Prime Time

Some premiers.  PBS has an interesting documentary on Islamic Spain.  I understand Stargate Universe is starting it’s final 10 episodes.  This season is ok, but if it’s ever (as it appears to be) I’m extremely disappointed because it’s way better than Caprica.

Quotes are not essential.  I dare you to find them.

Later-

Dave in repeats from 1/18.  Jon has Rand Paul (ugh), Stephen Joshua Foer.  Alton does Garbanzos and Eggs Benedict.  Conan hosts Seth Green and Travis Barker.

Zap2it TV Listings, Yahoo TV Listings

from firefly-dreaming 7.3.11

(midnight. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

Regular Daily Features:

mishima Bring the Funk in Late Night Karaoke

Gha!

Six Brilliant Articles! from Six Different Places!! on Six Different Topics!!!

                Six Days a Week!!!    at Six in the Morning!!!!

Essays Featured Monday, March 7th:

Monday Open Thoughts are Mirrored ramblings from RiaD

Fricking, Fracking, and Earthquakes from Translator

Spot-on snark from fake consultant in On “La Dolce Vita”, Or, The Real Life Of A State Worker

What Tahoe has to say is Awesome! Not to be missed!

RiaD finds The King’s Speech Inspires….

join the conversation! come firefly-dreaming with me….

Evening Edition

Evening Edition is an Open Thread

Now with 42 Top Stories.

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 France’s ex-president Chirac on trial for corruption

by Roland Lloyd Parry, AFP

2 hrs 15 mins ago

PARIS (AFP) – Jacques Chirac on Monday became the first former French president to go on trial as a court heard charges that he embezzled public funds while he was mayor of Paris in the 1990s.

The 78-year-old, one of France’s most popular political figures, did not attend the start of the trial that will examine whether he misused public money to pay people working for his party ahead of a successful election bid.

Presiding judge Dominique Pauthe adjourned Monday’s hearing after a few hours, saying it would resume on Tuesday when he would rule on a constitutional challenge in the case, which if successful could delay the trial by several months.

AFP

2 US defence chief sorry over Afghan child deaths

by Dan De Luce, AFP

2 hrs 29 mins ago

KABUL (AFP) – US Defense Secretary Robert Gates offered a personal apology to President Hamid Karzai Monday for the deaths of nine Afghan children in a NATO air strike which drew fury in Kabul.

“This breaks our heart,” Gates told a news conference at the presidential palace in Kabul, as Karzai looked on.

“Not only is their loss a tragedy for their families, it is a setback for our relationship with the Afghan people, whose security is our chief concern.”

3 Libya regime blasts West ‘conspiracy’ against Kadhafi

by Antoine Lambroschini, AFP

26 mins ago

TRIPOLI (AFP) – Moamer Kadhafi’s regime accused the United States, Britain and France of “a conspiracy to divide Libya” Monday as pressure built to arm the rebels and the UN named a special envoy to Tripoli.

The worsening conflict sent world oil prices higher, while NATO head Anders Fogh Rasmussen said attacks on civilians by Kadhafi’s troops could amount to crimes against humanity.

Libya’s foreign minister told reporters in the capital Tripoli that the Western allies were trying to split the North African country by secretly building up contacts with rebel leaders.

4 Britain, France ready Libya no-fly zone resolution

by Pierre-Antoine Donnet, AFP

23 mins ago

UNITED NATIONS (AFP) – A British-French resolution demanding a no-fly zone over Libya could go before the UN Security Council as early as this week, diplomats said Monday.

While Moamer Kadhafi’s offensive against rebels is intensifying, any demand for military action would set off a new diplomatic battle at the Security Council.

Anticipating opposition, Britain’s foreign minister has insisted that there must “a clear legal basis” for the zone and set other conditions.

5 In Libya clashes, rebels lose ground; UN gains access

by Danny Kemp, AFP

2 hrs 33 mins ago

RAS LANUF, Libya (AFP) – Libyan rebels ceded ground to Moamer Kadhafi’s advancing forces on Monday as the United States came under increasing pressure to arm the opposition and the UN appointed a humanitarian envoy.

World oil prices rose again, while NATO head Anders Fogh Rasmussen said attacks on civilians by Kadhafi’s troops could amount to crimes against humanity.

The rebels began pulling back from the key oil port of Ras Lanuf as fighter jets targeted defences on the edge of town, throwing up palls of smoke amid fears that government forces were preparing an attack.

6 Libyan rebels lose ground to Kadhafi loyalists

by Danny Kemp, AFP

Mon Mar 7, 11:16 am ET

RAS LANUF, Libya (AFP) – Libyan rebels ceded ground to Moamer Kadhafi’s advancing forces Monday as the United States came under increasing pressure to arm the opposition and the UN appointed a humanitarian envoy.

World oil prices rose again, while NATO head Anders Fogh Rasmussen said attacks on civilians by Kadhafi’s troops could amount to crimes against humanity.

The rebels began pulling back from the key oil port of Ras Lanuf as fighter jets targeted defences on the edge of town, throwing up palls of smoke amid fears that government forces were gearing for an attack.

7 Devastated Pietersen adds to Cricket World Cup injury woes

by Dave James, AFP

1 hr 53 mins ago

NEW DELHI (AFP) – England star Kevin Pietersen became the injury-cursed World Cup’s latest victim on Monday, his high-profile departure predictably dwarfing Canada’s low-key win over fellow no-hopers Kenya.

Pietersen will head home to undergo a hernia operation that he had been hoping to postpone until after the competition.

But after looking troubled during Sunday’s six-run win over his native South Africa in Chennai, where he made just two off three balls, the 30-year-old will go under the knife immediately.

8 Scores killed in south Sudan clashes

by Simon Martelli, AFP

Mon Mar 7, 12:36 pm ET

KHARTOUM (AFP) – Clashes between south Sudanese troops and two separate rebel militias have left at least 92 people dead, the army’s spokesman said on Monday, clouding the countdown to independence for the impoverished region.

Fighting on Monday morning between the army and a militia loyal to renegade southern general George Athor in troubled Jonglei state killed 14 rebels and seven soldiers, Philip Aguer told AFP.

He said the toll from clashes in neighbouring Upper Nile state on Sunday had risen to 72, including 65 rebels, whom he accused of being in the service of the Khartoum government.

9 Moody’s downgrade ‘completely unjustified’: Athens

by Will Vassilopoulos, AFP

Mon Mar 7, 10:39 am ET

ATHENS (AFP) – Bailed-out Greece reacted furiously to Moody’s decision to slash its credit ratings on Monday, only days before a crucial summit of eurozone leaders to discuss plans for a permanent debt rescue system.

“The rating downgrade announced by Moody’s today is completely unjustified as it does not reflect an objective and balanced assessment of the conditions Greece is presently facing,” the finance ministry said in a statement.

The finance ministry also blasted the rating agencies as a whole.

10 Hollywood steals the show in Rio’s Carnival parades

by Marc Burleigh, AFP

Mon Mar 7, 10:23 am ET

RIO DE JANEIRO (AFP) – A Carnival parade paying samba-fuelled hommage to Hollywood hits including “Avatar,” “Jaws” and “Raiders of the Lost Ark” roused cheers Monday in Rio de Janeiro as days of festivities reached their peak.

The colorful procession by the Unidos da Tijuca samba school wowed a crowd of 70,000 packed into Rio’s Sambodrome stadium from late Sunday, on the first night of the city’s spectacular annual parades.

It was one of six shows put on in an all-night climax to Rio’s Carnival partying, which began late Friday and ends Wednesday.

