Sunday, July 7, 2013

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The lamestream media admit that Tim Tebow is being excluded not primarily because of his quarterbacking skills. [1] Why should the public support the NFL as it discriminates against outspoken Christians?

Senator Frank Lautenberg (D-NJ) died this morning. Now Governor Chris Christie must appoint someone to replace him. Whom will that be? [2][3]

Liberal hatred of the First Amendment: [4]

Evolutionists failed to overturn Louisiana pro-creationism law - again! Also, another creationist mother is eager to have her daughter read a draft of the Question evolution! campaign book for middle school students.[5]

Forbes: Religion is an essential driver of economic growth. Evangelicalism is improving the cultures of third world countries and boosting their economies. [6]

UN Agenda 21 threatens San Francisco Bay. But two activists are preparing to sue to fight it. [7]

Liberal censorship continues, by making a big deal out of an offhand reference to "no homo" by a triumphant basketball player. [8] But there's no exception to the First Amendment allowing censorship to promote the homosexual agenda.

Are the Koch Brothers hoping to buy the Los Angeles Times? If so, conservatives should applaud, not decry, them for that. [9]

Anti-Darwinism has now entered into a mainstream public university. Indiana's Ball State University is now offering a course which is intelligent design friendly.[10]

Same-sex marriage is defeated in the liberal state of Illinois, despite Obama's push for it in his home state. [11] Has Obama become irrelevant?

The academic journal Sociology of Religion shows secularism losing momentum and beginning to decline in both Europe and America by 2050. Other academic research shows it may begin to happen much earlier.[12]

August 2012: A summer of triumph for biblical creation belief. Will August 2013 be a watershed month as well?[13]

Media-promoted Tiger Woods "shot his worst nine-hole score as a professional" but afterward his comments were again self-serving: "I'm sure I'm not the only one who struggled out there." [14] Actually, Woods' score is worse than 69 other players.

The number of adherents of liberal Christianity who will be spit out of Jesus's mouth will be many.[15]

The country with the world's biggest atheist population is very interested in information debunking Darwinism.[16]

The first review of the Question evolution! campaign book for middle school students is in! Rachel finds the book "very interesting". Sarah is "very interested" in reading the book.[17]

Evolutionists, learning science is exciting. The force feeding of stale, evolutionary bunkum is not.[18][19]

New Jersey voters! This Tuesday is Primary Day. Herewith a voter guide. [20][21][22]

The IRS and the White House definitely worked together. The visitor logs show how often IRS Commissioner Shulman visited – and how rarely anyone else did with whom he would have had meetings, of not with Barack Obama. [23]

A Tea Party activist withdraws his earlier call for a temporary criminal registry, in wake of the scandals surrounding the Internal Revenue Service. This is the same agency that will police Obamacare. [24]

Liberal double standard: when undefeated Michele Bachmann declined to run for reelection, there was liberal claptrap galore by the media. Then her Dem opponent pulled out of the race too, and the media are nearly speechless. [25]

Eric Holder gave a private party for his friends in the Mainstream Media, and less than half of them showed up. What does that say about those who did? [26]

After cutting Tim Tebow, the New York Jets now try to stop the building of a family amusement park. [27] Why should the increasingly anti-Christian NFL receive favoritism??

Associated Press reports that Americans may lose the health plan they like under Obamacare.[28]

Student Loan money profits are being siphoned off to pay for ObamaCare.[29]

An activist advises people to elect a sheriff who remembers his Constitutional duty to those who elect him. [30]

"Memorial Day 2013: How it was. What it will be" by Bishop Bert [31]

1960s liberalism is not only financially unsustainable, but its champions are a dying breed.[32]

Understanding gold market dynamics.[33]

Evolutionary racism directed towards an accomplished footballer puts a sour note on a football game.[34] Why are so many liberals racists?

When a republic turns into a democracy, it will surely fail. [35]

Remembering a fallen police officer in Phoenix, Arizona. [36]

Media bullying alert: the lamestream media spend all day picking on undefeated conservative Michele Bachmann, who repeatedly won in a liberal district. Rather their cheap criticism, the media should be asking why they could never defeat her.

Wikipedia continues to lose influence in the world in 2013.[37] Also, interest in Project 200 plus keeps expanding.

Undefeated five-term congressman Michele Bachmann announces that she will retire from her position, and may run for higher office. [38] The liberal machine was never able to defeat her in a Dem state.

Professor attacked by liberals. His "crime"? Teaching students to think for themselves. [39]

Judge-Shopping, or, How Eric Holder Got Away With Spying On A Reporter's Emails: [40]

The liberal nanny mayor of New York City doesn't like street cafes now. [41]

The IRS scandal that the news is not covering, because it's tied in with Obamacare: [42]

Eric Holder now faces investigation for perjury before Congress. Is Barack Hussein Obama paying attention? [43]

France struggles to find a strategy to turn around their economy even though it is right under their nose.[44] The Bible, Adam Smith and Friedrich Hayek

Many things happen in life that cannot be explained by science or philosophy. Atheists and agnostics self intellectually cripple themselves and are clueless about much of reality.[45]

Example of how modern conservatism is more conservative than Republicans from yesteryear: Bob Dole, Republican nominee in 1996, admits that "Reagan couldn't have made it. Certainly, Nixon couldn't have made it .... We might've made it, but I doubt it." [46]

A United States Senator finally says it: Barack H. Obama is throwing away his moral authority to lead. But in fact he never had legal authority to lead, either. [47]

Conservapedia pauses in prayer (not a liberal "moment of silence") in honor of Memorial Day.

RichardDawkins.net keeps getting smited! Has a plague of locusts eaten Richard Dawkins' daily website visitors?[48]

How long will you refuse to humble yourself before the Lord, Richard Dawkins?

Vox Day and a supporter of the Question evolution! campaign agree: The speed at which the secular left is collapsing is happening at an unexpectedly fast rate. [49]

Google USA estimates 101,000,000 search results for the search "Evolution and just so stories".[50]

"President Obama forgets to salute," but the lamestream media downplay gaffes by liberals. [51]

A Tea Party activist urges Congress to seize the moment, now that Obama's luck seems to have run out. [52]

Another study finds that obesity may decrease brain function.[53] See also: Atheism and obesity and Lesbianism and obesity

Have liberal policies destroyed Sweden? "Stockholm rioting continues for fifth night." [54]

The inventor of the concept "Attention Deficit and Hyperactivity Disorder" admitted, before he died, that he made the whole thing up. Think about that when the school district tells you to drug your kids. [55]

Dems admit they lack the votes to pass their amnesty-for-illegal-aliens bill, where 60 votes are the minimum needed in the U.S. Senate. [56]

The cold temperatures this spring have even hurt the sale of sporting goods. [57] Yet liberal denial about the cold weather persists, in order to perpetrate a fictional global warming.

World's most popular site devoted to atheism/agnosticism sees a massive loss of global market share according to Alexa. Also, new Question evolution! campaign group leader expected to be installed in June of 2013.[58]

Obama's paternalistic, sexist reference Thursday to a heckler as a "young lady" is no problem for the liberal media, [59] but an Hispanic golfer's offhand racial quip about Tiger Woods is unforgivable.

7 creationist groups have now joined Project 200 plus. Also, 7 ways the Question evolution! campaign is strengthening itself.[60]

An IRS official takes the Fifth Amendment. Or does she? Besides botching her plea, she shows hypocrisy in claiming a freedom she does not grant to others. [61]

Liberal double standard: racist remarks by Joe Biden are no problem, but the lamestream media and Tiger Woods make a big deal about an offhand joke by an Hispanic golfer. [62] Will media bullying enable Tiger Woods to end nearly 5 years without his winning a major?

