Morning Shinbun Friday December 24




Friday’s Headlines:

Expect more extreme winters thanks to global warming, say scientists

USA

EPA sets schedule to limit pollution from power plants, oil refineries

Navy Considers Medal, 65 Years After a Heroic Act

Europe

Hungary backtracks on media law after censure

Nokia Looks to Recover the ‘Magic Dust’

Middle East

In Bethlehem tourism is reborn, but only for a few

Iran’s Ahmadinejad urges West to choose ‘path of cooperation’

Asia

North Korea threatens South with ‘holy war’

As drone strikes have increased, so have assassinations, Pakistanis say

Africa

UN hears of Côte d’Ivoire atrocities

Oil could bring peace to Sudan: NGO

Latin America

Dictator jailed in final judgment on Argentinian junta’s dirty war

U.S. OKs business with terror-supporting nations

Loopholes let companies get lucrative deals with Iran, Cuba, North Korea

By JO BECKER

NEW YORK – Despite sanctions and trade embargoes, over the past decade the United States government has granted special licenses allowing American companies to do billions of dollars in business with Iran and other countries blacklisted as state sponsors of terrorism, an examination by The New York Times has found.

At the behest of a host of companies – from Kraft Food and Pepsi to some of the nation’s largest banks – a little-known office of the Treasury Department has made nearly 10,000 exceptions to American sanctions rules, approving deals involving countries that have been cast into economic purgatory, beyond the reach of American business.

Expect more extreme winters thanks to global warming, say scientists



By Steve Connor, Science Editor Friday, 24 December 2010

Scientists have established a link between the cold, snowy winters in Britain and melting sea ice in the Arctic and have warned that long periods of freezing weather are likely to become more frequent in years to come.

An analysis of the ice-free regions of the Arctic Ocean has found that the higher temperatures there caused by global warming, which have melted the sea ice in the summer months, have paradoxically increased the chances of colder winters in Britain and the rest of northern Europe.

USA

EPA sets schedule to limit pollution from power plants, oil refineries

Final standards would be announced in 2012 for such facilities, which account for almost 40% of the nation’s greenhouse gas emissions. Republicans and energy industry officials object.  

By Neela Banerjee, Washington Bureau

Reporting from Washington – The Environmental Protection Agency announced a timetable Thursday to curtail greenhouse gas emissions from two major sources of the pollution scientists link to global warming: power plants and oil refineries.

The announcement was the latest step in an ambitious effort to begin taking action on climate change, and it is certain to draw fire from congressional Republicans and industry leaders who have promised to halt the agency’s efforts.

The new move toward far-reaching emissions rules comes as environmentalists had begun to worry that the Obama administration was easing its push in order to avoid confrontations with major industries in advance of the 2012 presidential campaign.

Navy Considers Medal, 65 Years After a Heroic Act





By SCOTT JAMES

Published: December 23, 2010


Carl E. Clark, 94, served in World War II to defend America, not to win glory.

“We just figured it was a war that had to be won,” said Mr. Clark, who lives in Menlo Park.

Now the veteran, a remarkably modest man with a commanding presence, unexpectedly finds himself under consideration to receive the nation’s highest military decoration, the Medal of Honor.

It is an effort, 65 years after the fact, to repair history. Mr. Clark is one of an estimated one million black World War II veterans whose accomplishments were routinely ignored by the military.

Europe

Hungary backtracks on media law after censure

The Irish Times – Friday, December 24, 2010

DANIEL McLAUGHLIN in Budapest  

HUNGARY’S CONSERVATIVE government says it will change a controversial new media law if necessary, after coming under strong domestic and international pressure from critics who say it will muzzle the press.

The new law gives a new media council power to levy large fines on any publication, website or broadcaster that it deems to have breached guidelines on fair reporting and decency.

The council solely consists of supporters of the ruling Fidesz party, the fines it imposes must be paid before any appeal is lodged and it will have the power to force reporters to reveal their sources in matters deemed to involve national security or public safety.

Nokia Looks to Recover the ‘Magic Dust’

Outsmarted by Apple  

By Michaela Schiessl

Stephen Elop is unavailable. The man they call “The General” hardly ever appears in public. His employees say he’s busy, which is undoubtedly true — busy saving Nokia.

For the last three months, the former Microsoft executive has been at the helm of the Finnish cell phone maker. And, during that period, the company has been inundated with bad news. Elop finally took action last week, when he fired 560 software developers, presumably for proven incompetence.

Nokia much-touted new flagship smartphone, the N8, was released onto the market in October after delays caused by software problems.

Middle East

In Bethlehem tourism is reborn, but only for a few  



By Catrina Stewart in Bethlehem Friday, 24 December 2010



Artists have made a tidy sum depicting an imaginary scene where a pregnant Mary and Joseph are puzzled by Israel’s separation wall blocking their entry into Bethlehem.

The tourism industry, devastated by the Second Intifada that erupted a decade ago and the erection of the wall around the town, is now experiencing something of a rebirth. Pilgrims, drawn to the traditional birthplace of Jesus, are flocking to the town in droves.

Iran’s Ahmadinejad urges West to choose ‘path of cooperation’

While the US says that Iran has a ‘clear choice’ to make on its controversial nuclear program, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad insisted Thursday that world powers can choose cooperation or confrontation.



By Scott Peterson, Staff writer

East Sussex, England

Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad advised Western nations Thursday to create a “win-win” scenario for nuclear talks next month by choosing a “path of cooperation over confrontation.”

