WASHINGTON -- House Republicans sang "Amazing Grace" Tuesday morning and unveiled a fresh plan to fund the government and lift the debt ceiling -- only to have it declared dead on arrival.
House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) made the presentation in a two-hour, closed-door meeting of the GOP conference in the basement of the Capitol building after Florida Rep. Steve Southerland led three verses of the hymn, which one Democrat suggested is often sung at funerals.
Indeed, even Boehner, in an uncharacteristic move, conceded the plan might never be presented for a vote on the House floor.
"There are a lot of opinions about what direction to go. There have been no decisions about what exactly we will do," he told reporters. "We are going to continue to work with our members on both sides of the aisle to try and make sure there is no issue of default and to get our government reopened."
The Treasury Department said that sometime around Thursday it will run out of sufficient cash in the bank to pay all of the nation's bills, risking a default that economists fear will be catastrophic to the economy.
The House plan adopts significant aspects of the Senate's plan, and would fund the government through Jan. 15, raise the borrowing cap through Feb. 7, and add income verification tests to Obamacare. Unlike the Senate plan, it would delay the Affordable Health Care Act's medical device tax by two years and would eliminate federal health care subsidies for members of Congress, but not for their staffs. Some tea party members apparently want staff eliminated from coverage as well. In addition, the House effort would bar the Treasury Department from taking "extraordinary measures" to pay the government's bills as it has since the country began to reach the debt limit back in May.
Democrats and the The White House swiftly rejected the GOP plan in favor of the bipartisan effort in the Senate that would include only modest changes to Obamacare and would preserve the Treasury Department's ability to buy time to avoid default.
"The President has said repeatedly that Members of Congress don't get to demand ransom for fulfilling their basic responsibilities to pass a budget and pay the nation's bills," White House spokeswoman Amy Brundage said in a statement. "Unfortunately, the latest proposal from House Republicans does just that in a partisan attempt to appease a small group of Tea Party Republicans who forced the government shutdown in the first place."
"Introduction of this measure by the House Republican leadership is unproductive and a waste of time. Let's be clear: The House legislation will not pass the Senate," said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), singling out the Treasury restrictions as a petty attempt by the tea party to hamstring President Barack Obama. He also said the plan lacks a mechanism, called a conference committee, to resolve the dispute, although Republicans said there would be one in the still-evolving proposal.
"I'm very disappointed with John Boehner, who would once again try to preserve his role at the expense of the country," Reid said. "This bill that they're sending over here is doomed to failure. It's doomed to failure legislatively, and it is so awful, awful, awful for our country."
Reaction among House Republicans, who began the government funding fight in an attempt to defund Obamacare, was largely mixed.
Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.), the GOP's deputy whip, acknowledged the path to 218 votes might require Democratic support.
"I know we have a majority [of Republicans], but if we have 218, I don't know. We'll see," he said. "I hope [Democrats] vote for it, because this accomplishes some things that both sides say they want to accomplish, but I have no assurances that they would. I don't think they probably would until they saw 218 of our people up on the board."
Rep. Jeff Fortenberry (R-Neb.) said members had expressed several concerns about the plan, but were stuck with the "very unappealing" alternative of a default.
While he was supportive of the current plan, he added that it was a "tough question" as to whether leadership had enough votes to pass it.
Once again, the problem seemed to be bridging the differences between the right flank, for whom the plan didn't go far enough, and more moderate Republicans, who are fed up with efforts to appease the tea party.
Rep. Peter King (R-N.Y.), one of the most vocal critics of the House's strategy thus far, declined to react to the plan. Rep. Charlie Dent (R-Pa.), another frustrated moderate, said he'd vote for the plan to "move the ball forward," but was concerned it didn't leave enough time to avert default in just under three days.
Rep. John Fleming (R-La.), a conservative member of the House, said he was leaning toward supporting the bill. "I haven't completely worked through it, but I am leaning yes," he said. Rep. Walter Jones (R-N.C.) said he opposed raising the debt ceiling at all, but declined to say if he'd back the proposal. Rep. Andy Harris (R-Md.) said he backed the bill, but that Boehner would only put it on the floor if he thought it would pass. The "whipping" to find out how members would vote was likely to take hours, and changes in the plan could be made to gather enough support.
If Cole, a deputy GOP whip, was counting on Democratic votes, it appeared few would be available to offset Republican defections.
House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) said he hoped Democrats would not peel off in favor of the GOP's plan. "We're encouraging members to vote no on the bill," he told reporters at his weekly press availability.
"The Republican conference has got a very hard view and has given their leadership a very short leash," Hoyer said. "So the leadership seems to have little flexibility in coming to the kind of agreement that we see being discussed in the Senate."
Republicans seemed surprised at the adamant rejection of the GOP proposal before it had even been formally presented.
"I don't understand that. I don't understand that visceral reaction in a most negative fashion," said Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), even though he has harshly criticized the House's actions in the showdown. "I understand what the polling data says -- that 74 percent of the American people disapprove of Republican handling of this issue, and I agree with that ... We got ourselves in a ditch and we've got to stop digging."
But he pleaded for his chamber's leaders to take Boehner's "good-faith effort" seriously, which McCain said could lead to a compromise in 24 hours.
"For the majority leader and the Democrats in the House and the White House to say, 'Absolutely categorically not, we will not consider what the Republicans in the House of Representatives are doing,' in my view, is piling on. It's piling on, and it's not right," McCain said.
Source : http://www.politico.com/story/2013/10/government-shutdown-debt-ceiling-default-update-98317.html
All Kind of Information from Around the World... Whats happens around the Globe i post what i could..!
Tuesday, October 15, 2013
Monday, October 14, 2013
New Yorkers Say These Neighborhoods Have The Hottest Residents..!