The BBC News opened a story with this nonsense: “A study of Neanderthal skulls suggests that they became extinct because they had larger eyes than our species.”[63] Why does Darwinism spawn such lame just so stories?

Thomas Sowell recommends parents having their children read the book The New Leviathan which has a number of essays which debunk various liberal sacred cows.[64]

Barack Hussein Obama's "I am an idiot" defense about his recent scandals undermines his "cult of expertise" and statist redemption fantasies that he has been peddling.[65]

Ask yourselves right now: is this still America? Representative Mike Kelly asked that of IRS Acting Commissioner Miller. We should ask it of ourselves. [66]

Contrast the regal behavior of Barack Hussein Obama with the humble behavior of George Washington. [67]

Expert says that the discovery of a 20-year long rainfall in Ireland points to the Great Flood of the Bible being historical.[68]

Why do so many faux Christians deny the Great Flood and try to turn it into a non-Great Flood?[69] Did Jesus, Peter and Moses lie?[70]

Animals are where they are today, not because they evolved there, nor yet because of continental drift, but because they went there after the Great Flood. [71]

A description of "Common Core Education," the harm it can do, and a list of New Jersey primary candidates pledged to stop it. [72]

Outspokenly Christian Kevin Durant gives $1 million to the tornado victims. Durant uaually outscores LeBron, but the liberal media do not promote outspoken Christians.

Why does Glenn Beck, who loves to chart conspiracies on his famous chalkboards, ignore a conspiracy right under his nose? [73]

28 million Americans will be caught in a "massive game of health coverage pingpong" under ObamaCare, and even the liberal media are beginning to panic about this. [74]

Classic communist tactic by the Obama Administration: it files a document in court alleging that a reporter at Fox News is a possible co-conspirator in the "crime" of informing the public. [75] In fact this goes back further – to Henry II. Are we all Thomas Becket now? [76]

Teen awarded for improved capacitor - Intel gave a $50,000 scholarship to a girl whose titanium dioxide capacitor can store almost three times as much electrical energy as previous capacitors and is intended as a battery alternative. [77]

Most mainstream media got the story wrong, claiming incorrectly that her invention can charge a cell phone battery in 30 seconds. (Charging a battery too quickly reduces its life, which is why Motorola and Samsung and the rest keep the amperage low.)

Franklin Graham, one of America's most prominent evangelical Christians, says the targeting of conservative groups by the Internal Revenue Service included two of his ministries.[78]

Are many evangelical Christian churches primarily growing in America due to birth rates or due to evangelism?[79]

"Quiverfull" evangelical Christianity, which does not believe in contraception, is now spreading in the UK.[80] In the past 30 years, the number of Anabaptists in North America, including the Amish, has grown significantly, from 313,000 baptized members in 1978 to more than 535,000 in 2010. [81]

Unfortunately for militant atheists, secularist philosophy breeds sub-replacement levels of fertility. See: Decline of atheism

Obama says black men cannot use racism to explain away their failures. [82]

CDC says the number of children being diagnosed with mental disorders has been steadily growing. [83]

Reuters reports: "Europe is in the midst of its longest recession since it began keeping records in 1995 — even surpassing the calamity that hit the region in the financial crisis of 2008-2009."[84]

Biblical creationism is growing in Europe and its growth rate will accelerate amidst Europe's economic woes.[85]

The UK has experienced one lost economic decade, and it's about to enter a second. [86] When is the UK going to remove Charles Darwin off its currency?[87]

Turkey, a world leader in anti-evolutionism, had its Moody’s credit rating upgraded to investment-grade quality. [88][89]

Canada Flag.png

More Question evolution! campaign news from Canada. The stomachs of Darwinists are going to be tied into knots in 2013. [90]

California State Flag.gif

Question evolution! campaign book draft is off to California student readers tonight. Also, new proof and evidence that 2013 is a better year for creationism.[91]

In addition, an atheist wiki still appeals to atheist nerds.

What is the real IRS scandal? It's the tax code itself. [92]

A video was recently produced on the topic "Why Christianity and the Bible are true." [93]

Abortion: an indispensable right or violence against women?[94]

A New Jersey activist promotes the primarying of a RINO State Senator. See his side-by-side of a typical RINO and his challenger. [95]

The first rule of grassroots anti-evolution social movements: What's behind us in inane evolutionist commentary is NOT important![96]

Is the Question evolution! campaign entering a new phase? If so, what new tactics are being employed by a Question evolution campaign group?

Bradlee Dean has this scathing commentary on Minnesota's gay "marriage" law. [97]

Previous Conservapedia Breaking News


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Cramer: Already High, This Stock Trades Higher

Biogen is a leading maker of the most effective treatments for multiple sclerosis, a disease which afflicts some 350 thousand people in the United States and perhaps two million worldwide.

"Because multiple sclerosis is a chronic condition that comes and goes, the goal of every MS treatment is simply to prevent relapses, basically to keep the disease at bay," Cramer explained. "Therefore, there's a population of people who need to take these drugs for life. The total MS market should be worth nearly $18 billion by 2016."

Among Biogen's treatments is a drug called Avonex, said Cramer.

------------------------------------------------------------------
Read More from Mad Money with Jim Cramer
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"It's a mature drug. Nonetheless, it still generated $2.9 billion in sales last year," he explained. "Biogen also makes Tysabri, viewed as having more side effects but also seen as a more effective treatment for MS. And just this week, Biogen received approval for a brand new MS drug called Tecfidera.

But Biogen is about much more than MS treatments. Cramer is also impressed with drugs Biogen has developed to treat other health issues.

"Biogen gets a piece of Rituxan," Cramer explained, "That's Roche's drug for non-hodgkins lymphoma and rheumatoid arthritis. Their cut is equal to about 20% of the drug's sales, and that came to more than a billion dollars last year."

Also the company is working on a hemophilia franchise that could ultimately be worth $3 billion in sales by the second half of the decade.

On top of that Cramer said they have promising new drugs still in earlier stages of development.

"Biogen has an antibody based therapy for MS that's in phase 2 development and they're partnered with ISIS on a spinal muscular atrophy drug that generated positive data just last week, but it's still only in phase one trials."

All told, Cramer likes what he sees.

"Given the strength of the company's MS franchise and their pipeline, I think there's still plenty of upside here. Of course, I hate to chase and the stock is at its 52-week high now, so I say you wait for a pullback and then do some buying—that is, if we get one."


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Does ‘Game of Thrones’ Need More Male Nudity?

My friend, New York Magazine television critic Matt Zoller Seitz has a novel solution to the complaint that Game of Thrones makes gratuitous use of female nudity: get the guys naked more often. He argues:

Since its 2011 debut, Thrones has been attacked for “gratuitous” nudity and labeled sexist for stripping its women more often than its men. These are two different complaints, though; intertwining them muddies each. The first concerns the appropriateness of graphic sex and/or nudity; the second is about the show’s “gaze,” which is undeniably heterosexual and male. But it’s possible to enjoy sex and nudity without guilt or bluenosed justifications while simultaneously pointing out that the scales of spectatorship are out of whack. I’d like Game of Thrones to enlarge the scope of its fantasy­ — to show more same-sex couplings and male nudity — as Starz’s Spartacus series has done with such panache. For all its tough, complicated women characters, Thrones is rightly perceived as too much of a ­sausagefest. The producers could change that perception by adding more sausage.

