Saturday, December 31, 2011

$30 billion fighter jet deal with Saudi Arabia to bring thousands of jobs to St. Louis

KMOV.com

Posted on December 29, 2011 at 1:27 PM

Updated today at 6:48 PM

HAZELWOOD, Mo. (KMOV) ? It will be a very happy New Year for Boeing workers in St. Louis as Saudi Arabia has signed a nearly $30 billion deal for St. Louis-made fighter jets.

The contract calls for 84 new F-15 fighter jets and upgrades to 70 more.

Boeing says the agreement between the United States and Saudi Arabia will create and sustain more than 50,000 jobs through the end of the decade. It will help families for years, and will be a huge boost for St. Louis.

Congressman Russ Carnahan says the jobs will be high paying ones that will help people long-term.

The federal government said it believes the sale of the jets will help to stabilize and build relationships in the Middle East. ?

Source: http://www.kmov.com/news/local/US-signs-30-billion-dollar-deal-to-manufacture-Saudi-Arabia-fighter-jets-136386898.html

pabst blue ribbon mac miller omarion gabby gabby marcel the shell with shoes on ecu

Steve Jobs, Jobs, Jobs ? genius, visionary ... outsourcer

Photo Matt Yohe via Wikipedia

Steve Jobs

?It?s all about Jobs. Steve Jobs. Although he was brilliant, creative and a successful CEO, he had one flaw: He outsourced Apple.?

So writes Joel D. Joseph, chairman of the Made in the USA Foundation, a Los Angeles-based group that promotes U.S. products here and abroad. Here?s the rest of Joseph?s provocative essay about Jobs, the brilliant technology pioneer who died in October, and Apple Inc.?

?Mr. Jobs could have created a hundred thousand jobs in the United States, but instead he created them in China and Korea. Apple can still move many of those jobs back to the United States.

Outsourcing

Foxconn is one of the primary subcontractors for Apple. It is the world?s largest maker of electronic products, including the iPhone, iPod and iPad. Foxconn employs from 300,000 to 450,000 workers in Shenzhen, China at the Longhua Science & Technology Park, a cramped, walled campus sometimes known as ?Foxconn City? or ?iPod City.? Covering more than one square mile, its enclave includes 15 factories, worker dormitories and a shopping area complete with a grocery store, bank, restaurants, bookstore, and a hospital. Workers never have to leave the campus, and rarely do.

Apple?s iPods are made by mainly female workers who earn as little as $40 per month, according to a report in Britain?s Daily Mail. The report claims Foxconn?s workers live in dormitories that house 100 people, and that visitors from the outside world are not permitted. Workers toil for 15 hours a day to make the iPod music player, the report claims. They earn $40 per month. The report revealed that the iPod Nano is made in a five-story factory that is secured by police officers.

Steve Symanovich is editor of the San Francisco Business Times.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/bizj_eastbay/~3/fUGfuxKkvxw/steve-jobs-apple-iphone-ipod-outsource.html

ufc 141 fight card ifl gli joseph gordon levitt katy perry russell brand kevin durant rutgers

Friday, December 30, 2011

PSG chief Leonardo casts doubt on deal for LA Galaxy's Beckham

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Source: www.tribalfootball.com --- Friday, December 30, 2011
Carlo Ancelotti David Beckham PSG LA Galaxy PSG chief Leonardo admits a deal for LA Galaxy star David Beckham is in doubt. Leonardo made the revelation during the unveiling of Carlo Ancelotti as new coach. read more ...

Source: http://rss.feedsportal.com/c/399/f/607843/p/1/s/76933223/l/0Lrss0Bfeedsportal0N0Cc0C3990Cf0C60A78430Cp0C10Cs0Cb75d1ce0Cl0C0ALrss0ABfeedsportal0AN0ACc0AC3990ACf0AC60AA78430ACp0AC10ACs0AC52199f530ACl0AC0AALrss0AABfeedsportal0AAN0AACc0AAC3990AACf0AAC60A

go ask alice nflx john mccarthy john mccarthy lumpectomy robin williams blaine gabbert

RT on DVD & Blu-Ray: Final Destination 5 and Apollo 18

Plus, a few other choices during this post-Christmas lull.

It's shouldn't come as a surprise to anyone that the home video choices this week are rather slim; most studios try to make sure they have all of their best stuff ready to go before Christmas, naturally. With that in mind, we bring you an abbreviated edition of RT on DVD, focusing on just five new releases that are hitting shelves. For those of you who are also avid television-watchers, some items of interest we won't be covering include Season 2 of the animated series Archer, the first seasons of two Showtime dramas The Borgias and Shameless, and the first season of IFC sitcom The Increasingly Poor Decisions of Todd Margaret, which stars Arrested Development alumni David Cross and Will Arnett. That said, we will be covering two horror movies, a raunchy comedy, a Romanian film, and a fascinating documentary. See below for the full list!

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1924204/news/1924204/

michelle obama booed at nascar polio cutler natalie wood christina aguilera tony stewart amas

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Maryland company gives unlimited vacation

Imagine this, when you?re carefully plotting out when to use your precious vacation days next year: what if you could take as much time off from work as you?d like?

You don?t have to imagine it, if you work for WeddingWire. The Maryland-based company is now offering its employees unlimited vacation time.

The company claims it has no problem giving its workers plenty of time off, as long as they do their work and meet their job goals.

?We just want you to do your job,? Jennifer Harding, WeddingWire?s director of human resources, told The Washington Post. ?If you can do that, why limit the amount of vacation you can?t take??

Does the deal sound too good to be true? The Bethesda-based company is actually afraid of that. In fact, it?s making sure employees don?t think this policy is some manipulative way to keep them from taking no vacation at all.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45809001/ns/business-careers/

top chef powerball winner powerball winner narwhals narwhals gmail app gmail app

Android Ice Cream Sandwich coming to Sony Tablets

Sony Tablet S (left) and the Sony Tablet P

Sony has announced that its tablets, the Tablet S and Tablet P, will receive upgrades to Google's Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich operating system.

The tech giant, however, isn't yet saying when Ice Cream Sandwich will hit its tablets, of which only the Tablet S is on sale.

The Tablet S, which features a tapered shape resembling a rolled-back magazine and a 9.4-inch touch screen, went on sale in September at a price of $500.

Meanwhile, the Tablet P -- a clamshell device with two 5.5-inch touchscreens and a hinge running through the middle of the displays that allows it to close on itself, screen to screen -- was announced in April but has yet to hit stores or even get a solid release date.

