Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Obama to Boehner: No talks until government opens

WASHINGTON (AP) ? President Barack Obama called the top Republican in the GOP-controlled House Tuesday, telling Speaker John Boehner once again that he won't negotiate over reopening the government or must-pass legislation to prevent a U.S. default on its obligations.

In the second week of the partial government shutdown, Obama's call, revealed by Boehner's office, came as the speaker softened the tone of his rhetoric in remarks to the media. The White House said Obama would hold a news conference Tuesday afternoon.

The White House also confirmed the call and said Obama repeated to Boehner "what he told him when they met at the White House last week: the president is willing to negotiate with Republicans ? after the threat of government shutdown and default have been removed ? over policies that Republicans think would strengthen the country."

"I want to have a conversation. I'm not drawing lines in the sand. It is time for us to just sit down and resolve our differences," said Boehner, R-Ohio.

He added: "There's no boundaries here. There's nothing on the table, there's nothing off the table."

For his part, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said he is willing to negotiate over the budget but only after the government is funded and the debt ceiling lifted.

"All we're asking is that government be reopened. Stop threatening a catastrophic default on the nation's bills," the Nevada Democrat said.

At the same time, Democrats controlling the Senate planned to move quickly toward a vote to allow the government to borrow more money by raising the statutory limit on the federal debt.

A spokesman said Reid could unveil the debt limit measure as early as Tuesday, setting the table for a test vote later in the week. The measure is expected to provide enough borrowing room to last beyond next year's election, which means it likely will permit $1 trillion or more in new borrowing above the current $16.7 trillion debt ceiling that the administration says will be hit on Oct. 17. It's not expected to include new spending cuts sought by Republicans.

GOP aides said that the House vote would set up a new bipartisan panel to negotiate reopening the government and avoiding a default, tied to legislation to make sure federal employees who are required to work during the partial shutdown get paid on time.

Those affected include families of service members killed in action. Survivors are typically sent a $100,000 payment within three days to help with costs such as funeral expenses. Because of the shutdown, the Defense Department doesn't have the authority to make the payments, officials said Monday, even though most of the department's civilian workers have been recalled.

Some 350,000 civilian Defense Department workers were summoned back to work Monday as the result of legislation Congress passed and Obama signed after the shutdown began. Many other agencies, such as NASA and the Environmental Protection Agency, remain mostly shuttered.

Even the White House is feeling the effects, with about 3 out of 4 staffers furloughed.

It's not clear whether Reid's gambit will work in the Senate. Republicans are expected to oppose the measure if it doesn't contain budget cuts to make a dent in deficits. The question is whether Republicans will try to hold up the measure with a filibuster. Such a showdown could unnerve the financial markets.

Until recently, debt limit increases have not been the target of filibusters; the first in memory came four years ago, when Democrats controlled the Senate with a filibuster-proof 60 votes.

Many Republicans in the Senate, including Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and Whip John Cornyn of Texas, have voted for so-called clean debt limit increases during Republican administrations.

Some Republicans seemed wary of participating in a filibuster that could rattle the stock and bond markets.

"We shouldn't be dismissing anything out of hand, whether it's the debt ceiling or what we're going to do with this government shutdown," Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, said. "We've got a situation where you've got a calendar running, you've got people who are frustrated and upset, so let's figure it out."

The impasse over the shutdown ? sparked by House Republicans' insistence that a temporary funding bill contain concessions on Obama's health care law ? shows no signs of breaking, as each side sticks to its guns and repeats its talking points.

Democrats from Obama on down to the most junior lawmakers said again that the House should vote immediately on ending the partial closure of the government. Obama said that Boehner "doesn't apparently want to see the ... shutdown end at the moment, unless he's able to extract concessions that don't have anything to do with the budget."

Boehner, in rebuttal Monday, called on Obama to agree to negotiations on changes in "Obamacare" and steps to curb deficits, the principal GOP demands for ending the shutdown that began with the Oct. 1 beginning of the new fiscal year, and eliminating the threat of default. "Really, Mr. President. It's time to have that conversation before our economy is put further at risk," Boehner said on the House floor.

The White House has said repeatedly the president will not negotiate with Republicans until the government is fully reopened and the debt limit has been raised. But it hasn't said the debt limit measure has to be completely "clean" of add-ons.

White House aide Jason Furman told reporters the White House could accept some add-ons if Boehner "needs to have some talking point for his caucus that's consistent with us not negotiating ... that's not adding a bunch of extraneous conditions." Another White House official, Gene Sperling, said the administration could be open to an interim, short-term debt limit extension to prevent a catastrophic default.

