Prime Time

Welcome back to the usual shoddy, sloppy, sleep deprived workmanship you’ve come to expect normal for a while, though you still have those annoying ek’smas specials to deal with, most of which I will ignore if possible.

Skating.

I remember every detail. The Germans wore gray, you wore blue.

Later-

Dave is repeating 11/5.  Jon has Judah Friedlander, Stephen Dan Savage.  Alton has a 2 part Loin special.  Conan has George Lopez, Chris Colfer, and Kid Cudi.

BoondocksHome Alone.

“Corona veniat electis.” Victory shall come to the worthy. Today, democracy, liberty, and equality are words to fool the people. No nation can progress with such ideas. They stand in the way of action. Therefore, we frankly abolish them. In the future, each man will serve the interest of the State with absolute obedience. Let him who refuses beware! The rights of citizenship will be taken away from all Jews and other non-Aryans. They are inferior and therefore enemies of the state. It is the duty of all true Aryans to hate and despise them. Henceforth this nation is annexed to the Tomanian Empire, and the people of this nation will obey the laws bestowed upon us by our great leader, the Dictator of Tomania, the conqueror of Osterlich, the future Emperor of the World!

You speak.

I can’t.

You must. It’s our only hope.

Something about Casablamca always makes me want to sing-

Let’s go, children of the Fatherland (Homeland),

The day of glory has arrived!

Against us, tyranny

Has raised the bloodied banner,

Has raised the bloodied banner,

Do you hear, in the countryside,

The howling of those ferocious soldiers?

They are coming right into your arms

To slit the throats of your sons and consorts!

To arms, citizens,

Form your battalions,

Let’s march, let’s march!

That impure blood

May water our furrows!

What does this horde of slaves,

Of traitors and conjured kings want?

For whom are these vile chains,

These long-prepared irons?

These long-prepared irons?

Frenchmen, for us, ah! What outrage

What fury it must arouse!

It is us they dare plan

To return to the old slavery!

To arms, citizens,

Form your battalions,

Let’s march, let’s march!

That impure blood

May water our furrows!

What! Foreign cohorts

Would make the law in our homes!

What! These mercenary phalanxes

Would strike down our warrior sons!

Would strike down our warrior sons!

Great God! By chained hands

Our brows would yield under the yoke

Vile despots would have themselves

The masters of our destinies!

To arms, citizens,

Form your battalions,

Let’s march, let’s march!

That impure blood

May water our furrows!

Tremble, tyrants and you traitors

The shame of all parties,

Tremble! Your parricidal schemes

Will finally receive their reward!

Will finally receive their reward!

Everyone is a soldier to combat you

If they fall, our young heroes,

The earth will produce anew,

Against you, all are ready to fight!

To arms, citizens,

Form your battalions,

Let’s march, let’s march!

That impure blood

May water our furrows!

Frenchmen, as magnanimous warriors,

You bear or hold back your blows!

You spare those sorry victims,

Who arm against us with regret.

Who arm against us with regret.

But not these bloodthirsty despots,

These accomplices of Bouillé,

All these tigers who, mercilessly,

Rip their mother’s breast!

To arms, citizens,

Form your battalions,

Let’s march, let’s march!

That impure blood

May water our furrows!

Sacred love of the Fatherland,

Lead, support our avenging arms

Liberty, cherished Liberty,

Fight with thy defenders!

Fight with thy defenders!

Under our flags, shall victory

Hurry to thy manly accents,

Shall thy expiring enemies,

See thy triumph and our glory!

To arms, citizens,

Form your battalions,

Let’s march, let’s march!

That impure blood

May water our furrows!

(Children’s Verse)

We shall enter in the career

When our elders are no longer there,

There we shall find their dust

And the trace of their virtues

And the trace of their virtues

Much less jealous to survive them

Than to share their coffins,

We shall have the sublime pride

Of avenging or following them

To arms, citizens,

Form your battalions,

Let’s march, let’s march!

That impure blood

May water our furrows!

La Marseillaise

I’m sorry, but I don’t want to be an emperor. That’s not my business. I don’t want to rule or conquer anyone. I should like to help everyone if possible; Jew, Gentile, black man, white. We all want to help one another.

Human beings are like that. We want to live by each other’s happiness, not by each other’s misery. We don’t want to hate and despise one another.

In this world there is room for everyone, and the good earth is rich and can provide for everyone. The way of life can be free and beautiful, but we have lost the way.

Greed has poisoned men’s souls, has barricaded the world with hate, has goose-stepped us into misery and bloodshed. We have developed speed, but we have shut ourselves in. Machinery that gives abundance has left us in want. Our knowledge has made us cynical; our cleverness, hard and unkind. We think too much and feel too little.

More than machinery, we need humanity. More than cleverness, we need kindness and gentleness. Without these qualities, life will be violent and all will be lost.

The airplane and the radio have brought us closer together. The very nature of these inventions cries out for the goodness in men; cries out for universal brotherhood; for the unity of us all. Even now my voice is reaching millions throughout the world, millions of despairing men, women, and little children, victims of a system that makes men torture and imprison innocent people.

To those who can hear me, I say, do not despair. The misery that is now upon us is but the passing of greed, the bitterness of men who fear the way of human progress.

The hate of men will pass, and dictators die, and the power they took from the people will return to the people. And so long as men die, liberty will never perish.

Soldiers! Don’t give yourselves to brutes, men who despise you, enslave you; who regiment your lives, tell you what to do, what to think and what to feel! Who drill you, diet you, treat you like cattle, use you as cannon fodder. Don’t give yourselves to these unnatural men – machine men with machine minds and machine hearts! You are not machines, you are not cattle, you are men! You have the love of humanity in your hearts! You don’t hate! Only the unloved hate; the unloved and the unnatural.

Soldiers! Don’t fight for slavery! Fight for liberty! In the seventeenth chapter of St. Luke, it is written that the kingdom of God is within man, not one man nor a group of men, but in all men! In you! You, the people, have the power, the power to create machines, the power to create happiness! You, the people, have the power to make this life free and beautiful, to make this life a wonderful adventure.

Then in the name of democracy, let us use that power. Let us all unite. Let us fight for a new world, a decent world that will give men a chance to work, that will give youth a future and old age a security.

By the promise of these things, brutes have risen to power. But they lie! They do not fulfill that promise. They never will!

Dictators free themselves but they enslave the people.

Now let us fight to fulfill that promise. Let us fight to free the world! To do away with national barriers! To do away with greed, with hate and intolerance! Let us fight for a world of reason, a world where science and progress will lead to all men’s happiness.

Soldiers, in the name of democracy, let us all unite!

Hannah, can you hear me? Wherever you are, look up Hannah! The clouds are lifting! The sun is breaking through!

We are coming out of the darkness into the light! We are coming into a new world; a kindlier world, where men will rise above their hate, their greed, and brutality. Look up, Hannah! The soul of man has been given wings and at last he is beginning to fly. He is flying into the rainbow! Into the light of hope, into the future! The glorious future, that belongs to you, to me and to all of us. Look up, Hannah. Look up!

Evening Edition

Evening Edition is an Open Thread

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 World scrambles to deal with WikiLeaks fallout

by Charles Onians, AFP

2 hrs 44 mins ago

PARIS (AFP) – Governments worldwide scrambled Monday to head off damage from a flood of leaked US diplomatic cables revealing secret details and indiscreet asides on some of the world’s most tense international crises.

Despite diplomats’ red faces, officials were quick to criticise the release of the confidential missives, most of which date from 2007 to February this year, and to stress that the leaks would not harm relations.

Highlights include a call by Saudi King Abdullah for the US to “cut off the head” of the Iranian snake over its nuclear programme and leaked memos about a Chinese government bid to hack into Google.

