to Senator Reid probably half a dozen times yesterday.  I’ve talked to Barry Jackson, the Speaker’s chief of staff, more than a half a dozen times.

        Q    And your request to bring back, what is their response?

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  Well, you can call their offices and ask them about that.

        Yes.

        Q    Just to follow up on the safety question, you said safety won't be compromised.  Can you continue to guarantee that, especially given --

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  I can continue to guarantee that safety will never be compromised.  We have the safest aviation system in the world.  We would never compromise safety.  The people that are involved in safety inspections at airports that work for the FAA, many of them are using some of their own money to do their job, to pay their expenses.  You know why?  Because they're dedicated federal employees who believe in their mission of safety.

        I can say without equivocation, safety will never be compromised.  Flying is safe.  And passenger schedules should not be compromised by this issue.  

        Yes, sir.  We'll get the India question.  (Laughter.)  

        Q    This question is -- Mr. Secretary, as far as these many workers out of jobs, there are many congressmen who are -- these workers are from their own districts and they must be getting heat from these people.  And second, you said safety is not the problem, you cannot compromise safety.  Are you hearing anything from around the globe, aviation ministers, as far as what drama they feel is going on in Washington?

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  Well, look it, we're hearing from people -- primarily, we're hearing from our employees.  But I've not had any calls from any other transportation ministers around the country.  

        Let me take a second one here, and then you, Mike.

        Q    On the question of compromise, we saw during the debt ceiling debate that there are quite a few members in the Republican caucus who are not willing to compromise.  What makes you think that they would be willing to compromise over this?

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  Well, hopefully, the cloud of debt and deficit has been lifted.  Hopefully, they're hearing from their constituents who are laid off, whether they're FAA employees or construction workers.  Many of these members of Congress have these projects going on in their states.  And we're going to keep up our drumbeat and hopefully constituents will keep up their drumbeat.  And hopefully constituents will hold people's feet to the fire that love to give great speeches about creating jobs and then send people home off the job sites.  

        Mike.

        Q    Do you think you can realistically ask safety inspectors to work through Labor Day without pay, just pro bono, out of --

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  We have a corps of dedicated safety people at FAA.  I'm very proud of them.  They're working every day, doing their job, making sure that airports are safe, making sure that the safety inspections they do are done by the book.  And I hope the American people are proud of these people.  These are --

        Q    Aren't they on the payroll?

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  Yes, sir.

        Q    Yes.

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  But they're -- look, they're not -- they're doing this, spending their own money, to travel to airports and to do their safety inspections out of their own pockets.  

        Q    Wait a minute, I don't understand, Mr. Secretary.  They're still on the payroll.  They're essential employees, right, like the traffic controllers?  Yes, so they're still -- so then why wouldn't they be reimbursed by the federal government for their travel?  

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  They will be, but they aren’t right now. What they're doing is they're taking their credit card; they're taking a flight somewhere, inspecting an airport, with the hope that they're going to get reimbursed.  We're going to reimburse them.  Ordinarily, they'd be using a government credit card to do these things.  They're using their personal credit cards.  Now, how many of us could do that for very long?  These are dedicated federal employees.  

        Q    Can I ask if you see the difficulty mainly on the House side, or the Senate side?  Are you focusing --

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  The difficulty is with Congress.  Congress.

        Q    But are you focusing on your energies particularly --

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  I'm focusing my attention like a laser beam on Congress.  We need both houses.  End your vacation for a couple days.  Get off the beach.  Get out of your mobile homes or whatever you're traveling in -- (laughter) -- come back to Washington.  Pass a bill.

        Q    There’s a vision.  (Laughter.)  

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  Maybe I should have said RVs, right.  (Laughter.)  Come back.  Pass a bill.

        MR. CARNEY:  Thank you, sir.

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  Is that it?

        MR. CARNEY:  I appreciate it, as ever.

        SECRETARY LaHOOD:  Thank you.

        MR. CARNEY:  Before I take additional questions, let me give you a readout of President Obama’s call with President Medvedev of Russia.  

        Russian President Medvedev called President Obama to wish him a happy birthday and to discuss Russia’s WTO accession negotiations.  The Presidents -- plural -- noted the significant progress that had been made since they spoke last a few weeks ago.  President Obama stressed the need for Russia to work with other WTO members to close out the last remaining issues and bring the negotiations to a successful conclusion by the end of this year.

        And with that, I will take your questions.  Ben.

        Q    Did you think about employing Secretary LaHood in the debt negotiations?  If not, why not?  (Laughter.)

        MR. CARNEY:  He does have a full-time job.  But, look, you can see that he feels very passionately about this issue.  And I think that, going to some of these questions about other actions the President may or may not be able to take, and while I trust your transportation reporter may be highly qualified and knowledgeable, I mean, I’ll leave it to the experts to decide what other actions could be taken.

        All of this would not be necessary if it weren’t for a political dispute that has been inserted into this process that has normally gone off without a hitch 20 times since 2005, I believe, and that has created this stalemate, which is -- the result of which, over an ideological political dispute, is that 74,000 Americans are out of work, at a time when we need every possible person who could be working to be working.  And it’s really inexcusable.

        And that, as the Secretary made clear, if you want to fight about union measures and have that kind of fight later that would be fine.  But it is wholly within -- and was wholly within -- the capacity of Congress to pass a clean measure, as it has done many times in the past, to extend this authority and allow these people to continue working.  

        Because you don’t get August back in the construction season.  You never get those paychecks back, and you don’t get that month back in the construction season.  It’s very important that Congress take action and do what it has done in the past, and what Americans expect them to do, which is -- my goodness, they want Washington to be figuring out ways to help the economy create jobs, not figuring out ways to fire people or lay them off, which is what they’ve done in this case.

        Q    So understanding that, clearly, that you think it’s Congress’s job, if the House and Senate do stay away for August, as it’s looking like right now, is there anything the President can do?

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, we will address that.  The simplest thing is -- because they’ve decided to do these pro forma recesses that allow them to come back on a moment’s notice -- and the mechanics of this I'm not all that familiar with -- but it is quite easy for members to come back, vote on this, and leave again.  So we would anticipate that, if they did have interest in ensuring that these 74,000 Americans had work, they would come back and do it.

        Q    If you have the power to move the funds you could do it today.

        MR. CARNEY:  Again, we can talk about that issue, or maybe you can talk about it with the Secretary of Transportation further.  I don’t know about that.  It is not acceptable for Congress to simply say, it’s not my business to take care of my business.  This is a process that Congress has done in the past, should do, and because of decisions they made there’s 74,000 people out of work.

        Q    Is there anything you can tell us about the bus tour the President plans to take -- where he’s going and why?

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, I can tell you that it will be from August 15th through the 17th, and that it will be through the Midwest.  Further details will be forthcoming later.  That’s all I have for you now.

        Q    But in terms of the --

        MR. CARNEY:  I mean, he will get out -- very happily getting out in the country again, after a sustained period here in Washington.  And he will -- he looks forward to talking to folks about growing the economy, creating jobs.  And we’ll have more details, again, as I said, about the specifics of the trip later.

        Q    Did you say out of the country or out of --  

        MR. CARNEY:  Out in the country.

        Q    Oh, in the country.  I’m sorry.

        MR. CARNEY:  The Midwest.

        Q    I’m sorry.

