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Snuffysmith
At DNC Helm, Dean Tasked With Rebuilding

By Dan Balz

Former Vermont governor Howard Dean claimed the chairmanship of the Democratic National Committee by acclamation yesterday and used his opening speech to attack President Bush and the Republicans for "fiscal recklessness," saying the administration's new budget brings "Enron-style accounting to our nation's capital."

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/artic...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
Democrats Wrestle With Choice and Choices

By Charles Babington

Abortion rights advocates are fuming over reports that some key Democrats are backing antiabortion candidates in at least two Senate races, a sign that the emotional issue continues to vex the party after the 2004 election losses.

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/artic...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
Conservatives Join Forces for Bush Plans

By Thomas B. Edsall

With billions of dollars at stake, a large network of influential conservative groups is mounting a high-priced campaign to help the White House win passage of legislation to partially privatize Social Security and limit class-action lawsuits.

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/artic...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
Can Dean Give 'Em A Winner?

By E.J. Dionne Jr.

Howard Dean, are you absolutely sure you want to be the Democratic Party's national chairman?

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/artic...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
AN APPRAISAL
In a Saffron Ribbon, a Billowy Gift to the City
By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN
"The Gates," the Central Park installation by Christo and
his wife, Jeanne-Claude, is the first great public art
event of the century.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/13/arts/13kimmelman.html?th
Snuffysmith
- BUSINESS -
Doing Your Taxes
In a special section, the efforts of President Bush to overhaul the tax code are examined. He is considering a move from a system that taxes the money people earn to one that taxes the money they spend. Also, a review of tax software and a sample return.
http://www.nytimes.com/pages/business/your...s/index.html?th
Snuffysmith
Judge Considers Declassifying Sept. 11 Report on the F.B.I.
By ERIC LICHTBLAU
A federal judge is weighing whether to make public a secret
Justice Department report that officials say is sharply
critical of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/13/national...3/13FBI.html?th
Snuffysmith
Number of Gays Discharged From Services Drops Again
By JOHN FILES
The number of men and women discharged from the military
because they were gay has fallen three years in a row.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/13/national/13gays.html?th
Snuffysmith
In Small Town, the Fight Continues for Texas Sovereignty
By SIMON ROMERO
After several years of infighting, the Republic of Texas,
whose members believe Texas should be a sovereign nation,
has resurfaced in Overton, Tex.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/13/national/13overton.html?th
Snuffysmith
Democrats Elect Dean as Committee Chairman
By ANNE E. KORNBLUT
Howard Dean, once a party outsider, rode to an easy victory
to become the chairman of the Democratic National Committee.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/13/politics/13dems.html?th
Snuffysmith
Senate May Open Inquiry Into C.I.A.'s Handling of Suspects
By DOUGLAS JEHL
The inquiry would be the first by Congress to address the
C.I.A.'s conduct in what has remained a shadowy corner of
counterterrorism efforts.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/13/politics/13intel.html?th
Snuffysmith
Senate's New Math May Aid Stalled Judicial Nominees
By NEIL A. LEWIS
President Bush may have a good chance of winning
confirmation for some of his previously blocked judicial
nominations, Democrats and Republicans said this week.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/13/politics...ominees.html?th
Snuffysmith
Spinning Frenzy: P.R.'s Bad Press
By TIMOTHY L. O'BRIEN
The admission by Armstrong Williams that he was paid
$240,000 to promote the administration’s education
initiative has roiled the public relations industry.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/13/business.../13flak.html?th
Snuffysmith
Please Don't Call the Customers Dead
By RICHARD SANDOMIR
Can the Alcor Life Extension Foundation, the home of Ted
Williams's head, rescue patients from natural post-mortem
deterioration?

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/13/business...3freeze.html?th
Snuffysmith
Fat Substitute, Once Praised, Is Pushed Out of the Kitchen
By KIM SEVERSON and MELANIE WARNER
Scientists contend that trans fat, a component of partially
hydrogenated oil, is more dangerous than the fat it
replaced.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/13/business...ransfat.html?th
Snuffysmith
Death Sentence for the Hubble?
Upgrading the Hubble Space Telescope is probably the most
important contribution today's astronauts could make.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/13/opinion/13sun2.html?th
Snuffysmith
--------------------
Nevada's Clout Evident in Waste Site Battle
--------------------

When Congress chose Yucca Mountain, the state was a backwater. Times have changed.