Both devices currently run Android 3.0 Honeycomb, but that will soon change, Sony said in a forum posting on its website, as first reported by PCMag.com.

"We're happy to confirm that an update to Android 4.0 will be available for Sony Tablet," Sony said in a statement posted to its company forums. "Details including timing will be announced in due course, so please stay tuned."

Sony also said in the forum posting that it recently released a software development kit for the dual-screen Tablet P to help aid developers looking to create apps specifically for that device.

The company has previously stated that Ice Cream Sandwich, the first version of Android designed for use on both phones and tablets, will be heading to 11 Sony Ericsson smartphones next year as well.

RELATED:

Sony Ericsson phones dropping 'Ericsson' in mid-2012

Ice Cream Sandwich coming to 11 Sony Ericsson Androids

Sony Video Unlimited hits Tablet S; more Android devices planned

-- Nathan Olivarez-Giles

Nathan Olivarez-Giles on Google+

Twitter.com/nateog

Image: Sony's Tablet S, left, and Tablet P. Credit: Sony

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/TheTechnologyBlog/~3/1QbBdc79Tzw/android-ice-cream-sandwich-coming-to-sony-tablets.html

steelers ravens bengals new england patriots nfl nfl jets

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

sculpted eers PCS-200 Custom Molded Earphones Review

Over the past few years, I have had no less than three custom monitors created for me. All of which involved a separate trip to the audiologist to have specially-made molds of my ears created for the monitors to be made from. These visits had to be scheduled and involved a commute to have pink [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2011/12/26/sculpted-eers-pcs-200-custom-molded-earphones-review/

neville heavy d heavy d taser gun patriots vs jets adventureland sean hannity

3 Killed in North Florida Helicopter Crash


PALATKA, Fla. (AP) -- A Mayo Clinic heart surgeon was among three people killed in a helicopter crash in north Florida.

The Mayo Clinic says Dr. Luis Bonilla and procurement technician David Hines were on their way to a University of Florida hospital in Gainesville to retrieve a heart for a transplant in Jacksonville when the helicopter went down early Monday.

Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman Kathleen Bergen says the helicopter crashed about 12 miles northeast of Palatka. The pilot also was killed.

The Clay County Sheriff's Office said no additional information was immediately available from the remote crash site.

The National Transportation Safety Board also was investigating.

FAA records show the helicopter is operated by SK Jets. The St. Augustine company had no immediate information.

Source: http://www.wtvy.com/home/headlines/3_Killed_in_North_Florida_Helicopter_Crash_136242213.html

easter island dallas weather jimmer fredette deion sanders super bowl 2012 bill maher

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

PFT: Move over, NFC West -- AFC South is worst

New York Giants Cruz celebrates in front of the New York Jets bench after making a pass reception in East RutherfordReuters

All I wanted for Christmas was 14 NFL contests on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day.

And I got it, primarily since there was little or no danger of shooting my eye out.

The best part about it?? The ability to write 10 things about what I saw while enjoying the 14 games-a-playing.

1.? ?Playoff turnover trend continues.

While the final postseason field isn?t quite yet settled, it?s already obvious from the teams that made it ? and the teams that won?t ? that the trend of 50-percent playoff turnover most likely will once again hold true.

In the AFC, the Patriots, Steelers, and Ravens have made it back again to the playoffs.? But the Colts, Chargers, and (most likely) the Jets will be left behind.

Replacing them will be the Texans and some combination of the Broncos, Raiders, Bengals, and Titans, with the Jets having a far-slimmer-than-Rex chance of dropping the turnover rate to 33 percent.

In the NFC, the Packers, Saints, and Falcons will be back.? Dumped from contention are the Eagles, Seahawks, and Bears.? Taking their places will be the Cowboys or the Giants, along with the Lions and 49ers.

Maybe we should quit calling this a trend.? Maybe it?s now the rule, and any situations in which more than half of the playoff field makes it back the next year should be regarded as the exception.

For the NFL, it?s a great development, because it creates annual hope for the 20 teams that end up on the outside looking in.? Every year, the fans of those franchises can take some solace in the notion that nearly a third of them will be playing for a Super Bowl title the following year.

Even the Bills and the Browns.

2.? Steelers face tough decision on Ben.

It?s hard to gauge the overall impressiveness of the Steelers? 27-0 win over the Rams, due to the quality of the competition.? But the decision to sit Ben Roethlisberger and start veteran Charlie Batch at quarterback couldn?t have gone much better.

So why not do it again?

The Steelers, after all, are playing the lowly Browns.? And while Pittsburgh?s arch-rivals from Cleveland would love nothing more than to keep the Steelers from winning the AFC North and clinching the No. 2 seed (even if it means seeing the even-more-hated Ravens pocket those prizes), the Steelers have the weaponry to handle the Browns with Batch or Dennis Dixon or even Terry Hanratty at quarterback.

On the other hand, getting a bye and securing home field advantage for at least the division round and possibly, if the Pats lose to the Bills in Week 17 or at home in the conference semifinals, the AFC title game carries with it tremendous value.? If, in the end, the Steelers indeed are on a collision course to play the Ravens again, it?s important for that game to be played in Pittsburgh, where the Steelers have beaten the Ravens twice in the last three postseasons.

The fact that the Bengals can get in with a win, which gives them even more motivation to beat the Ravens, should make the Steelers more willing to load up the cannon in order to beat the Browns.? Thus, while it was reckless for the Steelers to go with Roethlisberger only 11 days after he suffered the sprained ankle, Sunday?s game invites a calculated risk that, if it works out, could generate a great reward.

If it doesn?t pay off, the Steelers will be in no worse shape, since they?re locked in as the fifth seed.

Unless, of course, Roethlisberger aggravates the ankle with as little as six days to get ready for a game in Denver or Oakland.

In the end, it won?t be an easy call.? Maybe the answer will be to use Roethlisberger until the game against the Browns seems to be decided ? or until the scoreboard shows that the Ravens are handling the Bengals.

3.? AFC playoff field is flawed.

Not that long ago, all the best teams resided in the AFC.? Now, the once top-heavy conference has teams at the top that are littered with warts.

The Patriots, currently the top seed, possess a porous defense and not much of a running game.? Last time I checked, those were two key components of any serious playoff run.

The Ravens seem to be the most dangerous team of the bunch, as long as they can put it all together.? But they seem only to put it all together when playing good teams.? Saturday?s dilly-dallying with the Browns shows that the Ravens could be ripe for an upset if/when a lesser franchise comes to town.

