Monday, June 20, 2011

Barack Obama Impersonator Hauled Offstage at Republican Gathering


From the Telegraph:

The incident is proving an embarrassment for the Republican Party, which faces an uphill battle to attract minority voters in the 2012 election. The nearly all-white audience at the Republican Leadership Conference in New Orleans laughed raucously when Reggie Brown, a regular Obama impersonator, said that while first lady Michelle Obama celebrated all of the annual Black History Month, Mr Obama, whose father was black and mother was white, celebrated only half.
Read more here.

 

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Source: http://www.bvblackspin.com/2011/06/20/barack-obama-impersonator-hauled-offstage-at-republican-gatherin/

Charli Baltimore Denise Richards Jennifer Sky Samantha Mathis Samantha Morton

She's Baaack! Oprah Plots Rescue of Stumbling Network


It has been less than a month since the last episode of the Oprah Winfrey Show aired and already the Queen is back on her grind, this time to rejuvenate her somewhat ailing television network.

After sprinting to the starting line and bursting through the gates, OWN: Oprah Winfrey Network has since watched its ratings tumble. But with her long-running talk show now a teary-eyed memory - dab-dab, sniff-sniff - Winfrey has committed herself to building the brand and bolstering her network's ratings.


"The vacation that I thought that I was going to have is over," Oprah Winfrey told more than 1,000 people attending the National Cable & Telecommunications Assn. convention in Chicago, according to a story in the 'Los Angeles Times' this morning. "I need to be there. I need to be engaged and be involved," Winfrey said.

That means a move from her beloved Chicago to Los Angeles.

Winfrey said that all of her energy had been dedicated to taping her 25th season of the Oprah Winfrey Show, which left little time to worry about plummeting ratings and programming. The result? OWN has struggled to find its voice. The network was built on the Winfrey brand, but without the big O in the building or her magical hands on the wheel, the network, a joint venture with Discovery Communications Inc. has been by some estimation, a disappointment.

"I let other people worry about the ratings," Winfrey told the audience, conceding that she doesn't even open daily email that might contain media coverage about OWN. No need for an email, she said, when she can flip to the channel herself and see what's lacking: the glorious stuff that made the Oprah Winfrey Show spark and sizzle.

To boost ratings Winfrey said that she would land big name guests for specials that would air exclusively on the channel. She named two of her most desired guests.

First up, Susan Smith, the South Carolina mother who in 1995 was sentenced to life in prison for killing her two young sons.

Winfrey said she always wanted to have Smith on her show to explain her thinking and her actions, the L.A. Times reported.

The second, drum roll please... O.J. Simpson!

"I have a dream of O.J. Simpson confessing to me," Winfrey said.

Winfrey said the interview would come with conditions, not least of which would be Simpson agreeing to confess to killing his former wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, a crime that he was acquitted for also back in 1995.

"I want the interview on the condition that you are ready, Mr. Simpson," Winfrey said. "And I am going to make that happen, people."

 

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Source: http://www.bvblackspin.com/2011/06/16/shes-baaack-oprah-plots-rescue-of-stumbling-network/

Blake Lively Christina Applegate Shana Hiatt Tara Conner Drea de Matteo

Is Nancy Dell'Olio the new Tolstoy?

Sven's ex breaks her silence - and just look how busy she's been

High50.com, the website that "believes old is good", is a curious business. Visitors to its home page are currently greeted with a blurred photograph of the late Princess Diana, an image that seems largely suggestive of a) failing eyesight and b) death. Not necessarily the first messages Lost in Showbiz would have thought a website looking to attract the more mature reader might want to send out, but perhaps we should look beyond them. And focus instead on High50.com's contribution to the greater good of humanity: it appears to have appointed Nancy Dell'Olio as its brand ambassador.

Lost in Showbiz can barely contain its excitement. For too long, Dell'Olio has been silent, thus depriving the world of the precious drops of philosophy that fall from her lips like molten gold: "Deciding what to wear and putting on makeup is stressful"; "It is better to have a walk-in wardrobe than a guest room ? just put your guests up in a nice hotel nearby instead." Or, "The best way to save money is by continuing to spend your money ? why not shop for personal pleasure and feel satisfied about the good you're doing society?" "There has not been any other woman for a minute in Sven's mind" etc. What news of her projected move into politics ("Ah, politics ? one of my old passions! I am not Italian for nothing!") or her plans to establish a Nato base in Jerusalem ("an interesting idea")? And indeed, what news of her project Truce International, which she last year claimed was her "lasting legacy . . . a simple but effective idea", in the teeth of the fact that what appears to be its second and final newsletter appeared in 2006.

Hither and yon she has gone on High50.com's behalf in the past week, permitting us all a glimpse into the brain of the self-styled "very loved person". "Women and men, they both love me and this is because I am the kindest person I know." My, but it's crowded in there. "I don't know anyone who does as much as I do," she says. "I wish one day there'll be a movie about how I spend my day because it is quite intense." Lost in Showbiz pays no heed to those who cruelly suggest a film about how Nancy Dell'Olio spends her day will constitute one of the great celluloid mysteries, like the contents of the briefcase in Pulp Fiction or what happened in Last Year at Marienbad. Namely, that it'll be "intense" largely in the sense that Picnic at Hanging Rock was "intense", ie audiences stagger from the cinema none the wiser than when they went in. Instead it invites you to examine the perfectly straightforward evidence presented in her recent press appearances. "I hated people closing me in a box. I live my life living outside boxes. I don't like closing anyone in a box." So there's your first clue: she's definitely not an undertaker.

In fact, she reveals herself to not only be a lawyer, a lobbyist, a travel writer, a food writer, a television producer and a novelist currently dedicated to improving the woefully deficient work of Tolstoy ("I think in my life I've really vindicated Anna Karenina ? Tolstoy was 19th-century, so she had to die"), but someone who bravely "dedicates a lot of time to cleansing and moisturising". Indeed, her makeup regime is such that it's hard to see how she finds time to attend to sorting out Tolstoy, although we must clearly pray she does, for the benefit of the multitudes who finished Anna Karenina, and sighed "Dostoevsky may have considered that a flawless work of art, but Dostoevsky hadn't read Nancy Dell'Olio's My Beautiful Game, most specifically the bit where she compares herself to Guinevere and Sven Goran Eriksson to Sir Lancelot."

She rises early ? "I am gifted to not need a lot of sleep" ? and "does a little breakfast", two herculean tasks which understandably exhaust her so much, she needs to take the rest of the morning off "to allow me time to wake up properly". Thus rested, at 11.30am she "goes over things" ? this is presumably the part of the day into which all that lobbying, law practice, food and travel writing, television production and improving Tolstoy is crammed ? before heading off to lunch at The Ivy or Claridge's. This understandably exhausts her so much that she takes the afternoon off ? "I read the papers, have my acupuncture" ? before going out to dinner with her new companion Trevor Nunn, who has understandably described her as "the most intelligent person he's ever met". "I do know Shakespeare very well," she adds, which comes as no surprise to those of us who've read her piece for High50.com, where she says: "I was always confident change would come, but when you're in the middle of the tempest . . . Talking of tempests, I consider The Tempest, which of course is about magic, to be one of Shakespeare's best plays."

One can only nod, and meekly suggest Miss Dell'Olio add "literary critic" to her already bulging list of parallel careers. "I know I'm fascinating," she concludes, which presumably explains why Lost in Showbiz finds itself staring at her interviews, transfixed, its eyes crossing like Nookie Bear's.

Marina Hyde is away


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/lostinshowbiz/2011/jun/16/lost-in-showbiz-nancy-dell-olio

Catherine Bell Tessie Santiago Jessica Simpson Mandy Moore Shannon Elizabeth

Why Did Facebook Block UK Strike Site?

Did Facebook intentionally block the website of UK-based labor protest organizers? The company denies the allegation, but UK activists aren't convinced.

Labor unions and student activists in the United Kingdom are organizing a massive strike of public workers to protest cuts planned by Prime Minister David Cameron's Conservative-led government. They're hoping to draw tens or even hundreds of thousands of supporters into the streets to join the workers in an across-the-pond version of the Wisconsin demonstrations that captured national attention n March.

But over the past few days, as activists worked to promote their plan, they ran into a problem: Facebook, the social networking site that has helped activists across the Arab world organize pro-Democracy protests in recent months, was blocking the strike organizers' website, www.j30strike.org. Here's one message received by people who attempted to share the site on their walls:

Screenshot of the error message received by people (including several Mother Jones staffers) who attempted to share the website promoting a strike planned for June 30 in the UK.Screenshot of the error message received by people (including several Mother Jones staffers) who attempted to use Facebook to share a website promoting a strike planned for June 30 in the UK.UK-based activists had been receiving the error message for days before a US-based tipster contacted Mother Jones with the news via our scoop [at] motherjones [dot] com tip line. After confirming that my coworkers and I had the same problem, I contacted Facebook by phone and email around  noon Eastern time on Monday. Sharing of the site was enabled almost immediately after my inquiries, but by 1:30 p.m., the site was blocked again. Around 3 p.m., I heard from Andrew Noyes, a Facebook spokesman in the company's DC office. "The site was blocked in error," he wrote in an email. "We've now unblocked it and apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused." I emailed back to report that the site had been blocked again. I have yet to hear back, but the site was unblocked again by 5:30 p.m, and seems to be working now.

The UK activists, meanwhile, believe something sinister may be afoot. They note that Facebook also seems to be blocking sharing of a post by Chris Peterson, a blogger who first wrote about this problem. Several activists sent me links to a Guardian article reporting on claims that Facebook had conducted a "purge" of accounts run by UK student activists. The activists also noted that Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has encouraged Britons to use Facebook to submit ideas about government funding cuts to Cameron's government, and that Cameron and Zuckerberg conducted a video chat to promote the idea last summer.

