The Week In Review 11/28 – 12/4

297 Stories served.  42 per day.

This is actually the hardest diary to execute, and yet perhaps the most valuable because it lets you track story trends over time.  It should be a Sunday morning feature.

Economy- 55

Sunday 11/28 4

Monday 11/29 5

Tuesday 11/30 12

Wednesday 12/1 7

Thursday 12/2 7

Friday 12/3 12

Saturday 12/4 8

Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Iran- 50

Sunday 11/28 5

Monday 11/29 10

Tuesday 11/30 5

Wednesday 12/1 5

Thursday 12/2 8

Friday 12/3 9

Saturday 12/4 8

International- 30

Sunday 11/28 5

Monday 11/29 5

Tuesday 11/30 6

Wednesday 12/1 3

Thursday 12/2 4

Friday 12/3 2

Saturday 12/4 5

Haitian Disaster- 8

Sunday 11/28 4

Monday 11/29 2

Tuesday 11/30 2

National- 84

Sunday 11/28 8

Monday 11/29 10

Tuesday 11/30 16

Wednesday 12/1 17

Thursday 12/2 13

Friday 12/3 14

Saturday 12/4 6

Gulf Oil Blowout Disaster- 6

Wednesday 12/1 3

Thursday 12/2 2

Friday 12/3 1

Science- 40

Sunday 11/28 1

Monday 11/29 7

Tuesday 11/30 6

Wednesday 12/1 6

Thursday 12/2 6

Friday 12/3 8

Saturday 12/4 6

Sports- 23

Sunday 11/28 1

Monday 11/29 4

Tuesday 11/30 2

Wednesday 12/1 5

Thursday 12/2 6

Friday 12/3 4

Saturday 12/4 1

Arts/Fashion- 1

Monday 11/29 1

2 Bloggers, an Economist and a Comedian

(4 pm. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

There were these two Bloggers, an Economist and a Dead Comedian who met in a virtual bar to discuss the economy and Social Security. The conversation turned to why President Obama is trying to do what George W. Bush failed to do, cut the only safety net many Americans have, Social Security. The President’s Cat Food Commission failed to get the 14 votes needed to pass the resolution that Congress would have been obligated to vote on. Now there are those on both sides of the aisle that want to bring to a vote anyway. Why do these people and the President hate 98% of Americans?

What the first Blogger said:

Well naturally the commission failed to get the required 14 votes and the press is spinning it as a new majority baseline for future compromise. But we knew this.

What is far more disturbing is Dick Durbin voting for it on the basis of wanting it to “move forward.” He is seen as a proxy vote on this for the president.

If they pursue this Social Security/Austerity business I think we’ll have a one term presidency (even, Gawd help us, if the Queen of the Arctic gets the nomination.) And I’m not sure that the Democratic Party won’t be permanently shattered.

I know that sounds hyperbolic, but it’s vitally, vitally important that the president understand that if he goes after Social Security, the Republicans will turn the argument on him just as they did with “death panels” and “pulling the plug on Grandma” and end up solidifying the senior vote for the foreseeable future and further alienate the Party from the liberal base. I know it makes no sense that Republicans would be able to cast themselves as the protectors of the elderly, but in case you haven’t been paying attention lately, politics doesn’t operate in a linear, rational fashion at the moment. After all, the Republicans just won an election almost entirely on the basis of saving Medicare.

The Economist added his two cents agreeing with the first Blogger that “a fair number of “centrist” Democrats – probably including the Incredible Shrinking President – seem willing, even eager, to join up with Republicans in cutting Social Security benefits and raising the retirement age.”:

The question you have to ask is, why are Democrats such suckers on this issue?

The proximate cause is that cutting Social Security is one of those things you’re for if you’re a Very Serious Person. Way back, I wrote that inside the Beltway calling for Social Security cuts is viewed as a “badge of seriousness”, which has nothing to do with the program’s real importance or lack thereof to the budget picture; that column elicited a more or less hysterical reaction, which sort of proved the point. (Looking back at the column, I was surprised to see that it was about the ISP himself; tales of a debacle foretold.)

But why Social Security? There was a telling moment in 2004, during one of the presidential campaign debates. Tim Russert, the moderator, asked eight or nine questions about Social Security, trying to put the candidates on the spot, while asking not once about Medicare, which serious people – as opposed to Serious People – know is the real heart of the story. Why the focus on Social Security?

The answer, I suspect, has to do with class. . .

So going after Social Security is a way to seem tough and serious – but entirely at the expense of people you don’t know.

From the past, the Dead Comedian weighed in to remind his bar stool companions that this is what the “owners of this country” have wanted all along:

The second Blogger summed it up:

The political analysis is equally simple, but it uses power as the dynamic – If you’re in the predator group, you get to eat the prey. It’s just a matter of feeding; no ill will intended.

(“The Incredible Shrinking President”? Well, that one’s gonna stick.)

On This Day in History: December 5

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.

December 5 is the 339th day of the year (340th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 26 days remaining until the end of the year.

On this day in 1933, The 21st Amendment to the U.S. Constitution is ratified, repealing the 18th Amendment and bringing an end to the era of national prohibition of alcohol in America. At 5:32 p.m. EST, Utah became the 36th state to ratify the amendment, achieving the requisite three-fourths majority of states’ approval. Pennsylvania and Ohio had ratified it earlier in the day.

The movement for the prohibition of alcohol began in the early 19th century, when Americans concerned about the adverse effects of drinking began forming temperance societies. By the late 19th century, these groups had become a powerful political force, campaigning on the state level and calling for national liquor abstinence. Several states outlawed the manufacture or sale of alcohol within their own borders. In December 1917, the 18th Amendment, prohibiting the “manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors for beverage purposes,” was passed by Congress and sent to the states for ratification. On January 29, 1919, the 18th Amendment achieved the necessary three-fourths majority of state ratification. Prohibition essentially began in June of that year, but the amendment did not officially take effect until January 29, 1920.

The proponents of Prohibition had believed that banning alcoholic beverages would reduce or even eliminate many social problems, particularly drunkenness, crime, mental illness, and poverty, and would eventually lead to reductions in taxes. However, during Prohibition, people continued to produce and drink alcohol, and bootlegging helped foster a massive industry completely under the control of organized crime. Prohibitionists argued that Prohibition would be more effective if enforcement were increased. However, increased efforts to enforce Prohibition simply resulted in the government spending more money, rather than less. Journalist H.L. Mencken asserted in 1925 that respect for law diminished rather than increased during Prohibition, and drunkenness, crime, insanity, and resentment towards the federal government had all increased.

During this period, support for Prohibition diminished among voters and politicians. John D. Rockefeller Jr., a lifelong nondrinker who had contributed much money to the Prohibitionist Anti-Saloon League, eventually announced his support for repeal because of the widespread problems he believed Prohibition had caused. Influential leaders, such as the du Pont brothers, led the Association Against the Prohibition Amendment, whose name clearly asserted its intentions.

Women as a bloc of voters and activists became pivotal in the effort to repeal, as many concluded that the effects of Prohibition were morally corrupting families, women, and children. (By then, women had become even more politically powerful due to ratification of the Constitutional amendment for women’s suffrage.) Activist Pauline Sabin argued that repeal would protect families from the corruption, violent crime, and underground drinking that resulted from Prohibition. In 1929 Sabin founded the Women’s Organization for National Prohibition Reform (WONPR), which came to be partly composed of and supported by former Prohibitionists; its membership was estimated at 1.5 million by 1931.