11 Japan PM rejects snap poll after FM quits

by Miwa Suzuki, AFP

Mon Mar 7, 2:47 am ET

TOKYO (AFP) – Japan’s centre-left premier on Monday vowed to fight on despite media charges that his government was “on the edge of a cliff” after the foreign minister resigned over a donations scandal.

Prime Minister Naoto Kan — Japan’s fifth leader in as many years, now battling low poll ratings and a split parliament — said he would not call snap elections as repeatedly demanded by the conservative opposition.

“Many prime ministers before me have bowed out after short periods of time,” said Kan, referring to the revolving-door leadership that is often cited as weakening Japan’s governance and global influence.

Reuters

12 A million Libyans need aid; UK, France seek no-fly zone

By Mohammed Abbas, Reuters

1 hr 22 mins ago

RAS LANUF, Libya (Reuters) – Britain and France said they were seeking U.N. authority for a no-fly zone over Libya, as Muammar Gaddafi’s warplanes counter-attacked against rebels and aid officials said a million people were in need.

Rebels swiftly rejected an olive branch offered by an associate of Gaddafi, and fighting escalated around a key oil port. The aging autocrat warned that if he fell thousands of refugees would “invade Europe.”

With civilians surrounded by forces loyal to Gaddafi in two western towns, Misrata and Zawiyah, fears grew of a rising humanitarian crisis if the fighting continued.

13 Obama treads carefully on Libya, rebuffs pressure

By Ross Colvin and Patricia Zengerle, Reuters

1 hr 41 mins ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The White House pushed back on Monday against pressure from some lawmakers for direct intervention in Libya, saying it first wanted to figure out what various military options could achieve.

“It would be premature to send a bunch of weapons to a post office box in eastern Libya,” White House spokesman Jay Carney said. “We need to not get ahead of ourselves in terms of the options we’re pursuing.”

The Obama administration faces sharp criticism, especially from Republican lawmakers and conservative commentators, for its cautious approach to the turmoil in Libya but has signaled it will not be rushed into hasty decisions that could suck the military into a new war and fuel anti-American sentiment.

14 U.S. could tap oil reserves as gasoline price surges

By Jackie Frank and Lewis Krauskopf, Reuters

Mon Mar 7, 8:26 am ET

WASHINGTON/SINGAPORE (Reuters) – The U.S. government reiterated that it could tap its strategic oil reserves in order to safeguard economic growth as surging gasoline prices increase pressure for action.

While longstanding U.S. policy is to release reserves only in the event of a significant and immediate supply shortage, some analysts say the Obama administration may feel compelled to try to tamp down prices that are being fueled both by outages in Libya and concern unrest could spread in the Middle East.

Reflecting market worries over unrest, crude futures prices were trading in Asia on Monday around their highest levels in more than two years.

15 U.S. firms stop Libyan oil trade due to sanctions

By Emma Farge and Dmitry Zhdannikov, Reuters

Mon Mar 7, 2:09 pm ET

LONDON (Reuters) – Major U.S. oil companies have halted trade with Libya and big banks have started to pull back from funding such deals because of U.S. sanctions, in moves that will further disrupt oil flows from the torn country.

Around half of Libya’s oil output, or over 1 percent of global supply, has already been choked off by lethal clashes between rebels and forces loyal to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi. Oil prices hit their highest levels since September 2008 on Monday.

Exxon Mobil and Morgan Stanley have stopped trading oil with Libya, trade sources said on Monday. ConocoPhillips also said it was not exporting oil from the country.

16 Italy tiptoes on Libya due to energy, trade, migrants

By Philip Pullella, Reuters

Mon Mar 7, 6:19 am ET

ROME (Reuters) – Italy, which did more than any other country to legitimize Libya and its mercurial leader, is going through a foreign policy nightmare as civil strife in its former colony threatens its energy supplies, international image and the stability of some of its blue chip companies.

“The stakes for our country are very high,” said Roberto Aliboni, vice-president of Italy’s Institute for International Affairs, who argued in a recent report that Italy should take a clear stand against Gaddafi and invest in the opposition.

But Rome is moving cautiously, realizing it has the most to lose among European nations as events unfold in the North African nation just 300 miles from Italy’s southernmost island.

17 Gaddafi forces advance east to rebel oil port

By Mohammed Abbas, Reuters

Mon Mar 7, 5:31 am ET

RAS LANUF (Reuters) – Forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi advanced on the rebel-held oil port of Ras Lanuf on Monday in a counter-attack that forced residents to flee and rebels to hide their weapons in the desert.

The Libyan army was moving east down the strategic Mediterranean coastal road from the recaptured town of Bin Jawad, heading toward Ras Lanuf which is about 60 km (40 miles) away and which has a major oil complex, witnesses told Reuters.

A Reuters correspondent had seen Gaddafi’s forces about 5 km (3 miles) east of Bin Jawad Sunday evening, suggesting the Libyan leader’s troops were making slow but steady progress.

18 Libyan rebels beat back attack on Misrata: residents

By Michael Georgy, Reuters

Sun Mar 6, 6:01 pm ET

TRIPOLI (Reuters) – Libyan rebels beat back the fiercest attack so far by Muammar Gaddafi’s forces on the town of Misrata, residents told Reuters on Sunday, and a doctor said at least 18 people were killed.

Government forces used tanks and artillery in what appeared to be their most concerted effort yet to retake the town, 200 km (125 miles) east of the capital Tripoli, but were pushed back by rebels fighting Gaddafi’s 41-year old rule.

“Today Misrata witnessed the toughest battle since the beginning of the revolution. Horrible attacks,” one resident, who did not want to give his name, told Reuters by phone.

19 Moody’s downgrade tips Greece closer to brink

By Angeliki Koutantou and William James, Reuters

Mon Mar 7, 11:22 am ET

ATHENS/LONDON (Reuters) – Moody’s slashed Greece’s credit rating by three notches on Monday due to an increased default risk, raising the specter that the distressed euro zone sovereign may have to restructure its debt, perhaps before 2013.

The move increased pressure on euro zone leaders to ease repayment terms on bailout loans to Athens, just as Germany and its allies seem to have turned their backs on more radical steps to help it reduce its debt through bond purchases or buy-backs.

Moody’s Investors Service downgraded Greek debt to B1 from Ba1 — lower than Egypt — and said it may cut further, drawing an indignant protest from the Greek Finance Ministry.

20 British prince pilloried over pedophile friend

By Michael Holden, Reuters

2 hrs 54 mins ago

LONDON (Reuters) – The royal family is supposed to burnish Britain’s image, but Prince Andrew has generated quite a different buzz by consorting with a convicted U.S. pedophile and having contacts with the Libyan leader’s son.

“Prince of Sleaze” ran a headline in Monday’s Daily Mirror over a story about the 50-year-old Duke of York, who is fourth in line to the throne and is Britain’s roving trade ambassador.

“Andrew: I won’t quit over my pervert pal,” the Sun added.

21 Gates says killing of Afghan boys a "setback"

By Missy Ryan, Reuters

Mon Mar 7, 11:57 am ET

KABUL (Reuters) – Defense Secretary Robert Gates described the mistaken killing of nine Afghan boys by NATO aircraft as a “setback” on Monday as the issue overshadowed a visit to Afghanistan to assess security progress.

Gates met Afghan President Hamid Karzai on an unannounced trip to Kabul and repeated Washington’s apology for the killing of the boys last week by NATO helicopters, which has increased strain on an already testy relationship with Afghan leaders.