Not long ago, the Texans were the ?it? team.? Now, many of their fans want to add an ?s? and an ?h? to that description.? With scant playoff experience on the roster, the Texans will need to make a quick adjustment when it?s time to play the big boys in the conference.

The Steelers have the tools to beat anyone, but they?re in danger of having to do it the hard way, with three hurdles to clear ? all of which most likely will come on the road ? before a earning a return trip to the Super Bowl.

The Broncos can beat anyone on any given day.? As we saw in fairly dramatic fashion on Saturday, they can lose to anyone, too.? Including a team that was riding a seven-game winning streak.? Even if the clock is striking twelve on Tebow Time, it?s hard to see this team winning in Pittsburgh/Baltimore, New England, or even Houston.

Ditto for the Raiders, who have at times looked good enough to barely win and at other times bad enough to be blown off the field.

That means the team poised to pocket the last ticket to the party ? the Bengals ? could be the most dangerous.? With a capable defense, a better-than-expected rookie quarterback, and a better-than-most rookie receiver, the team with the least to lose and the lowest expectations could string together one win after another, thanks to the deeply flawed field of candidates.

Of course, this could mean that the winner of the conference will end up being the sacrificial lambs for the Packers, Saints, or 49ers.? Unless, of course, the Ravens avoid playing down to the competition in their own conference long enough to earn a crack at the best teams in the league.

4.? Tough year for top two tailbacks.

Entering the 2011 football season, running backs in the NFL fell into two categories:? (1) Adrian Peterson and Chris Johnson; and (2) everyone else.

And the season started very well for both men, who took two very different paths to getting paid a lot of money.? Johnson held out of training camp and the preseason, getting his big-money deal only days before the start of the season.? Peterson happily entered the final season of his rookie contract without creating any overt drama, even though it privately was known he wouldn?t react well to being subjected to the franchise tag in 2012.

Once the games started, it became clear that the holdout hampered Johnson.? Peterson performed well as usual, but he was underutilized at times by a Vikings team that kept blowing second-half leads.

Now that Peterson has suffered a serious knee injury, which seemed inevitable given his hard-charging running style, both men have a long way to go to prove that they remain the best tailbacks in the game.? Johnson needs to rediscover the explosiveness that allowed him to slide through a crease and hit the nitrous button; Peterson needs to get healthy.

Their experiences demonstrate that, unlike the quarterback position, which produces a tight nucleus of elite players who remain at that level for years, the best running backs have become a revolving door, with each year producing new guys who?ll enter the next season at the top of the league ? and who?ll have only a limited window to remain there.

5.? Cruz control in New York.

In his team?s first game of the 2010 preseason, undrafted rookie receiver Victor Cruz created a major stir for the Giants, with a performance that featured 145 yards and three touchdowns against the Jets in their annual exhibition.? But then the regular season started, and Cruz disappeared from view, making zero receptions before suffering a season-ending injury.

The 2011 campaign began far more inconspicuously for Cruz, with no touchdowns in the preseason and no receptions in the regular-season opener.? In Week Two, Cruz had only two catches for 17 yards.

Then came the explosion.? In the past 13 games, Cruz has generated 1,341 receiving yards.? Combined with the paltry 51 feet from the first eighth of the season, Cruz now has become the single-season receiving yardage leader in the storied history of the Giants franchise.

And the breaking of Amani Toomers? record came in perhaps the biggest regular-season game the Giants have had in years ? a cross-town/cross-stadium rivalry with the loud-mouthed Jets, in which Cruz?s nine-yard catch and 90-yard run turned the tide of a game in which the ?home? team in Green seemed to be overpowering the team that had won only one of six games.

As a result, Cruz needs to be taken seriously as one of the best young receivers in the game.? It?s a great story for a New Jersey kid who simply wanted to play in the NFL.? Cruz, through two NFL seasons, is on track not just to play but to dominate.

6.? Heaping helping of humble pie for the Ryans.

It?ll be interesting to see the relationship between the outcome of the 2011 regular season and the extent to which the Ryan twins keep talking.? For Rex, the Jets head coach, he had a chance to put up or shut up against the Giants.? Rex didn?t put up; now we?ll see whether he shuts up.

For Rob, the Cowboys defensive coordinator, another ugly loss to the Eagles and a looming winner-take-all game against the team that just beat Rex should induce caution and, relatively speaking, silence.

But guys who like to talk tend to find ways to keep talking.? Even after a season in which the Eagles scored a total of 99 points against the Ryans in three games, and with both the Jets and Cowboys facing a strong possibility of no postseason appearance for either team, it?s unlikely that they?ll change.

They can?t change; they are who they are, which is the source of their appeal to the men who play for them.? And as long as their players respond well to Rex and Rob, they?ll have a place in the league.

Besides, there?s still a chance ? slim as it may be ? that both men will extend their seasons past January 1.? For Rob, it?s a simple win-and-in proposition.? For Rex, the odds are longer, but it?s no huge stretch to think that the Jets will beat the Dolphins, the Ravens will beat the Bengals, the Texans will beat the Titans, and the Raiders or the Broncos will lose to the Chargers or the Chiefs, respectively.

If that all happens, Rex will find a way to quickly and completely digest his Christmas Eve portion of humble pie.? And now that the Jets have bottomed out for the third time this year, the boomerang effect could carry them deep into that deeply flawed AFC playoff field.

7.? It?ll be hard to keep Raheem.

The Buccaneers nearly made it to the postseason in 2010.? But for a surprising (at the time) home loss to the Lions, the 10-6 Bucs would have claimed the last seat at the NFC table, bouncing to the curb the eventual Super Bowl champions.

This year, expectations were higher, even though they were tempered by the reality that the Bucs compete with the Falcons and Saints in the NFC South.? A 4-2 start to the season, including wins over said Falcons and Saints, created a sense that the ?yungry? team from Tampa could take over the division.

And then the bottom dropped out.

Nine straight losses later, including two to a Carolina team that won only two total games a year ago, the Bucs have clinched the basement.? With coach Raheem Morris having only one year left on his contract and receiving no public or (by all appearances) private assurances that he?ll be back in 2012, it?s safe to assume that ownership will move on.

With the Jon Gruden buyout completed and Morris being paid nowhere near the top of the coaching food chain, it?ll be no problem to pay him not to coach the team in 2011.? And with the Bucs on track to finish the year with as many consecutive losses as total victories a year ago, it?ll be virtually impossible for a team that struggles to sell tickets to bring Raheem back.