        MR. CARNEY:  Yes.

        Q    Is that a campaign event or --

        MR. CARNEY:  Negative.  It is an official event.

        Q    Okay, so it will be funded by taxpayers?

        MR. CARNEY:  He’s the President of the United States.  

        Yes.

        Q    The bus tour -- it’s certainly a visual, but what are the tangibles?  

        MR. CARNEY:  Again, we’ll have more specifics about this trip itself.  The air of cynicism is quite thick.  The idea that the President of the United States should not venture forth into the country is ridiculous.

        Q    I didn't suggest that.

        MR. CARNEY:  No, but you implied it in your question.  And it is absolutely important for the President, whoever that person is, in the past and in the future, to get out and hear from people in different communities.  And the President -- this is a trip that we’ve had on our books for quite a long time, and he very much looks forward to taking it.

        Q    So is it more of a listening tour, then?

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, again, I don't want to -- I know that people want specifics about what he may be announcing or what proposals he might have.  It will be very focused on the economy and jobs.  Beyond that, you’ll have to wait for when we’re ready to provide more specifics.  But he will be listening and addressing these very important issues.

        Q    And I know -- you’ve spoken to this a little bit, but obviously there’s some people who just wonder really what kind of options he has, really -- what kind of realistic options?  Because some of the things he’s laid out have seemed a little like maybe foregone conclusions that they might have --

        MR. CARNEY:  Would that anything were a foregone conclusion in Washington today.  For example, the previously known foregone conclusion that this authorization would be extended and 74,000 people would maintain their jobs -- that used to be a foregone conclusion.

        So you are right to assume that everything -- or most things are now difficult.  It is obviously collectively, Congress and the President, that can take different actions to enhance growth and create jobs.  And the President has already identified a number of things that have bipartisan support that are already in Congress’s lap that Congress can act on quite quickly.  And there are other measures that he has identified that he feels strongly about that we should support, like extension of the payroll tax credit -- essentially, a tax cut, rather -- a tax cut for working Americans.  Everyone who works pays a payroll tax.  And this is a substantial amount of money in the pocket of every American family that has helped them this year and needs to be extended so that they have that help next year.  

        And that money is important because, unlike a lot of things you can do, this is money that will likely be spent, and therefore help the families spending it, and then have add-on positive effects on the economy because that money is then introduced into the economy.  It helps create and sustain jobs; it helps businesses.  So this is a very important measure that he supports.

        Yes.  Sorry, I get confused.  Yes.

        Q    It’s okay, thanks.  I wanted to ask you about the very large series of cyber attacks that were uncovered by the security company, MacAfee, affecting governments around the world, including the United States.  Could you tell us which U.S. agencies were affected and how seriously the White House sees these incidents?

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, let me start at the top.  We are aware of this report and its contents.  While we do not comment on outside reports, detecting and blocking cyber intrusion is a key cyber security goal for this administration, working across government and with the private sector.  Cyber threats to information and communications infrastructure pose an economic and national security challenge for the United States and our partners, which is why the President has made cyber security one of his top priorities.

        As with all intrusions, we employ a “all of government approach," with the appropriate agency in the lead.  We refer you to DHS and FBI for more information.

        On the issue of which agencies were affected, we are working with all federal departments and agencies to deploy defensive tools, such as the Einstein Intrusion Detection and Prevention systems.  Again, I refer you to DHS for more specifics.

        Q    Could you tell us when you became aware of this series of incidents?

        MR. CARNEY:  I can only tell you that we are aware of it.  I don’t have a date for you.

        Q    The President has repeatedly pivoted back to jobs, as he did again yesterday.  Why is this time any different?  Why should the Americans have any confidence this time?

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, let’s be clear.  The President has been focusing on jobs and the economy since the day he was sworn into office, during a month that saw the loss of 800,000 -- nearly 800,000 American jobs in just one month.  And that was the situation that he encountered when he took the oath.  And that has been his focus since he became President.  

        There is no question that as President you have to deal with other problems.  And in this case, the debt ceiling crisis, if you will, was a manufactured crisis.  It was a self-inflicted wound.  It was the linkage between something that Congress absolutely has to do -- which is extend the borrowing authority of the United States government -- to specific legislation that one-half of one body of Congress wanted passed.  

        We worked through that.  We reached a compromise.  We avoided and averted catastrophe.  And that is a good thing.  Again, it was not a crisis that needed ever to present itself. But we did, through compromise, achieve some important things for the economy, for jobs -- which is a package that lifts the cloud of uncertainty of whether or not we were going to extend our borrowing authority for a significant period of time, and significantly -- has some significant initial deficit reduction attached to it, and creates a process for more significant deficit reduction.  

        Deficit reduction is an element of an economic strategy that we think is broadly agreed upon by Democrats and Republicans.  There are other things that we need to do -- and I just addressed this earlier in answer to Brianna’s questions -- and there are measures that can be taken right away.  If Congress is very interested in creating jobs and growing the economy, there are things that it can do right away.  In addition to reinstating the 74,000 people they’ve thrown out of work, they can move quickly to pass the free trade agreements -- the three of them that are up there -- that will create or support 70,000 additional jobs.  They can get patent reform done and they can move forward on a number of other issues.  

        The President will continue to promote and put forward ideas for things we can do to create jobs and grow the economy.  But there are certainly a number of things that we can do, working together, already.

        Q    At the risk of appearing cynical --

        MR. CARNEY:  Bill, I -- not you.  Surely not after all these years.

        Q    If the President is really so interested in getting those 74,000 people back to work, then why don’t you stop bashing Congress and switch the funds over so they can go to work?

        MR. CARNEY:  Bill, this is a fascinating process where the party with the responsibility -- the party that created this problem is out of town, and the reporters here are blaming the party that wants the problem fixed.  The fact of the matter is --
        look, we are obviously looking at the different options that we have, that the President has.  The simple reality is that because of a political dispute -- this is exactly what Americans loathe about the process here, justifiably and understandably -- because of an ideologically driven decision made, there is a stalemate over a measure that has never been a problem in the past.  

        They can resolve -- we need to, and we can, have fights over these issues that divide us.  But we should not have these fights in a way that throws 74,000 people out of -- in ways that throw 74,000 people out of work who -- innocently.  This is not their fight.

        And so, as Secretary LaHood made clear, it is wholly inappropriate for members of Congress to go on recess, go on vacation, and leave this issue hanging, and take away from these hardworking Americans their paychecks for at least another four, five, six weeks, when they could resolve this issue right away.

        Q    Sure, but if your goal is to get them back --

        MR. CARNEY:  I think I’ve answered -- I think I’ve answered the question, Bill.

        Q    If the goal is to get them back to work, then get them back to work.

        MR. CARNEY:  I think I’ve answered the --

        Q    It’s within the President’s power, apparently.

        MR. CARNEY:  Apparently based on your hearing from some other reporter --

        Q    That’s right.

        MR. CARNEY:  -- who is hearing it from another.  I think maybe a little --

        Q    Is that not correct?

        MR. CARNEY:  -- a little reporting on everybody’s part would be efficacious and --

        Q    Do you dispute that?

        MR. CARNEY:  -- what I can say is that we are looking at things that the President might be able to do.  This is a matter that Congress -- a crisis, yet again, that Congress created unnecessarily that can be resolved instantly by Congress.

