(Volume II is here. I updated the news broadcast a li’l bit again.)
Good evening; this is the early edition of the news.
In what Republican lawmakers described as ‘an easy vote’, the House today moved a step closer to avoiding a year-end government shutdown when it passed a one trillion dollar omnibus spending bill. The Senate expects a floor vote on the compromise bill soon, and rhetoric from both parties suggested that Senate Democrats are increasingly flexible, probably due to the new leverage Republicans have gained by passing their own version of the payroll-tax-holiday extension.
Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.) said the millionaires surtax long demanded by Democrats and President Obama as an offset for the payroll-tax-cut extension is no longer a part of the negotiations.
It’s unclear at this time whether or not the provision requiring the President to rule on the permitting of the Keystone pipeline within sixty days will be removed due to the threat of a veto. He did not make good on the veto threat of the National Defense Authorization Act, as Senator Lamar Alexander noted.
Senator Orin Hatch said in an interview today that Obama was ‘dilly-dallying on the proposed Keystone XL pipeline project’.
“I mean, my gosh, it makes sense. It is a shovel-ready project, ready to go right now. The pipes are already bought. It just has to be done,” Hatch said. “All we need [is] a president who will step up and start to lead and quit acting like some scaredy cat hiding in some closet in the White House.”
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) said that he has negotiated with Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and senior White House officials on the payroll-tax cut, extended unemployment benefits and a freeze of scheduled cuts to doctors’ Medicare payments, and is hopeful of an imminent resolution.
Senate Republican Conference Chairman Lamar Alexander (Tenn.) noted that the leaders’ comments were “more temperate” than on Wednesday and “reflect a holiday spirit that will lead us to an ordered and dignified conclusion.”
The Obama administration’s Interior Department today approved a plan by Royal Dutch Shell to drill in waters off Alaska’s coast. The approval is a victory for Shell, which has been pushing for years for federal approval to drill in Arctic waters off the state’s coast.
In other news relating to Royal Dutch Shell, The Supreme Court said in October that it will hear an appeal in a suit against Royal Dutch Shell PLC that poses the question of whether corporations can be sued in U.S. courts for allegedly aiding human-rights abuses overseas.
The plaintiffs in the Supreme Court case accuse Shell of aiding government forces that killed and abused thousands of people over two decades ago in the oil-rich Ogoni region of Nigeria, where Shell was exploring for oil. A U.S. appeals court in New York had dismissed the lawsuit on the grounds that corporations cannot be held liable in this country for violations of international human rights law.
Shell has denied the allegations.
Bradley Manning, the Army private who allegedly leaked classified information to WikiLeaks, started his pre- trial process today with an Article 32 hearing at Fort Meade in Maryland today.
According to Hans von Spakovsky of the Heritage Network, Manning will receive a fair and impartial trial, and blasted critics for claiming Manning was being held in inhumane solitary confinement for months before his trial. He added that “the Obama Administration investigated those claims and found there was no basis for them”.
The White House today sent out emails to all contacts praising the fact that the President has successfully ended the war in Iraq, and that it is now a stable nation, but advising that other nations should not interfere in the affairs of the fledgling democracy.
The President said that the remainder of the troops serving in Iraq will be home soon, and that he and his wife Michelle are committed to making sure they receive all the care that they require, and thanked them for their service in defeating our enemies in the ongoing War on Terror.
In health news, reports of a nationwide shortage of life-saving cancer drugs and anesthesia medications has drawn attention, but an ongoing dearth of ADHD drugs has taken a toll on millions of adults and children who need them daily to focus.
It has been reported that British-born journalist and atheist intellectual Christopher Hitchins died of pneumonia last night in Houston. The pneumonia was said to be a complication of his esophageal cancer.
In business news today, a newly released federal report shows that the number of small bank loans to business has fallen to the lowest point in more than a decade, cutting the flow of money to a sector that’s usually a job-creation powerhouse.
The SEC today filed charges against six former executives – including former CEOs – at mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac with securities fraud, alleging they misled investors about their exposure to risky subprime mortgage debt.
“Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac executives told the world that their subprime exposure was substantially smaller than it really was,” said Robert Khuzami, Director of the SEC’s Enforcement Division. Khuzami added that these misstatements “misled the market about the amount of risk on the company’s books.”
In online news, the infamous Unknown Blogger, with her trademark grocery bag with cut-out eye and mouth holes over her head, released a video on youtube in which she declared that:
“There is no longer any electoral remedy for reclaiming our Constitutional democracy. It is clear that our nation’s tax code, life-killing extractive energy and foreign policies, and domestic police-state ‘security’ in aid of total corporate profit and domination over ordinary citizens will continue to be sold to the highest bidders representing multinational profiteers. The sole remedy left to The People is massive uprising and revolution. Occupy everything!” she advised; “There is no turning back now. If we allow ourselves to be thwarted, the chance to take back our nation won’t come again in our lifetimes.”