“Not only is their loss a tragedy for their families, it is a setback for our relationship with the Afghan people,” Gates told a media conference with Karzai.

22 Top Democrat draws line in sand in budget fight

By Thomas Ferraro, Reuters

Sun Mar 6, 5:46 pm ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Assistant Senate Democratic leader Dick Durbin drew a line in the sand on Sunday in his party’s budget battle with Republicans, who are pushing deep spending cuts to trim the federal deficit.

Durbin, one of President Barack Obama’s top allies in Congress, said he opposed going beyond the $10.5 billion in domestic, non-defense discretionary spending cuts that Democrats have backed.

Republicans want $61 billion in spending reductions.

AP

23 Obama restarts Guantanamo trials

By LOLITA C. BALDOR and ERICA WERNER, Associated Press

1 hr 10 mins ago

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama reversed course Monday and ordered a resumption of military trials for terror suspects at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, making his once ironclad promise to close the isolated prison look even more distant.

Guantanamo has been a major political and national security headache for the president since he took office promising to close the prison within a year, a deadline that came and went without him ever setting a new one.

Obama made the change with clear reluctance, bowing to the reality that Congress’ vehement opposition to trying detainees on U.S. soil leaves them nowhere else to go. The president emphasized his preference for trials in federal civilian courts, and his administration blamed congressional meddling for closing off that avenue.

24 US, allies edge toward military options for Libya

By MATTHEW LEE and BRADLEY KLAPPER, Associated Press

1 hr 50 mins ago

WASHINGTON – The U.S. and its NATO allies edged closer Monday to formulating a military response to the escalating violence in Libya as the alliance boosted surveillance flights over the country and the Obama administration signaled it might be willing to help arm Moammar Gadhafi’s opponents. Europe, meanwhile, kick-started international efforts to impose a no-fly zone.

It still appeared unlikely that U.S. warplanes or missiles would soon deploy in Libya, which may be sliding toward civil war, but the ongoing violence increased pressure on Washington to do something or spell out its plan.

The violence “perpetrated by the government in Libya is unacceptable,” President Barack Obama declared as he authorized $15 million in new humanitarian aid to assist and evacuate people fleeing the fighting. And he warned those still loyal to Gadhafi that they will be held to account for a violent crackdown that continued Monday with warplanes launching multiple airstrikes on opposition fighters seeking to advance on Tripoli.

25 Against Libya’s rebels, Gadhafi controls the skies

By PAUL SCHEMM and RYAN LUCAS, Associated Press

2 hrs 38 mins ago

RAS LANOUF, Libya – Repeated airstrikes by Libyan warplanes on Monday illustrated the edge Moammar Gadhafi holds in his fight against rebel forces marching toward the capital: He controls the air. After pleading from the uprising’s leaders, Britain and France began drafting a U.N. resolution for a no-fly zone in Libya that could balance the scales.

President Barack Obama warned that the U.S. and its NATO allies are still considering military options to stop what he called “unacceptable” violence by Gadhafi’s regime. NATO decided to boost flights of AWACs surveillance planes over Libya from 10 to 24 hours a day, the U.S. Ambassador to NATO Ivo Daalder said.

“I want to send a very clear message to those who are around Colonel Gadhafi. It is their choice to make how they operate moving forward. And they will be held accountable for whatever violence continues to take place,” Obama said during remarks in the Oval Office Monday.

26 Gas prices are about more than just oil

By JONATHAN FAHEY, AP Energy Writer

1 hr 19 mins ago

When Jay Ricker, owner of the BP gas station off Interstate 70 in Plainfield, Ind., set the price of unleaded gasoline at $3.44 per gallon on Monday of last week, it was 4 cents higher than the Friday before.

That alone might have been irritating to drivers paying the highest gas prices in more than two years. It was even more so because it happened on a day when the price of crude oil, which is used to make gasoline, fell almost $1 a barrel.

“It’s up 20 cents one day, down 10 cents the next day,” says Oscar Elmore, a courier who was filling up his Ford Taurus at a RaceTrac service station in Dallas recently. “It sounds kinda fishy to me.”

27 Wis. gov. rebuffs Democrats’ request for meeting

By SCOTT BAUER, Associated Press

Mon Mar 7, 4:11 pm ET

MADISON, Wis. – Wisconsin Democrats who fled the state nearly three weeks ago asked Monday for a meeting with Gov. Scott Walker to talk about changes to his plan to eliminate most public workers’ union rights, a request the governor dismissed as “ridiculous.”

Walker said he and his administration have been in communication with at least a couple of the AWOL Senate Democrats about a deal that could bring them back, but the lawmaker who asked for the meeting, Senate Minority Leader Mark Miller, “is firmly standing in the way.”

That accusation led to a flurry of angry responses from Democrats who said Walker was misrepresenting the talks. The sometimes-angry exchange suggested that any resolution to the stalemate was farther away than ever.

28 NFL, players’ union leave mediator’s office

By HOWARD FENDRICH, AP Pro Football Writer

24 mins ago

WASHINGTON – The NFL and the players’ union have left the federal mediator’s office after a four-hour session.

Commissioner Roger Goodell, NFLPA executive director DeMaurice Smith and other members of the two negotiating teams resumed talks on a new labor deal Monday after taking a break over the weekend.

Mediator George Cohen also left his office shortly after 7 p.m.

29 Scientists skeptical of meteorite alien life claim

By SETH BORENSTEIN, AP Science Writer

Mon Mar 7, 1:23 pm ET

WASHINGTON – NASA and its top scientists are distancing themselves from a space agency researcher who concludes that he found alien bacterial life in meteorites that were collected many decades ago.

Richard Hoover of NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., claims that he found fossils that look like the remnants of bacteria in at least two meteorites. His research paper, published online Friday in the Journal of Cosmology, concludes these must have come from outer space.

But his claim has been roundly disputed by other scientists.

30 AP Exclusive: Abusive priests live unmonitored

By GILLIAN FLACCUS, Associated Press

51 mins ago

LOS ANGELES – The charges of child molestation came too long after the abuse to send Carl Sutphin, a Roman Catholic priest, to prison. Now he is spending his days in a doublewide mobile home, a short walk from day care centers and two elementary schools.

“I won’t say I deny it. I do not deny it, no,” Sutphin, 78, said in a frail voice as he leaned on his walker.

There are dozens of accused priests like him, from California to Maryland. To victims’ advocates, that is dangerous.

31 Doctors aim to save fertility of kids with cancer

By LAURAN NEERGAARD, AP Medical Writer

Mon Mar 7, 2:36 pm ET

WASHINGTON – The treatment beating back 9-year-old Dylan Hanlon’s cancer may also be destroying his chances of fathering his own children when he grows up.

Upset that doctors didn’t make that risk clear, his mother, Christine, tracked down an experiment that just might salvage Dylan’s future fertility. Between chemo sessions, the pair flew hundreds of miles from their Florida home to try it.

Many of the cancer treatments that can save patients’ lives also may cost their ability to have babies later in life. Young adults have options – bank some sperm, freeze embryos or eggs. Children diagnosed before puberty don’t.

32 Discovery leaves space station for the last time

By MARCIA DUNN, AP Aerospace Writer

Mon Mar 7, 10:13 am ET

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – Discovery, the world’s most traveled spaceship, left the International Space Station on Monday for the last time, getting a dramatic send-off by the dozen orbiting astronauts as well as “Star Trek’s” original Capt. Kirk.

Station skipper Scott Kelly rang his ship’s bell in true naval tradition, as the shuttle backed away on the final leg of its final journey.

