Punting the Pundits: Sunday Preview Edition

Punting the Punditsis an Open Thread. It is a selection of editorials and opinions from around the news medium and the internet blogs. The intent is to provide a forum for your reactions and opinions, not just to the opinions presented, but to what ever you find important.

Thanks to ek hornbeck, click on the link and you can access all the past “Punting the Pundits”.

The Sunday Talking Heads:

This Week with Christiane Amanpour: Ms. Amanpour will have an exclusive with Rep. Ron Paul (R-WI) and her round table guests will be ABC News’ George Will, Arianna Huffington of The Huffington Post, former Reagan budget director David Stockman, and Chrystia Freeland of Thomson-Reuters debating the Ryan plan and what the country needs to do to get back on firm financial footing.

Face the Nation with Bob Schieffer: Mr Schieffer’s guests Sen. John McCain, (R-AZ), Gov. Robert Bentley, (R-AL), Washington Post columnist Michael Gerson and

Georgetown University’s Michael Eric Dyson will discuss the Alabama storms, Syria and Obama’s birth certificate.

Sheesh, the MSM needs to stop talking about CT’s.

The Chris Matthews Show: This week’s guests Howard Fineman, The Huffington Post Senior Political Editor, Kelly O’Donnell, NBC News Capitol Hill Correspondent, Gloria Borger, CNN Senior Political Analyst and Clarence Page, Chicago Tribune Columnist who will discuss:

Is Racism Behind Attacks On President Obama’s Qualifications?

How Has President Obama Changed The Job Description?

Meet the Press with David Gregory: NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) grant exclusive interviews. Virginia Governor and Vice-Chairman of the Republican Governor’s Association, Bob McDonnell (R-VA), and Former White House Senior Advisor, David Axelrod discuss the 2012 Republican Presidential candidates. Head Writer for Saturday Night Live, Seth Meyers, sat down with David to talk about hosting the White House Correspondents Dinner and the power of political parodies.

State of the Union with Candy Crowley: This Sunday Republican Sen. John Barrasso and Democratic Rep. Chris Van Hollen discuss the debt ceiling, gas prices and stuff. Former National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley and a former ranking member of the House Homeland Security Committee, former Rep. Jane Harman will speculate on the national security shuffle. Ms. Crowley will host a education panel debating why are our kids falling behind in the classroom? Joining her will be former superintendent of Denver public schools, Colorado Sen. Michael Bennet; the former U.S. Secretary of Education, Tennessee Sen. Lamar Alexander; CNN education contributor and the founder of the Capitol Preparatory Magnet School, Steve Perry; and the president of the American Federation of Teachers, Randi Weingarten.

Go back to bed

Rania Khalek: News Media Too Busy Covering Spectacle to Do Its Job

Dear Media:

Since you have been busy this week with non-stop coverage of the royal wedding and the spectacle that is Donald Trump, I thought I would take it upon myself to fill you in on the less newsworthy items that you missed.  Clearly, the royal wedding of a country that is not your own, in addition to the frantic rantings of an ego obsessed real state tycoon, take priority over middle east turmoil, vicious attacks on labor, and deadly tornadoes ripping through the country.

I assume you haven’t heard-since there has been little to no coverage-that Wikileaks has released the Guantanamo Files, which include classified files on more than 700 past and present Guantanamo detainees.  These documents shed new light on the six-year long persecution of a journalist because he worked for Al-jazeera, the unreliable evidence used to justify due-process free detentions, and the capture of children and men as old as 89.  Of course, I wouldn’t expect such large and important outlets to be bothered with such silly, insignificant revelations.

Michelle Chen: Anti-Union Forces Try to Knock Out New York City’s Hard Hats

On Thursday, construction workers held hard hats in thick hands in the glow of St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Manhattan. In honor of International Workers’ Memorial Day, they solemnly honored the sacrifices of fellow workers who had been injured or killed on the job. The scene embodied the heavy legacy of the city’s building trades: the labor that sculpted gotham’s majesty, muscular but embattled, angled precariously against the city’s powers that be.

Historically, the building trades unions have been known as shrewd political players and a formidable counterweight to developers and the city’s bureaucracy. But now, a civic organization and the real estate industry have teamed up to try to dismantle the construction unions’ political clout.

The Regional Plan Association has issued an extensive report (which as of this writing seems to have been taken down from the RPA’s home page and was only retrievable in cached form), which argues that the pending expiration of 30 city union construction contracts provides an opportunity to roll a little disaster capitalism down 5th Avenue.

Saul Landau and Jack Willis: Same Old from the Nuclear Gang after Fukushima

Wishful thinking about energy generation has apparently induced both temporary blindness and long-term amnesia.

The nuclear industry has promised the world cheap, safe, and clean energy for over 60 years.

As the Japanese government continues to extend its nuclear evacuation zone around the Daiichi nuclear complex in Fukushima, the pushers of nuclear power–including President Barack Obama–still demand that Congress approve ever-larger subsidies for new reactors.

Wishful thinking about energy generation has apparently induced both temporary blindness and long-term amnesia about the history of nuclear “mishaps.”

In 2009, the government subsidized the nuclear industry with $18.5 billion in loan guarantees, which failed to anticipate the total costs of “the next generation of plants.” The Nuclear Energy Institute–the industry’s lobbying group–now wants $20 billion more in loan guarantees to get the so-called “nuclear renaissance” underway.

The Internationale

Arise ye workers from your slumbers

Arise ye prisoners of want

For reason in revolt now thunders

And at last ends the age of cant.

Away with all your superstitions

Servile masses arise, arise

We’ll change henceforth the old tradition

And spurn the dust to win the prize.

So comrades, come rally

And the last fight let us face

The Internationale unites the human race.

No more deluded by reaction

On tyrants only we’ll make war

The soldiers too will take strike action

They’ll break ranks and fight no more

And if those cannibals keep trying

To sacrifice us to their pride

They soon shall hear the bullets flying

We’ll shoot the generals on our own side.

So comrades, come rally

And the last fight let us face

The Internationale unites the human race.

No saviour from on high delivers

No faith have we in prince or peer

Our own right hand the chains must shiver

Chains of hatred, greed and fear

E’er the thieves will out with their booty

And give to all a happier lot.

Each at the forge must do their duty

And we’ll strike while the iron is hot.

So comrades, come rally

And the last fight let us face

The Internationale unites the human race.

A DocuDharma tradition now found on The Stars Hollow Gazette.

Six In The Morning

Costly Afghanistan Road Project Is Marred by Unsavory Alliances



By ALISSA J. RUBIN and JAMES RISEN

Published: May 1, 2011


GARDEZ, Afghanistan – When construction crews faced attacks while working on a major American-financed highway here in southeastern Afghanistan, Western contractors turned to a powerful local figure named simply Arafat, who was suspected to have links to Afghanistan’s insurgents.

Subcontractors, flush with American money, paid Mr. Arafat at least $1 million a year to keep them safe, according to people involved in the project and Mr. Arafat himself.

Christian Legal Centre has more than 50 cases in religious discrimination fight

Lawyers’ group pursues US tactics against ‘sidelining’ of ‘people with traditional biblical views’

Jamie Doward and Seb Wheeler

The Observer, Sunday 1 May 2011  


The Christian group that backed an electrician in his battle to display a crucifix in his company van says it now has more than 50 similar cases on its books.

The Christian Legal Centre, which represented electrician Colin Atkinson, says it is receiving up to five calls a day from Christians seeking to take action against their employers whom they feel are failing to respect their faith.

The dispute over the crucifix, between Atkinson and Wakefield District Housing, was transformed into a front-page row and hijacked by the far right. Wakefield and District Housing found itself vilified, with death threats made to staff and more than 1,000 abusive emails sent to them. The British National party picketed its offices.

The savage toll from Burma’s dirty war

The regime is the last in the world still planting mines and the rebels improvise their own devices. Liane Wimhurst meets the people caught in the middle  

Sunday, 1 May 2011

Ootepew lies with his withered leg under a mound of coarse blankets, his face stoical as he awaits an amputation. It is more than a week since he trod on a landmine outside his home in Burma’s Kayin state, and his wounds have begun to fester. In a messy and bitter war between insurgent groups and the Burmese army that has spanned decades, this clandestine killer has become the weapon of choice.

Burma is the only regime in the world still planting landmines. A tenth of the Burmese population live just a few ill-chosen footsteps away from a blast that could maim or kill, according to the International Committee to Ban Landmines (ICBL). Despite this, the Burmese authorities still churn out mines modelled on old Chinese and US designs at the state-run ammunition factory.