2 WikiLeaks unleashes a flood of damaging US cables

by Joseph Krauss, AFP

Mon Nov 29, 2:08 am ET

WASHINGTON (AFP) – Whistleblower website WikiLeaks unleashed a flood of US cables detailing shocking diplomatic episodes, from a nuclear standoff with Pakistan to Arab leaders urging a strike on Iran.

The leaked memos describe a Chinese government bid to hack into Google, plans to reunite the Korean peninsula after the North’s eventual collapse, and quote Saudi Arabia’s king as saying the United States should bomb Iran to halt its nuclear drive, telling it to “cut off the head of the snake.”

The confidential cables, most of which date from 2007 to last February, also reveal how the State Department has ordered diplomats to spy on foreign officials and even to obtain their credit card and frequent flier numbers.

3 Time for compromise, troubled UN climate talks told

by Richard Ingham, AFP

30 mins ago

CANCUN, Mexico (AFP) – A new round of UN climate talks got under way on Monday to appeals for action and compromise after the squabbles that drove last year’s global summit in Copenhagen close to disaster.

“A richer tapestry of efforts is needed,” UN climate chief Christiana Figueres warned, as she spelt out the tasks facing the 12-day conference in the Mexican resort city of Cancun.

“A tapestry of holes will not work — and the holes can only be filled in through compromise.”

4 Security tight as UN climate talks set to open

AFP

Mon Nov 29, 11:08 am ET

CANCUN, Mexico (AFP) – Nearly 200 countries were gathering on Monday under the UN flag and behind tight security for a fresh attempt to craft a treaty to roll back the threat of climate change.

Mexican police and troops, supported by navy patrol boats, threw a cordon around the Moon Palace hotel, a beachfront complex near the eastern resort city of Cancun.

Opening ceremonies were to include an address by President Felipe Calderon, who has declared war on Mexico’s powerful drug cartels.

5 Euro slumps to two-month low on Ireland rescue, Korea fears

AFP

Mon Nov 29, 12:53 pm ET

LONDON (AFP) – The euro slumped under 1.31 dollars to hit a fresh two-month low, stocks fell sharply and bond yields rose further on Monday as Ireland’s 85-billion-euro bailout failed to dispel fears over the eurozone debt crisis.

In late London deals, the euro was at 1.3090 dollars, after hitting 1.3064 dollars earlier for its lowest point since September 21. On Friday, the European single currency bought 1.3240 dollars.

The European Union and International Monetary Fund on Sunday agreed to an 85-billion-euro (113-billion-dollar) deal for Ireland but the initial boost the announcement gave the euro faded on worries Spain and Portugal could be next in line.

6 Obama calls for US government pay freeze

by Andrew Beatty, AFP

56 mins ago

WASHINGTON (AFP) – US President Barack Obama on Monday proposed a two-year freeze on most government pay, as a fierce political battled loomed over spending and taxes.

On the eve of a face-to-face meeting with his Republican adversaries, Obama said the freeze — which must be approved by Congress — would save more than five billion dollars in the rest of the 2011 fiscal year and in 2012.

Kicking off what he termed a “serious and long-overdue” debate on the deficit, Obama insisted the United States must make a “broad sacrifice” to correct its long-term fiscal course.

7 Deaths, cheating claims mar I.Coast election

by Roland Lloyd Parry, AFP

1 hr 26 mins ago

ABIDJAN (AFP) – Rival camps traded allegations of abuses in Ivory Coast’s presidential election as first results began to trickle in Monday after polls marred by deadly violence.

The election aims to end a decade of instability in the west African country, the world’s top cocoa producer, but tension reigned as the votes were counted with a nighttime curfew in force.

The electoral commission released partial overseas results late Monday and was to begin announcing results for the millions of voters in Ivory Coast itself on Tuesday morning.

8 Election chaos in Haiti as candidates cry foul

by Stephane Jourdain, AFP

Sun Nov 28, 6:56 pm ET

PORT-AU-PRINCE (AFP) – Haiti’s elections descended into chaos on Sunday as 12 of the 18 presidential candidates accused the ruling party of fraud and called for the pivotal national polls to be scrapped.

In the grip of a cholera epidemic that has claimed 1,650 lives, Haitians are choosing a successor to President Rene Preval, searching for someone to lead a nation shattered by a January earthquake that killed 250,000 people.

Fears that fraud could mar the elections were realized even before polls closed at 2100 GMT — with a majority of presidential contenders denouncing a “conspiracy” between Preval’s government and the electoral commission.

9 Anti corruption watchdog urges halt to World Cup race

by Peter Capella, AFP

1 hr 40 mins ago

ZURICH (AFP) – Anti-corruption watchdog Transparency International on Monday called on FIFA to postpone the race to host the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, after renewed media allegations of corruption were made.

The call by the private campaign group came just days before the executive committee of world football’s governing body was due to designate the two host nations under the eyes of a brace of world leaders and stars.

“The decision to award football’s World Cup in 2018 and 2022, scheduled for December 2, 2010, must be postponed until full light is shed on the allegations published in the press,” Transparency International Switzerland said in a statement.

10 A thousand shipwrecked stories call from a Baltic seabed

by Aira-Katariina Vehaskari

Mon Nov 29, 9:59 am ET

HELSINKI (AFP) – Riikka Alvik rests her chin in her palm as she imagines the last terrifying moments of the life of a 13-year-old girl trapped in a cabin on the St. Mikael as it mysteriously sank in the icy Baltic.

“We found her skeleton,” says Alvik, a marine archaeologist and curator with Finland’s National Board of Antiquities.

“She never got out. Think of the panic she felt as the cabin filled with icy water — it was November, after all.”

11 Saudi king urged U.S. to attack Iran: WikiLeaks

By Arshad Mohammed and Ross Colvin, Reuters

Mon Nov 29, 10:26 am ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Saudi King Abdullah has repeatedly urged the United States to attack Iran’s nuclear program and China directed cyberattacks on the United States, according to a vast cache of diplomatic cables released on Sunday in an embarrassing leak that undermines U.S. diplomacy.

The more than 250,000 documents, given to five media groups by the whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks, provide candid and at times critical views of foreign leaders as well as sensitive information on terrorism and nuclear proliferation filed by U.S. diplomats, according to The New York Times.

The White House condemned the release by WikiLeaks and said the disclosures may endanger U.S. informants abroad. WikiLeaks said its website was under attack and none of the underlying cables was visible there Sunday night, though some were posted by news organizations.

12 U.S. regrets leaks, says will tighten security

By Arshad Mohammed, Reuters

25 mins ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The United States said on Monday that it deeply regretted the release of any classified information and would tighten security to prevent leaks such as WikiLeaks’ disclosure of a trove of State Department cables.

More than 250,000 cables were obtained by the whistle-blower website and given to the New York Times and other media groups, which published stories Sunday exposing the inner workings of U.S. diplomacy, including candid and embarrassing assessments of world leaders.

The U.S. Justice Department said it was conducting a criminal investigation of the leak of classified documents and the White House, State Department and Pentagon all said they were taking steps to prevent such disclosures in future.

13 "Alpha-dog" Putin rules Russia’s chaos: WikiLeaks

By Guy Faulconbridge, Reuters

Mon Nov 29, 12:51 pm ET

MOSCOW (Reuters) – Russia’s Vladimir Putin emerges from the biggest ever leak of U.S. diplomatic documents as the “alpha-dog” ruler of a deeply corrupt state dominated by its security forces.

The 58-year-old prime minister is presented by U.S. diplomats as Russia’s most powerful politician, holding the keys to everything from energy deals to Moscow’s Iran policy.