But then who will they hire to run the team?? The up-and-coming coordinator who happens to be the younger brother of the guy the Bucs fired three years ago?? Another young assistant coach with low recognition, low salary demands, and, in turn, a limited ability to put butts in seats?

Or will the Glazer family decide to spend some of the money that hasn?t been devoted to player costs over the past several years on a big-name coach whose mere presence will help market the team?

We?ll all find out the answer soon.? The end result could result in even more empty seats next year at Raymond James Stadium.

8.? Lions peaking at the right time, but will it matter?

After the Lions slumped from 5-0 to 7-5, serious questions hovered regarding the team?s true ability to compete.? The loss of running back Jahvid Best to a season-ending concussion and the decision of opposing defenses to blanket receiver Calvin Johnson took the sting out of the offense.? The Ndamukong Suh imbroglio created a torrent of negative publicity, and a sense that the Lions simply weren?t ready to compete at the highest levels of the league.

Three straight wins in a row later, the Lions have made it to the postseason for the first time since 1999, and they?re being regarded as a serious threat to make some major noise when the playoffs start.

But will they?? Though Saturday?s thumping of the Chargers arguably was the most impressive victory of the season, the Lions barely held on to beat a bad Vikings team and found a way to steal a road win over the up-and-down Raiders.

It?s entirely possible that the bolt of momentum coming from the knockout blow that the Lions administered to the Chargers will help the Lions win a game or two, or maybe more, when it counts the most.? Ultimately, the Lions? fate could be influenced heavily by whether they enter the playoffs as the No. 5 or No. 6 seed.

If they can hold off the Falcons for the primary wild-card spot in the NFC, the Lions will play at Dallas (where the Lions won during the season) or New York (where the Giants have a hard time holding serve, at least when they?re not the visiting team).? But if the Lions slide into the sixth spot, Detroit will have to return to New Orleans, where they lost badly in early December.

The Saints seem to be unbeatable in the Superdome.? Perhaps the Lions could find a way to beat them there, but the Lions would surely prefer not to be forced to try.

And that creates an interesting dilemma for the Packers next week.? With the top seed clinched, should Green Bay rest their starters for the postseason, or should they do everything they can to force the Lions? postseason tour to commence with the possibility of inevitable failure in New Orleans?

9.? Eventual Super Bowl teams dodged a bullet.

In less than a month, we?ll know the identities of the teams who?ll qualify for the biggest event in all of sport.? Whoever makes it should look back to Week 16, and breathe a deep sigh of relief.? (Not to be confused with the many other types of sighs.)

On Christmas Eve, two of the most potentially disruptive teams summarily were erased from postseason contention, when the Chargers saw their three-game winning streak end in Detroit and when the Eagles saw their own three-game run rendered irrelevant by the Giants? win over the Jets.

Either team could have wreaked major havoc in January.? Just as the Packers barely made it to the playoffs as the NFC?s sixth seed in 2010 and then won the whole thing, the Eagles and Chargers could have parlayed late-season surges into postseason pillaging.

Now, none of the other playoff teams have to worry about the two teams who were the hottest in the league entering Week 16.? The Eagles have gotten even hotter, and the Packers, 49ers, and Saints should be thrilled that the Eagles won?t get a chance to extend that vibe beyond Sunday.

10.? The bloom is off the Tebow.

Eight days ago, Tim Tebow had reached the pinnacle of pro football popularity and/or notoriety.? The Broncos quarterback had become the biggest name in football, joining only a small handful of football players who can cross over into major mainstream consciousness.

Today, with a pair of ugly losses in which Tebow and the Broncos offense started strong but ultimately collapsed, the national buzz has diminished, significantly.? Though Tebow can get it back by leading the Broncos to a win over the Chiefs and former Denver starter Kyle Orton, the past two weekends prove that the flavor of the month sometimes is only the flavor of the week.

At some point, Tebowmania likely will return to the top of the non-sports news cycle.? Also, he remains the hottest thing going in Denver.

Still, his inability to deliver further heroics at home against the Patriots or to stay within 20 points of a bad Buffalo team on Christmas Eve has served as a stark reminder that the latest big name in sports is at any given time only a couple of bad games away from again becoming just another face in the crowd.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/12/26/the-afc-south-is-the-worst-division-in-football/related/

ginger white conrad murray sentencing conrad murray sentencing urban meyer adam shulman adam shulman nfl power rankings week 13

GoDaddy Responds To Namecheap Accusations, Removes ?Normal? Rate Limiting Block

Screen Shot 2011-12-26 at 1.57.57 PMYou know who got a lump of coal in their PR stocking this year? Domain registrar GoDaddy. Its most recent stumble? The company's presence on a SOPA supporter list sparked an impromptu user exodus last week, with already tens of thousands of domains being transferred in the fall out. Sensing a communications disaster (GoDaddy has gotten really good at this) the new CEO Warren Adelman then reversed the companies official position on SOPA, well kind of.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/vcPziUgyF7w/

the national defense authorization act bcs rankings lsu football lsu football miguel cotto vs antonio margarito terminator salvation terminator salvation

Monday, December 26, 2011

China makes record purchase as eurozone puts assets up for sale

China's? $3.5 billion investment in Portugal power producer is its largest yet in Europe, and signals willingness to buy assets even as it balks at purchasing bonds from indebted eurozone countries.

China?s Three Gorges Corp. has bought a 21 percent share in Portugal?s largest power producer from the country?s debt-burdened government, in a clear sign that Beijing may help bail out cash-strapped European nations, but only if it gets something worthwhile in return.

Skip to next paragraph

The Chinese government has responded coolly to pleas that it use some of its $3.2 trillion in foreign reserves to buy bonds from struggling governments in Greece, Italy, and Spain. But officials here have said they are interested in picking up European assets.

This week?s $3.5 billion deal by Three Gorges, which operates the world's largest hydroelectric project, is? the largest-ever Chinese investment in Europe. It comes only weeks after Trade Minister Chen Deming told Chinese businessmen that ?some European countries are facing a debt crisis and hope to convert their assets into cash and would like foreign capital to acquire their enterprises. We will be watching closely and pushing forward progress.?

The Portuguese government had been forced to sell off its share in Energias de Portugal as part of a ?78 billion bailout package from the European Union and the International Monetary Fund. Lisbon is also selling a 40 percent share in its national power grid operator, and another state-owned Chinese company, China State Grid Corp., is bidding for it.

?The European economy needs blood, but not in the form of a transfusion asking for us to buy their bonds,? said Wang Yiming, a senior economic policymaker, at a meeting in Brussels last month. ?We need to create new blood by promoting investment.?

