Plant that got $150M in taxpayer money to make Volt batteries furloughs workers

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President Obama touted it in 2010 as evidence "manufacturing jobs are coming back to the United States,” but two years later, a Michigan hybrid battery plant built with $150 million in taxpayer funds is putting workers on furlough before a single battery has been produced.

“Had it been private investors rather than government bureaucrats making the decision, there either would have been a reality check about the industry."

- Paul Chesser, National Legal and Policy Center

Workers at the Compact Power manufacturing facilities in Holland, Mich., run by LG Chem, have been placed on rotating furloughs, working only three weeks per month based on lack of demand for lithium-ion cells.

The facility, which was opened in July 2010 with a groundbreaking attended by Obama, has yet to produce a single battery for the Chevrolet Volt, the troubled electric car from General Motors. The plant's batteries also were intended to be used in Ford's electric Focus.

Production of the taxpayer-subsidized Volt has been plagued by work stoppages, and the effect has trickled down to companies and plants that build parts for it -- including the batteries.

“Considering the lack of demand for electric vehicles, despite billions of dollars from the Obama administration that were supposed to stimulate it, it’s not surprising what has happened with LG Chem. Just because a ton of money is poured into a product does not mean that people will buy it,” Paul Chesser, an associate fellow with the National Legal and Policy Center, told FoxNews.com.

The 650,000-square-foot, $300 million facility was slated to produce 15,000 batteries per year, while creating hundreds of new jobs. But to date, only 200 workers are employed at the plant by by the South Korean company. Batteries for the Chevy Volts that have been produced have been made by an LG plant in South Korea.

The factory was partly funded by a $150 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy. LG also received sizeable tax breaks from the local government, saving nearly $50 million in property taxes over 15 years and another $2.5 million annually in business taxes. Landing the factory was hailed as a coup when shovels first hit the ground. 

“You are leading the way in showing how manufacturing jobs are coming right back here to the United States of America,” Obama told workers at the ground-breaking ceremony. “Our goal has never been to create a government program, but rather to unleash private-sector growth. And we're seeing results.”

Randy Boileau, a spokesperson for LG Chem in Holland, told FoxNews.com that battery production is expected to pick up once Volt assembly lines in Detroit resume production on Oct. 15. He said the facility has spent the past two years building infrastructure and conducting pre-production “test runs.”

“The market conditions haven’t been as favorable, but this hasn’t slowed down plans one bit,” Boileau said. “LG Chem has repeatedly said that this facility is a critical component for them globally.”

Boileau pointed out the workers who are on furloughs one week a month are eligible to collect unemployment for that week, and he said the company covers the contributions to their individual benefits during the period.

The Volt has been plagued by low sales since it first rolled off the line three years ago. Orders have picked up for 2012 but are still well below projections.

Chesser said no amount of government subsidies can counter the practical problems posed by plug-in cars.

“Electric car batteries do not perform much better than they did 100 years ago," he said. "Research has not conquered the battery storage issue, and therefore the electric transportation ‘stimulus’ did not boost the ‘technology of the future,’ but instead a century-old technology as far as performance and capability goes.”

He added that the LG Chem plant's problems show that the unpopularity of electric cars despite heavy taxpayer subsidies has had more widespread negative effects than most realize.

“Billions of dollars were put into Volt research, and Ford received $5.9 billion in stimulus loans to retrofit plants to produce [electric vehicles]," Chesser said. "The battery companies like LG Chem that were supposed to service them have no customers to speak of. Their existence was solely based on access to taxpayer money.

“Had it been private investors rather than government bureaucrats making the decision, there either would have been a reality check about the industry, or only those who made individual decisions to invest would have lost their money, not taxpayers.”


Source : foxnews[dot]com
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Check out the Latest iPad Mini Mockups

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Two speculative versions of the iPad mini's design have showed up in new images over at 9to5Mac.

In one (on the glass surface), the smaller tablet has an antenna-friendly black plastic bar like its older cousin, and both front- and rear-facing cameras.

The more recent mockup (on the wooden table) looks like a wifi-only model, with the same small hole on the back side we've seen before, and no view of the device's front side.

These aren't the first "leaked photos" of the iPad mini we've seen, but they're the most convincing - the high resolution and close range of the shots feel real even to practiced eyes.

So why are we skeptical? Well for one thing, we're looking at two convincing yet conflicting pictures purporting to be the same product. One set of pictures doesn't show the front side at all (big red flag), but the other set shows a not-yet-released tablet running iOS 5 (just look at the YouTube app) - an OS that was never optimized for a 7.85-inch screen.