Death toll rises as Syria crackdown continues

At least four deaths reported in Deraa as security forces storm a mosque after shelling the flashpoint city.

Last Modified: 01 May 2011  

Syrian forces have continued their military crackdown in the flashpoint city of Deraa, seizing control of a mosque and shooting dead the son of its imam, witnesses say.

Four people were reportedly killed as the southern city came under heavy shelling and gunfire on Saturday, as residents attempted to bury those killed a day earlier during Friday’s “day of rage” protests against the government.

“We are totally besieged. It is a tragedy. Many houses are levelled by shelling from the army. For the past six days we haven’t seen an ambulance,” one witness told Al Jazeera via telephone, as gunfire rang out in the background.

“We are keeping the bodies of the dead in refrigerator trucks, but many bodies are still lying in the streets. Many of the bodies are bloated and are reeking.”

Residents to buy Copenhagen hippie enclave  

An enclave of hippies in downtown Copenhagen has agreed to pay the government for the land they’ve been squatting on for 40 years.

CITIES | 01.05.201  

The 900 residents of the Christiania district of Copenhagen have agreed to pay for the former Marine training ground they settled on in 1971.

The community lost a legal battle earlier this year, in which they’d tried to assert their right to continue to live in Christiania.

They have collectively agreed to pay the sum of 150 Danish kroner (20 million euros, $29.6 million) to continue living in their semi-autonomous commune.

Turbulent relations

For a long time, the community was allowed to exist until the government cracked down on the open drug trade in the commune in 2004.

DocuDharma Digest

Regular Features-

Featured Essays for April 30, 2011-

DocuDharma

The Week in Editorial Cartoons – So, Who’s the Hair Apparent Now? (Special Appeal)

(10 am. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

Crossposted at Daily Kos  and Docudharma



GOP Hair Apparent by Pat Bagley, Salt Lake Tribune, Buy this cartoon

:: ::

Note: Sections 1-4 contain dozens of additional editorial cartoons and commentary.  I’m not sure why but I was getting the below error when trying to post the complete diary.  Check out the remaining portions of the diary at Daily Kos.

java.sql.SQLException: Incorrect string value: ‘xC2x8CxC2xA9=1…’ for column ‘extendedText’ at row 1

PLEASE READ THIS – HELPING TORNADO VICTIMS



John Sherffius, Boulder Daily Camera, Buy this cartoon

:: ::

With the death toll over 300 and rising, there are a number of ways in which you can help tornado victims both in the short and long term, particularly if you live in or near the states devastated by these horrendous storms

The massive devastation left behind by the April 27 tornadoes in Alabama and other southern states will take weeks, if not months, to clean. Rebuilding will take years and millions of dollars, and that’s just to replace material things like businesses and homes.

Clay Bennett

Barometric Pressure by Clay Bennett, Comics.com, see reader comments in the Chattanooga Times Free Press

:: ::

1. The American Red Cross is providing temporary shelter for the thousands of people who lost their homes in the tornadoes.  They’re also providing food, blood, emergency-response vehicles and other relief supplies. You can make a cash gift online or by visiting your local Red Cross office, and you can text message REDCROSS to 90999 to give a $10 donation via your mobile phone.

2. The Salvation Army is setting up mobile stations to feed thousands of people in storm-affected areas. You can give online at your local Salvation Army store. You can text message GIVE to 80888 to donate money via your mobile phone.

3. A new Facebook page is trying to reunite tornado victims with property and personal effects (photos, for instance) that were blown miles and miles away by the tornadoes.

4. The Governor of Alabama has posted information for people wanting to volunteer. Call one of the phone numbers here to begin your journey.



Twisters by Joe Heller, Green Bay Press-Gazette, Buy this cartoon

 

:: ::

THE WEEK IN EDITORIAL CARTOONS

This weekly diary takes a look at the past week’s important news stories from the perspective of our leading editorial cartoonists (including a few foreign ones) with analysis and commentary added in by me.

When evaluating a cartoon, ask yourself these questions:

1. Does a cartoon add to my existing knowledge base and help crystallize my thinking about the issue depicted?

2. Does the cartoonist have any obvious biases that distort reality?

3. Is the cartoonist reflecting prevailing public opinion or trying to shape it?

The answers will help determine the effectiveness of the cartoonist’s message.

:: ::



Birther in Chief by Taylor Jones, Politicalcartoons.com, Buy this cartoon



GOP Hopefuls by Mike Keefe, Denver Post, Buy this cartoon



Hat tip: totallylookslike.com



Birthers Certified by Bruce Plante, see Reader comments in Tulsa World, Buy this cartoon



Trump by David Fitzsimmons, Arizona Star, Buy this cartoon



Joel Pett, McLatchy Cartoons/Lexington Herald-Leader

(click link to enlarge cartoon)



Trump Comb-over by John Cole, Scranton Times-Tribune, Buy this cartoon



Donald Trump by Sandy Huffaker, Politicalcartoons.com, Buy this cartoon



Ken Catalino, Nationally Syndicated Cartoonist, Buy this cartoon



Bob Gorrell, Nationally Syndicated Cartoonist, Buy this cartoon



Tony Auth, Yahoo Comics/Philadelphia Inquirer

(click link to enlarge cartoon)



Bachmann Red Meat by Pat Bagley, Salt Lake Tribune, Buy this cartoon



Hat tip: totallylookslike.com

Walt Handelsman

Walt Handelsman, Comics.com (Newsday)

Clay Bennett

Good Question by Clay Bennett, Comics.com, see the very large number of reader comments in the Chattanooga Times Free Press



John Sherffius, Boulder Daily Camera, Buy this cartoon

:: ::

INTRODUCTION



Trumpunzel by J.D. Crowe, Mobile Register, Buy this cartoon

:: ::

Crowe explains the rise of Donald Trump in terms of the weakness of the slate of 2012 presidential candidates put forth by the Republican Party.  Absent a compelling personality, it was somewhat inevitable that a huckster like Trump would grab media attention the way he did the past few weeks

It’s surprising enough that the Donald is being taken seriously in the polls. But you might think the Mr. Richie Rich would be more at home with the fiscally conservative corporate, free enterprise, business end of the GOP rather than the extremist, socially conservative right wing populated by the likes of the birthers.

Perhaps he thinks he needs the birther nonsense to balance his wealthy businessman persona. But then, you still have to pretend an egomaniacal reality TV show tycoon buffoon has any kind of credibility as a candidate. The fact that Trump is polling better than any other GOP candidate at this point is more of a reflection on the quality of the field than the potential for a Trump presidency.

As for the Rapunzel analogy, that’s a spoof.  I’m not convinced that thing on Trump’s head is a comb over. I think it’s a varmint with a mind of its own. Late at night, it sneaks out of the house and does terrible things out of pent-up anger.

Even so, it is worth noting that in the history of the Republic, only one person has ever been nominated as a major party presidential candidate who wasn’t either a vice president, governor, U.S. Senator, U.S. Representative, or a decorated military hero.  It was corporate lawyer Wendell Willkie in 1940, who captured the Republican nomination that year.

In 1940, with the winds of war fast approaching the shores of the United States, the incumbent Democratic President Franklin Roosevelt decided to seek an unprecedented third term.  The Republicans felt that Willkie’s background in business would make him an attractive opponent who could hammer the New Deal platform and pin the Great Depression upon the Democrats.  He would also do his utmost to keep the country out of World War II, which had started over a year ago in September 1939.

If Willkie is Trump’s model, he better think again.  Although Willkie captured a fairly respectable 45% of the popular vote, he lost in a landslide in the electoral college, 449-82 votes.

Trump should first decide to seek election as dog catcher in a small town like Schenectady, New York (pretty place, by the way) before he sets his goals any higher. I bet you he wouldn’t even win that election.

Over the past several weeks, Trump has appealed to the worst instincts of many voters in the Republican Party.  While his bombastic claims may have raised his public profile a lot, his blatantly racist dog whistles may have finally backfired on him.

A recent Pew Research survey showed the following results

Donald Trump has drawn a lot of attention in a slow-starting race for the GOP presidential nomination. Roughly a quarter of all Americans (26%) name Trump as the possible Republican presidential candidate they have heard most about lately, far more than volunteer any other candidate. Among Republicans, 39% name Trump as most visible — more than all other possible GOP candidates combined.

To be sure, Trump is standing out in a contest that has yet to draw much public interest or media coverage. In fact, about half of all Americans (53%) could not name anyone when asked which GOP candidate they have been hearing the most about.

Overall, just 20% of the public say they followed possible candidates for the 2012 presidential elections very closely last week and just 4% named it as their most closely followed story. The disaster in Japan was once again the most closely followed story (at 26%).

