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Could It Really Happen?


House Democrats call for congressional hearings on Clarence Thomas


by Joan McCarterFollow



 



Supreme Court
U.S. Supreme Court, Wikimedia Commons
     House Democrats are intensifying their efforts to shed light on Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas’s ethics problems. Last week, a group of 20 Democrats demanded the Judicial Conference, the governing body for federal courts, investigate Thomas for his failure to report hundreds of thousands of dollars on financial disclosure forms. No word yet on whether the Conference will follow up, so these Democrats are also demanding Congressional hearings into Thomas.
     On the steps of the Supreme Court this morning, Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-OR), Rep. Louise Slaughter (D-NY) and others held a press conference calling on the House Judiciary Committee to hold hearings investigating some of Thomas’s alleged ethical lapses. These include allegations that he failed to disclose at least $1.6 million in income earned by his wife Virginia, who worked for the conservative Heritage Foundation and has been an active opponent of the Obama health care law. Thomas has also been accused of taking unreported free trips on a corporate jet and a yacht from real estate magnate Harlan Crow.
     Blumenauer wrote to the House Judiciary committee members:
    “Reports of potential ethical lapses by Justice Thomas’s actions give rise to concerns about conflicts of interest undermining appellants’ rights of due process and also raise substantive questions about Justice Thomas’s ability to retain his seat. We urge that your committee hold hearings regarding the nature of these questions, their factual basis, and their potential to undermine the public’s trust in the Supreme Court.”
     In addition, Rep. Louise Slaughter, in an appearance on Countdown Tuesday night, suggested there’s a possibility of forcing a “retroactive recusal,” that could potentially also take away Thomas’s Citizen’s United vote.
     SLAUGHTER: […] But what I’m very interested here, as you know, the votes that he has cast that I think may be in conflict.
     And, of course his wife can work. But the fact is there are only nine Justices on that Supreme Court, and it certainly should be a given that a family member of any of those people lucky enough to be a Supreme Court Justice should not in any way involve themselves in matters that will go before that court. Now, we all know she worked very hard for the Citizens United case, which I think is one of the most egregious things that’s ever happened in the United States Supreme Court.
     OLBERMANN: Agreed.
     SLAUGHTER: There is such a thing as a retroactive recusal. We’re looking into that. That case, if you remember, was decided 5-4. If we could take away his vote, we could wipe that out. It would lose.[…]
     You know, the judiciary is the last place for all of us to go. We are only as good, all of us, as the courts are—only as safe as the courts are good. Their interpretations are really what give us the freedoms, when you come down to it. They have enormous power. I know the attempt is always made to put the very best persons on that court. And I, as I said—again, I’m trying not to prejudge him—but you can’t say in my view that what he did was not willful, by failing to report her income. And I think there is no question about it. It is against the law. So we’re hoping that the Judiciary Commission will turn this over to the attorney general.
     Common Cause has actually initiated an effort to have the Justice Department investigate whether whether Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas should have recused themselves in Citizens United because of their participation in events sponsored by the Koch brothers.
     It’s impossible that the Republican-controlled House Judiciary committee will launch an investigation and it’s also unlikely that a cautious Attorney General like Eric Holder would be willing to take on a Supreme Court Justice. So much of this effort is more intended to get at one thing: shaming Thomas into recusing himself when the Affordable Care Act comes before the Court. That also seems pretty likely, but there’s an outside chance that Justice Elena Kagan would also recuse herself, since she was acting as Solicitor General for the administration when the law was passed. Kagan’s recusal might just pave the way for Thomas’s, though it shouldn’t be unilateral.
      There’s another key point here, though, and that’s to shine a light on the fact that Supreme Court justices are essentially untouchable. They are not subject to the same code of conduct that every other member of the federal judiciary must follow. Supreme Court justices, of course, are supposed to be people of such quality, of such integrity, that they would be above reproach and should not be subject to such codes. Rep. Chris Murphy has legislation that would correct that, and end the Court’s exemption from judicial ethics laws.

Fantastic Plastic?


This Plastic Delivery Truck Is The Future Of UPS







There isn’t a better way to catch my attention than using a Star Trek analogy. Well, done UPS.



It’s kinda like how in Star Trek III, Scotty sees a lot of unexplored potential in the ol’ Enterprise, but the brass are telling him she’s scrap because the new Excelsior’s “transwarp” engine is the only future worth having. Then we learn the Enterprise is still the only hope for their mission, while the Excelsior can’t cut it. Granted, there was some sabotage in there somewhere… but the underlying message is the same!