By contrast, President Dmitry Medvedev “plays Robin to Putin’s Batman,” is pale and hesitant and has to get his decisions approved by Putin, according to the cables.

14 Pakistan defends nuclear stance revealed by WikiLeaks

By Chris Allbritton, Reuters

Mon Nov 29, 5:36 am ET

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) – Pakistan on Monday defended its decision to deny the United States access to a nuclear research reactor after leaked diplomatic cables revealed a U.S. attempt to remove enriched uranium from the facility.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Abdul Basit told Reuters that the nuclear reactor in question had been provided by the United States in the 1960s. The Americans, he said, wanted the fuel back because they said it was their property.

“We said no, because it’s now our property and we will not return it,” Basit said. “This only shows that Pakistan is very sensitive about its nuclear program and would not allow any direct or indirect foreign intrusion.”

15 U.N. talks urged to seek modest climate deal

By Alister Doyle and Gerard Wynn, Reuters

31 mins ago

CANCUN, Mexico (Reuters) – Almost 200 nations at U.N. climate talks in Mexico must compromise on a modest package of measures or face escalating damage from floods, droughts and rising seas, scientists and politicians said on Monday.

“Our relation with nature is reaching a critical point,” Mexican President Felipe Calderon told the opening of the two-week talks in a tightly guarded hotel by the Caribbean with warships patrolling off the coast.

“We either must change our way of life to stop climate change or climate change will permanently alter the way of life of our civilization, and it will not be for the better,” he said.

16 Obama proposes freeze in federal worker pay

By Caren Bohan, Reuters

37 mins ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – President Barack Obama proposed a two-year freeze on Monday on the pay of federal workers and vowed to work with Republicans to cut the ballooning U.S. budget deficit.

The pay freeze is part of an effort by Obama to push back against Republicans, who have labeled the president and his Democrats big spenders while taking aim at his policies such as an $814 billion stimulus package and healthcare reform.

The White House estimates the worker pay freeze would save about $2 billion in the current 2011 fiscal year and $28 billion over five years. It would require congressional approval.

17 Tax, spending divide hampers deficit cut push

By Kevin Drawbaugh, Reuters

1 hr 58 mins ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Two more proposals to cut the budget deficit emerged on Monday, underscoring a deep divide on taxes and spending that is likely to blunt the impact of a plan due in two days from a presidential panel.

The deficit and the national debt have soared in recent years.

The White House sharpened its focus on the issue on Monday, saying President Barack Obama will propose a two-year freeze on the pay of civilian federal workers.

18 Special Report: Weird weather leaves Amazon thirsty

By Stuart Grudgings, Reuters

2 hrs 51 mins ago

CAAPIRANGA, Brazil (Reuters) – The river loops low past its bleached-white banks, where caimans bask in the fierce morning sun and stranded houseboats tilt precariously. Nearby sits a beached barge with its load of eight trucks and a crane. Its owners were caught out long ago by the speed of the river’s decline.

This is what it looks like when the world’s greatest rainforest is thirsty. If climate scientists are right, parched Amazon scenes like this will become more common in the coming decades, possibly threatening the survival of the forest and accelerating global warming.

The environmental and economic consequences could be huge — for Brazil, for South America, for the planet.

19 Markets skeptical as Germany and France say euro saved

By Erik Kirschbaum and Daniel Flynn, Reuters

Mon Nov 29, 10:47 am ET

BERLIN/PARIS (Reuters) – Germany and France said on Monday Europe had acted decisively to save the euro by rescuing Ireland and agreeing the basis of a permanent debt resolution system, but underwhelmed markets drove debt costs higher.

The euro traded near two-month lows against the dollar, Italian bond yields jumped and default insurance for Portuguese and Spanish debt hit record highs as investors continued to ask “who’s next” in the euro debt crisis.

While bond yields eased slightly on Irish and Portuguese debt, investors worried big budget deficits could trigger a systemic crisis in the euro zone and demanded a higher premium to hold Belgian and Italian government bonds over benchmark German debt.

20 Special Report: Nuclear’s lost generation

By Sylvia Westall, Reuters

Mon Nov 29, 8:25 am ET

OLKILUOTO, Finland (Reuters) – On a flat, low-lying island nestled in crisp waters off the west coast of Finland, the first nuclear power plant ordered in Western Europe since 1986 is inching toward start-up.

Over 4,000 builders and engineers are at work on the sprawling Olkiluoto 3 project, whose turbine hall is so cavernous it could house two Boeing 747 jets stacked on top of each other.

When it is dark, which in winter is most of the day, enormous spotlights throw into focus scores of scaffolding towers and the red hauling equipment that encircle the grey, unfinished reactor building.

21 Oregon mosque hit by arson 2 days after bomb sting

By Teresa Carson, Reuters

Sun Nov 28, 10:03 pm ET

PORTLAND, Oregon (Reuters) – U.S. investigators said a fire at an Islamic center in Oregon on Sunday was arson and warned they would tolerate no retribution for an attempt by a Somali-born teenager to detonate what he thought was a car bomb.

The fire occurred less than two days after Mohamed Osman Mohamud, who had attended prayers at the center, was arrested in a sting involving a fake bomb at a Christmas tree lighting ceremony in Oregon’s largest city, Portland.

The fire damaged a room at the Salman Alfarisi Islamic Center in Corvallis before dawn on Sunday. “We do have evidence that it was arson,” said Carla Pusateri of Corvallis Fire Department, who led the initial investigation.

22 Economic crisis feeds Portuguese "saudade"

By Angus MacSwan, Reuters

Mon Nov 29, 12:40 pm ET

LISBON (Reuters) – As Portugal struggles through an economic crisis, a mood of “saudade” is gripping many of its people.

The sentiment is a national characteristic — a feeling of melancholy and resignation and a nostalgia for a past that always seems better than the present. “Saudade” is an essential element of fado, the mournful songs played in the bars of Lisbon’s Bairro Alto at night.

With the government imposing austerity measures and talk in markets that an internationally-funded bailout is needed to overcome a debt crisis, gloom prevails on the streets of the rain-swept capital at the edge of the Atlantic Ocean.

23 Protests and fraud charges roil Haiti elections

By Joseph Guyler Delva and Pascal Fletcher, Reuters

Sun Nov 28, 8:10 pm ET

PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters) – Haiti’s elections ended in confusion on Sunday as 12 of the 18 presidential candidates denounced “massive fraud” and demanded the polls be annulled and street protests erupted over voting delays and problems.

The repudiation of the elections by so many of the presidential candidates dealt a blow to the credibility of the U.N.-supported poll. The international community was hoping the vote could produce a stable, legitimate government in the poor earthquake-ravaged Caribbean country.

Voters’ frustration at not being able to cast their ballots due to organizational problems at many polling stations in the capital Port-au-Prince boiled over into street protests. At least one polling station was trashed by one angry group.

24 US tries to contain damage from leaked documents

By MATTHEW LEE, Associated Press

10 mins ago

WASHINGTON – The Obama administration moved forcefully Monday to contain damage from the release of more than a quarter-million classified diplomatic files, branding the action as an attack on the United States and raising the prospect of legal action against online whistle-blower WikiLeaks.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said that WikiLeaks acted illegally in posting the material. She said the Obama administration was taking “aggressive steps to hold responsible those who stole this information.”

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said the U.S. would not rule out taking action against WikiLeaks. Attorney General Eric Holder said the administration would prosecute if violations of federal law are found in an ongoing criminal investigation of the incident.

25 Obama calls for 2-year freeze on federal pay

By TOM RAUM, Associated Press

5 mins ago

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama on Monday proposed a two-year freeze of the salaries of some 2 million federal workers, trying to seize the deficit-cutting initiative from Republicans with a sudden, dramatic stroke. Though signaling White House concern over record deficits, the freeze would make only a tiny dent in annual deficits or the nation’s $14 trillion debt.