Here's the map of the neighborhoods with the beautiful people: |
One of the most interesting maps was the one which asked which neighborhood had the most attractive people.
Here are the top five - all of which are on Manhattan - with the percent of the vote they recieved:
- Upper East Side - 18%
- SoHo - 11%
- Chelsea - 9%
- Midtown - 8%
- Upper West Side - 7%
Senator Lindsey Graham Made The Most Politician Demand Ever
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) told National Review's Robert Costa on Sunday that he will not support a way out of Washington's current fiscal impasse without a vote in the Senate on the so-called "Vitter amendment."
The "Vitter amendment," from Sen. David Vitter (R-La.), would bar lawmakers, Congressional staffers, and administration staffers from receiving federal subsidies for health insurance under Obamacare. It has been opposed by both Republican and Democratic congressional staffs, because it effectively amounts to a pay cut of thousands of dollars.
But Graham isn't demanding that the Vitter amendment becomes law as part of any deal that would reopen the government and raise the debt ceiling.
He just wants an up-or-down vote - probably because he wants to use the Vitter amendment for its best purpose, which is as a talking point, going into his re-election campaign next year. Graham will be able to say that he voted to bar a congressional "exemption" from Obamacare, a talking point that has been disputed on both the left and right.
"Now, I hope the House rises to the occasion here," Graham told Costa. "But we're down to stopping bad things, and the only bad thing at this point that we can really push on is the OPM rule. At this point, I'm not sure if we're going to get it, so I'm going to object on any deal until I get that up-or-down vote. That's only fair, and I believe the American people will be with me."
Graham is not likely to get his wish, so it remains to be seen if he'll oppose a deal currently being discussed among a bipartisan group of senators, including Majority Leader Harry Reid and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. The deal currently on the table reportedly doesn't include anything relating to the Vitter amendment.
Source : http://www.businessinsider.in/Senator-Lindsey-Graham-Made-The-Most-Politician-Demand-Ever/articleshow/24165674.cms
The "Vitter amendment," from Sen. David Vitter (R-La.), would bar lawmakers, Congressional staffers, and administration staffers from receiving federal subsidies for health insurance under Obamacare. It has been opposed by both Republican and Democratic congressional staffs, because it effectively amounts to a pay cut of thousands of dollars.
But Graham isn't demanding that the Vitter amendment becomes law as part of any deal that would reopen the government and raise the debt ceiling.
He just wants an up-or-down vote - probably because he wants to use the Vitter amendment for its best purpose, which is as a talking point, going into his re-election campaign next year. Graham will be able to say that he voted to bar a congressional "exemption" from Obamacare, a talking point that has been disputed on both the left and right.
"Now, I hope the House rises to the occasion here," Graham told Costa. "But we're down to stopping bad things, and the only bad thing at this point that we can really push on is the OPM rule. At this point, I'm not sure if we're going to get it, so I'm going to object on any deal until I get that up-or-down vote. That's only fair, and I believe the American people will be with me."
Graham is not likely to get his wish, so it remains to be seen if he'll oppose a deal currently being discussed among a bipartisan group of senators, including Majority Leader Harry Reid and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. The deal currently on the table reportedly doesn't include anything relating to the Vitter amendment.
Source : http://www.businessinsider.in/Senator-Lindsey-Graham-Made-The-Most-Politician-Demand-Ever/articleshow/24165674.cms
Google readying 'Mobile Meter' app that offers rewards for tracking mobile usage..!
Google already knows better than most how we use the internet. Now it wants to dig a little deeper and monitor your app usage as well. Engadget has learned that the company is readying a new mobile service that compensates users if they allow their mobile behavior to be monitored. We're told that the project, known internally as "Mobile Meter," utilizes iOS and Android apps that intelligently monitor app usage and web browsing habits and send the data back to Google.
Google refused to comment, as it usually does on what it considers "rumor and speculation." However, our sources tell us that the Mobile Meter program will be totally voluntary. Participants will be required to give their consent (or opt in) before joining. Google isn't the first to reward users to gather mobile trends either: Nielsen has been conducting research into mobile trends with an Android app.
Google already passively collects data to improve its apps and resources. The Google Maps app, for instance, regularly feeds back location metrics to enhance the service. Since Google won't comment, we don't know exactly which app and web metrics it intends to track with Mobile Meter. However, it will presumably enable the company to evaluate the different habits of Android and iOS users, gaining an important insight into Apple's ecosystem. We're also told Google will anonymize all of the information it collects to ensure the privacy of its panelists. Given Facebook and Google's previous mistakes, where private information was made public, Google will need to be transparent over how the opt-in service uses the data it gathers.
Source : http://www.engadget.com/2013/10/14/google-mobile-meter-tracking-ios-android-app
Google refused to comment, as it usually does on what it considers "rumor and speculation." However, our sources tell us that the Mobile Meter program will be totally voluntary. Participants will be required to give their consent (or opt in) before joining. Google isn't the first to reward users to gather mobile trends either: Nielsen has been conducting research into mobile trends with an Android app.
Google already passively collects data to improve its apps and resources. The Google Maps app, for instance, regularly feeds back location metrics to enhance the service. Since Google won't comment, we don't know exactly which app and web metrics it intends to track with Mobile Meter. However, it will presumably enable the company to evaluate the different habits of Android and iOS users, gaining an important insight into Apple's ecosystem. We're also told Google will anonymize all of the information it collects to ensure the privacy of its panelists. Given Facebook and Google's previous mistakes, where private information was made public, Google will need to be transparent over how the opt-in service uses the data it gathers.
Source : http://www.engadget.com/2013/10/14/google-mobile-meter-tracking-ios-android-app
Two Weeks Of Government Shutdown Have Helped Erase Two Years Of Consumer Confidence Gains..!
