Tag Archives: Pelosi

The Current #137

The Current #137
Hosts: Jacob Bodnar and Logan Sparrow

Topics (bolded topics are available as separate audio segments below): Obama/Cheney spar on torture and Gitmo, Pentagon report shows 1 in 7 Gitmo detainees went back to terrorism, Pelosi stonewalls question on CIA comments, lawmakers divided on whether Pelosi knew or not, 12 of 16 Congressmen under investigation are democrats, US close to losing AAA rating, Obama says we’re running out of money, GM to head into bankruptcy, Obama’s new fuel standards, Republicans happier than Democrats, Gaffama of the week, Paid Vacation act introduced, and Woman hand cuffed and fined for not holding escalator rail.

The word of the week is Torture…and Gitmo
Barack Obama and former Vice President Dick Cheney had competing speeches this week about torture and Guantanamo Bay. Both speeches were opposite of each other. Obama said that torture didn’t work and we need to shut down Gitmo, Cheney said torture worked and Gitmo needs to remain open. What specifically did each have to say, and who’s right?
[audio:http://www.thecurrentpodcast.com/episodes/segments/obama_cheney137.mp3]

We’re out of Money but don’t worry I’m Spending More
It was released this week that the United States is dangerously close to losing it’s AAA rating. Secretary of Treasury Timothy Geithner has correctly said we need to lower the deficit, but he didn’t mention spending cuts just “policies” that need to be adjusted. Could he be talking tax increases? Probably. Also, Obama said this week we’ve run out of money and then tried to defend spending billions more on health care. Listen to how he’s trying to deceive the public about our debt.
[audio:http://www.thecurrentpodcast.com/episodes/segments/deficit_spending137.mp3]

The Real Criminals
Ya know the handrails on escalators, who really uses those? Well apparently if you’re in Montreal, Canada and you don’t use them you can be fined upwards of $100. Just ask Bela Kosoian, she wasn’t just fined $100 she was placed in a “small holding cell” as well. All for not holding the rail.
[audio:http://www.thecurrentpodcast.com/episodes/segments/escalator_fine137.mp3]

You’ll hear all those topic and much more in the full episode.

FULL EPISODE
[audio:http://www.thecurrentpodcast.com/episodes/thecurrentep137_96.mp3]

DOWNLOAD
64kbps | 96kbps

Subscribe in iTunes

Subscribe via RSS

Links to Stories

The Bodcast #25

Heads up to all, I’ll be doing a live episode of The Bodcast every Friday at 8pm from now on. The show will be broadcast live on UStream every Friday.

Here is the replay from Friday May 22, 2009, a high quality audio version is available below the video.

Video Version

Audio Version
[audio:http://www.thecurrentpodcast.com/bodcast/audio/bodcast_25.mp3]

–jb

The Current #135

The Current #135
Monday May 11, 2009
Hosts: Jacob Bodnar, Logan Sparrow, and Nick Turosky

How is 0.5% Amazing?
Obama announced the details of his budget this week, and surprise, it doesn’t have many cuts. The self proclaimed king of fiscal discipline managed to slash only $17 billion, or 0.5% of this year’s deficit. The Obama administration has touted it as a “new era of fiscal discipline,” Jacob, Logan and Nick describe it more as good intentions falling short…way short.
[audio:http://www.thecurrentpodcast.com/episodes/segments/obama_budget135.mp3]

Russia shows off its Military
To celebrate the 64th anniversary of the defeat of Hitler, Russia decided to hold a big parade in which their missiles and military men were walked around the Red Square. It was Russia’s reminder to the world that no one screws with them. Why is Russia so concerned that someone might screw with them? Do they have something to hide? Jacob, Logan, and Nick discuss the move.
[audio:http://www.thecurrentpodcast.com/episodes/segments/russia135.mp3]

Oprah be Crazy
Yes, Oprah can be a little insane at times. Whether it’s the drawn out screams of free prizes or the rapid fluctuations in weight, Oprah has been known to make headlines for her craziness. But this time she’s taken it over-the-top. She’s already proclaimed Michelle Obama the “greatest first lady we’ve ever known.” Really Oprah? Have you already forgotten about Eleanor Roosevelt and Nancy Reagan?
[audio:http://www.thecurrentpodcast.com/episodes/segments/oprah_michelle135.mp3]