The Trump Boomlet may be coming to an end.

After his triumphant tour of the early 2012 primary state of New Hampshire — where he was greeted by millions of his diehard supporters — Donald Trump returned home to New York City.

He was seen earlier this morning taking a walk outside his luxury apartment in the city.  Given his new-found celebrity and deeply-held political convictions, he had finally decided to shed any pretensions of political partisanship and dress appropriately for the occasion.  It was a sight to behold.

(Ben Sargent, Washington Post/Universal Press Syndicate

— click link to enlarge cartoon)

:: ::

“Voodoo Economics” – The Sequel

This Republican proposal of “ending Medicare as we know it” provides those currently under 55 years old with vouchers to buy health insurance on the private market.  The purpose of this “reform” is obvious: continue to provide the economic haves in this country with more and more tax cuts!

The National Journal reports that anti-Republican ads have started to run in Republican-controlled districts.  This was a political gift to the Democratic Party and if Democratic strategists cannot successfully hang this idiotic and very unpopular proposal around the GOP candidates’ necks in the 2012 Elections, they ought to be fired for political malpractice.

(Shared Sacrifice by John Darkow, Columbia Daily Tribune, Buy this cartoon)

:: ::

I should mention that I have literally posted dozens of editorial cartoons by John Darkow in diaries and comments over the past two years and he isn’t always supportive of President Obama’s policies.  This cartoon will give you a bit of an idea of how the Ryan Budget Proposal is playing in a swing state like Missouri, one that the President lost very narrowly by less than 4,000 votes (out of over 2.9 million cast) in 2008 to John McCain.

For those of you unfamiliar with the term “Voodoo Economics”… it was first used in the 1980 Republican presidential primaries by George H.W. Bush.  He used it to describe candidate Ronald Reagan’s economic proposals in a mocking and unflattering manner.

Note: I’ll have a lot more on this Ryan Budget Plan in my next weekly diary.

I hope you enjoy this week’s offering of editorial cartoons.

:: ::

Note: Sections 1-4 contain dozens of additional editorial cartoons and commentary.  I’m not sure why but I was getting the below error when trying to post the complete diary.  Check out the remaining portions of the diary at Daily Kos.

java.sql.SQLException: Incorrect string value: ‘xC2x8CxC2xA9=1…’ for column ‘extendedText’ at row 1

5. RIP Phoebe Snow



Phoebe Snow by Jimmy Margulies, New Jersey Record, Buy this cartoon

:: ::

I featured Singer Phoebe Snow in my last diary, a tribute to Karen Carpenter and Eva Cassidy — “Death Doesn’t Always Get the Last Word” – A Tribute to Two Great Female Singers. A number of you remembered her immense musical talent and contributions.

:: ::

6. Final Thoughts



Isaac Newton on Twitter and Facebook by Luojie, China Daily (China), Buy this cartoon

:: ::

Finally, are you on Facebook or do you use Twitter?  Sir Isaac Newton is.  Memo to self: don’t get left behind!

:: ::

A Note About the Diary Poll

Rob Rogers

One of Us by Rob Rogers, Comics.com, see reader comments in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

:: ::

After President Obama revealed his long-form birth certificate a couple of days ago, does that put an end to this silly nonsense?  Is Birtherism finally dead?

Maybe not, according to Rob Rogers

Donald Trump is taking credit for forcing President Barack Obama to furnish his official birth certificate.  The President had to ask Hawaii officials to make a special exception and give him copies of the long form birth certificate (the short form has been available to the public for two years.) Obama claims he gave into the birther demands because the discussion was distracting everyone from more important matters.  Guess what?  They’ll find other reasons not to believe Obama is legitimate.

Don’t forget to take the diary poll.  I am interested in your thoughts about what the future holds for Birthers.

Choose One Lobster to Represent Neil Gorsuch on the All Dog Supreme Court

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...

Evening Edition

Evening Edition is an Open Thread

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 Kadhafi call for Libya talks rejected

by Afaf Geblawi, AFP

1 hr 56 mins ago

TRIPOLI (AFP) – Moamer Kadhafi vowed Saturday not to step down and proposed talks to end Libya’s conflict, a call rejected by rebels and by NATO, as his forces pressed an offensive against the key port of Misrata.

At the same time, a rebel spokesman said he feared loyalists were seeking to open a new front in the eastern desert to advance on Ajdabiya, a strategic road junction and gateway to the rebel stronghold of Benghazi.

In an early-morning speech on state television, the Libyan leader said NATO “must abandon all hope of his departure.

AFP

2 Six killed as Syrians to bury protest dead

AFP

1 hr 33 mins ago

DAMASCUS (AFP) – Troops and snipers killed six civilians on Saturday in the flashpoint city of Daraa, activists said, as Syrians buried scores of people killed in a “day of rage” on Friday.

As the violence from seven weeks of protests continued, activists vowed to keep the pressure on the regime of President Bashar al-Assad, promising a new week of pro-democracy protests.

And 138 more members of Assad’s ruling Baath Party quit in protest at the deadly crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrators, according to collective resignation lists received by AFP in Nicosia.

3 62 killed in protests, Syria faces sanctions

AFP

Fri Apr 29, 4:44 pm ET

DAMASCUS (AFP) – At least 62 people died in clashes on Friday when tens of thousands of protesters marked a “day of rage,” activists said, as Washington and Brussels decided to slap sanctions on Syria.

Syrian authorities said nine members of the security forces were killed at the hands of “terrorist groups.”

Pro-democracy protests were held against President Bashar al-Assad’s regime in most cities and major towns after Muslim weekly prayers, as on past Fridays since last month, witnesses said.

4 US imposes sanctions on Syria

by Stephen Collinson, AFP

Sat Apr 30, 4:54 am ET

WASHINGTON (AFP) – The United States has imposed new sanctions on Syria over its brutal repression of mass protests, and again claimed that Iran’s Revolutionary Guard was aiding the crackdown.

Europe also imposed an arms embargo and considered additional sanctions against Bashar Al-Assad’s government, hardening the international front against Damascus on another day of bloody violence in Syria.

US President Barack Obama’s asset freezes and restrictions on financial transactions notably targeted Maher Al-Assad, the powerful brother of the president, who commands Syria’s feared Fourth Armored Division.

5 Morocco’s king visits site of Marrakesh bombing

by Virginie Grognou, AFP

41 mins ago

MARRAKESH, Morocco (AFP) – Morocco’s King Mohammed VI flew into Marrakesh on Saturday to visit survivors of a devastating bombing that killed 16 people, and to see the site of the attack itself.

Amid tight security, King Mohammed visited the popular Argana cafe in the city’s main Djemaa el-Fna square where the bomb went off Thursday — and where floral tributes now lie scattered outside the building’s wrecked facade.

Several hundred people, mainly women and children stood nearby, waving Moroccan flags and photos of the king. Several of them shouted: “Long live the King!”

6 Pilgrims gather for beatification of John Paul II

by Jean-Louis de la Vaissiere, AFP

Sat Apr 30, 11:34 am ET

VATICAN CITY (AFP) – Thousands of pilgrims thronged Rome on Saturday amid tight security, on the eve of a grand ceremony that the Vatican called a “Feast of Faith” to bring late pope John Paul II close to sainthood.

“May this feast of faith be a precious occasion to open the door to Christ,” Pope Benedict XVI, who will president Sunday’s ceremony, wrote in a message to Catholics around the world on the front page of the official Vatican newspaper.

In an editorial, the Osservatore Romano daily called it “an extraordinary event without precedent in the last 1,000 years of the Church’s history.”

7 62 killed in protests, Syria faces sanctions

AFP

Fri Apr 29, 4:44 pm ET

DAMASCUS (AFP) – At least 62 people died in clashes on Friday when tens of thousands of protesters marked a “day of rage,” activists said, as Washington and Brussels decided to slap sanctions on Syria.

Syrian authorities said nine members of the security forces were killed at the hands of “terrorist groups.”

Pro-democracy protests were held against President Bashar al-Assad’s regime in most cities and major towns after Muslim weekly prayers, as on past Fridays since last month, witnesses said.

8 Sony to reveal PlayStation hack probe findings

AFP

Sat Apr 30, 12:10 pm ET

TOKYO (AFP) – Sony will reveal details of its internal probe into a massive theft of personal data from users of its PlayStation Network on Sunday, plus a timetable for bringing the network back into action, it said.

The electronics giant said Saturday it would hold a news conference on the security breach of the online network, which may have involved the theft of credit card details and which it said this week was carried out by hackers.