        Yes, Mr. Henry.  Are we going to ask this question again, because I think I’ve answered it.

        Q    Jay, can the President do -- no.  (Laughter.)  I wanted to ask you why the President can’t call the Senate Majority Leader, Harry Reid, who he gets along with quite well.  And Democrats yesterday, I’m told, blocked a unanimous-consent agreement in the Senate to push the bill forward.

        MR. CARNEY:  Correct.  I know that’s what the Speaker of the House --

        Q    It’s run by a Democratic --

        MR. CARNEY:  -- and his office is saying, Ed.  And here’s the thing.  The House measure has a provision that is designed -- that is politically motivated.  And we can have that fight.  The way to resolve -- the way to not -- in the name of achieving that
        -- getting that scalp, we are preventing these 74,000 Americans from working.  So the way to do it is --

        Q    But Democrats blocked it, though.  Democrats blocked the request.

        MR. CARNEY:  And the House refused to pass a clean bill, which the Democrats would -- which the Senate would pass.

        Q    (Inaudible.)

        MR. CARNEY:  No, no, no, that is the issue, Ed.  

        Q    But if you want to put the people back to work, pass the bill that's on the table --

        MR. CARNEY:  Then you pass a clean bill.

        Q    -- and come back in a month --

        MR. CARNEY:  Oh, that's how it works.  (Laughter.)

        Q    No, no, no.  You say the top priority is to put people back to work.

        MR. CARNEY:  That's how it works.  We get what we want on our unrelated political agenda item, and then we come back and fight it.  That's not how it works.  If you have a dispute that's creating a logjam that will not allow this extension to pass because of an ideological dispute, preventing 74,000 people from working, you remove the problem.  You take the splinter out, or whatever is causing the problem, and you pass the clean bill.  And then you have the fight -- if you want to have the fight on the other issue.  That's what we believe.

        Q    Quick follow on the jobs issue.  If the President going -- saying yesterday in the Rose Garden, I’m going to focus on jobs -- you were just asked about that.  He has said that over and over again.  There’s a number of quotes.  One, January 2010: Jobs must be our number one focus in 2010.  A year and a half later, unemployment still over 9 percent.  So why should the American people have confidence that this pivot to jobs is actually going to create jobs?

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, look, it is -- I believe I just answered this question, but the --

        Q    You’ve talked about patent reform and the trade deal.  Trade deals have been sitting there for a couple years, and nobody thinks that the trade deals are going to magically lower it to 7 percent --

        MR. CARNEY:  Good point.  They’ve been before Congress and they -- well, I never suggested that.  I said 70,000 jobs that could be created or supported.  The fact that there is no magic bullet that lowers our unemployment rate to where it would be ideally if -- and it’s certainly not dismantling Medicare.  Is that going to put people back to work?  Is slashing clean energy investments -- will that put people back to work?  Because I don't hear a lot of jobs plans coming from other quarters.

        What I do know is that this President from the day he was sworn into office has focused aggressively on the need to, first, prevent a Great Depression, the second in our history; second, stabilize our economy, begin to see it grow again, as it has been; begin to see it create private sector jobs again, as it has been -- 2.1 million jobs -- more private sector jobs created in that period than were created in the -- net in the eight years of the previous presidency -- and then keep pressing forward to do that.  Everything that we do that’s related to the economy is related to economic growth and job creation.  

        What the President is saying now, and what you will be hearing him saying, is that you, the American citizen, have heard a lot of talk in Washington about debt ceilings and deficits; and while those are important issues -- very important -- and they have -- they are important in relation to our economy, and they are important in relation to jobs if they are addressed appropriately -- there are other things we can do directly that affect jobs and economic growth.  

        And that’s what he’s saying.  This is not a -- I think “pivot” is not an appropriate word.  It’s refocusing.  It’s continuing the focus that we’ve had and allowing us to focus even more intently now that we have reached the compromise that was reached with Congress a couple of days ago.

        Q    The S&P announced that it was giving the United States a negative outlook while keeping its AAA credit rating.  What’s the White House’s reaction to that?

        MR. CARNEY:  Again, we focus on the things we can control, which is why we worked so hard with Congress to reach this compromise to avert a crisis that would have unquestionably resulted in bad news from the ratings agencies.  So we believe that the measures we have taken to lift that cloud, to avert that crisis, to ensure that we have borrowing authority through 2012, should send a reassuring message around the world.  And we believe that the deficit reduction that is embedded upfront within the compromise reached with Congress should send a positive message that Washington is beginning to get serious about this issue.  And the way that we approach further deficit reduction should do the same as well.

        We have to focus on the things we can control, and assume that, if we do our work and we do it well that the rest, if you will, will take care of yourself.

        Q    And yet, Wall Street doesn’t seem to be reassured.  We’ve actually seen stocks dip this week.  What’s the level of concern that maybe this compromise bill didn’t go far enough or isn’t having the impact that you want it to have on the markets?

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, we certainly believe that we could have done more.  And the President worked very hard to try to get a grand bargain, a significant $3 trillion to $4 trillion package over 10 years that would have dealt with the real things that drive our debt, which are entitlements and revenues.  And he will continue to work for a balanced package that raises that number higher -- at least the additional $1.5 trillion that has been the target for the committee, the special committee when it’s set up, and then beyond that.

        Again, we focus on the things we can control.  We believe that if we make the right decisions about dealing with our debt and dealing with our deficits, taking measures that are responsible and effective to help create jobs and grow the economy, that other things like markets will take care of themselves.

        Q    There’s been a lot of discussion that these indicators might be signs that the economy is continuing to stagnate or potentially dipping back into a recession.  Do you see it that way?

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, we do not believe that there is a threat there of a double-dip recession.  We believe that the economy will continue to grow.  There is no question that growth has slowed over the past two quarters.  There’s no question that job creation has slowed.  But there are reasons for that --again, some of them beyond our control -- but that are beginning to -- the headwinds created by them like the earthquake in Japan, have subsided somewhat.  But there are other challenges that we have to contend with, including high energy prices, the situation in Europe, et cetera.  

        We, again, have to focus on what we can do to ensure that our economy is strong, that it continues to grow and create jobs. And we don’t have any projections to make from here, but I would note that the outside consensus among forecasters is that the U.S. economy will continue to grow in the third and fourth quarter.  

        Q    Larry Summers today in an op-ed both in The Washington Post and the Financial Times said there’s a one in three chance that the U.S. would slip back into a recession if some more things aren’t done to stimulate the economy.

        MR. CARNEY:  Is that a question?

        Q    Yes, what is your response to that?  Do you agree with --

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, it’s the same response that I just gave to Kristin.

        Q    Okay.  And he also wrote about kind of this debate over baselines in terms of what this committee of 12 or super committee is going to use as its baseline.  I know the White House has made clear that the committee has flexibility to choose whichever baseline it wants.  Does the White House have a preference in terms of which baseline the committee should use?

        MR. CARNEY:  I don’t know the answer to that question.  I think that what’s important is that that committee address seriously the need to achieve further significant deficit reduction in a balanced way.  And that’s the only -- because this will be an important and clarifying process, because to achieve  -- we have now, if you will, identified and removed from the table the roughly $1 trillion in discretionary cuts that we agree on.   