“Small businesses and families are tightening their belts,” Obama said in brief remarks at the White House. “The government should, too.” The administration said the plan was designed to save more than $5 billion over the first two years.

The proposal, which must be approved by Congress, would not apply to the military, but it would affect all others on the Executive Branch payroll. It would not affect members of Congress or their staffs, defense contractors, postal workers or federal court judges and workers.

26 Afghan police officer kills 6 US service members

By HEIDI VOGT and RAHIM FAIEZ, Associated Press

12 mins ago

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP – An Afghan border policeman killed six American servicemen during a training mission Monday, underscoring one of the risks in a U.S.-led program to educate enough recruits to turn over the lead for security to Afghan forces by 2014.

The shooting in a remote area near the Pakistani border appeared to be the deadliest attack of its kind in at least two years.

Attacks on NATO troops by Afghan policemen or soldiers, although still rare, have increased as the coalition has accelerated the program. Other problems with the rapidly growing security forces include drug use, widespread illiteracy and high rates of attrition.

27 Egyptians riot, burn cars, claiming vote fraud

By HADEEL AL-SHALCHI, Associated Press

13 mins ago

ALEXANDRIA, Egypt – Protesters set fire to cars, tires and two polling stations, clashing with police firing tear gas in riots that erupted around Egypt on Monday over allegations the ruling party carried out widespread fraud to sweep parliamentary elections.

The country’s most powerful opposition movement, the Islamic fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood, acknowledged that its lawmakers may be all but completely swept out of parliament by what it and other called rampant rigging.

That’s a significant blow to the group, which held 88 seats – a fifth – of the outgoing parliament, and it is widely believed that it was the government goal to drive out its only real rival’s lawmakers. The election showed the Brotherhood’s limited options after repeated crackdowns in past years – including the arrest of some 1,400 of its activists in the weeks ahead of the vote.

28 Staggering Picasso trove turns up in France

By JAMEY KEATEN, Associated Press

14 mins ago

PARIS – Pablo Picasso almost never stopped creating, leaving thousands of drawings, paintings and sculptures that lure crowds to museums and mansions worldwide. Now, a retired electrician says that 271 of the master’s creations have been sitting for decades in his garage.

Picasso’s heirs are claiming theft, the art world is savoring what appears to be an authentic find, and the workman, who installed burglar alarms for Picasso, is defending what he calls a gift from the most renowned artist of the 20th century.

Picasso’s son and other heirs say they were approached by electrician Pierre Le Guennec in September to authenticate the undocumented art from Picasso’s signature Cubist period.

29 AP poll: Duke unanimous No. 1; UConn joins Top 25

By JIM O’CONNELL, AP Basketball Writer

1 hr 12 mins ago

There’s no arguing Duke is No. 1 in The Associated Press college basketball poll and no doubt that Connecticut has moved into the Top 25. The Blue Devils (6-0) received all 65 first-place votes from the national media panel Monday, and the Huskies (5-0) made the second-most impressive jump into the rankings in the last 21 years, moving in at No. 7.

Duke was No. 1 on all but seven ballots last week but Michigan State, which got six No. 1 votes, and Kansas State, which had the other, both lost – the latter to the Blue Devils as they won the CBE Classic.

The wins over Marquette, Kansas State and Oregon made the Blue Devils the first unanimous No. 1 since Kentucky did it for one week last season.

30 Dem state lawmakers defecting to GOP post-election

By SHANNON McCAFFREY, Associated Press

17 mins ago

ATLANTA – Staggering Election Day losses are not the Democratic Party’s final indignity this year. At least 13 state lawmakers in five states have defected to Republican ranks since the Nov. 2 election, adding to already huge GOP gains in state legislatures. And that number could grow as next year’s legislative sessions draw near.

The defections underscore dissatisfaction with the Democratic Party – particularly in the South – and will give Republicans a stronger hand in everything from pushing a conservative fiscal and social agenda to redrawing political maps.

In Alabama, four Democrats announced last week they were joining the GOP, giving Republicans a supermajority in the House that allows them to pass legislation without any support from the other party. The party switch of a Democratic lawmaker from New Orleans handed control of Louisiana’s House to Republicans for the first time since Reconstruction.

31 Lawmakers return to Capitol to clean up leftovers

By JIM ABRAMS, Associated Press

Mon Nov 29, 10:30 am ET

WASHINGTON – Congress resumes its lame-duck session work Monday with the two parties sharply divided over how to deal with the George W. Bush-era tax cuts due to expire at year’s end.

President Barack Obama and most Democrats want to retain them for any couple earning $250,000 or less a year. Republicans are bent on making them permanent for everybody, including the richest.

The cuts apply to rates on wage income as well as to dividends and capital gains. A failure to act would mean big tax increases for people at every income level. Also at stake is the hope that Republicans and Democrats can work together, on this or any other issue, in the fading days of this congressional session or next year when Republicans gain control of the House.

32 Oregon Muslim leaders fear retribution after plot

By JONATHAN COOPER and NIGEL DUARA, Associated Press

1 hr 39 mins ago

CORVALLIS, Ore. – Patrols around mosques and other Islamic sites in Portland have been stepped up as Muslim leaders expressed fears of retribution, days after a Somali-American man was accused of trying to blow up a van full of explosives during the city’s Christmas tree lighting ceremony.

Portland Mayor Sam Adams said Sunday that he beefed up protection around mosques “and other facilities that might be vulnerable to knuckle-headed retribution” after hearing of the bomb plot.

The move followed a fire Sunday at the Islamic center in Corvallis, a college town about 75 miles southwest of Portland, where suspect Mohamed Osman Mohamud occasionally worshipped, prompting an FBI arson investigation and concern about the potential for more retaliation.

33 Tiny house movement thrives amid real estate bust

By TERENCE CHEA, Associated Press

2 hrs 2 mins ago

GRATON, Calif. – As Americans downsize in the aftermath of a colossal real estate bust, at least one tiny corner of the housing market appears to be thriving. To save money or simplify their lives, a small but growing number of Americans are buying or building homes that could fit inside many people’s living rooms, according to entrepreneurs in the small house industry.

Some put these wheeled homes in their backyards to use as offices, studios or extra bedrooms. Others use them as mobile vacation homes they can park in the woods. But the most intrepid of the tiny house owners live in them full-time, paring down their possessions and often living off the grid.

“It’s very un-American in the sense that living small means consuming less,” said Jay Shafer, 46, co-founder of the Small House Society, sitting on the porch of his wooden cabin in California wine country. “Living in a small house like this really entails knowing what you need to be happy and getting rid of everything else.”

34 TCU going to Big East Conference

By STEPHEN HAWKINS, AP Sports Writer

1 hr 3 mins ago

FORT WORTH, Texas – TCU is moving to the Big East Conference, where the Horned Frogs won’t have to worry about busting the BCS to play for a national championship.

TCU’s board of trustees unanimously approved an invitation Monday to join the Big East in football and all other sports. The move from the Mountain West Conference becomes official July 1, 2012.

The Big East will provide TCU automatic access to the Bowl Championship Series and its five big-money games. That league, currently with eight football teams, has one of six automatic BCS slots.

35 Scientists trick cells into switching identities

By MALCOLM RITTER, AP Science Writer

Mon Nov 29, 1:59 pm ET

NEW YORK – Scientists are reporting early success at transforming one kind of specialized cell into another, a feat of biological alchemy that doctors may someday perform inside a patient’s body to restore health.

So if a heart attack damages muscle tissue in the heart, for example, doctors may someday be able to get other cells in that organ to become muscle to help the heart pump.