The PlayStation Network and Qriocity streaming music service were shut down on April 20 after what Sony described as an “external intrusion” and remain offline as the company upgrades security and works with Federal investigators.

9 Rio Tinto says no need to rush emissions tax

by Amy Coopes, AFP

Sat Apr 30, 3:26 am ET

SYDNEY (AFP) – Mining giant Rio Tinto weighed into the debate over Australia’s proposed carbon emissions tax Saturday, urging Canberra not to rush into a decision while major polluters such as China and the United States held back.

Prime Minister Julia Gillard wants to charge polluters from July 2012 under a fixed-price scheme that would move to a full cap-and-trade model linked to international carbon markets within five years.

But she faces stiff opposition from her political rivals and the business community, with the powerful coal industry warning the plan will drive investment offshore and damage Australia’s mining-powered economy.

Reuters

10 Libya’s Gaddafi offers ceasefire, but will not leave

By Lin Noueihed, Reuters

1 hr 22 mins ago

TRIPOLI (Reuters) – Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi said on Saturday he was ready for a ceasefire and negotiations provided NATO “stop its planes,” but he refused to give up power as rebels and Western powers demand.

The rebels and NATO rejected Gaddafi’s offer, saying it lacked credibility. A spokesman for the insurgents said the time for compromise had passed and NATO said air strikes would go on as long as Libyan civilians were being threatened.

Weeks of Western air strikes have failed to dislodge the Libyan leader, instead imposing a stalemate on a war Gaddafi looked to have been winning, with government forces held at bay in the east and around the besieged city of Misrata while fighting for control of the western mountains.

11 Syria tanks shell Deraa: residents

By Suleiman al-Khalidi, Reuters

Sat Apr 30, 10:57 am ET

AMMAN (Reuters) – Syrian forces backed by tanks shelled parts of Deraa and stormed a mosque on Saturday, residents said, trying to quell resistance in the city at the heart of an uprising against President Bashar al-Assad.

Syrian troops and tanks first swept into Deraa on Monday to crush pro-democracy protests against Assad that have spread across the country of 20 million, posing the biggest challenge to his rule and prompting Western powers to impose sanctions.

A resident said Karak, a hilltop in Deraa’s old quarter, bore the brunt of the shelling. Assad’s brother, Maher, commands the Fourth Mechanised Division which stormed the city on Monday.

12 Obama seeks end to oil industry tax breaks

By Matt Spetalnick, Reuters

Sat Apr 30, 6:02 am ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – President Barack Obama on Saturday kept pressure on the Congress to end tax breaks for oil and gas companies, saying they were enjoying huge profits, as he sought to limit political fallout from rising gasoline prices.

With public anger over costs at the pump hitting Obama’s popularity as he revs up his 2012 re-election bid, he pressed his call for rolling back $4 billion in “unwarranted tax subsidies” at a time of budget belt-tightening in Washington.

But opposition Republicans continued their efforts to cast blame on the Democratic president for a surge in gas prices that is straining Americans’ pocketbooks at a time of stubbornly high unemployment and sluggish economic recovery.

13 Buffett admits error in Sokol affair

By Ben Berkowitz, Reuters

2 hrs 46 mins ago

OMAHA, Nebraska (Reuters) – Warren Buffett said he had made a mistake by not asking more about David Sokol’s purchases of Lubrizol Corp stock while his former top lieutenant was pitching the chemicals company as a possible takeover target for Berkshire Hathaway Inc.

Sokol was widely considered a leading candidate to succeed Buffett as Berkshire’s chief executive, but he resigned last month after it was revealed that he had bought $10 million of shares in Lubrizol. Sokol got a roughly $3 million profit on that stake when Berkshire agreed to buy Lubrizol.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is probing Sokol, a person familiar with the matter has said, and the controversy has put Buffett’s management style into question.

14 Afghan Taliban declare start to spring offensive

By Jonathon Burch and Rob Taylor, Reuters

Sat Apr 30, 8:35 am ET

KABUL (Reuters) – The Taliban declared the start of a spring offensive across Afghanistan on Saturday, warning they would target foreign troops as well as Afghan security forces and top government officials in a wave of attacks including suicide bombings.

In a statement, the hardline Islamists warned Afghan civilians to stay away from public gatherings, military bases and convoys, as well as Afghan government centers and buildings, as these would be the focus of attacks starting on May 1.

The Taliban statement comes just a day after senior military officials and Western diplomats warned they expected a surge in attacks over the next week, beginning on Sunday.

15 Republicans jockey for position in New Hampshire

By Steve Holland, Reuters

Fri Apr 29, 11:14 pm ET

MANCHESTER, New Hampshire (Reuters) – Republican presidential hopefuls jockeyed for position and took turns assailing President Barack Obama at an event on Friday that illustrated the wide-open race for the party’s 2012 nomination.

The event, sponsored by the Americans for Prosperity Foundation, marked the unofficial start to New Hampshire’s first-in-the-nation primary race next year. New Hampshire traditionally follows the Iowa caucuses and its voters pride themselves on vetting presidential candidates.

While all five Republicans espoused conservative values and blamed Obama for a struggling economy and high gas prices, two participants were singled out to defend policies now opposed by conservatives.

16 Florida pastor cuts Michigan protest short

By Bernie Woodall, Reuters

Fri Apr 29, 9:25 pm ET

DEARBORN, Michigan (Reuters) – A controversial Florida pastor banned last week from protesting at a Detroit-area mosque on Friday cut short a demonstration at a city hall largely drowned out by counter-protesters.

Terry Jones, 59, had vowed to return this week, saying that his ban on demonstrating in front of the landmark Islamic Center of America in heavily muslim Dearborn had violated free speech protections of the Constitution.

“We are here today to speak out on issues that pertain to all American citizens,” Jones said, using a wireless microphone at a podium set up at the top of the city hall steps.

AP

17 Afghan Taliban: Spring offensive starts now

By DEB RIECHMANN, Associated Press

1 hr 36 mins ago

KABUL, Afghanistan – The spring fighting season in Afghanistan geared up this weekend with a war of words.

The Taliban announced they will begin their spring offensive Sunday, pledging to attack military bases, convoys and Afghan officials, including members of the peace council working to reconcile with top insurgent leaders. Saturday’s declaration came a day after a new Pentagon report claimed the militants were experiencing low morale after suffering heavy losses on the battlefield.

“The war in our country will not come to an end unless and until the foreign invading forces pull out of Afghanistan,” the Taliban said in a two-page statement released by the leadership council of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, which is what the movement calls itself.

18 New Predator role fits diplomatic, military bill

By ROBERT BURNS, AP National Security Writer

1 hr 19 mins ago

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama’s decision to use unmanned Predator drones in Libya widened what had become very limited U.S. participation in the air war, but the aircraft credited with taking out terrorist leaders in western Pakistan probably won’t prove decisive against Moammar Gadhafi’s forces.

Sending just two remotely piloted Predators, each with two Hellfire missiles designed to pierce armor, over Libya 24 hours a day is far from a game-changing addition to an air campaign that features an array of high-flying French, British and other European jets bombing Libyan ground targets and enforcing a no-fly zone.

The small scale of this Predator deployment suggests that drones, while effective, have a downside. The weapon has become a detested symbol of U.S. military might in Pakistan, where their use is tolerated by the U.S.-backed government but widely criticized by Pakistanis. Afghan President Hamid Karzai sometimes has decried the use of U.S. drones, which he blames for civilian deaths.

19 NH GOP gets back-to-back look at 2012 hopefuls

By HOLLY RAMER, Associated Press

1 hr 22 mins ago

MANCHESTER, N.H. – With back-to-back events featuring multiple presidential hopefuls, it’s been something of an instant-replay kind of weekend for New Hampshire Republicans.

Barely 12 hours after five possible candidates spoke Friday at a dinner in Manchester, three of them showed up less than 10 miles away for a second gathering Saturday morning. Though Rep. Michele Bachmann started from scratch with her speech, former Gov. Tim Pawlenty and former Sen. Rick Santorum largely stuck to the highlights they delivered the previous night, when they were joined by former Gov. Mitt Romney and businessman Herman Cain.

That was probably the point, said Wayne Lesperance, a political science professor at New England College who said multi-candidate events are more about helping candidates refine their stump speeches than winning over voters.

20 Buffett says mistakes were made in handling Sokol

By JOSH FUNK, AP Business Writer

58 mins ago

OMAHA, Neb. – Berkshire Hathaway’s annual meeting on Saturday was dominated by somber topics, as Warren Buffett explained to roughly 40,000 shareholders how the company had been battered by a trusted former employee’s misdeeds and a string of natural disasters.