Gallup's latest reading of its daily economic confidence index is at -41, down 40 points from a peak of -1 reached in late May.
Half of the drop from May's peak to today's levels has happened in just the past two weeks, since the government shutdown started on October 1.
At -41, the index is at the lowest level since December 12, 2011 - almost two years ago. In other words, two weeks of government shutdown has helped erase two years of gains in consumer confidence.
Only 28% of those polled by Gallup say the economic outlook is getting better, whereas 67% say it's getting worse.
Source : http://www.businessinsider.in/Two-Weeks-Of-Government-Shutdown-Have-Helped-Erase-Two-Years-Of-Consumer-Confidence-Gains/articleshow/24165663.cms
Half of the drop from May's peak to today's levels has happened in just the past two weeks, since the government shutdown started on October 1.
At -41, the index is at the lowest level since December 12, 2011 - almost two years ago. In other words, two weeks of government shutdown has helped erase two years of gains in consumer confidence.
Only 28% of those polled by Gallup say the economic outlook is getting better, whereas 67% say it's getting worse.
Source : http://www.businessinsider.in/Two-Weeks-Of-Government-Shutdown-Have-Helped-Erase-Two-Years-Of-Consumer-Confidence-Gains/articleshow/24165663.cms
This Republican Congressman Wants To Put The U.S. Through Chapter 13 Bankruptcy..!
This weekend, Business Insider politics reporter Brett LoGiurato went to Gainesville, Florida to interview Rep. Ted Yoho (R-Fla.) who has insisted that hitting the debt ceiling would "bring stability to the world markets."
In his interview with us, Yoho elaborated on this idea:
What the Washington Post said, and what got picked up is, 'Ted Yoho thinks default is good for the government and for the economy.' And that's just an outright falsity or lying. Because what I said was, not raising the debt ceiling does not automatically trigger a default.
And if we address our problems, and we say, 'Brett, I owe you money - you know I owe you money, and I'm going to pay you. I'm going to pay you with interest. But we just need a little breathing room here to reorganize our debt.' I don't know if you've ever been in business with people who have owed you money...
And if you had someone that owed you money, and if they were to call you up and tell you that - instead of just trying to hunt them down, you're not going to feel better about that?
So, Yoho is proposing a restructuring of U.S. debts along the lines of a Chapter 13 bankruptcy. What he's describing - going to your creditors, saying "we just need a little breathing room," and getting new terms on your debt that allow you to pay - is the bankruptcy process.
I used to be a banker, and in every loan agreement I ever worked on, filing for bankruptcy was high on the list of defaults.
It is also possible to engage in a voluntary restructuring outside of bankruptcy. When a debtor calls up a creditor and asks for a reorganization, that might make the creditor "feel better" - relative to a scenario where the debtor hides from the creditor and makes no payment at all. It does not make the creditor feel better compared to a scenario where the debtor pays as agreed.
When a borrower comes to you asking for a restructuring on the grounds that he needs "breathing room," that is a sign of financial distress that warrants a high interest rate to compensate the lender for risk. If the U.S. is going to keep its world's-lowest borrowing costs, it can't be going to creditors saying it can't afford to pay as agreed.
I understand why Republicans are frustrated. They were sure that President Obama's deficit spending would cause a debt crisis. Creditors would flee Treasuries out of fear that the U.S. will be unable to pay its debts. Or at least they would demand higher bond yields out of fear of inflation. But the bond markets have not cooperated; interest rates are very low and investors think the U.S. is a great credit.
So Republicans have been forced to invent a debt crisis, either in their own minds, or in the real world by pushing the government into a default created by political circumstances instead of economic ones. They are sure that we can't afford to go on spending this way, and they will make sure that's the case, even if they have to break the financial system to do it.
It's crazy. But then, these people are crazy.
Source : http://www.businessinsider.in/This-Republican-Congressman-Wants-To-Put-The-U-S-Through-Chapter-13-Bankruptcy/articleshow/24165690.cms
In his interview with us, Yoho elaborated on this idea:
What the Washington Post said, and what got picked up is, 'Ted Yoho thinks default is good for the government and for the economy.' And that's just an outright falsity or lying. Because what I said was, not raising the debt ceiling does not automatically trigger a default.
And if we address our problems, and we say, 'Brett, I owe you money - you know I owe you money, and I'm going to pay you. I'm going to pay you with interest. But we just need a little breathing room here to reorganize our debt.' I don't know if you've ever been in business with people who have owed you money...
And if you had someone that owed you money, and if they were to call you up and tell you that - instead of just trying to hunt them down, you're not going to feel better about that?
So, Yoho is proposing a restructuring of U.S. debts along the lines of a Chapter 13 bankruptcy. What he's describing - going to your creditors, saying "we just need a little breathing room," and getting new terms on your debt that allow you to pay - is the bankruptcy process.
I used to be a banker, and in every loan agreement I ever worked on, filing for bankruptcy was high on the list of defaults.
It is also possible to engage in a voluntary restructuring outside of bankruptcy. When a debtor calls up a creditor and asks for a reorganization, that might make the creditor "feel better" - relative to a scenario where the debtor hides from the creditor and makes no payment at all. It does not make the creditor feel better compared to a scenario where the debtor pays as agreed.
When a borrower comes to you asking for a restructuring on the grounds that he needs "breathing room," that is a sign of financial distress that warrants a high interest rate to compensate the lender for risk. If the U.S. is going to keep its world's-lowest borrowing costs, it can't be going to creditors saying it can't afford to pay as agreed.
I understand why Republicans are frustrated. They were sure that President Obama's deficit spending would cause a debt crisis. Creditors would flee Treasuries out of fear that the U.S. will be unable to pay its debts. Or at least they would demand higher bond yields out of fear of inflation. But the bond markets have not cooperated; interest rates are very low and investors think the U.S. is a great credit.