Republicans were sticking with a strategy of trying to pin the blame for the shutdown on Obama for being unwilling to negotiate. The House also passed legislation Monday to reopen the Food and Drug Administration, the latest in a series of piecemeal funding bills to advance through the GOP-controlled chamber.

It's been commonly assumed that Republicans would suffer politically from the shutdown and the early polling data seems to bear that out.

A survey released Monday by The Washington Post and ABC News said disapproval of Republican handling of the budget showdown was measured at 70 percent, up from 63 percent a week earlier. Disapproval of Obama's role was statistically unchanged at 51 percent.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-boehner-no-talks-until-government-opens-161624563--finance.html

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Dodgers confident after routing Braves 13-6

Los Angeles Dodgers' Hanley Ramirez (13) reacts as third base coach Tim Wallach (29) watches, after Ramirez hit an RBI triple against the Atlanta Braves during the fourth inning in Game 3 of the National League division baseball series Sunday, Oct. 6, 2013, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Danny Moloshok)

Los Angeles Dodgers' Hanley Ramirez (13) reacts as third base coach Tim Wallach (29) watches, after Ramirez hit an RBI triple against the Atlanta Braves during the fourth inning in Game 3 of the National League division baseball series Sunday, Oct. 6, 2013, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Danny Moloshok)

Los Angeles Dodgers second baseman Mark Ellis, top, falls over Atlanta Braves' Chris Johnson after Johnson was forced at second during the third inning in Game 3 of the National League division baseball series Sunday, Oct. 6, 2013, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

Fans react as Los Angeles Dodgers left fielder Carl Crawford falls upside down over the rail after catching a foul ball hit by Atlanta Braves' Justin Upton during the seventh inning in Game 3 of the National League division baseball series Sunday, Oct. 6, 2013, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

Los Angeles Dodgers' Carl Crawford rounds the bases after he hit a three-run home run during the second inning in Game 3 of the National League division baseball series against the Atlanta Braves, Sunday, Oct. 6, 2013, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

Los Angeles Dodgers' Hanley Ramirez (13), right, celebrates with teammate Yasiel Puig, left, after Ramirez scored on a single hit by Dodgers' Adrian Gonzalez in the third inning of Game 3 of the National League division baseball series against the Atlanta Braves, Sunday, Oct. 6, 2013, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

(AP) ? The Dodgers clinched the NL West title on the road. They want to advance in the playoffs on their home turf and celebrate with their fans.

Los Angeles put itself in position to do just that on Monday night, taking a 2-1 lead over the Atlanta Braves into Game 4 of the National League division series.

"The good thing is that all of the hitters feel good about themselves and where they're at. That is a carry over," center fielder Skip Schumaker said. "Confidence is huge. Hitting is contagious and it's all about confidence."

Every starting position player except Mark Ellis had a hit in the Dodgers' 13-6 victory on Sunday night, and he scored one of their runs that tied a franchise record for a postseason game. Brooklyn beat the New York Yankees 13-8 in Game 2 of the 1956 World Series.

"We want to win it in front of our fans at home," Ellis said. "We want to end it."

The Dodgers will start Ricky Nolasco against veteran Freddy Garcia.

"I've got to face a powerful team, powerful lineup," Garcia said.

The Dodgers flexed their offensive muscle by pounding out 14 hits, with much of the production coming off the bats of their big-name talent.

Carl Crawford hit a three-run homer, Juan Uribe added a two-run shot, and Hanley Ramirez and Yasiel Puig each had three hits and scored three times.

Ramirez tied a Dodgers record for most extra-base hits in a postseason series with six. He's 7 for 13 with four doubles, a triple, a homer and the six RBIs through his first three playoff games in his ninth major league season.

"At the plate, right now I'm not thinking," Ramirez said. "I'm just looking at the ball and hit it, whatever the pitch is. It's an unbelievable feeling when it's just less thinking, just produce. Go out there and have fun and play hard."

After losing 4-3 in Game 2 to let the Braves even the series, the Dodgers returned to the offensive form they showed during a 6-1 victory in the opener on the road.

"Guys were unhappy with the way they played, so we wanted to get back to playing the way we did the first game," Crawford said. "We knew it was going to be at home in front of our home crowd, and we were going to have some extra energy for that. Hopefully, we can like wrap it up while we're here at home."

Crawford made the play of the game Sunday when he tumbled head over heels to catch an eighth-inning foul ball at the low retaining wall in left field. The speedy leadoff man also scored three times, including once in the eighth when the Dodgers made it 13-4.