The number of repeal organizations and demand for repeal both increased. In 1932, the Democratic Party’s platform included a plank for the repeal of Prohibition, and Democrat Franklin Roosevelt ran for President of the United States promising repeal of federal laws of Prohibition.

 63 BC – Cicero reads the last of his Catiline Orations.

663 – Fourth Council of Toledo takes place.

771 – Charlemagne becomes the sole King of the Franks after the death of his brother Carloman.

1082 – Ramon Berenguer II, Count of Barcelona is assassinated.

1408 – Emir Edigu of Golden Horde reaches Moscow.

1484 – Pope Innocent VIII issues the Summis desiderantes, a papal bull that deputizes Heinrich Kramer and James Sprenger as inquisitors to root out alleged witchcraft in Germany and leads to one of the most oppressive witch hunts in European history.

1492 – Christopher Columbus becomes the first European to set foot on the island of Hispaniola, now Haiti and the Dominican Republic.

1496 – King Manuel I of Portugal issues a decree of expulsion of “heretics” from the country.

1590 – Niccolo Sfondrati becomes Pope Gregory XIV.

1746 – Revolt in Genoa against Spanish rule.

1757 – Seven Years’ War: Battle of Leuthen – Frederick II of Prussia leads Prussian forces to a decisive victory over Austrian forces under Prince Charles Alexander of Lorraine.

1766 – In London, James Christie holds his first sale.

1775 – At Fort Ticonderoga, Henry Knox begins his historic transport of artillery to Cambridge, Massachusetts.

1831 – Former US President John Quincy Adams takes his seat in the House of Representatives.

1847 – Jefferson Davis is elected to the US senate, his first political post.

1848 – California Gold Rush: In a message before the U.S. Congress, US President James K. Polk confirms that large amounts of gold had been discovered in California.

1876 – Brooklyn Theater Fire kills at least 278 people in Brooklyn, NY.

1932 – German-born Swiss physicist Albert Einstein is granted an American visa.

1933 – Prohibition in the United States ends: Utah becomes the 36th U.S. state to ratify the Twenty-first Amendment to the United States Constitution, thus establishing the required 75% of states needed to enact the amendment (this overturned the 18th Amendment which had made the manufacture, sale, or transportation of alcohol illegal in the United States).

1936 – The Soviet Union adopts a new constitution and the Kirghiz Soviet Socialist Republic is established as a full Union Republic of the USSR.

1941 – World War II: In the Battle of Moscow Georgy Zhukov launches a massive Soviet counter-attack against the German army, with the biggest offensive launched against Army Group Centre.

1941 – World War II: Great Britain declares war on Finland, Hungary and Romania.

   * 1943 – World War II: U.S. Army Air Force begins attacking Germany’s secret weapons bases in Operation Crossbow .

1952 – Great Smog of 1952: A cold fog descends upon London, combining with air pollution and killing at least 12,000 in the weeks and months that follow.

1955 – The American Federation of Labor and the Congress of Industrial Organizations merge and form the AFL-CIO.

1955 – E.D. Nixon and Rosa Parks lead the Montgomery Bus Boycott.

1957 – Sukarno expels all Dutch people from Indonesia.

1958 – Subscriber Trunk Dialling (STD) is inaugurated in the UK by Queen Elizabeth II when she speaks to the Lord Provost in a call from Bristol to Edinburgh.

1964 – Vietnam War: For his heroism in battle earlier in the year, Captain Roger Donlon is awarded the first Medal of Honor of the war.

1976 – The United Nations General Assembly adopts Pakistan’s resolution on security of non-Nuclear States.

1977 – Egypt breaks diplomatic relations with Syria, Libya, Algeria, Iraq and South Yemen. The move is in retaliation for the Declaration of Tripoli against Egypt.

1978 – The Soviet Union signs a “friendship treaty” with the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan.

1979 – Sonia Johnson is formally excommunicated by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for her outspoken criticism of the church concerning the proposed Equal Rights Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.

1983 – ICIMOD is established and inaugurated with its headquarters in Kathmandu, Nepal, and legitimised through an Act of Parliament in Nepal in the same year.

2005 – The Lake Tanganyika earthquake causes significant damage, mostly in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

2005 – The Civil Partnership Act comes into effect in the United Kingdom, and the first civil partnership is registered there.

2006 – Commodore Frank Bainimarama overthrows the government in Fiji.

Holidays and observances

   * Christian Feast Day

         o Abercius

         o Clement of Alexandria (Episcopal Church in the United States of America)

         o Sabbas the Sanctified

   * Day of the Ninja

   * Faunalia, in honor of Faunus (Roman Empire)

   * Repeal Day (United States)

   * Saint Nicholas Eve (Belgium, Czech Republic, Slovakia, the Netherlands, Hungary, Romania and the UK)

         o Krampus (Austria)

   * The King‘s Birthday, National Day, and Father’s Day (Thailand)

Punting the Pundits: Sunday Preview Edition

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

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

The Sunday Talking Heads:

This Week with Christiane Amanpour: Ms Amanpour will discuss the Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell debate with Former NATO Supreme Allied Commander Wesley Clark, Lt. Col. (ret.) Bob Maginnis, Senior Fellow of the Family Research Council, R. Clarke Cooper, Executive Director of the Log Cabin Republicans, Elaine Donnelly of the Center for Military Readiness and Tammy Schultz, Director of National Security and Joint Warfare at the Marine Corps War College.

Can we win in Afghanistan? will be the question for former National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski, former ambassador to the United Nations and Afghanistan Zalmay Khalilzad, Sakena Yacoobi of the Afghan institute of Learning and George Will

Face the Nation with Bob Schieffer: Mr Schieffer’s guest will Sen. Richard Durbin, Democratic Whip, (D-Ill), Sen. Jon Kyl, Republican Whip, (R-Ariz), Nancy Cordes, CBS News Congressional Correspondent and Jim VandeHei, Executive Editor, Politico

The Chris Matthews Show: This week’s guests are Andrea Mitchell, NBC News Chief Foreign Affairs Correspondent, John Heilemann, New York Magazine National Political Correspondent, Susan Davis, National Journal Congressional Correspondent and Andrew Sullivan, The Atlantic

Senior Editor. They will discuss these questions:

Will Obama Grab the Deficit Cause and Drive a National Movement for Shared Sacrifice?

Why are Combat Commanders and Troops Worried about Open Service by Gays?

Meet the Press with David Gregory: The Republican Leader of the Senate Mitch McConnell (R-KY) and Democratic Senator John Kerry (D-MA) will talk about the “battle grounds” in the Senate.

MTP’s Round Table panel New York Times columnists David Brooks and Tom Friedman, BBC World News America’s Washington Correspondent Katty Kay and Republican Strategist Mike Murphy will continue the discussion of the Senate, as well as, Wikileaks, START, DADT and tax cuts.

State of the Union with Candy Crowley: Taking center stage this Sunday: the lame duck Congress tackles some hot button issues: compromise over tax cuts, Don’t Ask Don’t Tell, unemployment benefits, and the deficit. What will they achieve before the new Congress and is there room for compromise? The president makes a surprise trip to Afghanistan. And the leak felt around the world as Wikileaks releases confidential State Department documents.