That’s a futuristic idea, but researchers are enthusiastic about the potential for the new direct-conversion approach.

36 Iraq court gives Tariq Aziz new 10 year sentence

By QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA and MAZIN YAHYA, Associated Press

Mon Nov 29, 11:53 am ET

BAGHDAD – An Iraqi court on Monday convicted Tariq Aziz, Saddam Hussein’s longtime foreign minister, of terrorizing Shiite Kurds during the Iran-Iraq war, sentencing him to 10 years in prison.

The jail term piles a new penalty on the 74-year-old Aziz, the only Christian in Saddam’s inner circle who already faces an execution sentence from another case.

It is the fourth set of charges against Aziz, who is asking Iraqi President Jalal Talabani for a pardon to spare him from execution. Aziz attorney Giovanni di Stefano said Monday afternoon that it is also the last legal hurdle that the former diplomat and deputy prime minister had to face before Talabani could consider pardoning him.

37 Plenty of parity in all divisions as races heat up

By The Associated Press

Mon Nov 29, 6:43 am ET

Talk about a frenzied finish.

With each of the NFL’s eight divisions tightly jumbled after this weekend’s games, the last five weeks of the regular season are sure to be filled with plenty of unpredictable drama.

Take the wild NFC West, where Seattle and St. Louis are matched at the top with records below .500 at 5-6 – with Arizona and San Francisco playing Monday night and the winner moving a game behind at 4-7.

38 Ireland’s bailout boosts banks, inflames taxpayers

By SHAWN POGATCHNIK, Associated Press

Mon Nov 29, 1:58 pm ET

DUBLIN – Ireland’s international bailout boosted its bank stocks Monday but outraged many hard-pressed taxpayers, who questioned why the government’s pension reserves must be ravaged as part of a deal that burdens the whole country with the mistakes of a rich elite.

Shares in Ireland’s banks rose sharply as markets were encouraged by the bailout’s immediate focus on injecting ?10 billion into the cash-strapped lenders out of a total of ?67.5 billion ($89 billion) in loans.

But the Irish were shocked by a key condition for the rescue – that the government use ?17.5 billion of its own cash and pension reserves to shore up its public finances, which have been overwhelmed by recession and exceptional costs of a runaway bank-bailout effort.

39 UN agency pushes new rules on air cargo security

By CHRIS HAWLEY, Associated Press

Mon Nov 29, 8:06 am ET

NEW YORK – The U.N. agency that oversees aviation is pushing new guidelines for cargo security to counter al-Qaida’s new mail-bomb strategy, but is stopping short of calling for 100 percent screening of packages, as pilots and some U.S. lawmakers have urged.

The proposed changes by the International Civil Aviation Organization concentrate on “supply-chain security,” or checking outbound shipments before they even reach the airport. A draft of new guidelines will go out to all 190 member countries in the next few weeks, the agency says.

Governments are increasingly worried about cargo security as the holiday season swells the number of packages moving around the world.

40 AP Exclusive: Close calls for al-Qaida’s No. 2

By ADAM GOLDMAN and KATHY GANNON, Associated Press

Mon Nov 29, 10:25 am ET

WASHINGTON – The CIA has come closer to capturing or killing Osama bin Laden’s top deputy than was previously known during the last nine years, The Associated Press has learned.

Tragically, the agency thought it had its best chance last year at a secret base in Afghanistan, but instead fell victim to a double agent’s devastating suicide bombing.

The CIA missed a chance to nab Ayman al-Zawahri in 2003 in the northwest Pakistani city of Peshawar, where he met with another senior al-Qaida leader who was apprehended the next day, several current and former U.S. intelligence officials said.

41 Nations again try to bridge rich-poor climate gap

By ARTHUR MAX, Associated Press

Mon Nov 29, 4:52 am ET

CANCUN, Mexico – World governments begin another attempt Monday to overcome the disconnect between rich and poor nations on fighting global warming, with evidence mounting that the Earth’s climate already is changing in ways that will affect both sides of the wealth divide.

During two weeks of talks, the 193-nation U.N. conference hopes to conclude agreements that will clear the way to mobilize billions of dollars for developing countries and give them green technology to help them shift from fossil fuels affecting climate change.

After a disappointing summit last year in Copenhagen, no hope remains of reaching an overarching deal this year setting legal limits on how much major countries would be allowed to pollute. Such an accord was meant to describe a path toward slashing greenhouse gas emissions by mid-century, when scientists say they should be half of today’s levels.

42 Swastika case another race issue for NM town

By TIM KORTE, Associated Press

1 hr 6 mins ago

FARMINGTON, N.M. – Three friends had just finished their shifts at a McDonald’s when prosecutors say they carried out a gruesome attack on a customer: They allegedly shaped a coat hanger into a swastika, placed it on a heated stove and branded the symbol on the arm of the mentally disabled Navajo man.

Authorities say they then shaved a swastika on the back of the 22-year-old victim’s head and used markers to scrawl messages and images on his body, including “KKK,” “White Power,” a pentagram and a graphic image of a penis.

The men have become the first in the nation to be charged under a new law that makes it easier for the federal government to prosecute people for hate crimes.

43 USDA asked to approve GMO apple that won’t brown

By SHANNON DININNY, Associated Press

Mon Nov 29, 4:16 am ET

CASHMERE, Wash. – A Canadian biotechnology company has asked the U.S. to approve a genetically modified apple that won’t brown soon after its sliced, saying the improvement could boost sales of apples for snacks, salads and other uses.

U.S. apple growers say it’s too soon to know whether they’d be interested in the apple: They need to resolve questions about the apple’s quality, the cost of planting and, most importantly, whether people would buy it.

“Genetically modified – that’s a bad word in our industry,” said Todd Fryhover, president of the apple commission in Washington state, which produces more than half the U.S. crop.

44 NYC teacher caught up in Spanish curse debate

By CRISTIAN SALAZAR, Associated Press

Mon Nov 29, 1:29 am ET

NEW YORK – It can be tossed off almost harmlessly like “damn” or dropped like an F-bomb.

On the streets of New York’s diverse Spanish-speaking neighborhoods, it can be heard expressing joy, frustration and outrage.

Perhaps most notoriously in pop culture, it punctuated the film dialogue of 1983’s “Scarface.”

Idiots or Liars?

Pay Freeze Decision Smacks of Too-Cute Political Team Running the Show

By: David Dayen Monday November 29, 2010 12:06 pm

There are two options. One is that Obama necessarily gravitates toward people with really bad economic ideas, and as a result of this advice makes really bad economic decisions. The other, and I would probably say the right, option is that the economic team isn’t really driving the debate, certainly not anymore. The political team thinks in terms of 11-dimensional chess and putting Republicans in a bad spot and all of the things you’d expect out of this federal pay freeze decision. Never mind that this hasn’t worked in the entire history of the Obama Administration. So a politically-minded official saying that unemployment is structural reinforces that we should really get around to those budget cuts which will please centrists in 2012.

There’s a lot of turmoil on the economic team right now, with new people moving in and out. The political team, outside of Rahm Emanuel, has remained basically stable, certainly in terms of worldview. And that worldview (mis)reads polls, and thinks that being the “good guys” who cut worker pay and freeze discretionary spending to “look tough” on the deficit is eminently responsible. It’s also responsible to extend unemployment benefits to people who have no other visible means of support, but that’s out of their hands, and if they fail, ah well. What’s important is to convey responsibility to the elites, who will pat them on the head as they carry out their austerity plans.

