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Posts Tagged ‘Minnesota’

It’s official: money eases both physical and emotional pain

Money can alleviate physical pain as well as ease the sting of social rejection, according to a new study.
Since money can affect pain, the researchers theorised that it may offer clues as to how the brain evolved to process social interactions.
Using six different experiments, lead author Xinyue Zhou from Sun Yat-Sen University in Guangzhou and [...]

ABC Bounces Newlywed Couple For Also Appearing On NBC

A Newlywed couple from Minnesota became the latest victims in the vicious morning TV booking wars, when ABC had them thrown out of their hotel and canceled their airline tickets to fly home.

More on NBC

Arianna Huffington: States Forced to Cut Services to the Bone: The Opportunity Cost of the Bank Bailout

Reading about the huge budget cuts almost every state in the country is being forced to make quickly puts the $4.7 trillion we have pumped into the financial sector into perspective, and leaves us pondering the opportunity cost — what else we could have done with that money. Consider: America’s states are facing a projected cumulative budget gap of $166 billion for fiscal 2010. That’s a massive number. But when you remember that we spent $180 billion to bail out AIG, you realize that that alone would be more than enough to close the 2010 budget gap in every state in the union. Instead, that money has gone to the banks with no strings attached and no accompanying reform of the system. So all across the country the fiscal ax is falling. The devastation is in the details…

Paul Helmke: NRA Defeated In Key Gun Violence Prevention Vote: Elections Have Consequences

Today’s vote is proof that hard work, and elections, have real-life consequences that can help save lives.

YMSB Fall Tour w/ Barnes: In Support of The Show due 9/1

Yonder Mountain String Band’s New Album The Show To Be Released September 1
Fall Tour with Danny Barnes Announced


Yonder Mountain String Band

Yonder Mountain String Band is pleased to announce an upcoming fall tour in support of their brand new record, The Show. The album will be released nationwide on September 1 and August 28 at Red Rocks. The band is extremely excited that Danny Barnes will be opening the entire tour and that Darol Anger will be joining Yonder in Milwaukee, Madison and Chicago.

No track list is currently available for the album.

Yonder Mountain String Band Tour Dates:
08/07/09 Fri Fox Theatre Boulder, CO

08/11/09 Tue The Crossroads Kansas City, MO

08/12/09 Wed Simon Estes Amphitheater Des Moines, IA

08/13/09 Thu Redstone Room Davenport, IA

08/14/09 Fri Big Top Chautauqua Bayfield, WI

08/15/09 Sat Minnesota Zoo Amphitheater Apple Valley, MN

08/22/09 Sat Grand Targhee Alta, WY

08/27/09 Thu Fox Theatre Boulder, CO

08/28/09 Fri Red Rocks Amphitheatre Morrison, CO

08/29/09 Sat Paolo Soleri Amphitheatre Santa Fe, NM

08/30/09 Sun Pine Mountain Amphitheater Flagstaff, AZ

09/01/09 Tue USANA (West Valley) Amphitheatre West Valley, UT

09/02/09 Wed Hawkins Amphitheater Reno, NV

09/04/09 Fri The Gorge George, WA

09/05/09 Sat The Gorge George, WA

09/06/09 Sun The Gorge George, WA

10/06/09 Tue Mr. Small’s Theatre Pittsburgh, PA

10/08/09 Thu Keswick Theatre Glenside, PA

10/09/09 Fri 9:30 Club Washington, DC

10/10/09 Sat Rams Head Live Baltimore

10/11/09 Sun Pearl Street Nightclub Northampton, MA

10/14/09 Wed Higher Ground Burlington, VT

10/15/09 Thu Higher Ground Burlington, VT

10/16/09 Fri House of Blues Boston, MA

10/17/09 Sat Nokia Theatre Times Square New York, NY

10/18/09 Sun State Theatre State College, PA

10/21/09 Wed The Rave/Eagles Ballroom Milwaukee, WI

10/22/09 Thu Orpheum Theatre Madison, WI

10/23/09 Fri House of Blues Chicago, IL

10/24/09 Sat House of Blues Chicago, IL

10/28/09 Wed The Blue Note Columbia, MO

10/29/09 Thu Sokol Auditorium / Underground Omaha, NE


Obama goes on healthcare reform offensive

US president goes on the offensive following attacks from Republicans who’ve criticised cost of overhaul