Up first the view from both sides of the aisle with Democratic Senator Ron Wyden and Republican Senator Orrin Hatch.

Plus, an exclusive: New York Rep. Charlie Rangel in his first television interview since being censured by the House of Representatives.

Then the unlikely Republican maverick in an era of increasing partisanship, we’re joined by the ranking member of the Foreign Relations Committee Senator Dick Lugar of Indiana.

Fareed Zakaris: GPS: This week on GPS: Just what have the 250,000 diplomatic cable from the latest WikiLeaks document dump proven? Nefarious backroom dealings? The secretive inner workings of the State Department? Or do these documents show that American diplomats might actually be good at their jobs? Fareed offers his take.

And to help make sense of WikiLeaks, the financial crisis in Europe and its effect on America, we’ve assembled an all-star GPS panel. Niall Ferguson of Harvard, Richard Haass of the Council On Foreign Relations and Gillian Tett of the Financial Times.

Then, 2010 was a catastrophic year. Devastating earthquakes led the list, but the year also brought an uptick in climate-related deaths — from floods and droughts, heat and cold, . What’s it all about?

Next up, someone Fareed calls “one of the sharpest observers of American politics and life-in-general out there.” Bill Maher, the host of HBO’s “Real Time with Bill Maher” and one of this county’s most prominent stand-up comedians has had Fareed on his show before. Now see what happens when the tables are turned.

And finally, a last look at when nationalism, is perhaps, out of fashion.

 

Frank Rich: All the President’s Captors

THOSE desperate to decipher the baffling Obama presidency could do worse than consult an article titled “Understanding Stockholm Syndrome” in the online archive of The F.B.I. Law Enforcement Bulletin. It explains that hostage takers are most successful at winning a victim’s loyalty if they temper their brutality with a bogus show of kindness. Soon enough, the hostage will start concentrating on his captors’ “good side” and develop psychological characteristics to please them – “dependency; lack of initiative; and an inability to act, decide or think.”

This dynamic was acted out – yet again – in President Obama’s latest and perhaps most humiliating attempt to placate his Republican captors in Washington. No sooner did he invite the G.O.P.’s Congressional leaders to a post-election White House summit meeting than they countered his hospitality with a slap – postponing the date for two weeks because of “scheduling conflicts.” But they were kind enough to reschedule, and that was enough to get Obama to concentrate once more on his captors’ “good side.”

Nicholas D. Kristof: I’ve Seen the Future (in Haiti)

Cash is so 20th century.

I’ve been experimenting with a 21st-century alternative, using money on a cellphone account to buy goods in shops. It’s a bit like using a credit card, but the system can also enable you to use your cellphone account to transfer money to individuals or companies domestically or internationally. And it’s more secure because a thief would have to steal not only your phone but also your PIN to get access to your money.

What’s really astonishing, though, is the site of my experimentation with “mobile money.” Not in the banking capitals of New York City or London, but in this remote Haitian town of St.-Marc.

Mercy Corps, through a United States government-financed program, is providing food for people here in St.-Marc who have taken in earthquake survivors. The standard method would be to hand out bags of rice, or vouchers. Instead, Mercy Corps will be pushing a button once a month, and $40 will automatically go into each person’s cellphone savings account – redeemable at local merchants for rice, corn flour, beans or cooking oil.

Cenk Uygur Is Barack Obama Stupid?

New CBS News poll out confirms every other poll we’ve seen on the topic – the American people are solidly against tax cuts for the rich. . . .

Now, as a politician, how stupid do you have to be on the other side of this issue?  . . .

But that’s not entirely fair because the Republicans have built their entire party on being on the other side of this issue and they’re doing well. Why? Because they get handsomely compensated by those same millionaires and billionaires who benefit from the tax cuts. They use the money they collect from those guys into deceiving the American people into voting for them during the elections. That sucks for the rest of us, but at least that makes sense. There is a logical reason for them to take the more unpopular side of this equation.

Democrats on the other hand just got their ass kicked by that money spent to make sure they lose. Now, they would like to do a favor for the people who just killed them in the election and in the meanwhile take a position that 67% to 77% of the American people are against. How stupid do you have to be to do that?

danps: Shutting Down the Internet, One Seizure at a Time

No Associated Press content was harmed in the writing of this post

Last Friday, deep in the middle of a long holiday weekend, the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) division of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) seized dozens of web sites. The full list is here, and a common reaction might be “well obviously they were engaged in illegal activity, so they had it coming.” This is an example of what Glenn Greenwald mocked as trial by Wikipedia: the idea that if you bring up a topic which everyone can agree is self-evident, action may be taken without jumping through a whole bunch of tedious legal hoops.

In Greenwald’s case he is describing the hit put out for Anwar al-Awlaki by the president. Supporters of Obama’s assassination program protest that al-Awlaki is clearly a bad man – look at his Wikipedia page! – so it should not be necessary for courts to weigh in on the matter. If enough people who matter (“everyone”) simply recognizes this, due process may be disposed of. Similarly, look at the list of domains seized: who could possibly argue that dvdsetcollection.com is engaged in any kind of legally protected activity? Why, the very name should be enough to convict!

Morning Shinbun Sunday December 5




Sunday’s Headlines:

Giant panda breeding breakthrough in China

USA

Mounting State Debts Stoke Fears of a Looming Crisis

Tension grows between Calif. Muslims, FBI after informant infiltrates mosque

Europe

Spain, the world capital of prostitution?

Grandson of Chancellor Konrad Adenauer wants Germany to end eurozone bailouts

Middle East

Covert war against Iran’s nuclear aims takes chilling turn

Egyptians vote in runoff elections

Asia

Chinese blamed for Google attack

Unveiled: Work by Anthony Burgess suppressed for years

Africa

UN calls for ceasefire in Congo to expedite vaccinations following polio outbreak

Ken Saro-Wiwa was framed, secret evidence shows

Latin America

SWAT team sent as Easter Islanders take land

Fed workers told: Stay away from those leaked cables

Directive notes the content ‘remains classified’; Columbia U. also warns future diplomats

msnbc.com staff and news service reports

NEW YORK – With tens of thousands of U.S. diplomatic cables still to be disclosed by WikiLeaks, the Obama administration has warned federal government employees, and even some future diplomats, that they must refrain from downloading or even linking to any.

“Classified information, whether or not already posted on public websites or disclosed to the media, remains classified, and must be treated as such by federal employees and contractors,” the Office of Management and Budget said in a notice sent out Friday.

The New York Times, which first reported the directive, was told by a White House official that it does not advise agencies to block WikiLeaks or other websites on government computer systems. Nor does it bar federal employees from reading news stories about the leaks.

Giant panda breeding breakthrough in China

A critical breakthrough has been made in efforts to save the giant panda, one that could kick-start attempts to reintroduce the animals to the wild.

By Ella Davies

Earth News reporter


Conservationists say they have perfected the difficult task of reproducing pandas, having reached their target of successfully raising 300 of the bears in captivity.

The breakthrough, mainly by scientists at the Chengdu Panda Breeding Research Centre, China, should lead to the first panda being reintroduced into the wild within 15 years.

The revelation comes after documentary makers were given unprecedented access to the research centre to film captive breeding activity over two years.

