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Former Hillary Slagger, David Brock, Determined To Destroy Memes He Created

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A week after Hillary Clinton released her new memoir, Hard Choices, I met Burns Strider for lunch at the Hotel Monaco in Washington, DC. Just as the book hit the shelves, Strider's organization, Correct the Record, had released 11 pages of bullet points swatting down anticipated criticisms from Clinton's detractors ("Hard Choices is just another way for Hillary to make money hand over fist"; "Hard Choices is a glossed-over snooze-fest"). It was the kind of preemptive spin that Correct the Record was created to churn out. As Clinton prepares for a possible presidential run, Correct the Record keeps constant watch for any conceivable attacks against her, and then aggressively beats them back before they take hold.
As he picked at his beet and greens salad, Strider told me how he'd ditched eating animal products in 2010 at the behest of the then-secretary of state. "You've got to think about your two boys," she told Strider, who had worked as her senior adviser on faith outreach during the 2008 campaign. That night he got a call from Bill Clinton, who extolled the virtues of his new animal-free diet: "If I can do it, you can." A few days later Strider received a box of herbivore-themed books and handwritten recipes jotted down by the former president.
The contemplative 48-year-old vegan, who manages Correct the Record's day-to-day operations, says he has no qualms about his new role in the blood sport of presidential politics. Yet his boss is an even more unlikely figure: David Brock, the former Clinton nemesis and ringleader of the "vast right-wing conspiracy" that Hillary Clinton decried in 1998.
In the mid-1990s, as a reporter at the American Spectator, Brock investigated the first couple's involvement in the Whitewater real estate scheme and dove into the allegations that Bill had used Arkansas state troopers to facilitate his liaisons, including one with Paula Jones. (He also infamously described Anita Hill as "a little bit nutty and a little bit slutty.") Brock later underwent a political conversion and founded Media Matters, a research shop dedicated to countering Fox News and right-wing talking points. Now he's come full circle, launching Correct the Record to combat the resurgence of the very same narrative—the Clintons are venal, opportunistic pols who will do anything to attain power—that he once worked so hard to popularize.
Brock's ideological shift came in the late '90s as he penned The Seduction of Hillary Rodham, a book that everyone expected to be a withering takedown—but ended up being a tepid biography. By 1997 Brock began to recant, publishing a mea culpa in Esquire titled "Confessions of a Right-Wing Hit Man." In 2002, he released Blinded by the Right: The Conscience of an Ex-Conservative, a tell-all about the faults of the conservative movement and his disillusionment with it.
Brock "finds all of these nerd virgins and locks them away in a vault where they never see sunlight. But God bless them!"
Strider recalls picking up a copy in an airport bookstore and devouring it. He passed it along to his then-boss, Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), and arranged for Brock to address House Democrats. Meanwhile, Bill Clinton had started passing copies along to friends, opening new doors for Brock among liberal insiders. Having turned his back on his old right-wing patrons, Brock proved skilled at convincing rich liberals to open their wallets by revealing inside details of the conservative propaganda machine.
Brock says he first conceived of Correct the Record last summer. "Having left the State Department," Brock told me, "Clinton didn't have the kind of robust operation that one would have if one was holding public office. That's where I saw the need." He wrote a memo predicting "an uptick in political attacks" against Clinton and proposed a rapid-response group to defend her. As it happened, the very next dayAmerica Rising, an opposition research outfit founded by former Mitt Romney and Republican National Committee staff, announced a "Stop Hillary 2016" initiative.
Correct the Record's staff (18 and counting) is crammed into a newsroom-style bullpen in the back corner of the offices of American Bridge 21st Century, Brock's super-PAC. "They're always there; they're working around the clock," former Clinton White House adviser Paul Begala says of the crew. "I always tease David that he finds all of these nerd virgins and locks them away in a vault where they never see sunlight or have a drink or get laid. But God bless them!"
The team has been building an exhaustive database of factoids documenting Clinton's career, as well as compiling opposition research on her putative opponents. With Clinton's own press team largely silent, Correct the Record has become the go-to source for reporters seeking pro-Clinton quotes in response to Republican attacks.
Correct the Record is part of a larger shadow campaign that's gearing up for 2016. It includes Ready for Hillary, which is collecting voter data, and Priorities USA, which is raising big money. "For the first time in my adult life, the left has their shit together," says Begala, who relies on Correct the Record for talking points when he prepares for cable spots as a Hillary surrogate.
Hillary Clinton has always had a rocky relationship with the press, thanks in part to dealing with conservative smear artists like the young Brock. Correct the Record reflects her prickly approach to media relations. The group spent much of the early summer sending out press releases touting the sales of Clinton's book and tweeting about stories that questioned the numbers. When New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd wrote a column about the lavish speaking fees commanded by Hillary and daughter Chelsea, Correct fired back with a dossier on Dowd, highlighting her own speaking fees.
But this strategy could backfire. Hillary has always struggled with the perception that she is inauthentic and quick to become defensive; being shielded by a group that pounces on every slight could reinforce that image.
But Strider isn't too concerned. The Democrats failed in 2004, he explained, by not building a media operation that could respond to the Swift Boating of John Kerry. He doesn't want Clinton to suffer from the same mistake in 2016. "One thing Nancy Pelosi has said to me is, 'Burns, in politics, if you take a swing at somebody you can rest assured of one thing: They're going to swing back. So why not prepare in advance?'"

Diane Rehm's Insightful Interview With Google Chairman Eric Schmidt

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Google Chairman Eric Schmidt speaks at the Chinese University in Hong Kong on November 4, 2013.  - PHILIPPE LOPEZ/AFP/Getty Images
Google Chairman Eric Schmidt speaks at the Chinese University in Hong Kong on November 4, 2013.

Alan: I hold Google in high regard. 

That said, "nothing is perfect" nor "should" be. 

Indeed, insistence that human behavior "should" be "perfect" is the likely Root of Evil - at least the root of political and religious evil. http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2012/04/merton-best-imposed-as-norm-becomes.html

An anecdote...

Following graduation from Notre Dame, a dear relative received a job offer from Google. 

In addition to the glowing job description, B's assignment required him to live in Chicago, a city much to his liking.