Oh, and while raising taxes on or otherwise “punishing” the banksters will instantly result in these “talented” Masters of the Universe going Galt, the same logic doesn’t apply at all to government employees-

"Responsible" Obama Administration Doesn’t Think Federal Employees Facing Pay Cut Will Leave to the Private Sector

By: David Dayen Monday November 29, 2010 11:30 am

On a conference call just now, White House Communications Director Dan Pfeiffer and U.S. Chief Performance Officer and the Office of Management and Budget’s Deputy Director for Management Jeffrey Zients defended the White House’s [proposed pay freeze ] for federal employees from the charge that this will drive talented workers out of government as they see no prospects for individual advancement. Seeking a better return on their talent, the theory goes, they would move to the private sector, probably a government contractor, where their services can be “rented” from the government at a higher rate. If the government has the same amount of services to deliver and less skilled know-how at their disposal, they would need to draw upon that from somewhere. So under this scenario, government would end up paying more for the same pool of talent, despite freezing salaries.

Zients disputed the notion that this pay freeze will lead to a dissolution of talent. “On recruitment and retention, we believe that people come to government service for range of reasons…. We feel comfortable that we have a strong value proposition and can retain the best and brightest.” Given this, Zients didn’t feel that there would be an expanded reliance on government contracting as a result of this decision. They believe they can wring enough out of federal contracting to save $40 billion dollars, in fact.

And finally, the problem with the economy is NOT THE DEFICIT!  It’s a lack of Aggregate Demand!

Obama Flunks Economics with Pointless Federal Wage Freeze

By: Scarecrow Monday November 29, 2010 8:35 am

(F)or the umpteenth time, this President has repeated discredited Republican gibberish that when households are having to cut back spending during a recession, government should do the same thing.

That’s just wrong. Foolishly wrong. Depressingly (literally), tragically wrong.



With 15 million unemployed and millions more living in job and health insecurity, typical non-wealthy households have no choice but to cut back. So private spending cannot pull the economy out of the ditch as it has in the past. But that is not true of the federal government.

Government spending can pull the economy up from the bottom. And only government has the resources and the power to fill in the gap in aggregate demand to bring the economy and jobs back.

A government with its own currency is not a household. It has different abilities, different ways of affecting the economy and paying for things. It controls the money supply. And it has different responsibilities, including the obligation to pull the economy out of a deep recession, to help create jobs and foster job creation in the private sector. To do this under today’s conditions requires enhanced spending/investments by government, not less. And there has never been a better time for government to act, nor has the cost of acting ever been lower.

It’s counterproductive and stupid for the President of the United States to keep telling Americans the false argument that government needs to tighten its belt when households are tightening theirs. And it’s even worse to falsely claim that by focusing on deficit reduction, the government is “doing everything we can to help boost economic growth and spur job creation.”

As Krugman said

(Y)ou have to wonder what it will take for serious people to realize that punishing the populace for the bankers’ sins is worse than a crime; it’s a mistake.

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”.

Lawrence Lewis (Turkana): The war in Afghanistan enters Joseph Heller territory

Earlier this month, it was reported that one of the largest U.S. government contractors in Afghanistan was being fined nearly $70 million for having “knowingly and systematically overcharged the U.S. government.” But just two months after a whistleblower revealed the Louis Berger Group’s deliberate and systematic overcharging, the U.S. Agency for International Development awarded the company a new joint contract worth $1.4 billion. That seemingly large fine turned out to be but a minor business expense.

The one part of the U.S. effort in Afghanistan that is going very well is the contracting. Not the results of the contracting, the money being made off it. Less than two weeks ago came this news:

U.S. Army Gen. David Petraeus, the commander of international forces in Afghanistan, has ordered a dramatic expansion in contracting. Other than asking a brigadier general to investigate problems with military contracts, so far he’s failed to address their flaws.

   A McClatchy investigation has found that since January 2008, nearly $200 million in U.S. Army Corps of Engineers construction projects in Afghanistan have failed, face serious delays or resulted in subpar work. Poor recordkeeping made it impossible for McClatchy to determine the value of faulty projects before then. The military tries to recover part of a project’s cost, but in many cases, the funds were already spent.

McClatchy’s investigation also found that the Corps accepts bids that don’t cover such obvious costs as security or the contractor’s profit margin. One might think security costs in Afghanistan would be significant. One might think a contractor’s profit margin should be a factor when considering whether to send said contractor piles of taxpayers’ cash. Remember that whole deficit thing? Apparently, the Corps doesn’t. And, of course, it gets even worse. . . .

It’s hard to verify who is whom. It’s hard to verify where the billions of U.S. tax dollars are going. It’s hard to verify what exactly is supposed to be accomplished by continuing the war. It’s hard to verify the existence of an exit strategy and it’s hard to verify the existence of an exit date.

To be continued.

Joe Conason: Iran’s Best Friends on Capitol Hill

Nuclear weapons treaties are like currency exchange rates-always vitally important to the national interest but often stunningly dull, not to say impenetrable. Yet Washington has suddenly been jolted awake by Republican threats to stall if not kill the Obama administration’s New START treaty.

The irony is that by doing so, they would do little to protect American security while providing moral support to Iran, North Korea and any other rogue regime seeking to arm itself with nukes.

By reducing the bilateral limits on deployed warheads and delivery systems, and by modernizing the verification and monitoring system contained in the original START treaty, the new agreement achieved a breakthrough in arms control and improved U.S. relations with Moscow. The equally important strategic objective, however, was to establish a renewed bilateral commitment to arms control that would strengthen the international effort to prevent Iran from building nuclear weapons.

Dahlia Lithwick and David Weigel: Life After Russ

Defenders of civil liberties look for a new champion to replace Russ Feingold.

n an upset that seemed impossible in June and inevitable by October, Sen. Russ Feingold lost his bid for re-election. Three weeks later, disappointment lingers for some 1,020,860 Wisconsin voters and at least one ACLU lawyer in Washington. “I’m still in denial,” says Laura Murphy, who first met Feingold in the 1990s and is now on her second tour as director of the ACLU’s Washington office. “I have vivid memories of long conversations with him in the weeks after the 9/11 attacks. He was the only person willing to offer amendments or speak out at all against the USA Patriot Act.” . . . .

One of the reasons it’s become more politically palatable to attack the government on civil liberties is that Feingold made it so. We sometimes forget that, as well. Most coverage of Feingold’s defeat has centered on the ironic fact that it happened after his campaign-finance-reform legislation was gutted last winter by the Supreme Court. But Feingold is perhaps most famous for being the only senator to vote against the Patriot Act. With his defeat, the civil liberties community now finds itself facing a simple yet daunting task: Find another Russ Feingold.

Robert Kuttner: Backbone, Please

The media are infatuated with the idea that excessive partisanship is symmetrical (‘If only the Republicans and the Democrats would meet each other halfway, the nation’s ills would be solved’). There are two problems with this formulation. Firstly, the Republicans and Democrats aren’t playing the same game. So if the Democrats meet the Republicans half way, the Republicans only demand that they do it again. Secondly, the solution to what ails the economy is somewhere to the left of most Democrats — not midway between, say, President Obama and Mitch McConnell. The economy will be fixed only with more public investment, more progressive taxation, and more regulation.

Joseph A. Palermo: Stupid Politics From a Smart Administration

The Democratic Party lost its spine the moment it decided to cash in on all that corporate political money. If we don’t reverse Citizens United and get the money out of our political system all of the other progressive causes don’t stand a chance. A real breakthrough would be to unite Left and Right, the progressives and the Tea Partiers in a shared effort to get the money out of the politics — we might disagree on almost every other issue, but buying and selling politicians and rigging elections with corporate cash should be an area where there is common ground. And if Obama starts triangulating Howard Dean and Dennis Kucinich should run in the primaries. The Democratic Party at that point will have nothing to lose.