Not always welcome

Such investment is not always welcome. Last month the Icelandic government nixed a $200 million plan by a Chinese businessman to buy 115 square miles of land to build a tourist resort.

Chinese Deputy Foreign Minister Fu Ying lashed out earlier this month at such reticence, saying she hoped that ?our economic activities are not interpreted from a political perspective and are not imbued with political interests.?

Beijing is encouraging its state-owned enterprises, many of which are flush with cash, to seek opportunities abroad, and Europe is a promising destination.

Britain, for example, is seeking foreign investors to fund the lion?s share of a $310 billion plan to upgrade the nation?s roads, railways, utilities, and Internet systems, and is looking to China, among others.

?We are looking for short-term projects to invest in almost immediately, and that could mean next year,? Qi Yue, an executive at CITIC Construction Co., told the official China Daily on his way to the first meeting of the UK-China Infrastructure Taskforce last week.

Chinese corporations are growing increasingly adventurous in Europe. The Shanghai-based automobile manufacturer Geely bought Volvo in 2010, and earlier this year the China National Chemical Corp. paid $2.2 billion for Elkem, the Norwegian manufacturer of key components in solar panels.

Still, China?s total non-financial investment in European Union member states is still tiny ? around $15 billion according to a recent report by the Rhodium Group, a consultancy in New York, which is only 0.2 percent of all the foreign investment in Europe.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/XhtE5eKWC6w/China-makes-record-purchase-as-eurozone-puts-assets-up-for-sale

blaine gabbert netflix stock home affordable refinance program harp harp world series game 5 moammar gadhafi

No. 22 Southern Miss faces Nevada in Hawaii Bowl (AP)

HONOLULU ? As if being 5,500 miles from Hattiesburg and having Waikiki beach as a backyard wasn't enough, Conference USA champion Southern Mississippi had to deal with even more distractions.

The 22nd-ranked Golden Eagles (11-2) face Western Athletic Conference runner-up Nevada (7-5) in the Hawaii Bowl on Saturday in what will be the final game under coach Larry Fedora.

"It's going to be tough. There's a piece of my heart and soul in this football team," said Fedora, who is leaving after four seasons to lead North Carolina. "I deeply care about each and every one of those kids. ... But I do know, they're going to look back at this season and say we won however many games, a conference championship and we went to Hawaii. That's what they'll remember for the rest of their lives."

Southern Miss won a school-record 11 games this season en route to capturing its fifth C-USA title by upsetting Houston 49-28 in the conference championship game behind Austin Davis' four touchdown passes. It was the Golden Eagles' first 10-win season since 1988.

Despite the record year, Davis said the team isn't done yet as Southern Miss makes its 10th straight postseason appearance and is looking to snap a two-bowl losing streak.

"I would hate to end it on a bad note. We want to finish strong and get No. 12," said Davis, who has thrown for 3,331 yards and 28 touchdowns this year.

Fedora said his team isn't letting down after its big win over Houston.

"You can go out and watch practice and you wouldn't know if it was Aug. 5, the first day of practice for us, or if it was the next to the last practice. They're still practicing the same way," he said. "They understand what it takes. They understand how important it is. We're not playing another game. We're making history at Southern Miss."

Fedora is being replaced by South Carolina defensive coordinator Ellis Johnson, who was introduced in Hattiesburg while the team was in Honolulu.

"There's a lot of distractions going on with this football team and their future. So that makes it difficult," Fedora said. "The thing is, I've got to allow these seniors ... they're going to be the ones that lead us through the distractions. I expect us to play as we do week in and week out."

While Southern Miss is making its first trip here since beating Hawaii in 1977, Nevada is no stranger to the islands, or the Hawaii Bowl.

Nevada is making its seventh straight postseason appearance and 12th overall. It will be playing in the Hawaii Bowl for the third time since 2005. Nevada defeated Central Florida 49-48 in overtime in 2005 and lost to SMU 45-10 in 2009.

"We've been here. It's great and beautiful and we love it here, but for us, it's a business trip," Nevada defensive tackle Brett Roy said. "We know what we're here to do."

Featuring a high-powered offense that ranks fifth in the nation with 522.8 yards a game and eighth in rushing (251.8), Nevada is coming off a roller coaster year where it started 1-3 and won five straight before losing to Louisiana Tech and Utah State, blowing its chances for a conference title in its final season in the WAC before moving to the Mountain West Conference.

"We want to get that bad taste out of our mouths," said Roy, who is eighth in the nation in both sacks (10) and tackles for loss (18.5). "In order to do that, we have to go through Southern Miss, which is a high-caliber team."

Quarterback Cody Fajardo, who didn't start until the fifth game, runs Nevada's potent pistol. He has passed for 1,647 yards and six scores while rushing for 680 yards and 11 TDs. Nevada also has Rishard Matthews, who has caught 91 passes for 1,364 yards and eight TDs.

"They gain a lot of yards on the ground and through the air," said Southern Miss linebacker Ronnie Thornton, who leads the team with 104 tackles. "They have a very mobile quarterback that can make plays on his own, even when things may seem like they break down."

The Wolf Pack will be trying to pressure Davis, who has a quartet of capable running backs and his favorite receivers, Kelvin Bolden and Ryan Balentine.

"When they find something they can do, they exploit it and they do it often," Roy said. "Our biggest focus is tightening our loose ends and knowing if we do that, they don't have anything to exploit. So we've got to play the most sound football we have this year because we are definitely a huge underdog."

Nevada coach Chris Ault said Southern Mississippi's win over Houston is a good example.

"They just destroyed them. That just shows you what kind of football team they are," he said. "This Austin Davis is as good as we've seen. ... The defense does a great job getting around the ball. They're really a fine football team."

Davis said, "We went out and played well on that day. But we also know if we don't come ready to play in this game, it can go the other way, too."

Nevada is hoping Southern Miss had its fill of Hawaii and a week that included a luau and trip to Pearl Harbor.

"Hopefully they're all swimming, all tired and surfing up a storm," Roy said.

Fedora said he wants his players to enjoy Hawaii because they have earned it. But they'll be ready at kickoff.

"They're enjoying their free time and when it's time to go, we go," he said.