I think he’s on the right track, but has arrived at the wrong destination. What Game of Thrones needs isn’t more anatomy of any variety—and, as I’ll discuss at greater length in my full review of the season, which will be up on Friday, I think the show has actually absorbed that criticism in a productive way and is stronger for it. Instead, it needs more consensual sex, preferably in situations where one partner isn’t paying the other. At its best, Game of Thrones can be a terrific story about sexual violence in wartime. But for the full weight of that argument to be felt, and for sexual violence to register with the horror it’s meant to elicit—particularly given the troubling use of rape as a way to generate drama on prestige television without thought to larger context—we need to see the alternative, to see some of the happiness and normality that gets destroyed by war. It may be harder to depict good sex than the embarrassment of bad sex or the numbing fear of sexual violence. But that doesn’t mean it’s not worth trying, in part to remind those of us watching at home what kind of good world our friends in Westeros and beyond are fighting for.


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Economics Model Answers Twelve - 2013

(Difference between revisions)4.  Review:  Suppose that after completing this course, you start a new company.  In your first year, you "broke even" (had zero profits), and in your second year you want to increase your revenue and profits.  After careful study of your market, you decide that you can increase your revenue by increasing your price.  Therefore your good must be price elastic/inelastic (choose one).4.  Review:  Suppose that after completing this course, you start a new company.  In your first year, you "broke even" (had zero profits), and in your second year you want to increase your revenue and profits.  After careful study of your market, you decide that you can increase your revenue by increasing your price.  Therefore your good must be price elastic/inelastic (choose one).:The good must be price inelastic.5.  A monopolistic competitive firm has the following characteristic that ''is lacking'' for a perfectly competitive firm:5.  A monopolistic competitive firm has the following characteristic that ''is lacking'' for a perfectly competitive firm:

1. Which concept in Economics do you think is the best self-motivator, which you might use to achieve more?

Answers vary, but could include a discussion of opportunity costs, maximizing marginal utility, economic costs, advantages of long run planning, how time is equivalent to money, etc.

2. Which is true about the average fixed costs (AFC) of a firm?

(a) A firm can eliminate these costs by shutting down in the short run.
(b) As output increases, AFC decreases.
(c) As output increases, AFC increases.
(d) AFC is part of average variable costs.

Briefly explain your answer.

B is the correct answer, because AFC is fixed costs divided by total output: FC/Q. As Q increases, the outcome decreases.

3. What is one of the primary responsibilities of the Federal Reserve Bank?

Control the interest rates of banks (which controls the flow of money), and keep banks from failing.

4. Review: Suppose that after completing this course, you start a new company. In your first year, you "broke even" (had zero profits), and in your second year you want to increase your revenue and profits. After careful study of your market, you decide that you can increase your revenue by increasing your price. Therefore your good must be price elastic/inelastic (choose one).

The good must be price inelastic.

5. A monopolistic competitive firm has the following characteristic that is lacking for a perfectly competitive firm:

(a) There are low barriers to entry.
(b) MR = MC in the long run.
(c) P > MC
(d) There are many competitors.

Choose one of the above and explain your answer.

The correct answer is "C". A monopolistic competitive firm has the characteristic "P > MC", which is not true for a perfectly competitive firm. A monopolistic competitive firm does not have to repeatedly lower its prices to keep up wih the competition.

6. If you were to loan someone money, why would you want him to pay you something extra (interest) when he pays back the loan? Give at least one reason.

Here are two reasons: the time value of money, and something extra to compensate you for taking the risk that your loan will not be paid back.

7. Review: is the cost of the bus for the March for Life trip to D.C. a "fixed cost" or a "variable cost"? Explain, assuming for the purpose of this question that one and only one bus can be used (in reality, we used several buses).

The cost of the bus is a fixed cost, because it is the same cost whether there is one person on the bus (or no one), and whether there are 47 people on the bus. The cost does not "vary" with the output.

8. Suppose I will pay you $1000 in two years, and the interest rate is 10% per year, compounded annually. How much should you pay me today to receive $1000 in two years? Show your work.

Work backwards: at 10% interest, $1000 in two years is the same as $1000/1.1=$909.09 in one year. That is because $909.09 generates $1000 in one year at 10% interest. Then we have to work backwards one more year to get to "today": $909.09/1.1=$826.45. So the answer is $826.45 - that is what we would need to receive today for it to be the same as $1000 in two years, at 10% interest compounded annually. Check our answer: $826.45 times 10% = $82.65. Add that and our total in one year is it would require $1000/1.1=$909.10. Repeat that process for the second year and the total is $909.10 plus $90.91=$1000.01 (the extra penny is due to rounding error).

9. Explain why in long-run equilibrium the price charged in monopolistic competition is greater than marginal cost but equal to average total cost.

In monopolistic competition there are almost no barriers of entry. A new firm can easily enter the market if products were selling above average total cost. If they charged more than ATC they would be undersold by the competition, and if they charged less then they would loss money overall.

10. Economics is sometimes called the “dismal science” because economists predicted population to grow faster than the food supply, marginal returns to diminish, and profits to vanish. But, in fact, there is an abundance of food and profits have not vanished. Why is economics not so dismal after all?

Because new inventions and hard work by people create wealth, charity, ingenuity, and so on.

11. What is "Keynesian economics" and what is your view of it?

Keynesian economics claims that government interference, and especially government spending, is good for the economy.

12. An agreement by different firms with each other to reduce output is illegal. Why should that be illegal?

Yes, because reducing output is harmful to the public.

13. Nash equilibrium, revisited: What is the Nash equilibrium for two gas stations (an oligopoly) that are situated immediately across the street from each other? In other words, what price do they sell at, expressed in terms of one of their cost measures? Explain the process that reaches that "equilibrium".

They sell at MR=MC. If one firm were to sell higher, than the other firm would boost its profits by reducing its price to where MR=MC.

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Suicides, Disease: Europe's Sick Economy Costs Lives

Europe's financial crisis is costing lives, with suicides and infectious diseases on the rise, yet politicians are not addressing the problem, health experts said on Wednesday.

Deep budget cuts and growing unemployment are tipping more people into depression, and falling incomes mean fewer people can see their doctors or afford to buy medicines.

The result has been a reversal since 2007 of a long-term decline in suicide rates, coupled with worrying outbreaks of diseases including HIV - and even malaria - in Greece, according to an major analysis of European health in The Lancet journal.

Countering these threats requires strong social protection schemes, researchers argue. But the austerity measures imposed after a string of crises in southern Europe - most recently in Cyprus - has shredded such safety nets.

"There is a clear problem of denial of the health effects of the crisis, even though they are very apparent," said lead researcher Martin McKee of the European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies, a group backed by the World Health Organisation.

"The European Commission has a treaty obligation to look at the health effect of all of its policies but has not produced any impact assessment on the health effects of the austerity measures imposed by the troika."

The so-called troika of the European Commission, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund is the group of lenders responsible for a series of economic bail-outs.

McKee said the failure of European governments and the European Commission to face up to the health consequences of their policies was reminiscent of the "obfuscation" of the tobacco industry over curbs on smoking.

The case of Iceland, however, suggests there is an alternative.

Despite a devastating financial crisis, Iceland rejected austerity, following a referendum, and instead continued to invest in its social welfare system. As a result, the researchers found there had been no discernible effects on health since the crisis.

Iceland's economy has now returned to growth, but the recovery is patchy and inflation has remained stubbornly high.

By contrast, McKee and colleagues reported that healthcare systems were now under strain in many European countries, including Spain, Portugal and Greece, with a series of negative consequences.

In particular, there is a growing trend for patients to seek care at a later stage, even though this will mean worse outcomes for individuals and higher costs for the healthcare system in the long term.

In Greece, meanwhile, hospitals are struggling to maintain basic standards, resulting in a rise in antibiotic resistant infections, and patients have suffered shortages of a number of medicines, including epilepsy treatments.


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Remarks by the President at Swearing-in Ceremony of Julia Pierson as the Director of the U.S. Secret Service

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Oval Office

3:16 P.M. EDT

(The Vice President administers the oath to Ms. Pierson.)

THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Congratulations.

THE PRESIDENT:  Great job.

MS. PIERSON:  Thank you very much, Mr. President.

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you so much.  Well, listen, I have to say that Julia’s reputation within the Service is extraordinary.  She’s come up through the ranks.  She’s done just about every job there is to do at the Secret Service. 

Obviously, she’s breaking the mold in terms of directors of the agency, and I think that people are all extraordinarily proud of her.  And we have the greatest confidence in the wonderful task that lies ahead and very confident that she is going to do a great job.  So we just want to say congratulations. 

As Joe Biden pointed out, this person now probably has more control over our lives than anyone else -- (laughter) -- except for our spouses.  And I couldn’t be placing our lives in better hands than Julia’s.

THE VICE PRESIDENT:  And my agents are excited that we picked her.

THE PRESIDENT:  Absolutely.  You’re going to do a great job.

Q    How did you make your decision?

THE PRESIDENT:  She has extraordinary qualifications, and I think a lot of people who have worked with Julia know how dedicated, how professional, how committed she is, and I think are absolutely certain that she’s going to thrive in this job.

Thank you, guys.

Q    How are you feeling about your bracket, sir?

THE PRESIDENT:  Busted.  (Laughter.)  I think my women’s bracket is doing much better than my men’s bracket.

END  
3:18 P.M. EDT

Extending Middle Class Tax Cuts

Julia Pierson Is Sworn In As First-Ever Female Director of the US Secret Service

During a ceremony in the Oval Office, President Obama praised the veteran agent for her dedication, professionalism and commitment to her work.

White House Hangout: The Maker Movement

On Thursday, March 28th at 3:00 pm ET, White House innovation advisor Tom Kalil will join a Google+ Hangout to discuss the Maker Movement with leading innovators and Makers from around the country.

L.A. Kings and L.A. Galaxy Celebrate Championship Seasons at the White House

It was the second trip in two years for the Galaxy, while the Kings made their first visit after winning their first Stanley Cup in 2012.

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User:Conservative/scenic pictures and clips

Scenery around the world:

Boracay Island:


IloIlo City:

Caribbean:


China:

India:

Greece:

Norway:

Ireland:

Russia:

Africa:

France:

Germany:

Italy:

Scotland:

India - Documentary 2012:

Panama City Beach, Florida (J.S. Clark).jpg800px-The Beach - Panama City Beach Florida.jpg800px-Panama City FL 20070702-175916.jpg

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BRIEF-FDA approves Biogen Idec's Tecfidera for Multiple Sclerosis

March 27 (Reuters) - U.S. Food and Drug Administration:

* FDA says approved Biogen idec's tecfidera (dimethyl fumarate)

capsules to treat adults with relapsing forms of Multiple Sclerosis

* Source text for Eikon:

* Further company coverage ((Bangalore Newsroom; +1 646 223 8780))


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Letter from the President -- Regarding Overseas Contingency Operations/Global War on Terrorism

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Be Healthy, Be Active, Be You: April 1, 2013

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For Immediate Release March 26, 2013 Letter from the President -- Regarding Overseas Contingency Operations/Global War on Terrorism

Dear Mr. Speaker: (Dear Mr. President:)

In accordance with section 5 of the Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act, 2013, I hereby designate for Overseas Contingency Operations/Global War on Terrorism all funding (including the rescission of funds) so designated by the Congress in the Act pursuant to section 251(b)(2)(A) of the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985, as amended, as outlined in the enclosed list of accounts.

The details of this action are set forth in the enclosed memorandum from the Acting Director of the Office of Management and Budget.

Sincerely,

BARACK OBAMA

Extending Middle Class Tax Cuts

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March 27, 2013 12:11 PM EDTWhite House Hangout: The Maker MovementWhite House Hangout: The Maker Movement

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UPDATE 2-U.S. FDA approves Biogen's oral MS drug, Tecfidera

* Tecfidera expected to become dominant oral MS treatment

* Sales of Tecfidera expected to top $3 billion by 2017

* Tecfidera expected to be launched within days

* Stock rises 3.2 percent to $182.68

(Adds analyst comment, background, stock price)

By Toni Clarke

WASHINGTON, March 27 (Reuters) - U.S. regulators on Wednesday approved a new multiple sclerosis drug made by Biogen Idec Inc that is widely expected to become the No. 1 oral treatment for the disease, with annual sales topping $3 billion.

The drug, Tecfidera, activates a chemical pathway in the body known as Nrf2 that helps protect nerve cells from damage and inflammation. Following Wednesday's approval by the Food and Drug Administration, Biogen said it will launch the drug within the coming days.

Multiple sclerosis is a chronic condition that attacks the central nervous system and can lead to numbness, weakness, paralysis and blindness. It affects more than 2.1 million people worldwide, according to the National Multiple Sclerosis Society.

"We expect a solid launch of Tecfidera, and our sense is that there is a bolus of patients in the queue ready to transition to therapy," Geoff Meacham, an analyst at J.P. Morgan, said in a research note. "However, we believe that Street expectations likely already account for this and then some."

Shares of Weston, Massachusetts-based Biogen rose 3.2 percent to close at $182.68 on Wednesday. The shares have more than tripled over the past three years, mainly driven by high hopes for Tecfidera, known chemically as dimethyl fumarate.

Biogen already sells the MS drugs Avonex and Tysabri, which together account for about 30 percent of the market. Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd's drug Copaxone is the current market leader, with a roughly 29 percent share and annual sales last year of more than $4 billion.

Unlike Copaxone, Avonex and Tysabri, which are injected or infused, Tecfidera comes in the more convenient form of a pill. As such, it will compete with Novartis AG's MS pill Gilenya, which, though first to market, has been dogged by heart safety concerns. Gilenya holds an 8.5 percent share of the market and generated worldwide sales of $1.2 billion last year.

Tecfidera will also compete with Sanofi's recently approved MS pill Aubagio. Aubagio's label carries a boxed warning -- the most serious kind of warning -- alerting physicians to a potentially heightened risk of liver problems.

Novartis said in a statement that it welcomed additional treatment options for people with MS, but warned that Tecfidera may not perform as well in the market as in clinical trials.

"As with any new medication, real-world experience is critical to gain an accurate understanding of a therapy's full clinical profile," the company said. "It will be important to see the clinical profile of dimethyl fumarate -- including efficacy, safety, tolerability and adherence with its twice-a-day dosing -- as it gains real-world experience."

Michael Yee, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets, said the overall profile of Tecfidera looks "significantly better than Gilenya."

Tecfidera's side effects appear relatively benign, consisting mainly of flushing, diarrhea and nausea. And its label contains no boxed warnings. The FDA recommended only that physicians monitor patients' infection-fighting white blood cell count once a year.

"That's an excellent label," said Yee. "I expect the drug to meet consensus of $300 million this year, and over five years it can achieve greater than $3 billion in sales based on its convenience and efficacy profile."

Tecfidera will be used to treat patients with relapsing-remitting MS, a form of the disease in which flare-ups are followed by periods of remission. About 85 percent of people with MS are initially diagnosed with this form of the disease.

Combined clinical trial data showed Tecfidera cut the average relapse rate by 49 percent after two years compared to patients taking a placebo. The drug is expected to generate sales of about $3 billion in 2017, according to data compiled by Thomson Reuters Cortellis.

Last week European regulators recommended approval for Tecfidera and Aubagio, but they declined to give Aubagio a "new active substance" designation because it is similar to an older drug. Without this designation, generic copies of the drug could be launched in Europe in as little as three years. That could hurt sales of most other MS drugs on the market.

Sanofi said it was disappointed by the decision and plans to request a re-examination of the case.