        And to get bigger, we now have to deal with these difficult issues, entitlements, for example, and tax reform.  Because, otherwise, to get bigger you have to make very specific choices about on whose backs these issues will be resolved.  Will it be only the middle class and seniors that have to ensure that our deficits and debt come down?  Because that’s the choice you’d have to make if you say no to revenues and you say no to cuts in our Pentagon spending.
        So you really have to focus -- I mean, this will be a very clarifying process, because, in some ways as we led up to this compromise, there was some understandable confusion about what deficit reduction could be achieved and where was there agreement and disagreement.  And the fact is that this President wanted to reduce deficits to cut spending.  He identified, through his negotiations with the Speaker of the House, through the Vice President’s negotiations in the group he led with the House Majority Leader -- roughly that trillion dollars that we see in the agreement represent cuts that we all agree on.

        Beyond that, you have to make some really hard choices.  And this will be a clarifying and, we think, edifying debate in the fall.

        Q    Jay, I just want to make sure I understand you, getting back on this FAA thing.  Did you mean to leave the impression that the President is not considering taking any action --

        MR. CARNEY:  No.  In fact, I think I said three or four or five times that we will look at the measures the President may be able to take.  I’m simply not saying one way or the other whether I agree with Dorning's colleague in terms of what actions may be available to him.  

        We are intently interested on ensuring that these 74,000 Americans who had jobs get them back, and the simplest path to that, since they were thrown out of work by a failure of Congress to act, is to bring Congress back, pass a clean extension -- which they have done 20 times in the past, in the recent past -- and put them back to work.  And then, we can have the political fight later, not at the expense of 74,000 Americans.

        Q    So to sum it up, you’re looking at the measures --

        MR. CARNEY:  Correct.

        Q    -- but you'd rather this to be -- you want Congress to take care of this.

        MR. CARNEY:  We’re looking at the measures.  And Congress has absolutely within its capacity to very quickly fix the problem it created.

        Harry, you’ve had a lot.  I’ll come back to you.

        Q    Not on the FAA.

        MR. CARNEY:  All right.  

        Q    It sorts of relates to Kristin’s questions.  The stock market has been going down for eight days, which is the longest downswing in quite some time, while the bond market is rising --

        MR. CARNEY:  Just since you’re a business reporter, where was it when he took office -- or where was it in March of ’09?

        Q    I think I’ve written -- the last time I wrote about it, a lot more than 50 percent.

        MR. CARNEY:  Close to 100 percent.  Just saying.

        Q    So you obviously have a Bloomberg, too.  But it’s been down for eight days now.  What message does the administration take from this?  A lot of the market commentators take it to be that there’s less optimism about economic growth.  There’s some debate on whether or not we’ll be going into double-dip recession.  You’ve said, you guys don’t see that.  What message do you take from eight days going down in the stock market?

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, again, we’re not -- we don’t spend a lot of time focusing on things that we can’t control.  We spend a lot of time focusing on things we can do that will have a positive effect on people’s lives and specifically on their economic lives.  

        So markets go up, markets go down.  It’s not for me to judge why.  The fact, broadly speaking, is that there have been a number of headwinds this year that have affected, we believe, and economists everywhere believe, have affected growth in America and job creation.  And they include the Arab Spring, the uprisings in that part of the world that have affected the energy markets; certainly, the earthquake and tsunami and the terrible devastation that caused, and it affected global supply chains; and other issues including the situation in Europe.  

        So we are taking -- and then, obviously, most recently the uncertainty created by this debate in Washington over whether the United States would, for the first time in its history, default on its obligations.  Having resolved that, fortunately, we move on to other issues and we deal with what we can deal with.  And we think if we get our part of it right, working with Congress, the economy will grow and we will create jobs and the markets will appreciate it.

        Q    Why did the President decide against a public signing of the bill yesterday?

        MR. CARNEY:  I think he came out -- he wanted to speak immediately after the passage.  That was the moment, if you will. There was no reason except that it just a matter of signing a piece of paper, and it needed to be signed very quickly to ensure that we didn't inadvertently default on our obligations.  So he took care of that piece of business right away once it came down to him.

        Q    Who gets the pens?

        MR. CARNEY:  I think they’ll -- I think there’s a number of people, including the leaders of both houses, who will get pens.

        Q    For the interpretation that when optimum big bills pass, big important bills pass, there’s a public --

        MR. CARNEY:  Look, the President believes that this was an important compromise.  But make not mistake, the bigness of it in terms of the attention that was paid to it was because of a crisis that was wholly manufactured.  So he does not believe that we should be popping champagne bottles or celebrating the fact that we averted a crisis that was never necessary in the first place.  

        He does think it’s important that Congress came together and compromised to avert the crisis, and compromised to achieve some measure of deficit reduction.  But he does not believe it is enough.  He is not, to say the least, impressed with the process, Just like every American who watched it who was appalled by the three-ring circus that was created down here that caused some of the uncertainty out there and the doubt about whether or not the greatest nation of the world could get its act together.  But he believes it was significant and that we have a lot more work to do.

        Sam.

        Q    Obviously -- well, not obviously, but my guess is the White House is not going to be making recommendations about the lawmakers who serve on this committee of 12.  But what would the President like to see in terms of those selections?  Obviously, Mitch McConnell has come out and said he’s not going to appoint anyone who wants tax cuts on that committee.  Nancy Pelosi said something similar about protecting entitlement reforms.  What would the President’s guidance to the people who are actually choosing the members be?

        MR. CARNEY:  That they take it seriously, and that they understand that serious choices have to be made as we figure out ways to accomplish further deficit reduction.  

        I would note, in terms of the comments you attributed to the Senate Minority Leader that that creates a problem within his caucus since such a substantial number of the Republicans in the Senate have supported and endorsed the ideas behind the Gang of Six proposal, which takes a very balanced approach to deficit reduction that includes $2 trillion in revenues.  

        So it is simply -- as we saw after the passage of the House Republican budget, there is explaining that has to be done by the leaders in Washington.  If they want those members who believe that we should achieve deficit reduction only on the backs of senior citizens and vulnerable Americans and the middle class, they need to explain that.  And that will be ever more stark if that’s the approach they believe is the right approach as the super committee gets started, because, as I said earlier, the initial discretionary cuts have now been accomplished and moved off the table.  Now we’re dealing with the tougher issues.  

        And is the choice they they’re going to make dramatic cuts, further cuts in the discretionary budget?  Is it going to be ending Medicare as we know it?  Or is it going to be a balanced approach that includes modest reforms to strengthen entitlement programs and changes in our tax code -- tax reform that simplifies it, and ends preferences for the oil and gas industries, for example, or corporate jet makers, or hedge fund managers who -- billionaires who pay lower rates of taxes than their secretaries?  

        So I think that that is a debate that we look forward to having.  We believe that the preponderance of the American public supports us in that.  And we believe that for this super committee to accomplish something, there needs to be membership that represents an appreciation of that.

        Q    What will the White House’s involvement be in the selection process and in the legislative process --

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, I think we obviously -- none of us here, starting with the President, is an elected member of Congress and therefore will not be on the committee.  We are not shy about making our opinion known about the kind of seriousness that we think the members of this committee should approach the task.  And I’m sure we’ll continue to express that opinion.

        Steve.  It’s been a long time.

        Q    I was waiting for the debt cloud to raise --

        MR. CARNEY:  God bless.

        Q    Did the President and President Medvedev discuss Syria in their conversation?