Still, both designs square up (more or less) with what we already know about the iPad mini. So while we're hesitant to call either set of images a "leak," here's what they can tell us about Apple's next tablet:

It's a smaller iPad. We already knew Apple would keep its tablets' general design consistent and crop the display to 7.85 inches. But while that would only make it two inches smaller diagonally, the device itself should be closer to three inches smaller in-hand, thanks to the slimmed-down bezel you can see here.

It's got a front-facing camera. We're not totally sure why, especially if Apple is looking to compete with 7" budget tablets here, but all the mockups we've seen show an upper-corner camera like the iPad's.

Lighting port (Surprise!) Here's a good side-by-side look at just how much smaller Apple's new, reversible proprietary connector is than the old 30-pin style.

This thing sounds expensive. But it won't be. Apple already sells the iPad 2 starting at $400; will it really sell a more compact version for less? It's looking more and more like the iPad mini will sacrifice display-quality and/or CPU power to keep costs competitive with the Kindle Fire HD and Nexus 7. Speculatively, we'd expect pixel-density similar to the iPhone 3GS, along with the A5 chip from the iPhone 4S and new iPod Touches.

Of course, bright colorful iPad minis would be cool too:

Will the iPad mini be Apple's next big break or a big mistake? Let us know in the comments.

Jon Fox is a Seattle hipster who loves polar bears and climbing trees. You can follow him on Twitter and IGN.


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Joker Returns to the New 52

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Scott Snyder only recently wrapped up the Court of Owls storyline in the pages of Batman. Despite putting Bruce Wayne through the wringer and adding new layers to his relationship to Gotham City, Snyder is aiming even higher for his next big arc. Batman #13 marks the beginning of a new Bat-event called "Death of the Family." Joker is back after a year-long absence, and he has dark plans for the various heroes who fight alongside Batman.

Today Buzzfeed unveiled a preview of the the first several pages of Batman #13. Scroll down to see what's in store for Gotham. This issue will be released in stores and digitally on October 10th.

Jesse is a writer for various IGN channels. Allow him to lend a machete to your intellectual thicket by following @jschedeen on Twitter, or Kicksplode on MyIGN.


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MSNBC panel -- Ryan will lie but Biden will shine in VP debate

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MSNBC is so focused on building false narratives they should hand out hard hats to their on-air staff. This time it was the gang of unknowns on Melissa Harris-Perry‘s Sunday show depicting Vice President Joe Biden as a statesmen and GOP veep hopeful Paul Ryan as a liar.

Perry’s self-described “nerdland” included “The Cycle” co-host Steve Kornacki, Feministing editor Chloe Angyal, MSNBC contributor Robert Traynham, a former communications director for Rick Santorum, and Sayu Bhojwani, founding director of the New American Leaders Project. (That’s a line-up so obscure, MSNBC could actually have body doubles filling in and no one would know or care.)

After Perry set up the segment in boxing match terms between the two candidates, she turned it over to her team. Kornacki wasted no time saying “Joe Biden gets a bad rap as a politician, as a communicator and as a debater.” He went on to complain about how the “caricature as everyone’s crazy uncle” has taken hold.

Rather than admit Biden is a gaffemaster, Kornacki called him “a really skilled communicator.” In Biden speak, that’s “a big f***ing deal.” Remember, this is Biden who in 2008 called Obama ''clean'' and ''articulate,'' and even The New York Times’s Frank Rich said that was reminiscent of “Guess Who's Coming to Dinner.”

This is Biden whom the Washington Post described in October 2008 as “known to much of the public as a gabby, gaffe-prone, backslapping Irish boy from Scranton, Pa.” This is the vice president, whom the Post in 2008 compared to Italy’s Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi “whose propensity for gaffes rivals that of Vice President-elect Joe Biden.”

And this is Biden who makes so many gaffes that he joked that he had “never had a gaffe” when Jake Tapper interviewed him on July 18, 2010.

Kornacki wasn’t just constructing a fantasy, it was a bridge too far. He then went on to build a version of history that’s not exactly accurate. Kornacki said Biden was named to Obama’s ticket because of his success at the debates.

However, Biden was chosen after Obama was roundly criticized for having insufficient foreign policy experience. Biden’s background on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee was seen as key to balance out Obama’s lack of any substantive international experience.

On Aug. 24, 2008, when Biden was chosen as VP, the Post’s Anne E. Kornblut focused on his international experience. “Biden, 65, a sharp-witted and energetic foreign policy expert who has held two of the most critical Senate chairmanships, bounded out onto the stage just after 2 p.m. Central time,” she wrote.