"I'm fine. I landed in a way it didn't hurt," he said. "I didn't think the ball was going to go into the stands. It kept floating and I didn't see the wall coming. I felt myself flipping over. Good thing is I held onto the ball, so that's all that matters."

Chris Capuano won in relief of ineffective rookie Hyun-Jin Ryu. He struck out three and walked three in three hitless innings.

"We're trying to keep it loose in here but we're really focused right now," Capuano said.

The 13 runs allowed by the Braves equaled the most in club history for a postseason game.

Atlanta starter Julio Teheran took the loss, giving up six runs and eight hits in 2 2-3 innings.

"He just left some balls out over the plate and made some mistakes," Braves manager Fredi Gonzalez said. "With this club, if you do that, you're going to look down at a gas tank with a lighted match."

Los Angeles rallied in the third to regain the lead for good after Atlanta tied it in the top of the inning. After that, the Braves didn't manage much besides Jason Heyward's two-run homer in the ninth.

Teheran and Ryu both made inauspicious postseason debuts in the first matchup of rookie pitchers in the playoffs since 2007.

In addition to being shaky on the mound, Ryu made two major mistakes in the field. He allowed four runs and six hits in three innings, becoming the first South Korean-born pitcher to start a postseason game in the major leagues.

Los Angeles extended its lead to 10-4 with four runs in the fourth. Ramirez had an RBI triple.

"I just kept telling him, 'I want the whole world to see how good you are,'" Dodgers manager Don Mattingly said. "It's been good so far."

Puig added an RBI single and Uribe followed with a two-run homer on the first pitch he saw from reliever Alex Wood.

"With two outs there, if we get out of that inning, it's a whole different ballgame," Braves catcher Brian McCann said. "But it just didn't turn out the way we wanted. Carl hit a slider that hung up a little bit more than we wanted and he put a good swing on it."

The Dodgers regained the lead 6-4 in the third on RBI singles by Adrian Gonzalez and Schumaker.

Atlanta tied it 4-all with two runs in the third after loading the bases with nobody out.

The Dodgers scored four times in the second to take a 4-2 lead, highlighted by Crawford's three-run homer with two outs.

NOTES: Ryu's sacrifice fly in the second was the first postseason RBI by a Dodgers pitcher since Orel Hershiser on Oct. 16, 1988, in Game 2 of the World Series. ... Dodgers C A.J. Ellis got hit on the left elbow by a pitch from hard-throwing Jordan Walden in the eighth, but stayed in the game. Ellis had X-rays after the game and said he felt fine. ... Capuano's only other major league win in relief came on Aug. 20, 2010, for Milwaukee. ... It was the first time in Teheran and Ryu's careers as starters that their pitching lines had more runs than innings.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-10-07-BBN-NLDS-Braves-Dodgers-Folo/id-798c8aa7ac2a49b2b55e673922b29877

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Friday, October 4, 2013

Listen Up: Energy Storage Everywhere (The Energy Show on Renewable Energy World/RenewableEnergyWorld.com)

image: RenewableEnergyWorld.com

Just try to count the batteries that you use every day ? I bet you use over a dozen battery-operated devices by lunchtime. They have become so ubiquitous that our civilization would grind to a halt if we didn't have these portable forms of power.

Source: http://www.techinvestornews.com/Green/Latest-Green-Tech-News/listen-up-energy-storage-everywhere

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Blaming, shaming ? but still no way out: Nobody?s giving an inch, leading to darkening fears about debt-limit deadline

WASHINGTON ? President Barack Obama laid the blame for the government?s partial shutdown at the feet of House Speaker John Boehner, escalating a government-shutdown confrontation that was leading headlong into a potentially more damaging clash over the nation?s borrowing?authority.

Speaking at a construction company in Washington?s Maryland suburbs today, Obama cast Boehner as a captive of a small band of conservative Republicans who want to extract concessions in exchange for passing a short term spending bill that would restart the partially shuttered?government.

?The only thing preventing people from going back to work and basic research starting back up and farmers and small business owners getting their loans, the only thing that is preventing all that from happening right now, today, in the next five minutes is that Speaker John Boehner won?t even let the bill get a yes or no vote because he doesn?t want to anger the extremists in his party,? Obama?said.

The dispute over the shutdown deepened worries about a bigger problem rumbling ever closer ? a mid-October deadline for increasing the government?s borrowing limit before it runs out of money to pay creditors. The U.S. Treasury warned today that failure to raise that debt ceiling could spark a new recession even worse than the one Americans are still recovering?from.