But Mr. Ahmadinejad also delivered a number of broadsides against the West during a regional economic summit in Istanbul, Turkey, where the next round of nuclear talks between Iran and world powers are due by the end of January.

Co-opting the US tactic of casting the Islamic Republic as having a “clear choice” on its controversial nuclear program – to stop enriching uranium that might be used for weapons, or face unspecified “consequences” – Ahmadinejad said that world powers had “two choices.”

Asia

North Korea threatens South with ‘holy war’

The Irish Times – Friday, December 24, 2010

JONATHAN WATTS  

NORTH KOREA threatened yesterday to use nuclear weapons in a “holy war” against its neighbour after South Korean tanks, jets and artillery carried out one of the largest-ever live-fire exercises close to the border.

The exercises at Pocheon, just south of the Demilitarised Zone, were the third such show of force this week by South Korea amid the worst tensions since the 1950-53 war on the peninsula.

Multiple rocket-launchers, dozens of tanks and hundreds of troops joined the exercises which South Korean president Lee Myung-bak insisted were necessary for self-defence, after two deadly attacks this year.

As drone strikes have increased, so have assassinations, Pakistanis say  



By Karin Brulliard and Haq Nawaz Khan

Washington Post Foreign Service  

PESHAWAR, PAKISTAN – As drone-fired missiles drop with furious frequency in the tribal area of North Waziristan, so do the bodies.

As often as seven times a week, tribesmen there say, corpses appear in fields and on roadsides with dark warnings pinned to their tunics: All American spies will meet the same fate.

Espionage has long been viewed as an egregious offense in the lawless borderland, but residents say the current pace of assassinations is unprecedented. The escalation parallels a massive surge in CIA drone attacks on North Waziristan, home to a nest of insurgents that includes al-Qaeda and the Haqqani network, an Afghan militia considered the most lethal foe of U.S. troops in neighboring Afghanistan.

Africa

UN hears of Côte d’Ivoire atrocities



DAVE CLARK | ABIDJAN, CÔTE D’IVOIRE

The report to the UN Human Rights Council came as Ivorian strongman Laurent Gbagbo came under mounting pressure from world powers to step down.

UN staff have been able to confirm allegations of 173 killings and 90 cases of torture or ill treatment in Côte d’Ivoire in the past week, UN deputy human rights chief Kyung-wha Kang told ambassadors in Geneva.

“Unfortunately it has been impossible to investigate all the allegations of serious human rights violations, including reports of mass graves, due to restrictions on movement by UN personnel,” she added.  

Oil could bring peace to Sudan: NGO  

Sudan’s northerners have a pipeline but little petroleum; the southerners are swimming in oil but have no pipeline.  

By Sapa-AFP  

As north and south head for an expected break-up following a vote on independence for the south, oil could guarantee peace for the two new neighbours.

The January 9 referendum, which analysts expect will partition Africa’s largest country into a mostly Muslim north and a predominantly Christian and animist south, was a central part of a 2005 deal that ended a two-decade civil war between them.

Oil “can surely be a factor of peace in Sudan because both sides need each other — the north the oil, and the south the pipeline,” said Dana Wilkins, a campaigner at Global Witness, a British-based NGO.

Latin America

Dictator jailed in final judgment on Argentinian junta’s dirty war



By David Usborne Friday, 24 December 2010

The former military dictator of Argentina, Jorge Videla, who was the principal architect of the so-called “dirty war” during which as many as 30,000 civilians were “disappeared” to secret prisons, never to be seen again, has been found guilty of crimes against humanity and sentenced to 25 years in prison.

More than 20 other former military and police officials were also convicted and given harsh sentences alongside Videla, who, at 85 years old, will in all probability now die behind bars. They included his former army chief, retired General Luciano Benjamin Menendez.

Ignoring Asia A Blog

Dr. Doom: Nothing Has Changed

(10 am. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

Nouriel Roubini, chairman and co-founder of Roubini Global Economics and professor of economics at NYU’s Stern School of Business, appeared in a web only interview with Rachel Maddow. Roubini argues that efforts to restore the collapsing economy are too little too late and that the structure that caused the collapse has not been fixed.

‘It’s a problem when you have a society where you have more financial engineers than computer engineers.’

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

How Would You Know? Ask?

(10 am. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

With the repeal of DADT, wingers really start to come out of the closet.

“We don’t get ourselves dry-cleaned. We tend to take showers. …” And “Do you think that gyms should have separate showers for gay and straight people?”

An Airing of Grievances

Ah Festivus, that holiday for the rest of us.  Break out your Aluminium Poles.  Time for the airing of the grievances of which one constant on my list is the laziness and vapidity of TV programming.

I’m not kidding when I say I consider these pieces a public service.  They take a ton of research (an average Prime Time takes 90 minutes and has 40+ links).

And you have to keep your blog busy and readers distracted.

I’m trying new Tools which will hopefully keep things a little more organized but I’m not expecting much.

It’s a fairly normal Thursday night so we’ll be picking it up at 6 am for early risers and running 24 hours.

As always-

It’s arranged by time and marathons (4 half hour episodes, 3 hour episodes, double features, themes, and Instapeats) may be noted earlier than you expect, but they do also include the running time so you know when they end.

You may notice not a lot from the broadcast and other networks.  That’s because they’re going with regular programming (except for maybe Holiday Episodes) as far as I can tell.  The usual tools are available for broader choices-

Zap2it TV Listings, Yahoo TV Listings

This edition good until Noon.  Now 8 pm.  Now to 11 pm.  Done until dawn, but get to bed early so Santa can come.