Merton and Joan Bernstein: Washington Post Budget Hocus Pocus

Possibly the most amazing aspect of the Commission on Fiscal Responsibity’s drive to reduce the federal “deficit” are proposals by its chairs and others to cut benefits payable by Social Security, although the program pays its own way and has generated robust annual surpluses, now totaling $2.4 trillion and projected to reach $4.2 trillion. Those assets will enable Social Security to pay its promised benefits in full until 2037 and about 75% thereafter. Two measures that draw strong support in polls — extending the payroll tax to higher pay and slowly increasing the payroll tax rate (1/20th of 1 percent per year for 20 years is one version) — would fully fund the program for 75 years. The program’s own modest shortfall — about 27 years away — is easily fixed with these proposals that the public supports.

Moreover, Social Security does not and, indeed, cannot add to the federal deficit: It is permitted to pay benefits only to the extent it has funds on hand and is prohibited from borrowing. Nonetheless, the November 24 Washington Post presented summaries of three “bi-partisan plans to reduce the deficit” which propose multiple Social Security benefit reductions. The commission co-chairs propose to cut benefits for the top 50% of earners (which hits many with quite modest incomes) and to raise retirement age (another benefit cut); both benefit cuts and raising retirement age poll badly. And, despite assurances by reduction advocates that those already retired and nearing retirement would be spared, all three plans would soon trim the annual cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) formula. Advocates claim that a new “chained” COLA would more accurately reflect price increases by taking account of consumer substitution of less costly items in the “basket” used to measure price changes; a favorite illustration is switching from meat to chicken.

E.J. Dionne Jr.: Can Obama fight the GOP’s blame game?

Can we govern ourselves in the next two years? Do Republicans have any interest in accomplishments that might even indirectly benefit President Obama?

These questions hang over Tuesday’s meeting between the president and congressional leaders, an encounter that could set the tone for the next two years.

Grounds for optimism are thin. The most striking aspect of Republican behavior since their party’s electoral triumph is a haughty assumption that the voters rejected everything Obama represents and that he ought to capitulate on all fronts right now. Anyone who fails to see things this way just doesn’t “get” it.

So certain are the president’s opponents that they and only they represent the will of the nation that they feel empowered to undercut Obama even on issues related to our nation’s security.

Nothing Left To Steal

Monday Business Edition

The World is running out of money to insure the fictional assets of ‘senior creditors’ and banksters.

The problem is fundamentally leverage, the intellectual market laziness that makes financial institutions think they are entitled to make unlimited bets on 36:1 payouts every time.

When things get even a little difficult they whine and whine about how badly they are mistreated, but the fact of the matter is that there’s going to be a haircut taken and the obvious target is the biggest one.  Spain is the next to go and Italy after that.  Euros were such a good bet.

And if you were smart and doubled down every chance you could get, you’d build up quite a pile of chips.

Not the kind you can eat.

So what are they worth?  Whatever Rick will pay for them in some medium of exchange that’s good outside the casino.  Unless you want to barter, I have two passes out of Casablanca.

We’ve talked about Ireland and Iceland, but I wonder how many people are familiar with Dubai?

Today, Dubai has emerged as a global city and a business hub. Although Dubai’s economy was built on the oil industry, currently the emirate’s model of business, similar to that of Western countries, drives its economy, with the effect that its main revenues are now from tourism, real estate, and financial services.

I like this one because it has lots of numbers-

Dubai mulls sale of corporate champions

By Simeon Kerr in Dubai, Financial Times

Published: November 28 2010 18:42

Dubai is mulling the privatisation of home-grown corporate champions as a means to start paying down its estimated $110bn in debts, senior officials said.

Let’s just stop right there and recognize that we’re talking about an Ireland.  The proposal is to sell minority stakes in State Owned and Sovereign Wealth Fund Owned industries like their National Airline.

Mr Shaibani was speaking at an open forum held on Sunday, a rare moment of media engagement in an emirate that has faced a deluge of negative press since shocking markets with its standstill request a year ago, which ended with the restructuring of $25bn in debts at troubled conglomerate Dubai World.

Yup, that Dubai World, the one we were going to sell our ports to.  Now Dubai has already had a bailout from the UAE to the tune of $10 Billion in February of 2009 and assures us with the utmost gravity and reliability, just like Spain and Portugal, that they don’t need any bailouts thank you very much.

We are rapidly reaching the point where negative outcomes for the bankster class are inevitable due to the sheer volume of their theft.

Business News below.

From Yahoo News Business

1 Euro hits two month low after Ireland bailout

by Roddy Thomson, AFP

2 hrs 6 mins ago

BRUSSELS (AFP) – The euro sank to a two-month low on Monday in a nervous first reaction to a giant bailout for Ireland that European governments hope will steady the under-pressure currency.

Finance ministers who sealed the 85-billion-euro (113-billion-dollar) deal at emergency talks in Brussels Sunday were anxious to reassure Asian markets and head off any moves on Portugal and Spain, which are considered the next most vulnerable economies.

But even as international financial leaders stepped forward to endorse the agreement, currency dealers in Tokyo gave their own verdict.

2 French bank chief confident on Ireland bailout

AFP

Mon Nov 29, 2:49 am ET

TOKYO (AFP) – Bank of France governor Christian Noyer said on Monday he had “no doubt” that the 85 billion euro bailout of Ireland agreed at emergency talks in Brussels would be successful.

“The package has been clearly designed by the IMF and the EU and you can rely on the multi-decade experience of the IMF to put in place plans which are totally credible,” he told reporters in Tokyo on the sidelines of a financial forum.

“There is absolutely no doubt that this plan will work,” he said of the 113-billion-dollar bailout, adding that Ireland has launched “extremely tough measures to restructure its financial sector”.

3 Cowen faces tough task selling bailout to angry Irish

by Andrew Bushe, AFP

32 mins ago

DUBLIN (AFP) – Irish Prime Minister Brian Cowen faced a backlash Monday for agreeing the EU-IMF bailout for his debt-laden nation, amid outrage at what opposition politicians and the press condemned as a “sell-out”.

Cowen insisted the 85-billion-euro (113-billion-dollar) bailout was the “best deal available” for Ireland and will help shore up its banks, allowing his government to continue operating without imposing further tax rises or spending cuts.

But the main opposition Fine Gael party called the agreement “appalling”, insisting the 5.8 percent annual interest rate on the loan was unaffordable and condemning plans to raid Ireland’s pension fund reserves to help pay for it.

4 Europe fixes Irish bailout, future rescue rules

by Roddy Thomson, AFP

Sun Nov 28, 7:29 pm ET

BRUSSELS (AFP) – Europe on Sunday agreed a bailout for Ireland and new rules for future rescues which, under stringent IMF terms, would hit government bond investors.

And as the deal to help Ireland was finalised, attention in Brussels turned on fighting any moves by the market on Portugal and Spain.

Finance ministers sealed the 85-billion-euro (113-billion-dollar) agreement at emergency talks in Brussels timed to reassure the Asian financial markets before they reopened early Monday.

5 EU ministers divided over Irish bailout interest rate

AFP

Sun Nov 28, 8:34 am ET

BRUSSELS (AFP) – Europe’s finance ministers met on Sunday to thrash out details of Ireland’s 85-billion-euro (113-billion-dollar) bailout, but France’s representative said they were still divided over the interest rate to be charged on the loan.

Sunday’s emergency meeting in Brussels is aimed at preventing Ireland’s debt crisis from spreading to other countries in the 16-member eurozone, with experts declaring that Portugal and Spain are also vulnerable.

“We still have a few little details in the composition to rework and to finalise, particularly on the interest rate,” said French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde as she arrived for the meeting.

