Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Rick Santorum -- Not Liberal by Any Stretch of Imagination (ContributorNetwork)

COMMENTARY | In politics, just as in any other segment of society there are several differing sets of standards all operating at the same time. With the buildup to today's Iowa caucus, this has been extremely prevalent. The Republican Party is embarking on their first stop in the process of separating the wheat from the chaff to see which of the candidates they are going to pit President Barack Obama against next November.

By different sets of standards, I am speaking of the varying definition of what makes a conservative and a liberal. Surprisingly, former GOP castoff Rick Santorum has got a very good chance of getting the nod in Iowa today. According to MSBNC, Santorum's poll numbers have nearly doubled in the past month.

When he visited a pizza shop while campaigning in the state, he shut the thing down due to his number of supporters that were occupying the place. People like Santorum. In a field of who is trying to show they are more conservative, he is one that may win on that margin alone.

Which is why I sincerely do not understand the comment by fellow candidate Ron Paul. In an interview with a CNN correspondent, Paul stated that Santorum was "very liberal." Paul, of course was citing Santorum's voting for what he called too much spending during his time in Congress.

If you ever wonder why there is so much infighting in the Republican Party, this is why. Even those that call themselves conservatives branch themselves off into various sects. One group is your fiscal kind, the other your social conservative, and so on. For Paul to say Santorum is liberal on the whole is a stretch of the imagination.

According to Huffington Post, if elected Santorum stated he would invalidate same sex marriages. He would want to attempt to push forward a constitutional amendment essentially outlawing such. Santorum would push for the repeal of DADT. Just because Santorum voted for spending bill after spending bill does not make him a liberal by any stretch of the imagination. He may be part liberal, but most of his other missions if he becomes president far overshadow what little sliver of liberalism may be in his political mindset.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/oped/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20120103/cm_ac/10785993_rick_santorum__not_liberal_by_any_stretch_of_imagination

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Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Bret McKenzie discovers the secret of Muppets music (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) ? Bret McKenzie had a simple approach to a gig that led to some of the year's most delightful onscreen musical numbers. "I took the job very seriously," he said, "even though it's also a very silly job."

The New Zealand-based singer, songwriter and actor was talking about his role writing songs for "The Muppets." But he could have used the same words to describe the project for which he originally became known in the United States, the HBO series "Flight of the Conchords."

In that series, which ran for two seasons, McKenzie was one half of the hapless but brilliantly endearing folk-pop duo from which the show took its name. The program, interspersed with marvelously funny and low-rent videos, followed the travails of McKenzie and bandmate Jemaine Clement as they tried to launch a career in New York City.

Call it a 21st Century version of "The Monkees" -- but instead of turning McKenzie and Clement into teen idols, it made them cult figures. And when the show's creator Jason Bobin, was hired to direct "The Muppets," it put McKenzie in line to make his mark on a franchise he'd seen as a kid growing up halfway around the world.

"One of the strange things about growing up in New Zealand is that Hollywood and America felt not only far away, it felt like another universe," McKenzie told TheWrap from his home country. "It wasn't like you'd grow up with a dream of going to Hollywood. That was not an option. So it was very surreal to find myself working with the Muppets."

Bobin had already invited a number of songwriters to submit demos for the film, but he hadn't found an appropriate opening number. So he asked McKenzie to write "a song that was incredibly positive and catchy."

McKenzie came up with "Life's a Happy Song," which serves as the basis for a large-scale production number involving Jason Segel, Amy Adams, Segel's Muppet "brother" Walter, and the entire population of the small town in which they live.

"It came very quickly," said McKenzie of the song. "I was in a very good mood at the time. And I'm not an accomplished piano player, so it's all on the white keys."

McKenzie wrote "Man or Muppet," a very earnest and very funny song of yearning and confused identity that McKenzie admits is "the most Conchordian song" in the film.

"That was a slightly more complex track," he said, deadpan. "I used a few black notes."

Looking to write a power ballad, McKenzie listened to the work of Harry Nilsson ("Without You") and Eric Carmen ("All by Myself") before writing the song.

"There's nothing funnier to me than a power ballad with all the high drama and the high stakes," he said. "And the aim of that song was just to make it as dramatic as I possibly could."