Buffett assured the crowd at an Omaha convention center that Berkshire is strong enough to withstand both the David Sokol scandal and the estimated $1.7 billion in insurance losses that drove profits down 58 percent in the first quarter.

Buffett said he doesn’t think he will ever understand why Sokol bought stock in Lubrizol shortly before recommending that Berkshire buy the chemical company. Buffett said he believes Sokol clearly violated Berkshire’s ethics and insider trading policies.

21 Iraqi lawmakers approve $400M payment to Americans

By REBECCA SANTANA, Associated Press

2 hrs 8 mins ago

BAGHDAD – Iraqi lawmakers approved a controversial $400 million settlement Saturday for Americans who claim they were abused by Saddam Hussein’s regime during the 1990 invasion of Kuwait.

The settlement is part of a deal reached between Baghdad and Washington last year to end years of legal battles by U.S. citizens who claim they were tortured or traumatized, including hundreds held as human shields.

Many Iraqis consider themselves victims of both Saddam’s regime and the 2003 U.S.-led invasion and wonder why they should pay money for wrongs committed by the ousted dictator.

22 Obama keeps up push to end gas, oil tax breaks

By JIM KUHNHENN, Associated Press

Sat Apr 30, 9:33 am ET

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama says oil companies are profiting from rising pump prices and he wants Congress to end $4 billion in annual tax breaks for the oil and gas industry.

“These tax giveaways aren’t right,” Obama said in his weekly radio and Internet address Saturday. “They aren’t smart. And we need to end them.”

Drivers in 22 states are paying more than the national average of $3.91 per gallon. In Alaska, California and Connecticut, it’s $4.20 or more.

23 Criticism up on Japan PM’s handling of nuke crisis

By YURI KAGEYAMA, Associated Press

Sat Apr 30, 5:05 am ET

TOKYO – Criticism of the Japanese government’s handling of the crisis at a radiation-spewing nuclear power plant increased Saturday, with a new poll indicating three-quarters of the people disapprove and a key adviser quitting in protest.

A Kyodo News service poll released Saturday showed that Prime Minister Naoto Kan’s support ratings were plunging.

The poll reported that 76 percent of the respondents think Kan is not exercising sufficient leadership in handling the country’s earthquake, tsunami and nuclear triple crisis, up from 63.7 percent in the previous survey in late March.

24 Syrian troops kill 4 at mosque in restive city

By BASSEM MROUE and DIAA HADID, Associated Press

1 hr 54 mins ago

BEIRUT – Syrian troops killed four people Saturday while storming a mosque that became a focal point for protesters in the besieged southern city of Daraa, and security forces in Damascus kept dozens of women from marching on parliament to urge President Bashar Assad to end his crackdown on a six-week-old uprising.

More members of Assad’s ruling Baath Party resigned in protest as human rights activists said the death toll soared to 535 from government forces firing on demonstrators to try to suppress the popular revolt – action that has drawn international condemnation and U.S. financial penalties on top figures in his regime.

The military raid on the Omari mosque in Daraa came a day after 65 people were killed – most of them in the town on Syria’s border with Jordan. Friday was the second deadliest day since the uprising began in mid-March in Daraa.

25 Libyan village clinics become trauma centers

By BEN HUBBARD, Associated Press

Sat Apr 30, 4:10 am ET

ZAWIYAT AL-MAHJOUB, Libya – The wail of an ambulance signaled the start of what one doctor at the small village clinic called the “gush.”

The first of a flood of wounded were two Libyan rebel fighters whose legs had been mangled in a blast and one of the clinic’s own medics, who staggered in with a gunshot wound in the back that streaked red across his white coat.

As rebels push Moammar Gadhafi’s forces back to the edges of the frontline city of Misrata, the fighting is turning rural medical centers in villages like this one into battlefield clinics. Their staff, more accustomed to distributing medicine and handling minor outpatient cases, are now performing trauma surgery.

26 NATO powers reject Gadhafi’s truce offer

By KARIN LAUB, Associated Press

Sat Apr 30, 1:07 pm ET

TRIPOLI, Libya – NATO powers rejected Moammar Gadhafi’s call for a cease-fire and negotiations on Saturday, saying they need “actions not words,” and aid ships were prevented from docking in a besieged coastal city while the alliance swept the port for mines.

Human Rights Watch said two mines had been destroyed by NATO forces combing the Misrata port while a third was being closely monitored. The alliance did not give details but said the process would take time.

“Mine clearance is a precise and highly skilled task, so it will take time to do this in a safe and effective way,” NATO spokeswoman Carmen Romero said.

27 Poles travel to Rome for John Paul beatification

By VANESSA GERA, Associated Press

Sat Apr 30, 10:21 am ET

ABOARD THE POPIELUSZKO TRAIN – They slept in the aisles and celebrated Mass in the restaurant car.

Eight hundred Poles boarded a special train Friday night for a 26-hour trip across Europe, bound for Rome and the beatification of the late Pope John Paul II. They were joining tens of thousands of Poles who are massing in Rome for Sunday’s beatification, a major celebration for a nation overjoyed at seeing the Polish-born pontiff moved closer to sainthood.

By Saturday afternoon, the pilgrim train was whizzing past Italian vineyards and church belltowers, after having crossed through Poland, the Czech Republic and Austria.

28 Palin making noise again; will she run in 2012?

By PHILIP ELLIOTT, Associated Press

Sat Apr 30, 8:34 am ET

WASHINGTON – Sarah Palin’s support among Republicans has shrunk and there’s no evidence she’s close to saying whether she will run for president in 2012.

But it’s clear she wants to be part of the conversation.

After seemingly staying on the sidelines this spring, the GOP’s 2008 vice presidential nominee is back with public appearances, fiery criticism of President Barack Obama and a strong defense of Donald Trump, the reality TV show host who has raised questions about the president’s background without offering any proof of his assertions.

29 University of Calif. targets out-of-state students

By TERENCE CHEA, Associated Press

30 mins ago

SAN FRANCISCO – The University of California is looking for out-of-state solutions to its money problems.

Faced with sharp cuts in state funding, the 10-campus system is ramping up its campaign to recruit high-paying students from other states and countries, even as record numbers of California students seek a UC education.

For a second year, UC officials in April reported a significant increase in out-of-state and international students admitted for the coming fall term, with the biggest jumps at its most selective campuses in Berkeley, Los Angeles and San Diego. Accepted students must notify schools by May 1 if they plan to enroll.

30 Calif may let locals opt out of immigration checks

By AMY TAXIN, Associated Press

1 hr 30 mins ago

LOS ANGELES – California lawmakers are the latest to weigh joining efforts in other states to gain control over a controversial national program that automatically checks the immigration status of arrestees.

The Golden State accounts for more than a third of the deportations under the Immigration and Customs Enforcement program, and some local officials are saying they were misled by the federal government about the program’s extent.

Illinois lawmakers are also considering a measure to let communities retreat from the program. Washington state has deferred to local governments on whether they want to join the so-called “Secure Communities” program, which links up the FBI’s criminal database and the Department of Homeland Security’s records so that every time someone is arrested their immigration status is automatically, electronically checked.

31 Pearl Harbor visitors now get Japan and US view

By AUDREY McAVOY, Associated Press

1 hr 54 mins ago

PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii – Political assassinations in Tokyo. Censorship and the stifling of dissent. A nation hungry for oil and other natural resources. Kimono-clad women in department stores and boarding street cars. A smiling Babe Ruth posing for photos with Japanese teenage baseball players while on tour with other American all-stars.

Visitors to Pearl Harbor are seeing these snapshots of 1930s Japan as they stroll through the National Park Service’s new museum devoted to the Dec. 7, 1941, attack that dragged the U.S. into World War II. This is a significant departure from the old collection devoted to one of worst foreign attacks ever on American soil – what life was like in Japan at the time didn’t much figure into it.

The center, which officially opened last Dec. 7 and is drawing about 4,000 visitors a day, was built in part because the old one was sinking on reclaimed land. The park service had also outgrown the old facility.

32 Tax, spending divisions laid bare in public forums

By CHARLES BABINGTON, Associated Press writer

Sat Apr 30, 9:57 am ET

EXETER, N.H. – Peter Cass could stand it no longer as he listened to the Republican congressman defend a plan to cut taxes and Medicare simultaneously.

“We pay much lower taxes than the rest of the industrialized world,” Cass, an engineer from Durham, N.H., shouted from his seat at last week’s town hall forum held by freshman Rep. Frank Guinta. America must protect its children, Cass said, and the legislation recently passed by House Republicans won’t do it.

