Thursday, November 3, 2011

Chris Matthews dishes on his new Kennedy book and Obama (Reuters)

NEW YORK (TheWrap.com) ? Does Barack Obama have a JFK problem?

When Obama swept into the Oval Office back in 2008, just about everyone compared him to that other senator-turned-president with a cadre of young followers.

Almost three years into Obama's presidency, one doesn't hear many of those comparisons anymore. Most questions revolve around whether he can defeat whichever uninspiring GOP candidate gets the nomination.

With another election cycle in the hopper, who better to discuss both Commanders-in-Chief than Chris Matthews, a former speechwriter for Jimmy Carter, D.C. bureau chief for the San Francisco Examiner and current host of MSNBC's "Hardball With Chris Matthews."

Matthews already wrote one book on Kennedy's relationship with Richard Nixon, and on Tuesday he will release another book on the 35th President, a biography titled "Jack Kennedy: Elusive Hero."

TheWrap talked with Matthews about the Kennedy myth, the Obama's Kennedy problem and the 2012 presidential race.

In his last campaign, there were endless comparisons between Obama and Kennedy. Are those still apt?

Obama's personal touch is gone. You'll see. I personally think that's his deficit. His lack of personal rapport and connection and bond really with other politicians and the people. He doesn't' have what Jack Kennedy had, what Clinton had -- relationships with people in the country.

He doesn't have a relationship based on, "We're all in this together." It's: "Look how smart I am, look how good I am at this." Kennedy invited people in to help him share the Peace Corps and the special forces, to be part of winning the Cold War without a war. A Kennedy person was someone called to duty. You don't feel that today.

Speaking of personal touches, your book mentions the back story of how Kennedy won the Senate seat in 1952 by going to every corner of Massachusetts and developing all of those connections with both local politicians and everyday citizens. Is there space in politics for that now? Or is it all big fundraisers and social media?

There was a big piece by Scott Wilson in the Washington Post about how Obama doesn't like to hang out with politicians, how senators haven't gotten a call from him since the last election. That's terrible. Those politicians may not be people you or I would hang out with, but who chooses a career if you don't want to pursue it?

A lot of people have tried to change politics and make it virtual. He has a lot of young people out there social networking. I don't think that is the same as having allies. People emailing one another is not the same as allies.

Is there a remedy to all this for Obama? I just wrote a piece for Time where I give five pieces of advice for Obama from Jack and I end it by saying the chief reason he better start being more Kennedy-esque is he promised to be. He promised it, and he better deliver. He better be more Kennedy-esque in terms of optimism, and telling us what he'll do in a second term.

If he doesn't tell us what he'll do in second term, no one will vote for him. If this is about the past, it's in dispute. If it's about the present, he loses hands down. If it's about the future and he can make a case he'll be better than Romney or Cain because of experience, and the mistakes he made and learned from ... I wish he'd just tell me, if there was no Tea Party, no Eric Cantor, no Mitch McConnell, what would we he do to create jobs, reduce the debt.

Show us what you would do. Reagan did that. He would always say what he'd do if there were not Democrats around.

You say you are trying to focus people on history again. Of all the subjects from history you could choose, why Jack Kennedy, who has been written about so extensively?

Having read all the books myself, I was looking for the kind of insight you get from people who have first-hand long-term relationships with someone. The kinds of questions you put to somebody late at night, which I would do to people late at night, and with intensity.

What was he like in the room with you? I wanted to get that from people in school with him, people in the Navy with him. I wanted journalists because I trust them. I trust Ben Bradlee completely because of what he puts on paper. And Charlie Bartlett.

Although Jack was detached in many ways, you could catch him in the round. If you had 12 people looking at him, you could find him like a hologram in the middle of people. I'm tired of books where strangers are quoted.

You spend a great deal of time talking about his lifetime health problems. Why did you feel that should play such a large role?

Think about him growing up, his mom not visiting, thinking he has leukemia and the only person he could talk to about it was Lem Billings. All he had was this one guy to hang on for what looked to be a short life ahead. I think that was formative.

I was dreaming last night about God damn exams again at grad school. These things, they mark you. Imagine if normal people are still having exam dreams. Jack was always haunted by the leukemia threat. Three times he was read his last rites. I'm a Catholic, you're only given that at the abyss.

Do you think a politician today could get away with hiding such health problems?

No. The truth came out at the convention, Lyndon Johnson's guy John Connally brought it out and the Kennedys BS'd their way through it. Today I think the Kennedys would have to produce real doctors records, not that casual denial they got their doctor to write.

Has Romney already won the nomination?

By the pattern of every Republican election I've watched, yes. From 1952 to 2004, there have three names on the Republican ballot every year -- Nixon, Bush and Dole. It's a very predictable party. Reagan, Nixon, Bush, Dole -- they all won the nomination on a second or third try. McCain on his second try. By that definition, it goes to Romney.