Within a month however, B tendered his resignation, having quickly discovered that Google misrepresented his duties, requiring him - unexpectedly - to labor as a corporate hit man. His sole assignment was cost-benefit analysis of fellow employees, thus enabling Google to discharge anyone deemed inadequately profitable.

B does not dispute the central role played by "cost-benefit analysis" in successful capitalist enterprise but was disheartened that Google's deception resulted in employment that was not only distasteful but repulsive.

That said, the following interview offers keen insight into smart, inspired corporate leadership committed to learning lessons and sharing findings with institutional counterparts.


A Conversation With Google Chairman Eric Schmidt
When Google founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page were looking for someone to run their fledgling Internet start-up, they chose Eric Schmidt. The Bell Labs alum took the reins at Google just as the company faced a major battle with Microsoft. Under Schmidt’s leadership, Google established itself as the dominant Internet search engine and a global technology giant with more than $55 billion in annual revenues. Known for its "Don’t be Evil" corporate motto, the Mountain View, Calif., company is consistently ranked as the best place to work in the United States. A conversation with Google’s executive chairman, Eric Schmidt, on fostering innovation, managing millenials and how the company is responding to privacy concerns by consumers.

Guests


Eric Schmidt 
executive chairman, Google; former Chief Executive Officer (2001 - 2011); co-author with Jonathan Rosenberg of, "How Google Works" (Sept. 2014).

Related Items

Read An Excerpt

Excerpted from the book HOW GOOGLE WORKS by Eric Schmidt and Jonathan Rosenberg, with Alan Eagle. © 2014 by Google, Inc. Reprinted by permission of Grand Central Publishing. All rights reserved.

Whites Are The Most Dangerous People On The Face Of Earth

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Finally, Wall Street gets put on trial: We can still hold the 0.1 percent responsible for tanking the economy

"The Smirk-Smiley Face Of America's Most Despicable Felon"

Dear John,


White guys...

White guys are responsible for 45,000 Americans who died annually for lack of health insurance. (Recall the theological distinction between "sins of commission" and "sins of omission?" It certainly wasn't black people who failed to support universal healthcare.) http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2013/09/harvard-study-45000-americans-die.html

White guys are responsible for The Great Recession and all the havoc it wreaked - and continues wreak - worldwide.

Have you seen "Inside Job?" It's the story of Wall Street white guys crashing the global economy, wiping out 40% of every American's net worth. 

"Inside Job"
(Freely streamable)

***

"Between 2007 And 2010, American Families Lost 40% Of Their Net Worth"

A 40% decline in net worth is a lot of health insurance that didn't get bought.  

And a lot of life-saving operations that were not performed. 

And a lot of unfilled prescriptions that would have saved lives and prevented permanent disability.

White guys are responsible for the egregious wrong-doing of The Iraq War and the upheaving destabilization that has happened since.

If The Iraq War did not un-do The Middle East -- creating dysfunctional states in Syria and Iraq -- there would have been no ISIS, at least nothing like we've got.

The mass murderers at the forefront of the Iraq debacle were Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld -- some of the most nefarious white guys who ever walked Earth. (I realize these villians are not in the same league with fellow Caucasians Hitler and Stalin. At least not yet...)

Make no mistake. 

Bush and Cheney launched The Whimsy War on sheer trumpery and brazen fabrication. 

But despite their war crimes,their authorization of torture and their multiple crimes against humanity, the bastards will "walk" (as surely as Bo Brownstein. http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2014/03/american-plutocracy-whos-punished-and.html)

There are millions of maimed Iraqis hidden from view by our neo-necrophiliac focus on "body counts."

***

Also hidden from view are tens of thousands of maimed GIs.


All for nothing.

Less than nothing.

Burnt offerings on the altar of Born Again Bush's ego.

(The persistent hubris of the Abrahamic religions.)

"For misleading the American people, and launching the most foolish war since Emperor Augustus in 9 B.C sent his legions into Germany and lost them, Bush deserves to be impeached and, once he has been removed from office, put on trial along with the rest of the president’s men. If convicted, they’ll have plenty of time to mull over their sins."
Israeli War Historian, Martin van Creveld, the only non-American on the U.S. Military Officer Corps' required reading list.

***

Inline image 1
"Terrorism And The Other Religions" 
University Of Michigan Historian Juan Cole
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2014/04/terrorism-and-other-religions-juan-cole.html

***

White gringos are the most dangerous people on Earth.

By a country mile!

Tell a friend.  

Pax tecum

Alan

Lest we forget...

An overwhelming percentage of mass murderers are white males.

No review of Caucasian malfeasance is complete without reference to cradle Catholic Timothy McVeigh and cradle Catholic Adolf Hitler:


Timothy McVeigh
America's prototypal terrorist


"Bad Black People." Why Bill O'Reilly Is Wrong Even When He's Right


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Suspect in Pennsylvania Cop Shooting Is a Sharpshooting Survivalist

Sep 16, 2014
PHOTO: Eric Matthew Frein, is seen here in a police mug shot from the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation.





The suspect in the shooting of two Pennsylvania state troopers is a sharpshooting survivalist who specifically targeted cops and was out for mass murder, authorities said.
He's a skilled shooter who "doesn't miss," his father, a retired U.S. Army Major, told police. The father also told police that he was missing two weapons, a .308 rifle with a scope and an AK-47, according to court documents released today.
Suspect Eric Matthew Frein, 31, from Canadensis, Pa., practices survivalism -- the ability to survive without the help of government or society, and often storing food and guns, Pennsylvania police said today. Police who searched his home found a copy of a book entitled Sniper Training and Employment, according to the court documents.
"He has made statements about wanting to kill law enforcement officers and also to commit mass acts of murder," State Police Commissioner Frank Noonan said at a news conference when he revealed Frein's name. "What his reasons are, we don't know. But he has very strong feelings about law enforcement and seems to be very angry with a lot of things that go on in our society."
He had camouflage face paint, a black hooded sweatshirt, empty rifle cases and military gear in a vehicle, police said.
Frein's father, E. Michael Frein, told police he served in the military for 28 years and had trained his son how to shoot. The father told police that his son was a member of the rifle team in high school and that the son became a better shot than the father.
PHOTO: One trooper was killed and another was injured in a shooting at the State Police Barracks in Blooming Grove Township, Pa., Sept. 12, 2014.
Courtesy Pennsylvania State Police
PHOTO: One trooper was killed and another was injured in a shooting at the State Police Barracks in Blooming Grove Township, Pa., Sept. 12, 2014.
Now a massive manhunt is on in the rural forest area of eastern Pennsylvania to find Frein, who was charged today with first-degree murder, homicide of a law enforcement officer and other offenses. Police describe him as approximately 165 pounds, about 6-feet-1, and with blue eyes.
Noonan said he is still armed with the .308-caliber rifle he allegedly shot the troopers with on the barracks late Friday and is "extremely dangerous."
"We have no idea where he is," Noonan said.
Cpl. Bryon Dickinson, 38, was killed and Trooper Alex Douglass, 31, was wounded when a gunman opened fire during a shift change before slipping away, police said.
Lt. Col. George Biven addressed the shooter directly at a separate news conference on Monday.
"You're a coward," Bivens said. "You committed this spineless act and you did it from a place of hiding and then ran."
A resident who was walking his dog two miles from the barracks spotted a vehicle submerged in a pond and alerted authorities, who matched shell casings found in the car to ones also found at the shooting scene, Noonan said.
The vehicle is a Jeep registered to Frein's father but owned by his parents, they told police.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.