Some in the crowd of 200 cheered. Some booed.

33 White House, newspaper clash over protest video

By MARCUS WOHLSEN, Associated Press

Fri Apr 29, 7:40 pm ET

SAN FRANCISCO – The White House says a San Francisco Chronicle reporter broke the rules when she put down her pen and picked up a video camera to film a protest. The newspaper says the Obama administration needs to join the 21st century.

The conflict hit the newspaper’s front page Friday with a story about coverage of the protest during President Barack Obama’s speech last week at a private fundraiser.

It highlights the perils that arise when traditional arrangements between news organizations and politicians meet the modern reality that anyone with a smartphone can become a video journalist.

34 KC university supports lecturer in video flap

ALAN SCHER ZAGIER, Associated Press

Fri Apr 29, 7:39 pm ET

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – University of Missouri-Kansas City officials say they’re standing behind a labor studies professor whose lecture comments about union agitation tactics have created an Internet stir among conservative commentators.

Video clips on conservative blogger Andrew Breitbart’s Big Government website show professor Judy Ancel seemingly endorsing violence as a union tactic during a recent class. UMKC Provost Gail Hackett pledged support for the academic freedom of the school’s professors and said videos posted on Breitbart’s site rely on “selective editing” and are presented in “an inaccurate and distorted manner.”

A campus review of 18 hours of unedited video continues, Hackett said in a statement released late Thursday.

35 Files suggest elder Obama forced to leave Harvard

By BOB SALSBERG, Associated Press

Fri Apr 29, 7:09 pm ET

BOSTON – President Barack Obama’s father was forced to leave Harvard University before completing his Ph.D. in economics because the school was concerned about his personal life and finances, according to newly public immigration records.

Harvard had asked the Immigration and Naturalization Service to delay a request by Barack Hussein Obama Sr. to extend his stay in the U.S., “until they decided what action they could take in order to get rid of him,” immigration official M.F. McKeon wrote in a June 1964 memo.

Harvard administrators, the memo stated, “were having difficulty with his financial arrangements and couldn’t seem to figure out how many wives he had.”

36 AP: Feds say NJ must repay $271M for rail tunnel

By ANGELA DELLI SANTI, Associated Press

Fri Apr 29, 5:38 pm ET

TRENTON, N.J. – The Federal Transit Administration has determined that New Jersey must repay the federal government the entire $271 million it spent on early design and construction work for a New Jersey-New York train tunnel that Gov. Chris Christie scrapped.

U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood announced the final decision Friday in a letter to New Jersey’s congressional delegation and in a 52-page report sent to the Christie administration from the FTA’s Budget and Policy office. The Associated Press obtained copies of both documents.

Christie, a Republican who has gained national attention for his budget-cutting ways, abandoned the project last fall over what he said were escalating costs. He cited potential overruns of $2 billion to $5 billion, which he said the state couldn’t afford. He then hired a high-powered Washington law firm to fight the debt the federal government said was owed for work already completed. The administration has spent more than $800,000 in legal fees.

37 US aims financial hits at Syrian officials, Iran

By MATTHEW LEE, Associated Press

Fri Apr 29, 7:33 pm ET

WASHINGTON – The Obama administration on Friday imposed financial penalties against three top Syrian officials, Syria’s intelligence agency and Iran’s Revolutionary Guard over the violent crackdown on demonstrators in Syria.

The penalties freeze any assets that the officials, including two relatives of Syrian President Bashar Assad, as well as Syria’s General Intelligence Directorate and the Qods Force of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps may have in U.S. jurisdictions and bar Americans from doing business with them.

President Barack Obama authorized the action for repression and human rights abuses committed by Syrian authorities seeking to quell six weeks of protests. Activists say more than 500 people have been killed, 42 on Friday alone.

Random Japan

Photobucket

EASY COME, EASY GO

After taking heat for accepting a ¥1.04 million donation from a South Korean expat, Prime Minister Naoto Kan agreed to return the money. Political contributions from foreigners are a no-no in Japan.

The Osaka and Bombay stock exchanges agreed on a tie-up, paving the way for them to “develop financial products linked to their stock indexes and list them at each other’s markets.”

Toyota and Microsoft announced a joint venture to develop automotive software that will be “important for achieving the next-generation low-carbon, energy-saving society.”

The justice ministry ordered Japan’s Prosecutor General to record all interrogations of criminal suspects in an effort to “establish a new criminal justice system.”

The coast guard announced that 170 crewmembers serving on five ships were unable to vote in local elections earlier in the month because they were engaged in relief operations in quake-hit areas.

Nepal’s Ministry of Culture said it will honor the mayors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki with its inaugural Gautama Buddha International Peace Award. The prize is worth $50,000.

Japan, the US and India have announced they will begin scheduling regular minster-level talks. The rise of China is “expected to be a major topic.”

A trio of taxis in Hamamatsu, Shizuoka have been festooned with drawings of characters from hit manga and animated TV series Strawberry Marshmallow. Punters who catch these cabs will get a commemorative card designed by the series’ author.

Stats

250,000

Vending machines operated by the Japan unit of Coca Cola

33 percent

Electricity consumption that Coca Cola believes it will save by not refrigerating the machines during daytime this summer

19

Rank of Japan in terms of “global information technology competitiveness,” according to a survey by the World Economic Forum

1, 2

Rank of Sweden and Singapore, respectively

YEAH, THAT’LL WORK

One of the eight “countermeasures” proposed by the Japan Sumo Association to restore confidence in the sport is to distribute a survey so that spectators can assess the wrestlers’ “fighting spirit.”

“I’m leaving the details in the hands of my lawyer,” said former ozeki Kotomitsuki, who is suing the JSA for wrongful dismissal after being given the boot from sumo for illegal gambling.

A group of activists canceled plans to stage a protest at the disputed Senkaku Islands “out of sympathy” for Japan following the March 11 quake. The demonstrators were also concerned that the protest would “trigger adverse international publicity.”

The National Police Agency told cops in Iwate, Miyagi and Fukushima prefectures that they can go ahead and crack open safes recovered from the rubble in quake-hit areas. Police in Iwate alone have reportedly found 1,000 safes.

A geophysicist at the U.S. Geological Survey said that aftershocks related to the March 11 earthquake may continue for 10 years.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Kan was quoted as saying that the evacuation zone around the Fukushima plant might be “uninhabitable” for as long as 20 years. He quickly retracted the claim.

The government has confirmed that 23 foreigners were killed in the March 11 quake. That’s 127 fewer than the number who died in the Great Hanshin Earthquake in 1995.

Russia has awarded medals to 63 foreign astronauts commemorating their “services to developing space.” Among the three Japanese awarded was Toyohiro Akiyama, a former TBS correspondent who in 1990 became the first journalist to travel into space.

The residence of Japan’s ambassador to the Ivory Coast was hit by a rocket during the fighting that preceded the ousting of President Laurent Gbagbo earlier this month.

Faster Than A Speeding…

And It’s Back  

Yes  

I Bribed Them

Kan  

A Disaster Of One  

Chubu Electric seeks restart of ‘most dangerous’ nuke plant



2011/04/30

Chubu Electric Power Co. has produced a controversial plan to restart a reactor at its Hamaoka nuclear power plant on the shores of the Pacific in Shizuoka Prefecture to help alleviate a possible summer power shortage, but it remains unclear whether that will ever happen.

Local governments and residents are fiercely opposed to restarting the No. 3 reactor of what is described as “the world’s most dangerous” nuclear power plant, which sits in the hypocenter of a long-predicted earthquake that could devastate the Tokai region.

FDR: “Government by organized money is just as dangerous as Government by organized mob.”

(2 pm. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

An Antemdius entry uses a quote from Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who said in his speech announcing the Second New Deal in 1936:

For twelve years this Nation was afflicted with hear-nothing, see-nothing, do-nothing Government. The Nation looked to Government but the Government looked away. Nine mocking years with the golden calf and three long years of the scourge! Nine crazy years at the ticker and three long years in the breadlines! Nine mad years of mirage and three long years of despair! Powerful influences strive today to restore that kind of government with its doctrine that that Government is best which is most indifferent.

Sound familiar?  We are repeating the past.  Roosevelt went on:

We had to struggle with the old enemies of peace–business and financial monopoly, speculation, reckless banking, class antagonism, sectionalism, war profiteering.

They had begun to consider the Government of the United States as a mere appendage to their own affairs. We know now that Government by organized money is just as dangerous as Government by organized mob.