6 am

  • ESPNSports Center marathon (some of it ‘live’) until 3 pm
  • MSNBCDead Intern until 8 am
  • Turner ClassicBeyond Tomorrow

7 am

  • ABC FamilyLife of Santa Claus
  • SpeedGearz marathon until 3 pm

7:30 am

8 am

8:30 am

9 am

9:30 am

10 am

10:30 am

11 am

Noon

1 pm

1:30 pm

2 pm

3 pm

3:30 pm

4 pm

5 pm

  • ABC FamilyMickey’s Christmas
  • LifetimeA Christmas Wedding
  • National GeographicBefore Columbus

5:30 pm

6 pm

6:30 pm

7 pm

7:30 pm

8 pm

8:30 pm

9 pm

9:30 pm

10 pm

10:30 pm

11 pm

11:30 pm

  • CBSA Christmas for Everyone (premier)
  • NBCChristmas Eve (premier)

Midnight

12:30 am

1 am

1:30 am

2 am

2:30 am

3 am

  • ESPN– College Throwball, Sheraton Hawaii Bowl: Hawaii vs. Tulsa
  • National GeographicThe Gospel of Judas

3:30 am

4 am

5 am

  • NBCChristmas Liturgical
  • National GeographicThe First Christians

Prime Time

Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas (TV), Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas (Film).  We can only hope this is the Last Word from Lawrence O’Donnell in 2010.

When I was your age, television was called books. And this is a special book. It was the book my father used to read to me when I was sick, and I used to read it to your father. And today I’m gonna read it to you.

Has it got any sports in it?

Are you kidding? Fencing, fighting, torture, revenge, giants, monsters, chases, escapes, true love, miracles…

Doesn’t sound too bad. I’ll try to stay awake.

Oh, well, thank you very much, very nice of you. Your vote of confidence is overwhelming.

Later-

Dave hosts Amanda Peet, Jay Thomas, and Darlene Love.  Jon and Stephen in repeats, 12/13 & 12/14.  Pre-empted next week.  Conan hosts Jason Segel and Reggie Watts.

This ain’t pool. This is for bangers. Straight pool is pool. This is like hand-ball, or cribbage, or something. Straight pool, you gotta be a real surgeon to get ’em, you know? It’s all finesse. Now, everything is nine-ball, ’cause it’s fast, good for T.V., good for a lot of break shots… Oh, well. What the hell. Checkers sells more than chess.

Zap2it TV Listings, Yahoo TV Listings

Evening Edition

Evening Edition is an Open Thread

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 UN demands halt to Ivory Coast killings

by Dave Clark, AFP

1 hr 14 mins ago

ABIDJAN (AFP) – The United Nations demanded a halt Thursday to the “atrocities” triggered by Ivory Coast’s political crisis that have left 173 dead, and accused Laurent Gbagbo’s troops of harassing its peacekeepers.

UN officials in Abidjan said Gbagbo’s security forces, shielded by civilian protesters and backed by unidentified masked gunmen, had prevented human rights monitors from probing reports of at least two new mass graves.

They said gangs of gunmen carry out murderous overnight raids on civilians living in the poorest districts of Abidjan, where local men throw up makeshift barricades and women beat cooking pots as a warning signal.

2 UN confirms 173 deaths in Ivory Coast violence

by Dave Clark, AFP

Thu Dec 23, 9:23 am ET

ABIDJAN (AFP) – UN rights officials said Thursday at least 173 people have been killed in Ivory Coast and they had received reports of mass graves, as the fragile West African state’s post-election crisis escalated.

Amid evidence that Liberian fighters may now be operating in Ivory Coast, world powers increased pressure on the country’s strongman Laurent Gbagbo to make way for Alassane Ouattara, his rival in last month’s polls.

The United States and Nigeria brought a draft resolution before the UN Human Rights Council, meeting in Geneva, seeking to bolster their position before an important West African regional summit on Friday.

3 Bomb blasts hit Swiss, Chilean embassies in Rome

by Dario Thuburn, AFP

31 mins ago

ROME (AFP) – Bomb blasts in the Chilean and Swiss embassies in Rome injured two staffers on Thursday in attacks that officials said may have been carried out by anarchists like the ones behind a similar plot in Greece.

Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said the attacks represented “a serious threat” against foreign embassies, while Chile’s ambassador Oscar Godoy Arcaya condemned “an absolutely irrational and brutal act of terrorism.”

Police said checks were under way in all the embassies in the Italian capital and the city’s mayor said emergency services were on the ready.

4 Irish government nationalises Allied Irish Banks

AFP

Thu Dec 23, 12:29 pm ET

DUBLIN (AFP) – Ireland effectively nationalised troubled lender Allied Irish Banks on Thursday, after Dublin’s High Court approved another state injection of 3.7 billion euros (4.9 billion dollars).

The court signed off on the new cash injection after Finance Minister Brian Lenihan lodged papers earlier in the day, AIB said in an official statement.

This will eventually lift the Irish government’s stake to 92.8 percent, from the current level of 18.6 percent, it added.

5 Bleak Christmas for Iraq’s Qaeda-hit Christians

by Nafa Abdul Jabbar, AFP

Thu Dec 23, 10:49 am ET

BAGHDAD (AFP) – Faced with renewed threats by Al-Qaeda and still mourning a church massacre, Christmas for Iraq’s Christian community will this year be a time of fear and cancelled celebrations rather than rejoicing.