UPS is constantly trying to counter increasing fuel prices. This is likely true with every company in transportation, but UPS recently announced and demo’d its mostly plastic delivery truck that’s 40% more fuel efficient than the current. By ditching the sheet metal for plastic, these trucks are said to be 1,000 lbs lighter. This allows for a smaller diesel engine, which lends greatly to the lower fuel consumption. But back to that Star Trek line.


It seems by way of that Star Trek story that UPS doesn’t see next-gen powertrains being reliable enough for widespread use just yet. Current technology can be further advanced while the bugs are being worked out of upcoming tech.


It’s not like UPS hasn’t already embraced EVs. The company blog points out that they already have 1,900 EVs delievery packages. But these are smaller vehicles whose limited range cannot match that of the classic diesel trucks. This truck is an intermediary step whose innovations seem easily carried forward to the EV age. Fast Company explains that this truck is part of the firm’s goal to increase efficiency 20% across its entire fleet by 2020 over the baseline established in 2000.


The plastic brown trucks are still in the prototype stage so your UPS man will still be driving the ol’ ironside for some time.

Congress Underpaid?






 





The Ticket



Are members of Congress paid enough?

By Chris Moody



    

(Charles Dharapak/AP)

     Everyone complains about their job now and then, and members of Congress are no exception.
     A few lawmakers have suggested in recent months that despite a $174,000 annual salary, generous health care and pensions, and perks for things like travel and mail, being one of the elite 435 ain’t always what it’s cracked up to be. And when you calculate the hours they put in, the pay isn’t stellar either, they say.
     The Florida Capital News reported last week on a speech Steve Southerland, a Republican representative, gave to a retirement community in Tallahassee in which he complained about some of the parts of his new job:
     “He said his $174,000 salary is not so much, considering the hours a member of the House puts in, and that he had to sever ties with his family business in Panama City. Southerland also said there are no instant pensions or free health insurance, as some of his constituents often ask him about in Congress.
    
“‘And by the way, did I mention? They’re shooting at us. There is law-enforcement security in this room right now, and why is that?” Southerland told about 125 people in an auditorium at the Westminster Oaks retirement community. “If you think this job pays too much, with those kinds of risks and cutting me off from my family business, I’ll just tell you: This job don’t mean that much to me. I had a good life in Panama City.’
    
“…He added that ‘if you took the hours that I work and divided it into my pay,’ the $174,000 salary would not seem so high.”
    
Southerland, a freshman, ran a family funeral home business in Panama City and earned about $90,000 before joining Congress in January.
     His sentiments were not unlike those expressed by Sean Duffy, a Republican representative from Wisconsin, when he said in March it was a “struggle” to pay his mortgage and student loans with his congressional salary. “At this point, I’m not living high on the hog,” Duffy, a father of six, said. (Compared to his colleagues, Duffy is one of the least wealthy members of Congress.)
     At the height of the debate over a possible government shutdown last spring, Linda Sánchez, a Democratic representative from California, said during an MSNBC interview that she was living “paycheck to paycheck” on her congressional salary. And she wasn’t the only one. Renee Ellmers, a Republican representative from North Carolina, was asked if she would forgo her pay in the case of a shutdown. Ellmers declined, saying, “I need my paycheck.”
     Are times really so tough that even members of Congress are struggling to get by? The numbers suggest otherwise. A recent analysis of congressional pay found that members of Congress earn about 3.4 times the salary of the average American worker. Using that standard, members of Congress are among the highest paid legislators in the developed world.
     This talk probably won’t help Congress’ approval rating. The federal government is the worst-rated industry in the country, viewed favorably by only 17 percent of Americans, according to a new Gallup survey.

Let’s See, They Lie in the Media?


New letters bring scandal closer to Rupert Murdoch


The Associated Press


Updated: 08/17/2011 04:31:37 AM MDT




LONDON—The taint of a hacking scandal is creeping closer to media baron Rupert Murdoch.
     New documents published by U.K. lawmakers investigating Britain’s phone-hacking scandal apparently contradict claims made by the News Corp. chief’s former right-hand man and cast doubt on his son James Murdoch’s testimony before Parliament.
     Among them is a letter claiming that illegal espionage was pervasive at Murdoch’s now-defunct News of the World tabloid.
     Former Murdoch confidante Les Hinton said in 2009 that he’d seen no evidence that phone hacking had spread beyond a single rogue reporter at the tabloid. Yet Hinton is among those copied in on the explosive letter.
     Three former lieutenants are also challenging assertions by James Murdoch that he wasn’t told the full facts about the scandal.

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