(Reporting By Toni Clarke in Washington; additional reporting by Bill Berkrot in New York; Editing by Tim Dobbyn, Bernard Orr and Leslie Adler)

((toni.clarke@thomsonreuters.com)(202-898-8340)(Reuters

Messaging: toni.clarke.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net))

Keywords: BIOGEN TECFIDERA/


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Press Briefing by Press Secretary Jay Carney, 3/26/2013

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

12:33 P.M. EDT

MR. CARNEY:  Welcome to the White House.  Thanks for being here.  I have no announcements to make at the top, so I'll go to Darlene.

Q    Thank you.  On gay marriage, can you tell us at this point whether the President has been brought up to date on the arguments today over at the Supreme Court?

MR. CARNEY:  As you know, the Senior Advisor Valerie Jarrett was there; White House Counsel Kathy Ruemmler, as well as Associate Counsel Kathleen Hartnett were in attendance.  The President has been updated on the arguments, but beyond that I don't have anything for you.

Q    Has he signed the CR? 

MR. CARNEY:  He has not, but will, I'm sure, in due time. 

Q    And then a quick question about Afghanistan, the meeting that Secretary of State Kerry had with Karzai, where Karzai sort of explained that his comment that the U.S. was conspiring with the Taliban was misinterpreted by the media.  Is the White House satisfied with President Karzai’s explanation about what he had to say?

MR. CARNEY:  We have a very important relationship with President Karzai.  Most importantly, we have a very important relationship with the Afghan people, the Afghanistan government. As you know, on Sunday, Secretary Kerry and Pakistani Chief of Army Staff General Kayani had dinner and they discussed a range of bilateral security issues, including combatting terrorism, reconciliation process in Afghanistan and regional security.  And of course, as you know, Secretary Kerry was in Kabul yesterday to reaffirm the U.S. commitment to our strategic partnership with Afghanistan, and he met with President Karzai and other Afghan officials as well as the civil society groups to discuss how we can continue to work together to sustain the progress we've made and to advance our shared goal of a stable, sovereign Afghanistan that is no longer a launching pad for al Qaeda and other transnational terrorists.

As you know, the transfer of responsibility for the facility of Bagram has taken place and we are continuing to work with our Afghan counterparts as we move forward with the President’s policies on these issues.

Yes.

Q    North Korea has renewed some of its threats against the United States.  Does this raise heightened concerns, or is this just the usual rhetoric?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, Mark, as you know, North Korea’s bellicose rhetoric and the threats that they engage in follow a pattern designed to raise tensions and intimidate others.  And as we say consistently, the DPRK will achieve nothing by these threats or provocations, which will only further isolate North Korea and undermine international efforts to ensure peace and stability in Northeast Asia.

We continue to urge the North Korean leadership to heed President Obama’s call to choose the path of peace and to come into compliance with its international obligations.  This is something that we work on consistently with our international partners.  The United Nations Security Council recently took action unanimously in response to North Korean actions that were not in keeping with their international obligations and imposed further sanctions as part of that process.

So we do look at this as part of a pattern and we respond in the way that we always have.

Q    And if I can just go back to Darlene’s question -- I know it’s early days yet on the Prop 8 case, but some of Justice Kennedy’s comments raise concerns that the Court might not want to fully engage on this topic.  Would this be a missed opportunity to settle an issue of such great importance for the country?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I'm not going to evaluate the arguments today, and I, as everyone, I think, will wait for whatever decisions the Supreme Court makes in the case they heard today and the case they’ll hear tomorrow.  I would wait -- I think we've seen in recent history there’s ample reason to be cautious about predicting outcomes in Supreme Court cases based on any particular piece of the puzzle -- in this case, oral arguments.  So I'll heed my own caution and not engage in that.

Q    And just one detail -- you’ve said that the budget submission would come the week of April 8th.  Have you narrowed it down to the day of that week yet?

MR. CARNEY:  Between Monday and Friday.  (Laughter.) 

Yes.  Good to see you.

Q    Let me go to immigration for a moment.  This morning Janet Napolitano said --

MR. CARNEY:  And by “between” I mean it could include Monday or Friday.  (Laughter.)  Sorry.

Q    Inclusive, in other words.

MR. CARNEY:  Inclusive of. 

Q    Secretary Napolitano said today that triggers are not necessary before comprehensive immigration reform.  So what does the White House do to convince those on the other side?  Since there are no reliable metrics about border security, what will you do to convince them that the border is secure enough for immigration and a path to citizenship to begin?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I think the question is excellent, and I would note that what Secretary Napolitano has said -- Secretary Napolitano has said that the Department of Homeland Security measures progress using a number of metrics to make sure we are putting our resources where they will have the most impact.  And I think that while there are different ways to look at this issue, the fact is, by a host of measures, there has been great improvement in our border security.

Certainly the facts are there when it comes to the resources that have been applied to border security -- the doubling of border security agents, as well as the other metrics that you will often hear Secretary Napolitano or others discuss.  So we look at a variety of measures.

And I think you can look at what this President has committed to and the record on border security since he came into office to evaluate his assertion that border security is a vital element of comprehensive immigration reform.  That has been his position, and it continues to be.  And I would note -- and this is something that has been acknowledged by important members of the Senate, Republican members -- the progress that has been made on this very important issue, border security.  Much of -- the last time comprehensive immigration reform was essentially abandoned, some of the issues -- the principal reason for that was because of concerns about border security.  And many of the metrics that were put forward then have been met -- the goals and the targets that were said to have to be achieved before we could move forward have been met. 

But this is an ongoing issue.  This is an ongoing concern, and it’s an ongoing project of this administration.  And it will certainly be an important part of immigration reform.

Q    Do you -- does the White House oppose commissions or certain triggers before a path to citizenship can begin?

MR. CARNEY:  What we have said and I’ll say today is that we are not going to judge the bill before it’s been written.  And we are working with the senators who are in the Gang of Eight as they make progress, and they’ve made considerable progress, and that is worth noting.  Senator Schumer just the other day talked about where they are in that process and the progress that they’ve been making, and we were heartened by that. 

But as the President said yesterday, we have to keep pushing.  We have to make sure that we follow through on this progress, and that that progress leads to a bill that has bipartisan support and that can be signed by this President.  And we’re not there yet.  Progress is being made.  It’s being made in the Senate, which is where the President hoped it would be made. And we are very much monitoring that process and engaging in that process.  But it’s not done yet, and I don't want to prejudge a bill that hasn't been written.

Q    But if I could just press you on it, it does appear as though that Secretary Napolitano did today prejudge.  She said the triggers are not necessary.  Does the White House agree with that assessment?

MR. CARNEY:  I think what she was saying -- and the assessment we do agree with -- is that there are a variety of metrics by which you can measure, and we do measure, progress on border security.  And these are metrics that others use to measure border security, including Democrats and Republicans in the Senate and beyond the Senate, beyond the Congress. 

So we're working with Congress on this, with the Senate on this.  Progress has been made.  Border security is one of the key principles that the President has put forward that has to be part of comprehensive immigration reform.  He has demonstrated his seriousness on this issue, as has Secretary Napolitano.  But it is something that we're -- it’s not a done project.  We have to continue working on it.

Q    Senators Paul, Cruz and Lee say that they plan to filibuster a procedural vote to begin considering gun control legislation.  Is the President aware of this and what is his reaction?

MR. CARNEY:  I haven't discussed that with him.  I did see him earlier today, but I didn't hear that issue raised.  I would simply say that filibusters of efforts to move forward with common-sense measures to reduce gun violence would be unfortunate.  We have worked with Congress, with the Senate, to try to advance the elements of the President's plan that require legislative action.  And these, again, are common-sense measures.