FULL EPISODE
[audio:http://www.thecurrentpodcast.com/episodes/thecurrentep135_96.mp3]

DOWNLOAD
64kbps | 96kbps

Subscribe in iTunes

Subscribe via RSS

Links to Stories

Daily Chew: April 23, 2009

I was looking through my blog archives last night and noticed that I hadn’t done a daily chew post in awhile. I decided I’m going to bring it back every evening with the top three stories from the day.

Pelosi not being entirely honest about waterboarding knowledge
There’s been a lot of press today about torture. First, a private memo circulated by Obama’s national intelligence chief, admitted that “enhanced interrogation methods” actually worked. The other news is that there was a select group of congressmen that were briefed on the subject of torture and what the Bush administration was doing, or going to do, to intimidate inmates.

Apparently Nancy Pelosi was one of those briefed on waterboarding, yet today she denied it.

“In that or any other briefing…we were not, and I repeat, were not told that waterboarding or any of these other enhanced interrogation techniques were used. What they did tell us is that they had some legislative counsel … opinions that they could be used,” she told reporters today.

Pelosi is fairly confident that she wasn’t briefed. However, The Washington Post reports a different story:

In September 2002, four members of Congress met in secret for a first look at a unique CIA program designed to wring vital information from reticent terrorism suspects in U.S. custody. For more than an hour, the bipartisan group, which included current House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), was given a virtual tour of the CIA’s overseas detention sites and the harsh techniques interrogators had devised to try to make their prisoners talk.

So Pelosi was part of this briefing. Pelosi has responded basically by saying that she was briefed but didn’t know that the techniques would be used, or didn’t know how they would be used, or something like that.

On one occasion, in the fall of 2002, I was briefed on interrogation techniques the Administration was considering using in the future. The Administration advised that legal counsel for the both the CIA and the Department of Justice had concluded that the techniques were legal.

Either way, Pelosi knew about waterboarding, at the very least that it was being considered, didn’t say anything, despite her complete objection to it now, and then lied about knowing about it when someone questioned her. That’s a great speaker we have.

When Will Meghan McCain go away?
Meghan McCain is like the black plague right now. I say that for two reasons. One, she always wears black, who the hell does she think she is, Ann Coulter? Number two, she’s popping up everywhere and slowly killing her relationship with other republicans.

Here she is on “The View” the other day.

She thinks that Karl Rove following her on Twitter is weird? Does she understand the concept of Twitter? There are plenty of people that I don’t know that follow me, and last I checked Meghan was over 1,000 followers, maybe even 2,000, she obviously doesn’t know them all. She tries to paint her self as the “new face” of the republican party, of course the party’s top strategist would want to follow her.

She then says that Karl Rove and Dick Cheney “had their eight years” and then tells them to “go away.” Hey Meghan McCain, you had your fifteen minutes, I think it’s time to start listening to your own advice. Please, go away.

U.S. is said to be prepping Chrysler for bankruptcy
This story will make you pull your hair out, and then lock your wallet in a safe.

The Treasury Department is directing Chrysler to prepare a Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing that could come as soon as next week, people with direct knowledge of the action said Thursday.

Gee, I’m so glad we gave Chrysler and GM billions of dollars back in December so they could get back on their feet and “avoid bankruptcy.” If the government screwing up the auto industry doesn’t drain the rest of your confidence in Washington I don’t know what will.

Of course simply filing for bankruptcy doesn’t solve the problem. Chrysler still needs to negotiate with creditors to wave off some of the company’s debt. The latest offer from Chrysler was 22 cents on the dollar.

The Treasury Department has made an agreement with the UAW that their retirees health care and pension benefits would be protected under bankruptcy, which may or may not be a good thing, after all the legacy costs of employees help put the automakers into a financial blunder, you’d think they would want to renegotiate some of the those benefits to avoid this in the future.