By Ralph Vartabedian
Times Staff Writer

February 13 2005

LAS VEGAS — The federal government's campaign to put a nuclear waste dump at Yucca Mountain in Nevada is in trouble, having encountered political and legal setbacks during the last year that have raised questions about when and even if the project will go forward.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/f...lines-frontpage
Snuffysmith
--------------------
He's the Stickler of the House
--------------------

Rep. Sensenbrenner, holding the line as he sees it, stands in Bush's way on immigration.

By Mary Curtius
Times Staff Writer

February 13 2005

WHITEFISH BAY, Wis. — On a typically frigid winter's night in this affluent Milwaukee suburb, about a dozen people braved the cold for a recent town hall meeting with their local congressman. But Rep. F. James Sensenbrenner Jr. did not see it as an opportunity for an intimate chat with constituents.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/na...eadlines-nation
Snuffysmith
Election Battle for State Had Huge Price Tag
--------------------

From Times Wire Reports

February 13 2005

The battle for Ohio in last year's presidential campaign came with a huge price tag: $100 million for television advertising alone, according to a study released by political science professors from the universities of Cincinnati and Akron.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/na...eadlines-nation
Snuffysmith
Bush Touts Social Security Reform in Weekly Radio Address

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=B9311F:2F72C9D

President Bush repeats warning that system will soon run short of
money

George W. Bush President Bush has again urged Congress to approve his
plan for adding private investment accounts to the national retirement
system known as Social Security.

In Saturday's weekly radio address, Mr. Bush repeated his warning that
the system will soon run short of money because the amount collected
in taxes is far less than the money needed to pay benefits. He
stressed that if Congress does not act, the government could be forced
to dramatically increase taxes, borrow money or reduce Social Security
benefits.

Under Mr. Bush's plan, younger workers would be able to divert some of
their Social Security taxes into private accounts that could be
invested in stocks or bonds.

Speaking for the opposition Democratic party, US Senator Charles
Schumer, of New York said the federal retirement program only needs
fine-tuning. He said Mr. Bush's plan will not fix the system's
long-term financial problems.

Some information for this report provided by AP and Reuters.
Snuffysmith
US Democratic Party Chooses Howard Dean as New Leader

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=B9311E:2F72C9D

Dean urges Democrats to work at local level to organize and unite
party

Howard Dean Former Vermont governor, presidential contender and
practicing physician Howard Dean has been elected to head the
Democratic Party, as it seeks a strategy for winning back the
presidency in 2008.

Howard Dean, whose presidential campaign was notable for the
grassroots support he received, urged Democrats to work at the local
level to organize and unite the party.

"We can change the party, but only by working together and competing
in all 50 states and territories," he said. "We can change the party,
but only by working together and becoming a national party again. We
can change this party, but only by working together at the local
level, because, if we want to win nationally, we have to start by
winning locally."

The opposition Democrats have been debating where they went wrong,
following presidential candidate John Kerry's loss to President Bush
in November. The 2004 election also put Republicans firmly in control
of both houses of Congress.

Dr. Dean, who was elected chairman by the Democratic National
Committee, said the party must move forward from November's defeat and
connect with American voters, if it hopes to be successful in
congressional elections in 2006 and the 2008 presidential race.

"Republicans wandered around for 40 years in the political wilderness
before they took back Congress," he said. "It cannot take us that long
and it won't take us that long, not if we stand up for what we believe
in, organize at the local level and recognize that this party's
strength does not come from the consultants down. It comes from the
grassroots up."

Dr. Dean, who was the early favorite to win the Democratic Party's
presidential nomination last year before losing to Senator John Kerry,
was the first national candidate to harness the power of the Internet
to raise funds and build grassroots operations.

"We are going to use the power and potential of technology as part of
an aggressive outreach to meet and include voters, to work with your
state parties and get our unified message out," Mr. Dean
said.