Post columnist Richard Cohen did the same the next day, explaining that Obama “reached into the very heart of the Washington establishment -- especially its foreign policy wing” to choose Biden. It had little to do with his debate strengths and lot to do with Obama’s weaknesses.

The MSNBC conversation then went from Biden to Ryan and grew more ridiculous. Korncki was followed by Traynham, who had the only good words to say about Ryan. “He’s very specific and he’s very smart,” he admitted before being outnumbered by his fellow guests.

This time instead of building up, they were tearing down. Feministing’s Angyal, went on what is now a common liberal attack against the GOP, accusing Ryan of lying. “Ryan’s reputation as a smart, substantive guy is collapsing, in part because of the amount of fact-checking that had to be done after his nomination acceptance speech,” she claimed. She predicted there would be “ruthless fact-checking” of Ryan, not Biden, of course. Bhojwani agreed with Angyal, saying “there is going to be this desire for fact-checking.”

Traynham pointed out that as a society “we can’t even agree on what the facts are.” That too was blamed on the right as Perry criticized anyone who had questioned the latest jobs numbers.

This is the same theme liberals like New York Times’ economist Paul Krugman have been claiming about Romney as well. Obama’s errors are “minor,” Romney’s extreme. Krugman told ABC's “This Week” “the press just doesn't know how to handle flat out untruths” from Romney.

Dan Gainor is the Boone Pickens Fellow and the Media Research Center’s Vice President for Business and Culture. He writes frequently about media for Fox News Opinion. He can also be contacted on Facebook and Twitter as dangainor.


Source : foxnews[dot]com
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September's Best-Selling PSN Games

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It's that time of month when the PlayStation Blog announces what was selling last month on the PlayStation Network. Yup, here are the best selling titles on the PlayStation Store for the month of September 2012.

Top 20 PlayStation Network and PlayStation 3 Full Games

  1. The Walking Dead: The Game -- Episode 3: Long Road Ahead
  2. Counter-Strike: Global Offensive
  3. 3 on 3 NHL Arcade
  4. Jet Set Radio
  5. Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater HD
  6. Borderlands 2
  7. Tokyo Jungle
  8. Madden NFL 13
  9. Double Dragon Neon
  10. FIFA Soccer 13
  11. Marvel vs. Capcom: Origins
  12. The Walking Dead – Episode 1: A New Day
  13. One Piece: Pirate Warriors
  14. NHL 13
  15. Journey
  16. Fight Night Champion – Champion Mode
  17. I Am Alive
  18. Grand Theft Auto IV
  19. Magic: The Gathering – Duels of the Planeswalkers 2013
  20. Castle Crashers

Top 10 PlayStation Vita Games

  1. LittleBigPlanet PS Vita
  2. Madden NFL 13
  3. Sound Shapes
  4. Table Top Tanks
  5. Plants vs. Zombies
  6. Metal Gear Solid: HD Collection
  7. FIFA Soccer 13
  8. Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater – HD Edition
  9. Pure Chess
  10. Escape Plan

Top 5 PS3 Add-Ons

  1. NHL 13 – Premium Gold Jumbo
  2. Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 – Collection 3: Chaos Pack
  3. Madden NFL 13 – All-Pro Pack
  4. Madden NFL 13 – Legendary Pack
  5. Madden NFL 13 – Legendary Bundle

Top 5 PS2 Classics

  1. Grand Theft Auto 3
  2. Shin Megami Tensei: Persona 3 FES
  3. Psychonauts
  4. Harvest Moon: A Wonderful Life Special Edition
  5. La Pucelle: Tactics

Top 5 PSone Classics

  1. Final Fantasy VII (PS3/PSP/PS Vita)
  2. Legend of Dragoon (PS3/PSP)
  3. Metal Gear Solid (PS3/PSP)
  4. Final Fantasy IX (PS3/PSP)
  5. Final Fantasy VIII (PS3/PSP)

Top 5 PSP Games

  1. Monster Hunter Freedom Unite
  2. Grand Theft Auto: Vice City Stories
  3. Dissidia 012[duodecim] Final Fantsy
  4. Final Fantasy: The War of the Lions
  5. Grand Theft Auto: Liberty City Stories

Top 5 PlayStation Minis

  1. The Impossible Game
  2. Angry Birds
  3. One Epic Game
  4. 5-in-1 Arcade Hits
  5. MiniSquadron

How many of these titles did you buy? Let us know in the comments below.

Greg is the executive editor of IGN PlayStation, cohost of Podcast Beyond and host of Up at Noon. Follow IGN on Twitter, and keep track of Greg's shenanigans on Twitter at @GameOverGreggy and on IGN at Greggy-IGN. Beyond!


