Posts Tagged ‘ democrats ’

UNEMPLOYMENT JUMPS TO 9.6%

THE EMPLOYMENT SITUATION — AUGUST 2010

Nonfarm payroll employment changed little (-54,000) in August, and the unem-
ployment rate was about unchanged at 9.6 percent, the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics reported today. Government employment fell, as 114,000 temporary
workers hired for the decennial census completed their work. Private-sector
payroll employment continued to trend up modestly (+67,000).

Household Survey Data

The number of unemployed persons (14.9 million) and the unemployment rate
(9.6 percent) were little changed in August. From May through August, the
jobless rate remained in the range of 9.5 to 9.7 percent. (See table A-1.)

Among the major worker groups, the unemployment rate for adult men (9.8 per-
cent), adult women (8.0 percent), teenagers (26.3 percent), whites (8.7 per-
cent), blacks (16.3 percent), and Hispanics (12.0 percent) showed little
change in August. The jobless rate for Asians was 7.2 percent, not season-
ally adjusted. (See tables A-1, A-2, and A-3.)

The number of long-term unemployed (those jobless for 27 weeks and over) de-
clined by 323,000 over the month to 6.2 million. In August, 42.0 percent of
unemployed persons had been jobless for 27 weeks or more. (See table A-12.)

In August, the civilian labor force participation rate (64.7 percent) and
the employment-population ratio (58.5 percent) were essentially unchanged.
(See table A-1.)

The number of persons employed part time for economic reasons (sometimes re-
ferred to as involuntary part-time workers) increased by 331,000 over the
month to 8.9 million. These individuals were working part time because their
hours had been cut back or because they were unable to find a full-time job.
(See table A-8.)

About 2.4 million persons were marginally attached to the labor force in
August, little changed from a year earlier. (The data are not seasonally ad-
justed.) These individuals were not in the labor force, wanted and were avail-
able for work, and had looked for a job sometime in the prior 12 months. They
were not counted as unemployed because they had not searched for work in the
4 weeks preceding the survey. (See table A-16.)

Among the marginally attached, there were 1.1 million discouraged workers in
August, an increase of 352,000 from a year earlier. (The data are not season-
ally adjusted.) Discouraged workers are persons not currently looking for work
because they believe no jobs are available for them. The remaining 1.3 million
persons marginally attached to the labor force had not searched for work in the
4 weeks preceding the survey for reasons such as school attendance or family
responsibilities.

Establishment Survey Data

Total nonfarm payroll employment was little changed (-54,000) in August. Govern-
ment employment fell by 121,000, reflecting the departure of 114,000 temporary
Census 2010 workers from federal government payrolls. Total private employment
continued to trend up modestly over the month (+67,000). Since its most recent
low in December 2009, private-sector employment has risen by 763,000. (See
table B-1.)

Employment in health care increased by 28,000 in August, with the largest gains
occurring in ambulatory health care services (+17,000) and hospitals (+9,000).
Thus far in 2010, the health care industry has added an average of 20,000 jobs
per month, about in line with the average monthly job growth in 2009.

Mining employment rose by 8,000 in August. Since a recent low in October 2009,
employment in the industry has increased by 72,000. Support activities for mining
has accounted for about three-fourths of the gain.

Manufacturing employment declined by 27,000 over the month. A decline in motor
vehicles and parts (-22,000) offset a gain of similar magnitude in July as the
industry departed somewhat from its usual layoff and recall pattern for annual
retooling.

Within professional and business services, employment in temporary help services
was up by 17,000. This industry has added 392,000 jobs since a recent employment
low in September 2009.

Construction employment was up (+19,000) in August. This change partially re-
flected the return to payrolls of 10,000 workers who were on strike in July.

Employment in retail trade was about unchanged over the month. A job gain among
motor vehicle and parts dealers (+8,000) was essentially offset by losses in
building materials and garden supply stores (-6,000).

Employment in other private-sector industries, including wholesale trade, trans-
portation and warehousing, information, financial activities, and leisure and
hospitality, showed little change in August.

Over the month, government employment fell by 121,000, largely reflecting the
loss of 114,000 temporary workers hired for Census 2010. The number of tempor-
ary Census 2010 workers peaked in May at 564,000 but has declined to 82,000 in
August.

The average workweek for all employees on private nonfarm payrolls was unchanged
over the month at 34.2 hours. The manufacturing workweek for all employees in-
creased by 0.1 hour to 40.2 hours, and factory overtime was up by 0.1 hour. The
average workweek for production and nonsupervisory employees on private nonfarm
payrolls increased by 0.1 hour to 33.5 hours. (See tables B-2 and B-7.)

Average hourly earnings of all employees on private nonfarm payrolls increased
by 6 cents, or 0.3 percent, to $22.66 in August. Over the past 12 months, aver-
age hourly earnings have increased by 1.7 percent. In August, average hourly
earnings of private-sector production and nonsupervisory employees increased by
3 cents, or 0.2 percent, to $19.08. (See tables B-3 and B-8.)

The change in total nonfarm payroll employment for June was revised from -221,000
to -175,000, and the change for July was revised from -131,000 to -54,000.

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Obama Fifth Anniversary Of Hurricane Katrina (Transcript)

Aug. 29, 2010

Remarks by the President on the Fifth Anniversary of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, Louisiana

Xavier University
New Orleans, Louisiana

1:50 P.M. CDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, everybody.  It is good to be back.  (Applause.)  It is good to be back.

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  It’s good to have you back!

THE PRESIDENT:  I’m glad.  (Laughter.)  And due to popular demand, I decided to bring the First Lady down here.  (Applause.)

We have just an extraordinary number of dedicated public servants who are here.  If you will be patient with me, I want to make sure that all of them are acknowledged.  First of all, you’ve got the governor of the great state of Louisiana—Bobby Jindal is here.  (Applause.)  We have the outstanding mayor of New Orleans, Mitch Landrieu.  (Applause.)  We have the better looking and younger senator from Louisiana, Mary Landrieu.  (Applause.)

I believe that Senator David Vitter is here.  David—right here.  (Applause.)  We have—hold on a second now—we’ve got Congressman Joe Cao is here.  (Applause.)  Congressman Charlie Melancon is here.  (Applause.)  Congressman Steve Scalise is here.  (Applause.)

Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, who has been working tirelessly down here in Louisiana, Shaun Donovan.  (Applause.)  We’ve got our EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson here—homegirl.  (Applause.)  Administrator of FEMA Craig Fugate is here.  (Applause.)  The person who’s heading up our community service efforts all across the country—Patrick Corvington is here.  (Applause.)  Louisiana’s own Regina Benjamin, the Surgeon General—(applause)—a Xavier grad, I might add.  (Applause.)  We are very proud to have all of these terrific public servants here.

It is wonderful to be back in New Orleans, and it is a great honor—

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  We love you!

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  We can’t see you!

THE PRESIDENT:  It is a great honor—(laughter)—you can see me now?  (Laughter.)  Okay.  It is a great honor to be back at Xavier University.  (Applause.)  And I—it’s just inspiring to spend time with people who’ve demonstrated what it means to persevere in the face of tragedy; to rebuild in the face of ruin.

I’m grateful to Jade for her introduction, and congratulate you on being crowned Miss Xavier.  (Applause.)  I hope everybody heard during the introduction she was a junior at Ben Franklin High School five years ago when the storm came.  And after Katrina, Ben Franklin High was terribly damaged by wind and water.  Millions of dollars were needed to rebuild the school.  Many feared it would take years to reopen—if it could be reopened at all.

But something remarkable happened.  Parents, teachers, students, volunteers, they all got to work making repairs.  And donations came in from across New Orleans and around the world.  And soon, those silent and darkened corridors, they were bright and they were filled with the sounds of young men and women, including Jade, who were going back to class.  And then Jade committed to Xavier, a university that likewise refused to succumb to despair.  So Jade, like so many students here at this university, embody hope.  That sense of hope in difficult times, that’s what I came to talk about today.

It’s been five years since Katrina ravaged the Gulf Coast.  There’s no need to dwell on what you experienced and what the world witnessed.  We all remember it keenly:  water pouring through broken levees; mothers holding their children above the waterline; people stranded on rooftops begging for help; bodies lying in the streets of a great American city.  It was a natural disaster but also a manmade catastrophe—a shameful breakdown in government that left countless men, and women, and children abandoned and alone.

And shortly after the storm, I came down to Houston to spend time with some of the folks who had taken shelter there.  And I’ll never forget what one woman told me.  She said, “We had nothing before the hurricane.  And now we’ve got less than nothing.”

In the years that followed, New Orleans could have remained a symbol of destruction and decay; of a storm that came and the inadequate response that followed.  It was not hard to imagine a day when we’d tell our children that a once vibrant and wonderful city had been laid low by indifference and neglect.  But that’s not what happened.  It’s not what happened at Ben Franklin.  It’s not what happened here at Xavier.  It’s not what happened across New Orleans and across the Gulf Coast.  (Applause.)  Instead this city has become a symbol of resilience and of community and of the fundamental responsibility that we have to one another.

And we see that here at Xavier.  Less than a month after the storm struck, amidst debris and flood-damaged buildings, President Francis promised that this university would reopen in a matter of months.  (Applause.)  Some said he was crazy.  Some said it couldn’t happen.  But they didn’t count on what happens when one force of nature meets another.  (Laughter.)  And by January—four months later—class was in session.  Less than a year after the storm, I had the privilege of delivering a commencement address to the largest graduating class in Xavier’s history.  That is a symbol of what New Orleans is all about.  (Applause.)

We see New Orleans in the efforts of Joycelyn Heintz, who’s here today.  Katrina left her house 14 feet underwater.  But after volunteers helped her rebuild, she joined AmeriCorps to serve the community herself—part of a wave of AmeriCorps members who’ve been critical to the rebirth of this city and the rebuilding of this region.  (Applause.)  So today, she manages a local center for mental health and wellness.

We see the symbol that this city has become in the St. Bernard Project, whose founder Liz McCartney is with us.  (Applause.)  This endeavor has drawn volunteers from across the country to rebuild hundreds of homes throughout St. Bernard Parish and the Lower Ninth Ward.

I’ve seen the sense of purpose people felt after the storm when I visited Musicians’ Village in the Ninth Ward back in 2006.  Volunteers were not only constructing houses; they were coming together to preserve the culture of music and art that’s part of the soul of this city—and the soul of this country.  And today, more than 70 homes are complete, and construction is underway on the Ellis Marsalis Center for Music.  (Applause.)

We see the dedication to the community in the efforts of Xavier grad Dr. Regina Benjamin, who mortgaged her home, maxed out her credit cards so she could reopen her Bayou la Batre clinic to care for victims of the storm—and who is now our nation’s Surgeon General.  (Applause.)

And we see resilience and hope exemplified by students at Carver High School, who have helped to raise more than a million dollars to build a new community track and football field—their “Field of Dreams”—for the Ninth Ward.  (Applause.)

So because of all of you—all the advocates, all the organizers who are here today, folks standing behind me who’ve worked so hard, who never gave up hope—you are all leading the way toward a better future for this city with innovative approaches to fight poverty and improve health care, reduce crime, and create opportunities for young people.  Because of you, New Orleans is coming back.  (Applause.)

And I just came from Parkway Bakery and Tavern.  (Applause.)  Five years ago, the storm nearly destroyed that neighborhood institution.  I saw the pictures.  Now they’re open, business is booming, and that’s some good eats.  (Laughter.)  I had the shrimp po’boy and some of the gumbo.  (Applause.)  But I skipped the bread pudding because I thought I might fall asleep while I was speaking.  (Laughter.)  But I’ve got it saved for later.  (Laughter.)

Five years ago, many questioned whether people could ever return to this city.  Today, New Orleans is one of the fastest growing cities in America, with a big new surge in small businesses.  Five years ago, the Saints had to play every game on the road because of the damage to the Superdome.  Two weeks ago, we welcomed the Saints to the White House as Super Bowl champions.  (Applause.)  There was also food associated with that.  (Laughter.)  We marked the occasion with a 30-foot po’boy made with shrimps and oysters from the Gulf.  (Applause.)  And you’ll be pleased to know there were no leftovers.  (Laughter.)