Some Democrats have worried that his liberal image could be a
detriment in areas of the country where Republicans have made strong
gains in recent years. Dr. Dean said he will work to ensure that the
Democratic Party connects with American voters by promoting issues of
concern to all Americans: strong national security, high paying jobs
and affordable healthcare.
Snuffysmith
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=stor...ewillheleadthem

Democrats turn to Dean, but where will he lead them?
Snuffysmith
http://quote.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=1...4x9k&refer=home

Senate Budget Chairman Calls Medicare Drug Plan Too Expensive
Snuffysmith
Verizon Agrees to Acquire MCI for $6.6 Billion, Beating
Qwest
By MATT RICHTEL and ANDREW ROSS SORKIN
The deal, expected to be announced today, would end the
independence of MCI, the nation's second-largest
long-distance company.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/14/technology/14phone.html?th
Snuffysmith
New U.S. Secretary Showing Flexibility on 'No Child' Act
By SAM DILLON
Education Secretary Margaret Spellings has shown a
willingness to work with officials on some aspects of
President Bush's signature education law.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/14/politics/14educ.html?th
Snuffysmith
Bloggers as News Media Trophy Hunters
By KATHERINE Q. SEELYE
With the resignation of CNN's news chief, Eason Jordan,
Webloggers have shown their growing influence.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/14/technology/14cnn.html?th
Snuffysmith
ADVERTISING
One Way to Deflect From the N.B.A.'s Embarrassments: Funny
Ads
By JANE L. LEVERE
A new N.B.A. ad campaign, using humor to sell apparel,
shows how the league is struggling with its image after a
series of public embarrassments.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/14/business...14adcol.html?th
Snuffysmith
G.M. Will Pay $2 Billion to Sever Ties to Fiat
By DANNY HAKIM
General Motors said that it would pay Fiat $2 billion so
that it would not be forced to take over Fiat's ailing auto
business.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/14/business.../14auto.html?th
Snuffysmith
TODAY'S EDITORIALS
The Importance of Being Earnest
For all its talk of deficit reduction, President Bush's
2006 budget is a map of reckless economic policies.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/14/opinion/14mon1.html?th
Snuffysmith
--------------------
Democrats Seek to Outmaneuver Republicans by Imitating Their Strategy
--------------------

Ronald Brownstein

February 14 2005

For inspiration, Democrats these days appear to be looking more to Newt Gingrich than to Dick Gephardt, more to Bill Kristol than to Al From, and more to George W. Bush than Bill Clinton.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/na...,4110684.column
Snuffysmith
New AIDS Strain Discovered in US

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=B995CA:2F72C9D

Health officials say unidentified New York City man diagnosed with
strain not responding to anti-AIDS drugs U.S. public health officials
say an unidentified New York City man has been diagnosed with a new
HIV strain that has so far not responded to any anti-AIDS drugs. The
unidentified man in his mid-forties became infected with a drug
resistant form of the virus that causes AIDS after having unprotected
sex with other men while using crystal methamphetamine, an addictive
stimulant.

New York City Health Commissioner Thomas Frieden said officials know
little else about the man. "We don't know for certain precisely when
he was infected although further laboratory tests may shed light on
that. And we don't know how he will do in the future," he said.

Officials say they don't know how many people the man may have
infected. He was diagnosed with what turned out the be the drug
resistant strain of HIV in late 2004 after years of having unprotected
anal sex with other men.

Health officials say they've tried three commonly prescribed drugs on
the man without success. He is now receiving a fourth drug.

Infectious diseases specialist Jay Dobkin of the State University of
New York worries that HIV could again become an unmanageable disease.
"Many of us up here remember the dark days before there was any
effective treatment for HIV. And I think the case... should be a
reminder that those days could come back," he said.

While it's not unusual for anti-viral drugs to become less effective
or stop working in people who have been infected with HIV for a long
time, experts say they have never seen drug resistance develop so
quickly, either in the United States or abroad.
Snuffysmith
Online Exhibit Features African-American Migration Experience

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=B995D3:2F72C9D

New York Public Library launch extraordinary exhibit in time for Black
History month The first of these migrations, starting more than five
centuries ago, was the trans-Atlantic slave trade. Of course, the
slave trade was a forced movement. In most cases, the black migrations
were voluntary, as African Americans took to the road [or the rails or
the seas] to seek a better life.

"For far too long, the history of the African American experience has
been written as a history of our victimization, what others have done
to us. With the migration you begin to see what people of African
descent have done for themselves," says Howard Dodson, who heads the
Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, the New York Public
Library unit behind this new online exhibit. "We've been able, over
the course of the three years of the project, to put together some
25,000 pages of material - 16,000 of them text [and] 8,000 of them
images - to tell this really remarkable story in a very in-depth way."