Organic-Approved Weed Control Ready For Big Time

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Jim Eklund and Frank Forcella conduct an early test of the concept with a single-nozzle blaster. Jim is driving the ATV and Frank is applying the grit.

A new organic-approved weed control technique is poised for the big time

Great ideas often have very modest beginnings. But who would have guessed that a promising new weed management technology for organic farms would begin with a bucket of apricot pits?
This story is based on a radio interview. Listen to the full interview.
http://www.pri.org/stories/2014-09-19/new-organically-approved-weed-control-technique-poised-big-time
Frank Forcella, an agronomist with the USDA’s North Central Soil Conservation Research Laboratory, grows apricots as a hobby on his farm in Minnesota. 2007 was a wonderful year for apricot production in Minnesota, Forcella says, and he ended up with about a five gallon bucket full of apricot pits. He started wondering if there was something he could do with them.
“One of the things you can do with them is to grind them up and use them as a grit in sandblasters,” Forcella says. He mentioned this to a colleague, Dean Peterson, on their way out to their fields one day. Then, they “more or less simultaneously had the same idea: ‘I wonder if you could use sandblasters to kill weeds.’”
Initially, they thought "this had to be the dumbest idea in the world"— but they just couldn't get it out of their heads. It was their light bulb moment, Forcella says.
But then they “dimmed the light bulb for a while,” believing that a sandblaster would be prohibitively expensive. Wrong.
“As it turns out, you can buy a very cheap sandblaster for about $50, so we invested in one of those,” Forcella says. The light bulb was back on.
They began experimenting in their local greenhouse, putting some weeds and a corn plant in pots. When the corn plant was about six inches tall and the weeds were one to three inches tall, they hit the weeds with “split-second applications of walnut shell grit.” It worked. “The weeds would simply disappear and the corn plant remained intact,” Forcella says.
They decided to try it out in the field. Using a bigger sandblaster mounted on an ATV, they began blasting small weed seedlings that were growing alongside corn plants. Because the spray pattern of the sandblaster was so narrow, they were again able to destroy the weeds without damaging the plant.
“We get a pattern about three to four inches wide on either side of the crop row, as well as in the crop row itself — but we're not actually applying the grit to the crop plant,” Forcella explains. “Very little damage is done to the crop plant, but the small weeds growing alongside it are more or less obliterated.”
This new system of weed control could be a huge help to organic farmers. “Weeds are one of the most contentious issues for organic farmers,” Forcella says. “They have very few other tools in their toolboxes that they can use for weed control, so they are desperate for alternative forms of weed management.”
Tools organic farmers currently use, like plowing, tilling and disking, are all considered organic. But they also create soil disturbance, which has environmental consequences like soil erosion and CO2 loss.
Forcella has refined his technique by consulting with organic farmers. Some suggested adding a gritty material to organically-approved fertilizers, allowing them to control weeds and fertilize crops at the same time. “Corn gluten meal, for example, which is very rich in nitrogen, has a gritty texture and it works just fine as a grit for weed control,” Forcella says.
Crushed limestone is another good possibility. “Almost every farmer who has acidic soils has to add limestone to their soil,” Forcella says. “If they're going to do that, they might as well use it in a gritty form and apply it to control weeds.”
So far, Forcella and his partner have used this new technique on corn and soybeans with good results. Another colleague, Sam Wortman, has used it successfully on tomato plants.
Now, the big barrier to developing that success into wider use is money. “It may cost $100 or more per acre for weed control,” Forcella says. “That seems expensive, but if you consider that we can use organically approved fertilizers as a grit for weed control, that reduces the cost immensely.”
Forcella now has collaborators in Spain and at the University of California-Davis who are trying to develop a more efficient method of applying the material — not just in vegetable crops, but in vineyards and olive orchards as well. One idea for improvements is using GPS units to get a more precise application of the grit.
Forcella is pleased with how far his modest idea has come. Riding an ATV out in the fields of Minnesota was fun, but now his plan is getting even better.
“The National Institute of Food and Agriculture has just funded another grant; the Spanish government has funded yet another project — all along these lines," he says. "We think it's starting to snowball, and we are very encouraged."
This story is based on an interview that aired on PRI's Living on Earth with Steve Curwood.
Related stories

"Bacterial Nanowires" Point To Breakthroughs In Semiconductors, Fuel Cells And More

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Images of bacterial nanowires

'Bacterial nanowires' may lead to breakthroughs in semiconductors, fuel cells and more