Closing gun show loopholes, that's an idea that has something like 90 percent of support in the United States; by some polls, has a majority of support among gun owners in America, support among Republicans and independents and Democrats.  We ought to be able to do this.

But it's hard.  And we're continuing to work with Congress to get it done.  And as you know, a number of pieces of this have been voted out of committee.  That is important progress.  Senator Reid has vowed that action will be taken on these elements, and that is important progress.  We hope that that takes place. 

A vote ought to be held on all these elements.  That was what the President made clear when he announced his plan.  It is what the American people deserve.  It is what the victims of gun violence deserve.  I don't think you need to tell the families of those who have lost their children to gun violence that bills like this might be filibustered -- I don't think that would be welcome news. 

Q    Do you think you would be able to overcome that 60-vote threshold?

MR. CARNEY:  I don't have prognostications to make about these measures.  What I can tell you is that they have broad support, elements of them have overwhelming support, and they ought to be voted on.  And the President backs every element of them.

Q    Also, does the President think the assault weapons ban has any chance of passing as an amendment?

MR. CARNEY:  The President supports strongly the renewal of the assault weapons ban.  He has since he was a senator.  It is a part of the comprehensive package of proposals that he put forward and he certainly hopes that the Senate will pass it.

Q    What type of pressure is he willing to exert?

MR. CARNEY:  The President has been engaging with lawmakers of both parties on these issues.  When he has been having conversations with Democrats and Republicans, much of the attention has focused on fiscal and budget issues in the reporting and much of the conversation has been devoted to those topics.  But they have also included conversations about comprehensive immigration reform and moving forward on gun violence measures. 

And that will continue, as will our staff interaction with Congress on these issues.  And you'll continue to hear the President in public discuss the need to move forward on these important measures. 

Q    Will he really twist arms, though, particularly with members of his own party?

MR. CARNEY:  I think he has and will continue to make clear that this is a measure that he believes ought to pass; that it's a common-sense measure that would not -- and this is true of everything that’s part of his plan -- would not take a single firearm away from a law-abiding American citizen; that respects entirely the Second Amendment rights of the American people -- Second Amendment rights that the President supports, but which, as all of the measures do as a package, would help reduce the scourge of gun violence in America, which is an objective that he believes is non-political, non-partisan -- because the victims of gun violence in America are not Democrats or Republicans, and, as we have learned, they're often not even eligible to vote.

Q    Jay, can I follow up?

MR. CARNEY:  Yes.

Q    It appears that background checks are sort of the center of gravity in this legislative debate.  And I wonder if the White House believes it's a false construct on its face, both politically and from a policy perspective, that background checks require a federal registry?

MR. CARNEY:  It is not our position that --

Q    But is it a false construct?  Did you not have --

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I don’t -- that maybe too clever for me to answer.  I think the fact is, is that the existing system -- this is something that I think is misunderstood by those who don’t follow this issue closely.  There is a background check system.  What the President believes has to be done, and what the efforts underway in Congress hopefully would do if passed and made law, would close the loopholes in that system, make the system comprehensive so that it is absolutely effective in -- as effective as it can be in preventing weapons from getting into the hands of those who should not have them. 

That’s the purpose of the system.  And it is -- this idea is supported, as I said earlier, by a huge majority of the American people of all political persuasion. 

Q    You are aware that being injected into this debate is a either assertion or a fear that a registry has to be accompanied for this to be effective?  I'm curious what the administration --

MR. CARNEY:  Well, we do not believe that’s -- whether you would describe that as a false construct or not, we do not believe that.  That is not what would happen.  And a system that already exists merely needs to be improved so that these loopholes are closed, so that those who should not have weapons cannot obtain them.  That is the purpose of this legislation.  And it does not involve registries.  It is simply a background check system that would do in full what the system already does in part, which is, in a very simple process, ensure that those who don’t -- or should not have weapons cannot obtain them. 

Q    And that would apply to private transactions, as well?

MR. CARNEY:  The position is, is that the loopholes ought to be closed, all of them.  I'm not going to get involved in the specific negotiations underway right now.  This is obviously a topic of much discussion among those in the Senate who are engaged in this process. 

But we firmly believe that this element of the President's package is very important, and that it ought to be passed -- as should all elements.  This one in particular has enormous support among the American people.  It is, on its face, a common-sense measure, and we hope it moves forward.

Q    I want to follow up on Jim's question on immigration, because you mentioned some of the metrics or ways that people thought about measuring things in 2007 when the bill fell apart. Are you saying that those are acceptable means of measuring, and, maybe by certain standards, have already been met, as far as border security?

MR. CARNEY:  I’m simply citing what some lawmakers, including Republicans, have said about the goals that were asserted by some back in that previous debate and how they have been met when it comes to some of these metrics. 

It is a fact that we now have nearly 22,000 personnel along our border.  That's an all-time high.  And they are deploying unprecedented levels of technology in the effort to make our border more secure.  And there are just a variety of metrics that DHS I know has discussed and provided to reporters that confirm the progress that has been made on border security issues.  We want to --

Q    -- the 2007 standard, the border is already secure?

MR. CARNEY:  No, I think that what I would say, in echoing some lawmakers, is that much of what was put forward as necessary back in that debate has been achieved.  I would not suggest, because the President would not support this proposition, that we do not need to continue to do everything we can to make our border more secure. 

And the President is committed to that.  That's why it’s a key element of comprehensive immigration reform.  Secretary Napolitano is committed to that.  And we are working every day to take necessary measures to improve our border security.  And that's part of the discussion right now on this important piece of legislation.

Q    Lastly, on the CR, whenever the President signs it, what is the take-away from the White House on the fact that he will sign a CR that in large measure puts into law for the second time sequestration and perhaps casts a shadow over future years? Because the sequestration is there and there are those who look at it now and say this is part of a new normal.

MR. CARNEY:  Well, the CR does not put -- the CR just simply extends budget levels in keeping with the previous budget agreements.  The sequester stays into effect.  It doesn't alter the fact that the sequester is being implemented in keeping with the law. 

There is no question that we believe we should not have come to this point where sequester would be imposed.  There’s no question that we believe regular folks out there are being unnecessarily harmed by imposition of the sequester -- which was designed by Democrats and Republicans purposefully never to become law, to be filled with nonsensical approaches to deficit reduction. 

Q    And yet here it is? 

MR. CARNEY:  And yet here it is.  So we would love to see Republicans change their mind about imposition of the sequester. We would welcome a change of heart, maybe a change back to the position they held for much of 2012, which was sequester’s imposition would be cataclysmic and terrible for the economy and for our national defense -- that is what they said at the time -- instead of doing what they did on January 1st -- end of the year, January 1st -- instead of doing it, which was to postpone or delay the implementation of sequester with a balanced buy-down, which they were willing to do two months ago and now are suddenly unwilling to do -- or recently became suddenly unwilling to do.  We would welcome a reversal of that position.

Q    The President has had to accommodate political realities he finds very negative, right?

MR. CARNEY:  There is no question that Republicans chose to implement the sequester.  We cannot -- we have presented ways -- the President has presented ways on numerous occasions to eliminate the sequester entirely, to do that in a balanced way, to do that in a way that asks those who are well-off and well-connected to participate in further deficit reduction --

Q    Right, but you lost that.

MR. CARNEY:  No, we have not lost that.  The fact is --

Q    This doesn’t mean you’ve lost that debate?

MR. CARNEY:  On the overall effort to reduce our deficit in a balanced way?  No, absolutely not.  The fact is the Senate passed a budget that is balanced in its approach to deficit reduction that allows for the key investments that are necessary so that our economy will grow and our kids are educated.  It enacts further spending cuts and entitlement reforms.  It mirrors the balanced approach that the Simpson-Bowles Commission put forward, that the President’s budget proposals and submissions to the sequester and his offer to John Boehner represent. 