The 13 migrations highlighted in this online exhibit include journeys
by runaway slaves, emigration to Africa and elsewhere, and the
so-called Great Migration from southern U.S. farms to northern
factories. And what really makes this special is the vast amount of
material - including original documents, maps and photos - which helps
bring the story to life.

"Scholarly articles, manuscript items, chapters of books - whole books
at times - that allows a person who wants to know more about that
particular migration to go into it in greater depth," says Mr. Dodson.

There's a smaller version of "In Motion" at the Schomburg Center's
exhibit hall in New York, but Howard Dodson says the web version is
bigger, deeper and more accessible. "In this online environment, it's
accessible not just in our building, but indeed around the world. And
anyone that wants to access this material can now go to our website
and have access to it 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. That is, in my
judgment, the way of the future," he says.

The African American Migration Experience website just went live this
month, and with online lesson plans, much of it will certainly find
its place in school curriculums. For an in-depth look at African
American history that goes beyond just a few famous names or events,
surf on over to nypl.org, and click on "African American Migration
Experience."
Snuffysmith
47th Annual Grammy Awards Presented in Los Angeles Ceremony

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=B995D0:2F72C9D

Late Ray Charles, Alicia Keys among winners, as well as former
President Bill Clinton, who earned a Grammy for best spoken word album
for the audio adaptation of his best-selling autobiography called My
Life

Singer Billy Preston performs the Ray Charles classic "Georgia on My
Mind" Post-Grammy Party for Ray CharlesThe late Ray Charles dominated
the Grammy awards in Los Angeles, Sunday evening. The rhythm and blues
legend earned eight posthumous awards for his collaborative album
Genius Loves Company.

Ray Charles died in June, at age 73. His album Genius Loves Company,
released after his death, was the best-selling album of his career,
with sales of more than two million. Genius Loves Company received
Grammys for best pop album and album of the year, and this duet with
Norah Jones, Here We Go Again, was named record of the year and best
pop collaboration with vocals.

Backstage, singer Stevie Wonder recalled the talent of Ray Charles as
a musician and arranger, and his own pain at losing his friend.

"We will never forget that pain, but I'm so thankful to God that we
have something called joy and he gave so much joy in his life, so much
love that the joy far exceeds any pain," he said.

U2 was honored with the Grammy for best rock performance by a duo or
group for Vertigo, and the San Francisco group Green Day earned the
Grammy for best rock album for their punk rock album American Idiot.

Kanye West poses with his three awards Producer/singer Kanye West
received the Grammy for best rap album for  The College Dropout.

The group Maroon 5 was named best new artist

Backstage, Maroon 5 lead singer Adam Levine said band members were
surprised.

"Absolutely. When you're in the category of best new artist with
Kanye, you kind of have to expect to lose to him because he's
unbelievable, so it was definitely a shock," he said.

Alicia Keys received four Grammys, including one for best rhythm and
blues album, for The

Alicia Keys poses with her four awards at the 47th Annual Grammy
Awards Diary of Alicia Keys. The track  If I Ain't Got You was
named best female rhythm and blues performance.

Veteran country singer Loretta Lynn received the award for best
country album for Van Lear Rose, named after her home town, Van Lear,
Kentucky. Backstage, she said she and producer Jack White did not
expect a winner when they started making the album.

Loretta Lynn: "We never dreamed we'd get a Grammy tonight, did we?"
Jack White: "No, ma'am."Loretta Lynn: "We just figured we'd go out and
do a little album and sing a little bit. We did it, and it's been a
hit. And we're happy." Jack White: "Yes, we are."

Another music veteran, Prince, received the Grammy for best male
rhythm and blues performance for Call My Name.

Brian Wilson earned the Grammy for best rock instrumental for Mrs.
O'Leary's Cow, from his long-awaited album Smile. The creative force
behind such Beach Boys classics as Good Vibrations had never before
won a Grammy, as he noted backstage.

"It was worth waiting 42 years for it, let's put it that way. 'Good
Vibrations' lost, but 'Mrs. O'Leary's Cow' won," said Brian Wilson.

The Latin group Los Lonely Boys, three brothers from West Texas,
received the Grammy for best pop performance by a duo or group for
Heaven.