So Republicans have been forced to invent a debt crisis, either in their own minds, or in the real world by pushing the government into a default created by political circumstances instead of economic ones. They are sure that we can't afford to go on spending this way, and they will make sure that's the case, even if they have to break the financial system to do it.
It's crazy. But then, these people are crazy.
Source : http://www.businessinsider.in/This-Republican-Congressman-Wants-To-Put-The-U-S-Through-Chapter-13-Bankruptcy/articleshow/24165690.cms
US Cellular officially jumps on the shared data bandwagon..!
Click to Expand |
U.S. CELLULAR UNVEILS SHARED DATA PLANS FOR CONSUMERS AND BUSINESS
Consumers can share data on up to 10 devices; businesses can share on up to 25 devices
CHICAGO (Oct. 14, 2013) – U.S. Cellular (NYSE: USM) is making it easy for customers to manage their data, voice and messaging services with its new Shared Data plans for consumers and small businesses. With these new plans, customers can build the plan that best meets the wireless needs of their families or employees without having to keep track of multiple plans or accounts. These plans are available now, and existing customers are not required to change to a Shared Data plan.
U.S. Cellular's Shared Data plans include unlimited minutes and messaging and provide customers flexibility in choosing a data plan to match how they use their wireless devices. Customers can share a single bucket of data among their smartphones, basic phones, tablets, hotspots and wireless modems. U.S. Cellular offers the most Shared Data options of any carrier and its plans are the only ones in the marketplace that come with a valuable rewards program that recognizes customer loyalty.
"At U.S. Cellular, providing an exceptional wireless experience is our number one goal, and we strive to provide it through our high-quality network along with devices and plans that meet our customers' needs," said Joe Settimi, vice president of products, pricing and innovation for U.S. Cellular. "Our Shared Data plans are designed to simplify the way our customers manage their wireless usage and provide choice and flexibility when deciding what is right for them."
Customers can start by selecting the devices, up to 10, that they want on their Shared Data plan. They can then choose the amount of data that matches up with their usage on those devices from plans that start at 300 MB for $40 and go up to 75 GB for $560 per month. Business customers can select up to 25 devices to share up to 100 GB of data for $750 per month. Tethering is included on all plans. Smartphones have a monthly device connection charge of $40, basic phones are $30, hotspots and wireless modems are $20 and tablets can be added for $10 per month.
The following chart shows a sampling of some of the Shared Data plans that customers can choose from.
Monthly Device Connection Charge
Minutes and Messaging
Shared Data Offering
Monthly Recurring Data Charge
Smartphone: $40
Basic Phone $30
Hotspots/Wireless Modems: $20
Tablet: $10
Unlimited on all plans
$50 1GB
$60 2 GB
$70 4 GB
$80 6 GB
$90 8 GB
$100 10 GB
Data only plans are available for tablets, hotspots and modems that start at $10 per month for 1 GB of data. The same monthly device connection charges as above apply. For customers with basic phones, U.S. Cellular is offering "Talk and Text Only Plans" that include 450 minutes and unlimited messaging for individuals for $50 and 1000 minutes and unlimited messaging for families at $100 for two lines and $20 for each additional line.
For a limited time, customers that add a tablet, hotspot or modem to their Shared Data plan get the monthly device connection charge waived until the end of 2013. For more information on U.S. Cellular's Shared Data plans, visit uscellular.com.
Additional terms, conditions and/or charges may apply. See uscellular.com for details.
About U.S. Cellular
U.S. Cellular rewards its customers with unmatched benefits and industry-leading innovations designed to elevate the customer experience. The Chicago-based carrier has a strong line-up of cutting-edge devices that are all backed by its high-speed network that has the highest call quality of any national carrier. Currently, 61 percent of customers have access to 4G LTE speeds and nearly 90 percent will have access by the end of 2013. U.S. Cellular was named a J.D. Power and Associates Customer Service Champion in 2012 for the second year in a row. To learn more about U.S. Cellular, visit one of its retail stores or uscellular.com. To get the latest news, promos and videos, connect with U.S. Cellular on Facebook.com/uscellular, Twitter.com/uscellular and YouTube.com/uscellularcorp.
Source : http://www.engadget.com/2013/10/14/us-cellular-shared-data
India's Rajan: 'We Can Pay The World In Gold'
The Indian economy has been struggling to grow thanks a tumbling currency and surging food and energy prices.
Besides slowing growth, many have been watching two data points keenly. The first is the nation's current account deficit, currently at -5.07% of GDP. The other is its external debt which stands at 22% of GDP.
The current account deficit ballooned because of the nation's gold and oil imports.
And some think this is bound to get worse.
"As liquidity is expected to moderate, funds have been flowing back to the developed world from most emerging markets," writes Societe Generale's Patrick Legland. "This reversal of flow is further exacerbating the problem with the INR depreciating sharply, causing higher imported inflation and rising input costs, which are proving to be a massive blow to already waning growth."
India's central bank governor, Raghuram Rajan, said India has a reserve of $280 billion which is 15% of its GDP. "The country can pay three-fourth of its debt from its Forex reserves," First Post cites him saying.
"We bought over $60 billion dollar gold last year. $60 billion accounts for three-fourth of our current account deficit," he said. "If the push comes to shove, we can pay the world in gold."
Rajan also said that India will not approach the IMF for financing in the next five years, adding that countries only go the IMF when they are "desperate."
Dennis Gartman, of The Gartman Letter wrote that Rajan's comments along with heavy trading volume on Friday, unleashed a "powerful storm of selling."
Gartman writes that while, gold bugs think this is "central bank manipulation at work,' "from our vantage point, this selling looked like massive margin call liquidation that was forced." He writes that life for gold bugs is "getting tiresome."