For about a decade, scientists have known about bacteria that "breathe" using rocks and minerals in place of oxygen. Now a new study reveals the surprising way they do it.
The bacteria survive by "breathing" through a system of "bacterial nanowires" that connect to iron-based material nearby. "Nanowires are actually the membrane of the cell morphing itself into the form of a long wire or tube [that extends] away from the cell,” says Moh El-Naggar, an assistant professor ofphysics and biological sciences at the University of Southern California. “The membrane is [covered] with very specific proteins that can carry electrons — proteins called cytochromes,” El-Naggar explains.
At the cellular level, "breathing," or respiration, is different from how we normally imagine it. Cells draw electrons from food and transfer them to the material they're breathing, whether it's oxygen or rock. After receiving the electrons, oxygen passes easily back through the cell membrane, completing the cycle.
But in the absence of oxygen, a cell needs to find a way to transfer the electrons to something outside the cell membrane. This is what the nanowires do. El-Naggar and his colleagues discovered that, if deprived of oxygen, certain bacteria will grow nanowires that shoot out from the cell in an attempt to find something else that can keep them alive.
“[C]ells make this beautiful molecule called ATP, which is basically the energy currency of life,” El-Naggar says. “It’s what you need to get life going. [And] a lot of bacteria can make this without oxygen — including even with things that are solid, outside the cell body.”
This may sound weird, El-Naggar says, but there was “plenty of microscopic life here on Earth, probably for about one-and-a-half billion years or so before there was oxygen in the atmosphere ... There were, however, a lot of rocks."
Since their discovery, bacterial nanowires have been the subject of much scientific debate, El-Naggar says: What exactly are these wires made of? How can electrons travel long distances in a biological system? To help answer these questions, El-Naggar and his colleagues developed a way to watch the process “live.”
“We have these beautiful movies of the bacteria shooting out these bacterial nanowires into their environment," he says. "What's even more exciting, perhaps, from a scientific standpoint, is by monitoring it live, you can label for different components, figure out what they're made of, and study them in great detail.”
From these movies emerged the surprising finding that the nanowires are not something the cell grows: they are instead the cell itself extending outward to transfer its electrons to an energy source in order to live.
El-Naggar believes nanowires will one day have practical applications. In 2009, he and his colleagues proved that, because nanowires transfer electrons so reliably, they are highly efficient electrical conductors. 
On the nanoscale, this might mean they could be engineered to power things in remote, harsh environments. On a much larger scale, wastewater treatment has emerged as a significant application, he says.
“You can tap into these electrons, harvest them at the electrode, and then basically what you've built is a biological battery, a microbial battery — or a microbial fuel cell,” he explains. “In principle, it's not that different from [commercial] fuel cells. But the catalyst driving the burning of the fuel and the generation of the electricity just happens to be a living organism inside the fuel cell.”
This story is based on an interview from PRI's Science Friday with Ira Flatow.

The Role Of Convent Kitchens In The Development Of Mexican Cuisine

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Chef Barbara Sibley of La Palapa Cocina Mexicana in New York

If you like enchiladas con mole, give thanks to Mexico’s convent kitchens


Barbara Sibley grew up in Mexico City, the child of expatriate Americans who fell in love with Mexico and decided to stay.

Audio File: http://www.pri.org/stories/2014-02-26/if-you-enchiladas-con-mole-give-thanks-mexico-s-convent-kitchens
Sibley's home was in Mexico City's San Ángel neighborhood, in the southwest of the city.
One of the local landmarks was a convent.
As a child, Sibley would go to the door of the convent and buy small bags of leftover host, the doughy, sweet white wafers used in the Catholic communion rite. "They would make the host in large sheets, like the size of a letter, and they would punch out the circles. At the convent you could buy large bags of the leftover edges."
And it was a very mysterious exchange: "You'd walk to the door of the convent, a gate would open, and a hand would come out with a plastic bag full of these bits."
Barbara Sibley still travels to Mexico City regularly — she thinks of it as home — but these days she runs a restaurant in New York City: La Palapa Cocina Mexicana. She's also co-author of the book "Antojitos: Festive and Flavorful Mexican Appetizers."
And she's developed a deep understanding of the roots of Mexican cuisine, including American favorites such as enchiladas and mole poblano.
It turns out that the kitchens of Mexico's convents were central to the development of those dishes, and many more.
"You start with the pre-Columbians, before the Spaniards came," Sibley explains. "When they came and colonized Mexico they needed a place for women, and the convents and monasteries were often placed along the roads; they were safe havens, as well as places where they were evangelizing and teaching the native Mexicans about Catholicism."
The convents grew into schools and cultural centers, and the kitchens became "more and more elaborate," culminating at the end of the Viceregal period — the late 1820s — with a recipe for chiles en nogada, one of the most important dishes in Mexican culinary history.
That recipe, developed at a covent, features poblano chili peppers stuffed with pork, beef, and many sweets, both fruits and nuts. It's covered with a cheese and walnut cream (the nogada), and garnished with pomegranate seeds and fresh parsley.
Chiles en nogada was created at the beginning of Mexico's independence from Spain, and the dish proudly reflects the colors of the Mexican flag.
That kind of unification, in essence, represents the prime contribution of Mexico's convent kitchens, says Barbara Sibley. The kitchens were where the country's mestizaje or mixing, took place—ingredients and cultural traditions, both indigenous and imported, came together in the creation of extraordinary new flavors and dishes.
"The food that we think of as the food of Mexico," says Sibley, "really originated in the convents."