–jb

The Current #131

The Current #131
Friday April 10, 2009 (taped Thursday April 9)
Hosts: Jacob Bodnar, Louie Glinzak, and Don Higgins

Path to Citizenship
Despite the collapse of our economy, Obama has decided to make it his “number one” priority to fix the immigration system. Don’t get us wrong, we like the idea of fixing immigration, but giving illegals a path to citizenship isn’t really what we would define as “fixing.” How about we secure the border first.
[audio:http://www.thecurrentpodcast.com/episodes/segments/obama_immigration131.mp3]

Terrorism is now “Man-Caused Disaster”
Janet Napolitano, the Homeland Security Secretary, has decided that she doesn’t like the word “terrorism,” it’s just too fearful. Instead she prefers “man-caused disaster.” Jacob, Louie, and Don discuss what exactly that means, and Jacob offers up an even more politically correct alternative.
[audio:http://www.thecurrentpodcast.com/episodes/segments/man_caused_disaster131.mp3]

10,000 Text Messages
Believe it or not a Wyoming girl managed to send 10,000 text messages in a month, that’s 333 texts a day. Her father decided to go to town on her cell phone with a hammer and grounded her for the rest of the school year. I guess after seeing the $4,000 phone bill he was slightly peeved. The panel talks about what they would do in the dad’s situation, and they manage to poke fun at Wyoming at the same time.
[audio:http://www.thecurrentpodcast.com/episodes/segments/text_message131.mp3]

Spotlight Interview: Drew Jurgensen
This week we took a different route with our spotlight interview, we talked to an average college student. Drew Jurgensen joined Jacob to talk health care, gay marriage, and Obama’s Eurotrip (by the way Drew’s a liberal). Drew will be a co-host on Jacob and Jacob with Drew, a new sports show premiering in May.
[audio:http://www.thecurrentpodcast.com/episodes/segments/drew_interview.mp3]

FULL EPISODE
[audio:http://www.thecurrentpodcast.com/episodes/thecurrentep131_96.mp3]

DOWNLOAD
64kbps | 96kbps

Subscribe in iTunes

Subscribe via RSS

Links to Stories

The Current #129

The Current #129
Saturday March 21, 2009
Hosts: Jacob Bodnar and Logan Sparrow

Outrageously outraged at the AIG Bonuses
Outrage was the word this week on Capitol Hill after it was revealed that AIG gave $165 million in bonuses to top executives. Obama, Barney Frank, and Geithner were all in on the outrage-fest, but who knew what when? Was this burst of outrage just a little too late? Jacob and Logan breakdown the timeline.
[audio:http://www.thecurrentpodcast.com/episodes/segments/aig_129.mp3]

12 Zeros in a Trillion
What would you buy with $9.3 trillion? According to the Congressional Budget Office, that’s how much debt Obama’s budget proposals would rack up in the next 10 years. In a discussion that ranges from flying chairs and plasma TV’s to Disney character’s super powers, Jacob and Logan discuss our massive debt.
[audio:http://www.thecurrentpodcast.com/episodes/segments/trillion_129.mp3]

“Not Evil, Just Wrong” Full Interview
The Current Spotlight interview this week featured Phelim McAleer, the director of the new film “Not Evil, Just Wrong.” The film looks at the true cost of global warming hysteria. Episode 129 features a seven-minute segment of the interview, the full interview is below.
[audio:http://www.thecurrentpodcast.com/episodes/segments/phelim_interview_full.mp3]

Champion Cheeses and NCAA
Believe it or not there is a cheese competition in the United States that crowns the best cheese. Who knew? Even more striking, the last two times Wisconsin has failed to bring home the award. Luckily for the cheese heads, that streak was broken this year. Also in this clip Jacob and Logan discuss their NCAA Tournament bracket pool and who’s going to come out on top.
[audio:http://www.thecurrentpodcast.com/episodes/segments/cheese_129.mp3]

FULL EPISODE
[audio:http://www.thecurrentpodcast.com/episodes/thecurrentep129_96.mp3]

DOWNLOAD
64kbps | 96kbps

SUBSCRIBE (ITUNES)

SUBSCRIBE (RSS)

LINKS TO STORIES

A Quick Lesson in Media Economics

Our lawmakers in Washington simply don’t understand media economics.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is urging the Justice Department to allow certain mergers to go through, basically change the rules, to make sure that newspapers don’t go under.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, worried about the fate of The Chronicle and other financially struggling newspapers, urged the Justice Department Monday to consider giving Bay Area papers more leeway to merge or consolidate business operations to stay afloat.