USA

Mounting State Debts Stoke Fears of a Looming Crisis

 

By MICHAEL COOPER and MARY WILLIAMS WALSH

Published: December 4, 2010  


The State of Illinois is still paying off billions in bills that it got from schools and social service providers last year. Arizona recently stopped paying for certain organ transplants for people in its Medicaid program. States are releasing prisoners early, more to cut expenses than to reward good behavior. And in Newark, the city laid off 13 percent of its police officers last week.

While next year could be even worse, there are bigger, longer-term risks, financial analysts say. Their fear is that even when the economy recovers, the shortfalls will not disappear, because many state and local governments have so much debt – several trillion dollars’ worth, with much of it off the books and largely hidden from view – that it could overwhelm them in the next few years.

Tension grows between Calif. Muslims, FBI after informant infiltrates mosque  



By Jerry Markon

Washington Post Staff Writer

Sunday, December 5, 2010; 12:47 AM  


IRVINE, CALIF. – Before the sun rose, the informant donned a white Islamic robe. A tiny camera was sewn into a button, and a microphone was buried in a device attached to his keys.

“This is Farouk al-Aziz, code name Oracle,” he said into the keys as he sat in his parked car in this quiet community south of Los Angeles. “It’s November 13th, 4:30 a.m. And we’re hot.”

The undercover FBI informant – a convicted forger named Craig Monteilh – then drove off for 5 a.m. prayers at the Islamic Center of Irvine, where he says he spied on dozens of worshipers in a quest for potential terrorists.

Europe

Spain, the world capital of prostitution?

Europe’s largest brothel has just opened in a land where no fewer than 39 per cent of men admit to visiting sex workers

By Alasdair Fotheringham Sunday, 5 December 2010

The Spanish economy may be dangerously close to meltdown this week but one area at least – prostitution – appears to be doing very nicely, thank you.

“Don Jose – cleanliness; Don Jose – discretion; Don Jose – security, and a patrolled car park,” half-whispers the calm female voice on a Granada radio station throughout the day. It is an advertisement for the city’s biggest and best-known brothel.

Cut to a Saturday night inside the said Don Jose “club” – three storeys high, flashing neon lights, two bars, a VIP zone and some 70 sex workers, clad in everything from nightgowns to G-strings to the very briefest of shorts – and, according to local regulars, business is booming.

Grandson of Chancellor Konrad Adenauer wants Germany to end eurozone bailouts  

The eurozone is depending on Germany to pay for the bailouts of Greece and Ireland. But German taxpayers and businessmen are starting to wonder where it will end – and whether they can afford it.

By Nick Meo in Cologne 8:00AM GMT 05 Dec 1010  

His grandfather was Konrad Adenauer, Germany’s first post-war chancellor and one of the original signatories of the Treaty of Rome – the first big step towards what is now the European Union.

With his family’s name so firmly linked to the dream of European integration, when business leader Patrick Adenauer backed a court action to try to stop German taxpayers’ billions being poured into EU bailouts, Germany took notice.

“We don’t want to pay the debts of Greece, Portugal, Ireland and then Spain, and then others,” Mr Adenauer told The Sunday Telegraph at his office in Cologne.

Middle East

Covert war against Iran’s nuclear aims takes chilling turn  

Sophisticated cyber-worms, motorcycling assassins: but who is behind the increasingly sinister campaign against the Iranian energy programme?

Julian Borger and Saeed Kamali Dehghan

The Observer, Sunday 5 December 2010  


Tehran’s streets at the height of the morning rush hour resemble a vast, sprawling car park. Bumper-to-bumper traffic, much of it stationary, the acrid steam of a thousand exhausts hanging in the cold winter air. If you wanted to kill someone, this would be the moment to do it: when they are stuck in their cars – sitting targets.

At 7.40am last Monday, in north Tehran’s Aghdasieh district, a motorcycle threaded its way through the long lines of cars on Artesh Boulevard. It edged up to a silver Peugeot 405, hesitating alongside for moment, before moving off into the maze of vehicles..

Egyptians vote in runoff elections  

Ruling party set to dominate second round of parliamentary polls hit by withdrawal of two main opposition blocs.  

Last Modified: 05 Dec 2010  

Voting has started in a second round of parliamentary elections in Egypt, a week after the first round was condemned for alleged fraud.

Egypt’s ruling party, The National Democratic Party (NDP), which has never lost an election, is set on Sunday to win all but a handful of seats that may be taken up by minor parties with no significant grass-roots support, after the Muslim Brotherhood and the liberal Wafd party pulled out.

With the Brotherhood sidelined from formal politics, the government’s main critics have one less platform for attack as Egypt heads towards a 2011 presidential election whose outcome is more uncertain.

The runoffs are being held in 114 seats where candidatess failed to secure the necessary 50 per cent of votes needed for an outright win in the first round.

Asia

Chinese blamed for Google attack

US diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks say senior officials orchestrated hacking of search engine.  

Last Modified: 05 Dec 2010  

US diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks have linked senior Chinese officials to the hacking of Google that led the company to briefly pull out of China earlier this year.

Citing the cables on Saturday, The New York Times newspaper said the country’s senior propaganda official had overseen the cyber attack after he had found “results critical of him” when he typed his name into the search engine.

“A well-placed contact claims that the Chinese government co-ordinated the recent intrusions of Google systems,” a cable dated earlier this year said.

“According to our contact, the closely held operations were directed at the Politburo Standing Committee level,” it said, referring to the ruling body of the Chinese Communist Party.

Unveiled: Work by Anthony Burgess suppressed for years

The exclusive Malaysian school where the author taught finally allows his ode to be performed  

By Sholto Byrnes  Sunday, 5 December 2010

When Anthony Burgess returned to Malaysia in 1980 after a gap of 22 years to film an episode of the BBC series Writers and Places, he was not impressed. “The country and I,” he announced, “have nothing to say to each other.” The author of A Clockwork Orange and Earthly Powers died 17 years ago, but he is still being talked about in the land that launched his career as one of the most celebrated British novelists of the late 20th century. And last night, the capital, Kuala Lumpur, saw a historic royal unveiling of one of Burgess’s first works, which was never published. Further, not only had it been forgotten, it had been deliberately suppressed.

Africa

UN calls for ceasefire in Congo to expedite vaccinations following polio outbreak  

As polio reappears in 12 African countries, Unicef officials appeal for fighting to stop in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo so that an ambitious vaccination programme can proceed

Alex Duval Smith, Africa correspondent

guardian.co.uk, Sunday 5 December 2010 00.07 GMT  


United Nations officials have called for an immediate ceasefire in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) to allow vaccinations to reach millions of children who are threatened by a sudden epidemic of polio.

The aggressive return of the contagious paralysing virus comes just five years after it was declared eradicated in most of the world. It marks a major setback in the race to make polio only the third disease, after smallpox and the cattle virus rinderpest, to be eradicated.

In the wake of an outbreak earlier this year of so-called wild poliovirus, the first round of an unprecedented vaccination campaign aimed at 72 million children under five was launched in 15 African countries in November

Ken Saro-Wiwa was framed, secret evidence shows

Witness statements accuse Nigerian military commander of ordering killings and taking bribes

By Andy Rowell and Eveline Lubbers Sunday, 5 December 2010

Compelling new evidence suggests the Nigerian military killed four Ogoni elders whose murders led to the execution of the playwright and activist Ken Saro-Wiwa in 1995.