Now, I don’t have to tell you that there are still too many vacant and overgrown lots.  There are still too many students attending classes in trailers.  There are still too many people unable to find work.  And there are still too many New Orleanians, folks who haven’t been able to come home.  So while an incredible amount of progress has been made, on this fifth anniversary, I wanted to come here and tell the people of this city directly:  My administration is going to stand with you—and fight alongside you—until the job is done.  (Applause.)  Until New Orleans is all the way back, all the way.  (Applause.)

When I took office, I directed my Cabinet to redouble our efforts, to put an end to the turf wars between agencies, to cut the red tape and cut the bureaucracy.  (Applause.)  I wanted to make sure that the federal government was a partner—not an obstacle—to recovery here in the Gulf Coast.  And members of my Cabinet—including EPA administrator, Lisa Jackson, who grew up in Pontchartrain Park—(applause)—they have come down here dozens of times.  Shaun Donovan has come down here dozens of times.  This is not just to make appearances.  It’s not just to get photo ops.  They came down here to listen and to learn and make real the changes that were necessary so that government was actually working for you.

So for example, efforts to rebuild schools and hospitals, to repair damaged roads and bridges, to get people back to their homes—they were tied up for years in a tangle of disagreements and byzantine rules.  So when I took office, working with your outstanding delegation, particularly Senator Mary Landrieu, we put in place a new way of resolving disputes.  (Applause.)  We put in place a new way of resolving disputes so that funds set aside for rebuilding efforts actually went toward rebuilding efforts.  And as a result, more than 170 projects are getting underway—work on firehouses, and police stations, and roads, and sewer systems, and health clinics, and libraries, and universities.

We’re tackling the corruption and inefficiency that has long plagued the New Orleans Housing Authority.  We’re helping homeowners rebuild and making it easier for renters to find affordable options.  And we’re helping people to move out of temporary homes.  You know, when I took office, more than three years after the storm, tens of thousands of families were still stuck in disaster housing—many still living in small trailers that had been provided by FEMA.  We were spending huge sums of money on temporary shelters when we knew it would be better for families, and less costly for taxpayers, to help people get into affordable, stable, and more permanent housing.  So we’ve helped make it possible for people to find those homes, and we’ve dramatically reduced the number of families in emergency housing.

On the health care front, as a candidate for President, I pledged to make sure we were helping New Orleans recruit doctors and nurses, and rebuild medical facilities—including a new veterans hospital.  (Applause.)  Well, we have resolved a long-standing dispute—one that had tied up hundreds of millions of dollars—to fund the replacement for Charity Hospital.  And in June, Veterans Secretary Ric Shinseki came to New Orleans for the groundbreaking of that new VA hospital.

In education, we’ve made strides as well.  As you know, schools in New Orleans were falling behind long before Katrina.  But in the years since the storm, a lot of public schools opened themselves up to innovation and to reform.  And as a result, we’re actually seeing rising achievement, and New Orleans is becoming a model of innovation for the nation.  This is yet another sign that you’re not just rebuilding—you’re rebuilding stronger than before.  Just this Friday, my administration announced a final agreement on $1.8 billion dollars for Orleans Parish schools.  (Applause.)  This is money that had been locked up for years, but now it’s freed up so folks here can determine best how to restore the school system.

And in a city that’s known too much violence, that’s seen too many young people lost to drugs and criminal activity, we’ve got a Justice Department that’s committed to working with New Orleans to fight the scourge of violent crime, and to weed out corruption in the police force, and to ensure the criminal justice system works for everyone in this city.  (Applause.)  And I want everybody to hear—to know and to hear me thank Mitch Landrieu, your new mayor, for his commitment to that partnership.  (Applause.)

Now, even as we continue our recovery efforts, we’re also focusing on preparing for future threats so that there is never another disaster like Katrina.  The largest civil works project in American history is underway to build a fortified levee system.  And as I—just as I pledged as a candidate, we’re going to finish this system by next year so that this city is protected against a 100-year storm.  We should not be playing Russian roulette every hurricane season.  (Applause.)  And we’re also working to restore protective wetlands and natural barriers that were not only damaged by Katrina—were not just damaged by Katrina but had been rapidly disappearing for decades.

In Washington, we are restoring competence and accountability.  I am proud that my FEMA Director, Craig Fugate, has 25 years of experience in disaster management in Florida.  (Applause.)  He came from Florida, a state that has known its share of hurricanes.  We’ve put together a group led by Secretary Donovan and Secretary Napolitano to look at disaster recovery across the country.  We’re improving coordination on the ground, and modernizing emergency communications, helping families plan for a crisis.  And we’re putting in place reforms so that never again in America is somebody left behind in a disaster because they’re living with a disability or because they’re elderly or because they’re infirmed.  That will not happen again.  (Applause.)

Finally, even as you’ve been buffeted by Katrina and Rita, even as you’ve been impacted by the broader recession that has devastated communities across the country, in recent months the Gulf Coast has seen new hardship as a result of the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill.  And just as we’ve sought to ensure that we are doing what it takes to recover from Katrina, my administration has worked hard to match our efforts on the spill to what you need on the ground.  And we’ve been in close consultation with your governor, your mayors, your parish presidents, your local government officials.

And from the start, I promised you two things.  One is that we would see to it that the leak was stopped.  And it has been.  The second promise I made was that we would stick with our efforts, and stay on BP, until the damage to the Gulf and to the lives of the people in this region was reversed.  And this, too, is a promise that we will keep.  We are not going to forget.  We’re going to stay on it until this area is fully recovered.  (Applause.)

That’s why we rapidly launched the largest response to an environmental disaster in American history—47,000 people on the ground, 5,700 vessels on the water—to contain and clean up the oil.  When BP was not moving fast enough on claims, we told BP to set aside $20 billion in a fund—managed by an independent third party—to help all those whose lives have been turned upside down by the spill.

And we will continue to rely on sound science, carefully monitoring waters and coastlines as well as the health of the people along the Gulf, to deal with any long-term effects of the oil spill.  We are going to stand with you until the oil is cleaned up, until the environment is restored, until polluters are held accountable, until communities are made whole, and until this region is all the way back on its feet.  (Applause.)

So that’s how we’re helping this city, and this state, and this region to recover from the worst natural disaster in our nation’s history.  We’re cutting through the red tape that has impeded rebuilding efforts for years.  We’re making government work better and smarter, in coordination with one of the most expansive non-profit efforts in American history.  We’re helping state and local leaders to address serious problems that had been neglected for decades—problems that existed before the storm came, and have continued after the waters receded—from the levee system to the justice system, from the health care system to the education system.