President Barack Obama has launched a vigorous campaign to force an overhaul of healthcare through Congress within weeks, and extend affordable medical insurance to all Americans, as the centrepiece of his domestic agenda is threatened by Republicans exploiting divisions in the president’s party and rising public anxiety over the cost of reform.

Obama has accused his opponents of playing the politics of “delay and defeat” as he urges Congress to pass legislation before it goes into recess next month out of concern that if the process drags on late into the year public and congressional support will further erode. The Republicans are now openly attempting to stall the reforms and have said that they see an opportunity to deliver Obama a damaging political defeat.

The president has gone on the offensive by lobbying members of Congress and by appealing directly to the voters in warning that the existing system “works for the insurance and drug companies” while ordinary people face escalating insurance premiums.

“The need for reform is urgent and it is indisputable,” Obama said. “We’ve talked this problem to death, year after year.”

Several bills working their way through Congress would expand health insurance through a new government scheme that would ensure 97% of the population is covered. An estimated 47 million Americans, one in six of the population, is without health coverage. The legislation would subsidise premiums for those on low incomes.

Under a bill before the House of Representatives, the new scheme would in part be paid for with a tax surcharge of between 1% and 5% on high earners. Employers will also be required to provide health benefits to workers or pay the government to do so.

But the process is running in to problems. Six senators, three of them Democrats, have written to Obama urging him to slow passage of the legislation and win the agreement of both parties. One of the senators, Joe Lieberman, described the reforms as “enormous and complicated” and said they shouldn’t be rushed.

Even in the House of Representatives there are signs that doubts are beginning to set in over warnings about cost.

Obama has said he will not sign any healthcare bill that raises the deficit and has argued that reform can be paid for in part by reducing the escalating cost of treatment through the power of the government to negotiate preferential prices with drug companies.

But the president was delivered a significant blow last week when the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) director, Doug Elmendorf, warned that far from saving money, the proposed reforms would add $239bn to the national debt over ten years.

That has proven to be particularly sensitive in the present economic climate with opinion polls showing that public support for Obama on healthcare reform has slumped to less than 50% in part over concerns at the cost.

The president’s position was not helped when a meeting of governors also raised concerns about being landed with the cost of underwriting insurance for the poor.

Then yesterday a hospital Obama has praised as an example of affordable quality healthcare, the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota, came out against his plan.

“The proposed legislation misses the opportunity to help create higher-quality, more affordable healthcare for patients. In fact, it will do the opposite,” the hospital said.

The Republicans have pounced on the concerns. The Huffington Post published what it said is a private Republican party memo outlining strategies to defeat Obama’s proposals through delay. These include a publicity campaign that claims the reforms will deepen the national debt, that the president is endangering healthcare and the economy by experimenting with change, and that the government will take over control of patient care and medicines.

Some Republicans sense Obama is on the back foot. Senator Jim DeMint was recorded in a conference call discussion saying that Republicans should block healthcare reform to undermine the president.

“If we’re able to stop Obama on this, it will be his Waterloo. It will break him,” he said.

The president responded directly to DeMint by accusing some Republicans of playing with an issue as important as healthcare in order to try and regain control of Congress at the next election.

“Think about that. This isn’t about me. This isn’t about politics. This is about a healthcare system that is breaking America’s families, breaking America’s businesses and breaking America’s economy. And we can’t afford the politics of delay and defeat when it comes to healthcare, not this time, not now,” he said.