Chiles en Nogada (recipe by Barbara Sibley of La Palapa Cocina Mexicana, NYC)
Poblano Chiles Stuffed with Sweet and Savory Beef, Pine Nuts, Pineapple, Almonds, and Raisins with a Fresh Walnut Crema
  • Chiles en Nogada were invented in the convent of Santa Monica in Puebla around 1820 to celebrate the battle of Puebla which is Cinco de Mayo! At La Palapa I use a traditional recipe that dates from that time. Nogada is the Spanish word for walnuts.
  • The dish creates the colors of the Mexican flag: green, white, and red
Serves 6, makes 12 chiles
Roasting Chiles Poblanos
12 chiles poblanos
  1. Wash and dry chiles
  2. Roast chiles for about 10 to 15 minutes until the skin is blistered and charred all over. They can be roasted over a gas burner holding the chiles with tongs and turning them toward the flame to blister the skin. This can also be done on the grill. To char the chiles under the broiler place the chiles on a foil lined cookie sheet and roast about 4 inches from broiler. Turn the chiles so that they char evenly all around.
  3. Place the hot chiles in a bowl with plastic wrap or a moistened towel over it. Allow the chiles to steam in the bowl for about 15 minutes. Use your fingers or a small knife to peel off the skin. It should come off very easily.
  4. Be careful when cutting into hot chiles as the steam inside will be full of the capsaicin oil and can burn.
Cook's Note: Fresh Raw Chiles
When buying fresh chiles, choose ones that have firm flesh and no breaks or wrinkles on the skin. Most chiles are harvested with the stems on and this keeps the chiles fresh longer. They should be rinsed before use or washed with a food safe soap as some chiles are processed with wax, similar to apples, to extend their shelf life. Raw chiles should be stored in the refrigerator in a loosely closed plastic bag. Raw chiles have a tough skin and often they are roasted to remove the skin before using them for rajas, chile strips, or for stuffing. This is can be done best with Jalapeños or Poblanos.
Picadillo
1 lb beef ground
1 lb pork ground
4 cloves of garlic chopped
2 poblano chiles, deveined and chopped, about ½ a cup
1 medium onion chopped
4 plum tomatoes, chopped
2 bay leaf
1 teaspoon thyme
1/2 cup chopped cilantro
1 stick of Mexican cinnamon
1/8 teaspoon ground cloves
½ teaspoon ground black pepper
2 teaspoons salt
¼  cup corn oil
¼  cup candied pineapple
¼  cup raisins, plumped in sherry or warm water
¼  cup pine nuts
¼  cup almonds slivered
1/2 cup diced peeled apples
salt to taste
Sprigs Italian Parsley
½ cup pomegranate
  1. In a saute pan with the 3 tablespoons of oil saute the onion and garlic until soft over medium heat for about 3 minutes.
  2. Add the poblanos, tomatoes, bay leaf, thyme, cilantro, cinamon, and cloves and continue to cook until they release their juices. Add the pork and beef  and saute until the meat is cooked through.
  3. Add the pineapple, raisins, pine nuts, almonds and apples and continue to saute until the apples soften.
  4. Taste and add salt if needed.
Salsa Nogada
1 cup walnuts soaked/peeled
1/2 cup Queso Fresco
3 Tablespoons sherry
½ teaspoon sugar
1 cup heavy cream
  1. Soak the walnuts in 2 cups of warm water for 20 mintues. Remove from the water and remove as much is the brown skin that covers the walnuts as possible.
  2. In a food processor or blender place the walnuts, queso fresco, sherry and sugar. Blend until creamy.
  3. Whip the heavy cream as if to make whipped cream.
  4. Fold the walnut mixture and whipped cream together.
To serve the chiles place them on a platter with a dollop of the nogadaa parsley sprig and a sprinkle of pomegranate seeds.


"The Language Of Food: A Linguist Reads The Menu"

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On Sale September 2014!!

The Language of Food
Blogspot

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Fascinating author interview at the 40 minute mark of PRI's The Week, September 29, 2014

***

Entrée

entrée, entremet: A couple of French terms which no doubt retain interest for persons attending hotel and restaurant courses conducted under the shadow of French classical traditions, but have ceased to have any real use, partly because most people cannot remember what they mean and partly because their meanings have changed over time and vary from one part of the world to another. Forget them.
        Alan Davidson, Oxford Companion to Food, 1999

We might ... follow fashion in food through the revealing history of certain words which are still in use but which have changed in meaning several times: entrées, entremet, ragoûts, etc.
         Fernand Braudel, The Structures of Everyday Life, Volume 1, 1989 page 189

Living in San Francisco means visitors, and visitors mean an excuse to wander down Bernal Hill and explore various delicious dinner options along Mission Street. Of course my friends are invariably excellent house-guests and, crucially, open-minded eaters, but they do sometimes find odd things to complain about. My British friend Paul, for example, is annoyed by the interminable questions at cafes in the US ("Single or double? Small, medium, large? For here or to go? Milk or soy? Whole milk or nonfat?"). "Just give me a bloody coffee," says Paul, who claims these coffee dialogs reflect our national obsession with personal control and choice.

Other visitors are confused by our parochial word usage. For example, the word entrée in the United States means a main course. Contrarily, as (numerous) guests have informed me, in France as well as in other English-speaking countries, the entrée means what we would call the appetizer course. Thus a French meal might consist of an entrée, the main course (the plat), and dessert, while a corresponding American meal would have appetizer, entrée, and dessert. Since the word entrée comes originally from French (and literally means 'entrance'), my guests are (ever so politely) implying that we Americans must have botched up the meaning of this word at some point.

Well, let's go find out! Anyhow, it seems appropriate to begin these notes on language and food by snooping into the history ofentrées.

Just to be completely formal, here's the modern French definition in the Le Grand Robert de la Langue Francaise:

Mets qui se sert au début du repas, après le potage ou après les hors-d'œuvre.
[A dish served at the beginning of the meal, after the soup or after the hors d'oeuvres]

The two menus below, from Alain Ducasse's bistro Aux Lyonnaisin Paris, and Range in San Francisco, show the French and American usages.




How did this difference in meaning develop? The word entrée first appears in France in 1555. In the 16th century, a banquet began with a course called entrée de table ("entering to/of the table") and ends with one called issue de table ("exiting the table"). Here are two menus in Middle French (explaining the archaic forms and variable spelling) from the 1555 book Livre fort excellent de cuysine tres-utile et profitable  exerpted from culinary historian Jean-Louis Flandrin's excellent book Arranging the Meal: A history of Table Service in France:

Cest que fault pour faire ung banquet ou nopces après pasques
[What you need for a banquet or wedding after Easter:]

Bon pain. Bon vin. Entrée de table. Potages. Rost. Second rost. Tiers service de rost. Issue de table.
[Bread. Wine. Table Entree. Soups. Roast. Second Roast. Third roast service. Table Exit.]

Bon pain. Bon vin. Entrée de table. Aultre entrée de table pour yver. Potaiges. Rost. Issue de tables.
[Bread. Wine. Table Entree. Another table entree for winter. Soups. Roast. Table Exit.]

As these menus show, the entrée is the first course of the meal, there can be multiple entrées, and after the entrée comes the soup, one or more roasts, and then a final course.

Over the next hundred years, this sequence began to shift slightly, with the most significant change being that by 1650 the soup was the first course, followed by the entrée.