And together, we are helping to make New Orleans a place that stands for what we can do in America—not just for what we can’t do.  Ultimately, that must be the legacy of Katrina:  not one of neglect, but of action; not one of indifference, but of empathy; not of abandonment, but of a community working together to meet shared challenges.  (Applause.)

The truth is, there are some wounds that have not yet healed.  And there are some losses that can’t be repaid.  And for many who lived through those harrowing days five years ago, there’s searing memories that time may not erase.  But even amid so much tragedy, we saw stirrings of a brighter day.  Five years ago we saw men and women risking their own safety to save strangers.  We saw nurses staying behind to care for the sick and the injured.  We saw families coming home to clean up and rebuild—not just their own homes, but their neighbors’ homes, as well.  And we saw music and Mardi Gras and the vibrancy, the fun of this town undiminished.  And we’ve seen many return to their beloved city with a newfound sense of appreciation and obligation to this community.

And when I came here four years ago, one thing I found striking was all the greenery that had begun to come back.  And I was reminded of a passage from the book of Job.  “There is hope for a tree if it be cut down that it will sprout again, and that its tender branch will not cease.”  The work ahead will not be easy, and there will be setbacks.  There will be challenges along the way.  But thanks to you, thanks to the great people of this great city, New Orleans is blossoming again.

Thank you, everybody.  God bless you.  And God bless the United States of America.  (Applause.)

END   2:16 P.M. CDT

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Fifth U.S. Climate Action Report

**Note: This is a draft of the Fifth U.S. Climate Action Report. Comments from the public are welcome, and will be accepted until May 6, 2010. You may submit a comment via e-mail (CAR5@state.gov), via fax ((202) 647-0191), or via postal mail (CAR5 Comments, Department of State, Office of Global Change, Harry S. Truman Building, Room 2480, 2201 “C” Street N.W., Washington, DC 20520).**

In June 1992, the United States signed the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), and ratified it in October of that year. Pursuant to the national communication reporting requirements under Articles 4.2 and 12 of the Convention and to guidelines later adopted by the UNFCCC Conference of the Parties (COP), the United States submitted the first U.S. Climate Action Report (CAR) to the UNFCCC Secretariat in 1994, the second in 1997, the third in 2002, and the fourth in 2007.

The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) requires periodic “national communications” from industrialized countries listed in Annex I of the convention.
So far, all Annex I countries have each submitted four reports over the years. The fifth national communications were due January 1, 2010.  All but these four countries have submitted reports: U.S., Monaco, Slovenia and Turkey. See this table for a listing of the reports that have been submitted; all are available online.

In the United States, the State Department is the lead agency in producing the report, and the report here is typically referred to as the “Climate Action Report.”  Four have been produced so far and are often referred to as CAR-1, CAR-2, CAR-3 and CAR-4; or by the year published (Climate Action Report 2006, etc).  The first two were produced under Clinton and the 3rd and 4th reports were published under Bush. They have been the only routine and comprehensive statements to the world community of what the U.S. is doing on climate change.

The Fifth U.S. Climate Action Report presents a detailed outline of the actions the U.S. is taking to address climate change, contains updated projections on U.S. greenhouse gas emissions, and underscores the United States commitment to address climate change.

Table of Contents of the Fifth U.S. CAR:

-Entire Climate Action Report [2900 Kb]
-Table of Contents [339 Kb]
-1. Executive Summary [Get Acrobat Reader PDF version ]
-2. National Circumstances [Get Acrobat Reader PDF version ]
-3. Greenhouse Gas Inventory [Get Acrobat Reader PDF version ]
-4. Policies and Measures [Get Acrobat Reader PDF version ]
-5. Projected Greenhouse [Get Acrobat Reader PDF version ]
-6. Vulnerability Assessment, Climate Change Impacts, & Adaptation Measures [Get Acrobat Reader PDF version ]
-7. Financial Resources and Technology Transfer [Get Acrobat Reader PDF version ]
-8. Research and Systematic Observation [Get Acrobat Reader PDF version ]
-9. Education, Training, and Outreach [Get Acrobat Reader PDF version ]
-10. Appendices A [283 Kb]
-10. Appendix B: Bibliography [Get Acrobat Reader PDF version

Top Contributors In 2008 Election

This table lists the top donors to this candidate in the 2008 election cycle. The organizations themselves did not donate , rather the money came from the organization’s PAC, its individual members or employees or owners, and those individuals’ immediate families. Organization totals include subsidiaries and affiliates.

Barack Obama (D)
University of California $1,591,395
Goldman Sachs
$994,795
Harvard University $854,747
Microsoft Corp
$833,617
Google Inc $803,436
Citigroup Inc
$701,290
JPMorgan Chase & Co
$695,132
Time Warner
$590,084
Sidley Austin LLP $588,598
Stanford University $586,557
National Amusements Inc $551,683
UBS AG
$543,219
Wilmerhale Llp $542,618
Skadden, Arps et al $530,839
IBM Corp $528,822
Columbia University $528,302
Morgan Stanley
$514,881
General Electric
$499,130
US Government $494,820
Latham & Watkins $493,835

John McCain (R)
Merrill Lynch $373,595
Citigroup Inc $322,051
Morgan Stanley $273,452
Goldman Sachs $230,095
JPMorgan Chase & Co $228,107
US Government $208,379
AT&T Inc $201,438
Wachovia Corp $195,063
UBS AG $192,493
Credit Suisse Group $183,353
PricewaterhouseCoopers $167,900
US Army $167,820
Bank of America $166,026
Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher $159,596
Blank Rome LLP $154,226
Greenberg Traurig LLP $146,437
US Dept of Defense $144,105
FedEx Corp $131,974
Bear Stearns $117,498
Lehman Brothers $114,357

Cynthia McKinney (3)
Thoughtworks Inc $2,300
Shawnee Core LLC $2,300
Redwood School District $2,300
Verizon Communications $1,600
Producers Group $1,250
Usd $1,200
Kaiser Permanente $1,200
Democracy Unlimited $1,113
Houston Independent School District $1,000
Grow $1,000
Community Mediation Inc $1,000
Best Care Home Health $1,000
Baltimore City Schools $1,000
Archon Group $1,000
Pwrlite Inc $900
GREEN PARTY, UNITED STATES $900
Liberty PAC $750
Esa $750
Pitzer College $700
Bond Operating $700