I guess just Bay Area papers have competition from different media outlets. But apparently Pelosi is worried about newspapers all over the country going out of business, I guess she thinks there will be no one left to report the news.

“We must ensure that our policies enable our news organizations to survive and to engage in the news gathering and analysis that the American people expect,” Pelosi wrote.

The speaker said the issue of newspapers’ survival and antitrust law will be the subject of a hearing soon before the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Courts and Competition Policy, chaired by Rep. Hank Johnson, D-Ga.

For Pelosi and all the democrats allow me to explain this phenomenon in the newspaper industry. It’s called convergence, it’s a real term, used by real media people, and it’s really what’s happening to the newspaper industry.

See, I don’t think that Pelosi, or many congressmen for that matter, really understand the internet and fully grasp the way the economy is adjusting in the digital age. The fact that they don’t get it is scary, because they think that newspapers going under is a terrible event, when in reality it’s natural and regardless of what they do, it will happen.

Let me begin by explaining convergence. Put simply convergence is the transition from old media (newspapers) to new media (the internet). In this instance convergence is happening in two ways; one, newspapers are moving exclusively to the internet, and two, newspapers are moving part of their business to the internet. Step one in this process was moving part of their business to the internet, every major newspaper has a website and posts all of their print content on their website. The second step is moving all of their content on their website and doing away with the print edition.

This is the step that lawmakers don’t understand. They can’t fathom a world without a physical newspaper to read. For older generations it’ll be an adjustment, but for younger generations it’s going to be the norm.

There’s really one big reason why newspapers want to move exclusively to the web; cost. It’s costly to operate a website and a print edition, so newspapers are faced with a decision to drop one, and because printing a paper cost more than posting an article on a website, the print edition gets the boot. Not to mention it’s easier to sell advertisements on a website for a variety of reasons, mainly because you can rotate through multiple ads in one spot and the user can literally click the ad and go to the advertisers website.

For newspapers if they have to choose between being exclusively online or exclusively in print it’s an easy decision. Your content has much more potential online because there’s no geographical boundaries holding it back. With print, a newspaper is limited to a particular geographical area, and if you want to expand your area it costs a significant amount of money. When content is online it doesn’t matter where the reader is at; the newspaper will pay the same price.

The lack of geographical boundaries is not only appealing for the company, but also for the advertiser. When content is on the internet it has a further reach than simply in print, readership also has a greater chance of expansion online than in print.

To inject some media economics jargon, when newspapers post exclusively online their first copy costs are significantly reduced. Basically it costs them a lot less to produce the first copy of an article to go online than to go in print. Even better for newspapers their marginal cost is significantly reduced as well. When you print a newspaper the company has to pay a large sum of money to print the physical paper, thus increasing readership and circulation costs the company more. But when the content is online there’s no cost difference between 1,000 readers and a million readers.

So ya see lawmakers, convergence is a really easy concept. Now you can probably see why newspapers are folding. It’s not because their liberal (that’s what Bill O’Reilly wants you to think), it’s because the market is demanding it, and it simply makes more sense for their bottom lines to switch their content exclusively online.

Pelosi can do all see wants to stop it, but in this economic climate she’s simply delaying the inevitable.