The Council of Churches in Iraq has asked the faithful to limit Christmas celebrations “to a spiritual feast of participating in mass, for reasons of caution and sadness,” said Shlimun Warduni, the Chaldean bishop of Baghdad.

A pall of gloom has descended on Iraq’s badly-battered Christian community since gunmen on October 31 burst into Our Lady of Salvation church in Baghdad and began firing on worshippers.

6 Greek lawmakers approve 2011 austerity budget

by John Hadoulis, AFP

Thu Dec 23, 5:51 am ET

ATHENS (AFP) – Greek lawmakers Thursday approved an austerity budget, including 14 billion euros in spending cuts, as part of a tough economic overhaul imposed on Athens after it received an international bailout.

Following five days of debates, the budget was adopted by 156 votes to 142, with the ruling socialist Pasok party in favour and the rightist New Democracy, Communists, radical left and extreme right voting against.

The vote in the early hours came after thousands of unionists and Communists staged separate demonstrations to reject the finance bill.

7 China pledges support to eurozone countries

by Robert Saiget, AFP

Thu Dec 23, 4:27 am ET

BEIJING (AFP) – China on Thursday pledged its backing to eurozone countries amid an ongoing debt crisis and said Europe would be a “major market” for investment of Beijing’s massive foreign exchange reserves.

“We are ready to support the eurozone countries to overcome the financial crisis and realise economic recovery,” foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu told reporters at a regular briefing.

“In the future, the European Union will be one of the major markets for our forex investment.”

8 Ivory Coast violence has killed at least 173: U.N.

By Tim Cocks and Laura MacInnis, Reuters

2 hrs 52 mins ago

ABIDJAN/GENEVA (Reuters) – At least 173 people have been killed in Ivory Coast in recent days following last month’s disputed election, the U.N. said on Thursday, as international pressure grows on defiant leader Laurent Gbagbo to step down.

The United Nations also reported many people had been tortured and detained, while the United States said it feared the death toll since the November 28 election may be close to 200.

Led by African states, the U.N. Human Rights Council unanimously condemned the political violence and called for reconciliation to avoid renewed civil war.

9 Police check Rome embassies after blasts hurt two

By Daniele Mari, Reuters

25 mins ago

ROME (Reuters) – Italian police checked foreign embassies in Rome on Thursday after two people were wounded in separate explosions at the Swiss and Chilean missions that the government suggested could be the work of anarchist groups.

There was no claim of responsibility but the incidents bore similarities to an episode in Greece last month in which far-left militants sent parcel bombs to foreign governments and embassies in Athens.

“We think this is the right track,” Interior Minister Roberto Maroni said during the taping of a television talk show due to be broadcast later on Thursday.

10 Russian Duma could ratify START within days

By Lidia Kelly, Reuters

26 mins ago

MOSCOW (Reuters) – Russian lawmakers said they could approve a nuclear arms reduction pact that is crucial to the “reset” in ties with the United States as early as Friday if a successful U.S. Senate vote left the terms of the treaty intact.

Swift Russian ratification of the New START treaty would shore up efforts to set long-strained relations on a positive track, increasing trust between Cold War foes bristling with nuclear weapons and sending the world a signal of unity.

It would be a victory for Presidents Barack Obama and Dmitry Medvedev, who signed the treaty in April and have made improving ties between Moscow and Washington — increasing strained under their predecessors — major foreign policy goals.

11 China speeds plans to launch aircraft carrier: sources

By Benjamin Kang Lim, Reuters

Thu Dec 23, 4:08 am ET

BEIJING (Reuters) – China may be ready to launch its first aircraft carrier in 2011, Chinese military and political sources said on Thursday, a year ahead of U.S. military analysts’ expectations.

Analysts expect China to use its first operational aircraft carrier to ensure the security of its oil supply route through the Indian Ocean and near the disputed Spratly Islands, but full capability is still some years away.

“The period around July 1 next year to celebrate the (Chinese Communist) Party’s birthday is one window (for launch),” one source with ties to the leadership told Reuters, requesting anonymity because the carrier programme is one of China’s most closely guarded secrets.

12 Senate approves nuclear arms treaty with Russia

By David Alexander and Thomas Ferraro, Reuters

Wed Dec 22, 6:52 pm ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The Senate approved a landmark nuclear arms control treaty with Russia on Wednesday, giving President Barack Obama a major foreign policy victory in his drive to improve ties with Moscow and curb the spread of atomic weapons to other nations.

The Senate voted 71-26 in favor of the New START treaty between the former Cold War foes after a contentious debate with Republican leaders that threatened traditional bipartisanship on security affairs.

“This treaty will enhance our leadership to stop the spread of nuclear weapons and seek the peace of a world without them,” Obama told a news conference after the vote, praising the bipartisan nature of the final result.

13 Rome embassy blasts wound 2; anarchists suspected

By FRANCES D’EMILIO, Associated Press

24 mins ago

ROME – Mail bombs exploded in the hands of employees at the Swiss and Chilean embassies in Rome on Thursday, seriously wounding two people and triggering heightened security checks at diplomatic missions just as holiday deliveries deluge their mailrooms.

Italian investigators suspected the attacks were the work of anarchists, similar to the two-day wave of mail bombs that targeted several embassies in Athens last month – including those of Chile and Switzerland. One of last month’s booby-trapped packages, addressed to Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi, was intercepted in Italy.