        MR. CARNEY:  I believe they discussed the WTO session process.  

        Q    No Syria?

        MR. CARNEY:  Not that I’m aware of.

        Q    The administration has had increasing pressure on the Hill and from Syrian dissidents to do more to punish Syria in the latest escalation of the crackdown.  Is the White House considering further sanctions, perhaps measures to punish foreign firms that deal in Syria, that kind of thing?

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, I can tell you that we are looking at ways to increase the pressure.  The images coming out of Syria of the Syrian government’s brutality against its own people have been grotesque and appalling, and they demonstrate the true character of the regime.  Once again, President Assad has shown that he is completely incapable and unwilling to respond to the legitimate grievances of the Syrian people.  His use of torture, corruption, and terror puts him on the wrong side of history and his people.

        As we have stated, President Assad is not indispensable, and the U.S. has nothing invested in Assad remaining in power.  We do not want to see him remain in Syria for stability’s sake, and rather, we view him as the cause of instability in Syria.  Through his actions, Bashar al Assad is ensuring that he and his regime will be left in the past, and that the courageous Syrian people who have demonstrated in the streets will determine Syria’s future.  

        We want to see the Syrian people’s desire for democratic transformation carried out.  We will continue to call on the regime to immediately halt its campaign of violence and arrests, pull its security forces back, release the many thousand of detainees, and to respect and act upon the clear demands of the Syrian people for a peaceful and democratic transition to democracy.

        Q    Jay, why has this President delivered this message personally, like he did with Mubarak before?

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, all I can say is that we take this matter very seriously.  I think you just heard what I said about our attitude towards what’s happening in Syria and to the regime’s actions.  We will certainly continue to look at ways to take further steps to put pressure on the regime to end its violence. And we think, frankly, that it’s safe to say that Syria would be a better place without President Assad.

        Q    Has he seen pictures of Mubarak today in court?

        MR. CARNEY:  Not that I’m aware of.  

        Thank you.

END 1:00 P.M. EDT

Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/08/03/press-briefing-press-secretary-jay-carney-and-transportation-secretary-r

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Blog EntryAug 5, '11 12:00 PM
for everyone
Release Time: 
For Immediate Release

Russian President Medvedev called President Obama to wish him a happy birthday and to discuss Russia’s WTO accession negotiations.  The Presidents noted the significant progress that had been made since they spoke last a few weeks ago.  President Obama stressed the need for Russia to work with other WTO members to close out the last remaining issues and bring the negotiations to a successful conclusion by the end of the year.

Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/08/03/statement-press-secretary

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Blog EntryAug 5, '11 10:00 AM
for everyone

Summer reading is a pleasure for many. What are you reading these days? Are you looking for new titles or want some good suggestions? Join the discussion and share what you are reading, on Wednesday, July 6, from 12 noon ? 1 p.m., at the Ashland Branch Library, 410 Siskiyou Boulevard.

 

Any book you haven't read is a new book to you. Everyone will leave with a list of favorites the group shares. "Wednesday Programs at the Library" continues with different programs each week. Check it out.

 

For more information, please call the Ashland Branch Library at 541-774-6996.
 

 

Source: http://www.co.jackson.or.us/News.asp?NewsID=1848

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Blog EntryAug 5, '11 8:00 AM
for everyone

Jackson County Roads will be performing chip seal maintenance treatments on selected roads in Jackson County beginning July 25, 2011.  The work is expected to take 3-4 weeks to complete.  Over 60 miles of road will be treated using this cost effective method of maintaining asphalt road surfaces.

Chip sealing involves the application of liquid asphalt to 'seal' the surface.  The emulsion oil is then covered with aggregate (chips) to allow traffic to use the roadway quickly as well as to provide a wearing surface which extends the life of the treatment.

Drivers should use caution when around work zones as well as follow temporary warning signs which can be left to caution drivers to travel at slower speeds for several days after the application of the chip seal is complete.

Follow-up work involves sweeping any remaining loose aggregate from the roadway and re-striping travel lane markings.

For 2011 the treatment list is ordered as follows.  Please note this list is subject to change without notice.

  1. Bigham Brown Road (Antelope to Alta Vista) -1.89 miles
  2. Alta Vista Road (Riley to Meridian) - 1.73 miles
  3. East Antelope Road (Agate Lake Access to Meridian) - .62 miles
  4. Obenchain Road (140 - end of oil) - .29 miles
  5. Lake Creek Loop (140 - 140) - 1.44 miles
  6. S. Fork Little Butte Creek (Lake Cr Loop - end of maint.) - 10.44 miles
  7. Lewis Road (62 - end of pavement) - 1.67 miles
  8. Evergreen Drive (Lewis - Shipley) - .50 miles
  9. Cascade Gorge Road (62 - end of pavement) - .14 miles
  10. Mill Creek Drive (62 - 62) - 6.93 miles
  11. Prospect Access Road (62 - Mill Cr) - .29 miles
  12. 1st Street (Prospect) (62 - Mill Cr) - .30 miles
  13. Butte Falls - Prospect Road (mile point 22 - mile point 6.5) - 15.5 miles
  14. Butte Falls Road (62 - Fall Street) - 15.90 miles
  15. Rogue River Drive (62 - Long Branch) - 1.60 miles
  16. Old Ferry Road (62 - end of maintenance) - 1.39 miles

For questions please call our main office at 541.774.8184.

Source: http://www.co.jackson.or.us/News.asp?NewsID=1874

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On August 11, 2011, the Jackson County Planning Commission will review the Recommendation for Approval to the Jackson County Board of Commissioners of the Greater Bear Creek Valley Regional Plan including adoption of the Regional Plan Element as a new element of the Jackson County Comprehensive Plan; amendment to the Land Development Ordinance Sections 7.3.1 and 7.3.3 and Official Comprehensive Plan and Zoning Maps to designate the Regional Plan Boundary and Urban Reserve Areas; Urban Reserve Management Agreements between Jackson County and the cities of Central Point, Eagle Point, Medford, Phoenix, and Talent; and amendment to the Population Allocations of Rural Unincorporated Jackson County and the City of Ashland in the Population Element of the Jackson County Comprehensive Plan. The file number for this item is LRP2009-00010. The meeting will be held at 9:00 a.m. in the Auditorium of the Jackson County Offices, 10 South Oakdale Avenue, Medford, Oregon.
 
Please visit www.jacksoncounty.org/RPS for up-to-date information regarding the County's involvement in the RPS process, including information on upcoming public meetings.

Source: http://www.co.jackson.or.us/News.asp?NewsID=1884

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Blog EntryJul 28, '11 3:01 PM
for everyone

The Brain Books Discussion Group will examine Cordelia Fine?s A Mind of Its Own on Tuesday, July 26, from 1:30 ? 3:00 p.m. at the Ashland Branch Library, 410 Siskiyou Boulevard.

 

Our brains are the trusted advisers we should never trust. This "distorting prism" of self knowledge is what Cordelia Fine, a psychologist at the Australian National University, calls our "vain brain." Ms. Fine documents the lengths to which a human brain will go to bias perceptions in the perceiver?s favor. This group meets the fourth Tuesday of each month to discuss a book relating to the brain. The August book selection is The Moral Landscape by Sam Harris. All are welcome to join in the conversation. 