The result, he said, is his favorite musical sequence from the film. (I'd go further and say it is the best musical number from any film in 2011.) "The song and the visuals really connect on that one," he said. "The song felt cohesive, if I can say so myself. Jason and Peter Linz, who plays Walter, did incredible vocal recordings. And James did an amazing job making sure that the music and the visuals really connected."

McKenzie's work on the film also included co-writing the Amy Adams/Miss Piggy tune "Me Party" and Chris Cooper's bad-guy rap "Let's Talk About Me." He was then hired to serve as the movie's musical supervisor -- which, he said, consisted mostly of "overseeing all the songs to make sure they all sounded like they would fit into the world of the Muppets."

And what does it take for a song to fit into that world, which in the past produced songs like Paul Williams' Oscar-nominated "The Rainbow Connection"? "We listened to a lot of the original Muppets music and there were some key ingredients," he said. "They usually feature banjo, baritone sax and the tack piano, which is a piano with thumbtacks on all the hammers, so that when the strings hit they have that twinkle."

He also kept in mind something that Muppets creator Jim Henson used to say: "If the music sounds too good, it's not right."

McKenzie recorded all the songs before the movie began shooting -- a process, he said, that led to a number of surreal moments when he had to supervise a group of grownups singing in funny voices.

He also found that in the world of the Muppets, there are certain lines you can't cross -- not even for a joke. In one song, a line for one Muppet to sing -- "I remember when I was a little piece of felt" -- was immediately killed.'

"You're not allowed to say that," he said, "because the Muppets are real."

He paused. "Actually, the Muppets are a lot like Santa Claus. They're real until you're old enough to know that they're not real, and then you don't talk about it."

Since "The Muppets," McKenzie has acted in the comedy "Austenland," a romantic-comedy spoof directed by Jerusha Hess, the co-writer of "Napoleon Dynamite." He's also planning to work on new Flight of the Conchords songs with Clement ("it just requires us being in the same town for a while, which hasn't happened lately"), and do some tour dates in 2012.

And he wants to make another Hollywood musical. "On HBO, they let us do whatever we want," he said. "So it was a new experience having to deal with executives and a big studio. But I'm excited about doing another big-studio musical because once you have those budgets, it's really fun doing large-scale musical numbers."

Before he does that, though, McKenzie will appear onscreen in Peter Jackson's "The Hobbit." In "The Fellowship of the Ring," the first of Jackson's "Lord of the Rings" films, McKenzie's three-second appearance as an elf somehow ignited a furor online, where fans dubbed his character Figwit (an acronym for "Frodo is grea ... who is THAT?").

This time around, though, the expectations are higher. "I'm playing an elf again," said McKenzie. "But I'm hoping for ten seconds this time."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/movies/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120102/film_nm/us_muppets_bretmckenzie

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The Caucus: At Church on Sunday Morning, Thoughts of Tuesday

Reporters visited several Iowa churches on Sunday to take the pulse of worshipers as they prepared to caucus on Tuesday.

In Iowa

Reporting on candidates and voters from the Hawkeye State.

Point of Grace Church, Waukee

At this evangelical church in the heavily Republican suburbs outside Des Moines, politics was ignored in the early morning sermon but was very much on the mind of the congregants, many of whom said they were wrestling with the decision of which candidate to support.

The worshipers were able to rattle off the names of each candidate, offering quick descriptions of their strengths and weaknesses. Many had, at one time or another, supported nearly every candidate in the field. But with the caucuses two days away, many suggested that the choice had come down to deciding who offered the best chance to beat President Obama and who best represented their Christian values.

In a field absent of perfect options, that decision, several said, was a contest between Mitt Romney, the former Massachusetts governor, and Rick Santorum, the former senator from Pennsylvania, who has gained momentum in the last few days among those who remain skeptical of Mr. Romney but have grown dissatisfied with the other options.

Over the last few months, Dustin Graber, 34, said he had supported Representative Michele Bachmann of Minnesota, Gov. Rick Perry of Texas and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich. But disappointed with each, he recently decided to caucus for Mr. Santorum. ?I?ve been a flip-flopper,? he said. ?But my mind?s made up now.?