Late Thursday night, the Italian news agency ANSA reported that a claim by anarchists was found in a small box near one of the wounded employees, and was being examined by anti-terrorism police squad.

14 Election board: Emanuel can run for Chicago mayor

By TAMMY WEBBER, Associated Press

25 mins ago

CHICAGO – Former White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel can run for Chicago mayor although he spent much of the last two years living in Washington while working for President Barack Obama, the Chicago Board of Election Commissioners ruled Thursday.

The board’s unanimous decision to put Emanuel’s name on the Feb. 22 ballot allowed the former White House chief of staff to clear a major hurdle to his ambitions to replace retiring Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley. But the commission ruling the Emanuel met the residency requirement didn’t resolve the matter completely, with one of the objectors’ lawyers saying he would immediately appeal the ruling and fight Emanuel’s candidacy all the way to the Illinois Supreme Court, if necessary.

More than two dozen people had challenged Emanuel’s candidacy, contending he didn’t meet a one-year residency requirement. But an election board hearing officer recommended early Thursday morning that Emanuel’s name be placed on the ballot, based on evidence showing that Emanuel had no intention of terminating his residency in Chicago, left the city only to work for Obama and often told friends he intended to live in Washington for no more than two years.

15 Venezuelan students protest university law

By FABIOLA SANCHEZ, Associated Press

26 mins ago

CARACAS, Venezuela – Police and soldiers fired water cannons and plastic bullets Thursday as thousands of students protested against a law passed by Venezuela’s congress that increases government powers over the country’s universities.

At least four people were injured, including a news photographer who was treated for a cut to the head after being hit with an object.

Dozens of police and National Guard troops in anti-riot gear blocked student protesters outside the Central University of Venezuela in Caracas, firing plastic bullets into the air and also at demonstrators.

16 Gov’t had ‘extreme interest’ in Steinbrenner probe

By FREDERIC J. FROMMER, Associated Press

28 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Newly released documents show Watergate Special Prosecutor Archibald Cox expressed “extreme interest” in a 1970s criminal investigation of Yankees owner George Steinbrenner for illegal campaign contributions.

Then-FBI Director Clarence M. Kelley echoed Cox’s concern in an Aug. 16, 1973 memo to the bureau’s Cleveland office, saying agents needed to make sure the probe received “the same, immediate and preferred handling” as other criminal cases then growing from the Watergate scandal.

The memos were included in a 400-page release Thursday of Steinbrenner’s FBI file. Most of the material focused on the Watergate-era federal probe that led to the shipbuilding magnate’s 1974 conviction for illegal contributions to disgraced President Richard M. Nixon. There are scant references to Steinbrenner’s later pardon by President Ronald Reagan and nothing on his turbulent career as the Yankees’ “Boss.”

17 Kremlin hails Senate’s approval of nuclear treaty

By VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV, Associated Press

1 min ago

MOSCOW – President Dmitry Medvedev on Thursday welcomed the U.S. Senate’s decision to ratify a landmark U.S.-Russian nuclear arms control treaty, but Russian legislators said they need to study a resolution until January accompanying the document before following suit.

Medvedev’s spokeswoman Natalya Timakova said that when he signed the New START treaty with President Barack Obama, they agreed that the ratification process should be conducted simultaneously.

She said that Medvedev voiced hope that both houses of Russian parliament would ratify the pact, but added that they would need some time to analyze the Senate’s conditions for its ratification before making their decision.

18 Gays ousted from military now hoping to return

By DAVID CRARY, AP National Writer

Thu Dec 23, 6:32 am ET

NEW YORK – Joseph Rocha reported being cruelly hazed by Navy colleagues. Katherine Miller resigned from West Point halfway through, weary of concealing her sexual orientation. David Hall was outed by a fellow Air Force cadet and booted from the career he loved.

The exits from military service were wrenching consequences of “don’t ask, don’t tell,” the policy prohibiting gay and lesbian personnel from being open about their sexuality. Yet Hall, Rocha and Miller savored military duty and now – with “don’t ask, don’t tell” heading toward oblivion – they want to return.

Rocha, 24, was in Washington on Wednesday, watching euphorically as President Barack Obama signed the bill clearing the way for repeal of the 17-year-old policy. Obama encouraged those who were discharged to re-enlist, and Rocha said he hopes to do just that by enrolling in the Marine Corps’ Officer Candidates School in Quantico, Va.

19 9/11 responders’ $4.2B aid package called miracle

By BETH FOUHY and ANDREW MIGA, Associated Press

Thu Dec 23, 10:01 am ET

NEW YORK – It was called a “Christmas miracle,” but a last-minute compromise by Congress will provide a smaller aid package than originally envisioned to help victims of the Sept. 11 attack on the World Trade Center and the responders sickened as they worked in its smoldering ruins.

The measure passed by Congress and sent to President Barack Obama on Wednesday would provide up to $4.2 billion in new aid to survivors and responders, $2 billion less than originally proposed. Obama said he is eager to sign it.

The package provides $1.5 billion to monitor the health of rescue and cleanup workers and treat illnesses related to ground zero. It also reopens a victims’ compensation fund with $2.7 billion.

20 Wilderness rules restored for public lands

By KRISTEN WYATT, Associated Press

38 mins ago

DENVER – The Obama administration plans to reverse a Bush-era policy and make millions of undeveloped acres of land once again eligible for federal wilderness protection, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar said Thursday.