 

For more information, please call the Ashland Branch Library at 541-774-6996.

 

Source: http://www.co.jackson.or.us/News.asp?NewsID=1872

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Blog EntryJul 28, '11 1:02 PM
for everyone
Release Time: 
For Immediate Release

East Room

9:01 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Good evening.  Tonight, I want to talk about the debate we’ve been having in Washington over the national debt -- a debate that directly affects the lives of all Americans.

For the last decade, we’ve spent more money than we take in.  In the year 2000, the government had a budget surplus.  But instead of using it to pay off our debt, the money was spent on trillions of dollars in new tax cuts, while two wars and an expensive prescription drug program were simply added to our nation’s credit card.

As a result, the deficit was on track to top $1 trillion the year I took office.  To make matters worse, the recession meant that there was less money coming in, and it required us to spend even more -– on tax cuts for middle-class families to spur the economy; on unemployment insurance; on aid to states so we could prevent more teachers and firefighters and police officers from being laid off.  These emergency steps also added to the deficit.

Now, every family knows that a little credit card debt is manageable.  But if we stay on the current path, our growing debt could cost us jobs and do serious damage to the economy.  More of our tax dollars will go toward paying off the interest on our loans.  Businesses will be less likely to open up shop and hire workers in a country that can’t balance its books.  Interest rates could climb for everyone who borrows money -– the homeowner with a mortgage, the student with a college loan, the corner store that wants to expand.  And we won’t have enough money to make job-creating investments in things like education and infrastructure, or pay for vital programs like Medicare and Medicaid.

Because neither party is blameless for the decisions that led to this problem, both parties have a responsibility to solve it.  And over the last several months, that’s what we’ve been trying to do.  I won’t bore you with the details of every plan or proposal, but basically, the debate has centered around two different approaches.

The first approach says, let’s live within our means by making serious, historic cuts in government spending.  Let’s cut domestic spending to the lowest level it’s been since Dwight Eisenhower was President.  Let’s cut defense spending at the Pentagon by hundreds of billions of dollars.  Let’s cut out waste and fraud in health care programs like Medicare -- and at the same time, let’s make modest adjustments so that Medicare is still there for future generations.  Finally, let’s ask the wealthiest Americans and biggest corporations to give up some of their breaks in the tax code and special deductions.

This balanced approach asks everyone to give a little without requiring anyone to sacrifice too much.  It would reduce the deficit by around $4 trillion and put us on a path to pay down our debt.  And the cuts wouldn’t happen so abruptly that they’d be a drag on our economy, or prevent us from helping small businesses and middle-class families get back on their feet right now.

This approach is also bipartisan.  While many in my own party aren’t happy with the painful cuts it makes, enough will be willing to accept them if the burden is fairly shared.  While Republicans might like to see deeper cuts and no revenue at all, there are many in the Senate who have said, “Yes, I’m willing to put politics aside and consider this approach because I care about solving the problem.”  And to his credit, this is the kind of approach the Republican Speaker of the House, John Boehner, was working on with me over the last several weeks.

The only reason this balanced approach isn’t on its way to becoming law right now is because a significant number of Republicans in Congress are insisting on a different approach -- a cuts-only approach -– an approach that doesn’t ask the wealthiest Americans or biggest corporations to contribute anything at all.  And because nothing is asked of those at the top of the income scale, such an approach would close the deficit only with more severe cuts to programs we all care about –- cuts that place a greater burden on working families.

So the debate right now isn’t about whether we need to make tough choices.  Democrats and Republicans agree on the amount of deficit reduction we need.  The debate is about how it should be done.  Most Americans, regardless of political party, don’t understand how we can ask a senior citizen to pay more for her Medicare before we ask a corporate jet owner or the oil companies to give up tax breaks that other companies don’t get.  How can we ask a student to pay more for college before we ask hedge fund managers to stop paying taxes at a lower rate than their secretaries?  How can we slash funding for education and clean energy before we ask people like me to give up tax breaks we don’t need and didn’t ask for?  

That’s not right.  It’s not fair.  We all want a government that lives within its means, but there are still things we need to pay for as a country -– things like new roads and bridges; weather satellites and food inspection; services to veterans and medical research. 

And keep in mind that under a balanced approach, the 98 percent of Americans who make under $250,000 would see no tax increases at all.  None.  In fact, I want to extend the payroll tax cut for working families.  What we’re talking about under a balanced approach is asking Americans whose incomes have gone up the most over the last decade -– millionaires and billionaires -– to share in the sacrifice everyone else has to make.  And I think these patriotic Americans are willing to pitch in.  In fact, over the last few decades, they’ve pitched in every time we passed a bipartisan deal to reduce the deficit.  The first time a deal was passed, a predecessor of mine made the case for a balanced approach by saying this:

“Would you rather reduce deficits and interest rates by raising revenue from those who are not now paying their fair share, or would you rather accept larger budget deficits, higher interest rates, and higher unemployment?  And I think I know your answer.”

Those words were spoken by Ronald Reagan.  But today, many Republicans in the House refuse to consider this kind of balanced approach -– an approach that was pursued not only by President Reagan, but by the first President Bush, by President Clinton, by myself, and by many Democrats and Republicans in the United States Senate.  So we’re left with a stalemate. 

Now, what makes today’s stalemate so dangerous is that it has been tied to something known as the debt ceiling -– a term that most people outside of Washington have probably never heard of before. 

Understand –- raising the debt ceiling does not allow Congress to spend more money.  It simply gives our country the ability to pay the bills that Congress has already racked up.  In the past, raising the debt ceiling was routine.  Since the 1950s, Congress has always passed it, and every President has signed it.  President Reagan did it 18 times.  George W. Bush did it seven times.  And we have to do it by next Tuesday, August 2nd, or else we won’t be able to pay all of our bills.  

Unfortunately, for the past several weeks, Republican House members have essentially said that the only way they’ll vote to prevent America’s first-ever default is if the rest of us agree to their deep, spending cuts-only approach.   

If that happens, and we default, we would not have enough money to pay all of our bills -– bills that include monthly Social Security checks, veterans’ benefits, and the government contracts we’ve signed with thousands of businesses. 

For the first time in history, our country’s AAA credit rating would be downgraded, leaving investors around the world to wonder whether the United States is still a good bet.  Interest rates would skyrocket on credit cards, on mortgages and on car loans, which amounts to a huge tax hike on the American people.  We would risk sparking a deep economic crisis -– this one caused almost entirely by Washington.

So defaulting on our obligations is a reckless and irresponsible outcome to this debate.  And Republican leaders say that they agree we must avoid default.  But the new approach that Speaker Boehner unveiled today, which would temporarily extend the debt ceiling in exchange for spending cuts, would force us to once again face the threat of default just six months from now.  In other words, it doesn’t solve the problem.  

First of all, a six-month extension of the debt ceiling might not be enough to avoid a credit downgrade and the higher interest rates that all Americans would have to pay as a result.  We know what we have to do to reduce our deficits; there’s no point in putting the economy at risk by kicking the can further down the road.    

But there’s an even greater danger to this approach.  Based on what we’ve seen these past few weeks, we know what to expect six months from now.  The House of Representatives will once again refuse to prevent default unless the rest of us accept their cuts-only approach.  Again, they will refuse to ask the wealthiest Americans to give up their tax cuts or deductions.  Again, they will demand harsh cuts to programs like Medicare.  And once again, the economy will be held captive unless they get their way. 