All that said, Facebook is now on the record saying this was an error. But as an increasingly important means of communication and social and political organizing, it's important—for Facebook and its users—that the company be seen as a neutral party in debates over political issues. Ensuring that both sides of a debate have equal access to Facebook's impressive organizing powers is part of that equation. If blocking the June 30th strike website really was an error, Facebook should make sure it stays unblocked—and take steps to prevent similar errors in the future.

Source: http://motherjones.com/mojo/2011/06/why-did-facebook-block-uk-strike-website

Malin Akerman Melissa Joan Hart Bianca Kajlich Giulianna Ramirez Ashley Greene

Evangeline Lilly Joins the Cast of "The Hobbit"

Joining next year's highly-anticipated fantasy flick, Evangeline Lilly has officially signed on to star in "The Hobbit."

The "Lost" actress is set to play a new character in the two-movie version of the J.R.R. Tolkien novel - as she'll be portraying a woodland elf named Tauriel.

The film's director, Peter Jackson, offered up a few bits and pieces of information about the new addition to his Facebook page, writing, "Her name means ?daughter of Mirkwood? and, beyond that, we must leave you guessing!"

Jackson further teased, ?What is not a secret is how talented and compelling an actress Evangeline is; we are thrilled and excited she will be the one to bring our first true Sylvan Elf to life."

Source: http://celebrity-gossip.net/evangeline-lilly/evangeline-lilly-joins-cast-hobbit-516309

Monika Kramlik Lacey Chabert Amber Brkich Gretha Cavazzoni Marla Sokoloff

New Firefox Nightly and Aurora logos unearthed, and how to enable channel switching

Firefox Nightly and Aurora logos
Later today, Firefox will undergo its biggest developmental upheaval ever. Mozilla-central, the source of nightly builds, will be renumbered to version 5 -- and at long last, after years of wallowing around version 1, Mozilla's rendering and layout engine, Gecko, will also have its version number updated to match Firefox.

Shortly thereafter, Firefox's new channel system will be implemented. Firefox 5a2 will be introduced as the first Aurora build, and we should also see a Firefox 6 Nightly build. While we we're not sure where they came from, one Sören Hentzschel seems to have unearthed the new Nightly and Aurora logos (see above), along with new About Firefox dialogs (after the break).

In other news, if you want to take a sneak peek at the new 'channel changing' technology that will be introduced in upcoming Firefox builds, head to about:config and create a new string called app.update.desiredChannel -- the value doesn't matter. Then open Help > About Firefox and you'll be able to switch channel, but it doesn't do anything just yet (image after the break). Here's hoping that Firefox channel switching is smoother than Chrome.

Continue reading New Firefox Nightly and Aurora logos unearthed, and how to enable channel switching

New Firefox Nightly and Aurora logos unearthed, and how to enable channel switching originally appeared on Download Squad on Mon, 11 Apr 2011 07:35:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Pockets Of Attention

Venkat Rao argues that a finite amount of attention will doom the corporation: Take an average housewife, the target of much time mining early in the 20th century. It was clear where her attention was directed. Laundry, cooking, walking to...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/andrewsullivan/rApM/~3/8baCV89OPkY/the-end-of-corporations.html

Cameron Richardson Chandra West Kasey Chambers Megan Ewing Kristanna Loken

Message from the President on the Continuation of the National Emergency with respect to the Russian Federation

Release Time: 
For Immediate Release

TO THE CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES:

        Section 202(d) of the National Emergencies Act (50 U.S.C. 1622(d)) provides for the automatic termination of a national emergency unless, prior to the anniversary date of its declaration, the President publishes in the Federal Register and transmits to the Congress a notice stating that the emergency is to continue in effect beyond the anniversary date.  In accordance with this provision, I have sent to the Federal Register for publication the enclosed notice stating that the emergency declared in Executive Order 13159 of June 21, 2000, with respect to the risk of nuclear proliferation created by the accumulation of a large volume of weapons-usable fissile material in the territory of the Russian Federation is to continue beyond June 21, 2011.

        It remains a major national security goal of the United States to ensure that fissile material removed from Russian nuclear weapons pursuant to various arms control and disarmament agreements is dedicated to peaceful uses, subject to transparency measures, and protected from diversion to activities of proliferation concern.  The accumulation of a large volume of weapons-usable fissile material in the territory of the Russian Federation continues to pose an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States.  For this reason, I have determined that it is necessary to continue the national emergency declared with respect to the risk of nuclear proliferation created by the accumulation of a large volume of weapons-usable fissile material in the territory of the Russian Federation and maintain in force these emergency authorities to respond to this threat.
 

BARACK OBAMA
 

THE WHITE HOUSE,

June 17, 2011.

Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/06/17/message-president-continuation-national-emergency-respect-russian-federa

Arielle Kebbel Jessica Paré Leelee Sobieski Teri Hatcher Lauren Bush

Remarks by the President at a Welcome Event in San Juan, Puerto Rico

Release Time: 
For Immediate Release

Luis Muñoz Marin International Airport
San Juan, Puerto Rico

11:43 A.M. AST

     THE PRESIDENT:  Buenas tardes!  (Applause.)  It is good to be back in Puerto Rico.  (Applause.)  It is great to see so many familiar faces, so many advocates for the island.  First of all, I want to acknowledge Congressman Pierluisi is here.  Where is he?  Right over there.  (Applause.)  My great friend, Andres Lopez.  (Applause.)  Franciso Pavia.  (Applause.)  Senator Bhatia.  (Applause.)  Governor Fortuno.  (Applause.)  And I know that we’ve got some former governors here today, along with leaders of local parties, and of the House and the Senate.
 
I am so grateful for the unbelievable reception.  As you know, the last President to come to San Juan and address the people of Puerto Rico was John F. Kennedy, nearly 50 years ago.  (Applause.)  Now, at the time, I was about four months old -- (laughter) -- so my memory of this visit is a little hazy.  What I do remember is that when I came here to campaign, I promised that I would return as President of the United States.  (Applause.)  And although my hair is a little grayer -- (applause) -- than during my first visit, I am glad to be able to keep that promise to the people of Puerto Rico.  (Applause.)  

But this is only one part of my commitment to families here on the island.  Because when I ran for President, I promised to include Puerto Rico not just on my itinerary, but also in my vision of where our country needs to go.  And I am proud to say that we’ve kept that promise, too.

First of all, we’ve addressed the question of political status.  In March, a report from our presidential task force on Puerto Rican status provided a meaningful way forward on this question so that the residents of the island can determine their own future.  And when the people of Puerto Rico make a clear decision, my administration will stand by you.  (Applause.) 

I also know that there are plenty of other issues that the island is facing.  When President Kennedy was here, he addressed the relationship between Washington and San Juan, and he also spoke about tackling what he called, “the difficult problems of education and housing and employment.”

In that same spirit, we’ve been trying to make sure that every family on the island can find work and make a living and provide for their children.  That’s why our economic plan and our health care reform included help for Puerto Rico.  (Applause.)

That’s why we’re increasing access to broadband and investing in education.  That's why we’re helping to grow local tourism and health care and clean-energy industries.  We’re giving Puerto Ricans the tools they need to build their own economic futures.
    
And this is how it should be.  Because every day, Boricuas help write the American story.  (Applause.)  Puerto Rican artists contribute to our culture -- and by the way, I don't know if you noticed, but Marc Anthony decided to show up here today.  (Applause.)  Puerto Rican entrepreneurs create American jobs.  Even in the NBA finals, J.J. Barea inspired all of us -- (applause) -- with those drives to the hoop.  That guy can play.  (Applause.)  Next time I’m down here I’m going to have to -- next time I’m here, I’m going to have to play some hoops.  (Applause.)
 
I also want to take a moment to acknowledge all the Puerto Rican men and women who serve in our country’s uniform.  (Applause.)  Give it up for our veterans.   Thank you.  (Applause.)

One of those veterans is Juan Castillo.  Juan fought in World War II, and he fought in the Korean War.  Today, he’s two months away from his 101st birthday.  (Applause.)

Juan’s legacy is carried on by Puerto Ricans in Iraq and Afghanistan; men and women like Chief Master Sergeant Ramon Colon-Lopez, of the United States Air Force.  In 2004, Ramon’s team was going after a high-value target in Afghanistan.  His helicopter was seriously damaged by hostile fire.  In the thick of battle, he didn’t know how large the force that he was up against.  But he pressed on anyway, and his team killed or captured 12 enemy fighters.  Because of his bravery, he was the first Hispanic American to be awarded the Air Force Combat Action Medal.  (Applause.)

And I tell this story because for decades, Puerto Ricans like Juan and Ramon have put themselves in harm’s way for a simple reason:  They want to protect the country that they love.  Their willingness to serve, their willingness to sacrifice, is as American as apple pie –- or as Arroz con Gandules.  (Applause.)  The aspirations and the struggles on this island mirror those across America.

So I know that today a lot of folks are asking some of the same questions here on the island as they’re asking in Indiana or California or in Texas:  How do I make sure my kids get the kind of education that they need?  How can I put away a little money for retirement?  How can I fill up my gas tank?  How can I pay the bills?

Everywhere I go, I see families facing challenges like these, but they’re facing them with resolve and determination.  You know, these problems didn’t develop overnight here in Puerto Rico or anywhere else, but that means we’re not going to solve them overnight.  But, day by day, step by step, we will solve them.

We are going to be able to improve our education system here in Puerto Rico and all across America.  (Applause.)  We are making strides to improve our health care system here in Puerto Rico and all across America.  (Applause.)  We are going to put people back to work here in Puerto Rico and all across America.  (Applause.)