Obama has also come under criticism for not going to Congress with a detailed plan and instead relying on members to shape the legislation, apparently out of a wish to avoid President Bill Clinton’s mistake in trying to impose healthcare reform and watching it fail.

Obama warned that his opponents are attempting to repeat the strategy.

“They explicitly went after the Clintons, said we’re not going to get this done. So it was a pure political play, a show of strength by the Republicans that helped them regain the House. I think there are folks who think that we should try to dust off that old playbook,” he said.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


ProPublica: Help Us Do Stimulus Spot Checks

by Amanda Michel, ProPublica (flickr user kylemay) It’s the middle of July and we’re all wondering whether the stimulus is working. If we do as…

Roger I. Abrams: StarCaps Anyone?

The StarCaps litigation is a sports law professor’s dream: it’s filled with questions of the supremacy of federal law, collective bargaining and the rights of states to regulate aspects of drug testing.

Mike Stark: My Take on Dems, Politics, and Health Care

I’ve been on the Hill asking Representatives where they are on health care, and specifically, the public option. I’ll tell you how things have gone so far and what I think about the whole mess.

150-Pound Cupcake In Minnesota Sets Guinness Record

MINNEAPOLIS — A 151-pound cupcake in Minneapolis has been certified as the world’s largest. The 1-foot tall, 2-foot wide cupcake on display Saturday at the Minneapolis Mall of America had 15 pounds of fudge filling and 60 pounds of yello…

Governor Quinn Meets Troops In Iraq

CHICAGO (AP) — Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn said Sunday that he spent the weekend visiting American troops and military leaders in a surprise trip to Iraq and Kuwait along with four other U.S. governors.

“I was extremely impressed by the service …

Stats Guru Nate Silver Issues Financial Challenge To Climate Skeptics

John Hinderaker at the popular conservative blog PowerLine reports that it’s been cold, cold, cold in his home town of Minneapolis, Minnesota, going to far as to compare it with “The Year Without a Summer”, 1816, when global temperatures were …

Scientists create material that can repel hot water

In a breakthrough study, scientists from University of Minnesota in St Paul have developed a new material that can repel hot water.
The new discovery could help protect vulnerable members of the population such as elderly, children, physically impaired people from hot-water burns.
Scientists have long been working on producing water-repelling materials inspired by natural surfaces, such [...]

Childhood cancer ‘increases with advancing maternal age’

Baby born to an older mother may have a slightly increased risk for many of the cancers that occur during childhood, according to a new study from the Masonic Cancer Center, University of Minnesota.
Logan Spector, Ph.D., assistant professor of paediatrics and cancer epidemiology researcher, and Kimberly Johnson, Ph.D., postdoctoral fellow in paediatric epidemiology, led the [...]

Obama Leading Pawlenty By 11 Points In Minnesota: Survey

Minnesota continues to make news this week. Following word from Ohio that Barack Obama’s approval numbers have edged down into mere mortal range, a new survey from Public Policy Polling of Minnesotans–those lucky souls now boasting a full con…

Franken laughs last

The long-running battle for Minnesota’s Senate seat is finally over. Democracy – and Al Franken – won fair and square

In the end, the conspiracy theories became so laughable that the Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee (RSCC) quietly removed its own “Minnesota Recount” website, once it became clear that no, the Democratic candidate Al Franken was not “stealing” the US Senate election in Minnesota, as the Republican party had been shamefully declaring, without actual evidence, for weeks following election day back on 4 November 2008.

Nearly eight months on from election day, Franken finally got to celebrate his election as Minnesota’s next US senator after the defeated Republican incumbent Norm Coleman dropped his quixotic legal challenge, and the state’s Republican governor announced he was going to formally approve Franken’s victory.

Although the victory was sealed today, the Republican claims of “voter fraud” became impossible to support long ago, because hand-marked paper ballots – nearly three million of them – as cast by the voters in the squeaker of an election, were actually being counted, in full view of the media and any interested citizen alike. To a ballot, they were all accounted for, and any disagreement about voter intent on those ballots was adjudicated in an open process by a bipartisan state canvassing board. All but a handful of those votes were determined unanimously by the board to have been cast either for Franken, for Coleman, for a third party candidate or for nobody at all.