?The president remains hopeful that common sense will prevail,? the White House said in a written statement after an unproductive meeting at the White House about the political standoff that has idled 800,000 federal workers and halted an array of services Americans expect from their?government.

Boehner, R-Ohio, complained to reporters that Obama had used the meeting simply to declare anew that he won?t negotiate over his health care?law.

House Republicans, pushed by a core of tea party conservatives, are insisting that Obama accept changes to the health care law he pushed through Congress three years ago as part of the price for reopening all of government. Obama refuses to consider any deal linking the health care law to routine legislation needed to extend government funding or to raise the nation?s debt?limit.

?We?re probably through negotiating with ourselves,? Rep. Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, said on?MSNBC.

Republicans who initially sought to defund the health care law in exchange for funding the rest of government have gradually scaled back their demands but say they need some sort of offer from?Obama.

Expressing frustration after the White House meeting, Boehner said: ?All we?re asking for here is a discussion and fairness for the American people under?Obamacare.?

The White House said Obama would be happy to talk about health care ? but only after Congress moves to reopen the government ?and stop the harm this shutdown is causing to the economy and families across the?country.?

If the shutdown dispute persists it could become entangled with the even more consequential battle over the debt limit. The Obama administration has said Congress must renew the government?s authority to borrow money by Oct. 17 or risk a first-ever federal default, which many economists say would dangerously jangle the world?economy.

Treasury?s report today said defaulting on the nation?s debts could cause the nation?s credit markets to freeze, the value of the dollar to plummet and U.S. interest rates to?skyrocket.

The shutdown stalemate is already rattling investors. Stock markets in the U.S. and overseas faded Wednesday, and Europe?s top central banker, Mario Draghi, called the shutdown ?a risk if protracted.? Leading financial executives met with Obama, and one, Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein, said politicians should not use a potential default ?as a?cudgel.?

Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill said the House could easily defuse the worsening?situation.

?Get us through this six weeks and then let?s sit down and figure out how we pay our debts and bring down federal spending,? McCaskill of Missouri, said on?MSNBC.

Republicans planned to continue pursuing their latest strategy: muscling bills through the House that would restart some popular?programs.

Votes were on tap for restoring funds for veterans and paying members of the National Guard and Reserves. On Wednesday, the chamber voted to finance the national parks and biomedical research and let the District of Columbia?s municipal government spend federally controlled?dollars.

Democrats demanded that the entire government be reopened, and the White House and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., made clear that the GOP?s narrower bills have no chance of survival. They said the strategy showed that Republicans were buckling under public pressure, with Rep. Louise Slaughter, D-N.Y., saying groups like veterans were being ?used as a pawn in this cynical political?game.?

Republicans countered that Democrats were being inflexible and were to blame for the continued closure of programs the GOP was trying to reopen. A favorite target was Reid, who has made clear that the Senate will be a graveyard for the Republican?effort.

?The Senate?s refusal to work with the House is an all-time low,? Rep. Trey Radel, R-Fla.,?said.

Reid told reporters that Obama and Democrats are ?locked in tight? on not diluting the health care?law.

Source: http://www.wenatcheeworld.com/news/2013/oct/03/blaming-shaming-but-still-no-way-out-nobodys-giving-an-inch-leading-to-darkening-fears-about-debt-limit-deadline/

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Tom Clancy's Legacy: The Military-Entertainment Complex

Tom Clancy's expertise was contagious. He knew how sonar could be defeated, how rubber bullets could kill, how the Secret Service could respond to a passenger jet nose-diving into the Capitol building, and myriad other ways the United States government could and likely would respond to threats at home and abroad. He knew all of this with a chilling degree of accuracy. And if you read Clancy's novels, you knew it, too.

The best-selling author, who died Tuesday night in a Baltimore hospital, wrote tales of derring-do. But his cinema-ready heroes and villains employed startlingly realistic tools and protocols. Did you know that the U.S. Air Force developed missiles that could be fired from an F-15 to take down a satellite? Or that rounds from a submachine gun could punch through a car frame as easily as fingers through rice paper? I certainly didn't, and neither did millions of other readers in the 1980's, during Clancy's pre-internet heyday. Back then, the mechanics of death and mayhem, on scales both tactical and strategic, weren't at anyone's fingertips. They were locked away in hardcopy textbooks, encyclopedias, and war games. In fact, Clancy famously simulated the naval maneuvers in his first two novels, The Hunt for Red October (1984) and Red Storm Rising (1986) using the paper maps and cardboard counters of the war game Harpoon.