Bob Barr (L)
Sunnyside Technical Consulting $4,600
Office Place $4,600
Halcyon Search International $4,600
Beal Bank $4,600
Mitre Corp $4,500
Stewart Corp $3,300
Fedex Corp $2,975
Microsoft Corp $2,800
Intex Solutions $2,800
US Marine Corps $2,550
Horizontal Technology $2,506
Web Hosting/Developme $2,300
UnzOrg $2,300
Truth Lies LLC $2,300
Technical Services $2,300
Strategic Business Consultant $2,300
Smith Barney $2,300
Rocket Software $2,300
Rapid City Regional Hospital $2,300
R James Properties $2,300

Chuck Baldwin (3)
Us Army $2,800
Wcfs Inc $2,300
Tourico Holidays $2,300
Southern Showcase Housing $2,300
Cytopath PC $2,300
Blacksmith $2,300Simtek Corp $1,000
Remodel Contractor $1,000
Joe Sanger CPA $1,000
Experience Works Inc $1,000
Denney Management $1,000
Bridgestone Americas $1,000
US Postal Service $750
Liberty PAC $750
North Dakota State Hospital $600
Myself $600
Devon Energy $548
Warburg Pincus $500
Venture Firm $500
Ma-Tex Wire Rope $500

Ralph Nader (I)
Farouk Systems $9,200
YMCA $6,900
University of South Carolina $6,850
Falconwood Corp $6,600
University of Massachusetts $5,150
Immunization Action Coalition $5,100
Ann Taylor $4,867
Twin Tier Pathology Assoc $4,600
Seabree Partners Mgt $4,600
Scsra $4,600
Rizk Construction $4,600
North Chicago Va Medical Center $4,600
Luigino’s Inc $4,600
Kayline Enterprises $4,600
Jigsaw Productions $4,600
Ibg LLC $4,600
GH Palmer Assoc $4,600Genentech Inc $4,600
Financial West Group $4,600
Dept of Education $4,600

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Michelle Obama In Haiti (VIDEO)

Take a first look at this exclusive White House footage of Michelle Obama’s surprise trip to Haiti last Tuesday.

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Michelle Obama Arrives In Mexico

Despite of how many feel about Michelle, let’s pray that she makes a safe trip home.

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Dick Cheney Surprise Appearance at CPAC

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Sarah Palin’s Notes Written On Her Hand

Sarah Palin drew many standing ovations from a friendly crowd of 600 members gathered at the Gaylord resort in Nashville billed as the first national Tea Party Convention. She called the Tea Party movement a “ground-up call to action that is forcing both parties to change the way they’re doing business.” The buzz about the speech is the fact that Sarah wrote some notes in the palm of her hand and that has made MSM and Liberals go crazy.

Written on her left hand. The words “Energy”, “Tax” and “Lift American Spirits” are clearly visible. There’s also what appears to read as “Budget cuts” with the word Budget crossed out. Obama rely on teleprompters to guide him through speeches. When Obama becomes separated from his teleprompters he’s lost in words, the start his “uh’s/hum’s” and completely lose focus of the subject. I have used, napkins, pieces of torn paper, and my palm as well for speeches.

This is really no big deal; the notes weren’t for her speech, for which she used prepared remarks. They were for the Q&A session that followed, during which she glanced at the hand in question. MSM has found another item to criticize Palin about because of her growing popularity. Palin sought to hold Obama accountable as she took on a number of issues, including national security, the economy. Palin’s speech gave a foretaste of her campaign for the presidency. The Democratic agenda is “running out of time,” Palin said, claiming that the conservative tea party movement is part of a brewing “revolution” that constitutes the “future of politics.”

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Sarah Palin’s Tea Party Speech (video)

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State Of The Union Overview

The speech/campaign was under 90 minutes.  Nobody yelled “you lie.” Republicans stood and clapped at several points. Obama took responsibility for failing to make the case for health care reform.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton did not attend Obama’s State of the Union/campaign, claiming she had to attend a conference in London. Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan was designated by the White House to ride out the speech in an undisclosed location as a precaution against the possibility of a catastrophe wiping out the rest of the government leadership. Can you believe this? The truth is, Clinton didn’t want to attend another boring speech that Obama has been given for a whole year. Clinton has already stated that she will be a One Term Secretary of State, not by choice. The media has tried to make the conference on Yemen and Afghanistan more important then the State of the Union. What are aides for? They are the one’s you send to mediocre events, right? Well Shaun Donovan did her job!

From the speech: ” I have never been more hopeful about America’s future than I am tonight. Despite our hardships, our union is strong. We do not give up. We do not quit. We do not allow fear or division to break our spirit.”

“If there’s one thing that has unified Democrats and Republicans and everybody in between it’s that we all hated the bank bailout. I hated it. I hated it. I hated it. You hated it. It was about as popular as a root canal.”

“For every success story, there are other stories, of men and women who wake up with the anguish of not knowing where their next paycheck will come from, who send out resumes week after week and hear nothing in response. That is why jobs must be our number-one focus in 2010, and that’s why I’m calling for a new jobs bill tonight.”

” I’m proposing that we take $30 billion of the money Wall Street banks have repaid and use it to help community banks give small businesses the credit they need to stay afloat. I’m also proposing a new small-business tax credit, one that will go to over 1 million small businesses who hire new workers or raise wages. While we’re at it, let’s also eliminate all capital gains taxes on small-business investment and provide a tax incentive for all large businesses and all small businesses to invest in new plants and equipment.”

Alito saying, “Not True”

“I know that there are those who disagree with the overwhelming scientific evidence on climate change. But here’s the thing. Even if you doubt the evidence, providing incentives for energy efficiency and clean energy are the right thing to do for our future, because the nation that leads the clean-energy economy will be the nation that leads the global economy, and America must be that nation.”

“We will double our exports over the next five years, an increase that will support 2 million jobs in America.”

” I didn’t choose to tackle this issue to get some legislative victory under my belt. And by now, it should be fairly obvious that I didn’t take on health care because it was good politics.”