However, this is a strange year, like 1964. This may be one of those odd years like '64 where they do something extraordinary and pick a Tea Party favorite like Herman Cain. The acid test will be South Carolina. If Cain wins Iowa and Romney wins New Hampshire, the acid test will be the white voters of South Carolina.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tv/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111031/stage_nm/us_books_chrismatthews

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Wednesday, November 2, 2011

AT&T's First LTE Phones Arrive November 6th [At&t]

The wait is almost over: AT&T is bringing the LTE ruckus with two new Android smartphones: the HTC Vivid and the Samsung Galaxy S II Skyrocket. They're very similar, but hey, forget specs for a minute: LTE, finally. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/NlWIkZjQk_Y/atts-first-lte-phones-arrive-november-6th

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A Game of "Assassination" On YOUR College Campus!

roleplay/college-royale-the-assassination-game/

RP Theme

Maybe you've played it in High School. Maybe you haven't.

But right now, you are a former High School Senior who has just enetered Daff College so you could get an education. What you don't realize is Daff is well known for its Guild of 'Assassin' players.

Assassin is a game which uses non-threatening "Weapons" like Spoons, or nerf guns to "Kill" Other players. It can last a long time, the amounts can be set, or lasting weeks. It is difficult to simply trust people, because that person that just gave you information on your target could very well be the target themselves, or a rival assassin out to get you.

Master Stealth, Practice Espionage, and engage in fierce combat situations to ensure you and your friends are the last ones standing in the end of the game...

Image

Image

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Character Sheet Requirements:

Name
Gender
Age
Appearance
History
Items
"Weapons"

Optional:

Quote(s)
Theme Song
Extra

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/NYvR2RC6Aac/viewtopic.php

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Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Italy's Berlusconi denies report of Sarkozy, Merkel meeting (Reuters)

ROME (Reuters) ? Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi denied as "entirely baseless" a report in the daily la Repubblica newspaper on Tuesday that he had held a special meeting with French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel after last week's summit meeting of European Union leaders.

He also denied reports that he planned to dismiss Economy Minister Giulio Tremonti, with whom he has had repeated disagreements in recent weeks.

La Repubblica reported that Berlusconi had said that he had held private meetings with Sarkozy and Merkel to create a "common front" to save the euro.

It also said he was counting on help from Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, with whom he has good relations, to help Italy deal with the mounting market turmoil that has sent its bond yields to record levels.

Berlusconi also denied that report.

(Reporting By James Mackenzie)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111101/wl_nm/us_italy_berlusconi

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BASF applies for EU approval for Fortuna GM potato

FRANKFURT | Mon Oct 31, 2011 10:50am EDT

FRANKFURT (Reuters) - BASF has applied for European Union approval for Fortuna, a potato genetically modified to resist a common plant disease, as the German chemicals company tries again to overcome resistance in the region to GM food.

The world's largest chemical maker by sales said on Monday it had asked for clearance for Fortuna, covering commercial cultivation and consumption by humans and animals.

In March 2010, BASF won European Commission approval for Amflora, another genetically modified potato, for commercial cultivation, marking the bloc's first GM cultivation approval in 12 years.

While Amflora was designed for industrial-starch production, Fortuna marks the first GM food plant BASF has sought to market in Europe, where consumers' opposition to such products remains widespread.

BASF said it expected market introduction in 2014 or 2015, even though it took BASF about 14 years to win clearance for Amflora. EU rules on the GM plant approval process have been streamlined since then, a company spokesman said.

The chemical maker is not publishing an annual peak sales assessment for the product for now, he added.

The company said its researchers made Fortuna resistant to late blight, the world's most damaging potato disease, which is caused by Phytophthora infestans, a fungi-like pathogen.

The plant disease, which was behind the mass starvation that ravaged Ireland in the 1840s, is cited by BASF as still causing the loss of up to 20 percent of the global potato harvest per year.

(Reporting by Ludwig Burger; Editing by Erica Billingham)

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/scienceNews/~3/YEcH5wGp1FM/us-basf-idUSTRE79U41Q20111031

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Thais hope flooded factories back up in 3 months (Reuters)

BANGKOK (Reuters) ? Thailand hopes industrial estates swamped in its worst floods in half a century can be up and running within three months, the prime minister said on Monday, as the center of the capital finally appeared to have escaped a similar fate.

Nearly 400 people have been killed in months of floods, the lives of more than two million disrupted, economic growth has been set back and global supply chains for Thai-made computer and auto parts thrown into disarray.

But inner Bangkok, protected by a network of dikes and sandbag walls, appeared to have escaped the deluge with peak tides on the Chao Phraya river due to pass on Monday and clear weather setting in.

While the city center remained dry with business mostly as usual, neighborhoods on the wrong side of the protective ring, especially to the north and west, and provinces to the north, have been swamped by deep, fetid flows.

The government is planning to spend 900 billion baht ($30 billion) on reconstruction, flood prevention and helping industry, a government minister said.

But in the mean time, anger is rising in hard-hit communities just as water is in some places as it makes its way toward the sea.

Tension has boiled over into skirmishes with police in some areas as villagers try to pull down flood barriers keeping water high in their communities but protecting the capital.