“Discovery departing,” he called out.

33 Libya army transport deal frozen after US approval

By STEPHEN BRAUN, Associated Press

Mon Mar 7, 10:51 am ET

WASHINGTON – In the months before Libyans revolted and President Barack Obama told leader Moammar Gadhafi to go, the U.S. government was moving to do business with his regime on an increasing scale by quietly approving a $77 million dollar deal to deliver at least 50 refurbished armored troop carriers to the dictator’s military.

Congress balked, concerned the deal would improve Libyan army mobility and questioning the Obama administration’s support for the agreement, which would have benefited British defense company BAE. The congressional concerns effectively stalled the deal until the turmoil in the country scuttled the sale. Earlier last week, after all military exports to the Gadhafi regime were suspended, the State Department’s Directorate of Defense Trade Controls informed Capitol Hill that the deal had been returned without action – effectively off the table, according to U.S. officials who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe the deal’s sensitive details.

State Department spokesman Mark C. Toner said the proposed license was suspended along with the rest of “what limited defense trade we had with Libya.”

34 SD sheriff now oversees more bison than people

By JAMES MacPHERSON, Associated Press

Mon Mar 7, 8:06 am ET

MCLAUGHLIN, S.D. – Sheriff Keith Gall is known as the “singing sheriff” for his a cappella performances at weddings and funerals. But thanks to a judge, the gun-toting tenor now spends more time with a grunting, testy audience of some 6,000 bison that outnumber people in his South Dakota county.

“I’m known as everything related to buffalo now,” joked the 42-year-old Gall, who was elected sheriff two decades ago. “It’s all part of the job, but this is a first.”

His rural Corson County is home to most of a sprawling ranch owned by a Florida real estate tycoon whose herd was ordered into the sheriff’s care after more than a dozen bison were found dead. Many more were malnourished and others were stuck by vehicles when they escaped in search of food.

35 China challenges US predominance in Asia-Pacific

By MATTHEW PENNINGTON, Associated Press

Mon Mar 7, 6:16 am ET

WASHINGTON – When China launched threatening war games off Taiwan 15 years ago on the eve of an election on the self-governing island, the U.S. deployed two aircraft carriers, and China quickly backed down.

Things don’t seem so one-sided any more.

China’s military has been on a spending spree at a time that the debt-ridden U.S. government is looking to cut defense costs. On Friday, China announced a 12.7 percent hike for this year, the latest in a string of double-digit increases.

36 Carnival group hit by fire cheered in Rio parade

By JULIANA BARBASSA, Associated Press

Mon Mar 7, 6:15 am ET

RIO DE JANEIRO – Strutting in a rainbow of glittering colors, Rio’s samba groups opened two days of Carnival parades with a dazzling show that included a rousing welcome for one of the elite bands that lost most of their elaborate costumes and floats in a fire last month.

The Portela group made a dramatic entrance into the throbbing Sambadrome stadium late Sunday, its 300-strong percussion section abruptly quieting its thundering drums and crouching down in a moment of silence for its losses in the fire.

With silence descending over the crowd for a few seconds, the drummers leaped back up with a raucous beat as Portela’s thousands of members marched on to the cheers and applause of fans.

37 US negotiating security deal with Afghans

By ROBERT BURNS, AP National Security Writer

Mon Mar 7, 3:03 pm ET

KABUL, Afghanistan – The United States is beginning to decide what its responsibilities will be in Afghanistan after U.S. combat troops leave, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Monday, but he ruled out permanent military bases in the strategically important country.

President Hamid Karzai wants U.S. military support even as he heavily criticizes the current U.S.-led military campaign for being too quick on the trigger. Nine Afghan boys died in an accidental air strike last week, reopening a raw issue.

Gates said the U.S. is interested in keeping a military presence in this former al-Qaida haven beyond the planned end of combat in three years. At a news conference with Karzai, Gates said a team of U.S. officials would arrive here next week to begin negotiations over a new compact for U.S.-Afghan security relations after 2014, when all international combat forces are supposed to be gone. U.S. forces have been in Afghanistan since 2001, and President Barack Obama has repeatedly said the war is not open-ended.

38 White House promotes Muslim help against terrorism

By EILEEN SULLIVAN, Associated Press

Mon Mar 7, 1:16 pm ET

WASHINGTON – The White House is pushing a message of religious tolerance ahead of this week’s congressional hearing on Islamic radicalism, which has sparked protests on grounds it unfairly singles out Muslims as potential terrorists.

President Barack Obama sent his deputy national security adviser, Denis McDonough, on Sunday to a Washington-area mosque known for its cooperation with the FBI and its rejection of the al-Qaida brand of Islam.

“Being religious is never un-American. Being religious is quintessentially American,” McDonough said.

39 Grizzly’s threatened status appealed in Ore. court

By NIGEL DUARA, Associated Press

9 mins ago

PORTLAND, Ore. – Dueling attorneys for a conservation group and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service offered starkly different opinions Monday about the future of the grizzly bear population in and around Yellowstone National Park, if the bear is taken off the threatened species list.

Three Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals justices heard half-hour arguments and rebuttals from each side more than a year after the grizzlies were returned to the list by U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy.

The federal government is bullish on the bear’s prospects, and state wildlife agencies from Montana and Wyoming have argued in briefs filed to the appellate court that officials are confident the bears won’t go extinct if states are left to manage them.

40 Nevada GOP Sen. Ensign won’t seek re-election

By KEVIN FREKING and CRISTINA SILVA, Associated Press Writers

1 hr 6 mins ago

LAS VEGAS – Republican Sen. John Ensign of Nevada, damaged politically and facing a Senate ethics investigation over an extramarital affair, said Monday he won’t seek re-election next year.

His decision to retire could set off a free-for-all to fill the seat coveted by Democrats and become a key to what will be a significantly reconstituted U.S. Senate, where eight members have now said they won’t run again.

More than a dozen family members and supporters flanked Ensign during his brief announcement. His wife Darlene Ensign stood next to him, reassuringly patting his back at moments.

41 Inside trade trial offers new look at Wall Street

By LARRY NEUMEISTER, Associated Press

1 hr 24 mins ago

NEW YORK – The start of the insider trading trial of a one-time billionaire Tuesday is expected to offer a rare look at the seamier side of Wall Street as prosecutors play taped conversations to try to prove that the powerful hedge fund founder conspired to earn more than $50 million illegally.

U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara announced the October 2009 arrest of Raj Rajaratnam by saying it was the largest hedge fund insider trading case in history and marked the first extensive use of wiretaps in a white collar prosecution. Since then, charges have been brought against more than two dozen others – and 19 of them have pleaded guilty.

Evidence gathered during the investigation also has led to a separate probe of those who peddle inside information as the product of legitimate research. That investigation has resulted in nine arrests, with more defendants likely.

42 Union protests preface Ohio gov’s State of State

By JULIE CARR SMYTH and ANN SANNER, Associated Press

1 hr 28 mins ago

COLUMBUS, Ohio – Outcry over collective bargaining proposals in Ohio threatened to overshadow Republican Gov. John Kasich’s first State of the State speech as Democrats and union groups worked to mobilize thousands more protesters to the Statehouse.

The speech falls on Tuesday, the day a bill limiting negotiating rights for 350,000 police, firefighters, teachers and other public workers begins its trip through the Ohio House. The bill cleared the state Senate last week.

The American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees set the stage for Tuesday’s protests with a “State of the Worker” event Monday.

How much is that Sheepskin worth?