Source : http://www.businessinsider.in/Indias-Rajan-We-Can-Pay-The-World-In-Gold/articleshow/24162701.cms
Besides slowing growth, many have been watching two data points keenly. The first is the nation's current account deficit, currently at -5.07% of GDP. The other is its external debt which stands at 22% of GDP.
The current account deficit ballooned because of the nation's gold and oil imports.
And some think this is bound to get worse.
"As liquidity is expected to moderate, funds have been flowing back to the developed world from most emerging markets," writes Societe Generale's Patrick Legland. "This reversal of flow is further exacerbating the problem with the INR depreciating sharply, causing higher imported inflation and rising input costs, which are proving to be a massive blow to already waning growth."
India's central bank governor, Raghuram Rajan, said India has a reserve of $280 billion which is 15% of its GDP. "The country can pay three-fourth of its debt from its Forex reserves," First Post cites him saying.
"We bought over $60 billion dollar gold last year. $60 billion accounts for three-fourth of our current account deficit," he said. "If the push comes to shove, we can pay the world in gold."
Rajan also said that India will not approach the IMF for financing in the next five years, adding that countries only go the IMF when they are "desperate."
Dennis Gartman, of The Gartman Letter wrote that Rajan's comments along with heavy trading volume on Friday, unleashed a "powerful storm of selling."
Gartman writes that while, gold bugs think this is "central bank manipulation at work,' "from our vantage point, this selling looked like massive margin call liquidation that was forced." He writes that life for gold bugs is "getting tiresome."
Source : http://www.businessinsider.in/Indias-Rajan-We-Can-Pay-The-World-In-Gold/articleshow/24162701.cms
Kim Kardashian Shows Thin Waist on Date Night with Kanye..!
Kim Kardashian is turning Paris into her own personal catwalk.
The "Keeping Up with the Kardashians" star has been all over the place since touching down in France for Fashion Week -- and tonight, she ditched that Max Mara coat and showed off her slim waist!
Wearing a pleather skirt and jersey t-shirt, the new mom put her famous curves on display on a date night with baby daddy Kanye West, who dressed like Kurt Cobain in ripped jeans and an oversized sweater.
But Kim's best accessory was her necklace, a gold piece of jewelry with the couple's daughter's nickname, Nori, on it.
Kanye was also seen wearing the same necklace. How cute.
Kim had a busy day on Monday, as she was photographed at offices for Stephane Rolland and Givenchy, went shopping and had lunch with former Vogue editor Andre Leon Talley.
We can't wait to see what she wears next!
Source : http://www.toofab.com/2013/09/30/kim-kardashian-waist-date-night-kanye-west-photos/
The "Keeping Up with the Kardashians" star has been all over the place since touching down in France for Fashion Week -- and tonight, she ditched that Max Mara coat and showed off her slim waist!
Wearing a pleather skirt and jersey t-shirt, the new mom put her famous curves on display on a date night with baby daddy Kanye West, who dressed like Kurt Cobain in ripped jeans and an oversized sweater.
But Kim's best accessory was her necklace, a gold piece of jewelry with the couple's daughter's nickname, Nori, on it.
Kanye was also seen wearing the same necklace. How cute.
Kim had a busy day on Monday, as she was photographed at offices for Stephane Rolland and Givenchy, went shopping and had lunch with former Vogue editor Andre Leon Talley.
We can't wait to see what she wears next!
Source : http://www.toofab.com/2013/09/30/kim-kardashian-waist-date-night-kanye-west-photos/
Part - V - Best Comments over Shut Down..!
As the government shut down this week, the political echo chamber
certainly did not. Here are some of the best quotes about the shutdown.
“This is about the happiest I’ve seen members in a long time because we’ve seen we’re starting to win this dialogue on a national level.”
— Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.), on Fox News’s “Sean Hannity”.
“We’ve obscured a lot. We’ve obscured our victory on the spending level, and we obscured the failures of Obamacare on its first day. … We should show what we got.”
— Rep. Peter King (R-N.Y.),.
“Think about the precedent. What’s next? What if the Democratic extreme said, ‘Well we’re not going to sign a budget unless you do away with assault weapons?’ What if we’re not going to have a budget unless 20 people around here decide that everybody under the age of 40 should wear a tin hat around? This is not the way you govern a great country.”
— Rep. Jim Himes (D-Conn.), on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe”.
“Democratic leaders in Congress finally have their prize, a government shutdown that no one seems to want but them,”
— Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.),.
Last but not least...
“My simple message today is: Call a vote. Call a vote. Put it on the floor. Take a vote, stop this farce and end this shutdown right now. The only thing that’s keeping the government shut down … is that Speaker John Boehner won’t even let the bill get a yes or no vote because he doesn’t want to anger the extremists in his party.”
— President Barack Obama, at a construction company in Maryland.
Source : http://www.politico.com/gallery/2013/10/shutdown-25-great-quotes/001338-019087.html
“This is about the happiest I’ve seen members in a long time because we’ve seen we’re starting to win this dialogue on a national level.”
— Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.), on Fox News’s “Sean Hannity”.
“We’ve obscured a lot. We’ve obscured our victory on the spending level, and we obscured the failures of Obamacare on its first day. … We should show what we got.”
— Rep. Peter King (R-N.Y.),.
“Think about the precedent. What’s next? What if the Democratic extreme said, ‘Well we’re not going to sign a budget unless you do away with assault weapons?’ What if we’re not going to have a budget unless 20 people around here decide that everybody under the age of 40 should wear a tin hat around? This is not the way you govern a great country.”
— Rep. Jim Himes (D-Conn.), on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe”.
“Democratic leaders in Congress finally have their prize, a government shutdown that no one seems to want but them,”
— Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.),.
Last but not least...