This is no way to run the greatest country on Earth.  It’s a dangerous game that we’ve never played before, and we can’t afford to play it now.  Not when the jobs and livelihoods of so many families are at stake.  We can’t allow the American people to become collateral damage to Washington’s political warfare. 

Congress now has one week left to act, and there are still paths forward.  The Senate has introduced a plan to avoid default, which makes a down payment on deficit reduction and ensures that we don’t have to go through this again in six months. 

I think that’s a much better approach, although serious deficit reduction would still require us to tackle the tough challenges of entitlement and tax reform.  Either way, I’ve told leaders of both parties that they must come up with a fair compromise in the next few days that can pass both houses of Congress -– and a compromise that I can sign.  I’m confident we can reach this compromise.  Despite our disagreements, Republican leaders and I have found common ground before.  And I believe that enough members of both parties will ultimately put politics aside and help us make progress.

Now, I realize that a lot of the new members of Congress and I don’t see eye-to-eye on many issues.  But we were each elected by some of the same Americans for some of the same reasons.  Yes, many want government to start living within its means.  And many are fed up with a system in which the deck seems stacked against middle-class Americans in favor of the wealthiest few.  But do you know what people are fed up with most of all?

They’re fed up with a town where compromise has become a dirty word.  They work all day long, many of them scraping by, just to put food on the table.  And when these Americans come home at night, bone-tired, and turn on the news, all they see is the same partisan three-ring circus here in Washington.  They see leaders who can’t seem to come together and do what it takes to make life just a little bit better for ordinary Americans.  They’re offended by that.  And they should be. 

The American people may have voted for divided government, but they didn’t vote for a dysfunctional government.  So I’m asking you all to make your voice heard.  If you want a balanced approach to reducing the deficit, let your member of Congress know.  If you believe we can solve this problem through compromise, send that message.

America, after all, has always been a grand experiment in compromise.  As a democracy made up of every race and religion, where every belief and point of view is welcomed, we have put to the test time and again the proposition at the heart of our founding:  that out of many, we are one.  We’ve engaged in fierce and passionate debates about the issues of the day, but from slavery to war, from civil liberties to questions of economic justice, we have tried to live by the words that Jefferson once wrote:  “Every man cannot have his way in all things -- without this mutual disposition, we are disjointed individuals, but not a society.” 

History is scattered with the stories of those who held fast to rigid ideologies and refused to listen to those who disagreed.  But those are not the Americans we remember.  We remember the Americans who put country above self, and set personal grievances aside for the greater good.  We remember the Americans who held this country together during its most difficult hours; who put aside pride and party to form a more perfect union.  

That’s who we remember.  That’s who we need to be right now.  The entire world is watching.  So let’s seize this moment to show why the United States of America is still the greatest nation on Earth –- not just because we can still keep our word and meet our obligations, but because we can still come together as one nation. 

Thank you, God bless you, and may God bless the United States of America. 

END
9:16 P.M. EDT

Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/07/25/address-president-nation

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Police shut down the event after Kaskade announced his free show on Twitter.
By Gil Kaufman


Police closure of Hollywood Blvd during the 'Electric Daisy Carnival' July 27, 2011
Photo: FilmMagic

An impromptu street rave announced on Twitter to celebrate the Hollywood screening of a documentary about the Electric Daisy Carnival turned into a near riot on Wednesday night when police attempted to disperse a huge crowd that gathered on a downtown street.

Popular electronic musician Kaskade tweeted a special DJ set earlier in the day, telling fans to gather at 6 p.m. in front of Grauman's Chinese Theatre, promising, "Me+BIG SPEAKERS+MUSIC=BLOCK PARTY!!! RT!"

The show was intended to celebrate the debut of the rave documentary "Electric Daily Carnival Experience." But when hundreds of dancers converged on the invitation-only premiere and began throwing bottles and other objects at police, who were trying to disperse them, officers in riot gear responded in force, according to the Los Angeles Times.

While invited guests tried to get into the screening, thousands of non-ticketed dance fans converged en masse and ran up against police, who were trying to clear Hollywood Boulevard for the premiere. According to The Hollywood Reporter,

the near-riot happened when the street dancers ignored warnings from cops that Kaskade's set had been canceled and that they should disperse. Even after Kaskade sent out some follow-up tweets telling fans to "chill" and leave the area, officers were forced to push crowds away from the Grauman's entrance, setting off the clashes.

The movie, directed by video legend Kevin Kerslake, chronicles the 2010 edition of the massive music festival, with interviews from such stars as Kaskade, David Guetta and Steve Aoki. The event moved to Las Vegas this year after the widely reported crowd-control problems and drug-related death of a 15-year-old girl at the 2010 show.

LAPD officers detained dozens of revelers after the melee, with most of them eventually released without charge. Two people were arrested on suspicion of felony vandalism in connection with damage to police cars.

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Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1668062/electric-daisy-riot-movie-screening.jhtml

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First Lady Michelle Obama with the "Extreme Makeover Home Edition" Team

First Lady Michelle Obama, along with Ty Pennington and the "Extreme Makeover Home Edition" team, watch as Barbara Summey Marshall, center, a 15-year Navy veteran,and her family get the first look at their new house in Fayetteville, N.C., July 21, 2011. (Official White House Photo by Samantha Appleton)

FIrst Lady Michelle Obama joined three thousand military and civilian volunteers last week in Fayetteville, NC  to give one selfless Navy veteran the surprise of her life.

Barbara Summey Marshall, who served 15 years in the Navy, shares her home with the Steps N Stages Jubilee House,which provides shelter, support and services such as mentoring and life coaching, to homeless female veterans. Marshell's intentions were impressive, but the modest, 1,600- square-foot ranch house was in need of major renovations.

Fortunately, the volunteers working on the home renovations were overseen by a team that has some impressive experience of their own: Ty Pennington and his crew from "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition". In one week of 24 hour days, Marshall's humble home was replaced by a two-story, 5,000-square-foot house with plenty of space for her family, and for the women she has dedicated her life to helping.

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Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2011/07/25/first-lady-michelle-obamas-extreme-support-military-family

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President Obama with the San Francisco Giants

President Barack Obama gives a thumbs up to the 2010 Major League Baseball Champion San Francisco Giants during a visit with the team in the East Room of the White House.

 
President Obama today welcomed the 2010 World Series winners, the San Francisco Giants, to the White House. He congratulated the team on their first championship in 56 years. Baseball legend Willie Mays, who was a 23-year-old outfielder for the Giants the last time they won the title, joined the team for the meeting in the East Room.
 
The President commended the Giants for their commitment to giving back to the community, from their work with the Wounded Warrior program to their leadership as the first professional sports team to join the "It Gets Better" campaign against bullying.

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Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2011/07/25/president-obama-welcomes-world-series-champion-san-francisco-giants

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Director Jon Favreau tells MTV News there's much more to the movie than the 'silly' title may suggest.
By Kara Warner, with reporting by Josh Horowitz


Jon Favreau
Photo: Frazer Harrison/ Getty Images

When news broke that "Iron Man" director Jon Favreau had wrangled two of the biggest names in the action-movie business — Harrison Ford and Daniel Craig — to star in his intriguing genre mash-up "Cowboys & Aliens," that and a compelling premise proved to be enough to send scores of fanboys online seeking advanced tickets.