Krugman points out today that Education is no substitute for a Job and as someone who has programmed I’ll tell you flat out there is no repetitive task I can’t automate (well, once I install my compliers and linkers and blow the dust off my language skills).

Sort of off topic, I’m looking for a script that will cycle through a Soapblox database (they’re sequentially ordered) and save the page with contents, links, and comments to a hard drive so I can burn offline archive CDs and DVDs for the authors on our sites.

Yes, I could do it myself, but it’s mind numbing grundge work of the type suitable only for interns and computers.

Degrees and Dollars

By PAUL KRUGMAN, The New York Times

Published: March 6, 2011

(T)he idea that modern technology eliminates only menial jobs, that well-educated workers are clear winners, may dominate popular discussion, but it’s actually decades out of date.

The fact is that since 1990 or so the U.S. job market has been characterized not by a general rise in the demand for skill, but by “hollowing out”: both high-wage and low-wage employment have grown rapidly, but medium-wage jobs – the kinds of jobs we count on to support a strong middle class – have lagged behind. And the hole in the middle has been getting wider: many of the high-wage occupations that grew rapidly in the 1990s have seen much slower growth recently, even as growth in low-wage employment has accelerated.



(A)ny routine task – a category that includes many white-collar, nonmanual jobs – is in the firing line. Conversely, jobs that can’t be carried out by following explicit rules – a category that includes many kinds of manual labor, from truck drivers to janitors – will tend to grow even in the face of technological progress.

And here’s the thing: Most of the manual labor still being done in our economy seems to be of the kind that’s hard to automate. Notably, with production workers in manufacturing down to about 6 percent of U.S. employment, there aren’t many assembly-line jobs left to lose. Meanwhile, quite a lot of white-collar work currently carried out by well-educated, relatively well-paid workers may soon be computerized. Roombas are cute, but robot janitors are a long way off; computerized legal research and computer-aided medical diagnosis are already here.



(T)here are things education can’t do. In particular, the notion that putting more kids through college can restore the middle-class society we used to have is wishful thinking. It’s no longer true that having a college degree guarantees that you’ll get a good job, and it’s becoming less true with each passing decade.

So if we want a society of broadly shared prosperity, education isn’t the answer – we’ll have to go about building that society directly. We need to restore the bargaining power that labor has lost over the last 30 years, so that ordinary workers as well as superstars have the power to bargain for good wages. We need to guarantee the essentials, above all health care, to every citizen.

Punting the Pundits

“Punting the Pundits” is 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”

David Swanson: Manchurian Senators

People are doing journalism and the Washington Post is pissed. How to respond? Apparently the answer arrived at by Post editors is to just give up on any Americans who have been informing themselves and target those Americans who believe anything that super important people say. How else to explain an op-ed full of documented lies and published last Friday over the byline of two Democratic senators, Carl Levin and Jack Reed?

The headline was “The Surge Afghanistan Still Needs.” Surge is not code for food or peace or environmental restoration or a moment’s relief from the attentions of the world’s oil, gas, and power addicts. Surge, in ignorant-American-newspaper-readerspeak is a term denoting the comical pretense that a criminal and genocidal invasion and occupation can be redeemed by escalating it. The term was coined in reference to Iraq, that hell on earth where pro-democracy demonstrators are now being murdered by the government that 20 years of war and sanctions built, even as that government demands reparations payments for recent US destruction.

Laurence Lewis: Democrats Are Ceding the Entire Traditional Democratic Economic Ideology

On Thursday, we got this news:

   President Obama on Wednesday intervened in a partisan brawl that threatens to shut down the government, inviting congressional leaders of both parties to sit down with Vice President Biden and work out a compromise to fund federal programs through the end of the fiscal year.

The official statement called for a “bipartisan” approach. There seems to be a presumption that no one has been paying attention the past couple years, because the only people that still believe in bipartisanship are also likely the holdouts on Santa Claus and the Tooth Fairy. The way it actually works is that every time the word is mentioned, Democrats give ground on core principles while Republicans have to accept that they get only some, but not all, of what they want. The administration’s framing of its role also is interesting. Republican administrations tend to think of themselves as partisan, representing the core values of their party. This administration seems to think of itself as a mediator between partisans. Triangulation you can believe in.

E.J. Dionne Jr.: How Boehner is playing the Democrats

Richard Nixon espoused what he called “the madman theory.” It’s a negotiating approach that induces the other side to believe you are capable of dangerously irrational actions and leads it to back down to avoid the wreckage your rage might let loose.

House Republicans are pursuing their own madman theory in budget negotiations, with a clever twist: Speaker John Boehner is casting himself as the reasonable man fully prepared to reach a deal to avoid a government shutdown. But he also has to satisfy a band of “wild-eyed bomb-throwing freshmen,” as he characterized new House members in a Wall Street Journal interview last week by way of comparing them fondly to his younger self.

Thus are negotiators for President Obama and Senate Democrats forced to deal not only with Republican leaders in the room but also with a menacing specter outside its confines. As “responsible” public officials, Democrats are asked to make additional concessions just to keep the bomb-throwers at bay.

Melissa Harris-Perry: Huckabee wrong on single moms

Last week Mike Huckabee’s presidential ramp-up took a Quaylian detour when he denounced Oscar winner Natalie Portman for her out-of-wedlock pregnancy.  Suggesting that Portman and other unmarried Hollywood stars glamorize single motherhood, he claimed, “Most single moms are very poor, uneducated, can’t get a job, and if it weren’t for government assistance, their kids would be starving to death and never have health care.”

This is the kind of story I would typically ignore, but I agreed to talk with Lawrence O’Donnell about it on Friday night because Huckabee’s  recycled and inaccurate attack on single motherhood was personally irritating to me.

I know a bit about single parenting. Although my father was always a part of my life, my parents were not married and my mother was the primary caretaker and breadwinner.  She managed this as a white woman raising an interracial child in the South in the 1970s.  She rarely made a wage equal to her male counterparts and often had to navigate a difficult racial environment. It was not an easy task socially, financially, or emotionally. It was certainly not glamorous. I am sure my mom would have liked much more personal and financial support.  My mother worked extremely hard, was always present, and never left my sister or me feeling deprived. I didn’t even know how economically marginal we truly were until I got to college and saw what wealth looked like for the first time.

Robert Perry: Bush’s Interrogators Stressed Nudity

Consortiumnews.com Editor’s Note: The disclosure that Army Pvt. Bradley Manning was subjected to seven hours of forced nudity on Wednesday – amid new pressures aimed at getting him to identify others involved in the WikiLeaks case – recalled how the Bush administration used nudity and other abusive tactics to break down “war on terror” detainees. In 2004, the CIA told President George W. Bush’s lawyers how useful forced nudity was for instilling “learned helplessness” in prisoners, though the repeated emphasis on nudity took on a lewd and sadistic quality, as Robert Parry reported in this article from the archives:

The CIA shared with George W. Bush’s Justice Department the details of how an interrogation strategy – with an emphasis on forced nudity and physical abuse – could train prisoners in “learned helplessness” and demonstrate “the complete control of Americans.”

The 19-page document, entitled “Background Paper on CIA’s Combined Use of Interrogation Techniques” and dated Dec. 30, 2004, contains repeated references to keeping suspected al-Qaeda captives – called “high-value detainees” or HVDs – naked as part of the strategy for breaking down their resistance.

The first of several “specific conditioning interrogation techniques” lists “Nudity. The HVD’s clothes are taken and he remains nude until the interrogators provide clothes to him.” [Underline in original.]