What was true in 1932 is true today, and has been for going on thirty years now, but especially the last ten.  We saw 9/11 happen on the Shrub’s watch, with the election-stealing chimp sitting on his ass and let a major terrorist attack kill nearly three thousand people.  We saw that same dictator brush off warnings that hurricane-wrecked levies, allowed to deteriorate for years, would not hold up under the weight of rising floodwaters, and New Orleans drowned.  The Shrub presided over the largest financial meltdown since the First Great Depression, and the current dictator enable the bailout of the very same corporate criminals who caused it.  Barry Obama, Hopey McChangerton himself, sat by and let the Gulf of Mexico die from BP’s criminal negligence.  Now the Obamassiah is waltzing through the devastation left behind by ever more extreme tornadoes as a result of Global Warming, spouting empty words, as is his pattern, but fully intending to do absolutely nothing to help the survivors.

When it comes to oppressing people, the U.S. government – at the behest of Big Money – has no trouble at all getting intimately involved in the lives of citizens.  But when We the People need a hand up, when we are poor and downtrodden and need the government we pay for with our hard-earned dollars to come through for us, we are left to suffer on our own.  There’s always money for more wars and more police state bullshit, always more money for endless corporate bailouts, but never so much as a single penny for ordinary folk.

And it’s all because we let organized money back into politics.  For a brief moment in our nation’s history, we thought we had broken its influence.  We were wrong.  The corporate bosses who were defeated in the 1930s regrouped, re-organized, and slowly but steadily chipped away at the victories we fought for and won, until today there is almost nothing left – and what remains is likely to disappear within our lifetimes.

I had planned to continue my college classes over the summer.  Now, because of federal and state austerity measures, I have to wait until the Fall.  Being unemployed, this means I am pretty much screwed unless I can find a job before what little money I have runs out.  That is not going to happen without a miracle.  I’ve been unemployed too long, my credit history too disastrous, my lack of reliable transportation the nail in the coffin.  I have no idea what I’m going to do to support myself.  I am one of the millions of Americans left out in the cold because of the rule of organized money.

It does not have to be this way.  More Americans than not support the things progressives and liberals support.  We want single-payer health insurance, a cleaned up environment, clean energy, protection from unsafe labor conditions, protection from unsafe food and drink, protection from outsourcing and mass layoffs, protection from employers when those employers try to prevent us from organizing to defend our rights, and a whole host of other things that are crucial to all real democracies.

We are not going to take back our country through the right-wing Democrat Party.  They are the Washington Generals to the Republicans’ Harlem Globetrotters, and both political organizations are wholly owned subsidiaries of the corporations that now control this nation lock- stock, and a million smoking barrels.  The best and only way we’re going to take back our country is through the twin prongs of massive protests that shut down the centers of power and running candidates from alternative political parties (like the Greens and Progressives) that actually represent us.  Pretending to oppose the Democrats, all the while knowing that one is going to cave in and vote for them anyway, is a betrayal of everything one claims to stand for, and it does not help the rest of us fight back against the monstrous system that has grown so far out of our control.

Cross-posted from Progressive Independence.

Health and Fitness News

Welcome to the Stars Hollow Health and Fitness weekly diary. It will publish on Saturday afternoon and be open for discussion about health related issues including diet, exercise, health and health care issues, as well as, tips on what you can do when there is a medical emergency. Also an opportunity to share and exchange your favorite healthy recipes.

Questions are encouraged and I will answer to the best of my ability. If I can’t, I will try to steer you in the right direction. Naturally, I cannot give individual medical advice for personal health issues. I can give you information about medical conditions and the current treatments available.

You can now find past Health and Fitness News diaries here and on the right hand side of the Front Page.

Mango for Dinner and Dessert

Photobucket

If you are also a fan of mango, this is the best time of year to enjoy them, writes Martha Rose Shulman in this week’s Recipes for Health:

Often called the “king of fruits” elsewhere in the world, the mango is not high in calories, and it is an excellent source of beta carotene, vitamin A and potassium. Now is the time to get acquainted with them: although they’re in season from January to August, mangoes peak in May and June. A ripe mango gives a bit when pressed, and its fragrance should be heady and sweet, particularly at the stem end. But if you can find only hard, green mangoes, bring them home anyway – they will ripen at room temperature in a few days time. Put them in a paper bag with an apple to speed the process along.

To dice a mango, cut down the broad side of the fruit, slightly off center, from the stem end to the tip end. The knife should slide down against the flat side of the pit. Repeat on the other side, cutting as close to the pit as possible. Cut the flesh from the sides of the pit, following the curve of the pit.

Lay each half on your cutting surface and score with the tip of your knife in a crosshatch pattern, down to — but not through — the skin. Lift the mango half, and press on the skin with your thumbs to turn it inside out. Little cubes of mango will pop out on the other side, and you can easily cut them away from the skin.

If you want to peel the mango before cutting, slice off a small piece of the end, stand the mango upright and peel down the sides using a paring knife, between the skin and the flesh, as you would a pineapple.

Strawberries in a Mango Sea

A simple mango puree paired with strawberries makes a refreshing and healthful treat.

Pigeon Peas With Mango

Garam masala adds spiciness to this curry dish.

Shrimp and Mango Tacos

A sweet and pungent combination of mango, shrimp, chilies and cumin.

Mango, Orange and Ginger Smoothie

Ginger combines well with mango in this dish.

Red Coconut Rice Pudding With Mango

This dish is inspired by a classic Thai sweet made with sticky rice.

General Medicine/Family Medical

Heart Attacks in the Morning Are More Severe

Study Shows Heart Attacks in the Morning Are More Serious Than Those in Overnight Hours

April 27, 2011 — The most common time of day for heart attacks is the morning, and now new research suggests that morning heart attacks are also the most serious.

Heart attacks occurring between 6 a.m. and noon were associated with the most the damage in the study, reported Wednesday in the journal Heart.

Low Health Literacy May Have Deadly Consequences

by Jennifer Warner

Lack of Basic Health Information Raises Risk of Heart Failure Death, Study Finds

April 26, 2011 — Not knowing enough about basic health can be deadly for people with heart failure, a new study finds.

The study shows that nearly one in five people with heart failure have low health literacy, making them more than twice as likely to die as a result of their condition. According to the Institute of Medicine, health literacy is the degree to which a person can obtain, process, and understand basic health information and services needed to make appropriate health decisions.

The study appears in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA).

Drugs for Bone Loss May Also Help the Heart

by Brenda Goodman

Study Shows Patients Taking Combination of Didronel and Lipitor Have Fewer Heart Attacks

April 28, 2011 — An early report of a new study shows that the first-generation bisphosphonate, Didronel, in combination with the cholesterol drug Lipitor reduced abdominal aortic plaques by about 12% in people with high cholesterol, compared to 1% in people on Lipitor alone.

Death Rate Declines for Americans With Hypertension

By Cari Nierenberg

But Study Shows Smaller Decline in Death Rate for Women With High Blood Pressure

April 25, 2011 — There’s been a decline in the number of deaths among Americans with high blood pressure for heart-related reasons or any cause, but these rates are still higher than in people with normal blood pressure, a study shows.

Arthritis Patients More Likely to Be Obese

by Kathleen Doheny

Obesity 54% Higher in Those With Arthritis Than Those Without, Researchers Say

April 28, 2011 — Adults with arthritis are more likely than those without arthritis to be obese, according to a new government study.

”The frequency of obesity is 54% higher among people with arthritis compared to those without,” says Jennifer Hootman, PhD, an epidemiologist with the CDC.

Gastric Bypass May Improve Diabetes Quickly

by Salynn Boyles

Researchers Say Changes in Amino Acid Levels Explains Improvements in Bypass Patients

April 27, 2011 — Gastric bypass weight loss surgery often improves type 2 diabetes long before patients lose much weight. Now a new study from Duke University Medical Center and Columbia University may help explain why.

When researchers compared patients who had gastric bypass surgery to those who lost the same amount of weight by dieting, they found that the surgery patients had lower levels of amino acids that have been linked to insulin resistance.

Leprosy May Pass Between Armadillos and People

by Brenda Goodman

Study: Infected Armadillos, Patients Share the Same Bacterial Strain

April 27, 2011 — They may be built like tanks, but armadillos’ natural armor doesn’t protect them from leprosy.

Now a new study shows that some armadillos and people with leprosy in the southern United States are infected with the same bacterial strain. That suggests that the disease, which causes skin lesions and eventual nerve damage, can pass between species, although that circumstance appears to be rare.