The agency will replace the 2003 policy adopted under former Interior Secretary Gale Norton, Salazar said. That policy – derided by some as the “No More Wilderness” policy – stated that new areas could not be recommended for wilderness protection by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management and opened millions of acres in the Rocky Mountain region to potential commercial development.

That policy “frankly never should have happened and was wrong in the first place,” Salazar said Thursday.

21 War trauma treatment center assists Iraqi refugees

By JEFF KAROUB, Associated Press

1 hr 48 mins ago

STERLING HEIGHTS, Mich. – Ekhlas Gorgees kept her composure as she recounted the horrific traumas she and her family endured in Iraq.

She calmly recalled how her husband was severely wounded after a bomb exploded outside of his Baghdad plumbing shop, how she was threatened at gunpoint while walking home from church and how her family tried to escape north to the city of Mosul just before a bloody attack on civilians sent them fleeing back to the capital. It wasn’t until later when she talked about the difficulty of leaving her homeland that the tears came.

“We are the native people of Iraq – it’s hard for us to leave our native country,” she said through an interpreter. “The hope – even now – is to go back to my country.”

22 Colleges reconsider ROTC after ‘don’t ask’ repeal

By ERIC GORSKI, AP Education Writer

2 hrs 40 mins ago

Three days a week, Yale sophomore James Campbell rises at 5 a.m. for ROTC drills on a college campus that isn’t his own.

He would gladly do push-ups and run circles on Yale’s campus.

But even if that were an option, he wouldn’t have much company. Campbell is Yale’s only Army ROTC cadet.

23 Analysis: Senate nuke pact boosts US-Russia ties

By ANNE GEARAN, AP National Security Writer

Thu Dec 23, 12:53 pm ET

WASHINGTON – Despite skepticism from Republican opponents who worry that the U.S. is deliberately fraying its nuclear advantage, the Obama administration considers a new arms control pact with Russia a disarmament bargain.

The agreement is more important for the diplomatic bargain it seals with a restive Russia than the limits it places on weapons that neither side was likely to use – treaty or no treaty.

It will probably also help cinch Russian cooperation with an American plan to protect Europe with an anti-missile shield arrayed against Iran.

24 Lawman’s descendant objects to pardoning the Kid

By SUE MAJOR HOLMES, Associated Press

Wed Dec 22, 8:44 pm ET

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. – Descendants of Old West lawman Pat Garrett and New Mexico Territorial Gov. Lew Wallace are outraged that Gov. Bill Richardson is considering a pardon for Billy the Kid, saying Wallace never offered a pardon, and a petition seeking one is tainted because it comes from a lawyer with ties to Richardson.

Sheriff Pat Garrett’s grandson J.P. Garrett and Wallace’s great-grandson William Wallace submitted their objections after Richardson set up a website last week to take public comment on the possibility of a posthumous pardon for the Kid on a murder indictment. The governor plans to make a decision before his term ends Dec. 31.

“I don’t know where I’ll end up. I might not pardon him. But then I might,” he told The Associated Press on Wednesday.

400 cold dogs

(2 pm. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

There are over 400 dogs in the Prietenii Nostri shelter facing another very cold Romanian winter.

Photobucket

If you have just a few dollars, please consider sending to the shelter. Founder Gratiela Ristea is one of my heros and she gives everything she’s got to these dogs. $10 feeds one dog for a month.

here is the pay pal link

or bank transfer info:

Asociatia Pentru Protectia Animalelor “Prieteni Nostri”

Tudor Vladimirescu Street, Number 169

Slatina City, Romania

BANCA COMERCIALA ROMANA – Slatina

• COD BIC: RNCBROBU

• CONT IBAN RO29RNCB0200042737330002

• COD SWIFT:RNCBROBUOT0

cross posted at Daily Kos

PhotobucketMany of these dogs are already five years at the shelter after being rescued from certain death, either from the local killing pound or from the streets.

Year after year these poor souls become older and their needs increase.

A part of them have been lucky to find a home abroad thanks to our international adoption program but not all have this chance.

For them, we try to offer an easier winter. Sometimes, in the winter period the temperatures drop below 20 degrees.

We need your help! You can support us with useful stuff or donations for winter time like:

Photobucket•blankets, towels

•winter equipment for employees

•food (because of the cold weather, the dogs need much more food than usual, if they don’t have enough level of proteins, they can’t survive)

•vet bills and medicines (in this period are more health problems)

•hose, shovels and other tools for snow

•dog houses with thermal insulation (especially for the older dogs)

Thank you!

The association “Prietenii Nostri” was officially founded in 2005 to give an answer to the tragic emergency that affects stray dogs in Romania:  a strayness completely out of control and hundreds of thousands of dogs exterminated every year by the authorities in a climate of total indifference.

________________________________

on a personal note: i found my girl, bobby, from Prietenii Nostri. for 225 euros, she was flown from Romania to The Netherlands, had all her shots, and was neutered. and let me tell you, bobby is a lovely girl… and full of fun. We love her and she makes the house alive!

Gratiela Ristea, founder of the shelter, not only rescues, cares and advocates for dogs, but she works in her Romanian city with kids and dogs, bringing these two perfect creatures together. The kids learn to care for the dogs. They feed them, brush them, walk and play with them. And the dogs give the kids empathy and love.

In truth, Gratieal is an advocate for all creatures.

So please, if you have just a few dollars, please consider sending it her way. $10 feeds one dog for a year.