___

Follow Jaymes Song at http://twitter.com/jaymessong

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111224/ap_on_sp_co_ne/fbc_t25_hawaii_bowl

generators lesean mccoy while you were sleeping while you were sleeping happy halloween happy halloween history of halloween

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Paul Forecast a "Race War" (Taegan Goddard's Political Wire)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/178437467?client_source=feed&format=rss

cliff harris cliff harris josh turner bishop eddie long chicago news chicago news barnaby

Unborn son's struggle inspires Christian singer (AP)

PERRYSBURG, Ohio ? Told that his unborn son had only half a heart and little chance to survive, the lead singer of the Christian rock band Sanctus Real began pouring his fears and doubts into music.

The songs were meant to comfort his family while they searched for answers and sought to understand God's role during the months before and after the baby's birth that were filled with surgeries and life-threatening complications.

It didn't take long for him to realize that his words needed to be shared so that others struggling with life would know they're not alone.

What came out of the heartache was "Every Falling Tear," a solo album that's meant to touch and console during the hardest of times.

"People want to know that their pain has a purpose," said Matt Hammitt, one of the founding members of Sanctus Real, a band with two Grammy-nominated albums since 2008.

"That's the biggest part of sharing our story," he said. "That there is a purpose."

Hammitt and his wife, Sarah, knew something was wrong minutes after finding out during an ultrasound in April 2010 that their third child would be a boy, following two girls. They saw the sorrow on their doctor's face even before she spoke.

Doctors later confirmed the baby had a rare congenital heart defect called hypoplastic left heart syndrome, which causes the left side of the heart to be severely underdeveloped. For five months, the couple contemplated all of the possible procedures and treatments while weighing the odds of what could go wrong.

Their baby would face multiple surgeries and an uncertain future at best.

They also didn't know how to deal with a flood of emotions ? the anger, the doubt, the feeling of being alone. Hammitt, 32, decided he needed to tell God how he was feeling, so he started writing songs about their journey.

"I began writing about all that I was learning about struggle and faith," he said.

Each song tells of a moment or a series of events leading to the baby's birth ? there's a father's fear of holding back his love for a son he may never know and a mother's hope of finding peace in the midst of despair.

"I wanted to write songs that would speak him someday about how much his father loved him no matter how long or short his life would be," Hammitt said, his voice trailing off.

The album released in September was his first solo work. On tour during the fall with the band, he included the song "All of Me" in their sets. It starts: "Afraid to love, something that could break. Could I move on if you were torn away?"

Hammitt was a high school sophomore when he and guitarist Chris Rohman and drummer Mark Graalman started the band 15 years ago. They've stayed together, playing in coffee shops, churches and now arenas.

Sanctus Real will be one of nearly a dozen Christian artists taking part in the Winter Jam tour that starts in January, with stops in 47 cities.

The song from "Every Falling Tear" that means the most to Hammitt is "Trust," a worship song that reminds people not to lose faith "even in the darkness, even in the questions, even when the hardest times of life are at hand."

The lyrics were born out of a time when Hammitt was feeling isolated and alone.

"Sometimes we need to be reminded of the truth," he said. "And for me, the truth is that I trust God."

Bowen Matthew Hammitt was born on Sept. 9, 2010. His first open heart surgery came four days later and the next night he went into cardiac arrest. A team of doctors and nurses spent an hour performing CPR until they were able to revive him and get him on life support.

Complications and a stroke kept him in the hospital in Ann Arbor, Mich., for just over two months.

While there, the couple played demos of the songs Hammitt had written "so Bowen could hear his dad's voice," his wife said. Night-shift nurses often turned up the music when most families would leave for the evening.

"They felt it was good for all the babies to be soothed," Sarah said. "We'd come back in the morning and it'd be really loud."

Hammitt recorded the songs for the album soon after the family brought Bowen home to suburban Toledo. His only unease was that they might be critiqued like any other work.

"Originally I just wanted them recorded for us at the hospital," he said. "I realized they're meant to comfort other people too."

So far, the response has been what he hoped for. They've even received notes from parents who've played the songs at their children's funerals.

Now, the Hammitts want to take their work a step further by starting the Whole Hearts Foundation, a source of financial, emotional and spiritual help for families with children suffering from congenital heart defects. They see the foundation becoming their life's work.

"It's amazing to see even beyond the album what's come out of this," Hammitt said. "We had a vision in the hospital, how can we help other families, let them know they're not alone."

Bowen, who turned 1 in September, faces one more surgery now slated for 2013 to repair his heart. Eventually, he'll likely need a new heart before he reaches middle age.

He's growing, but not as fast as doctors would like. Sarah watches him closely for any signs of heart failure. He only has a single ventricle pumping oxygen to his body and lungs so she looks to see if he sweats when he eats or if his skin turns blue or red.

When Matt brought him downstairs after a nap, a look of worry crossed her face when she saw that his hair was matted with sweat. But it turned out there was no cause for concern.

"We know at any moment things could change even though he's stable now," Sarah said. "It's ultimately God's will."

___

Online:

http://www.bowensheart.com/

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/music/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111224/ap_en_mu/us_songwriter_son_s_heart

demarco murray ed reed teresa giudice red ribbon week much ado about nothing sean hayes caroline manzo

Saturday, December 24, 2011

Infobae: Sigue la protesta de los comerciantes de Florida contra los manteros http://t.co/190oqPxH

  • Passer la navigation
  • Twitter sur votre mobile ? Cliquez ici m.twitter.com!
  • Passer cette ?tape
  • Connexion
Loader Twitter.com
  • Connexion
Sigue la protesta de los comerciantes de Florida contra los manteros ow.ly/89j3s Infobae

Pied de page

Source: http://twitter.com/Infobae/statuses/150527405499486210

top model all stars americas next top model mark buehrle mark buehrle rick perry ad rick perry ad richard cordray

Syrian state media: Terrorists bomb government buildings in Damascus

According to state-run media in Syria, two car bombs went off in Damascus today. The government is blaming 'armed terrorists.'

? A daily summary of global reports on security issues.

Skip to next paragraph

Syria's state-run news agency reports that suicide attackers detonated two car bombs outside government buildings in Damascus Friday, capping off one of the deadliest weeks since Syria's uprising began in March. More than 160 people were killed this week as the government cracked down on what appeared to be attempts to create a rebel stronghold in the northwest.

The Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA) reports that the attack "bears the blueprints of Al Qaeda" (warning: graphic images). Throughout the uprising, the government has blamed much of the violence on "armed terrorists."

The Washington Post reports at least 30 dead and more than 100 wounded from today's bombings, but notes that because the Syrian government still bars foreign journalists from the country and controls media within the country, there is no way to verify government accounts or state media reports. An opposition leader and a regional analyst both expressed doubt about the bombings, telling the Post that there was "little direct evidence of a serious bombing, and that attacks by Al Qaeda and other groups are virtually unheard of in Syria."