Maybe some of you remember that when I was here in 2008, I spoke in front of the Cuartel de Ballaja, a site that had been home to so many chapters of Puerto Rican history.  Today, Puerto Rican workers are writing the next chapter by turning the building into a model of energy efficiency.  They’re making HVAC systems more efficient.  They’re putting on a green roof.  They’re installing 720 photovoltaic panels.  When they’re done, it’s estimated that the energy savings will be 57 percent.  And Puerto Rico will have taken one more step towards creating a clean energy economy.

Those are the kinds of steps it will take for Puerto Rico to win the future and for America to win the future.  (Applause.)  That’s what we do in this country.  With each passing decade, with each new challenge, we reinvent ourselves.  We find new ways to solve our problems.  We push forward. 

And we do so in a way that gives every one of our people a shot at the dream that we all share -– the dream that if you’re willing to work hard and take responsibility, you can build a better life for your family.  You can find a job that’s secure, provides decent wages, provides for your children, provides for your retirement.  That’s what people are hoping for, and it’s not too much to ask.

Puerto Rico, I don’t need to tell you that we’re not there yet.  We’re not where we need to be.  But in these challenging times, people on this island don’t quit.  We don’t turn back.  (Applause.)  People in America don’t quit.  We don’t turn back.  We place our bets on entrepreneurs and on workers and on our families.  We understand that there is strength in our diversity.  We renew the American Dream.  We have done it before.  We will do it again.
 
Muchas gracias.  Thank you very much.  Thank you.  Thank you, Puerto Rico.  (Applause.) 
             
END          
11:54 A.M. AST

Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/06/14/remarks-president-welcome-event-san-juan-puerto-rico

Gretha Cavazzoni Marla Sokoloff Jennifer Love Hewitt Tina Fey Gina Philips

Duane Eddy: Road Trip ? review

(Mad Monkey)

If there was one contemporary artist you'd expect on the first Duane Eddy album in 25 years, it's Richard Hawley. The Sheffield singer would acknowledge his debt to Eddy's twanging guitar, one of the building blocks of rock'n'roll and the pair share writing duties on four tracks. Recorded in Hawley's hometown, the album leans on Eddy's atmospheric side, yielding an appealing sense of place that's most obvious on "Bleaklow Air", where the US veteran falls in love not with the majesty of an American highway, but the more rough-hewn beauty of the Pennines.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2011/jun/19/duane-eddy-road-trip-review

Jill Arrington Tami Donaldson Padma Lakshmi Sarah Mutch Gabrielle Union

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Weatherwatch: Be prepared for anything at Glastonbury

Top of the list of useful things to take to the Glastonbury festival this week is socks.

The advice is that there is nothing finer for lifting the spirits if the weather turns nasty than pulling on a pair of dry socks. The festival is famous for mud, which in 2005 turned into six feet of water and flooded hundreds of tents after torrential downpours of rain.

The event at Worthy Farm, Pilton in Somerset is now one of the UK Climate Impact Programme's case studies for the West Country on how to adapt to climate change. In 2005 the downpour was described as a one in a hundred year storm but, as the case study points out, there were six such storms at Glastonbury in that year alone.

Robert Kearle, the festival's environmental manager, who had to sort out the problem, said the organisers were lucky nobody drowned. As a result of this problem Glastonbury might have lost its licence to hold further festivals, so a lot of money was spent to adapt to "freak" events that are becoming normal. The size of the drains was tripled, hollows that flooded were filled in, roads were modified and altogether the site adapted as much as possible for "heatwaves, intense rainfall or storms."

This year, after a record dry spring the weather has changed back to "normal" ? if that can be said of British summers any longer. Either way, Glastonbury, with its huge drains, is ready for anything.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/2011/jun/20/weatherwatch-somerset-glastonbury-festivals

Diora Baird Laura Prepon Ashley Scott Michelle Behennah Julie Benz

Readout of the President?s Meeting with Special Envoy Lyman

Release Time: 
For Immediate Release

President Obama today met with Ambassador Princeton Lyman, his Special Envoy for Sudan, to discuss the status of mediation efforts to end the political and humanitarian crisis in Abyei and the humanitarian crisis and violence in Southern Kordofan.  

The President expressed deep concern over the violence and the lack of humanitarian access, and he underscored the urgent need to get back to cooperative negotiations to enable full and timely implementation of the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement, including peaceful resolution of the future status of Abyei and the Two Areas.  

Ambassador Lyman updated the President on the recent meetings Secretary of State Clinton had with the parties during her trip to Africa.  President Obama told Ambassador Lyman he is following the situation closely and gave his full support to Ambassador Lyman’s work to press for a successful conclusion of the negotiations to achieve a withdrawal from Abyei and a cessation of hostilities across the region and to support the emergence of two viable states at peace.   

President Obama noted the important contributions towards peace made by Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi and African Union Panel leader Thabo Mbeki.   

Special Envoy Lyman plans to return to the region this month to help translate political agreements into lasting and credible security arrangements.  In a message to Sudan's leaders, the President said they must not throw away the opportunity to move toward the promise of greater peace and prosperity.
 

Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/06/16/readout-president-s-meeting-special-envoy-lyman

Jill Wagner Susie Castillo Fergie Ivanka Trump Blake Lively

Skype for Linux gets an update after almost 15 months

Skype for Linux download page

Proving how much it cares about those people who use its app on Linux, Skype has released version 2.2 for Linux. Don't run towards the champagne though, as this is still a beta version, and, as its minor revision number implies, isn't the much-awaited big new version that achieves feature parity with its Windows and Mac brethren.

It's only been what, almost 15 months since the last Skype beta for Linux? Well, during this time, Skype's main focus has clearly been improving its Linux app, since the new version fixes the amazing number of 49 bugs. It also brings 23 'improvements', and yet somehow still manages to have a fair share of 'known issues'. Exciting, no?

What is perhaps the most important feature addition here is the support for Skype Access. This lets you easily connect to paid Wi-Fi hotspots across the globe while paying for them with Skype credit. Skype for Linux has also received support for call waiting and holding, as well as easy conference hosting. Audio and video quality have been boosted (hopefully in a way that's going to be noticeable in day-to-day use), and some of the languages have been updated.

Download Skype 2.2.0.25 for Linux

Skype for Linux gets an update after almost 15 months originally appeared on Download Squad on Thu, 07 Apr 2011 15:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Kerry Suseck FSU Cowgirls Abbie Cornish Krista Allen Hayden Panettiere

Plan B, Lykke Li and Ms Dynamite-ee give us their Glastonbury memories

We're heading to Pilton once again to give you best coverage from every corner of Worthy Farm. But how do these survivors of Glastonburys gone by remember the festival?

Click here to see this week's Guide in full

KATY B

Dubstep diva's garlic butter addiction shame

I first went with the Brit School ? me and 30 of my classmates performed on the Leftfield Stage. We did a soul set and an African set. We camped. I come from a real camping family, so my mum gave me loads of pots and pans to take. I had half the kitchen with me and people didn't totally think this was cool.

After food I went up to the Stone Circle and had some laughing gas. I don't know if it's legal, but it's amazing. But you can only do it once otherwise you might get addicted. Apart from that I was quite tame; I didn't get too mashed up. I lived on garlic butter and clotted cream.

EXAMPLE

He came, he saw, he got sworn at by Phil Collins

I've played Glastonbury twice. The first time was in 2007 when my debut album came out and it wasn't a very good album so I didn't have many fans there! N-Dubz were on the same stage ? a small tent in the dance village. I remember they got out of their minibus, saw the mud and they were like, "Nah, blud, nah," and put plastic bags on their feet so they wouldn't spoil their trainers. But Glastonbury's got a certain mystique. Even if it's full of mud you're like, "Oh, it's the Promised Land."

My most embarrassing moment at Glastonbury came shortly after that. I was coming back to the campsite at 6am and, not really being able to see, I got in the wrong tent. I woke up the next morning with a couple. The guy looked me in the eye and, quite calmly, said, "You've made a mistake here, mate, so I'm not going to smack you one. But you've got 10 seconds to get out."

You always get ill after festivals. Everything's going around: E coli, tuberculosis, Sars, chlamydia ? and that's just the hospitality area. Celebrity encounters? It's usually me, rolling around pissed, annoying everyone. I did see Phil Collins there once. I went up to him and did the drum solo from In The Air Tonight. He looked like he was going to punch me. He just went, "Thanks, mate, cheers, brilliant. Now fuck off."

WRETCH 32

Sleep? No! Toilets? No! Drinking with N-Dubz? Yes!

Glastonbury is so different from my normal walk of life. It's weird that people are prepared to accept such terrible conditions, especially the toilets. You never know what to expect when you open the door. You're like, "O-kaaay ?".

I went last year and stayed up most of the time. I don't really sleep much anyway, maybe four hours a night. It was weird seeing Chipmunk there, the whole crowd singing along. I was proud of him, man. Apart from that, I was just running around, causing mischief. Drinking with N-Dubz, the usual nonsense. This year I'm on a stage with Labrinth, Devlin and Professor Green. It should be spiritual.

LAURA MARLING

Faithless taught he the meaning of true fear

I'm not a natural festival-goer. Big crowds give me the willies, as it were. Last year I ventured out to watch the Middle East and found myself in the middle of the crowd for Faithless, just as they started Insomnia. I don't think I've ever been so scared in my entire life.

The most memorable thing that's happened to me at Glastonbury was last year when I was playing the Park Stage right as the sun was going down ? that was beautiful. I was dumbfounded. I had my first stage invasion at Glastonbury too; it was a friend of mine. I slipped her a fiver. I might do the same for Beyonc� this year, join her for the Single Ladies dance.

DUANE EDDY

Grizzled guitar man can sleep standing up

Down the road from me in Nashville is Bonnaroo, but this is a different order. Sleeping in a tent in a muddy field might have appealed when I was young, but not at my age. I'm more the luxury tourbus type. I'll walk around when I get there; I won't need a disguise. I'm not anal about hygiene but the food might be a problem; I have to watch my diet. I can have the odd sweet. Maybe I'll save up my quota for Glastonbury. I'm not worried about getting sleep; I can sleep standing up.