The only question remaining after the weeks-long, painstaking, public hand-count was whether a number of uncounted absentee ballots, rejected as per the state’s strict standards for counting, should, in fact, be counted.

A tripartisan, three-judge panel took their time, in yet another fully public process, in reviewing evidence and hearing witness testimony presented by both sides. A few hundred more ballots were deemed to be legitimate and improperly rejected, and those too were then publicly counted – the counting again witnessed by all – and added to the final tally.

Hand-counted paper ballots proved, yet again, to be the gold standard in this election, which the state canvassing board, the three-judge election contest panel and now the state’s supreme court has affirmed as won by Franken, the former radio talkshow host and comedian, by a mere 312 votes.

Minnesota’s excellent election law, requiring both the secretary of state and the governor to sign the election certification only after all election contests are settled in the state, has assured that the next senator from Minnesota will not serve under a cloud of suspicion. Only the most insane and/or disingenuous could challenge the findings from one of the longest and most transparent election hand-counts in the history of the US.

Coleman, of course, may do exactly that. Though it’s exceedingly unlikely the US supreme court would rule in his favour – or even deem to review the case – Coleman still has the right to decide whether or not he’ll continue his fight, by taking it to the highest authority in the land.

If other states, and even the nation, had a law requiring that all ballots actually be counted, and all contests be fully settled before seating, we might have avoided the clouds of illegitimacy which always shrouded the Bush administration following the disputed election results in Florida 2000 and Ohio 2004, as well as countless other races – including Iran 2009.

When ballots are counted in secret (or, in many cases, not counted at all), democracy is dangerously imperilled. Lucky for Minnesotans, that wasn’t the case up there, even if it meant some eight months without proper representation in the US Congress. It was worth the wait.

Transparency was no match for the conspiracy theorists, including the RSCC, the head of the Republican party and even the Republican National Lawyers Association, who embarrassingly joined the black helicopter crowd in touting evidence-free claims of Franken’s “efforts to steal a seat in the United States Senate”.

Coleman, of course, was entitled to his contest, though it quickly became a desperate comedy of errors for the ousted Republican. His election contest began with a presentation of doctored evidence and concluded with the revelation of hidden legal notes and witnesses. The more he challenged the election and the counting of previously rejected absentee ballots, the wider Franken’s margin of victory grew.

The hard-fought post-election contest was understandable, of course. It’s a pity that Democrats don’t fight like hell for each and every vote they’re entitled to (yes, I’m speaking to you, John Kerry, and too many of your colleagues, or would-be colleagues.) Franken’s victory will now offer the Democrats a 60-vote, filibuster-proof majority in the Senate, following the recent party jump by former Pennsylvania Republican Arlen Specter.

Minnesota’s law is a good one, but as with any law, there is no guarantee it won’t be abused, as Coleman has done for so many months by filing specious challenges, flipping and flopping on ballots he first fought to keep from being counted, only to change his mind later in hopes of having them counted after all, once it appeared he was on the losing side of the democratic draw.

And what of those infamous claims of Democratic “voter fraud” by all of those Acorn voters? After the most detailed, ballot-by-ballot, voter-by-voter analysis of an election likely in the history of the country, surely the Republicans would be able to show at least one case of fraud committed by their favourite bogey-man community organising, voter-registration group, right? After all, Acorn managed to register more than 42,000 new voters in Minnesota in the last election cycle. With all the claims of voter fraud being committed by the group, surely this election, of all elections, would be where evidence of all that fraud would finally be revealed for all to see, no? Um, no. Apparently not.