The Secretary of Homeland Security, Janet Napolitano, could not be reached for comment by the time of this broadcast.
There are seven more shopping days until Christmas.
Good night from all of us at FUBS news; and good luck.
Silent night, holy night
All is calm, all is bright
Round yon virgin mother and child
Holy infant so tender and mild
Sleep in heavenly peace…

(by permission of Anthony Freda @ www.anthonyfreda.com)
(cross-posted at www.kgblogz.com)



26 Comments

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m_eJBrqnyu8
Yes. And ever?, never? :
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yz8VQ8C-_3E
recc’d. I mean, where to even begin? Well done, thank you.
Happy Christmas! War is Over!
Trying to extract the good news out of your post … still trying. Maybe it’s that I don’t have to watch the MSM tonight now to see what the corporations want us to know (or not know). So thank you for such a thorough report, my friend!
Hey hotflashcarol, the good news is that the now infamous Unknown Blogger appeared to give us the final word!
Mercy, mercy, mercy Wendy. Between you and David Swanson’s countdown to Armageddon, I have sunk into a blue funk that even my watching all the little cuties in my granddaughter’s “Nutcracker” dress rehersal can dispel. I keep thinking of what their lives will be like in 10 or 15 years.
And it won’t be better in the morning.
What is this – duelling youtubes??
Whoops, that 2nd sentence should read, “… that not even watching all the little cuties ….” That’s what happens when I type with one hand, hold a glass of wine in the other, and try to listen to granddaughter explain how their headdresses fall off when they dance.
Complementary youtubes, twocents. ;o)
Sleeeeeeep well, Crane-Station, and have good dreams. ;o)
3/4 of One War Over!!! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yN4Uu0OlmTg
Good thing the Malaki government refused to extend the SOFA, ain’t it?
But, oh, those private armies of Hillary’s! How large can they grow? Ask Erik Prince:
Yeppers, girlfriend, no news for ya tonight. But: I could not bring myself to report on last night’s Republican ‘debate’. Could not even begin to figure out how to put a sentence in the FUQ newscaster’s mouth that began with ‘Michelle Bachmann charged…”
Kudos wendydavis,
A veritable tour de force! Cynic that I am, my most favoritistical method of communication of all is biting sarcasm; not to detract from your inestimable talents and depth of compassion even one little bit, but sadly this shit nearly writes itself nowadays no?
I haven’t seen a movie trailer in ages that made me hunger for the experience…….but whoever this sumbich is who is scripting this political kabuki crapola……we need to get him to Hollywood. He would no doubt become even richer than he/she is becoming in DC, we’d get entertained in the bargain……and he/she’d have the added benefit of not burning in hell.
No, it won’t be better in the morning, dear Eclair. But we will get their, and a big part of it we allow ourselves to slide *temporarily* into the doldrums when we see those sweet and innocent faces, and the trusting looks they cast upon us. They *know* we will protect them and provide for them. And we get awfully fucking jittery that we may not be able to, cuz it will take sooo many of us pushing back.
Everyone has their way to bear witness and cope, but for me it’s: never to pretend to be more optimistic, or higher than I really am, but to immerse myself in what I feel, then rage, weep, write…and then…laugh a little at the absurd levels of calumny, oppression and moral vacuity that we’ve allowed to overwhelm us and our society with virtually no objection.
I know all the clever ruses that were used to keep us subdued and asleep, but still…some of refused to take the Blue Pill for all these years and decades…and it’s so nice more are waking up to join us in our rage, pain…and enormous hope now.
Stay strong and beautiful, and listen to the falling-off ballerina headpieces…but drink wine with *both* hands some nights, eh wot?
‘They are few, and we are legion!’
Er…ummm…in fact, it DID write itself. Couldn’t sleep this afternoon, and had been stayin’ away from the computer pretty much lately, tryin’ ta put some Christmas in the mail for the grandbabbies and all.
And all of a sudden I was cuttin’ and pastin’ up a storm. Almost all of it was there for the pluckin’, though I had to go after a few fucked up tidbits here and there that I’d remembered. That all of it is ‘real news’ makes it…hideous. Stayed away from the updated parallel to the Richard Speck murders; figured I could afford to be that delicate. ;o)
The new movie trailers I see on the teevee seem to be all paranormal things or zombie stuff; odd, really. Must be people needing to feel more powerful, or more frightened by weirdness than daily life.
I know you like this one, and I hope your recording is going well. You’re one fine musician, Robert. G’night.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rj4J6i_vw0w&feature=related
Got it wrong. Shouldda been:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a48gIt84AZc&feature=related
Dang, I must Chime in…! *g*
Here’s the one, at the Rock n Roll Hall of fame tribute to George. What I want to know….what inquiring minds want to know….is where the fuck does Prince’s Telecaster go to after he throws it up in the air after his best freakin’ ever solo?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rj4J6i_vw0w&feature=player_detailpage
No tellin’ why that happened I was at the video I wanted….but here….let me try again :
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=HoR6YQ1V8ks
@Robert Alexander Dumas December 16th, 2011 at 10:51 pm
Hmmm. Can’t turn it up yet, but that’s the one I was tryin’ to fetch, but the one I found was pretty garbled and fuzzy for some reason. Or mebbe it was my ears? Or: ack! My head?