LYKKE LI

Mysteriousness went out of the window

The last time I went to Glastonbury, a few years ago, we had one of those super-small vans, and the whole band stayed in it. We were all in each others' laps. I wouldn't say it was a good experience ? I was quite shocked by the facilities; I didn't shower for four days. I've been to a lot of festivals, but this was more like a war zone. It was overwhelming. In fact, I've erased a lot of it from my mind, mainly because someone gave me one of those special "cookies". I was on my way to see Kings Of Leon, then the cookie hit me and my plans changed ? I played at 11.30 in the morning ? it was dreadful. There were maybe 15 people in the audience. They did look quite impressed, but it was strange, trying to act mysterious in a big field before noon. Maybe a forest at 3am would have been better. Still, it's good to have one weekend in the year where you can roll around in mud with no clothes on.

GUY GARVEY

National treasure has nap in outdoor toilet

Seeing Paul McCartney [in 2004] was a life-changer. I was wandering about beforehand with a load of whisky in a Volvic bottle, trying to find my friends, when I saw a load of security guards coming towards me. Inside this ring of security there was a further ring of beautiful women, and inside that was Noel Gallagher. He said, "You're from round our way, aren't you?" So I was buzzing off that chat when I walked up the hill as McCartney was starting. It was incredible. Apparently I ruined Blackbird for all my friends by shouting "Genius!" at the top of my voice every few bars.

I like to go out and about at Glastonbury. Elbow don't tend to invite hysteria. People are like, "All right, Guy!" like we're old mates. People know me as an affable pisshead who likes writing songs. I did have a terrible experience one year, though, when I woke up in a toilet. It was the most unpleasant experience of my life, bar none. I threw my clothes away immediately and bought some new ones. You're picturing me now in some funky tie-dye kaftan, aren't you? My guitarist Mark [Potter] and his mate Saul take time out each year to get a couple of deckchairs, sit opposite a row of toilets and watch people's faces as they come out. They find it quite entertaining.

All said though, it's the best party on Earth. And aren't we lucky that it hasn't been killed by fuckin' health and safety or these little pressure groups: "Ooh, are you having fun? You mustn't do that." I'm glad it's still intact, and the attitude of the Eavis family permeates all the way down from the top. It's a massive national display of generosity of spirit and I love it.

TINIE TEMPAH

Rapper shocked at lack of on-site taxi service

I am fastidious about hygiene. I always have baby wipes and anti-bacterial hand gel because you can't really trust those public toilets. Last year, naturally, I camped in a teepee ? glamping, as they call it. It had an Xbox and a TV. It had a shower around it but not inside. Last year the weather was insane. This year it's not looking so good. So I've got my wellies, but my thing is about keeping them clean.

Before I went I didn't realise how massive Glastonbury was. Last year I walked from my teepee, next to the main stage, to Shangri-La. I was a little bit wasted to say the least and I ended up walking for 45 minutes and got there just as it was finishing. I was, like, "Do they have a car that can take us back?" Everyone looked at me, "Mate, we're in the middle of a field."

MAX MCGELLIOTT

Warning: Wolf Gang man likes to rugby tackle

The last time I was at Glastonbury was when I played there two years ago. I camped with three other guys. We bought this huge pink palace of a tent for 50 quid ? it was a very camp tent indeed. Then we had this incredible night where we ended up in the Stone Circle with painted faces and I drummed bongos with these rastafarians until the sun came up. And there's more. I also rugby-tackled Florence and her band. We had a big mud fight and it got quite violent. Then I stayed up all night. I had a gig planned the next day in the Guardian tent but my manager took one look at me and said I couldn't play it. So I'd like to take this opportunity to apologise to the Guardian.

BEN LOVETT

This Mumford likes to have it large ? and wet

Last year was excruciatingly hot. I prefer the Battle of the Somme conditions to not being able to get away from the heat. The Mumford tipple of choice is whisky. I don't swig it, I sip. With water. I'm banking on some being in our rider. Hopefully they'll be nice enough to provide a bottle or two. Maybe we should take our own though too, just in case.

I've done a lot of dancing at Glastonbury ? and I'm not a very good dancer. Anyone who's seen me at Shangri-La at 4am will bear that out. But it's such an incredible 24-hour experience. Let's just hope I don't wake up in Example's tent.

MS DYNAMITE

Dy-na-my-tee-ee's got this Glasto game down pat

My first time was a complete nightmare. I was 14. I went there with my brand-new trainers that I'd saved up for, and it was the muddiest Glastonbury for 20 years. I even had these plastic bags on and the mud seeped through. I was horrified when I went to have a shower in the morning and people could look over the top and see you. I stormed back to my tent and stayed there the whole weekend with a pan of water so I could wash. I was a spoilt brat, basically. Now I'm not like that. I'm more go-with-the-flow. I enjoy getting muddy. Although when I turn the tap off in a toilet I do it with a piece of tissue.

PLAN B

Your one-stop shop for uncomfortable stories

The first time I went was in 2000, when I broke in with my mates. We jumped straight over the fence. I was 16 and didn't have any money. I remember throwing a tin of red salmon on a fire. Suddenly it exploded, and my mate ? who was in his sleeping bag ? was in flames, with debris all over him. That was funny.

The first night, me and my mate popped a couple of pills. The next night, this northerner asked if he could use our fire, and we were too young and scared to say no. He got this foil out and started smoking heroin. We started asking him about it, and he told us he did it because he was abused as a child. Then he asked if we wanted some. So, like idiots, we took some of his heroin and on the last night we smoked it. It was the first and last time I ever did it; I'm never going near it again. My head was spinning like I was drunk, I was hot then I was cold, I was itching all over ? it was horrible.

I camped last year. They promised me a Winnebago and I got a three-man teepee. This year I've got a Winnebago ? or I'd better have.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2011/jun/17/glastonbury-plan-b-katy-b

Raquel Alessi Marisa Coughlan Shanna Moakler Portia de Rossi Jolene Blalock

Saturday, June 18, 2011

President Obama Signs Vermont Disaster Declaration

Release Time: 
For Immediate Release

The President today declared a major disaster exists in the State of Vermont and ordered Federal aid to supplement State and local recovery efforts in the area struck by severe storms and flooding during the period of April 23 to May 9, 2011.

The President's action makes Federal funding available to affected individuals in the counties of Addison, Chittenden, Essex, Franklin, Grand Isle, Lamoille, and Orleans.

Assistance can include grants for temporary housing and home repairs, low-cost loans to cover uninsured property losses, and other programs to help individuals and business owners recover from the effects of the disaster.

Federal funding also is available to State and eligible local governments and certain private nonprofit organizations on a cost-sharing basis for emergency work and the repair or replacement of facilities damaged by the severe storms and flooding in the counties of Addison, Chittenden, Essex, Franklin, Grand Isle, Lamoille, and Orleans.

Federal funding is also available on a cost-sharing basis for hazard mitigation measures statewide.  

W. Craig Fugate, Administrator, Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), Department of Homeland Security, named Craig A. Gilbert as the Federal Coordinating Officer for Federal recovery operations in the affected area.  

FEMA said additional designations may be made at a later date if requested by the State and warranted by the results of further damage assessments.

FEMA said that residents and business owners who sustained losses in the designated counties can begin applying for assistance tomorrow by registering online at http://www.DisasterAssistance.gov or by calling 1-800-621-FEMA(3362) or 1-800-462-7585 (TTY) for the hearing and speech impaired. The toll-free telephone numbers will operate from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. (local time) seven days a week until further notice.  

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:  FEMA (202) 646-3272.

Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/06/15/president-obama-signs-vermont-disaster-declaration

Mila Kunis Samaire Armstrong Selita Ebanks Michael Michele Marisa Tomei

White Picket Fences In Russia?

Julia Felsenthal searches for other countries' version of the American Dream: U.K. Labour Party leader Ed Miliband coined the phrase "the British Promise", meaning that each generation can and will do better than the last, but it hasn't caught on....

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/andrewsullivan/rApM/~3/8azSpFEvhpg/white-picket-fences-in-russia.html

Malia Jones Jennifer ODell Jenny McCarthy Zooey Deschanel Tara Reid

FACT SHEET: 21st-Century Communications for our First Responders

Release Time: 
For Immediate Release

Click HERE to read the full reportannounced today by Vice President Biden on how The President’s Wireless Innovation and Infrastructure Initiative can facilitate the transition to a next  generation, interoperable system.

The limitations of current public safety communications systems became tragically apparent on 9/11 and in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. [1] In those critical moments, law enforcement, firefighters, and other public safety officers could not talk to each other, putting the lives and mission of our first responders at risk.  Almost ten years after 9/11, our system of public safety communications remains outdated, both from a performance and cost-effectiveness standpoint. Traditional public safety devices and networks trail well behind those provided by modern commercial cellular operators.  Consequently, public safety is unable to take advantage of the sorts of innovative applications that many teenagers now take for granted.

With the ongoing rollout of the latest line of commercial wireless standards, there is anopportunity to develop and deploy a nationwide and interoperable wireless broadband network for our first responders.  With such a network in place, public safety will be able to welcome commercial developers of smartphones, tablets, and apps to connect to and compete within a unified public safety market.  And once developed appropriately, first responders will both be able to benefit from advanced wireless broadband technologies and, eventually, replace their high-cost, legacy communications infrastructure and devices.

To facilitate the development and deployment of a nationwide high speed wireless network for public safety, the President’s Wireless Innovation and Infrastructure Initiative will enable public safety agencies to transition away from the traditional, fragmented world of public safety communications to a next generation system.  This initiative will provide first responders with a network that offers far greater levels of interoperability and effectiveness than they possess today, ultimately saving billions of dollars by enabling public safety to benefit from the competition and innovation that major commercial enterprises already enjoy.