The evidence also reveals that the notorious military commander Lieutenant-Colonel Paul Okuntimo, whose troops were implicated in murder and rape, was in the pay of Shell at the time of the killings and was driven around in a Shell vehicle.

Since the time of Saro-Wiwa’s death, Shell has insisted that it had no financial relationship with the Nigerian military, although it has admitted paying it “field allowances” on two occasions.

Latin America

SWAT team sent as Easter Islanders take land  

‘All we’re asking for is title to the land,’ says native after police fired on dozens

By FEDERICO QUILODRAN

SANTIAGO, Chile – A military plane carrying riot police reinforcements landed on Easter Island Saturday, and Chile’s Interior Minister said they will continue evicting Rapa Nui islanders who have been squatting in government buildings built on their ancestral properties.

Dozens of people were wounded by police buckshot and batons after violently resisting the first such eviction on Friday on the usually tranquil South Pacific island, where as many as 50,000 tourists come each year to see the Moai – huge stone heads carved by the Rapa Nui’s ancestors..

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GitS SAC: 2nd GigFake Food, Ambivalence (Episodes 8 & 9).

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The Wikileaks Debate

Democracy Now hosted a debate about WikiLeaks and Julian Assange. The guests were Glenn Greenwald, a constitutional law attorney and legal blogger for Salon and Steven Aftergood, senior research analyst at the Federation of American Scientists. He directs the Project on Government Secrecy and runs Secrecy News. The transcript is in this link to Democracy Now.

Is WikiLeaks’ Julian Assange a Hero? Glenn Greenwald Debates Steven Aftergood of Secrecy News

Evening Edition

Evening Edition is an Open Thread

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 WikiLeaks faces donations blow as it fights for survival

by Roland Jackson, AFP

1 hr 46 mins ago

LONDON (AFP) – WikiLeaks faced a fresh threat to its survival on Saturday as the online payment service PayPal cut off the account used for donations to the whistle-blowing website.

WikiLeaks is already fighting to stay on the Internet. It had to switch its domain to Switzerland because its original web address was shut down by a US provider, as it continues to release tens of thousands of classified US diplomatic cables.

At the same time Sweden has issued an amended international arrest warrant for WikiLeaks’ founder Julian Assange, who is believed to be in Britain, and The Times newspaper, citing police sources, reported he could be arrested next week.

2 WikiLeaks battles to stay online as Assange arrest looms

by Roland Jackson, AFP

Sat Dec 4, 9:04 am ET

LONDON (AFP) – WikiLeaks was battling to stay online on Saturday after Sweden issued a new arrest warrant for its elusive boss Julian Assange, while PayPal axed donations access for the whistleblowing website.

The Times newspaper, citing police sources, reported that Assange — who is believed to be in Britain — could be arrested next week. Other media suggested that the 39-year-old Australian could face arrest within 10 days.

Swedish prosecutors have issued a new international arrest warrant for Assange on sex assault allegations that incorporated missing elements which had been requested by British police.

3 Defiant Gbagbo sworn in as I.Coast president

by Roland Lloyd Parry, AFP

Sat Dec 4, 11:31 am ET

ABIDJAN (AFP) – Laurent Gbagbo defied international calls for him to cede power in Ivory Coast’s bloody, disputed presidential election as he was sworn back into office on Saturday.

Amid reports of more deaths in fresh violence sparked by the standoff, Gbagbo had the ceremonial chain of office hung around his neck after his high court allies overturned a UN-certified victory for his rival.

The United Nations and other world powers have recognised opposition leader Alassane Ouattara as the west African country’s new president after last Sunday’s run-off vote, but incumbent Gbagbo refused to step aside and told outsiders to mind their own business.

4 International pressure mounts on ICoast’s Gbagbo to concede

by Roland Lloyd Parry, AFP

Fri Dec 3, 6:27 pm ET

ABIDJAN (AFP) – Laurent Gbagbo came under mounting international pressure Friday to acknowledge defeat in Ivory Coast’s presidential vote and step aside for opposition leader Alassane Ouattara.

The United Nations, United States and European Union all recognised Ouattara as president, acknowledging results announced earlier by the country’s electoral commission.

They called on Gbagbo to allow a peaceful transfer of power.

5 Two killed in I.Coast presidential standoff

by David Youant, AFP

Sat Dec 4, 8:55 am ET

ABIDJAN (AFP) – Two people were killed in heavy gunfire by security forces in Ivory Coast on Saturday in a hardening standoff over a disputed election as President Laurent Gbagbo clung to power.

Gbagbo has defied international calls to step aside despite the United Nations and other world powers recognising his rival Alassane Ouattara as the country’s new president.

Residents said security forces opened fire overnight in the main city Abidjan during clashes between local supporters of the rival candidates from last Sunday’s election.

6 Madrid forces end to air controllers wildcat strike

by Katell Abiven, AFP

1 hr 14 mins ago

MADRID (AFP) – Spanish air traffic controllers returned to work under military orders Saturday, ending a wildcat strike after the government declared a state of alert and threatened them with jail.

The strike over working hours hit an estimated 300,000 passengers on a long holiday weekend, prompting the government to place the military in command of the skies and threaten prison for absent controllers.

“The airspace is open,” Interior Minister Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba told a news conference after an emergency cabinet meeting.

7 Spanish air space opens, recovery in ’24-48 hours’

by Katell Abiven, AFP

Sat Dec 4, 9:59 am ET

MADRID (AFP) – Spanish air traffic will be back to normal in 24-48 hours, Transport Minister Jose Blanco said on Saturday after the government intervened to stop a wildcat strike.

Striking air traffic controllers began returning to work after the government declared a state of alert and warned of criminal prosecutions, airports said.

The wildcat strike over working hours hit an estimated 250,000 passengers on a holiday weekend, prompting the government to put the military in command of the skies and threaten prison for absent controllers.

8 Obama hails ‘win-win’ US-S.Korea trade deal

by Olivia Hampton, AFP

1 hr 20 mins ago

WASHINGTON (AFP) – President Barack Obama said Saturday a sweeping US-South Korean free trade agreement that broke through a three-year deadlock was a “win-win” for both countries.

The “landmark” agreement benefits US workers, farmers and ranchers, Obama said, and was also a “win” for South Korea because it will grant the Asian ally “greater access to our markets and make American products more affordable for Korean households and businesses.”

Associated tariff reductions are expected to boost annual exports of US goods by up to 11 billion dollars while contributing “significantly” to his goal of doubling US exports over the next five years, Obama said of the agreement that raised hopes of renewed US leadership in Asia.

9 Climate: Kyoto row rocks UN talks

by Claire Snegaroff and Anna Cuenca, AFP

Fri Dec 3, 7:05 pm ET

CANCUN, Mexico (AFP) – UN climate talks in Cancun ran into a storm Friday as a deepening split emerged over the future of the carbon-cutting Kyoto Protocol.

The fate of the world’s only treaty to spell out curbs in greenhouse gases buffeted the effort to revive the UN’s campaign against global warming and its impacts.

“If countries park on extreme positions, then it’s just not possible to come to a UN consensus,” said EU chief negotiator Artur Runge-Metzger.

10 WikiLeaks founder says guards against death threats

By Keith Weir and Adam Cox, Reuters

Fri Dec 3, 4:31 pm ET

LONDON/STOCKHOLM (Reuters) – WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange said on Friday he and colleagues were taking steps to protect themselves after death threats following the publication of leaked U.S. diplomatic cables on their website.