But though there's lots of early buzz from the marquee names associated with "Aliens" (mega-watt producers Steven Spielberg and Ron Howard are also onboard), Favreau recently admitted to MTV News that he felt pressure to deliver something extraordinary for fans.

"Of course, with Ron Howard and Steven Spielberg [producing], I'm in real good hands," Favreau said about overcoming the challenges of establishing just the right tone for the movie. "I learned a tremendous amount from them, and I think when you cast Harrison Ford and Daniel Craig — with 'Bond' and 'Indy,' those are two franchises that are fun but not silly," he added about Craig's 007 and Ford's "Indiana Jones" series. "And I think that if people take a clue from who I cast in the film as to how it's going to play, it's a good indicator," he explained.

Favreau went on to say that there's far more to the film than what the title suggests. "I think [moviegoers] hear the name 'Cowboys and Aliens,' it sounds kind of silly, but it also sounds compelling and interesting," he said. "So if they give it a chance, they'll see it's a fun movie, it's an exciting movie, and I think it's going to exceed their expectations."

Check out everything we've got on "Cowboys & Aliens."

For breaking news and previews of the latest comic book movies — updated around the clock — visit SplashPage.MTV.com.

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Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1667897/jon-favreau-cowboys-and-aliens.jhtml

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Thanks to Skype, Apple FaceTime and at least a half dozen other mobile video apps, the old-fashioned phone call is becoming passé. Why just speak to someone when you can engage them in video chat or use your handset to transmit what is happening around you in real time? The problem, though, is that owners of the handsets must share the same software to communicate: Both users need to have Skype client software, say, or an iPhone 4 with FaceTime. [More]

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Presented By:
  The way the world consumes and shares data will dramatically change in the next five years. Is your network ready to handle the load? Friend and follow Cisco across the web as we show you how to prepare for the future.
socialmedia.cisco.com

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Blog EntryJul 26, '11 11:01 AM
for everyone
CANNES, France ? Nokia partnered with the Cannes Lions festival this year to host a competition for Young Lions to create one-minute films in 48

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NokiaConversations-Posts/~3/YZ7MdoIQFAo/

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GLOBAL – Another week has been and gone and we’ve bought you a whole heap of Nokia News. As it’s Friday, that means for those

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Blog EntryJul 25, '11 4:00 PM
for everyone

The Jackson County Board of Commissioners announces vacancies on the Jackson County Library Advisory Committee. This is a seven member committee and members serve without compensation for a four-year term.

 

The Library Advisory Committee advises the Board of Commissioners on issues as they affect governance of the library system in Jackson County.

 

Applicants may be interviewed by the Board of Commissioners.

 

Interested applicants should complete an application at www.jacksoncounty.org or contact the Board of Commissioners, 541-776-6116 (10 South Oakdale, Room 214, Medford), for an application. Questions about the committee may be directed to Lisa White, 541-774-6402.

Source: http://www.co.jackson.or.us/News.asp?NewsID=1870

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The latest to announce its demise is Google Powermeter . All the efforts to combine social networking with energy conservation seem to be pulling the plug. As I wrote back in April , Web 2.0 may be many things, but green it is not. And that's a shame, because if our friends could "unlike" our energy habits, we might have some incentive to improve them.

To see what might be done to turn things around, I talked to Paul Cole, vice-president of Tendril , in April and again yesterday. Cole is a psychologist by training and has been conducting some pilot projects to see what might get people to save energy. "We have gotten it wrong so far," he says. "It's less a question of user motivation than that we energy technologists haven't gotten the right products to the consumers."

[More]

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With the development of technology?we use the laptops or computers more and more often?so how can we keep health when we facing the computer all days has become a serious problem  and there is doctor said we can keep our health through improve our diet.

1, rich in vitamin A and carotene food: animal liver, eggs, cabbage, sweet potatoes, squash, carrots, etc.


2, rich in vitamin B clan food: whole grains, milk, yogurt, asparagus, animal liver, vegetables, fruit, etc.


3, rich in vitamin D food: egg yolk, sardines, etc.


4, rich in vitamin E food: whole grai, wheat germ, almond, etc.


5, rich in calcium foods: shrimp, anchovies, soy products, milk, dairy products, etc.

Source: http://en.community.dell.com/thread/19878930.aspx

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Andrew Garfield describes 'surreal' moment: 'I felt like I was Spider-Man,' he tells MTV News.
By Terri Schwartz, with reporting by Josh Horowitz


Andrew Garfield in "The Amazing Spiderman"
Photo: Sony Pictures

SAN DIEGO"The Amazing Spider-Man" swung into San Diego Comic-Con on Friday (July 22), and star Andrew Garfield made sure he came ready to talk about the comic book influences he drew from for his performance.

Part of what makes Garfield so endearing in the role is his passion for the character of Spider-Man and his love of the comic books. When he chatted with MTV News, he showed off his nerd cred by dropping comic book names when describing the suit and physicality he used for Peter Parker.

"The body time in the Ultimates is what I loved," he explained. "Because I'm skinny, if you hadn't noticed; I'm a skinny guy. I love the idea of a skinny guy beating the crap out of big guys just as a personal fantasy fulfillment."

But there was more to his performance than that. Garfield made sure he was very specific with his body movements and his physical appearance because he wanted to make a point of bringing more to the evolution of Peter Parker to Spider-Man than the previous films did.

"One of the elements that I was interested in was doing something with his physicality," Garfield said. "I wanted it to be like the venom, the spider bite, was doing something specific to his DNA ... In life, imagine like he has more arms than he does, more legs than he does, and more of a special awareness."

Fans have finally had a chance to take a look at "The Amazing Spider-Man" thanks to a trailer that debuted earlier this week. But, as a huge fan himself, Garfield had a bit of a difficult time rationalizing to himself that he was actually Spider-Man.

Garfield said there was only one moment in which he felt like he was Spider-Man instead of going through some strange out-of-body experience that wasn't really happening. "I was in a changing room on my own, and I could be honest with myself. I was really moved by it because no one else was around," Garfield said. "It was genuinely very, very emotional, and it felt surreal. It was the only moment where I felt like I was Spider-Man."

Check out everything we've got on "The Amazing Spider-Man."

For breaking news and previews of the latest comic book movies — updated around the clock — visit SplashPage.MTV.com.

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Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1667793/amazing-spider-man-andrew-garfield-comic-con.jhtml

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Blog EntryJul 25, '11 8:00 AM
for everyone

Your quick look at happened this week on WhiteHouse.gov

President Obama Nominates Ohio Attorney General Richard Cordray as Director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

President Barack Obama announces the nomination of former Ohio Attorney General Richard Cordray, right, as the first director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) during a statement in the Rose Garden of the White House, July 18, 2011. At left is Elizabeth Warren, interim director of the CFPB. (Official White House Photo by Lawrence Jackson)

Deficit Talks: President Obama believes the current debt crisis offers a chance "to do something big and meaningful" and in an editorial he wrote for USA Today, he urges leaders "to seize the opportunity."  The President stressed the urgency of the looming deadline in a press conference where he repeated his commitment to solving the issue through shared sacrifice. At a University of Maryland town hall, he told the crowd he was willing to make tough choices.   

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Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2011/07/22/weekly-wrap-seize-opportunity

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