“My simple message today is: Call a vote. Call a vote. Put it on the floor. Take a vote, stop this farce and end this shutdown right now. The only thing that’s keeping the government shut down … is that Speaker John Boehner won’t even let the bill get a yes or no vote because he doesn’t want to anger the extremists in his party.”
— President Barack Obama, at a construction company in Maryland.
Source : http://www.politico.com/gallery/2013/10/shutdown-25-great-quotes/001338-019087.html
Part - IV - Best Comments over Shut Down..!
As the government shut down this week, the political echo chamber
certainly did not. Here are some of the best quotes about the shutdown.
“The American people in the greatest land, the greatest country in the world, deserve to have their government open, and they deserve to know where their members stand. Do you stand with your country? Do you stand for your country? Or do you want to take it down this evening? Stand up for your country. Stand up for America. Stand with us this evening and keep this government going. In the name of fairness.”
— Rep. John Larson (D-Conn.), on the House floor.
“If the speaker were to do what I just talked about, the government would be up and running by dinner time.”
— White House press secretary Jay Carney, at a White House briefing.
“Sen. Ted Cruz is going to pick his favorite federal agencies to keep open? Come on.”
— Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.),.
“We’re here to say to the Senate Democrats, come and talk to us. This is how we resolve our differences and can work our way out of this kind of situation.”
— House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.), in a half-empty conference room.
“They will not negotiate. We had a nice conversation, a polite conversation, but at some point we’ve got to allow the process that our founders gave us to work out.”
— House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), at the White House.
“The American people in the greatest land, the greatest country in the world, deserve to have their government open, and they deserve to know where their members stand. Do you stand with your country? Do you stand for your country? Or do you want to take it down this evening? Stand up for your country. Stand up for America. Stand with us this evening and keep this government going. In the name of fairness.”
— Rep. John Larson (D-Conn.), on the House floor.
“If the speaker were to do what I just talked about, the government would be up and running by dinner time.”
— White House press secretary Jay Carney, at a White House briefing.
“Sen. Ted Cruz is going to pick his favorite federal agencies to keep open? Come on.”
— Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.),.
“We’re here to say to the Senate Democrats, come and talk to us. This is how we resolve our differences and can work our way out of this kind of situation.”
— House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.), in a half-empty conference room.
“They will not negotiate. We had a nice conversation, a polite conversation, but at some point we’ve got to allow the process that our founders gave us to work out.”
— House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), at the White House.
More on Next Update..
Source : http://www.politico.com/gallery/2013/10/shutdown-25-great-quotes/001338-019087.html
Part - III - Best Comments over Shut Down..!
As the government shut down this week, the political echo chamber
certainly did not. Here are some of the best quotes about the shutdown.
“When you don’t have a president, every congressman, every senator, every governor, thinks they’re the spokesman for the party. And the one that lights their hair on fire is the one that gets on the evening news.”
— Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, at the University of Utah convocation.
“It seems that there is nothing the media likes to cover more than disagreements among Republicans, and apparently some senators are content to fuel those stories with anonymous quotes. Regardless, my focus — and, I would hope, the focus of the rest of the conference — is on stopping Harry Reid’s shutdown, ensuring that vital government priorities are funded, and preventing the enormous harms that Obamacare is inflicting on millions of Americans.”
— Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas).
“This is a dreamland for foreign intelligence services to recruit.”
— Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, at a Senate committee hearing.
“I think if we keep saying, ‘We wanted to defund it, we fought for that, but now we’re willing to compromise on this.’ … I know we don’t want to be here, but we’re going to win this, I think.”
— Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), caught on a hot mic.
“I think the American people look at what’s happening in D.C. and see that leaders across the board are not doing what they were elected to do.”
— Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, at a Republican Governors Association briefing.
“When you don’t have a president, every congressman, every senator, every governor, thinks they’re the spokesman for the party. And the one that lights their hair on fire is the one that gets on the evening news.”
— Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, at the University of Utah convocation.
“It seems that there is nothing the media likes to cover more than disagreements among Republicans, and apparently some senators are content to fuel those stories with anonymous quotes. Regardless, my focus — and, I would hope, the focus of the rest of the conference — is on stopping Harry Reid’s shutdown, ensuring that vital government priorities are funded, and preventing the enormous harms that Obamacare is inflicting on millions of Americans.”
— Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas).
“This is a dreamland for foreign intelligence services to recruit.”
— Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, at a Senate committee hearing.
“I think if we keep saying, ‘We wanted to defund it, we fought for that, but now we’re willing to compromise on this.’ … I know we don’t want to be here, but we’re going to win this, I think.”
— Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), caught on a hot mic.
“I think the American people look at what’s happening in D.C. and see that leaders across the board are not doing what they were elected to do.”
— Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, at a Republican Governors Association briefing.
More on Next Update..
Source : http://www.politico.com/gallery/2013/10/shutdown-25-great-quotes/001338-019087.html
Part - II - Best Comments over Shut Down..!
As the government shut down this week, the political echo chamber
certainly did not. Here are some of the best quotes about the shutdown.
“I really think Boehner needs to get some courage. Maybe he needs to take an afternoon off and golf and contemplate it and come back.”
— Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.), on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe”.
“As an old army guy and an FBI agent, the last place you want to be fighting a fight is on the enemy’s territory where they know it best. You want to get them in a place where you dominate the playing field, and we’re just not, and that’s what worries me.”
— Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Mich.), on “The Mike Huckabee Show”.
“I am not a criminal. I am not a scoundrel. So they better get a different definition of me.”
— Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), on the Senate floor.
“I think if you’re the White House, you just sit back and watch.”
—Former press secretary Robert Gibbs, on MSNBC’s “Now with Alex Wagner”.