One of Assange’s lawyers said he would also fight any attempt to extradite his client to face questions over alleged sexual misconduct, adding that he believed foreign powers were influencing Sweden in the matter.

Washington is furious about the leak of hundreds of confidential diplomatic cables that have given unvarnished and sometimes embarrassing insights into the foreign policy of the United States and its allies.

11 Spain reopens airspace after controllers’ strike

By Paul Day and Teresa Larraz, Reuters

1 hr 15 mins ago

MADRID (Reuters) – Spanish airspace reopened on Saturday after a wildcat strike by air traffic controllers paralyzed airports for a second day and the government declared its first state of emergency in the post-Franco era.

Spain’s Deputy Prime Minister Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba vowed there would be no repeat of the strike, which stranded passengers, hurt companies and damaged Spain’s image.

The government is pushing through tough reforms and spending cuts to rein in a deficit and ward off market fears it may need a bailout similar to that of Ireland.

12 Senate bid to renew "middle class" tax cuts fails

By Kim Dixon, Reuters

Sat Dec 4, 1:20 pm ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Democratic measures to extend tax cuts for most Americans, but not additional low rates for the wealthiest, failed in the Senate on Saturday, as Republicans and some Democrats blocked the plans.

The two Democratic plans to renew low tax rates for individual income up to $200,000 and up to $1 million both failed in procedural votes, as Republicans argued that low tax rates for the wealthiest should also be extended.

No Republicans backed the Democratic proposals, and a few Democrats voted against them.

13 Negotiators shape possible tax-cut deal

By Thomas Ferraro, Reuters

Fri Dec 3, 10:17 pm ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – A framework for a possible deal between the White House and congressional leaders to extend expiring tax cuts for millions of Americans is slowly being put together behind closed doors, aides said on Friday.

Negotiators are working on a potential deal that could temporarily renew all these tax breaks, including ones for the wealthiest, and extend jobless benefits for hundreds of thousands of the needy, congressional aides said.

The possible accord could also clear the way for Senate ratification of a stalled U.S.-Russian arms treaty, and perhaps even an increase the U.S. debt limit, they said.

14 Ivory Coast’s Gbagbo sworn in despite world rejection

By Tim Cocks and Loucoumane Coulibaly, Reuters

1 hr 15 mins ago

ABIDJAN (Reuters) – Laurent Gbagbo was sworn in as Ivory Coast president on Saturday after his proclaimed election victory was rejected by world leaders and his rival, but accepted by the army, raising the risk of a long power struggle.

Meanwhile, Alassane Ouattara, named winner of the vote by the election commission before the result was reversed on Friday by the top Ivorian legal body, submitted a written oath and took the first steps toward setting up a parallel government.

Gbagbo has presided over the world’s top cocoa-producing nation for a decade, but now faces international isolation and possible sanctions after its Constitutional Council, headed by an ally of Gbagbo, canceled hundreds of thousands of votes in Ouattara strongholds, alleging intimidation by northern rebels.

15 China says some at climate talks want to kill Kyoto

By Gerard Wynn and Robert Campbell, Reuters

Fri Dec 3, 10:15 pm ET

CANCUN, Mexico (Reuters) – China accused some developed nations on Friday at U.N. climate talks of seeking to kill the Kyoto Protocol pact to curb global warming, in a damaging standoff with Japan, Russia and Canada.

Venezuela and Bolivia also branded some rich countries “unacceptable” for distancing themselves from the Kyoto accord, stepping up sparring before ministers arrive for next week’s climax of the November 29-December 10 talks in the Mexican beach resort of Cancun.

Developing countries favor an extension of the 1997 protocol, which obliges only developed nations to cut greenhouse gas emissions until 2012, while many rich nations prefer a new agreement that includes emerging economies led by China.

16 Obama visits Afghanistan, says U.S. making progress

By Caren Bohan, Reuters

Fri Dec 3, 8:07 pm ET

BAGRAM AIR BASE, Afghanistan (Reuters) – President Barack Obama, paying a surprise visit to Afghanistan on Friday, praised U.S. troops for their sacrifice and “important progress” in a nine-year war that is increasingly unpopular at home.

He spent four hours at an airbase outside the Afghan capital and canceled a planned helicopter trip to Kabul to meet Afghan counterpart Hamid Karzai because of bad weather. Instead, the two leaders spoke by telephone.

Obama’s second visit to Afghanistan as president came as the White House prepared to release a review of the war’s strategy in the week of December 13, and the day after leaked cables detailed U.S. concerns about Karzai’s abilities and widespread fraud in the country.

17 Jobless rate jump casts cloud on recovery

By Lucia Mutikani, Reuters

Fri Dec 3, 6:55 pm ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. employment barely grew in November and the jobless rate unexpectedly hit a seven-month high, hardening views the Federal Reserve would stick to its $600 billion plan to shore up the anemic recovery.

Nonfarm payrolls rose 39,000, with private hiring gaining only 50,000, just a third of what economists had expected, a Labor Department report showed on Friday. The unemployment rate jumped to 9.8 percent from 9.6 percent in October.

The weak report was a surprise given the relative strength of some other recent economic signals, including robust retail sales. Economists had expected 140,000 new jobs and a steady unemployment rate.

18 WikiLeaks loses major source of revenue

By JUERGEN BAETZ, Associated Press

1 hr 49 mins ago

BERLIN – WikiLeaks has lost a major source of revenue after the online payment service provider PayPal cut off its account used to collect donations, saying the website is engaged in illegal activity.

The announcement also came as WikiLeaks is struggling to keep its website accessible after service providers such as Amazon dropped contracts, and governments and hackers continued to hound the organization.

The weekend move by PayPal came as WikiLeaks’ release of hundreds of thousands of United States diplomatic cables brought commercial organizations on the Internet that have business ties with the organization under more scrutiny.

19 Could WikiLeaks survive without Julian Assange?

By JILL LAWLESS, Associated Press

Sat Dec 4, 7:07 am ET

LONDON – Its founder is a wanted man, its systems are under attack, it is condemned from the capitals of the world.

But although the future is uncertain for WikiLeaks, the website dedicated to releasing classified information has opened a Pandora’s Box of secret-spilling that will be difficult to reverse.

WikiLeaks, which has triggered global governmental alarm by releasing reams of classified U.S. diplomatic cables, is facing attacks in cyberspace and in the legal sphere. The site is assailed by hackers and has been booted from its U.S. server. Frontman Julian Assange is in hiding and faces allegations of sexual misconduct.

20 Memos reveal US-Libya standoff over uranium

By LEE KEATH, Associated Press

Sat Dec 4, 4:32 am ET

CAIRO – As it dismantled its nuclear weapons program, Libya sparked a tense diplomatic standoff with the United States last year when it refused to hand over its last batch of highly enriched uranium to protest the slowness of improving ties with Washington, leaked U.S. diplomatic memos reveal.

The monthlong standoff, which has not previously been made public, was resolved only after a call from U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton to Libya’s foreign minister, apparently to underline Washington’s commitment to warming relations. After the call, Libya allowed Russia to take away the uranium in December 2009.

But for that month, U.S. officials issued frantic warnings that the 11.5 pounds (5.2 kilograms) of highly enriched uranium was vulnerable to start leaking or be stolen, since it was sitting at Libya’s Tajoura nuclear facility with only a single armed guard.