Benefits of a Nationwide Wireless Network For Public Safety Communications

  • A fully interoperable nationwide network:The nationwide network for public safety would provide interoperability for all first responders, preventing tragic failures of communication and coordination, reducing risks for first responders and the public.
  • Saving resources through a coordinated system for public safety communications: Today’s communication systems are not only outdated compared with more modern networks and devices, but they are split across thousands of Federal, State, and local jurisdictions that each pay maintenance and upkeep. The Department of Homeland Security alone spends around $1 billion on public safety communications and interoperability. A nationwide network will align today’s fragmented system, saving money while bringing capabilities into the 21st Century.
  • Unlocking the potential of commercial devices and infrastructure for public safety :Traditional public safety systems cost up to 10 times more than the same commercial device. A nationwide network will allow commercial developers of smartphones, tablets, and mobile networks and apps to connect a broad, unified market for public safety communications. According to the Congressional Research Service, participation by commercial carriers could drive down the cost of public safety radios from $4,000-$6,000 per unit, the price today, to $500 (or the cost of a smart phone). A 2010 FCC analysis found that leveraging available commercial systems could save considerably on capital expenditures compared with the existing, fragmented public safety communications infrastructure.
  • Providing better performance and cost effectiveness through innovation: Participation in a broader market, based on open standards, will also allow public safety to pick and choose the best technology from many more competing firms. This will spur competition and innovation to produce applications that improve safety and situational awareness, identification, and emergency health care. 
  • Enhancing the public safety mission:  Developing and deploying a hardened, reliable public safety broadband network will put new and important tools in the hands of first responders.  For example, first responders could use smartphones or other mobile devices to capture license plate information, quickly verify fingerprints and identity, link to multiple existing databases instantly, or transmit video and data from the scenes of accidents or emergencies.

 

Background On The President’s Wireless Initiative

The President’s Wireless Initiative pays for itself and would reduce the deficit by enabling more efficient use of wireless spectrum and freeing up spectrum for auction to the highest bidder.  In total, this effort would drive investment and innovation and generate $28 billion in auction revenue. After using some of the proceeds from spectrum auctions to reduce the deficit, the Initiative proposes four areas of investment to spur innovation in next generation wireless technologies for public safety:

  1. An investment in a nationwide wireless network for public safety communications based on 4G technology.
  2. Rollout of 4G services to at least 98% of the population.
  3. Reallocate the D Block – a key band of spectrum in the 700 megahertz range – to public safety.
  4. Creation of a Wireless Innovation Fund that, among other things, would support $500 million in research to meet the communications requirements of public safety.

 

[1] The 9-11 Commission Report: Final Report of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States (July 22, 2004), available at http://www.gpoaccess.gov/911/Index.html; “The Federal Response to Hurricane Katrina:  Lessons Learned” (Feb. 2006), available at http://www.whitehouse.gov/reports/katrina-lessons-learned.pdf

Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/06/16/fact-sheet-21st-century-communications-our-first-responders

Krista Allen Hayden Panettiere Jules Asner Whitney Able Kelly Clarkson

Press Briefing by Press Secretary Jay Carney, 6/16/2011

Release Time: 
For Immediate Release
Location: 
James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

1:17 P.M. EDT

        MR. CARNEY:  Hello, everyone.  I have no announcements, so we’ll get started with questions.

        Julie.

        Q    Thank you.  The Libya report that the administration sent to the Hill yesterday seems to have only increased some of the anger and criticism among members of Congress, and Speaker Boehner says he still wants an additional legal rationale for the U.S. involvement in Libya.  Are you planning on sending him anything by tomorrow, as he’s asked, or are you satisfied with the response in the report?

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, two things.  First of all, we have from the beginning consulted regularly with Congress -- more than 40 times, and 41 at least if you add yesterday’s substantial report that we provided to Congress, which included our legal reasoning with regards to the War Powers resolution.

        So I don’t anticipate further elucidation of our legal reasoning, because I think it was quite clear.  And I can go through that with you if you like.

        I think -- and let me just say that we absolutely respect Congress’s interest in this issue and desire for consultation and answers to their questions, and that’s why we have been so responsive, including with the substantial report that we provided yesterday.

        I think it’s noteworthy that the views expressed in the Speaker’s letter stand in contrast to the views he expressed in 1999 when he called the War Powers Act “constitutionally suspect,” and warned Congress to “resist the temptation to take any action that would do further damage to the institution of the presidency.”  I make an observation about that because I think it is worth noting in the current context.

        Q    So do you think Speaker Boehner is playing politics now by --

        MR. CARNEY:  I simply think it’s important to know what his views were then.  And what’s important about that, too, is that this was 1999 and he was -- he had concerns about the actions that then President Clinton was taking in the Balkans, and yet despite those concerns, urged Congress to resist invoking the War Powers resolution because of the potential damage it could do to the institution of the presidency.

        So I think that the context here is worth noting, that is all.  And I think that our legal reasoning, which we provided to Congress, is quite complete and stands alone and doesn’t need any addition.

        Q    If I could just switch to Afghanistan quickly, do you have any update for us on whether the President has met with General Petraeus or plans to do so today or tomorrow on the Afghan withdrawal?

        MR. CARNEY:  Sure, thanks for the question.  General Petraeus was here yesterday.  The President met with his national security team, including General Petraeus, to discuss Afghanistan, to review the broad array of issues surrounding the drawdown that will begin in July of 2011, next month.  And he will consult further with his national security team and, of course, including General Petraeus in the days coming forward.

        Q    And did the General provide his recommendations for options for that drawdown?

        MR. CARNEY:  They discussed a range of options, as I think the General has said in the past publicly, that this was a question of options plural and not option.  And that conversation will continue.

        Yes, Caren.

        Q    A follow on Petraeus.  When does the President hope to make a decision?

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, I will cite the President, who said “soon,” so I don’t have a specific date for you.  I don’t have a -- I’m not going to get more specific than “soon.”  Obviously the operative date here is July of 2011, so since the policy that he began to implement in December of 2009 envisions and calls for the beginning of the drawdown of this surge force in July of 2011, obviously it will be in time for that to happen.

        Q    And what is the process from here?  Is there going to be a series of meetings or is he just going to reflect on what --

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, let’s step back a little bit.  He meets regularly with his national security team.  Afghanistan, for important reasons, including the presence of 100,000 U.S. military personnel, is frequently on the agenda when he meets with his national security team.  So these are conversations that occur with some regularity.

        He -- in answer to Julie’s question, he did meet with his team yesterday, including General Petraeus.  Those meetings will continue.  There is no process that is similar to the one that the President undertook in the fall of December of 2009 to do a deep dive and review of our strategy in Afghanistan because that process was designed to produce the policy and the strategy that the President forged and announced in December of 2009 and that he has been implementing ever since, he and the team have been implementing ever since.  This is -- this discussion, these meetings, and the result, which will come with his announcement, are part of that implementation process.

        Q    Shifting gears, how worried is the White House about the Greek crisis and what its implications might be for the American economy?

        MR. CARNEY:  I think we have said that the -- we obviously are monitoring this regularly.  We consider it a headwind, if you will, in terms of the global economy, and therefore the domestic economy.  So we’re monitoring the situation and developments in Greece closely.  And we are in regular communication with our European counterparts.  We continue to believe that they have the capacity to deal with this, and we believe it is completely within their capacity to do that, and that they will.

        So far, Greece has made significant progress in terms of reforms.  But it is important that the Greek government carry on with the fiscal measures and reforms that are frequently under discussion with the EU and the IMF.

        Yes.

        Q    Jay, Congressman Anthony Weiner is expected to resign in the next half hour or so.  Does the White House feel that this closes the chapter?  Does it allow you to focus back on jobs, et cetera?

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, we never stopped focusing on jobs.  I think when the President was asked about this he made clear that -- he expressed his opinion, but he also made clear that this is not an issue that he has been focused on because he has obviously much more significant priorities.  And I don’t really have anything to add to that.

        Q    Has the President spoken to him in recent days?  

        MR. CARNEY:  Not that I’m aware of.

        Q    Okay.  And can you -- yesterday, Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz, the DNC Chairwoman, said that Democrats now own the economy.  Do you agree?

        MR. CARNEY:  We all own the economy.  We all work together in Washington to devise policies to improve the economic situation.  I think what the Congresswoman was referring to is the fact that the turnaround that we have seen, the turn -- the change in direction reflected in the fact that when the President was sworn into office we were losing 700,000 jobs a month, and for the last just six months, we’ve gained a million jobs; in the, I think, 17 months, or 15 months, it’s been 2.1 million -- reflects a change in direction for the better.  The fact that we were contracting severely as an economy by something like 6.4 percent when he took office has been reversed, and that we have grown for seven straight quarters.

        We believe that the actions that we took in early 2009 -- some of them controversial, some of them very difficult -- have been responsible, or have certainly helped produce that change in direction.  A change in direction does not mean an arrival at a destination.  We are not where we want to be in terms of the economy, in terms of job creation.  That’s why the President is so focused, why he spent so much of his time devoted to discussing the economy with his advisors, talking to outside folks about their ideas, including his Jobs and Competitiveness Council; CEOs and other leaders in the economy for their ideas about what we need to do to continue to grow the economy and create jobs.

        Jake.

        Q    In the six years since President Obama came to Washington, including his Senate career, there have been any number of politicians who have undergone scandal.  I can only recall President Obama saying or suggesting that someone should resign or that if he were that person he would resign with Congressman Anthony Weiner, who as far as I can tell has not actually committed any law-breaking as far as has been disclosed as of yet.  Why would President Obama choose to speak out on this issue and not, say, Congressman Rangel or Senator Vitter?