And we hope that now that the House has passed a budget and the Senate has passed a budget that we can come together -- Democrats and Republicans -- and reach a compromise.  Compromise requires accepting the general proposition you’re not going to get 100 percent of what you want.  The President has in his own submissions and offers and his budget made clear that he understands that, that he is willing to compromise on things that are difficult for Democrats. 

What we have not seen as of yet is a commensurate willingness by Republicans to compromise.  So their position now is we ought to devastate Medicare; we ought to seriously reduce, dramatically reduce our spending on education, research and development, innovation, manufacturing, infrastructure -- just cut, cut, cut to the bone in the name of deficit reduction -- but while we do that, reform our tax code in a way that funnels massive tax cuts for the well-off. 

That's a terrible approach to the problems that we face, because this challenge can be dealt with in a balanced and reasonable way.  And that's represented in the President's proposals.  It's represented in the budget the Senate passed.  And the President hopes that as these conversations continue that he has been engaged in that we can move forward and find common ground.  It's going to be hard, because as we've seen in the House, there is an embrace of -- by some -- of the idea that the well-off and well-connected should not only be held harmless, but they should get a huge tax cut.

Q    I understand that, Jay.  But that's all -- budget resolutions are all theoretical until you do something in reconciliation.  The CR is law.  And for the second time now --

MR. CARNEY:  The CR is simply --

Q    You're putting into place that which the White House fundamentally opposes -- originally suggested but hoped never would be implemented but now has to implement.

MR. CARNEY:  I just want to be clear.  The CR extends funding level for the government through the fiscal year at the levels already agreed to by both parties.  It did not eliminate the sequester.  It doesn't address the sequester.  The sequester remains law. 

Q    It could have, but it didn't. 

MR. CARNEY:  Well, look, the Republicans made clear that they went from saying the sequester would be the worst possible thing --

Q    And yet, the President is going to sign this.
MR. CARNEY:  -- that could ever happen to calling it a homerun; to saying it was a political victory for the tea party.

Q    That the President now shares.

MR. CARNEY:  Well, no, he doesn't.  He thinks they were wrong. 

Q    But signing it anyway.  

MR. CARNEY:  The CR does not -- you're not signing a sequester, Major.  I think you’ve got to understand the CR is not the sequester.  Republicans chose to impose the sequester.  The sequester was part of the Budget Control Act.  So if you're asking me does the President regret that Republicans would not make a common-sense, balanced proposition to postpone or eliminate the sequester -- you bet.  Is he continuing to work with lawmakers of both parties on a bigger deal that would not just eliminate the sequester, but reduce our deficit beyond the $4 trillion target that we've all talked about?  Yes, he is.  And he hopes that Republicans will go along with that, because the American people overwhelmingly support it.

Q    Jay, on Syria, interesting moment today at the Arab League Summit where, of course, President Assad was not there, so a Syrian opposition leader took his seat.  I wonder if you could talk about how symbolically important you think that is in terms of getting Assad out of power?  But also, when that opposition leader had the microphone, he seemed to be calling on the U.S., some of our key allies, to do more.  How do you answer that criticism that you're facing?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I would say a couple of things.  One is we support the Syrian Opposition Coalition, as you know.  And we do so with our partners.  We believe that it is the legitimate representative of the opposition and of the Syrian people in their effort to rid their country of the scourge that is President Assad, a leader with enormous amounts of the blood of his own people on his hands. 

We continue to provide an exceptional amount of humanitarian aid to the Syrian people, the largest amount, I believe, of any country.  We continue to provide non-lethal assistance to the opposition and continue to step up the levels of non-lethal assistance that we provide.  And we work with our partners. 

As the President said on his trip when he was asked about Syria, this is a problem that we are working with our partners on.  It is one, when it comes to our policy, that we are constantly evaluating in terms of what steps we should be taking to help bring about the transition in Syria that the Syrian people so desperately deserve.  And we will continue to do that. 
The fact is that we have provided an enormous amount of humanitarian assistance.  We are assisting the opposition and we'll continue to do so, working with our partners. 

Q    On that trip, he was obviously in Jordan.  And since he's returned from Jordan there have been reports and there’s some conflicting information about whether or not the U.S. is training the Syrian opposition inside the boundaries of Jordan.  And the question is whether we're directly training the Syrian opposition, or whether we're training the Jordanian forces to then train them.  Can you clear that up?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, let me say that we have always been clear that our non-lethal assistance to the Syrian opposition includes equipment and training to build a capacity of civilian activists, and to link Syrian citizens with the Syrian Opposition Coalition and local coordinating councils.  So I can say that much.

Q    So what does that mean in English, though, I guess?  (Laughter.) 

MR. CARNEY:  That was pretty good English. 

Q    Well, I mean, no offense, but --

MR. CARNEY:  There were no dangling participles.

Q    I mean, so are we training the Syrians directly, or are we training them through Jordanian --

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I can just tell you that, again, our non-lethal assistance to the Syrian opposition includes equipment and training to build a capacity of civilian activists.  On some of these other issues, I don’t have anything for you.  But it is clear that we are providing the kinds of non-lethal assistance to the Syrian opposition that we've discussed.

Q    Okay.  One other quick question on health care.  Republicans on the Hill are complaining that there is a draft questionnaire -- or draft application, I should say, for people to apply for insurance coverage under the Affordable Care Act.  And I think it's on page 59, there's a question asking whether you want to register to vote.  And Republicans are complaining specifically about the idea that in offering a benefit, there seems to be a suggestion that the administration wants to steer people to register to vote, but to also register for the Democratic Party because you're getting a benefit.  Is that the administration is doing?

MR. CARNEY:  Are you suggesting that all benefits -- does that means the Republicans are disowning any ownership of Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security?  Is that --

Q    This is about the Affordable Care Act. 

MR. CARNEY:  Well, actually --

Q    When you apply for Medicare --

MR. CARNEY:  -- the linkage of checking off whether or not you want to register to vote goes back to a 1993 law regarding Medicaid, which maybe Republicans opposed, I can't remember.  But again, it goes back to that.  It's not about the Affordable Care Act.  As a separate measure, I'm not sure that it's such a terrible thing that people might want to register to vote.  But I think this predates the Affordable Care Act.

Yes, sir.  Peter.

Q    Jay, back to Syria very briefly.  How do we know that the aid, humanitarian or military, in any form that’s coming from the United States is going to the right people, is getting to the good guys in Syria right now?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, obviously, we monitor this closely in making our decisions about the kinds of aid that we supply and who we provide it to -- evaluate just these questions.  But when it comes to the Syrian Opposition Coalition, we obviously have recognized that organization, and work with our partners and directly with them to help them unify and to provide non-lethal assistance to them.  But this is a question I think, going back on this issue in Syria, that we've talked about in the past that we have to make these evaluations all the time.

Q    And do we presently have people on the ground inside Syria helping vet those opposition members to determine -- groups to see exactly who should be recipients?

MR. CARNEY:  Not that I'm aware of, no. 

Q    Let me digress very briefly -- I want to ask you a question.  Given the fact that the President is a big college sports fan and now we're heading toward the Sweet 16, this is the first year where basketball teams have been disqualified for failing to meet academic requirements.  This year one of the teams that failed to make it was Connecticut, because it didn’t graduate approaching 50 percent of those necessary to graduate.  So would the President be willing to endorse efforts to raise the minimum academic rate, basically -- the minimum graduation rate higher to 60 percent or something like that? 

MR. CARNEY:  It's a fascinating question, and I don’t know the answer to it.  I haven't had that conversation with him.  I know he believes strongly in the need for student athletes to be students, but I don’t -- beyond that, I haven't had a conversation with him about that particular proposal.