Grammys were presented in 107 categories, not all of them for music.
Former President Bill Clinton earned a Grammy for best spoken word
album for the audio adaptation of his best-selling autobiography
called My Life.
Snuffysmith
White House Director of Strategic Initiatives to Address Symposium on President Bush's Governing Philosophy

2/14/2005 12:21:00 PM

News Advisory:

Hudson Institute's Bradley Center for Philanthropy and Civic Renewal in cooperation with the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation will convene a symposium of conservative intellectuals to discuss the future of conservative thought.

Peter Wehner, deputy assistant to the president and director of Strategic Initiatives will be the featured luncheon speaker on President Bush's Governing Philosophy.

A partial list of symposium participants includes: William Kristol, The Weekly Standard; David Keene, The American Conservative Union; Grover Norquist, Americans for Tax Reform; Scott McConnell, The American Conservative; Steven Hayward, The American Enterprise Institute.

WHO: Peter Wehner, deputy assistant to the president and director of Strategic Initiatives

WHAT: Luncheon Address "President Bush's Governing Philosophy"

WHEN: Wednesday, Feb. 16, at 12 Noon

WHERE: The Ritz-Carlton, Ballroom, 1150 22ND Street, NW, Washington, D.C.

For further information, please contact Kevin McVicker at Shirley & Banister Public Affairs at 703-739-5920.

http://www.usnewswire.com/
Snuffysmith
CAF Responds to GOP Attack on Social Security Analysis; RNC Fails to Defend Bush Privatization Campaign

2/14/2005 2:56:00 PM

Contact: Toby Chaudhuri of the Campaign for America's Future, 202-955-5665 ext. 133

WASHINGTON, Feb. 14 /U.S. Newswire/ -- The Campaign for America's Future responded in detail today to the RNC's Friday night attack on the group's analysis of the impact of President Bush's campaign to privatize Social Security. The RNC issued a press release and statement late on Friday night that distorts the truth and attacks the Campaign for America's Future even as the American public and policymakers from both parties express increasing skepticism of the president's plan to privatize Social Security.

Campaign for America's Future Co-director Roger Hickey said that the RNC campaign of name-calling is a sign of their weakness.

"We stand by our analysis of the president's privatization plan," said Hickey. "The RNC's distortions of Campaign for America's Future and other privatization critics only signals political desperation and an unwillingness to come clean with the facts. Privatization will cut benefits for every working American."

The Campaign for America's Future reports attacked by the RNC show that a typical 20-year-old worker would lose $152,000 in guaranteed Social Security benefits if the president's plan to privatize Social Security is implemented.

The RNC's attack came as the Campaign for America's Future promotes the efforts of more than 20 organizations critical of the president's privatization plan--including the AFL-CIO, the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, the Alliance for Retired Americans, USAction and others. The groups unleashed a broad assault on the president's privatization plan, joining with local leaders in every city the president visited following his State of the Union address to launch daily news conferences, rallies and advertisements.

Center for Economic and Policy Research Co-director and Economist Dean Baker, Ph.D., whose data was cited in the Campaign for America's Future's reports, immediately responded to the substantive flaws in the RNC's attack.

Baker said that the president has no evidence that privatization would boost guaranteed benefits, citing that the president's Social Security Commission refuses to provide evidence that a set of dividend and capital gains could add up to the 6.5 percent rate of return they claim is possible with private accounts.

"The president, and now the RNC, are playing games with the numbers in describing the impact of their Social Security privatization proposal," said Baker. "If the president wants an honest debate on the merits of his proposal, he should allow the SSA's actuaries to rigorously derive a set of projections of stock returns from the profit growth projections used in its analysis of the Social Security programs."

Hickey noted that the president has not proposed a real, detailed legislative proposal to improve the long-term solvency of Social Security or explain how he would pay for the massive cost of private accounts.

"The president's actual plan is a blank sheet of paper. It's hard for the RNC to push their distortion campaign when there is nothing behind it," said Hickey. "If the RNC wants to correct us, they should tell the American people the real details of what the president plans to do to the guaranteed benefits we've paid for."

The Campaign for America's Future examined Model 2 of the president's 2001 Social Security Commission to produce the analysis, the only detailed plan released by the Bush administration.