Salman Shaikh, of the Brookings Institute in Doha, said that it was difficult to believe that al-Qaeda or an opposition group would have staged such an attack in Damascus.

?Syria doesn?t really have a record of this,? he said. ?The security forces have not lost control of the situation to such an extent that this would seem likely.?

Shaikh also said it seemed suspicious that the media reported the attack so quickly, while pictures showed the car bombs already cleared away. ?I am deeply skeptical,? he said.

Mr. Shaikh said the explosions could actually help the regime by stirring up fears of instability among Syrians.

The bombings targeted state security headquarters and a second security installation, hours before planned demonstrations against an Arab League plan to bring an end to the ongoing violence, The New York Times reports. Members of the opposition speculate that this week's elevated crackdown is intended to cow the resistance into submission before Arab League observers arrive in the country in large numbers.

An advance team of Arab League officials has already arrived in Damascus to set up a framework for the hundreds of observers coming to Syria in upcoming weeks, Al Jazeera reports. Between 30 and 50 are expected to arrive Saturday in the first phase of the mission. The Syrian government is responsible for their protection.

The opposition remains skeptical of the plan, but if observers are able to operate as intended, it might create an opening for protesters without the threat of a brutal government response.

However, in an Al Jazeera report from earlier this week, Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Muallem is quoted as saying that the government expects the observer mission to "vindicate" its assertions that the uprising is driven by armed terrorists. "There are many countries in the world who don't wish to admit the presence of terrorist armed groups in Syria." he said. "They will come and see that they are present.... We must not be afraid at all."

Al Jazeera reports that Syrian officials say they have already released more than 1,000 prisoners and pulled the Army out of several cities. The observers are there partially to ensuring continuing compliance with promises to further withdraw Army troops and to release more prisoners, according to The New York Times.

The United Nations now puts the death toll in the uprising at more than 5,000 people, the Associated Press reports.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/2j9lWxVEnZM/Syrian-state-media-Terrorists-bomb-government-buildings-in-Damascus

humpback whale barrel roll anagram 180 degrees askew cory smoot do a barrel roll

Friday, December 23, 2011

Ethiopian court: 2 Swedish reporters guilty (AP)

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia ? A court in Ethiopia convicted two Swedish journalists Wednesday of supporting terrorism after the pair illegally entered the country with an ethnic Somali rebel group.

The pair, who now face up to 15 years in prison at their sentencing next week, have said they were gathering news at the time of their arrest.

However, Judge Shemsu Sirgaga said that was "very unlikely," accusing the Ogaden National Liberation Front of organizing the Swedes' journey starting in London via Kenya and Somalia into Ethiopia. Outlawed groups in many countries frequently facilitate the travels of reporters in order to have their version of events told.

Ethiopian troops captured Johan Persson and Martin Schibbye six months ago during a clash with rebels in Ethiopia's restive Somali region in the country's east, a no-go area for reporters. Ethiopia considers the rebel group a terrorist organization, and it is very difficult for journalists to gain access to the region. Rights groups say that is so abuses there are not exposed.

The chairman of the Swedish Union of Journalists, Jonas Nordling, deplored the conviction, saying it is clearly aimed at deterring reporters from investigating alleged human rights abuses in the Ogaden.

"This is a political verdict," Nordling said. "There is no evidence to support that this is a terror crime."

"They are two established reporters who have used accepted journalistic methods to enter the area," he said, adding Ethiopian officials "absolutely do not want to see an open examination of what happens in the Ogaden area."

Persson and Schibbye are both freelance contributors to the Sweden-based photojournalism agency Kontinent. Schibbye is also a writer. The two regularly had their work published in national newspapers in Sweden and Norway.

The pair said they had been gathering news about a Swedish oil company that is exploring Ethiopia's Somali region for oil. Sweden's foreign minister, Carl Bildt, was a member of the board of the company ? Lundin Petroleum ? between 2000 and 2006. He left the board when he was appointed foreign minister.

Bildt said on Twitter that Sweden expresses "grave concern" over Wednesday's verdict. "We will continue to work to set them free," he said.

The Ethiopian judge said that "journalism demands impartiality and balance but doesn't require violating the laws of a sovereign country."

"The court finds the defendants guilty as charged in a unanimous vote," he said.

The Swedes' lawyers, their family and the Swedish ambassador to Ethiopia left the court without making any comments.

In Sweden, Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt said the Swedish government will immediately contact high-level officials in the Ethiopian government.

"Our starting point is and remains that they have been in the country on a journalistic mission. They should be freed as soon as possible to be able to reunite with their families in Sweden," Reinfeldt said.

Bildt later told reporters in Stockholm that Sweden had sent a "clear and vocal" statement about its concerns to the Ethiopian government.

"Ethiopia is an important country and we do have an interest in long-term good relations with Ethiopia," he said. "I fail to see that the Ethiopian government would have an interest in what would be a long-lasting and serious negative impact on our bilateral relations."

Persson and Schibbye have acknowledged that they entered Ethiopia illegally.

"Your honor, I am a journalist and my job is to gather news. I am guilty of entering Ethiopia illegally, but I am not guilty of the other activities I am charged of," Schibbye said during the case's preliminary hearing in October.

"I entered the country illegally and nothing else," Persson added.

The international community has closely followed the terror trial against the Swedes. Rights groups and diplomats say Ethiopia's anti-terrorism proclamation restricts freedom of expression and is used as a tool to crack down on dissent.

The rights group Amnesty International said after the verdict that there was no evidence to suggest that the two Swedes were doing anything but carrying out work as reporters.

"We believe that these men are prisoners of conscience, prosecuted because of their legitimate work," said Claire Beston, Amnesty International's Ethiopia researcher. "The overly broad provisions of the Anti-Terrorism Proclamation allow the authorities to criminalize the exercise of freedom of expression."

___

Associated Press writer Malin Rising in Stockholm contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111221/ap_on_re_af/af_ethiopia_journalists

paulina gretzky wayne gretzky wayne gretzky occupy los angeles occupy los angeles comedian patrice o neal occupy philadelphia

Verizon users across nation report data outage

By Rosa Golijan

Verizon Wireless

Updated 12:28 p.m. ET

Uh oh! It seems that it's not a good day to be a Verizon Wireless user. Based on an overwhelming number of reports in support forums, the cellular provider's customers are experiencing 3G and 4G data outages across the U.S. right now.