“My approach would be, as the executive, is to call in the leaders of the Congress, the legislature, whatever you’re dealing with and say that we’re not leaving this room until we fix this problem. Because I’m the boss, I’m in charge.”
— New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, at a Jon Bon Jovi Soul Foundation event.
“I really think Boehner needs to get some courage. Maybe he needs to take an afternoon off and golf and contemplate it and come back.”
— Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.), on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe”.
“As an old army guy and an FBI agent, the last place you want to be fighting a fight is on the enemy’s territory where they know it best. You want to get them in a place where you dominate the playing field, and we’re just not, and that’s what worries me.”
— Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Mich.), on “The Mike Huckabee Show”.
“I am not a criminal. I am not a scoundrel. So they better get a different definition of me.”
— Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), on the Senate floor.
“I think if you’re the White House, you just sit back and watch.”
—Former press secretary Robert Gibbs, on MSNBC’s “Now with Alex Wagner”.
“My approach would be, as the executive, is to call in the leaders of the Congress, the legislature, whatever you’re dealing with and say that we’re not leaving this room until we fix this problem. Because I’m the boss, I’m in charge.”
— New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, at a Jon Bon Jovi Soul Foundation event.
More on Next Update..
Source : http://www.politico.com/gallery/2013/10/shutdown-25-great-quotes/001338-019087.html
Best Comments over Shut Down..!
As the government shut down this week, the political echo chamber certainly did not. Here are some of the best quotes about the shutdown.
Senate Chaplain Barry Black |
“Save us from the madness. Deliver us from the hypocrisy of attempting to sound reasonable while being unreasonable. Remove the burdens of those who are the collateral damage of this government shutdown, transforming negatives into positives.”
— Senate Chaplain Barry Black, opening prayer on the Senate floor.
“We’re not going to be disrespected, We have to get something out of this. And I don’t know what that even is.”
— Rep. Marlin Stutzman (R-Ind.), the Washington Examiner, Oct. 2 (Stutzman issued a statement the following day, saying, “Yesterday, I carelessly misrepresented the ongoing budget debate and Speaker Boehner’s work on behalf of the American people. Despite my remarks it’s clear that the American people want both parties to come to the table to reopen the government, tackle this nation’s debt crisis, and stop ObamaCare’s pain.”)
“So when you were on the jihad against Americans’ access to health care, shutting down the parks wasn’t a problem. Shutting down NIH wasn’t a problem.”
— Rep. George Miller (D-Calif.), on the House floor.
“As a citizen, I have to say that this is a pretty ugly sight.’”
— Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, on “CBS This Morning”.
— Rep. George Miller (D-Calif.), on the House floor.
“As a citizen, I have to say that this is a pretty ugly sight.’”
— Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, on “CBS This Morning”.
“This is much more like what I deal with Henry in the morning when he says he wants to say, ‘I want candy for breakfast.’ It’s really a tantrum; it’s a tea party tantrum. ‘You either give me my way, or we’re going to shut down government.’”
— Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe”.
— Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe”.
More on Next Update..
Source : http://www.politico.com/gallery/2013/10/shutdown-25-great-quotes/001338-019087.html
Senate leaders nearing a deal..!
Senate leaders are closing in on a deal to reopen the government and extend the U.S. debt ceiling until next year, marking a major breakthrough in an impasse that has paralyzed Washington for the last two weeks, according to several sources familiar with the talks.
In a furious round of last-ditch negotiations, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell were discussing a proposal to reopen the government until Jan. 15 and raise the national debt limit until Feb. 15. Several people familiar with the matter expected that a deal could be announced Monday, though its prospects in the GOP-led House are far from certain.
After meeting twice Monday, Reid and McConnell both were hopeful a deal would reached.
”I’m very optimistic that we will reach an agreement that’s reasonable in nature this week to reopen the government, pay the nation’s bills and begin long term negotiations to put our country on sound fiscal footing,” Reid said on the floor.
McConnell said he was also optimistic that “we’re going to get a result that will be acceptable to both sides.”
In a sign a deal was taking shape, President Barack Obama delayed a Monday meeting at the White House with the congressional leaders to give Reid and McConnell more time to finalize an accord. A Senate Republican source said Republicans are likely to hold a party caucus to go over the negotiations sometime this afternoon or evening.
The plan under consideration would require larger bicameral budget negotiations to conclude by Dec. 15, sources said. Moreover, Senate Democrats are open to a requirement that those receiving Obamacare subsidies be subject to income verification. But it appears that the fight over delaying Obamacare’s medical device tax is still a point of contention with Democrats objecting to its inclusion in the package, sources said.
If sequestration were to continue in 2014, the proposal would give federal agencies more discretion to implement the across-the-board cuts.
Under the plan, the government would be funded at $986 billion until Jan. 15, the same day that a $21 billion across-the-board sequestration cut is slated to take place. Indeed, by aligning the government funding fight with the date that the next sequester is supposed to hit, it all but ensures a heated fight over whether to continue the unpopular cuts in the new year. Doing so would lower 2014 funding levels to $967 billion, a level far too low for many Democrats.
And by extending the debt ceiling until the beginning of next year, it would put the issue in the center of the heated 2014 midterm elections.
McConnell reviewed the offer Monday as he privately huddled with groups of GOP senators Monday who could be key to providing enough votes in the Senate. On Monday morning, McConnell met with Sens. John McCain of Arizona, Susan Collins of Maine, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Mike Johanns of Nebraska and Mark Kirk of Illinois.
“We’re engaged in good-faith negotiations,” said Don Stewart, McConnell’s spokesman. “Those talks will continue.”
House Republican leadership has been inclose touch with McConnell throughout his negotiations with Reid, but there was growing concern that a six-to-nine month debt ceiling would not be good enough for the House GOP. This proposal would be easier for Boehner - but aides say he still could amend it.