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, I’m not sure I can make the comparison for you.  He was asked about it; he didn’t come here and announce it or anything.  He was not looking to comment on this situation.  As he made clear in the follow-up question that was asked by Ann Curry in that interview, this is not something he has had the luxury to focus on.  He has been focused on other issues -- the economy, jobs, national security, Afghanistan, et cetera.

        However, I think he made clear that he agreed with Congressman Weiner that the behavior he exhibited was inappropriate, that he had embarrassed himself and obviously his family, and asked the question, he responded.  But I don’t think he was looking to make a particular point beyond that -- simply responding to the question.

        Q    And how does he feel about Senator Vitter and Congressman Rangel’s behavior?

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, again, I haven’t discussed it with him, I don’t know.

        Q    In recent weeks, Republicans have been attacking President Obama for, in their view, seeming to be out of touch with the economic woes of Americans, whether it’s Mitt Romney issuing a video featuring unemployed Americans saying they’re not speed bumps; Senator Mitch McConnell of the floor of the Senate yesterday suggested that President Obama was joking about the stimulus not working in that Jobs and Competitive Council event in North Carolina, when he talked about shovel-ready is not as shovel-ready as they had anticipated.  Do you guys have any response?  Does the White House have any response to this charge?

        MR. CARNEY:  I think it’s patently obvious that the President is focused on the economy; that he takes enormously seriously the hardship that Americans continue to endure as we emerge from the worst recession most of us have ever seen in our lifetimes.

        One of the reasons why he asked his office to cull 10 letters a day for him from the 40,000 that are received by this White House, addressed to him every day, is because he wanted to, in their own words, read about the travails that some Americans are going through.  And especially if you -- he initiated this practice back in the early part of his administration when we were in an economic freefall.  

        And obviously that hardship continues.  The President feels that very keenly.  It is why, again, it is the primary focus of his administration, the primary focus of his waking hours, what he can do, what we can do as an administration, what we can do as Americans, as Republicans and Democrats together, to continue to grow the economy, continue the positive progress we’ve made, and most importantly continue to create jobs.

        Q    I’m sure you saw the ABC News/Washington Post poll last week.  President Obama was under 50 percent for the first time I can remember when voters were asked whether or not he understands the problems of people like them.  Are you concerned at all that the President is conveying the opposite of what you just said?

        MR. CARNEY:  Look, what he does every day is focus on his job and what he can to do to help the American people.  Polls say a lot of different things.  I think that the reality is that when you are worried about losing your job or you’ve lost your job, or you worry about losing your house or your mortgage is underwater, that anxiety is real and understandable and it affects how you view your own prospects, it affects how you view the overall economy, and it affects how you view your leaders in Washington -- and understandably.

        What this President believes is that he came here for a reason, which was to help America, to help change the direction of the country and help, specifically, given the circumstances, the dire circumstances that were here when he took office, to reverse a catastrophic economic collapse that was unfolding as he moved in.  That work continues.

        We have changed direction.  We are growing.  The economy is growing; it is no longer shrinking.  We are creating jobs.  We’ve created more than 2.1 private sector -- 2.1 million private sector jobs.  But that work continues.  This recession caused the loss of 8 million jobs.  Eight million Americans lost their jobs in this recession.  That is a deep hole.  And there is no other task that he has been more dedicated to since he took office than to digging us out of that hole -- or climbing out of that hole.  

        But the work continues.  And that’s why he says we’re not done.  We’re a long way from done.  And that’s why we have to make the right decisions -- as we get our deficits under control, as we address our long-term debt, but that do we do these things, these important things, in ways that further our potential for economic growth, increase our potential to create jobs, and do not in any way reverse the progress that we’ve made.

        Yes.

        Q    Jay, if I could just ask you to respond to -- specifically to Boehner’s remarks today on Libya, where he said we’re spending $10 million a day, we’re part of an effort to drop bombs on Qaddafi’s compounds -- “It doesn’t pass the straight face test, in my opinion, that we’re not in the midst of hostilities.”

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, I think you have the 30-plus pages that we provided to Congress --

        Q    But there’s only one paragraph on that issue.

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, no, there’s a substantial amount of material there in answer to all the specific questions that Congress had asked -- members of Congress had asked.  And on the --

        Q    Yes, but on the issue of the War Powers resolution there’s one paragraph.

        MR. CARNEY:  And we simply disagree.  And we think that -- U.S. forces are playing a constrained supporting role in a multinational coalition whose operations are both legitimized by and limited to the terms of a U.N. Security Council resolution.  

        As we made clear yesterday, we believe U.S. forces are not engaged in the kind of hostilities envisaged by the War Powers resolution.  U.S. operations do not involve a number of elements traditionally associated with hostilities, including sustained fighting or active exchanges of fire with hostile forces; the presence of U.S. ground troops -- let me reiterate -- not a single U.S. ground troop in Libya now or ever.  U.S. casualties also lack -- U.S. casualties or a serious threat thereof, or any significant chance of escalation into a conflict characterized by those factors.

        Our conclusion, therefore, that these constrained and limited operations do not amount to hostilities under the War Powers resolution is consistent with War Powers resolution interpretations put forward by administrations of both political parties dating back to the statute’s 1973 enactment.  

        I think that that is a comprehensive and thorough legal analysis.  Obviously as a lawyer yourself, Chip, you know that there is a long history of legal debate about the War Powers resolution.  We do not expect every person to agree with this.  We believe that it is accurate and sound legal analysis.

        Q    Was the President personally involved in formulating what you just read?

        MR. CARNEY:  Yes.

        Q    He worked with Bob Bauer --

        MR. CARNEY:  What I can say is that he certainly -- it is his position and he worked with White House Counsel and his team and, as a constitutional lawyer himself, he is obviously -- he owns this document.

        Q    And it was his decision ultimately --

        MR. CARNEY:  Correct.

        Q    -- and not Bob Bauer’s decision?

        MR. CARNEY:  Correct.

        Q    Boehner has also called on the President to speak to the American people.  Any consideration being given to a speech on this?

        MR. CARNEY:  Not that I’m aware of.  Well, I wouldn’t speculate too far into the future, but there are no plans to give a speech on Libya.

        Q    And on power of the purse, Boehner suggested that ultimately their option may be power of the purse.  Concern that Congress could cut off funding for the Libyan --

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, as we’ve said in the past, we don’t think it’s helpful for Congress to send mixed messages, because I think we all agree, the vast majority of the members of Congress, as well as this administration, this President, that the mission undertaken by this broad coalition by NATO and other allies to enforce U.N. Security Council Resolution 1973 has been important, it has protected Libyan civilians, it has saved thousands of lives, and it has helped create space for the Libyan opposition to organize itself, and it has helped put pressure on Qaddafi to see the writing on the wall and to ultimately step away from power.

        I think those are -- that success is something that members of Congress, even those who have concern, would acknowledge.  And the importance of continuing that mission is, I think, something that a majority of Congress supports.

        Q    And finally, yesterday you were asked if the President personally believes the War Powers resolution is constitutional, and you said you couldn’t say because you hadn’t spoken to the President --

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, I haven’t spoken to him about this, but let me just make clear what we are not saying.  First of all, what we are saying is that this -- our current actions in Libya or in this mission do not fall under the War Powers resolution because they do not meet the threshold of hostilities as envisioned by the War Powers resolution.

        What this reasoning is not saying is that -- is not addressing the constitutionality of the War Powers resolution.  It is not -- it is a very -- it is a limited assessment based on what we are doing in Libya and how it relates to the War Powers resolution.  It is not an overall analysis, the likes of which we have seen much of over the past many years since the resolution became law.

        Yes, sir.

        Q    On Libya, the attorneys advising the executive branch, did they all agree that this was within the President’s authority?

        MR. CARNEY:  There was a robust debate, as you might expect in this situation, and that led the President to his view that the War Power resolution’s 60-day termination provision did not apply here.  But again, going back to what I’ve said before, this resolution has been -- it would be impossible to have a discussion about the War Powers resolution in a room of lawyers and not have it be a robust debate, because it is a highly debated and debatable resolution.  So I don’t think that’s surprising at all.  I hope that answers your question.

        Q    On the definition of hostilities, if a foreign country were to be lobbing missiles at, say, New York City, is that hostility?

        MR. CARNEY:  I’m not going to -- I will address the issue here in terms of how it relates to our participation in a multinational coalition in Libya, how our extremely circumscribed and limited role in that coalition and the activities that we’re engaged in -- I’m not going to -- not just because I’m not a lawyer, but partly because I’m not a lawyer, I’m not going to engage in that kind of speculation.

        Q    One quick other one.  Any reaction to Zawahiri taking the lead of al Qaeda?

        MR. CARNEY:  Certainly not surprising.  He was identified prior to the successful mission against Osama bin Laden as al Qaeda’s number two.  It’s neither surprising nor does it change some fundamental facts, which is al Qaeda’s ideology is bankrupt.  The fact is that peaceful movements for change are the future of the region and al Qaeda is the past.  That was true before Osama bin Laden’s death and is true today.

        Q    Any plans to send him a congratulatory drone or bunker buster?  (Laughter.)

        MR. CARNEY:  I have no comment on that.  Mike.

        Q    You’re not elucidating any further, as you put it, on the Libya --

        MR. CARNEY:  Did you say elucidating or hallucinating?  (Laughter.)

        Q    Depends on -- is this Friday?  (Laughter.)  You’re not elucidating any longer -- your words.  Does that mean you’re essentially aware of the political and legislative dynamic on Capitol Hill?  It’s essentially, “Okay, John Boehner, if you want to put a resolution on the floor, you can go ahead and do it.  It’s not going anywhere in the Senate.  We’re through talking about it.”