Saving inner Bangkok from disaster would be a major victory for the government of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra, a political novice who took over this year after an election that many Thais hoped would heal deep divisions.

Bangkok's 12 million people account for 41 percent of Thailand's gross domestic product.

Another economically vital region is just north of Bangkok, in particular Pathum Thani and Ayutthaya provinces, which have been largely inundated for weeks.

Seven industrial estates that have sprung up over the last decade or two on what used to be the central plain's rice fields have been overcome by the exceptionally large volumes of water flowing down the Chao Phraya basin.

Yingluck said it should take three months to rehabilitate the industrial estates where some foreign investors have built regional production hubs.

"We expect after the water recedes the industrial estates will recover within three months if we can release the water and recover the machinery quickly," Yingluck told reporters.

Thailand is the second-largest exporter of computer hard drives and global prices are rising because of a flood-related shortage of major components used in personal computers.

Yingluck said she had been in talks with Japanese investors and had assured them of steps to prevent a repeat of disaster from the annual rainy season.

"They are still confident to invest in Thailand but we have to invest in a long-term flood-protection plan," she said.

DANGER, DISEASE

Energy Minister Pichai Naripthaphan said the government expected a recovery plan would cost 900 billion baht ($30 billion), including 800 billion baht for an overhaul of the water-management system and 100 billion for the rehabilitation of industrial estates.

"Every crisis has an opportunity. We are studying how to rebuild the country's economy and competitiveness. We have studied models from several countries," Pichai told Reuters.

"Solving the flood crisis is the main issue."

The president of South Korea's Samsung Electronics said on the weekend he expected Thailand's floods to hit the computer memory chip market further by hurting PC production until the first quarter of next year.

Japan's Honda Motor Co may keep its Thai factory shut for about six months which would hit 3 percent of its annual global car output, the Nikkei business daily reported on Sunday.

The Bank of Thailand has nearly halved its projection of economic growth this year to 2.6 percent from July's 4.1 percent estimate, and said the economy -- Southeast Asia's second largest -- would shrink by 1.9 percent in the December quarter from the previous three months due to the floods.

The floods have destroyed 25 percent of the main rice crop in the world's largest rice exporter as they submerged four million acres (1.6 million hectares), an area roughly the size of Kuwait.

The floods were caused in part by unusually heavy monsoon rain falling on a low-lying region but the weather has been largely clear for a week as the cooler, dry season begins.

But the danger is far from over with the run-off still flowing south and swamping new neighborhoods as fears of disease grow.

People living in Thonburi, on the west bank of the Chao Phraya, have been struggling in waist-deep water for days, as have those in suburbs and provinces to the north of Bangkok.

About 30 riot police were deployed in an area of Pathum Thani to maintain order after residents destroyed a barrier.

Yingluck assured flood victims in a Facebook message that they would be taken care of.

As well as a big risk of diarrhea and mosquito-borne diseases, skin infections area a major problem and in some areas, hungry crocodiles have escaped from flooded farms and snakes searching for dry land have slithered into homes.

(Additional reporting by Khettiya Jittapong and Bazuki Muhammad; Editing by Nick Macfie)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111031/wl_nm/us_thailand_floods

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Michael Douglas says can't forget being told of cancer (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) ? Veteran actor Michael Douglas said in a recent interview with Alec Baldwin that he will never forget when he was first told he had late-stage throat cancer in 2010.

The 66-year-old "Fatal Attraction" actor, who was diagnosed with the disease in August, underwent radiation treatment and chemotherapy and in January 2011, announced the tumor was gone. But five months earlier, the story was different.

"I'll never forget that moment when he (the doctor) looked up at me and looked back down. I knew, and he said 'Well, I guess we're going to have to take a biopsy, see there's a polyp here,' it was on my tongue. Two days later, he called me back and said 'you've got cancer,'" Douglas told Baldwin in a podcast posted earlier this week for New York public radio station WNYC.

Douglas said that just after filming "Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps" his throat felt "a little sore," but he thought it was from the stress of portraying financier Gordon Gekko, the role that earned him an Oscar in 1987's "Wall Street."

"I thought maybe it was from tension, from the part, where you haven't placed your voice, where you're swallowing your words and you speak from the back of your throat," he said. "I had a little bit of a sore gum and so I saw doctors."

He underwent seven weeks of treatments that cleared the cancer and now he has this advice for others: "the thing with cancer is that you want to get it as early as you can."

Douglas also touched on coming to terms with his eldest son Cameron's history of drug abuse and his jail sentence in 2010 for dealing methamphetamine and cocaine and possessing heroin.

"I think as far as drug addiction, your peer group plays a huge part of that," said Douglas. "In my oldest son's case, there was no end, until he was incarcerated."

After taking time to recover from cancer treatments, Douglas will next be seen in the title role of "Liberace," a film based on the life of the famous American pianist with Matt Damon playing his on-screen lover.

"Liberace was a lovely guy," said the actor. "I haven't played a lot of nice guys."

(Reporting and Writing by Piya Sinha-Roy; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/cancer/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111031/en_nm/us_michaeldouglas

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