21 Spanish air controllers start returning to work

By DANIEL WOOLLS and HAROLD HECKLE, Associated Press

Sat Dec 4, 11:04 am ET

MADRID – Spain placed striking air traffic controllers under military authority Saturday and threatened them with jail terms in an unprecedented emergency order to get planes back in the skies and clear chaotic airports clogged with irate travelers.

Hours after the order was issued at an emergency Cabinet meeting, officials said strikers were returning to work, but that it could take up to two days before flights return to normal.

Spain got the all-clear from Eurocontrol, Europe’s air traffic control agency, to reopen air space closed Friday when the wildcat strike began, ruining the start of a long holiday weekend for hundreds of thousands of people.

22 Senate showdown may pave way for year-end tax deal

By DAVID ESPO, AP Special Correspondent

2 hrs 25 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Senate Republicans derailed legislation Saturday to extend expiring tax cuts at all but the highest income levels in a political showdown that paradoxically clears a path for a compromise with the White House on steps to boost the economy.

“We need to get this resolved and I’m confident we can do it,” President Barack Obama said shortly after the near party-line votes. The public must have “the peace of mind that their taxes will not go up” on Jan. 1, he added.

Obama has signaled that he will bow to Republican demands for extending tax cuts at all income levels, and his remarks capped a day that lurched between political conflict and talk of compromise on an issue that played a leading role in last month’s elections.

23 Obama hails SKorea trade as victory for US workers

By JULIE PACE and KEN THOMAS, Associated Press

2 hrs 59 mins ago

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama on Saturday praised a newly sealed trade deal with South Korea as a landmark agreement that promises to boost the domestic auto industry and support tens of thousands of American jobs.

“This agreement shows the U.S. is willing to lead and compete in the global economy,” the president told reporters at the White House, calling it a triumph for American workers in fields from farming to aerospace.

The pact, which requires congressional approval, would be the largest since the North American Free Trade Agreement with Canada and Mexico in 1994. Obama said the South Korean deal would support at least 70,000 American jobs – welcome news with the latest unemployment figures showing nearly stagnant job growth. The president said that jobs report showed more needed to be done.

24 Ivory Coast dispute leaves 2 presidents, chaos

By MARCO CHOWN OVED, Associated Press

29 mins ago

ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast – The two candidates in Ivory Coast’s disputed presidential election took dueling oaths of office Saturday after each claimed victory, as the political crisis spiraled out of control and renewed unrest in this country once split in two by civil war.

Incumbent President Laurent Gbagbo defied calls from the United States, France and the United Nations to concede defeat, wrapping himself in the Ivorian flag as he was sworn in for another term. Hours later, opposition candidate Alassane Ouattara announced that he too had taken his own oath.

Saturday’s developments leave Ivory Coast with two men who both claim to be president, furthering inflaming the political chaos in the West African nation whose once-prosperous economy was destroyed by the brief 2002-2003 civil war.

25 Analysis: Obama’s trip signals Afghan war plan set

By BEN FELLER, AP White House Correspondent

Sat Dec 4, 11:20 am ET

BAGRAM AIR FIELD, Afghanistan – President Barack Obama’s dash to Afghanistan amounted to more than a feel-good mission of thanks to troops fighting for their lives. It was a confirmation that his war plan is here to stay.

Obama’s determination to come to the war zone for a second time this year – a move of considerable risk and intricate concealment – was meant to lift the holiday spirits of those waging a long, intensifying fight.

So he shook hands. He awarded Purple Hearts. He comforted soldiers whose buddies had died. He spoke of hope.

26 As climate talks drag on, more ponder techno-fixes

By CHARLES J. HANLEY, AP Special Correspondent

Sat Dec 4, 7:08 am ET

CANCUN, Mexico – Like the warming atmosphere above, a once-taboo idea hangs over the slow, frustrating U.N. talks to curb climate change: the idea to tinker with the atmosphere or the planet itself, pollute the skies to ward off the sun, fill the oceans with gas-eating plankton, do whatever it takes.

As climate negotiators grew more discouraged in recent months, U.S. and British government bodies urged stepped-up studies of such “geoengineering.” The U.N. climate science network decided to assess the options. And a range of new research moved ahead in America and elsewhere.

“The taboo is broken,” Paul Crutzen, a Nobel Prize-winning atmospheric scientist, told The Associated Press.

27 Union to players: Save pay, NFL lockout’s coming

By JIMMY GOLEN, AP Sports Writer

1 min ago

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. – NFL players might soon be socking away their next paycheck to get ready for a lockout that could cost them their entire salary in 2011.

The pro football players’ union has advised its members to save their last three game checks this year in case next season is canceled. In a letter to the players that was viewed by The Associated Press, NFLPA executive director DeMaurice Smith said the union’s “internal deadline” for agreeing to a new collective bargaining agreement has passed.

“It is important that you protect yourself and your family,” he wrote in the letter, which was dated Wednesday.

28 Massey CEO Blankenship expected to testify Dec. 14

By BRIAN FARKAS, Associated Press

58 mins ago

CHARLESTON, W.Va. – Massey Energy chief executive Don Blankenship is expected to honor an agreement to testify this month about the nation’s worst coal mine disaster in decades despite his sudden retirement plans, investigators said Saturday.

The Virginia-based coal company announced late Friday that Blankenship, who has been chairman and chief executive since 2000, will retire effective Dec. 31. The modern-day coal baron who made millions for investors while turning countless neighbors into enemies over mining’s effects on the environment has been with Massey since 1982 in a variety of roles.

Investigators want to question Blankenship about the April 5 explosion at the Upper Big Branch mine, which killed 29 and injured two. Unlike other Massey employees, who have refused to speak with investigators, Blankenship reached an agreement with state investigators to testify on Dec. 14. The interview will be closed to the public.

29 Obama, troops cheer each other in Afghan visit

By BEN FELLER, AP White House Correspondent

Sat Dec 4, 1:08 am ET

BAGRAM AIR FIELD, Afghanistan – In a rousing holiday-season visit, President Barack Obama on Friday told cheering U.S. troops in Afghanistan they’re succeeding in their vital mission fighting terrorism. But after he flew in secrecy for 13 hours to get here, foul weather kept him from nearby Kabul and a meeting to address frayed relations with Afghan President Hamid Karzai

Obama’s surprise visit to the war zone, his second as president, came 10 days before he is to address the nation about a new review of U.S. strategy to defeat the Taliban and strengthen the Afghan government so American troops can begin leaving next year.

The trip also came at a particularly awkward moment in already strained U.S. relations with Afghanistan because of new and embarrassing leaked cables alleging widespread fraud and underscoring deep American concerns about Karzai.

30 Panel recommends expanding use of stomach bands

By MATTHEW PERRONE, Associated Press

Sat Dec 4, 1:18 am ET

WASHINGTON – About 12 million more obese Americans could soon qualify for surgery to implant a small, flexible stomach band designed to help them lose weight by dramatically limiting their food intake. The Food and Drug Administration will make a final decision on the Lap-Band in the coming months.

The device from Allergan Inc. is currently implanted in roughly 100,000 people each year and usually helps patients lose 50 pounds or more. Under federal guidelines, it has been limited to patients who are morbidly obese.