Prietenii Nostri

tudor vladimirescu street nr. 169

Slatina – Romania

cell: 0040728321729

tel/fax: 0040349401113


________________________________

again, here is the pay pal link

or bank transfer info:

ASOCIATIA PENTRU PROTECTIA ANIMALELOR “PRIETENII NOSTRI ”

TUDOR VLADIMIRESCU STREET, NUMBER 169, SLATINA CITY

BANCA COMERCIALA ROMANA – Slatina

…COD BIC: RNCBROBU

…CONT IBAN RO29RNCB0200042737330002

…COD SWIFT:RNCBROBUOT0

The Invisible Hand: Further Adventures in the Territories of Hope

(2 pm. – promoted by ek hornbeck)


Who wouldn’t agree that our society is capitalistic, based on competition and selfishness? As it happens, however, huge areas of our lives are also based on gift economies, barter, mutual aid, and giving without hope of return (principles that have little or nothing to do with competition, selfishness, or scarcity economics). Think of the relations between friends, between family members, the activities of volunteers or those who have chosen their vocation on principle rather than for profit.

Think of the acts of those — from daycare worker to nursing home aide or the editor of TomDispatch.com — who do more, and do it more passionately, than they are paid to do; think of the armies of the unpaid who are at “work” counterbalancing and cleaning up after the invisible hand and making every effort to loosen its grip on our collective throat. Such acts represent the relations of the great majority of us some of the time and a minority of us all the time. They are, as the two feminist economists who published together as J. K. Gibson-Graham noted, the nine-tenths of the economic iceberg that is below the waterline.

Capitalism is only kept going by this army of anti-capitalists, who constantly exert their powers to clean up after it, and at least partially compensate for its destructiveness. Behind the system we all know, in other words, is a shadow system of kindness, the other invisible hand. Much of its work now lies in simply undoing the depredations of the official system. Its achievements are often hard to see or grasp.  How can you add up the foreclosures and evictions that don’t happen, the forests that aren’t leveled, the species that don’t go extinct, the discriminations that don’t occur?

The official economic arrangements and the laws that enforce them ensure that hungry and homeless people will be plentiful amid plenty.  The shadow system provides soup kitchens, food pantries, and giveaways, takes in the unemployed, evicted, and foreclosed upon, defends the indigent, tutors the poorly schooled, comforts the neglected, provides loans, gifts, donations, and a thousand other forms of practical solidarity, as well as emotional support. In the meantime, others seek to reform or transform the system from the inside and out, and in this way, inch by inch, inroads have been made on many fronts over the past half century.

The terrible things done, often in our name and thanks in part to the complicity of our silence or ignorance, matter. They are what wells up daily in the news and attracts our attention.  In estimating the true make-up of the world, however, gauging the depth and breadth of this other force is no less important. What actually sustains life is far closer to home and more essential, even if deeper in the shadows, than market forces and much more interesting than selfishness.

Most of the real work on this planet is not done for profit: it’s done at home, for each other, for affection, out of idealism, and it starts with the heroic effort to sustain each helpless human being for all those years before fending for yourself becomes feasible.  Years ago, when my friends started having babies I finally began to grasp just what kind of labor goes into sustaining one baby from birth just to toddlerhood.

If you do the math, with nearly seven billion of us on Earth right now, that means seven billion years of near-constant tending only to get children upright and walking, a labor of love that adds up to more than the age of this planet. That’s not a small force, even if it is only a force of maintenance. Still, the same fierce affection and determination pushes back everywhere at the forces of destruction.

[snip]

We tend to think revolution has to mean a big in-the-streets, winner-take-all battle that culminates with regime change, but in the past half century it has far more often involved a trillion tiny acts of resistance that sometimes cumulatively change a society so much that the laws have no choice but to follow after. Certainly, American society has changed profoundly over the past half century for those among us who are not male, or straight, or white, or Christian, becoming far less discriminatory and exclusionary.

Radicals often speak as though we live in a bleak landscape in which the good has yet to be born, the revolution yet to begin. As Constantino points out, both of them are here, right now, and they always have been.  They are represented in countless acts of solidarity and resistance, and sometimes they even triumph.  When they don’t — and that’s often enough — they still do a great deal to counterbalance the official organization of our country and economy. That organization ensures oil spills, while the revolutionaries, if you want to call them that, head for the birds and the beaches, and maybe, while they’re at it, change the official order a little, too.

Go read it all (you’ll be glad you did):

Iceberg Economies and Shadow Selves

Further Adventures in the Territories of Hope


By Rebecca Solnit

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”.

Robert Reich: Why Obama Wins on Foreign Policy and Gays But Loses on Economics and Taxes

Two important victories for President Obama this week — the New Start anti-ballistic missile treaty with Russia to reduce weapons and restart inspections, and the end of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell after a 17-year ban on gays in the military.

Why have Senate Republicans been willing to break ranks on these two, while not a single Republican went along with Obama’s plan to extend the Bush tax cuts only on the first $250,000 of income?

A hint of an answer can be found in another Senate defeat for Obama over the last few weeks that got almost no attention in the media but was a big one: Republicans blocked consideration of the House-passed DISCLOSE Act, which would have required groups that spend money on outside political advertising to disclose the major sources of their funding.

The answer is this. When it comes to protecting the fortunes of America’s rich (mostly top corporate executives and Wall Street) and maintaining their stranglehold on the political process, Senate Republicans, along with some Senate Democrats, don’t budge.