Source : http://www.politico.com/story/2013/10/government-shutdown-debt-ceiling-default-update-98260.html
Friday, October 11, 2013
Google's Going to Start Sticking Your Face and Name in Ads..!
This was bound to happen. Following Facebook's highly controversial attempts to make social endorsements ubiquitous on the site, Google just announced a Terms of Service update that will enable the company to use your name, photo and endorsements in Google's advertising network.
So how does that make you feel? Google obviously wants you to feel okay about the changes. The company assured users in its announcement blog post, "On Google, you're in control of what you share." (Emphasis Google's) And that's technically true. You can opt out of the face-flaunting new feature through this settings page in Google+, but if you don't do anything, Google says it will use your information without explicit consent.
Ugh. Doing anything from leaving a YouTube comment to starring something in Google Play to giving it the +1 treatment will cause your face to show up on ads. (Users under 18, however, will not appear in ads.) Google is also somewhat vague about who will see your face: "So your friends, family and others may see your Profile name and photo, and content like the reviews you share or the ads you +1'd." Facebook, however, is less vague: "If you have selected a specific audience for your content or information, we will respect your choice when we use it."
Although the new changes don't sound awesome, Google's learned from Facebook's mistakes in a way. Facebook similarly uses your likeness in so-called Sponsored Stories, however you can't opt out. When Facebook started doing this, users freaked out and said that Facebook hadn't properly notified them about how the social network was using their endorsements. And when we say "freaked out," we mean "filed a class action lawsuit"-which they won-prompting Facebook to change the site's privacy policy. The FTC has since opened an investigation into the matter.
Obviously, Google wants to avoid the shitstorm that Facebook has endured, so they're trying to be better communicators. That doesn't detract from the fact that the search giant is going to start slinging your face and name all over the internet without your explicit consent. You'll be notified with some banner ads on Google's homepage before the new Terms of Service goes into effect on November 1. But it's up to you-and only you-to opt out if you don't like that.
Source : http://www.gizmodo.in/software/Googles-Going-to-Start-Sticking-Your-Face-and-Name-in-Ads/articleshow/23987477.cms
Following Its Revamp, Yahoo Email Forwarding Bug Leaves Users’ Inboxes Empty..!
Yahoo Mail has been experiencing a major bug, following its revamp earlier this week. According to a number of reports, the service has been automatically forwarding emails to users’ “alternate,” external email addresses – a setting that was switched on without users’ permission. Yahoo has replied to some help requests via its Twitter account @YahooCare, but it hasn’t replied to help requests on its UserVoice forum, nor has its Customer Care site offered a solution to this problem.
We’ve also reached out to the company for information on this and will update if/when we hear back.
Some of the affected users have contacted TechCrunch tips and staff about the problem. It seems the bug has been in the wild for some time. Yahoo’s Mail upgrade took place on Tuesday, Oct. 8, when it introduced 1 TB of storage, “Mail Plus” features, and more. Complaints began showing up shortly after.
In Yahoo Mail, as in many other webmail providers, users had previously been able to configure a secondary address, which could also be used to send their Yahoo Mail elsewhere through an auto-forwarding option, which could be switched off or on. But after the Mail upgrade this week, that auto-forwarding option was set to “on” for some users, even though they had not switched it on themselves.
The result was that users were not getting their emails at all, not realizing that they were being sent to an alternate inbox.
As one tipster lamented to TechCrunch, “Yahoo support wasn’t any help, and after a couple of days I finally figured out that all incoming email was being forwarded to an old Hotmail address that I haven’t used in nearly 15 years. Making the situation even worse, it appears that the Hotmail address was recycled and is now being used by someone else, which is potentially a huge privacy/identity theft issue,” they said. (Security issues around recycled email addresses was another complaint Yahoo recently had to overcome itself).
Another complaint on Yahoo’s UserVoice site reads:
“Auto-forwarding was turned on for my account without my request or action. For over a day, my mail was being forwarded to a DEAD corporate account to a company that I have not worked for over 3.5 years!! This resulted in valuable lost mail.”
Meanwhile, others say they couldn’t get help through Customer Care, and one person even writesthat while trying to submit “Feedback,” that page wasn’t working either, leading to error messages. Similar complaints are found on Twitter, too, with some @YahooCare responses asking users to check to see if they could switch the setting off.
The account then tweeted this morning in response to one user that, after checking with the Mail team, their issue — which appears to be related to auto-forwarding — was fixed. But the account isstill responding to these kinds of requests, so it’s unclear if that’s the case for all.
This could be a problem for Yahoo’s attempts at revamping its image. The massive amount of storage Yahoo Mail now offers is tempting for new or relocating email users who may be considering between top webmail services like Gmail, Microsoft’s Outlook.com, and Yahoo, for example. But while no service is immune from issues (Gmail experienced lengthy email delays last month), anything less than a smooth transition from “old” Yahoo Mail to “new” Yahoo Mail could keep users from placing their trust in the company’s infrastructure for something as mission-critical as email.
Really, though, the larger problem here is not that the auto-forwarding was happening (though that’s bad, bugs do happen), but that Yahoo hasn’t publicly addressed the issue (unless you count Twitter support), nor did it reply to those complaining of problems on the forums and through other channels, from what we’re hearing. There’s no reason a rep couldn’t quickly reply on UserVoice at the very least, saying “we’re looking into this now,” or the Mail blog couldn’t post a short message, even if Yahoo doesn’t have a fancy “app status” dashboard like Google.
Without an official comment from Yahoo, we can’t confirm how widespread the issue is or where we are in terms of a fix. This could be a minor issue affecting a small percentage of users, or it could be larger.
Source : http://techcrunch.com/2013/10/11/following-its-revamp-yahoo-email-forwarding-bug-leaves-users-inboxes-empty/
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