Why does it matter that Clancy workshopped best-selling novels by sitting around a table with friends, pushing fake fleets and squadrons across make-believe warzones in the military dork's equivalent of Dungeons and Dragons? Because Harpoon, which was developed by civilians, is still used to this day by Navy instructors to train officer cadets. Its numerical models of both American and then-Soviet vehicles and weapon systems were so detailed that, as legend has it, the Department of Defense paid a none-too-friendly visit to Harpoon's creator, Larry Bond (who co-wrote Red Storm Rising with Clancy), demanding to see his classified materials, only to find that Bond had culled all the information from non-classified sources. Apocryphal or not, that is Harpoon's legacy?a naval simulation so good, it borders on illegal.

That's where military expertise used to reside: In the military itself, and in brilliant games that no one in the mainstream had ever heard of, much less played. Tom Clancy put an end to that. He sold millions of books, which were adapted into blockbuster movies. And even if Hollywood took some shortcuts, that air of realism and convincing interplay of military and espionage assets often made it to the screen. Clancy's complex depictions of the modern art of war were shocking, especially compared to James Bond's campy super-gadgets, and Stallone and Schwarzenegger's bulging, cartoonish action heroism.

And ultimately, Clancy won. Today's movie heroes, on the whole, don't mow down entire gangs and battalions with hip-fired machine guns or spin-kick their way out of a jam. Actors move from cover to cover, firing smooth and steady, just the way their special forces consultants trained them. They fight quick and dirty up close. They paint targets with lasers for drone-launched Hellfire missiles or request airstrikes from the AC-130 gunship circling overhead. There are exceptions, naturally. But most Hollywood action now has the look and feel of military action.

That's Clancy's legacy, or part of it. While he didn't invent the techno-thriller, he spread its themes and sensibilities throughout our culture. And like the most powerful contagions, the author's contribution mutated. He brought the hard-nosed military content and perspectives of techno-thrillers to video games, with franchises that bore his name such as Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon. Though Clancy's licensed shooters are now eclipsed in sales by the likes of Call of Duty, the military first-person-shooter owes him a great debt. The use of real weapons, and the attempts to model their mechanics?including their range, rate of fire, recoil, and even their ability to penetrate walls, doors, or other features?are Clancy's legacy too. But so are the legions of teens playing soldier on Xbox Live, the online commenters who chillingly respond to stories of America's increasingly common mass shootings with exasperation that the killer used an AR-15 as opposed to a larger-caliber Kalashnikov, or the face-palming disbelief at the shoddy marksmanship of local sheriffs seemingly spraying rounds at a barricaded suspect. Everyone is an expert in military tactics now.

What Clancy curated so expertly, and shared so thrillingly, was privileged information. He showed us weapons as they are, and warriors as they use them, at a time when knowledge of that kind wasn't easily known. That he changed our culture is clear. That it's for the better remains to be seen.

Source: http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/military/weapons/tom-clancys-legacy-the-military-entertainment-complex-15995880?src=rss

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Thursday, October 3, 2013

iOS 7 Removed iPad Safety Features, Schools Say

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iPad mini - iOS 7 - In Hand

The iPad is an obvious education tool around the globe, though to make it useful schools often need to apply software that prevents students from accessing unwanted and unneeded content. Unfortunately, however, a new report from?AllThingsD?suggests that Apple?s latest iOS 7 release for iPads has totally removed the safety software.

?Apple did not realize that installing iOS 7 would remove our safety protection measure, which now makes the iPad devices unfiltered when accessing the Internet away from school,? one school district said in a note sent to?AllThingsD.?As a result, this particular school district has decided to recall all of the iPads issued to students and will now have to manually re-install the software on each iPad. What a headache.

Apple already responded to the issue and said that it?s aware of the security that?s being removed with the iOS 7 update and that it plans to release a fix sometime this month that prevents the occurrence in the future. We wonder if this is partially the reason that the Los Angeles Unified School district stopped rolling out 640,000 iPads to students ? the initiative was halted after students started bypassing security restrictions.

Source: http://technobuffalo.com.feedsportal.com/c/35293/f/658062/s/320555a0/sc/15/l/0L0Stechnobuffalo0N0C20A130C10A0C0A30Cios0E70Eremoved0Eipad0Esafety0Efeatures0Eschools0Esay0C/story01.htm

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Video: Republicans cannot sustain this: Former Congressman

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Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/53161367/

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