Rhonda Garelick: High Fascism

AS I left a Paris cafe the other night, instead of the usual “Bonsoir, Madame,” the waiter called after me, “Happy Fashion Week!” as if we were all celebrating a national holiday.

Maybe we were. Fashion is more than business in France: it’s a mythology, a secular religion, a source of national pride, especially during Fashion Week, when the country recalls its history as the birthplace of haute couture.

In recent days, though, in response to the anti-Semitic diatribe by Christian Dior’s creative director, John Galliano, the French have been recalling a far more ominous chapter in their history.

The Misfortune of the Libyan People

Of all the uprisings happening in the world today, the Libyan People are going to be the most unfortunate.

We’re not talking about unfortunate in the sense of seeing a woman with an exceptionally large mouth hooked up with a guy with exceptionally small hands, “Woooow, now that’s unfortunate!” kind of way.



PhotobucketPhotobucketPhotobucket

We’re talking more like you’re Michael Jackson and instead of dying, you just dropped the soap in the Aryan Nation end of the prison shower after being convicted of child molestation unfortunate.

There is no way this is going to end well for them. Its not just going to leave them vaguely dissatisfied, its going to leave them scarred and royally screwed.

Now spank my ass and call me a bad-girl-America-hater; but generally any time the Military Industrial Complex backs a revolution? You know damned well it ain’t about human rights. You know it has nothing to do with empowering the people either. It has to do with something Nationalized from which OUR private sector wants to PROFIT. Any country that does not let the US/Euro Gangster-banksters run rough shod? They be terrorists.

PhotobucketSo this all has my tiny brain woefully perplexed. NATO isn’t calling for airstrikes in Egypt or Tunisia. They certainly are silent about the upcoming revolt in the Gangster-bankster friendly human-right clusterfuck called Saudi Arabia. Now those people make Gaddafi look like Mr. Rogers, albeit with a touch of RuPaul flair. No sweater vests for dictators. The man has a certain panache!  AND!!! We’ve asked the Saudi government to arm the people in Libya to revolt, while backing the Saudi crackdown on their own. The mind BOGGLES, dudes.

But about old Mo?

I just don’t know anymore.

Why of all the vicious mother fuckers on the planet are the PTB painting him as the next Great Satan. I mean, we’ve had a definite hard-on for him since he booted our “shores of tripoli…” singing bases right out of his country. Remember when old Ray-guns Ronnie bombed and killed Gaddafi’s infant daughter? That should have taught Mo right then and there not to funnel his country’s oil wealth into free health care and education.

********************

Now, lets say I established the Socialist Commonwealth of Diane under which I was elected first President and Goddess of all assets for all my people. I’d know damned well that the entire armed-to-the teeth world of Gangster-banksters would not only try and isolate me from any world trade, any unions with other nation not operating under their “protection” (read protection like the Mafia provides – “nice store, I’d hate to see something happen to it, you needa take out some ‘surance…”)

But that would be the LEAST of my problems. Offering the low-hanging fruit I allowed on my little Paradise Island untold riches, glory and fame to over-throw me, and let the “Investors” come in and “Grow” our country would be the more serious line of attack. Humans have a greedy streak a forbidden apple wide, and covet gene that runs longer than a Charlie Sheen bender.

So, you start to mistrust some of your own citizens, citizens you have taken care of; but those certain ones who have always made your spidey sense tingle when their oaths of love and loyalty ring about as dishonest as plaid-clad used car salesman. They wanna be rich, powerful, people to be “contended” with. Or they just want to have their own yacht to watch their pathetic neighbors drool over from their tiny fishing boats. You know the type. Corruptible.

So when CIA spooks come in speaking Diane-rastafarian (our official language) and start training and arming the rotten fruit? When they start writing op-eds lying about me and my good-hearted countrymen saying we are oppressing them by not letting them work for McDonalds?

To what extent would I crack down on foreign Gangster-bankster subversive interference?

Paradise exists exactly in a vacuum; a world-wide kabal vacuum of sucking greed that wishes to explode it from the outside and suck it dry.

********************

So, anyway, back to Mo.

How do I know what to believe about his “reign of terror” in his country and this FNSL which was born in the bowels of the Gangster-bankster in London, with the US & Britain giving them a golden shower of cold hard cash to overthrow the oil-rich Libya whose evil leader created an irrigation system massive enough to make the desert bloom, and destroy the market for importing genetically engineered sterile grains? Huh? What’s a goddess to think about that?

I do know the Western Gangster-mouth pieces have painted him “killer of his own people,” yet when asked? Libyans do NOT want NATO/US intervention. They say he is brutalizing this uprising, and want us to be SHOCKED! Shocked, I tell you. No matter that even if it were true? Whatever causalities incurred are nothing at all compared to what our Military wreaks exponentially more brutally on Afghanis and Iraqis every fucking day.

Keep in mind: War is profitable, whether you win or lose it to the Gangster-banksters.

But its doubly profitable when you can denationalize oil and create the more subtle invasion that follows the hard invasion called war: The invasion of the “Investors.”

We would have a hard time selling that intervention in Egypt or Tunisia, places more open to the Western press, and much harder to lie about. I have no idea whats really happening, or has happened in the past in Libya.

I don’t know what Libyans themselves really want. They have no economic crisis at present, hell they were importing labor their economy was so robust. They are fairly well educated. They have the highest rating for the Human Development Index for Africa ~ and the highest life expectancy on the continent. So are the protests real or CIA controlled?

All I know? Is if Gaddafi prevails, we will “save” them by killing them, and if Gaddafi fails? They go back to being the Gangster-bankster’s butt-puppets and goodbye healthcare, free education, and their economy.

Its either end up bombed into oblivion, or end up as fucked as US citizens.

Either choice?

Highly unfortunate for the People who have the misfortune of being born into a land our Kleptocracy covets.

Photobucket

On This Day in History March 7

This is your morning Open Thread. Pour your favorite beverage and review the past and comment on the future.

Find the past “On This Day in History” here.

March 7 is the 66th day of the year (67th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 299 days remaining until the end of the year.

On this day in 1976, a group of 600 civil rights marchers are forcefully broken up in Selma, Alabama. This day would be remembered in the Civil Rights Movement as “Bloody Sunday”

The Selma to Montgomery marches were three marches in 1965 that marked the political and emotional peak of the American civil rights movement. They grew out of the voting rights movement in Selma, Alabama, launched by local African-Americans who formed the Dallas County Voters League (DCVL). In 1963, the DCVL and organizers from the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) began voter-registration work. When white resistance to Black voter registration proved intractable, the DCVL requested the assistance of Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, who brought many prominent civil rights and civic leaders to support voting rights.

The first march took place on March 7, 1965 – “Bloody Sunday” – when 600 civil rights marchers were attacked by state and local police with billy clubs and tear gas. The second march took place on March 9. Only the third march, which began on March 21 and lasted five days, made it to Montgomery, 51 miles away.

The marchers averaged 10 miles a day along U.S. Route 80, known in Alabama as the “Jefferson Davis Highway”. Protected by 2,000 soldiers of the U.S. Army, 1,900 members of the Alabama National Guard under Federal command, and many FBI agents and Federal Marshals, they arrived in Montgomery on March 24, and at the Alabama Capitol building on March 25.

The route is memorialized as the Selma To Montgomery Voting Rights Trail, a U.S. National Historic Trail.

Selma essentially became the focus the right to vote marches because it was the seat of Dallas County, AL that although it has a black population of 57% with 15,000 blacks elegible to vote, there were only 130 registered. Efforts to register voters were blocked by state and local officials, the White Citizens’ Council, and the Ku Klux Klan, using a literacy test, economic pressure, and violence.