Not a single allegation of Acorn-related voter fraud was presented by the Republicans throughout the entire eight-month contest, even in an election in which just a few hundred votes separated winner from loser. The closest anybody came to presenting evidence of such fraud was when Coleman’s own witness admitted that he hadn’t signed his ballot, and that it had been forged by his girlfriend. Coleman fought to have that ballot, and others that were also illegally submitted, accepted in the final tally. So much for the Democratic voter fraud canard. If nothing else, this election once again revealed the Republican claims of voter fraud to be amongst the biggest frauds in modern American elections. Transparency has a way of doing that.

Despite his concession speech this afternoon, Coleman could still try his luck at the US supreme court, and given the wild-card make-up of that body, anything could happen, I suppose. The law has little to do with it, it seems (see 2000′s Bush v Gore). But the story here is that democracy only works when every citizen is allowed to participate both in the casting and – as importantly – in the counting of the ballots.

When democracy is visible to all, it works. When it becomes buried behind secrecy, insider tabulations and computerised black boxes, the very basis of our system of government is put dangerously at stake.

Transparency wins again. Along with the voters of Minnesota. Nice to see the voters win one for a change. Now if Barack Obama puts his money where his mouth is and delivers some of the transparency to the American people that he once promised, we might stand a chance at rebuilding this country. That appears a difficult fight at this time. But the results, if we can get them, just as in Minnesota, will be worth every moment of that fight.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Blue Turtle Seduction:16 States Tour

LAKE TAHOE BOYS HIT OKLAHOMA, WISCONSIN, MINNESOTA AND MORE

Blue Turtle Seduction

Blue Turtle Seduction is no stranger to the road – and now their “16 States, 13 Floors Tour”, which kicked off yesterday in Sparks, Nevada, leads them across 16 states in support of their digital release of 13 Floors (JamBase review). The bluegrass, folk, hip-hop and rock ensemble will make their way through Oklahoma, Arkansas, Missouri, Wisconsin, Minnesota and several other states before heading back west with a finale in Dunsmuir, CA, at Sengthong’s Blue Sky Room on May 16, less than a month after the tour kicks off.

Featuring Jay Seals (guitar, vocals) Glenn Stewart (harmonica, pan flute, vocals), Christian Zupancic (violin, mandolin, vocals), Stephen Seals (bass) and Adam Navone (drums), the band met while working at a resort in South Lake Tahoe. Several highlights on this tour include the Norman Music Festival and the Hemp Hoe Down, as well as sharing bills with Oakhurst, That 1 Guy, Madahoochi, 56 Hope Road and Pert’ Near Sandstone.

16 States Tour Dates:

04/21 – Urban Lounge – Salt Lake City, UT
04/23 – Hodi’s Half Note – Ft. Collins, CO
04/24 – Bottleneck – Lawrence, KS
04/25 – Norman Music Festival – Norman, OK
04/28 – The Deli – Norman, OK
04/30 – Juanita’s Cantina – Little Rock, AR
05/01 – The Old Rock House – St. Louis, MO
05/02 – High Noon – Madison, WI
05/03 – Nomad World Pub – Minneapolis, MN
05/05 – Vaudeville Mews – Des Moines, IA
05/07 – Hemp Hoe Down – Sturgis, SD
05/08 – Filling Station – Bozeman, MT
05/09 – John’s Alley – Moscow, ID
05/10 – Tractor Tavern – Seattle, WA
05/12 – The Goodfoot Lounge – Portland, OR
05/13 – Sam Bond’s Garage – Eugene, OR
05/14 – The Applegate Lodge – Applegate, OR
05/15 – Humboldt Brews – Arcata, CA
05/16 – Sengthong’s Blue Sky Room – Dunsmuir, CA


False Steve Jobs Heart Attack Report on CNN’s iReport Is a Failure of Open Systems

Someone posted a false report that Steve Jobs had heart attack to CNN’s citizen journalism site iReport. The fallout (which could include an SEC investigation) lead to the inevitable question of whether this is a failure of citizen journalism.
It’s not. It’s a failure of open systems.
As Sarah Perez points out at ReadWriteWeb, ANYONE can become [...]