Another Iowan who has decided in the last few days to back Mr. Santorum is Randy Yontz, 69, a retired lobbyist who is active in the local Republican Party. He made his decision by ruling out candidates because of their negative qualities, he said, and at the end only one was left. And he argued that Mr. Santorum?s support would not erode under the spotlight, as it has for so many of his rivals.

?He?s not a flash in the pan,? he said.

The hourlong church service was a slickly produced collection of musical numbers, videos and a sermon to a thin crowd of about 100. But Jeff Mullen, the politically active pastor who is running for State Senate, did not make any mention of the vote. ?I forgot,? Mr. Mullen said. ?In my next sermon I?m going to ask people to pray for the caucuses.?

Though he has been a prominent supporter of Mrs. Bachmann?s ? which has been a source of complaint from some in his congregation ? Mr. Mullen said he believed that Mr. Perry, Mr. Santorum and Mr. Gingrich had strengths as conservative Christians. But he was plainly skeptical of both Representative Ron Paul of Texas and Mr. Romney. ?There?s no perfect candidate,? he said. ?The question is what flaws can you put up with.?

Frank Coulter, 78, a retired mail carrier who also acknowledged ?a soft spot for Santorum,? said he was leaning toward Mr. Romney because he was ?a good family man.? He expected to base his decision on the speeches made on caucus night.

Talking with a friend who said she was praying for guidance, Martha Cole, a retired teacher, said she also had not decided. But she knew that the main attribute she wanted: someone who could beat Mr. Obama. ?I?m looking for a winner,? she said. ?And I don?t know who that is yet.?

? A.G. Sulzberger

First Federated Church, Des Moines

Randy Maurer, 61, a member of this evangelical church on the outer edges of Des Moines, said he had spent weeks casting about for a ?candidate who stands for righteousness,? even flirting with Mr. Gingrich despite ?his baggage.?

?I?ve liked them all,? he said.

But in the past few days, he finally settled on Mr. Santorum. A major factor in his decision: the endorsement of leading evangelicals in the state like Bob Vander Plaats, the head of the Family Leader, an influential conservative group.

?For a lot of the faith community, that moved us,? said Mr. Maurer, who said he had caucused for former Gov. Mike Huckabee of Arkansas in 2008.

? Michael Barbaro

First Church of the Open Bible, Des Moines

Among worshipers here, two themes were evident on Sunday morning: Enthusiasm for Mr. Santorum?s late surge, and a pragmatic view that ?electability? is important ? a factor that could favor Mr. Romney on Tuesday.

For Darla Cox, who has been frustrated that Mr. Santorum has not received much attention on the campaign trail or time during televised debates, his sudden rise in the polls has been gratifying after watching his campaign as it crisscrossed the state, making more than 300 stops.

?I didn?t think he had a chance,? she said as she left the service here before noon. She likes Mr. Santorum?s broad narrative about the nation?s problems ? that a breakdown of marriage and the family is to blame for many of them ? and believes that he might turn those trends around. ?America needs to get back to what he believes,? she said.

Beverly Channell, another worshiper, had not made up her mind, but she said that it was important that the winner be someone who could defeat the president.

?I?m a conservative Republican, and there are no perfect candidates,? she said. But it is crucial to have ?a candidate who is electable against Barack Obama,? she said, even if that candidate is not the most conservative.

?There are some good candidates, good people, not perfect, but good people, and I think it?s imperative to have someone electable,? she said.

When she thinks of the most electable, she said, ?I think of Romney, I think of Perry, I think of Gingrich.? And Ron Paul too, she said.

The church?s pastor, Curt Arne, had not made up his mind, either. ?But if I had to narrow it down to three, I?d probably pick Perry, Newt and Santorum.? He likes Mrs. Bachmann too.

?Perry has a very strong faith foundation, he?s a proven job maker, and he at least talks tough on straightening out Congress,? Mr. Arne said.

?Newt has a lot of baggage, as everybody will tell you,? he added, ?but at least he balanced the budget, and I think that?s what people are looking for.?