Let's look at Le cuisinier françois, the famous 1651 cookbook that helped introduce modern French cuisine, to see what the word entrée meant at this time. An entrée was a hot meat dish, distinguished from the roast course. The roast course was a spit roast, usually of fowl or rabbit, while the entree was a more complicated 'made dish' of meat, often with a sauce, and something requiring some effort in the kitchen. The cookbook, recently translated as The French Cook, gives such lovely entrees as Ducks in Ragout, Sausages of Partridge White-Meat, a Daube of a Leg of Mutton, and Fricaseed Chicken. An entrée was not cold, nor was it composed of vegetables or eggs. (Dishes that were cold, or composed of vegetable, or eggs were called entremets, but that's a story for another day). So the entrée in 1651 is a hot meat course eaten after the soup and before the roast.

By a hundred years later, in the 18th century, the French, English (and colonial American) banquet meal had standardized in a tradition called à la Française or sometimes à l'Anglaise. Meals were often in two courses, each course consisting of an entire table-full of food. All the dishes were laid out on the table, with the most important dishes in the middle and the soup or fish perhaps at the head of the table, entrees scattered about, and the smallest courses (the hors d'oeuvres) placed around the edges (i.e., "outside" of the main stuff).

After the soup was eaten, it was taken away, and it was replaced on the table by another dish, called the relevé in French or theremove in English. A remove might be a fish, a joint, or a dish of veal. The other dishes (the entrees and entremets) stayed on the table. Sometimes a fish course was itself removed, just like the soup. Then the joint might be carved while the entrees and hors d'oeuvres were passed around. After this first course was completed, the dishes would all be cleared away and a second course of dishes would be brought in, based around the roast, usually hare or various fowl such as turkey, partridge, or chicken, together with other dishes.

Here's a map of how the dishes were laid on the table in the two courses à la Française from the first cookbook published in the American colonies, Eliza Smith's very popular English cookbook,The Compleat Housewife: or, Accomplished Gentlewoman's Companion, first published in 1727 in England, and published in the American colonies in the 1742 edition.


Note the "soop", with the Breast of Veal Ragout remove, and the entrées like Leg of Lamb2 Carp Stew'd, and A Pig Roasted. Recall that the classic French roast course consisted of roast fowl; that would be the 4 Partridges and 2 Quails in the second course; roast beef and pork were served in the first course as entrées or removes. Also note that at this point, the word entrée was not yet used in English; at least it's not mentioned in Eliza Smith, and the first usage listed in the Oxford English Dictionary seems to be 10 or 20 years later, in William Verral's 1759 A complete system of cookery, where it is marked in italics as a newly-borrowed foreign word.

The next change in the ordering of meals was another hundred years later, in the 19th century, to a method known as service à la Russe, significantly closer to modern coursed dinners. Instead of the food being all piled on the table to get cold, dishes are brought in one course at a time on plates served directly to the guests. Thus, for example, meat is carved at the sideboard or the kitchen by servants rather than by the host at the table. Since the table was no longer covered in food, it was decorated with flowers and so on. And since the guests couldn't know what food they were going to eat just by looking at the table, a small list of dishes (the "menu") was placed by each setting. This service à la Russe took over in France in the 19th century; in England and the US the custom shifted roughly between 1850 and 1890. (Note that although modern meals are served in serial courses à la Russe, the old-fashioned method of putting all the food on the table at once and having the host carve at the table is still commonly practiced even in the US for very traditional meals like Thanksgving dinner.)

At this point (meaning the second half of the 19th century and the first half of the 20th), the order of a traditional meal was something like the following:
  1. soup
  2. fish (possibly followed by a remove)
  3. entree
  4. break (sherbet or rum or absinthe)
  5. roast
  6. possible other courses (salads, etc)
  7. dessert
The word entrée maintained this meaning of a substantial meat course served after the soup/fish and before the roast in Britain, France, and America until well after the first World War. Here are some menus from 1883 (Delmonicos in New York) and 1909 (the Hotel Washington in Seattle) showing this formal meaning; note that these still show a separate relevé (remove) course.

 
By the 1930s, the word seems to be in transition. In a number of US menus from this period, the word is still used in its classic sense as a substantial 'made' meat dish distinguished from roasts, but by now sometimes the term includes fish, and has lost the sense of a course in a particular order. Here is a typical such menu from the Home of the Green Apple Pie restaurant in Seattle in 1937. Note that there are still distinct sections for Entrees and Roasts but some of the entrees are seafood.


By the 1950s, as separate roast and fish courses dropped out of common usage, the word entrée seems to no longer be distinguished from roasts or fish, leaving it to mean the main course, as in this menu from the Chrystal Tea Room in the Seattle Bon Marche:


The result is thus a three-course meal consisting of appetizer, entrée, and dessert. What about the French usage? The French use of the word entrée in Escoffier's 1921 Le Guide Culinaire was still the traditional one ('made' hot meat dishes served in the classic sequence before a roast). Escoffier classifies as entrées almost any dish that we would now consider a main course: steaks (entrecotes or filet de boeuf, tournedos), cassoulet, lamb or veal cutlets, ham, sausage, braised leg of lamb (gigot), stews or sautes of chicken, pigeon or turkey, braised goose, foie gras. Escoffier has over 500 pages of entrée recipes. Only roast fowl, and small game animals are classified as roasts, in a small 14 page roast section.

Thus for French, the change from the classic usage of a central heavy meat dish to the modern French usage of a light first course must have come after 1921. But the meaning of entrée must have changed by 1962, by which point the recipes Julia Child gives for entrées are light dishes, mainly quiches, soufflees, and quennelles, and we see similar light dishes listed as typical entrées in the modern Larousse Gastronomique, the French culinary encyclopedia.

A clue comes from an older edition of the Larousse Gastronomique. The 1938 edition defines entrée as follows:

Ce mot ne signifie pas du tout, comme bien des personnes semblent le croire, le premier plat d'un menu. L'entrée est le mets qui suit, dan l'ordonnance d'un repas, le plat qui est désigneé sous le nom de relevé, plat qui, lui-même, est servi après le poisson (ou le mets en tenant lieu) et qui, par conséquent, vient en troisième ligne sur le menu. [This word does not mean, as many seem to believe, the first dish in a meal. In the ordering of a meal, the entree is the dish that follows the relevé, the dish served after the fish (or after the dish that takes the place of the fish) and, therefore, comes third in the meal.]