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, let me answer as I did to Julie, which is that we will continue to consult with Congress.  We will continue to answer Congress’s questions as we participate in this mission.  We’ve made our legal reasoning clear.  We can restate it, but I don’t anticipate further legal analysis on this issue from us.  But I do anticipate continued consultations with Congress about the mission.  And stepping back to something I haven’t mentioned today, which is that we obviously do support a resolution similar to or exactly like the one tabled by -- put forward by Senators Kerry and McCain and others -- a bipartisan resolution that we would support and agree with.

        Q    Just to follow up, yesterday on the debt talk, you didn’t specifically endorse the Vice President’s deadline -- I think it’s July 1st or 4th -- to have something concrete put forward.  Does the President agree that that is a viable deadline?

        MR. CARNEY:  I think that the Vice President is leading these talks; what he says represents where we are on these talks.  So I have no -- I’m not disagreeing with anything he said.

        Q    But you’re not specifically endorsing it, either --

        MR. CARNEY:  I endorse what the Vice President said.

        Q    Okay, great.  And finally, yesterday at the congressional picnic, the pool cameras caught a -- some video of the Speaker, well known to be a smoker; I believe he prefers Camels.  The President, I assume --

        MR. CARNEY:  I was a Marlboro Light guy.

        Q    Okay, I assume the President is still abstaining from tobacco smoke.  Will the President ask him when they golf together to not smoke?  And does the venue where they’re going to be golfing allow smoking?

        MR. CARNEY:  I have no -- I don’t know about the venue.  I’m sure that the President will be a fine host.  (Laughter.)  I don’t --

        Q    So he won’t have a problem with the Speaker --

        MR. CARNEY:  I don’t foresee a problem.

        Carol.

        Q    Thanks.  What’s the White House’s reaction to the ethanol subsidies vote that’s going to take place in the Senate?

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, we oppose the full repeal of that subsidy, but as you know, we are focused and have been focused on a broad strategy including increasing domestic development of oil and gas but also aggressive development of alternative fuels including biofuels, and also improving our efficiency, our fuel efficiency.  And as part of our overall strategy, we would like to see reform that would reduce costs in terms of the subsidy in question here, but not -- we were not -- we did not support the full repeal.

        Mr. Knoller.

        Q    Do you know what the venue is for the Saturday golf game?

        MR. CARNEY:  I do.  If we haven’t put it out, I’m not going to announce it from here.

        Q    Nothing’s out.

        MR. CARNEY:  Then my lips are sealed.

        Q    Were you discussing the golf game with Speaker Boehner yesterday in your chat with him?

        MR. CARNEY:  We discussed a lot of things.  I’ve known Speaker Boehner for a long time since I covered Congress in the mid-’90s.  I consider him a friend and had an enjoyable conversation.

        Q    And the legal arguments in the Libya document yesterday, are those the same legal arguments that Justice will use in answering the lawsuit filed yesterday by members of Congress?

        MR. CARNEY:  I don’t want to prescribe how lawyers might -- actions they might take, but I certainly think the legal reasoning we put forward yesterday, the analysis we put forward yesterday, would be a foundation for a response.

        Q    Just to follow up on Caren’s question, is the President receiving any special briefings on the Greek debt crisis right now?

        MR. CARNEY:  He has been briefed specifically on it.

        Q    Today?

        MR. CARNEY:  Not that I’m aware of today, although he
        did get, as part of his overall briefing, I’m sure it included paper on Greece.  He may have gotten something specific on Greece today; I’m just not sure.

        Q    And also, any updates on the government reorganization plans and when that might be released?

        MR. CARNEY:  Yes, I can -- I do have something on that.  As you know, the President called for a reorganization of the government in his State of the Union address because he believes that government should be retooled to meet the needs of the 21st century.  This set of recommendations is part of an overall effort to streamline government, cut waste and duplication, increase effectiveness so that we can create a system that will help Americans and businesses compete.

        The analysis, options, and recommendations were submitted to the President by Jeff Zients and Lisa Brown on June 9th, as directed.  The President will review the recommendations submitted to him over the summer and discuss them with his team.  And when he completes his review I expect he will make a public statement about it.

        Q    Does that mean the review isn’t expected to be completed until the fall?

        MR. CARNEY:  I don’t have a timeline on it.  The submission of the recommendations was made on June 9th, as directed by the President.  The President will review it over the summer, so sometime within the post-review period, I’m sure he will, as he meets with his team, make a public statement about the recommendations.

        Yes, sir.

        Q    What’s the road map between the meeting today on the Hill with the Vice President and July 1st?

        MR. CARNEY:  I anticipate more meetings.  I don’t have an announcement yet to make on when those meetings will take place, but we continue to look to intensify the process as -- deliberately, we’ve been unspecific about the progress that has been made, but consistent in describing what has transpired as progress -- and not just us, but other participants -- and we continue to believe that they’ve made important progress in those negotiations and are optimistic about the prospect of an agreement.

        Q    Back to the Petreaus meeting.  What’s the rationale for waiting a day to acknowledge that and the fact that there were National Security Council --

        MR. CARNEY:  The meeting happened after the briefing.  I was asked yesterday; it hadn’t happened.

        Q    I mean, you seem to repeatedly stress that this is not part of a wholesale reevaluation of strategy.  Are you trying to purposely, like, downplay this whole notion that we’re going to give a big announcement, big speech coming?

        MR. CARNEY:  No.  No, no, no.  But what I think happened is that -- I’m just simply saying, because people -- most folks here reported on that rather unique and unprecedented process that the President oversaw and initiated -- initiated and oversaw back in the fall of 2009.  And I simply didn’t want people to expect a repeat of that unique and unprecedented -- that’s probably redundant -- but unprecedented process.  

        So that’s all.  I’m not trying to downplay it.  We think it is very significant that he is doing what he said he would do to some degree of skepticism back when he announced this policy.  Remember, the inclusion of the July 2011 date as the beginning of a drawdown of those surge forces that he was sending into Afghanistan was viewed by some, in some quarters, as not serious.  It was deadly serious.  

        And the President is doing, as he tends to do, exactly what he said he would do.  And he is implementing the policy and the strategy that he put in place in December of 2009.  That strategy has met with some significant success, and he is reviewing the situation and will make an announcement relatively soon, as he said, about the pace and slope of the drawdown that will begin next month.

        Q    Well, I’ll ask again because I’ve been asked several times already today.  Is the President still intending to have some sort of formal speech to present the particulars of the immediate drawdown and the early stages of the plan?

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, when you say, “still” intends to, I don’t know that we’ve ever suggested that he would make a formal speech.  We haven’t decided yet on the venue or the format by which he will make the announcement, but he will address it in his own words, I’m confident of that.  But I don’t have an announcement about venue or form.

        Ann.

        Q    Jay, why wasn’t the Petraeus meeting on the schedule?

        MR. CARNEY:  Not every meeting the President has is on his public schedule, as you might expect.

        Q    Normally, though, something like that is on his schedule.

        MR. CARNEY:  Not all of them.  But I --

        Q    But your routine National Security Council meetings in the Sit Room typically are on the schedule.

        MR. CARNEY:  The monthly meetings are.  The weekly meetings with Secretary Gates, Secretary Clinton are, but not all the meetings he has are.  This was not a -- this was an additional meeting to the routine meetings.  We didn’t put it on the schedule, but when asked, I’ve answered the fact that he did have this meeting.

        Yes, Ann.

        Q    Thanks, Jay.  On Libya, what happens now?  You say the President disagrees with Congress.  Speaker Boehner says he wants an answer tomorrow on whether the Office of Legal Counsel agrees with this assessment of the President.  You say you’re not going to give any more legal assessment to Congress.  What happens in a deadlock like that?  Who wins?  Does the President win?

        MR. CARNEY:  Look, I think the important thing here is not about who wins in terms of partisan politics, Ann.  It’s about does the --

        Q    No, who wins on policy?

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, we are continuing with the mission and our participation in it.  We continue to consult with Congress.  We continue to answer questions when they have them.  We have provided the legal analysis that was sent yesterday to Congress.  And the process moves forward.  Again, I think as I answered in response to a question from Mike, we would support and endorse the -- a vote on the resolution put forward by -- the bipartisan resolution put forward by Senators McCain and Kerry and others.  And so we continue.  

        And the important thing is that we understand what is happening in Libya, the tremendous progress we’ve made, the fact that the President has done exactly what he said he would do -- again, to some degree of skepticism evinced by the very people I’m looking at now -- that he would do what he said he would do, which is have the United States military take the lead in this operation in the initial days because of our unique capabilities, and then within days and not weeks the U.S. would step back and other partners would take the lead in this mission.  That is what happened, and it has been true ever since.

        He said that there would not be U.S. ground forces in Libya.  He meant what he said.  And he has said that our mission there is described by and limited by United Nations Security Council Resolution 1973.  And he meant what he said.

        So this mission continues and it continues to be successful.  It saved thousands of lives, prevented what was likely to be a massacre in Benghazi.  It has given time and space to the opposition to organize -- an opposition that we have worked increasingly closely with as we have gotten to know it and dealt with it.  We have worked hard to free up funds that have been frozen that -- Qaddafi regime funds so that the opposition can use those funds for assistance.  And we believe that the Libyan people will have the opportunity to decide their future, their political future.

        Q    So on current military policy, the President won’t budge?

        MR. CARNEY:  Again, I can’t improve upon the substantial report that we sent to Congress yesterday.  And we are continuing with our supporting role in that mission.

        Yes, Abby.

        Q    Putting aside the legal justification for just a second, the report says that the mission has current -- has cost about $700 million up until this point.  It projects that by September it will be $1.1 billion.  That’s a lot of money in the context of the budget cutting and trimming of programs that already exist.  How do you justify that to the American people, and when do you expect the money to stop flowing?

