News Dec 25, 2012 at 9:20 am

Comments

1
If you need some news watch Katherine Harris call in to Sam Seder's show to break down the election.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pqHnPHG3_…

Janeane Garafalo is BRILLIANT!!!
2
There is plenty of joy in the world today.

Goldy is just bummed that there was not a massacre to gloat about....
3
Crazy-ass well-armed-militia convicted-felon momma's boy had an AR-15 with 30-round magazines. You know, for duck hunting.
5
@4

Yeah, they're exactly the same, sure.
6
Oscar....Oscar....Oscar.....
7
@4 No it isn't. It's A) not that pejorative and B) it's like saying honky is the equivalent of the N-word. One word is loaded with persecution and privilege, the other isn't.
9
Ladies and gentlemen, I would like to declare that I, also, will not be running for a seat in the Senate.

Thank you, that is all.
10
@4, @4, hey, @4. That's a lie and you know it so fuck you.
11
Merry Christmas to all. Goyim and kikes and everyone in between.
12
gun owners your guns did not prevent or stop the shooting in webster ny, or the shooting in the bellevue bar. I would bet that in england and japan they had no similar shootings the last couple of days.

tell me again, how does having 280 million guns all over help us achieve .....safety?

what does it help us achieve, exactly?

oh and I mean only the responsible gun owners, the ones who are disgusted wit the nra. tell us, what do your guns achieve for us, as a nation?

certainly with 280 million guns we can feel secure that canada will not invade us, and mexico won't either. is that it?

or is it that we know we can't fall into tyranny the way australia and the UK have fallen?

isn't it true that your guns are jut entertainment, they let you pretent to be bruce willis, sort of a video game for adults type thing? that's the purpose and effect of them, right. I mean, are you responsible gun owners claimingthey keep you safe at home, or they prevent tyranny or are you merely claiming ...it's just fun, or nice, o you like guns, that's all?
13
@4, in the Torah, goyim means nation, or peoples. In common parlance, it means non-Jews. If you think that compares with kike, you're meshugenah.
14

Time for an indie horror flick set in Seattle...

TUBA MAN

They beat him and left him for dead.

They thought.

But he came back and got them...one, by one, by one...

http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2…

15

#13

My friend Leo thought the definition of goy was someone ordering an egg bagel.
16
WHERE IS OLAHA OBAMA?

Businesses warn of 'coast wide port shutdown' as union strike looms, appeal for Obama intervention
Published December 25, 2012

As if Superstorm Sandy and the looming fiscal crisis weren't enough, a potential strike by thousands of dock workers from Boston to Houston threatens to shock the economy as early as this weekend.

>>>Business groups and state officials in recent days have called on President Obama to intervene, and use emergency powers to "avoid a coast wide port shutdown."

They warn it could cost billions, citing estimates that a 10-day port lockout in 2002 cost $1 billion a day -- and caused a major backlog in shipments.
Florida Gov. Rick Scott is the latest to enter the fray and call for White House intervention. But a port strike would affect more than the East and Gulf coasts, where all these ports are located. It could choke supply chains across the country. Groups ranging from the automobile industry to the National Retail Federation to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce to the Cheese Importers Association of America are warning of dire consequences.
"Failure to reach an agreement resulting in a coast wide shutdown will have serious economy-wide impacts," those and dozens of other groups wrote to Obama last week. They said "just the threat of a shutdown" has forced many businesses to enact costly "contingency plans."
At issue is a labor dispute between the International Longshoremen's Association, which represents dock workers, and the U.S. Maritime Alliance, which represents port operators and shipping companies.
Talks between the dock workers and the shipping companies broke down Dec. 18, just weeks after a critical West Coast port complex was crippled by a strike involving a few hundred workers.
Federal mediators have since called a meeting before the end of the week, in hopes of resolving the disagreement before the Dec. 29 expiration of the dock workers' latest contract extension.
The union could strike after that date without a resolution.
The disagreement has worried scores of business groups because of the sheer number of workers and ports involved. The union represents 14,500 workers at more than a dozen ports extending south from Boston and handling 95 percent of all containerized shipments from Maine to Texas, about 110 million tons' worth.
The New York-New Jersey ports handle the most cargo on the East Coast, valued at $208 billion last year. The other ports that would be affected by a strike are Boston; Delaware River; Baltimore; Hampton Roads, Va.; Wilmington, N.C.; Charleston, S.C.; Savannah, Ga.; Jacksonville, Fla.; Port Everglades, Fla.; Miami; Tampa, Fla.; Mobile, Ala.; New Orleans; and Houston.
Florida Gov. Scott recently wrote a letter to Obama warning of the "devastating" impact a strike would have on his state, where cargo-related activity "generates more than 550,000 direct and indirect jobs." He also recalled how, in 2002, "tons of perishable cargo were destroyed" in the West Coast lockout.
He, along with groups like the National Retail Federation, want Obama to use his powers under the 1947 Taft-Hartley Act to try and prevent a strike.
The National Retail Federation has called on the president to "use all means necessary" to avert the closure of ports.
The White House did not say whether Obama would get personally involved, but made clear they are monitoring.
"Federal mediators are assisting with the negotiations, and we continue to monitor the situation closely and urge the parties to continue their work at the negotiating table to get a deal done as quickly as possible," White House spokesman Matt Lehrich said in a statement to Fox News.
The dispute and threatened strike come at a particularly vulnerable time for the U.S. economy. Roughly $110 billion in spending cuts are set to take effect starting in January if Congress cannot come up with an alternative plan. On top of that are more than $500 billion in scheduled tax hikes, which Washington also has not yet been able to reduce.
In the dock worker labor talks, issues including wages are unresolved, but the key sticking point is container royalties, which are payments to union workers based on cargo weight.
Port operators and shipping companies want to cap the royalties at last year's levels. They say the royalties have morphed into a huge expense unrelated to their original purpose and amount to a bonus averaging $15,500 a year for East Coast workers already earning more than $50 an hour.
17
@16: Posted from Fox News, FYI.
So, businesses didn't want to negotiate with the unions and want the Federal government to force the workers to keep working. Rather than let the unions keep the contract, they want to cry foul and get Uncle Sam to clean up their mess. Uh huh.

Please wait...

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