---

RNC DISTORTS THE TRUTH IN SOCIAL SECURITY ATTACK

Rhetoric V. The Reality For American Workers

RNC Didn't Read The Campaign For America's Future's Analysis:

Report Analyzes Commission Model That The President Said Is The Basis Of His Plan. The reports the Campaign for America's Future released are based on the only detailed plan advanced by the White House, which includes a scheduled reduction in Social Security's guaranteed benefits phased in over time. Plan 2 of the president's Social Security Commission cuts benefits by 10 percent for workers age 55. (CBO, "Long-Term Analysis of Plan 2 of the President's' Commission to Strengthen Social Security," 7/21/04)

RNC Implies President's Plan Is Worse Than Bankrupt:

President's Plan Offers Fewer Benefits Than The System The RNC Calls "Bankrupt." RNC Comm. Dir. Brian Jones said that "Social Security will go bankrupt unless action is taken," in their attack on the Campaign for America's Future. The president's plan would provide workers age 55 and younger with smaller guaranteed benefits than the current Social Security system, which the RNC calls "bankrupt." (CBO, Ibid.)

RNC Exaggerates Stock Market Gains:

Private Accounts Can't Make Up For The Benefit Cuts Privatization Requires. The White House refuses to provide evidence that a set of dividend and capital gains could add up to the 6.5 percent rate of return they claim is possible with private accounts. (Dean Baker, "No Economist Left Behind Social Security Test," http://www.cepr.net, Accessed 2/12/05)

RNC Plays A Numbers Game To Obscure The Facts:

The RNC Says Guaranteed Benefit Cuts Are 4 Years Later Than CAF's Report Projects. The president introduced a 4-year delay in the proposed implementation of his privatization plan. (State of the Union, 2/2/2005) This only delays the massive benefit cuts outlined in the Campaign for America's Future's reports by four years. The RNC did not refute these results, only that the timing now includes a delay.

RNC Doesn't Know The Details Of President's Plan:

The President's Plan Is So Secret, Even The RNC Doesn't Know It. The RNC claims that "price indexing" is not a feature of the president's plan. However, the only plan discussed at length by President Bush clearly includes price indexing (Model 2, President's Commission; 2004 WH Economic Report, Ch. 6, www.gpoaccess.gov/eop/index.html) A recent White House memo clearly states that the president "cannot solve the Social Security problem with PRAs alone." The memo says that "under current law benefits are calculated by a 'wage index' - but because wages grow faster than inflation (prices), so do Social Security benefits. If we don't address this aspect of the current system, we'll face serious economic risks." (WH OSI Dir. Peter Wehner, Memo, 1/3/05) Price indexing is the White House's method to eliminate Social Security's guaranteed benefits.

RNC Doesn't Represent A Majority Of Americans:

The RNC Is Pushing The Agenda Of A Narrow Set Of Special Interests. Very few people support an overhaul of the Social Security system or any reduction in its guaranteed benefits. Recent polls find that resistance is growing to the president's plans to privatize Social Security. While 55 percent believe the president's privatization plan is a "bad idea" and 85 percent say benefit cuts are "too risky," including 83 percent of Republicans and 84 percent of independents, RNC Chairman Ken Mehlman e-mailed a memo to millions of people that says core right-wing voters will define the RNC's success on this issue. (CNN, 2/8/05; Newsweek poll, Marcus Mabry, 2/5/05; WSJ/NBC News poll, John Harwood, 1/18/05; Ken Mehlman, Memo to RNC members, 2/11/05)

RNC Wants Wall Street Firms To Make Billions Off Everday People:

The President's Privatization Campaign Relies On Wall Street And Corporate Interests. The president is mobilizing big business and financial institutions that stand to benefit from privatization. (CATO Foundation Journal article quoted in the Los Angeles Times, 1/30/05).

The National Association of Manufacturers, the nation's largest industrial trade association, created the Alliance for Worker Retirement Security to fund a public campaign to sell privatization. The Alliance includes the Securities Industry Association, which includes nearly 600 of the world's most powerful investment houses. (www.sia.com)

-- Alliance members spent $108 million lobbying the federal government in the last two years. Alliance members donated $34.6 million to federal candidates and political parties since 1999, $25.8 million went to Republicans. (Center for Responsive Politics, 1/25/05)

-- Alliance leaders say that Schwab Brokerage is helping to fund their privatization campaign. The conservative Cato Institute also reportedly received funds from American International Group, T. Rowe Price, E-Trade Financial and others to fund studies on private social security accounts. (Los Angeles Times, 1/18/05)

The Coalition for the Modernization and Protection of America's Social Security is actively pushing for private accounts. COMPASS plans to spend millions of dollars on the privatization campaign. (San Francisco Chronicle, 1/26/05)

http://www.usnewswire.com/

-0-

/© 2005 U.S. Newswire 202-347-2770/
Snuffysmith
As a community organizer in the South Bronx, Elena Conte doesn't exactly fit the profile of a Wall Street mover and shaker. To the contrary, she works daily with some of New York City's poorest denizens to rid her neighborhood of toxic air and the nonstop stench of burning sludge.