Warnings/Alerts/Guidelines

Pediatricians Seek Stiffer Regulation of Chemicals

by Denise Mann

Pediatrician Group Says Current Legislation Does Not Adequately Protect Children, Pregnant Women

April 25, 2011 — The U.S. chemical management policy known as the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) does not adequately protect children and pregnant women from hazardous chemicals in the environment and needs to be overhauled, according to a new policy statement by the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP).

Women’s Health

Study: Ovary Removal Doesn’t Raise Heart Risk

by Salynnn Boyles

But Findings Oppose Earlier Study Linking Ovary Removal During Hysterectomy With Heart Risk

April 25, 2011 — A new analysis of data from a major women’s health study finds little evidence that ovary removal during hysterectomy increases heart disease risk.

The findings appear to contradict those from another large study in women suggesting a higher risk for heart disease and stroke associated with the practice.

About 600,000 women in the U.S. have their uteruses surgically removed each year. About half of these procedures include removal of the ovaries.

Men’s Health

Being Tall, Obese May Boost Risk of Blood Clots

by Kathleen Doherny

Risk Highest for Men, but Researchers Don’t Know Why Height Plays a Role

April 28, 2011 — Being tall and obese boosts the risk of blood clots, especially in men, according to new research.

Obesity has long been linked with dangerous blood clots in the deep veins, usually in the legs, and with blood clots in the lungs, known as pulmonary embolisms. More recently, experts have found a link with height and cannot thoroughly explain it.

Pediatric Health

Many Kids With Epilepsy Don’t Take Their Medicine

by Salynn Boyles

Study Suggests Some Parents Forget to Give Antiseizure Drugs, but Others Choose Not To

April 26, 2011 — More than half of children with newly diagnosed epilepsy do not take their seizure medications as prescribed, a study shows.

The study is published in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

FDA OKs Meningitis Vaccine for Infants

by Bill Hendrick

Vaccine Known as Menactra Can Now Be Used Starting at Age 9 MonthsApril 26, 2011 — The FDA has approved the use of Menactra, a vaccine that prevents a life-threatening form of meningitis, in children as young as 9 months.

Menactra is already approved for use in people ages 2 through 55. It helps prevent invasive meningococcal disease caused by a bacterium called Neisseria meningitidis.

Obese Teens Engage in Risky Behavior

Study: Smoking, Risky Sex More Common in the Heaviest High School Students

April 25, 2011 — Teens with extreme obesity may engage in risky behaviors at similar rates as those with a healthy weight, but sometimes in more dangerous ways, according to a new study.

The government-funded research looked at the risks for sex, alcohol, illegal drugs, or suicide attempts reported by more 9,000 high school students who took part in a nationwide survey.

Aging

Thyroid Drug Linked to Fracture Risk in Elderly

by Salynn Boyles

Study Raises Concerns About Levothyroxine DosingApril 28, 2011 — Older adults with underactive thyroid, or hypothyroidism, who take drugs to treat the problem may be at increased risk for fractures, new research suggests.

Thyroid hormone deficiency is common in the elderly, especially women. The drug levothyroxine, a synthetic form of the natural thyroid hormone, is widely prescribed.

New Guidelines: Treat High Blood Pressure in Over-80s

by Daniel J. DeNoon

High Blood Pressure Treatment Extends Life in the Very Elderly

April 25, 2011 – New guidelines stress more aggressive treatment of high blood pressure in very elderly patients.

It’s long been clear that people ages 65 to 79 benefit greatly from treatments that lower blood pressure. But now an expert panel convened by the American College of Cardiology (ACC) and the American Heart Association (AHA) endorses treatment for patients over age 80.

Because blood-pressure-lowering drugs can have dangerous side effects in very elderly patients, doctors have been wary of aggressively treating high blood pressure in people over age 80.

The result: Only one in three men and only one in four women over age 80 have their blood pressure under control.

Nutrition/Diet/Fitness

Wine, Salt, and Your Heart: Confusion Abounds

by Bill Hendrick

Survey Shows Many Americans Misunderstand the Effects of Wine and Salt on Heart Health

April 26, 2011 — Most Americans believe that drinking red wine is good for the heart but may not fully understand that failure to limit the amount they drink could lead to serious health problems, according to a new survey by the American Heart Association (AHA).

What’s more, most people also mistakenly believe that sea salt is a good low-sodium alternative to table salt, the survey shows.

The poll of 1,000 adults was conducted to help the AHA gauge American perceptions about wine and sodium consumption as those substances relate to heart health.

The AHA says drinking of any type of alcohol should be limited to no more than two drinks per day for men and one for women. That’s about 8 ounces of wine for men and 4 ounces for women.

Tai Chi Benefits Heart Patients

by Bill Hendrick

Tai Chi Exercise Improves Mood and Health of Heart Failure Patients, Study Finds

April 25, 2011 — Tai chi, often called “meditation in motion,” appears to improve the quality of life in people with heart failure, say researchers at Harvard Medical School.

The ancient Chinese exercise of tai chi features physical movements that are slow and gentle and require concentration.

Cayenne Pepper May Burn Calories, Curb Appetite

by Brenda Goodman

Study Suggests Pepper May Help Weight Loss When Combined With Other Weight Loss Efforts

April 27, 2010 — Red cayenne pepper may help burn calories and curb appetite, especially in people who aren’t used to eating it, says a new study that was partly supported by the National Institutes of Health and the McCormick Spice Company.

The study found that about half a teaspoon of cayenne pepper either mixed in food or swallowed in a capsule helped normal-weight young adults burn about 10 more calories over a four-hour period, compared to eating the same meal but without the red pepper.

New Clues to Low-Calorie Diets and Longer Life

By Denise Mann

Study Helps Explain Why Low-Calorie Diets May Increase Life Span

April 27, 2011 — Research has suggested that very low-calorie diets may increase life expectancy in animals, and now a new study in humans provides some important clues as to why this may occur.

In the new study, individuals who had higher metabolic rates — the amount of energy the body uses for normal body functions — were more likely to die early from natural causes than those who had lower metabolic rates.

The new findings appear in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism

Beltane and a Remembrance for Ben Masel

(8 pm. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

Beltane, the old Gaelic name for the month of May, is the last of the three Wiccan spring fertility festivals, the others being Imbolc and Ostara. Beltane is the second principal Celtic festival (the other being Samhain). Celebrated approximately halfway between Vernal (spring) equinox and the midsummer (Summer Solstice). Beltane traditionally marked the arrival if summer in ancient times. It is one of eight solar Sabbats.

Beltane, like Samhain, is a time of “no time” when the veils between the two worlds are at their thinnest. No time is when the two worlds intermingle and unite and the magic abounds! It is the time when the Faeries return from their winter respite, carefree and full of faery mischief and faery delight. On the night before Beltane, in times past, folks would place rowan branches at their windows and doors for protection, many otherworldly occurrences could transpire during this time of “no time”. Traditionally on the Isle of Man, the youngest member of the family gathers primroses on the eve before Beltane and throws the flowers at the door of the home for protection. In Ireland it is believed that food left over from May Eve must not be eaten, but rather buried or left as an offering to the faery instead. Much like the tradition of leaving of whatever is not harvested from the fields on Samhain, food on the time of no time is treated with great care.

When the veils are so thin it is an extremely magical time, it is said that the Queen of the Faeries rides out on her white horse. Roving about on Beltane eve She will try to entice people away to the Faeryland. Legend has it that if you sit beneath a tree on Beltane night, you may see the Faery Queen or hear the sound of Her horse’s bells as She rides through the night. Legend says if you hide your face, She will pass you by but if you look at Her, She may choose you. There is a Scottish ballad of this called Thomas the Rhymer, in which Thomas chooses to go the Faeryland with the Queen and has not been seen since.

Tonight, when the Beltane fires are lit, there will be some sadness in out hearts. A good man, and one of my favorite DFH activists, Ben Masel has passed through that thin veil to the Summerlands.

Ben was from Wisconsin and the perennial candidate for public office, including the US Senate. He was diagnosed earlier this year with lung cancer and was in the hospital when the protests in Madison started. Against all advice, he left the hospital to join the protest. he diaried them at Daily Kos, he tweeted and documented the events on his FaceBook page.

I met him in Pittsburgh and looked forward to seeing him this June. We exchanged e-mails and private tweets about his health and the wisdom of leaving the hospital to join the protests in Wisconsin. It was what he wanted to do in the time he had, while he still could.

I can still feel his hug when we met. He will always be in my heart.

He will be remembered tonight when we light the Beltane fires.

May the Goddess guide him on his journey to the Summerlands. May his family and friends find Peace.

Blessed be. The Wheel Turns.

Load more