What we have here is a "language maven" complaining about a change in progress: Aux armes! The French masses are using the word entrée incorrectly! Language mavens have probably been around pretty much since there were two speakers to complain about the vocabulary, pronunciation, or grammar of a third. They can be very useful for historical linguists, because grammar writers don't complain about a change in the language until it's basically already happened, at least by a sufficiently large number of speakers. So we can be pretty certain that in popular usage, entrée mostly meant "first course" in French by 1938.

In summary, the word entrée originally (in 1555) meant the opening course of a meal, one consisting of substantial hot 'made' meat dishes, usually with a sauce, then evolved to mean the same kind of dishes, but served as a third course after a soup and a fish, and before a roast fowl course. American usage kept this sense of a substantial meat course, and as distinct roast and fish courses dropped away from popular usage, the meaning of entree in American English was no longer opposed to fish or roast dishes, leaving the entree as the single main course.

In French, the word changed its meaning by the 1930s to mean a light course of eggs or seafood, essentially taking on much the meaning of earlier terms like hors d'oeuvres or entremets. The change was presumably helped along by the fact that the literal French meaning ("entering, entrance") was still transparent to French speakers, and perhaps as more speakers began to eat multi-course meals the word attached itself more readily to a first or entering course. So both French and American English retain some aspects of the original meaning of the word; French the "first course" aspect of the meaning (which had actually died out by 1651) and American the "main meat course" aspect.

Postscript:

With the rise in the popularity and status of ethnic food and the simultaneous decline of the social prestige of French cooking in the United States, I thought I had better check whether the wordentrée is still used. I checked the 40 or so (mainly Asian or Central or South American) restaurants in my neighborhood: the word entree was hardly used (appearing on less than 10% of the menus). This suggests that the word is mainly only used for American food of European origin, or perhaps only upscale restaurants. To test this hypothesis, I selected 25 upscale restaurants serving European American cuisine returned from the Google query ("San Francisco restaurants"). The following table shows how the main course was referred to on their dinner menus. In summary, entreeis indeed the most popular way to refer to the main course in upscale European American restaurants, but is generally not used on other ethnic menus.

Americans Believe Gays And Lesbians Face More Discrimination Than Any Other Group

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  • Americans believe gays and lesbians face more discrimination than a host of religious, racial, and ethnic groups. Pew found that 65 percent of Americans think homosexuals face “a lot” of discrimination in the US, more than do Hispanics (50 percent), African Americans (54 percent), and Muslims (59 percent). Americans perceive less discrimination toward other groups. Thirty-two percent of Americans think Jews face a lot of discrimination, 31 percent feel that way about evangelical Christians, 27 percent about atheists, and 19 percent about Catholics.



Tom Toles Cartoon: White House Security

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Alan: Americans are unusually dedicated to the proposition: "Failure is not an option." 

To avoid failure and guarantee "success," Uncle Sam depends on massive acts of violence like "carpet bombing" and "bombing them back to The Stone Age" as if sufficient destruction obligates victory. 

Until recently, armies fought on designated battlefields (away from civilian populations), and belligerence -- at least of imperial type and waged by super-power surrogates -- was routinely projected "over there, far away." 

Surely the designation of battlefields in Iraq and Afghanistan would insulate "The Homeland" from direct devastation.

The seeming advantages of "violence over there, far away" formerly conspired with limited transportation and primitive communication so that blowback was geographically contained or sufficiently delayed to detach cause from effect, providing a prurient semblance of "violent solution." 

BOOM! A climax devoutly to be wished.

The fact that The Treaty of Versailles ended World War I while causing World War II is a case in point. (Will the establishment of modern Israel at the end of World War II bring about World War III?)

Most people fail to see the connection. Hitler was an inexplicable monstrosity, not the predictable embodiment of the German people's simmering rage at the onerous terms of The Treaty. 

Nowadays, blowback is so swift that "cause and effect" are linked by unbroken chains. 

Marshall McLuhan summarized this sea change with an observation both tragic and laughable: "To the spoils belongs the victor." 

A case in point is Netanyahu's recent war on Gaza, ostensibly "won" by Israel. 

Paradoxically, feisty resistance by Hamas prolonged the war beyond any expectation so that Gazans consider themselves "the victors." 

As night follows day, Palestinians will be back on the battlefield as soon as wounds are licked and they have recouped sufficient psychological energy to re-direct attention from "the ruins" to "the battlefield."

Short of extermination, the people who live in "killing fields" eventually prevail precisely because they live there. 

They are already "at home" and are not going away.

Invaders and occupiers always go away.




Thomas Carlyle On Devotion

"Our Conscience Is Not The Vessel Of Eternal Verities," Walter Lippman

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"Our conscience is not the vessel of eternal verities. It grows with our social life, and a new social condition means a radical change in conscience." 
Walter Lippmann, journalist (1889-1974) 















Saudi Arabia: "Never Before Has America Been So Closely Allied With A Mortal Enemy"

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"Why Is Bush Holding Hands With Saudi Prince?"

***

"Saudi Arabia's Support For Wahhabi Radicalism Is The Taproot Of Islamic Radicalism"

***

House of Bush, House of Saud

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Bush,_House_of_Saud
House of Bush, House of Saud: The Secret Relationship Between the World's Two Most Powerful Dynasties is a 2004 book by Craig Unger that explores the relationship between the Saudi Royal Family and the Bush extended political family. Unger asserts that the groundwork for today's terrorist movements and the modern wars that have sprung up about them was unintentionally laid more than 30 years ago with a series of business deals between the ruling Saudis and the powerful Bush family. The Saudis received investments and military protection in exchange for cooperation on lucrative oil deals. The author claims that the result has been a shady alliance between "the world's two most powerful dynasties." Unger writes, "Never before has an American president been so closely tied to a foreign power that harbors and supports our country's mortal enemies."
Controversial documentary filmmaker Michael Moore's 2004 picture Fahrenheit 9/11 draws heavily on arguments made in Unger's book.

References

  • Unger, Craig (2007). House of Bush House of Saud: The Secret Relationship Between the World's Two Most Powerful Dynasties. Gibson Square Books Ltd. ISBN 1-903933-89-7.