On Friday, a panel of FDA advisers recommended expanding use of the device to include patients who are less obese. The panel voted 8-2 that the benefits of broader approval outweighed the risks.

31 Cities seek to cut strings tying up gas money

By RAMIT PLUSHNICK-MASTI, Associated Press

2 hrs 19 mins ago

BEAUMONT, Texas – Advances in drilling have helped American towns and cities strike natural gas, and just in time, it would appear. With many facing cash crunches, the millions of dollars they’re reaping in royalties could go toward saving public services, jobs and badly needed road projects.

Not so fast. Because of restrictions built into deeds and federal grants, municipalities can’t use most of to their newfound wealth to plug budget shortfalls.

And so, while elected officials struggle to make ends meet, the money sits there, close enough to smell but just out of reach.

32 National monument status urged for Arctic refuge

By MARY PEMBERTON, Associated Press

Sat Dec 4, 12:31 pm ET

ANCHORAGE, Alaska – President Obama is being urged to bestow national monument status on the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge for its 50th anniversary in what supporters say would finally put the refuge’s coastal plain beyond the reach of oil companies.

They want the country’s largest and most untamed refuge to join the likes of the Statue of Liberty in New York, the Giant Sequoia groves of California, the Sonoran Desert in Arizona and George Washington’s birthplace in Virginia.

National monument status could put an estimated 11 billion barrels of recoverable oil beyond the grasp of oil companies forever.

33 Joe Miller gambles with Alaska Senate challenge

By BECKY BOHRER, Associated Press

Sat Dec 4, 12:31 pm ET

JUNEAU, Alaska – Joe Miller is fighting as though Alaska’s Senate race has yet to occur.

He has maintained a presence on TV, conservative radio and the Internet, casting himself as a righteous reformer in the face of an out-of-control establishment. He is still raising money and speaking out against his opponent.

Miller has mounted a vigorous post-election campaign as his lawyers wage a last-ditch legal challenge to throw out write-in ballots for Sen. Lisa Murkowski in their hard-fought Senate race.

34 Former employee sues Daystar over affair

By LINDA STEWART BALL, Associated Press

Fri Dec 3, 11:10 pm ET

DALLAS – A Texas woman who was promised a Christian working environment claims she was devastated after learning that her boss, a prominent televangelist, was having an affair and his company was trying to cover it up, according to a lawsuit she filed against her former employer.

Jeanette Hawkins levied the accusations against Daystar Television Network and its founder, the Rev. Marcus Lamb, in a lawsuit Wednesday – a day after Lamb and his wife told their television audience that three unnamed people who knew about the affair were trying to blackmail them for $7.5 million.

On Friday, Daystar countersued Hawkins, saying she and her attorney made “outrageous allegations” and amended their original lawsuit that they’d given to media outlets, according to a statement released by the company.

35 2 more rare red foxes confirmed in Sierra Nevada

By SCOTT SONNER, Associated Press

Fri Dec 3, 9:29 pm ET

RENO, Nev. – Federal wildlife biologists have confirmed sightings of two more Sierra Nevada red foxes that once were thought to be extinct.

Scientists believe the foxes are related to another that was photographed this summer near Yosemite National Park. More importantly, they say, DNA samples show enough diversity in the Sierra Nevada red foxes to suggest a “fairly strong population” of the animals may secretly be doing quite well in the rugged mountains about 90 miles south of Reno.

The first confirmed sighting of the subspecies in two decades came in August when a remote camera captured the image of a female fox in the Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest near Sonora Pass.

36 APNewsBreak: Feds propose listing for seals

By DAN JOLING, Associated Press

Fri Dec 3, 6:00 pm ET

ANCHORAGE, Alaska – The federal government on Friday proposed listing two seals that depend on sea ice as threatened species because of the projected loss of ice from climate warming.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration will seek to list ringed seals found in the Arctic Basin and the North Atlantic and two populations of bearded seals in the Pacific Ocean as threatened under the Endangered Species Act.

Ringed seals are the main prey of polar bears, which were listed as threatened by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in 2008. For ringed seals, the proposed listing also cites the threat of reduced snow cover.

Random Japan

KARMA-RIFIC

A senior citizen trying to steal coins from a donation box at a shrine in Tokushima fell and hit his head while attempting to flee the scene. He later claimed his six stitches were “punishment from God.”

A 35-year-old Japanese man was caught at the airport in Bali with 6kg of hash. Apparently, he recently served time in an Indian prison for a similar offense, and now faces the death penalty under Indonesian law.

The 19-year-old son of an American soldier stationed in Japan was found guilty of seriously injuring a 24-year-old Tokyo woman by stringing a rope across a roadway in 2009, causing her to fall off her scooter “just for laughs.” Three other American kids involved got off without charge.

Three Tokyo teens, meanwhile, were arrested for breaking into a couple of cars using a method they had learned on YouTube.

STATS

16 million

Letters and packages sent by air and sea from Japan to the US annually

453 grams

Maximum weight of airmail packages sent from Japan to the US due to new anti-terrorism measures (see “The Last Word”

9

Percent of people in Hong Kong who have a “positive feeling about the Japanese government,” according to a public opinion poll by Hong Kong University

15,615

Reported cases of abuse of elderly Japanese by family members in fiscal 2009, a record, according to the health ministry

STRANGE DAYS

Believe it or not, 86 incidents were reported of people injuring themselves in Japan over the last 10 years by taking pills before removing the plastic packaging. They musta been smart pills.

A 24-year-old bank employee in Sendai committed suicide by hanging himself, and streamed video of the act online. Some viewers reportedly told him to hurry up and get on with it, while others urged him to reconsider. He didn’t.

Thai authorities said an initial investigation into the shooting death of Reuters cameraman Hiroyuki Muramoto during unrest in Bangkok last April has revealed that Thai security forces may have fired the fatal shots.

In Los Angeles, an 84-year-old Japanese-American woman, who had spent time in an internment camp during World War II, was pushed to her death on some train tracks by a deranged homeless woman.

Governor’s Son

Goes To The Big House

Financial Services Minister

He Pays  For Your Votes

Wanted Man

Wants Name Removed From Wanted List  

Younger foreign residents seek a more multicultural Japan



TOKYO    

While the foreign resident population in Japan remains relatively small compared to most developed countries at slightly less than 2% of the populace, as of 2009, its presence is being increasingly felt.

From ethnic Koreans to Japanese Brazilians, the younger generations are actively making their voices heard, calling for greater understanding from the Japanese people while also tackling their own identity issues.

”As a third generation ethnic Korean resident, I personally have had almost no experience of any direct discrimination,” said Kim Bung Ang of the Korea NGO Center Tokyo branch. ”People of our parents’ generation were unable to get jobs at Japanese companies, but nowadays rejection due solely to foreign nationality is rare.”

Kan seen at critical turning point

Should he bring in Ozawa allies to Cabinet, or reach out to LDP?

By KANAKO TAKAHARA and NATSUKO FUKUE

Staff writers Saturday, Dec. 4, 2010


It was less than three months ago that Prime Minister Naoto Kan was flying high, defeating his political foe Ichiro Ozawa in the Democratic Party of Japan presidential election and enjoying a public support rate of better than 60 percent.

But that support has since plunged to around 20 percent after a number of political blunders, ranging from mishandling the diplomatic crisis with Beijing and the embarrassing online leak of Japan Coast Guard video clips to recent gaffes by key Cabinet ministers.

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