But thanks to a recent partnership with nearby Sisters of Mercy nuns, her neighborhood's concerns will soon get a prominent hearing at Synagro, which owns the company that turns malodorous New York sewage into fertilizer pellets. The secret? Clout, as in the kind that comes with having millions to invest, as the sisters' Mercy Investment Program does.

Read more:
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0214/p13s01-wmgn.html?s=meset
Snuffysmith
Bush to Request $82B for Military Operations

By Deb Riechmann

President Bush is asking Congress for $82 billion to cover the costs of ongoing military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan and a myriad of other internationally related expenses, such as training Iraqi security forces, aiding tsunami victims and helping military forces in other nations.

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/artic...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
After Bush Leaves Office, His Budget's Costs Balloon

By Jonathan Weisman and Peter Baker

For President Bush, the budget sent to Congress last week outlines a painful path to meeting his promise to bring down the federal budget deficit by the time he leaves office in 2009. But for the senators and governors already jockeying to succeed him, the numbers released in recent days add up to a budgetary landmine that could blow up just as the next president moves into the Oval Office.

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/artic...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
Bush Urges Patriot Act Renewal

By Nedra Pickler

President Bush on Monday urged Congress to reauthorize the USA Patriot Act, the Justice Department's widely criticized anti-terrorism law.

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/artic...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
Democrats Mobilizing on Social Security

By Mike Allen

NORTH BRUNSWICK, N.J. -- Carol James, a senior clerk typist in this township's tax assessor's office, had listened to snippets of President Bush's speeches and was convinced that Social Security "is in trouble right now" and that creating new individual investment accounts might be a good way to help young workers "do something for themselves."

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/artic...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
A Newly Meaningful Relationship?

By Al Kamen

Romance is in the air today across the land. But in Washington, the buzz continues about "The Kiss." No, not Gustav Klimt's famous painting. It's the big fat one an exuberant President Bush planted on Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman's right cheek as he waded through the Capitol crowd after the State of the Union a couple of weeks ago.

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/artic...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
http://www.carnegieendowment.org/npp/publi...a=view&id=16438

Senator Levin Critiques Secretary Rice's Iraq Claims
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
Snuffysmith
http://www.carnegieendowment.org/npp/publi...a=view&id=16395

Rice Pledges Strong Support to Nunn-Lugar Efforts

Joseph Cirincione
Proliferaton News and Resources
Snuffysmith
Gains on the reservations
Indian tribes' economic gains go beyond casinos. By Brad Knickerbocker
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0215/p01s03-ussc.html?s=hns
Snuffysmith
New rules to stem pollution on factory farms draw fire
Environmentalists say Bush's cooperative approach is toothless, while
the EPA sees it as efficient and effective. By Christopher D. Cook
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0215/p02s01-uspo.html?s=hns
Snuffysmith
To curb meth, a crackdown on cold medicines
States try to limit access to a key meth ingredient, but some drug
companies and consumer groups oppose the move. By Kris Axtman
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0215/p02s02-uspo.html?s=hns
Snuffysmith
How the elections will affect US role in Iraq
Lack of a big majority may mean the US will be involved longer to
support a 'weak' government. By Howard LaFranchi
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0215/p03s01-usfp.html?s=hns
Snuffysmith
Attracting the World's Brightest
Finally, the US loosened visa security requirements for many foreign
students and high-tech workers. The Monitor's View
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0215/p08s01-comv.html?s=hns
Snuffysmith
Can US Budget Be Rational?
Bush's system to rate programs by their results is unproved, but the
intent is right. The Monitor's View
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0215/p08s03-comv.html?s=hns
Snuffysmith
College admissions capitalizing on worry?
Some things that make my son a great college candidate are not ones you
get grades for. By Susan DeMersseman
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0215/p09s01-coop.html?s=hns
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