And he likes Mr. Santorum, but his 2006 re-election defeat in Pennsylvania gives him pause. ?That?s not a good sign, the fact that he got blown out,? he said.

? Richard A. Oppel Jr.

Cornerstone Family Church, Des Moines

?I?m going to use my head and I?m going to vote my conscience,? said Pastor Dan Berry, who identifies himself as an independent. But the key, he said, was showing up at the caucuses.

?It is your moral obligation. It is your spiritual obligation,? he told the hundreds gathered in the church?s industrial-style sanctuary.

Cornerstone, an evangelical church known for its diversity ? the service opened with gospel music, and the crowd appeared to be an even mixture of blacks and whites ? was where Mr. Huckabee chose to worship on the final Sunday before the 2008 Iowa caucuses. He went on to win the state three days later, and many of the Cornerstone parishioners backed him.

Now they?re leaning toward Mr. Santorum.

?I just decided I was going to vote for the person who best supports my worldview, even if they?re down in the polls,? said Jerry Miller, 61, of Des Moines. ?I was kind of riding that roller coaster for a while, and then I said, ?I can?t do that.? ?

Mr. Miller, like many others, expressed admiration for Mr. Paul as well, but said he found some of his views too extreme, particularly his isolationist posture.

Mr. Santorum appears to be finding support even among more moderate Republicans. The former Pennsylvania senator will get the vote of Jean Jones, a Des Moines Republican who said she voted for Mr. Obama in 2008.

Mr. Santorum ?seems to have been the most consistent,? said Ms. Jones, 52, adding that she hoped he could curtail partisan bickering, in contrast with Mr. Gingrich.

Others expected to remain undecided until they showed up to caucus.

?I?m really going to offer up a prayer and hope that it comes to me,? said Deborah Anderson, 54. This will be her first caucus.

? Sarah Wheaton

First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), Perry

At the progressive First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), in Perry, a town of less than 8,000 people, Mavis Struyk, one of the few Republicans in the congregation, will cast her vote for Mitt Romney on Tuesday.

Unlike some in more conservative Christian churches, Ms. Struyk said she considered Mr. Romney, a Mormon, to be a Christian.

?He?s gone to church all his life and a candidate of faith is important to me,? the retiree said.

While most of the candidates say they are strong Christians, Mr.
Romney attracts her because she feels he attacks the other candidates less.

?I just got sick and tired of the negativity from the other candidates attacking each other,? Ms. Struyk said, adding that Mr. Romney ?seems like the only one who isn?t doing that.?

Her pastor, Tim Johnson, didn?t mention politics in his sermon, even though this was the last Sunday before the caucuses. Afterwards, he noted that ministers who preach politics ?tend to get into trouble?
and lose members as a result.

? Armando Monta?o

Source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=95f7efc67802e343ebb65b7572d51851

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Sunday, January 1, 2012

6 businesses got bulk of Rome tornado damage

Metro Atlanta / State News 8:38 p.m. Friday, December 30, 2011

For the AJC

A week after a tornado struck northwest Georgia, an examination of damage has resulted in losses estimated at $1.82 million in the Rome area.

Floyd County Emergency Management Agency Director Scotty Hancock told the Rome News-Tribune that two-thirds of the losses were incurred by six businesses, with none listed as destroyed.

Keith Clark, owner of the West Rome IGA grocery, says he's still assessing damage to his store but says the roof over the shopping center will have to be replaced. He says thousands of dollars worth of food had to be dumped.

Thirty-one other businesses or commercial establishments also sustained losses that are being listed as minor, meaning losses of at least $20,000 were estimated.

Hancock says Floyd County is eligible for assistance through the Small Business Administration.

Source: http://www.ajc.com/news/6-businesses-got-bulk-1282628.html?cxtype=rss_news

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Inconstant Constants

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Some things never change. physicists call them the constants of nature. Such quantities as the velocity of light, c , Newton’s constant of gravitation, G , and the mass of the electron, m e , are assumed to be the same at all places and times in the universe. They form the scaffolding around which the theories of physics are erected, and they define the fabric of our universe. Physics has progressed by making ever more accurate measurements of their values.

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Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=068630730c6a7b845fd28a1dcc29f9a2

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