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, I think the President has justified it clearly in terms of why it is in the interests of the United States to participate in this mission in the form that he has our forces participating in it.  It is also important to note that the money that you mention is coming from existing funds.  There is no request for a supplemental.  And it is money that would have been spent on other things like training missions that are being fulfilled by the actual missions being performed.  So this is not new money.  And we believe that it continues to be in the U.S. interest to participate in this mission in the limited manner that we are participating in it because it is in our interest, within this multinational coalition, to continue to protect Libyan civilians, to continue to enforce the no-fly zone and an arms embargo to give the opposition the time and space that it needs to organize.

        Q    Is the expectation going to be that we’ll be operating in the same capacity until September?

        MR. CARNEY:  I can’t predict the future, so it obviously -- a lot depends on what’s happening on the ground.  But NATO recently I think in the last couple of weeks extended its mission for 90 days -- is that correct?  Ninety days.  And obviously we are participants in that mission.  But to anticipate what Libya will look like in September is something I’m not prepared to do.

        Q    Is the cost something that President Obama is considering when he’s making decisions about how involved --

        MR. CARNEY:  I think that President Obama made the decision about the level of our participation based on a number of factors regarding our -- serving the American people’s best interests and our best national security interests.  And one thing that is certainly factually true is that the limited nature of our participation has reduced the cost of it.  

        More importantly, in terms of its success, the multinational nature of the mission has ensured that this has not been something that the United States owns; that it is a broad coalition, including Arab partners, that are responsible for this, that decided collectively to take this action.  And we believe that doing it in that way enhances the prospects of a positive outcome for Libya.

        April.

        Q    Jay, two questions, one on the economy.  Last week the Labor Department came out with a report on the black labor force in the recovery, and the Secretary -- Labor Secretary said the President and the Vice President did see this report.  What next?  What’s the next step as the black labor force has been hurting for decades in this country?

        MR. CARNEY:  No question.  And this is a matter of significant concern to this administration, as is the overall situation with employment.  Unemployment is too high.  We are working every day to bring it down, to make sure that Americans who are looking for jobs -- minorities and non-minorities who are looking for jobs -- can find them.  So this is -- there is no higher priority here.  And we are working hard to address overall our economic growth and our job creation.

        Q    And also, on the other question, on the War Powers Act -- the President wants to keep calm waters between the branches.  Why didn’t he just have a conversation and just say, look, this is what we’re intending?  Why didn’t he do that to Congress?

        MR. CARNEY:  The President has consulted with Congress on this.  Members of his team have consulted with regularly on Congress -- with Congress on Libya.  Again, I think this is now somewhat stale, so the number of engagements is higher.  But more than 40 occasions that this administration has engaged with Congress on Libya, both in closed and open session, and in larger and small meetings, and in direct consultations, and we will continue to do that.  So the President has had this discussion, and members of his team have had this discussion with Congress.

        Q    All right, I will quantify it -- more than 40 occasions prior to the action in Libya?

        MR. CARNEY:  No, no, no.  Prior to -- I mean, since the action, and including prior to it, but within the context of the action.

        Q    Okay.  What I’m saying again is why didn’t he just -- in efforts to stay above the fray and to keep peace, why didn’t he just go to Congress and say, look, this is what I’m thinking about doing?  I want to join --

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, he did.  He did have -- he did, as you know, have leaders down here before the mission began, first of all.  Second of all, the President’s goal is not to keep the peace and stay above the fray.  That is not the mission of his presidency.  He saw an urgent need that needed to be addressed; an imminent massacre; a unique set of circumstances that allowed for a broad multinational coalition that was willing to take action; a significant resolution passed by the United Nations Security Council.  And that -- those factors combined to lead the President to believe that he took -- that the action he took was the right action to take, and he consulted with Congress about it.

        Yes, sir.  

        Q    Jay, twice you said that Congress shouldn’t send mixed messages on Libya.  Why not?

        MR. CARNEY:  Well, because I think that it is important that -- well, first of all, because I think Congress does share our goals in -- broadly, our goals in Libya, and that it’s important to make it clear to Qaddafi and others that that unity of goal -- in terms of the shared goals exist.  And we are not in any way suggesting that Congress shouldn’t express its opinion or have these discussions -- and we are in these consultations regularly.  But I think that -- it’s a just a broad point that we share these goals, we have consulted regularly, we’ve answered these questions.  We understand there are concerns, and we continue to answer those concerns.

        Q    Well, if you’re not questioning Congress’s right to ask questions about it, what’s the mixed message?

        MR. CARNEY:  I think that they are sending more than one message about how they view Libya, about our -- whether our goals are the right ones, and how we achieve them.  But again, I don’t want to suggest that -- and I’m not -- that they are not well within their rights to express concern or objections and raise questions.

        I wanted to ask Sam, and I just -- I wanted to ask you if you noted that Josh Beckett had a masterful performance yesterday, a one-hitter with 97 pitches -- a shutout.

        Q    It was beautiful.  Am I supposed to ask my question now?

        MR. CARNEY:  No, no, that’s all.  I just wanted to make sure -- (laughter) -- I thought maybe they were playing this afternoon, because I saw your head down.  Maybe you were --

        Q    No, no, I’m updating my fantasy team.  (Laughter.)  Can I ask a question?

        MR. CARNEY:  Yes, please.

        Q    Before you refer me to the Department of Justice -- (laughter) -- Senator Lautenberg sent a letter to the White House yesterday expressing disapproval with the lack of action on gun policy from this administration and calling for more presidential leadership, not Department of Justice leadership.  So I’m wondering what the reaction is from the White House.  And how do you push back against the notion that nothing has been done on guns when the records show that nothing has been done on guns?

        MR. CARNEY:  Can I refer you to the Justice Department?  (Laughter.)  

        Q    No, you cannot.

        MR. CARNEY:  I’m not aware of the letter.  So I don’t have a reaction to it, Sam.  So I think you know the President did have an op-ed about --

        Q    Well, that was many months ago.

        MR. CARNEY:  -- gun policy in the wake of the terrible shooting in Arizona.  I don’t have an update for you on the actions that we’ve taken.

        Q    Is the pen mightier than the gun?

        Q    Can I email you the letter and get a reaction later, perhaps?

        MR. CARNEY:  You are welcome to do that.

        Q    Thank you.

        Q    Jay?

        MR. CARNEY:  Jon-Christopher.

        Q    Last night, UK Chancellor George Osborne endorsed a plan to separate retail banking from investment banking activities as part of a response to the global financial crisis.  Since the U.S. is a part of the same global financial marketplace, does this administration believe this may affect competition between the U.S. and the UK in the financial services market?

        MR. CARNEY:  That’s the kind of question that I think the Treasury Department is best suited to answer, so I’d refer you to the Treasury Department -- especially on the second part.  Overall, I think it’s important for us to note that as countries around the globe have dealt with the crisis that occurred in 2008, the financial sector crisis and then the recession that ensured -- obviously every country is different and the way they deal with it is different.  

        We have, because of the President’s leadership, took very significant action to pass financial reforms, financial sector reforms, and we continue to implement those.  But again, each country addresses these issues differently.

        Q    Is this the kind of thing he’d discuss with the PM, Prime Minister Cameron?

        MR. CARNEY:  Not that I’m aware of.

        Toshi.

        Q    I have a question on the job creation.  On Monday, at Cree in North Carolina, the President laid out a new initiative to train 10,000 new American engineers to compete, I guess, with the other countries.  And could you elaborate a little bit how it would work?  And also how -- it is said that it’s a private sector-led initiative, but how is government really involved?  I mean, will the government provide any -- or would not provide anything?

        MR. CARNEY:  I believe it is a private sector initiative that we support.  Why don’t you come up to me -- I do have -- the way this job works, on Monday I could have told you so many things about that, and now it’s been displaced by Libya and other things -- (laughter) -- my bandwidth being limited.  But you’re correct, it is a private sector initiative.

        And look, we are looking for ways -- actions the government can take, actions the private sector can take.  This is an all-hands-on-deck situation, as it has been, since the moment we took -- we came to the White House.  So we were -- the President was very encouraged by the Jobs Council meeting and the ideas that were generated there -- I think two dozen ideas, many of them very promising, he thinks.  And that was just one of them.

        George.

        Q    Thank you.  You just mentioned your personal friendship with the Speaker.  In this week of golf games and picnics, can you talk about the value of --

        MR. CARNEY:  I have no plans to play golf with anybody.

        Q    Talk about the value of building personal relationships between the President and leaders from the other party in Congress.

        MR. CARNEY:  Look, I think he and I have addressed this before.  He feels that it is a very useful thing to do; that -- and I know the Vice President, whom I also work for and worked more directly for in the past, feels very strongly about this, too, that part of what’s happened in Washington has been that the normal human interactions you have with people that you might disagree with on policy have become far and fewer between, and that that’s not particularly helpful for constructive dialogue, because we have big issues.  

        And the nature that we need to solve and the nature of our system is that for better or worse -- and we think for better because we think it’s an awfully good system, the American system -- it requires bipartisan cooperation to get anything significant done.  That is almost always the case.  And it is certainly the case when you have one party in the White House and the other party in control of one or both houses of Congress.  

        So these kinds of meetings, this kind of communication are, I think, very helpful.  They don’t necessarily produce tangible progress on legislation, but they do produce the potential for a better atmosphere in the room when important things are discussed and negotiated.  So that’s why the President has encouraged the kind of encounters that he’s had with members of Congress, with the leadership, with Speaker Boehner and Senator McConnell, for example, as well as Democrats; why he asked the conferences and caucuses of each house to come to the White House earlier this year; and why he invited the Speaker to play golf this weekend.

        Q    Thanks, Jay.

        Q    Does it make it easier for him to cut through his staff and just pick up the phone and call somebody like the Speaker --

        MR. CARNEY:  Yes, no question, no question.  

        Thanks very much.  I know you guys got somewhere to go at 2:00 p.m., right?

END 2:02 P.M. EDT

Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/06/16/press-briefing-press-secretary-jay-carney-6162011

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