His Telecaster goes to heaven, silly. Guitar Rapture.
Speaking of ‘burning in hell’, Bill Black had a few hundred scathing words for our Commander-in-Chief about his interview on Sixty Minutes; he doesn’t mince them one iota.
Nice, Tuttle; thanks.
I recently made contact with a musician friend from my past, and (long story short) discovered he was on tour with Stills. So…being a good little Occupy supporter, asked him to talk it over with Stephen and see if they couldn’t write a song or songs for the democracy movement. I admitted I had no idea about their current politics and all…
But…ummmm…I never heard back. Oopsie. ;o)
Just as true today as back then.
The war broke my bonds with churches as they prayed to god to protect their sons and daughters as they went to the killing fields.
One person told me on church member didn’t fight, he was just loading planes .
I asked with what ,Bombs ?
Someone observed it’s always darkest before dawn, look for the light.
Love and light, light and love…Carlos Santana, Bob Marley…
http://my.firedoglake.com/wendydavis/2011/12/09/inconvenient-people/
Was just listening to this on another tab when I came over here. ;o)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=endscreen&NR=1&v=vdB-8eLEW8g
We try so hard to believe those encouraging aphorisms, don’t we? Whooosh. Be well and strong, tjbs.
Pallets and pallets of shrink-wrapped packages of hundred-dollar bills?
Thank you for this, wendy. I had almost forgotten the Simon & Garfunkel cover of “Silent Night.” And that would seem to be an impossibility. After all, I remember so very well the impact this album – and this song! – had on me as a young man. I played this album over and over again as only a pre-teen might, absolutely entranced by it all. Singing along was a transcendent affair.
I remember feeling the pain and the injustice in the world around me at that time. I was fearful, angry, upset, enraged and oh-so-indignant over the state of affairs we confronted in 1966. The alienation of the youth during the sixties is often mentioned in accounts from the time, almost like a mantra or a throw-away line. Yet, I felt it keenly. This song (and “Homeward Bound” from the same album) were quite capable of stirring me to tears even as I sang along.
As I say, the alienation was real but I was never hopeless. There were demonstrations, after all. There were people coming together in their art and their politics and their youth and their education and their other passions to set the world right on its axis once again.
And we did it! Somehow, we actually did it! Not without pain. Not without mistakes. Not without regressions and not without delusion. But we nevertheless set civility as a standard among peoples. We declared Civil Rights to be inviolate, and set about making our actions conform to our words in this regard. We decided we would tread lightly upon the world and fought the impulse to do otherwise. Peace and Justice were admirable objectives then, worthy of pursuit by whole societies, including our own!
Life went on. We were sure that everyone was on the path toward enlightenment and justice and peace and love. We knew our failings, but we also knew we all played by the same rules and for the same purpose.
But someone forgot to tell the other side. And it sure seems they have spent the years since studying where they went wrong in their efforts to maximize profit from other peoples’ grief, troubles, and turmoil. And they’ve learned their lesson well.
As your “news reports” indicate, we are undergoing what seems to be a full-scale assault against all we hold sacred. They now come at us from so many different directions that we become disoriented in the spin-around. And it seems no amount of singing will make the pain go away.
Hello, my friend; so nice to see you here. I’ve missed you, but understand how important what you’re doing in Wisconsin for democracy and justice is, and I am proud of your (collectively, too) bold efforts.
This album was formative to me, too. I was sixteen, going to high school half a day, the other half at college, Kent State, actually. The contrast of a preppy high school and the radicalization I received standing with the SDS and other unruly DFH’s could not have been more stark, and I confess I didn’t always meld the two so well (busted for pot, all that…). But I am still the same person today, just crankier. ;o)
The missing bits in the decades in-between bear some examination: how too many were too comfortable and sleepy to notice or push back against the burgeoning corporate power and failures of government to care for the people’s welfare.
But here we are, Jeezus, at this point in the great awakening, and it can’t get larger fast enough for us, though we can’t really hasten it. But events can…and will soon, IMO. More will realize they have nothing left to lose, as so many in England have, or will see how horrid the future looks for their grandchildren and beyond, unless they choose a side.
No amount of singing makes the pain go away, but I have at least a dozen go-to songs to either find perspective, ironic humor, or, as with this one, bravery. I blast it most Saturdays before Steve and I go downtown to ‘Occupy Mancos’. ;o) You’d get a boot outta seeing these two geezers gettin’ honks and high fives in this one-horse town, I’ll bet.
Give my love to J, dear, save plenty for yourself.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K_tDwpB3Vnk&feature=related