External links

Obama's Presidency Has Been Written Off Because We're At That Point In The Cycle

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"238 Presidential Historians Rate Obama Near Top; Dubyah Near Bottom"

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Alan: Many Americans badmouth Obama out of perverse determination to resurrect an "impossible past" based on "impossible principles." 

Currently, Obama's low approval numbers arise from his failure to "kick ass" in Iraq and Syria.

Legions of dimwitted citizens assume "God" will automatically warrant American victory if only Uncle Sam exhibits adequate aggression.

At the same time, few Americans would authorize (and none would send their own children into) a ground war where the prospect of killing American troops would be our enemy's best possible recruitment tool.

Osama bin Laden was shrewd enough to goad the United States in this very way.


We would wisely remember that the mythic account of Hydra is not just a "story." It is how violent attempts to eliminate evil often work out. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lernaean_Hydra

In passing, I note the never-homilized "saying" of Jesus: "Resist not evil." https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Matthew+5%3A39&version=GNV

As a nation we prefer the paralysis of (presumed) "perfection" to the actual, limited "good" that is within our grasp. 

Before the decade is out, it will be evident that Obama accomplished extraordinary good in face of unprecedented opposition.

***

"American Conservatives And Oppositional Defiant Disorder"

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"Most of these end-of-Obama sentiments are sincerely felt, and there are plenty of Obama-specific reasons for making these judgments. Yet they all lack historical perspective. In fact, the notion that the Obama presidency is all but over has arrived right on schedule for any second-term president. By this stage of their presidencies, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, like Reagan before them, were all being written off as finished, not least of all by those who had been their strongest supporters. However, history also demonstrates a larger truth that the commentators ignore today. Quite a few of the most significant achievements of the Reagan, Clinton and Bush presidencies took place in their final two years." James Mann in The New York Times



Google Chairman Says Global Warming Opposition Is "Literally Lying"

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"Diane Rehm's Insightful Interview With Google Chairman Eric Schmidt"
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2014/09/diane-rehms-insightful-interview-with.html

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Google: We’re parting with the climate change skeptics at ALEC. "In an interview with NPR's Diane Rehm, Schmidt said that the American Legislative Exchange Council had been 'literally lying' about the reality of climate change — a fact that led Google to reconsider its financial contributions to the organization....Google had initially supported ALEC over an 'unrelated' issue, Schmidt told Rehm. But ALEC's stand on climate change convinced Google to pull its support....Google said it will not be renewing its ALEC membership at the end of the year. ALEC's opposition to climate change policy has taken a number of forms." Brian Fung in The Washington Post.



The Climate Summit's Major Sin Of Omission: The Ocean

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The summit's major sin of omission. "The ocean, over two-thirds of the planet, is completely absent from the programme. It is neither one of the eight 'action areas' on which governments and other key players are invited to announce bold new commitments, nor one of the 'thematic sessions' where states and stakeholders will share solutions. The summit is keeping its feet firmly on dry land and is highlighting the huge gap between scientific knowledge and political action....Science is showing us that there can be no solution to the climate challenge without a healthy ocean, which is currently in sharp decline." David Miliband, José María Figueres and Trevor Manuel in The Guardian. 




ISIS Is A Trivial Threat Relative To Global Warming

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"Shark Attacks Rise Worldwide: Risk Assessment and Aquinas' Criteria For Sin"



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"What does it take to generate a global response to a global threat? The financial crisis of 2008 and the threats from insurgency and terrorism in 2014 are seen as 'clear and present dangers' to one and all — and both have drawn a global response. Meanwhile, climate change, and the devastating effects of carbon-dioxide emissions, pose greater and longer-term threats, and yet have elicited only a feeble response....World leaders must act on all global challenges when they recognize them. Preventing bank failures and stopping terrorist attacks are important goals; unless we get serious about addressing climate change, we are likely to have more of both." Donald Kaberuka in Project Syndicate.



Why Wall Street Cares About Inequality

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Middle class hasn't gotten raise in 15 years. 
Ben Casselman in FiveThirtyEight.

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First, it was Standard & Poor’s.  Now, Morgan Stanley weighs in on income inequality in a new report. Why are these Wall Street institutions, normally focused on macroeconomic issues directly related to gross domestic product forecasts, suddenly chiming in on the issue?
Because both firms find U.S. inequality is holding back economic growth. Morgan Stanley’s research suggests weaker-than-usual consumption at the lower end of the income ladder helps explain why this economic recovery has been particularly anemic.
“It has taken more than five years for U.S. households to ‘feel’ like they are in recovery,” write economists Ellen Zentner and Paula Campbell in the report, entitled “Inequality and Consumption.”
Before the recession, they say, “the expansion of credit simply delayed the day of reckoning from declining incomes and rising inequality.”
The Morgan Stanley economists do find reason for optimism, however, saying there are some hints of meaningful wage increases ahead.
“Stronger growth in wages and salaries is essential to the macro outlook, because it would help households spend more broadly across the income spectrum,” the authors write. “It matters to monetary policy because the [Federal Reserve] will remain reluctant to raise rates in the absence of a pickup in wage growth.”
The Fed last week indicated it was in no rush to begin raising interest rates, which have been near zero since December 2008. Instead, the central bank reaffirmed its commitment to keep borrowing costs at rock-bottom lows for a “considerable time”after the end of its bond-buying program, expected in October.

The Bible Belt Trails The Pack Again

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"Bank On It! The South Is Always Wrong"

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Southern states are now the epicenter of HIV/AIDS in the U.S. "Southern states now have the highest rates of new HIV diagnoses, the largest percentage of people living with the disease and the most people dying from it, according to...the Southern AIDS Coalition....States in the South have the least expansive Medicaid programs and the strictest eligibility requirements to qualify for assistance, which prevents people living with HIV/AIDS from getting care, according to a coalition report. In the South, Campbell said, people living with HIV have to reach disability status before they qualify for aid. This is significant, because nationally the vast majority of HIV/AIDS patients rely on Medicaid for their health insurance, according to research conducted by the Morehouse School of Medicine in Atlanta." Teresa Wiltz in The Washington Post and Pew Stateline.



Man Playing With Lion

Why Climate Change Is A Growing Health Threat

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