–jb

The Current #128

The Current #128
March 14, 2009
Hosts: Jacob Bodnar and Logan Sparrow

A Second Stimulus? Believe it
Believe it or not, I choose not to, Nancy Pelosi and the democrats have said they’re open to the idea of a second stimulus. Although they say the effectiveness of the first stimulus needs to be taken into account when determining the size of the second. So it’s no longer a question of if there will be a second, but rather when. Jacob and Logan discuss the insanity.
[audio:http://www.thecurrentpodcast.com/episodes/segments/second_stimulus_128.mp3]

It Ain’t Your Money to Spend
A new segment was inaugurated on the show this week, The Current Spotlight Interview. This week Jacob interviewed Kathleen Stewart and Steve Jones. Stewart and Jones teamed up to create a song protesting the stimulus and bailouts titled, “It Ain’t Your Money to Spend.” You can listen to the song here.
[audio:http://www.thecurrentpodcast.com/episodes/segments/spotlight_128.mp3]

Fly Away Pelosi
It was 2007 when Nancy Pelosi was accused of asking for a bigger jet. She denied the allegations but Judicial Watch submitted a FOIA request to see if she was being truthful. Surprise, she wasn’t, but there was a lot more plane business the group uncovered.
[audio:http://www.thecurrentpodcast.com/episodes/segments/pelosi_plane_128.mp3]

Taliban Diplomacy
How exactly do you “talk” with the enemy that you admit is winning? That’s the exact question Jacob asked when it was announced this week that Obama was interested in “talking” with the “moderate” Taliban. This despite the fact that both himself and Joe Biden admit the U.S. is losing in Afghanistan.
[audio:http://www.thecurrentpodcast.com/episodes/segments/obama_taliban_128.mp3]

FULL EPISODE
[audio:http://www.thecurrentpodcast.com/episodes/thecurrentep128_96.mp3]

DOWNLOAD
64kbps | 96kbps

SUBSCRIBE (ITUNES)

SUBSCRIBE (RSS)

LINKS TO STORIES

Pelosi Gets a Jump on the Census

UPDATE: Mitch McConnell, the Senate minority leader, was just on the floor of the Senate speaking about the stimulus package. He made a good point; the stimulus package spends $1.3 million for each job it creates. There’s got to be a cheaper way to create jobs.

Being the Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi must get insider information on the latest census data. After all, she knows there are at least 500 million+ people living in the United States.

On to real news.

Obama is expected to announce this morning a plan to cap the salaries of CEO’s who receive money from the TARP program.

Later this morning the White House and Treasury Department will announce new restrictions on executive compensation on financial institutions receiving government funds.

The executive compensation limits will sit at $500,000. It only applies to banks receiving “exceptional” TARP funds, those taking in general TARP money can wave the restriction.

You can probably guess that I don’t like this idea, basically because the government is intervening in something that it shouldn’t have to intervene in. If Obama and the rest of Washington is so teed off about TARP bank’s frivolous spending, then why do they continue to give them money? They’ve authorized two rounds of TARP spending and they’re considering a third. What lesson are you teaching them by continually funding their poor spending behaviors?

However, I will admit that I was pleased with one Obama move yesterday.

Packed into this massive stimulus bill, being debated by the Senate, is what’s called the “buy American provision.” Basically it forces all infrastructure projects to purchase their steel from U.S. companies, and no one else.

Obama’s Press Secretary Robert Gibbs had said earlier in the week that Obama was undecided on the provision, and that after pressure from the EU and Canada, he may drop it.

Well that time has come.

The EU threatened to retaliate if the US Congress went ahead with sweeping measures in its $800 billion (£554 billion) stimulus plan to restrict spending to American goods and services…

…“I agree that we can’t send a protectionist message,” he said in an interview with Fox TV. “I want to see what kind of language we can work on this issue. I think it would be a mistake, though, at a time when worldwide trade is declining, for us to start sending a message that somehow we’re just looking after ourselves and not concerned with world trade.”

That’s good news, I’m happy he came down on that side of the issue. The main problem with the “buy American” provision is that it would make infrastructure projects more costly. Sure it would create jobs and help the steel industry, but they would have to up their prices to pay for the increased labor. Simple supply and demand would force them to increase their prices as well. If more people were buying from them, and those consumers had no where else to turn, they’d increase prices to increase profit.

In other news, Obama will visit House democrats today to begin preparations to cut some garbage in the stimulus bill. Of course the Senate is still debating, and still adding spending, to the bill, but Obama is holding ground on the February 16 deadline. If anything major breaks on that, I’ll keep ya posted.

–jb