“Starting in 2011, we are prepared to freeze government spending for three years. Spending related to our national security, Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security will not be affected, but all other discretionary government programs will.”

Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano fell asleep.
“With all due deference to separation of powers, last week, the Supreme Court reversed a century of law that I believe will open the floodgates for special interests, including foreign corporations, to spend without limit in our elections. I don’t think American elections should be bankrolled by America’s most powerful interests or, worse, by foreign entities. They should be decided by the American people. And I urge Democrats and Republicans to pass a bill that helps correct some of these problems.”

“What frustrates the American people is a Washington where every day is Election Day. We can’t wage a perpetual campaign where the only goal is to see who can get the most embarrassing headlines about the other side, a belief that if you lose, I win. Neither party should delay or obstruct every single bill just because they can.”

“If the Republican leadership is going to insist that 60 votes in the Senate are required to do any business at all in this town, a supermajority, then the responsibility to govern is now yours, as well. Just saying no to everything may be good short-term politics, but it’s not leadership.”

“ We will support — we will support the Iraqi government — we will support the Iraqi government as they hold elections, and we will continue to partner with the Iraqi people to promote regional peace and prosperity. But make no mistake: This war is ending, and all of our troops are coming home.”

” This year, I will work with Congress and our military to finally repeal the law that denies gay Americans the right to serve the country they love because of who they are. It’s the right thing to do.”
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid also seemed a little sleepy, yawning throughout the speech/campaign.

” I campaigned on the promise of change, change we can believe in, the slogan went. And right now, I know there are many Americans who aren’t sure if they still believe we can change, or that I can deliver it. But remember this: I never suggested that change would be easy or that I could do it alone. Democracy in a nation of 300 million people can be noisy and messy and complicated. And when you try to do big things and make big changes, it stirs passions and controversy. That’s just how it is.”

” The spirit that has sustained this nation for more than two centuries lives on in you, its people. We have finished a difficult year. We have come through a difficult decade. But a new year has come. A new decade stretches before us. We don’t quit. I don’t quit. Let’s seize this moment, to start anew, to carry the dream forward, and to strengthen our union once more.”

Obama failed to offer a clear direction forward for health care reform, seemingly implying that it’s anything goes.  The Speech was Very Boring. Obama added nothing new to what he has been saying for the past year.

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John Edwards Is The Father

Former Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards admits in a written statement that he is the father of Frances Quinn Hunter, the 1-year-old daughter of his former mistress, Rielle Hunter.

“I am Quinn’s father. I will do everything in my power to provide her with the love and support she deserves,” Edwards, a former senator from North Carolina and John Kerry’s 2004 running mate, said in the written statement. “It was wrong for me ever to deny she was my daughter and hopefully one day, when she understands, she will forgive me.” Elizabeth Edwards reportedly wants to meet Quinn. Rielle is asking nearly $18,000 a month for child support to avoid a nasty court battle.

Edwards had an affair while his wife, Elizabeth, battled cancer. Quinn is almost 2. Previous reports have claimed that a secret DNA test proved Edwards’ paternity to the child. The test was taken after Hunter tried to get financial help from Edwards for Frances. Edwards admitted in August 2008 to an affair with Hunter that he says ended in 2006. That year, Edwards’ political action committee paid Hunter’s video production firm $100,000 for work. Then the committee paid another $14,086 on April 1, 2007.

Edwards recently went on a “sex-and-booze” bender, and tried to bring home 34-year-old bartender Stephanie Breshears and women young enough to be his daughter. Breshears revealed that Edwards repeatedly tried to get her to go back to his house for sex…. [Bresears] said Edwards hit on her “for four consecutive nights” at the local Kornerstone Bistro.

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Rush Limbaugh’s Transcript: Donating To Red Cross For Haiti Relief

Where did all these Rush haters get the idea that Rush said, “Do not donate to Haiti relief?” Rush said do not donate through the whitehouse.gov website. He states that HIS belief that funds that would go through the White House website would go to the Haitian government and would probably not be used for the relief of the Haitian people. He does encourage people who want to help to go through an established charity, like the Red Cross, by donating directly to them.  Click here to visit the American Red Cross Web site to find out more or donate online. Those who wish to donate by phone can dial (800) Redcross or (800) 257-7575.

Those who wish to donate by mail can do so by contacting their local Red Cross chapter or by mailing a donation to the following address:

American Red Cross
P.O. Box 37243
Washington D.C. 20013

Click Here For Haiti Earthquake Relief

Click Here For Earthquake in Haiti WorldVision

Haiti Relief Fund and other relief efforts they support.

The transcript is below.

BEGIN TRANSCRIPT

RUSH: Here’s President Obama speaking about Haiti this morning in Washington at the White House.  He held a press conference.  Now, I want you to remember, it took him three days to respond to the Christmas Day Fruit of Kaboom Bomber, three days.  And when he came out after those three days, he was clearly irritated that he had to do it.  He didn’t want to do it.  He comes out here in less than 24 hours to speak about Haiti.

OBAMA:  I have directed my administration to respond with a swift, coordinated, and aggressive effort to save lives.  The people of Haiti will have the full support of the United States in the urgent effort to rescue those trapped beneath the rubble and to deliver the humanitarian relief, the food, water, and medicine that Haitians will need in the coming days.

RUSH:  Oh, this is what he lives for.  He lives for serving those in misery.  Now, don’t misunderstand here, folks.  I don’t have the whole press conference, but I wonder did he apologize for America before acknowledging we are the only people on earth that can possibly help ‘em out down there in any significant way?  By the way, I’ve checked it out, Cuba has offered nothing.  Venezuela has offered nothing.  They have nothing to offer. (interruption) Venezuela is going to send 30 people?  Well, they’re people who want to get out of there anyway because they’re having rolling blackouts in Venezuela, in Caracas, which is an oil-driven — it’s the most amazing thing.  The vision of our future is right before our eyes in Venezuela.  Socialist country, devalued the currency on purpose a couple days ago, putting people in jail if they raise prices as a result of this.  We are devaluing our own currency, not as rapidly as Hugo Chavez did but we’re doing it with all of our deficit spending and borrowing.  At any rate, here’s another portion of the president’s statement.