We've reached out to Verizon for more information about the issue and will update this story once we hear back, but in the meantime we're checking on the complaints in Verizon's own support forums.?

Users are reporting trouble maintaining a steady data connection as well as misleading connectivity statuses (some devices are displaying icons which suggest connectivity, but no actual connection occurs).?According to the folks at The Verge?? who have been keeping track of the origins of the posts ??the reports are coming in from "pretty much everywhere" including California, Rhode Island, Virginia, Pennsylvania, Nevada, New Jersey, and New York.

Are you a Verizon customer and experiencing issues with your data connection? Please let us know in the comments below.

Update:?Verizon Wireless responded to us with a brief note stating that things should be getting back to normal:

Verizon Wireless 4G LTE service is returning to normal this morning after company engineers worked to resolve an issue with the 4G network during the early morning hours today.?? Throughout this time, 4G LTE customers were able to make voice calls and send and receive text messages. The 3G data network operated normally.?

Wireless analyst Jeff Kagan chimed in to point out that it's not particularly surprising that an outage like this occurred in the first place.?"As the wireless world becomes more about wireless data we can experience more of these outages," he says. He also offers some words of warning:

Expect wireless data traffic to explode during the holidays starting this week with Chanukah, then Christmas and the weeks following. We should brace for impact of all those users gobbling all that wireless data. Sounds like the right atmosphere for outages and slowdowns.??

Related stories:

Want more tech news, silly puns or amusing links? You'll get plenty of all three if you keep up with Rosa Golijan, the writer of this post, by following her on?Twitter, subscribing to her?Facebook?posts, or circling her?on?Google+.

Source: http://technolog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/21/9607346-verizon-users-across-nation-report-data-outage

unc basketball college basketball gunsmoke papelbon papelbon anita hill penn state football schedule

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Scandal, financial mess dim Minn. GOP's '12 hopes (AP)

ST. PAUL, Minn. ? It wasn't so long ago that Minnesota seemed like an attractive target for an emboldened GOP trying to expand its list of presidential battlegrounds. But a financial tailspin at state party headquarters and allegations of infidelity involving one of the party's young stars have Republicans watching in horror as their brand is tarnished.

The worst-case scenario for Republicans: that donors will see the party as a bad investment, diverting resources that might have been spent making the Obama campaign defend once-friendly turf; and that grass-roots activists, turned off by scandal and dysfunction, will sit out the election cycle.

While a Republican presidential campaign "will invest in Minnesota if it thinks they can win it, they will also look at how well the party is doing its basic functions ? identifying Republicans, getting out the vote," Scott Cottington, a St. Paul-based political consultant who works on GOP campaigns around the country, said Tuesday. "They will make a decision based in part on the strength of the collective effort."

The potential problems reach far deeper than presidential politics. Newly won Republican majorities in the state House and Senate started to look wobbly last week when Senate Majority Leader Amy Koch abruptly resigned her leadership post and said she wouldn't seek re-election. A day later, several of her Republican colleagues said Koch quit only after they confronted her with rumors of her "inappropriate relationship" with a Senate employee.

But that was only the worst piece of news on a terrible day for Republicans. The same day Koch's colleagues went public with their claims, the front-runner to take control of the financially troubled state party dropped out of the race after revelations of an arrest for expired car registration and an earlier sexual harassment lawsuit. And a Republican candidate to challenge popular Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar next year admitted a 2005 arrest for carrying a loaded gun at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport.

By late afternoon Friday party operatives, activists and true believers were jamming Twitter with open consternation. "I need a drink," tweeted Mark Drake, a former state party spokesman.

It wasn't always this way. Despite Minnesota's longstanding liberal reputation, conservative Republicans made real gains in the state throughout the past decade. President George W. Bush made a serious ? though ultimately unsuccessful ? play in 2004 at breaking the Democratic lock on the state's electoral votes that dates to 1976. As recently as 2008, the party had national rising stars in the likes of Gov. Tim Pawlenty and Sen. Norm Coleman, and the Republican National Committee chose St. Paul as the site of its 2008 national convention.

Today Pawlenty is in private life after a failed run for president, and Coleman lost his 2008 election to Al Franken. Minnesota Republican Michele Bachmann remains in the presidential race, but has struggled in polls after a brief burst of success earlier this year.

Obama dispatched John McCain handily here, and the party no longer holds a single statewide elected office. So far, Republicans have failed to recruit any formidable opponent for Klobuchar. And few talk with confidence of Minnesota as a presidential pickup opportunity the way they do neighboring states like Iowa and Wisconsin.

"I anticipate Obama will carry the state," said Joe Repya, a conservative activist and former Army officer who ran unsuccessfully for Republican state chairman in 2007.

Repya is blunter than most of his fellow Republicans when it comes to the financial mess facing the state party, with debt estimated from $500,000 and $1.2 million. In recent weeks, the party's chairman, deputy chairman and executive director have all left their jobs. Departing chairman Tony Sutton pinned the debt on his decision to bankroll a recount of the 2010 governor's race, in which Democrat Mark Dayton ultimately emerged triumphant.

"I'm not sure most Republicans understand how deep the trouble we're in right now," Repya said. "Next year is going to be a tough year for the party. I really think so. I wish I could shed a glimmer of hope, but I'm a realist."

Bill Guidera, the party's finance chairman, said the next leader will have to make reassuring jittery Republican donors a top priority.

"Because of the financial situation, we need to convince our donors at all levels that we have a business plan to relieve the debt, and get us into positive growth," Guidera said.

Numerous Minnesota Republicans insist Election Day 2012 is far enough off for the party to right itself. Factors like the economy, Obama's poll numbers and the strength of the Republican presidential candidate will keep conservative donors motivated, they say.

"This isn't September of 2012," said Phil Krinkie, a former Republican state lawmaker and anti-tax activist. "There's plenty of times to put things back together again. Out of the muck and the mire comes the lotus blossom."

But money's not the only problem. The infidelity claims against the married Koch has Democrats crying hypocrisy, since she was part of a push to allow voters in 2012 to decide whether to ban same-sex marriage in the state Constitution.

Ken Martin, chairman of the state Democratic Party, said Democrats will make it a prominent issue as they try to undo last year's Republican takeover of the Legislature and help Obama defend the state. Martin questioned, though, if Democrats would even need to make much of an argument.

"There's an old adage in politics," Martin said. "When your opponent is committing political suicide, it's best to stand out of the way."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111220/ap_on_go_ot/us_minnesota_republican_disarray

hunter s thompson hunter s thompson berkman berkman new beavis and butthead game 7 anya ayoung chee