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Terra Nova Co-Creator to Pen Fifty Shades of Grey

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Universal Pictures and Focus Features announced today that Terra Nova co-creator Kelly Marcel will write the screenplay for Fifty Shades of Grey, based on the bestselling novel from E. L. James.

"We were all taken with the depth and passion of Kelly's engagement with the characters and world E. L. James has created and we knew she was the right person to augment our Fifty Shades family," said Dana Brunetti, who is producing the film alongside Michael De Luca.

Uni and Focus acquired the film rights to the Fifty Shades Trilogy last March. The series tracks the deepening relationship of 27-year-old billionaire Christian Grey and college student Anastasia Steele. It originated as a fan-fiction series based on Twilight.

In addition to Fifty Shades, Marcel has also penned the script for Saving Mr. Banks, the upcoming Walt Disney/Mary Poppins film starring Tom Hanks, Emma Thompson and Colin Farrell.

Max Nicholson is a writer for IGN, and he desperately seeks your approval. Show him some love by following @Max_Nicholson on Twitter, or MaxNicholson on IGN.


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Clinton aide swiftly briefed lawmakers on 'coordinated' Libya strike, despite Rice claims

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In a briefing to Capitol Hill staffers delivered the day after the deadly Sept. 11 attack in Benghazi, a top aide to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said the killings appeared to be the result of a terrorist attack. 

Under Secretary of State for Management Patrick F. Kennedy -- who exercises responsibility for all department personnel, facilities, and operations, and who is one of the department's most respected civil servants, having served in his position under both the George W. Bush and Obama administrations -- delivered the assessment in an unclassified, half-hour conference call with staff aides to House and Senate lawmakers from relevant committees, and leadership offices, on the evening of Sept. 12. Capitol Hill sources described the call to Fox News. 

That a State Department official of Kennedy's rank -- one with direct oversight of the installations and people targeted in Benghazi -- reached so swiftly the conclusion that the attacks were premeditated and coordinated stands in stark contrast to the opposing narrative pressed at that time, and for several days afterward, by other top officials at State, the White House, and the intelligence agencies. 

Four days after Kennedy's conference call, for example, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice appeared on five Sunday morning talk shows to insist that the attacks were neither coordinated nor premeditated, but were rather the result of a spontaneous mob action, inspired by an anti-Muslim video on the Internet, that spun out of control. 

Rice has since told lawmakers that her comments reflected "the intelligence community's best, current assessment as of the date of my television appearances," and a spokesman to the Director of National Intelligence, James R. Clapper, has said in a statement that the intelligence community "revised our initial assessment to ... (conclude) that it was a deliberate and organized terrorist attack carried out by extremists." 

According to participants on the Kennedy call, the under secretary noted he is not a "security expert," but then focused on the presence of light and heavy weapons outside the U.S. consulate and annex in Benghazi where U.S. Ambassador to Libya Chris Stevens and three other Americans had been killed the night before. 

"He made clear that this was a sophisticated attack," said one Hill staff aide with a security clearance.  "He indicated this was fairly complex, and not, like, a protest that got out of hand. ... These were not the kind of weapons you tote around." 

In subsequent days, Kennedy delivered an in-person, classified briefing to a group composed of many of the same congressional staff aides who had participated on the Sept. 12 conference call. 

Fox News and other news organizations have previously reported that earlier on Sept. 12 -- within 24 hours of learning about the murders -- the Obama administration made a secret determination that Benghazi was indeed a terrorist attack.  Doing so enabled them, under the terms of a 2001 anti-terrorism statute, to move men, money and materiel around more freely, and position these assets to meet the threats in Libya and other parts of the Mideast that had recently seen attacks on U.S. installations.  Kennedy's assessment accorded with that determination. 

This leaves unexplained how Rice, ostensibly armed with the intelligence community's best assessment, could have offered such a starkly different account in her Sunday show appearances.  As late as Sept. 17, Fox News reported last week, high-level U.S. intelligence officials obtained from outside security contractors assessments of the mortar damage done at the U.S. annex in Benghazi.  Sources told Fox News these officials then used the contractors' mortar damage assessments -- which indicated the presence of at least two highly skilled mortar teams using GPS devices -- to rebut Rice's claims internally. 

The next day, on Sept. 19, Matthew Olsen, director of the National Counterterrorism Center, testified publicly that the attacks were an act of terrorism -- which effectively ended the internal disputes roiling the Obama administration and the intelligence community.

A representative with the State Department did not respond to a request for comment Monday. 


Source : foxnews[dot]com
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