OBAMA:  Despite the fact that we are experiencing tough times here at home, I would encourage those Americans who want to support the urgent humanitarian efforts to go to WhiteHouse.gov where you can learn how to contribute.  We’ll be resolute in our response, and I pledge to the people of Haiti that you will have a friend and partner in the United States of America today and going forward.  May God bless the people of Haiti and those working on their behalf.

RUSH:  So the country that he runs around the world apologizing for, the country that he has chip on his shoulder about, he now turns to as its president and asks people who have lost their jobs because of his policies to donate to WhiteHouse.gov to the people of Haiti, and we will do it.  We are the most charitable and the most generous people on the face of the earth.  Each and every time a natural disaster like this happens, we step up.  We are there.  “Despite the fact we’re experiencing tough times here at home, I would encourage those Americans who want to support the urgent humanitarian effort –”  You know, I have been to Haiti way back a long time ago when it was a cruise ship stop, Port-au-Prince.  And I’ve seen pictures of Haiti.  It is a devastatingly poor place and nothing has ever changed.  And right across a mountain ridge in the middle you’ve got the Dominican Republic, which is like night and day.  It’s like night and day.  And what’s the one common factor?

That place, Haiti, has been run by dictators and communists, and how long is it going to be before we hear Obama and the left in this country say that what we really need to do is reinstate the communist Aristide to the leadership position down there to coordinate putting the country back together?  The Haitian economy is entirely dependent on foreign aid.  They produce nothing.  Zilch, zero, nada.  And it’s been that way for the longest time.  Debbie Wasserman Schultz, who you will next hear, was on MSNBC Live this morning, and she essentially says that Haiti and its current plight is our fault.  I knew it wouldn’t take long for some Democrat to get there.  The question she was asked was this: “I want to know if you can put into perspective how difficult it is when you talk about there not being much infrastructure to begin with, how challenging that makes the relief effort now?”

SCHULTZ:  You should think of the most primitive environments, the most primitive living conditions that you can imagine.  It is wrong, especially in a region as prosperous as this one, for us to continue to allow the desperate situation that exists in Haiti to continue, and I want to conclude by saying that in particular it’s incredibly important that the United States grant TPS, temporary protective status to the Haitians that are here because the last thing in the world that we need to have happen is for Haitians who are here to be sent back to Haiti in this desperate hour that they are struggling through, there’s no way they could support that.

RUSH:  I could sit here and be really cynical.  I’ll hold off on the cynicism for a couple hours, I’ll hold off on it.  I’m going to hold off on it, give the show’s flow a chance to establish, ’cause it’s going to be the Media Tweak of the Day.  I’ll wait ’til about 2:15 when they’re occupied with something else Obama is doing and then I’ll make my cynical comment.  You know, Bill Clinton is the envoy to Haiti.  I guess we’re thankful he wasn’t there.  He sent his thoughts and prayers?  You may not have remembered that, folks, but Obama made him the envoy.  Did you not know that, Dawn?  Well, that’s because he’s got experience of this kind, he’s called up the Arkansas National Guard before so he knows.  He wasn’t there.  We’re all very fortunate that Bill Clinton was not there in his official position as envoy.  So here you have Debbie Wasserman Schultz.  “It is wrong, especially in a region as prosperous as this one, to continue to allow the desperate situation that exists in Haiti to continue.”  So it’s our fault, it’s our fault that Haiti is in its current state of devastation.  We should take it over, we should do something, annex it, make it a state. Imperialism, yeah, make it a state, take it over.

No word from Cuba about aid.  They’re not sending anything.  They don’t have anything.  You say Hugo is going to send 30 people and some supplies?  All right, well, good for him.  Now, here are some facts about Haiti.  It’s one-third of the island of Hispaniola.  It’s in the Caribbean located between Cuba and Puerto Rico, one of the poorest countries in the western hemisphere.  Eighty percent of the residents live in poverty.  It’s one of the most densely populated, least developed countries in the Western hemisphere, and of course this, according to Debbie Wasserman Schultz, is our fault.  Jean-Claude Duvalier declared himself president for life in 1964 and ruled as a dictator.  In August of 1971 he died, and his son declared himself president for life.  He used a secret police force called the Tontons Macoutes, which is bogeyman, to enforce his policies.  Jean-Bertrand Aristide, the communist in December 1991, Haiti’s first free election.  And in ’91 Aristide was outed in a military coup.  He fled the country.  The Organization of American States and United Nations led trade boycotts to try to force Aristide’s return to power.

Many Haitians tried to flee to the US.  They were forced back to Haiti.  Later the refugees were sent to Guantanamo Bay in Cuba.  In September of 1994, President Clinton, now the envoy to Haiti, sent a delegation there in hopes of avoiding a military conflict.  He sent President Carter, General Powell, and Senator Sam Nunn.  The peace deal does prevent an outbreak of fighting.  And what happened was Colin Powell went in there and he took one of these military leaders — I forget the guy’s name. (interruption) It might be General Cedras.  Yeah, I think it was.  What a memory you’ve got there, H.R.  General Cedras.  He took General Cedras over to a window in this decrepit room and building they were in.  He said, “General, you see this window?  Ten minutes after we leave this building, I can have a missile fired and hit right through this window.”  That’s when General Powell was still a Republican and was not making the top 100 liberal lists in British newspapers.

I did not know until I looked this up, February 24th of 2004: “Reverend Al Sharpton, US presidential candidate, states that both Aristide and the political opposition leaders approved his suggestion to travel to Haiti to broker a peace agreement, after the former US-backed peace plan was rejected by the opposition leaders.”  On February 28th, four days later, “Secretary of State Colin Powell urges Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide to step down, according to senior State Department officials. Aristide reaffirms his stance on his position; he will not leave until his term expires in 2006.” Aristide’s a communist.  Now, I do think that part and parcel of helping out down there, it won’t be long before somebody in the Obama administration suggests that we reinstate, reinstall Aristide, because there’s sympathy with these kind of people.  So we’ll keep a sharp eye on this, but I’m just fascinated here the country the president of the United States feels the need to apologize for, the country the president of the United States feels is immoral and unjust, can barely contain himself running to the cameras in less than 24 hours after this earthquake to pledge aid and to ask citizens who have lost their jobs because of his policies to donate to the relief effort.