On July 2, 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 into law, which declared segregation illegal, yet Jim Crow remained in effect. When attempts to integrate Selma’s dining and entertainment venues were resumed, blacks who tried to attend the movie theater and eat at a hamburger stand were beaten and arrested.

On July 6, John Lewis led 50 blacks to the courthouse on registration day, but Sheriff Clark arrested them rather than allow them to apply to vote. On July 9, Judge James Hare issued an injunction forbidding any gathering of three or more people under the sponsorship of civil rights organizations or leaders. This injunction made it illegal to even talk to more than two people at a time about civil rights or voter registration in Selma, suppressing public civil rights activity there for the next six months.

Planning the First March

With civil rights activity blocked by Judge Hare’s injunction, the DCVL requested the assistance of King and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC). Three of SCLC’s main organizers – Director of Direct Action and Nonviolent Education James Bevel, Diane Nash, and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Orange James Orang, who had been working on Bevel’s Alabama Voting Rights Project since late 1963, a project which King and the executive board of SCLC had not joined. When SCLC officially accepted Amelia Boynton’s invitation to bring their organization to Selma, Bevel, Nash, Orange and others in SCLC began working in Selma in December 1964. They also worked in the surrounding counties along with the SNCC staff who had been active there since early 1963.

The Selma Voting Rights Movement officially started on January 2, 1965, when King addressed a mass meeting in Brown Chapel in defiance of the anti-meeting injunction.

Over the following weeks, SCLC and SNCC activists expanded voter registration drives and protests in Selma and the adjacent Black Belt counties. In addition to Selma, marches and other protests in support of voting rights were held in Perry, Wilcox, Marengo, Greene, and Hale counties.

On February 18, 1965, an Alabama State Trooper, corporal James Bonard Fowler, shot Jimmie Lee Jackson as he tried to protect his mother and grandfather in a café to which they had fled while being attacked by troopers during a nighttime civil rights demonstration in Marion, the county seat of Perry County. Jackson died eight days later, of an infection resulting from the gunshot wound, at Selma’s Good Samaritan Hospital.

In response, James Bevel called for a march from Selma to Montgomery.

Goals of the March

Bevel’s initial plan was to march to Montgomery to ask Governor George Wallace if he had anything to do with ordering the lights out and the state troopers to shoot during the march in which Jackson was killed. Bevel called the march in order to focus the anger and pain of the people of Selma, some of whom wanted to address Jackson’s death with violence, towards a nonviolent goal. The marchers also hoped to bring attention to the violations of their rights by marching to Montgomery. Dr. King agreed with Bevel’s plan, and asked for a march from Selma to Montgomery to ask Governor Wallace to protect black registrants.

Wallace denounced the march as a threat to public safety and declared he would take all measures necessary to prevent this from happening.

The First March: “Bloody Sunday”

On March 7, 1965, 525 to 600 civil rights marchers headed east out of Selma on U.S. Highway 80. The march was led by John Lewis of SNCC and the Reverend Hosea Williams of SCLC, followed by Bob Mants of SNCC and Albert Turner of SCLC. The protest went smoothly until the marchers crossed the Edmund Pettus Bridge and found a wall of state troopers waiting for them on the other side. Their commanding officer told the demonstrators to disband at once and go home. Williams tried to speak to the officer, but the man curtly informed him there was nothing to discuss. Seconds later, the troopers began shoving the demonstrators. Many were knocked to the ground and beaten with nightsticks. Another detachment of troopers fired tear gas. Mounted troopers charged the crowd on horseback.

Brutal televised images of the attack, which presented people with horrifying images of marchers left bloodied and severely injured, roused support for the U.S. civil rights movement. Amelia Boynton was beaten and gassed nearly to death; her photo appeared on the front page of newspapers and news magazines around the world Seventeen marchers were hospitalized, leading to the naming of the day “Bloody Sunday”.

 161 – Emperor Antoninus Pius dies and is succeeded by his adoptive sons Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus.

238 – Roman subjects in Africa revolt against Maximinus Thrax and elect Gordian I as emperor.

321 – Emperor Constantine I decrees that the dies Solis Invicti (sun-day) is the day of rest in the Empire.

1277 – Stephen Tempier, bishop of Paris, condemns 219 philosophical and theological theses.

1799 – Napoleon Bonaparte captures Jaffa in Palestine and his troops proceed to kill more than 2,000 Albanian captives.

1814 – Emperor Napoleon I of France wins the Battle of Craonne.

1827 – Brazil marines unsuccessfully attack the temporary naval base of Carmen de Patagones, Argentina.

1827 – Shrigley Abduction: Ellen Turner is abducted by Edward Gibbon Wakefield, a future politician in colonial New Zealand.

1850 – Senator Daniel Webster gives his “Seventh of March” speech endorsing the Compromise of 1850 in order to prevent a possible civil war.

1862 – American Civil War: Union forces defeat Confederate troops at Pea Ridge in northwestern Arkansas.

1876 – Alexander Graham Bell is granted a patent for an invention he calls the telephone.

1886 – The City of Labrea in Amazonas, Brazil was founded. Today, the town is the seat of the Territorial Prelature of Labrea.

1900 – The German liner SS Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse becomes the first ship to send wireless signals to shore.

1902 – Second Boer War: In the Battle of Tweebosch, a Boer commando led by Koos de la Rey inflicts the biggest defeat upon the British since the beginning of the war

1912 – Roald Amundsen announces that his expedition had reached the South Pole on December 14, 1911.

1914 – Prince William of Wied arrives in Albania to begin his reign.

1936 – World War II (Prelude to): In violation of the Locarno Pact and the Treaty of Versailles, Germany reoccupies the Rhineland.

1945 – World War II: American troops seize the Ludendorff Bridge over the Rhine River at Remagen.

1950 – Cold War: The Soviet Union issues a statement denying that Klaus Fuchs served as a Soviet spy.

1951 – Korean War: Operation Ripper – United Nations troops led by General Matthew Ridgeway begin an assault against Chinese forces.

1965 – Bloody Sunday: A group of 600 civil rights marchers are forcefully broken up in Selma, Alabama.

1968 – Vietnam War: The United States and South Vietnamese military begin Operation Truong Cong Dinh to root out Viet Cong forces from the area surrounding My Tho.

1971 – Sheikh Mujibur Rahman delivers his historic “This time the struggle is for our freedom” speech at Ramna Race Course, calling upon the Bengali people to prepare for the freedom struggle ahead.

1985 – The song “We Are the World” has its international release.

1986 – Challenger Disaster: Divers from the USS Preserver locate the crew cabin of Challenger on the ocean floor.

1989 – Iran and the United Kingdom break diplomatic relations after a row over Salman Rushdie and his controversial novel.

1994 – Copyright Law: The U.S. Supreme Court rules that parodies of an original work are generally covered by the doctrine of fair use.

2006 – The terrorist organisation Lashkar-e-Taiba coordinates a series of bombings in Varanasi, India.

2007 – The British House of Commons votes to make the upper chamber, the House of Lords, 100% elected.

2009 – The Real Irish Republican Army kills two British soldiers and two civilians, the first British military deaths in Northern Ireland since The Troubles.

2009 – The Kepler space observatory, designed to discover Earth-like planets orbiting other stars, is launched.