Q    I guess the question, then, to take for consideration  -- I'll pose it to you again since we'll have plenty of time to talk basketball -- the gist is, right now, if you have 50 percent, that’s viewed as sufficient to play in the NCAA tournament.  Does this White House support efforts to try to make it higher than that?

MR. CARNEY:  Again, I wouldn’t want to guess whether we have a position or what it is.  I can just tell you that the President, in general, believes that it’s important for student athletes to be students and not just athletes.

Roger.

Q    Thanks.  Back to immigration and guns for a moment.  You said a few minutes ago that --

MR. CARNEY:  I'm driving them away.  (Laughter.)  Maybe it’s you, Roger, I don't know.  (Laughter.) 

Q    You said a few minutes ago that we will continue to hear the President in public on these two issues.  Can you give a little sketch as to what’s planned in the next several weeks on pressing immigration and guns?

MR. CARNEY:  No.  I can just say that -- I have no scheduling announcements to make.  But the President has made clear --

Q    Speeches out of town, trips to the Hill again, one-on-one?

MR. CARNEY:  Again, I don't have any specific scheduling engagement to preview for you.  Going back to his State of the Union address and then back even further to the announcement of his plan to reduce gun violence, the President has made clear that he considers this a priority.  And he will make that clear, as he has already, in the future, in the coming days and weeks as these issues are being -- as these issues are considered by the Senate and hopefully move forward in the Senate.

So beyond that, I don't want to preview anything for you, but you can be sure the President will be continuing to discuss what he believes are fundamentally common-sense proposals that would help reduce gun violence in America in a way that is absolutely appropriate and that in no way infringes on our Second Amendment rights; in no way would take any weapons away from any law-abiding citizen.  And he believes that we ought to move forward with those measures, and we are working with the Senate as they consider them.

Q    The event in Florida on Friday is on the economy, but could he conceivably touch on these two subjects as well?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I'm not going to preview that event or the President’s remarks.  I would just say that in coming days and weeks, as these issues move forward in the Senate, the President will want to make clear his support for common-sense measures to reduce gun violence.

Yes, Alexis.

Q    Can you tell us whether any members of Congress will be with the President at the event?  It’s supposed to be at the Port of Miami.

MR. CARNEY:  I just don't have anything for you on that.  When we're ready to provide more details about the President’s schedule we'll offer them to you, but I don't have anything more.

Q    Can you at least suggest that it’s trade-related?  Can you help us --

MR. CARNEY:  I can promise you that when we have more information to provide that we will provide it -- and it will be excellent.

Yes, Steve.

Q    To follow up Ed’s question, Khatib specifically ask for NATO and U.S. to provide Patriot missile protection for rebels from -- to Syria.  That would seem to me to test the non-lethal help.  Is that something the U.S. might consider?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, we are aware of the request and at this time, NATO does not intend to intervene militarily in Syria.  I think that a Patriot missile battery I think would be -- would fall within the definition of military assistance.  The Patriot missile batteries that are deployed in Turkey are for defensive purposes only, to augment Turkey’s air defense capabilities to defend its territory and people.

But again, we will continue to work with the coalition leadership and membership to expand their efforts to provide essential services to Syrians across the country, to deliver assistance to those in need, and prepare for a Syrian-led political transition toward a free and democratic Syria.

Bill.

Q    Jay, the Italian highest court in Italy has reversed the verdict of Amanda Knox, who is now back in the United States. Is there any way the Obama administration would agree to the extradition of Amanda Knox so she could go -- had to go back to Italy?

MR. CARNEY:  This is a legal matter that’s I think still in process.  I just don't have any comment on it, Bill.

Yes.

Q    Thanks, Jay.  Back on the gun issue, there have been 381 sheriffs, local sheriffs, that have signed on saying that they would not enforce gun laws that they believe are unconstitutional.  Would the administration or the Justice Department have any problems with that if a sheriff at the local level or local law enforcement did not enforce whatever gun package that is passed?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I haven’t seen the letters that you reference.  I think that as a general proposition we think that people ought to follow the law.  And as an absolute matter of fact, in my view and I think many others, including constitutional experts, there’s not a single measure in this package of proposals the President has put forward that in any way violates the Constitution.  In fact, they reflect the President’s commitment to our Second Amendment rights.

Q    Okay, and one more.  Today the Democrats For Life filed amicus briefs in two cases regarding the HHS mandate.  Would you have any comment on that?

MR. CARNEY:  I don't.  I don't have anything for you on that.

All the way in the back, yes, sir.

Q    Jay, a question on immigration.  What’s the position of the President with regard to visas for immediate family member, immigrants who will benefit with any immigration reform?

MR. CARNEY:  I know that this is an issue that is part of the discussion as comprehensive immigration reform is being worked on in the Senate.  I don't have anything specific for you on it.  We want to see what emerges from that process.  The President’s views on this are reflected in his blueprint, which has been available for sometime online.  But I don't want to prejudge a bill -- a bipartisan bill that's being worked on before we’ve seen the language in that bill.

Yes, sir.

Q    You said you didn't want to get into the business of predicting Supreme Court case outcomes.  Should we expect the President to talk about same-sex marriage at all between now and the Court’s decision?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I mean the President’s views are clear.  He made those views clear last year.  He spoke about in a press conference I believe about the amicus brief that the Department of Justice filed, and he spoke beyond that about his own views and how the application of heightened scrutiny in his view would mean that there would be no way to write a law that cleared the bar when it came to justifying discrimination against LGBT Americans. 

But it’s certainly possible that either in an engagement with -- in a press conference or some other encounter, he might be asked about and therefore speak about it, but I don't have anything beyond that to preview for you. 

Ann.

Q    To follow on that, does the President have any thought about why there’s so much interest in this now, and so many members of Congress and public figures are changing their minds on gay marriage?  I think it was Jay Rockefeller and Senator McCaskill has changed, Senator Warner of Virginia.  Does he have any thoughts on what it is about an issue like this that has really a very dramatic increase in support in public opinion polls in the last year?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, the President has noted in talking with you about the transformation that's been taking place in American society on these issues.  He’s talked about his own evolution on these issues.  And many other commentators on American society have discussed I think in depth this phenomenon, which is a welcome phenomenon.  And I think the only comment that we would have about it -- we’d leave the in-depth studies to sociologists and others -- is that it is a recognition by an increasing number of Americans that gay and lesbian Americans ought not to be discriminated against. 

And that goes to core principles about who we are as a country.  The President spoke about this in his inaugural address, and that section of the address was much noted.  And it reflects his core beliefs on these issues.

Donovan.

Q    Thanks, Jay.  I just wanted to get back a little bit to the sequester and implementation here at the White House.  Has there -- is there further information about that?  Like, are people getting furlough notices?

MR. CARNEY:  I'll have to check.  We were traveling.  I'm not sure what updates I have on that.  As we've said in the past, the sequester applies to the White House and the Executive Office of the President as it does to the rest of the executive branch. But I don’t have any more details for you.

Q    People have been asking about this for weeks.  Is there a way to maybe corral some of the information and put it out, as opposed to just getting the question again and again and again?  Because we're going to keep asking again and again.

MR. CARNEY:  Yes, we'll see what we can get for you.  This is -- when furlough decisions are made, as I understand it -- and I would have to refer you to OMB -- about the implementation and application of the sequester, there might be furlough notices or reductions in pay.  And I'm not familiar with the details.  And I don’t think -- before those things actually happen -- and we've seen this in other agencies, that before the notices actually go out, we don’t have specific information about when that will happen because I think those evaluations are being made in real time. 

Is that it?  Thanks, all.

END 
1:12 P.M. EDT

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