BREAK TRANSCRIPT

RUSH:  Yes, I think in the Haiti earthquake, ladies and gentlemen — in the words of Rahm Emanuel — we have another crisis simply too good to waste.  This will play right into Obama’s hands. He’s humanitarian, compassionate.  They’ll use this to burnish their, shall we say, “credibility” with the black community — in the both light-skinned and dark-skinned black community in this country.  It’s made-to-order for them.  That’s why he couldn’t wait to get out there, could not wait to get out there.

BREAK TRANSCRIPT

RUSH:  President Obama, folks, cites in his book Dreams from My Father, page 293, the passages of Wright’s Audacity to Hope speech that most inspired him, what Reverend Wright said.  This is one of the things Wright said that most inspired Obama: “In this world, a world where cruise ships throw away more food in a day than most residents of Port-au-Prince see in a year, where white folks’ greed runs a world in need, apartheid in one hemisphere, apathy in another hemisphere, that’s the world on which hope sits.”  That’s a Reverend Wright statement Obama was most inspired by, in his own book.

BREAK TRANSCRIPT

RUSH: We’re going to start in Raleigh, North Carolina.  Justin you’re first today.  Great to have you with us.

CALLER:  Mega Rush Baby dittos.  My question is, why did Obama in the sound bite you played earlier, when he’s talking about if you wanted to donate some money, you can go to WhiteHouse.gov –

RUSH:  Yeah.

CALLER: — to direct you how to do so.  If I want to donate money to the Red Cross, why do I need to go to the WhiteHouse.gov page and –

RUSH:  Exactly.  Would you trust that the money is going to go to Haiti?

CALLER:  No.

RUSH:  Would you trust that your name is going to end up on a mailing list for the Obama people to start asking you for campaign donations for him and other causes.

CALLER:  Absolutely.

RUSH:  Absolutely right.

CALLER:  That’s the point.

RUSH:  Besides, we’ve already donated to Haiti.  It’s called the US income tax.

CALLER:  Rush, my mother was going to be on a missionary trip.  She was going to leave at 4:30 this morning to go to Haiti with our church.

RUSH:  That’s another point, too.  Churches –

CALLER:  No government money, Rush.

RUSH:  Exactly right.  Look, there are people that do charitable work every day in Haiti.  It’s not as though — like Debbie Wasserman Schultz, it’s our fault.  Reverend Wright, it’s our fault, there’s no excuse for such poverty when there’s a nation as rich as we are so close.  There are people that have been trying to save Haiti just as we’re trying to save Africa.  You just can’t keep throwing money at it because the dictatorships there just take it all.  They don’t spread it around, and even if they did they’re not creating a permanent system where people can provide for themselves.  It’s a simple matter of self-reliance.  Nobody takes that approach down there because this has always been a country run by dictators and incompetent ones at that.

BREAK TRANSCRIPT

RUSH: Carol from Coupeville — hope I’m pronouncing that right — Coupeville, Washington.  Is that right, Carol?

CALLER:  Yes.

RUSH:  Is it Coupeville, Washington?

CALLER:  Yes, Coupeville, Washington.

RUSH:  Thank you.

CALLER:  Formally from Sacramento.

RUSH:  Oh, good.  Well, my adopted hometown.  Were you there when I was there?

CALLER:  Yes.  In fact, when we signed our house papers, I looked up at a billboard across the street and it had a picture of somebody’s mouth and said: “Rush Limbaugh’s mouth, actual size.”  And I’ve been a fan ever since.

RUSH:  (laughing)  Giant billboard, “Rush Limbaugh’s mouth, actual size.”  Well, welcome to the program, Carol, great to have you here.

CALLER:  Thank you.

RUSH:  Is that what you wanted to say, about the billboard?

CALLER:  No.  I wanted to say that I thought that since President Obama said he was going to donate his money from the Nobel Peace Prize to charity, Haiti would be perfect, you know, and he’s calling for us to donate money.  This would be a perfect thing for him to donate his charitable money to, which I don’t believe.

RUSH:  Did he say he was going to donate the Nobel Peace Prize?  What is that, a thousand, 700 dollars or some such?

CALLER:  No, it’s a million.

RUSH:  That’s right, it’s a million dollars.  I wonder if he’s donated it all yet.

CALLER:  What do you bet?

RUSH:  Well, you know most presidents release their tax returns.  We’ll see.  We’ll see it at (interruption) what’s so funny?

CALLER:  Well, I think he’s phony.  When he was over in Hawaii –

RUSH:  Let me tell you something.  Let me tell you something, Carol.  You realize he’s got this brother living in a hut –

CALLER:  Yes, I know.

RUSH:  — over in Kenya, and this guy makes the equivalent of 50 cents a year.  If Obama would give this guy $20, I mean the percentage increase, $20 would be like giving an average person a thousand.

CALLER:  I know.

RUSH:  And if he hasn’t given his brother any money or any of his family any money, what makes you think he’s going to send money to Haiti?

CALLER:  I never thought he was anyway.  I just thought it would be good to call him on it.

RUSH:  Well, I’m glad you did and I’m glad you called, Carol.  Thanks very much.  I had somebody go to WhiteHouse.gov to see what the donation process is.  And this is all the guidance you get on donating to Haiti at the White House site.  What I’m going to read to you is buried in a very long blog post about what Obama said about the earthquake.  You get that first, you gotta read what Obama said, the maximum leader, you gotta read what he says and then you get to the bottom and here’s what it says.  “You can also help, immediately, by donating to the Red Cross to assist the relief effort.  Contribute online here, or donate $10 to be charged to your cell phone bill by texting Haiti.  Find more ways to help through the Center for International Disaster Information.”  So that’s all the guidance you get.  Now, that’s pretty easy, text Haiti and you’re gonna get billed for ten bucks and that money ostensibly is going to go to Haiti.

END TRANSCRIPT

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Devastation After Earthquake In Haiti
Haiti Earthquake Caught On Tape
Haiti: 50,000 Thought To Be Dead
Haitian Survivors Struggle While Waiting For Aid
Haiti Earthquake
Obama Attacks Rush
Black People Don’t Like Black Conservatives

Obama Attempted To Block Fox News From Interviews
Liberals Hate Fox News
Impeach Obama
Why Liberals Hate Free Speech
Obama Using The Race Card

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