[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/March_7#Holidays_and_observances     * Christian Feast Day:

         o Perpetua and Felicitas

   * Commemoration of Thomas Aquinas, Doctor and Poet, 1274 CE (Anglicanism)

   * One of the days dedicated to Vejovis (Roman Empire)

   * http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T… Teacher’s Day] (Albania)

Six In The Morning

America’s secret plan to arm Libya’s rebels

Obama asks Saudis to airlift weapons into Benghazi

By Robert Fisk, Middle East Correspondent  Monday, 7 March 2011

Desperate to avoid US military involvement in Libya in the event of a prolonged struggle between the Gaddafi regime and its opponents, the Americans have asked Saudi Arabia if it can supply weapons to the rebels in Benghazi. The Saudi Kingdom, already facing a “day of rage” from its 10 per cent Shia Muslim community on Friday, with a ban on all demonstrations, has so far failed to respond to Washington’s highly classified request, although King Abdullah personally loathes the Libyan leader, who tried to assassinate him just over a year ago.

Washington’s request is in line with other US military co-operation with the Saudis. The royal family in Jeddah, which was deeply involved in the Contra scandal during the Reagan administration, gave immediate support to American efforts to arm guerrillas fighting the Soviet army in Afghanistan in 1980 and later – to America’s chagrin – also funded and armed the Taliban.

Japan’s foreign minister resigns over illegal donation

Seiji Maehara’s sudden resignation could not have come at a worse time for the prime minister as he struggles to push a series of bills through a deeply divided parliament

Justin McCurry in Osaka guardian.co.uk, Monday 7 March 2011

http://www.guardian.co.uk/worl… Japan’s foreign minister Seiji Maehara has resigned, following revelations that he had received an illegal donation from a foreign national, deepening the crisis facing Japan’s government.

Maehara had earlier admitted receiving a total of 250,000 yen since 2005 from a South Korean resident of Japan, but said he had been unaware of the source of the cash.

According to Japanese media, the chief cabinet secretary, Yukio Edano, will double up as foreign minister until a permanent replacement is named for Maehara, a strong supporter of security ties with the US who had been tipped as a possible successor to the prime minister, Naoto Kan.

Voting reform would give voice to extreme parties, says Clarke

The Irish Times – Monday, March 7, 2011

MARK HENNESSY, London Editor, in Cardiff

EXTREME POLITICAL parties such as the far-right British National Party will be given a voice in British politics if the referendum on voting reform is passed on May 5th, leading Conservative minister Kenneth Clarke has said.

The referendum on the introduction of the alternative vote, which would put an end to first-past-the-post, was agreed between the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats as part of the smaller party’s price to enter the coalition, although Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg once described it as “a miserable little compromise” compared with the party’s preference for proportional representation.

Aruna Shanbaug has to live, says Supreme Court



Agencies

New Delhi, March 07, 2011


The Supreme Court on Monday rejected a petition for the mercy killing of Aruna Shanbaug, who has been in a “persistent vegitative state” for the past 37 years after being sodomised by a hospital sweeper but  permitted passive euthanasia subject to a declaration by a high court to this effect. An apex court bench of justice Markandey Katju and justice

Gyan Sudha Misra delivered the ruling while rejecting a petition moved on Shanbaug’s behalf by her friend and social activist Pinki Virani

Justice Katju said that active euthanasia is illegal as there is no statutory provision to support it.

However, the court said: “Passive euthanasia is permissible under certain conditions with the approval of the high court.”

Mexican Church Takes a Closer Look at Donors



By DAMIEN CAVE Published: March 6, 2011

PACHUCA, Mexico – The large orange chapel here, with its towering cross, would be just another Roman Catholic church if not for a bronze plaque announcing that it was “donated by Heriberto Lazcano Lazcano” – better known as “the executioner,” commander of the ruthless crime syndicate called the Zetas.

The nameplate goes on to quote Psalm 143: “Lord, hear my prayer, answer my plea.” But Mexican Catholics are the ones struggling with how to respond.

Ever since the chapel’s financing spawned a government investigation four months ago, theRoman Catholic Church in Mexico has been trying to confront its historic ties to drug traffickers.

Rio celebrates ‘greatest party on earth’



Rio de Janeiro

March 7, 2011


Revelry took over Rio’s streets on Saturday as Carnival kicked into high gear, while extra police ensured the safety of those participating in the event billed as the Greatest Party on Earth.

A light rain did nothing to dampen the festive spirit, serving more as a refreshing cool-down for bodies worked into a sweat as they danced and gyrated in the numerous “blocos”, or street parties.

The monster of all the blocos, the Bloco Bola Preta, filled the centre of Rio with a motley crowd of up to two million people wearing all manner of garb – or in many cases, little at all.

The Spelunker-in-Chief is Caving Again

(10 am. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

Even before the ink was dry on the continuing resolution that will keep the US government open until March 18, President Obama was already caving to Republican demands:

The White House has released what amounts to an opening bid in budget negotiations for Fiscal Year 2011 with Republicans. They have offered an additional $6.5 billion in cuts below the baseline of the 2010 budget. This goes on top of the $4 billion in cuts that have already been signed into law….this briefing took place before the first meeting between the White House and Congress even began. So the compromises preceded the negotiation. And there are no compromises happening on the other side.

That was Friday. Then on Saturday in his weekly address to the country via You Tube, he not only confirmed this but stated he was willing to go further.

How much further is he willing to sell out the middle class, the poor and future generations? Well this weekend he sent our one of his “canaries” to test the “air”, Austin Goolsbee, who in appearance on Lawrence O’Donnell’s “Last Word” couldn’t answer a straight question about Social Security.

From Gaius Publius at AMERICAblog points out the worst of Goolsbee’s administration apologia:

The Goolsbee interview starts at 3:20; the Social Security discussion starts at 7:15. At 8:80, weasel words begin leaving Goolsbee’s mouth – and they just don’t stop

Kudos to O’Donnell (who’s a benefit hawk himself) for pressing this hard. Question: Are you open to small changes to Social Security benefits, changes that would not be called “slashing”?

Goolsbee: “We don’t have a specific plan” … we want an “open discussion” … the president won’t weaken Social Security “including especially ideas about privatization” … but he “will look at” things that “insure the solvency” of the program. Weasel. They still want at it.

And by “they” I mean Obama. The Bush tax cuts blow a hole, and Social Security benefits are the fix. Dems, Reps, doesn’t seem to matter.

Senate Majority Leader, Harry Reid (D-NV), to his credit, very clearly and concisely stated on Meat the Press in January that Social Security did not contribute to the deficit or the current budget problems:

DAVID GREGORY: Social Security– how does it have to change? (an assumption by Gregory, TMC) What they put on the agenda is raising the retirement age, maybe means testing benefits. Is it time for Social Security to fundamentally change if you’re gonna deal with the debt problem?

HARRY REID: One of the things that always troubles me is when we start talking about the debt, the first thing people do is run to Social Security. Social Security is a program that works. And it’s going to be– it’s fully funded for the next forty years. Stop picking on Social Security. There’re a lotta places–

DAVID GREGORY: Senator are you really saying —

HARRY REID: –where you can go to save money.

DAVID GREGORY:– the arithmetic on Social Security works?

HARRY REID: I’m saying the arithmetic in Social Security works. I have no doubt it does.

DAVID GREGORY: It’s not in crisis?

HARRY REID: The ne– no, it’s not in crisis. This is– this is– this is something that’s perpetuated by people who don’t like government. Social Security is fine. Are there things we can do to improve Social Security? Of course.

Why is Obama even bothering to say he’s willing to “negotiate” when we all know the real word is “cave”?  

DocuDharma Digest

Regular Features-

Featured Essays for March 6, 2011-

DocuDharma

Load more