Katrina vanden Heuvel: The Costs of War

“We are winning” in Afghanistan, says Gen. David H. Petraeus. President Obama declares that the December military review shows we are “on track.” No doubt the president and the general are right: We will keep “making progress” for as many months or years as we choose to fight what is now America’s longest war – until we finally pull out, in defeat or in political exhaustion, wondering what we have accomplished for all the blood and treasure spent.

The president’s review only confirmed what informed observers already know. U.S. troops can win nearly any firefight. But ultimately we are no more secure, and Afghanistan is no closer to becoming a stable and developing country. No matter how light or agile their “footprint,” U.S. and allied occupying forces end up generating as many enemies as they kill, not only in Afghanistan but in other Muslim lands. No matter how much help we give to the Afghan people, inevitably it is seen as being on behalf of a government that is more a kleptocracy than a democracy.

New York Times Editorial: A Matter of Life or Death

St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center in Phoenix announced on Tuesday that it will continue to provide life-saving abortion care to patients even though it means losing its affiliation with the local Roman Catholic Diocese.

This commendable decision by St. Joseph’s and the hospital network that oversees it, Catholic Healthcare West, upholds important legal and moral principles. It also underscores the need to ensure that religiously affiliated hospitals comply with their legal duty to provide emergency reproductive care. . . .

This is no small matter. Catholic hospitals account for about 15 percent of the nation’s hospital beds and are the only hospital facilities in many communities. Months ago, the American Civil Liberties Union asked the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services to investigate reported instances where religious doctrine prevailed over the need for emergency reproductive care, and to issue a formal clarification that denying such treatment violates federal law.

Sen. Al Franken: The Internet as We Know it Is Still at Risk

In today’s net neutrality action by the Federal Communications Commission there’s good news and bad news. The good news is that, thanks to Commissioners Copps and Clyburn — not to mention a nationwide network of net neutrality activists — the proposal approved today is better than the original circulated by FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski. For instance, the FCC has now stated that it does not condone discriminatory behavior by wireless companies like Verizon and AT&T — an important piece that was missing from the first draft.

The bad news is that, while it’s no longer worse than nothing, the rule approved today is not nearly strong enough to protect consumers or preserve the free and open Internet. And with so much at stake, I cannot support it.

I’m still very concerned that it includes almost nothing to protect net neutrality for mobile broadband service — often the only choice for broadband if you live in rural or otherwise underserved areas. And I’m particularly disappointed that the FCC isn’t specifically banning paid prioritization — the creation of an Internet “fast lane” for corporations that can afford to pay for it.

E.J. Dionne, Jr.: The Pride of ‘Obama’s Orphans’

At the beginning of 2009, the choice before Democrats who controlled the 111th Congress was whether they would enact historic legislation, even at the risk of their majority, or whether they would play it safe.

They gave the safe option a pass, with two results: This will go down as the most productive Congress since the 89th, which was even more Democratic because of Lyndon Johnson’s 1964 landslide. And 52 Democratic House incumbents, most elected in 2006 or 2008, lost their seats.

The departing Democrats are, as one in their ranks put it, “Obama’s Orphans.” So many of them cast vote after vote for the president’s program. They were then left at the side of the road while history moved by.

During the recent campaign, these loyalists were accused of being “out of touch,” and they certainly were out of sync with the prevailing mood of those who chose to vote this year. But this accusation begs an important question: To whom did these members owe their real loyalty?

Aura Bogado: Undocumented Students Give Congress an F

Jennifer was three days away from graduating from Yale when I met her for lunch in New Haven, Conn., last May. Like most in her class, she was excited to have her family in town for the event and was busy packing and preparing to say goodbye to the small city she had called home for the past four years. Unlike most of the graduating seniors, however, Jennifer was unsure about her future. She would soon have a piece of paper called a Yale degree, but she was missing a piece of paper that would grant her citizenship. Jennifer and nearly 2 million other young people live lives of legal uncertainty. . . . .

For now, the Dreamers have a lot to be proud of. Like Jennifer, they continue to graduate and contribute to their society any way they can. During a time when states increasingly criminalize brown people, they managed to get support for a pro-immigrant bill in the House. They also set a new model of dignity for being “undocumented and unafraid,” celebrating their marginalized status as a core from which to build a vibrant new movement. This grass-roots group of students has earned the respect of legislators, educators, media pundits and others. Perhaps Washington insiders should listen.

Larry Gross: ‘Don’t Ask’: Not Quite Fa La La Just Yet

According to the mainstream media and the Obama administration, it would appear that all us gay folks should don our gay apparel and go caroling from 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. to the Capitol, thanking our elected representatives for finally giving us the right to kill and be killed without simultaneously hiding in the closet. Progress, no doubt, in the sense that any denial of our civil rights is a denial of our basic right to full citizenship-but not a cause for unalloyed celebration.

Consider that President Obama campaigned on a menu of promises to lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender folks, and I very much doubt that most of us would have put repealing “don’t ask, don’t tell” at the top of that list. Early on Congress added sexual orientation to existing federal hate crimes legislation, which was one item on the promised agenda-although another that evokes ambivalence, given the troubling civil liberties aspects of hate crime laws. Here, too, as with the military, we seem confined to saying “we’re not thrilled with the institution, but if it exists we shouldn’t be excluded.” I think it is fair to say that two other issues ranked higher on the LGBT agenda than either hate crimes or DADT: enacting the Employment Non-discrimination Act [ENDA] in its transgender-inclusive form, and repealing the Defense of Marriage Act [DOMA].

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