6 Markets see both debt and EU in need of restructuring

by Richard Lein, AFP

Sun Nov 28, 2:55 am ET

PARIS (AFP) – An eventual restructuring of some eurozone debt and big changes in how the European Union and eurozone functions are now seen as probable and even inevitable, analysts say.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel may have said this week that she sees “absolutely no case of a eurozone country in … a situation” where it would need to restructure its debt.

But markets are thinking otherwise.

7 Debt-ridden regions weigh on Spain

by Katell Abiven, AFP

Sun Nov 28, 12:47 am ET

MADRID (AFP) – Spain’s crisis-struck regions have rolled up a combined 105-billion-euro debt, heightening concerns about the prospects for the entire country’s finances.

Senior members of Spain’s Socialist government have stressed over past days that the Spanish economy is not the same as that of Ireland, which is being thrown a lifeline worth 85 billion euros (113 billion dollars).

“Of course we are not the same,” said the conservative daily ABC in an ironic commentary.

8 Dubai considers privatisation in fight against debt

by Ali Khalil, AFP

Sun Nov 28, 10:31 am ET

DUBAI (AFP) – Debt-laden Dubai is looking into a possible privatisation of public sector firms and offloading international assets, but is waiting for the right time for a good return, officials said on Sunday.

“We continue to work to diversify our financing sources and broaden the space for participation in the wealth of our economy,” said Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed al-Maktoum, the head of Dubai’s Supreme Fiscal Committee.

“We (continue to) work on opening the door for public subscription in some of our large companies,” he added in a meeting with the media titled “Dubai economic update forum.”

9 Africa lashes Europe on trade at summit eve

by Claire Rosemberg, AFP

Sun Nov 28, 12:52 am ET

TRIPOLI (AFP) – Africa’s leaders, frustrated after almost a decade of failed efforts to seal trade deals with Europe, are heading into a summit with the European Union next week ready to do battle, or walk out.

“If there’s no progress, we may as well go back to square one,” said an African Union diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity ahead of talks Monday and Tuesday in the Libyan capital. The gathering will involve 80 EU and African Union nations.

After years of wrangling over Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) between the two continents, the prickly issue was studiously left off the summit agenda.

10 Cotton price surge threatens ‘cheap fashion’

by Shafiq Alam, AFP

Sun Nov 28, 12:56 am ET

DHAKA (AFP) – In the home of cheap clothing manufacturing, the record price of cotton is causing havoc for producers — and the pain will pass down the chain to buyers in developed countries, analysts say.

Bangladesh, the third-biggest producer of clothes worldwide, is one of the cheapest locations for manufacturing in the world and its factories churn out clothing for leading brands from Wal-Mart to H & M and Gap.

After reluctantly agreeing to a sharp rise in the minimum wage, under pressure from the government and violent protests from workers, the industry is now grappling with price and supply issues with its main raw material.

11 PM casts doubt on N.Zealand coal mining future

by Marty Melville, AFP

Sun Nov 28, 4:01 am ET

GREYMOUTH, New Zealand (AFP) – Premier John Key cast doubt on the future of New Zealand’s underground coal mining industry Sunday ahead of a fresh explosion which sparked an inferno at the colliery where 29 men died.

Police said the latest blast ripped through the Pike River pit just before 2:00pm (0100 GMT), causing no injuries but igniting coal in the mine, opened two years ago to meet burgeoning demand from Asia.

“It literally sparked a coal fire in the mine. The fire is visible from the air above the ventilation shaft which was further damaged during the latest explosion,” police inspector Mark Harrison said.

12 Irish in mass protest against cuts to seal bailout

by Loic Vennin, AFP

Sat Nov 27, 4:36 pm ET

DUBLIN (AFP) – Tens of thousands of people on Saturday joined a mass protest in Dublin against austerity measures needed to secure an international bailout for Ireland, as speculation grew of an imminent deal.

Protesters marched through Dublin waving placards reading “Eire not for sale, not to the IMF” and “there is a better, fairer way”, denouncing the bailout and calling on Prime Minister Brian Cowen to quit.

A spokeswoman for the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU), which organised the march, said about 150,000 people took part. Police put the figure at 50,000.

13 PM says Spain ready to ‘accelerate’ economic reforms

AFP

Sat Nov 27, 1:46 pm ET

MADRID (AFP) – Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero said Saturday his government was ready to “accelerate” economic reforms if necessary, amid deep concerns on the world financial markets.

Zapatero added that he would not “deviate from austerity”, a day after he ruled out an Irish-style rescue for Spain and markets cranked the country’s debt risk premium up to record highs.

“If it is necessary to accelerate the reforms, we will do it,” he told reporters following a meeting with 37 leaders of big business.

14 EU ministers prepare to seal Irish aid plan

AFP

Sat Nov 27, 11:03 am ET

PARIS (AFP) – EU finance ministers will meet in Brussels on Sunday to wrap up an aid plan for debt-ravaged Ireland before markets reopen, a French source said as tens of thousands protested planned austerity measures in Dublin.

The source familiar with the issue said French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde had called for the meeting of her colleagues from eurozone countries, to be joined afterwards by ministers from the rest of the EU.

Originally it had been planned for them to communicate simply by telephone to approve the package worth 85 billion euros (113 billion dollars) and its conditions, the source added.

15 Putin backtracks on EU-Russia free trade zone

by Anna Smolchenko, AFP

Fri Nov 26, 2:57 pm ET

BERLIN (AFP) – Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin toned down Friday his enthusiasm for a vast EU-Russia free trade zone after German Chancellor Angela Merkel gave his proposals a cool reception in Berlin.

“A free trade zone is a complex, very complicated issue requiring thorough consideration,” Putin said after a visit to Germany that saw him meet Merkel as well as German business leaders.

A day earlier Putin had suggested in a guest article for a German newspaper a bold idea of a vast free-trade zone from Vladivostok on Russia’s eastern edge to Lisbon in Portugal on Europe’s western extremity.

16 Ukraine tax protests test mettle of new president

by Anya Tsukanova, AFP

Sat Nov 27, 11:54 pm ET

KIEV (AFP) – President Viktor Yanukovych is undergoing his biggest test since taking power, over tax reforms that sparked the biggest protests in Ukraine since the Orange Revolution, analysts said.

The reforms passed earlier this month by parliament are due to come into force on January 1 but the bill still needs to be signed by the president, who on Saturday indicated he might refuse it.

Thousands of Ukrainians have turned out in noisy demonstrations across the country against the reforms, in a nasty surprise for Yanukovych just as he seemed to be asserting his authority after taking power in February.

17 France, Germany say euro saved but investors skeptical

By Erik Kirschbaum and Daniel Flynn, Reuters

2 hrs 2 mins ago

BERLIN/PARIS (Reuters) – Germany and France declared on Monday that Europe had taken decisive action to save the euro by rescuing Ireland and laying the foundations of a permanent debt resolution system, but investors were not convinced.

Under pressure to arrest the threat to the currency before markets opened and prevent contagion engulfing Portugal and Spain, EU finance ministers endorsed an 85 billion-euro ($115 billion) loan package on Sunday to help Dublin cover bad bank debts and bridge a huge budget deficit.

They also approved the outlines of a long-term European Stability Mechanism (ESM), based on a Franco-German proposal, that will create a permanent bailout facility and make the private sector gradually share the burden of any future default.

18 Euro struggles despite Irish deal, doubts abound

By Koh Gui Qing, Reuters

Mon Nov 29, 3:43 am ET

SYDNEY (Reuters) – Doubts over whether a rescue deal for debt-soaked Ireland can plug Europe’s debt crisis drove the euro to two-month lows on Monday, though shares in Europe and Asia managed to move higher.

Even though European authorities agreed to lend Ireland 85 billion euros ($115 billion) on Sunday in the hope it would assure investors that all European nations can repay their debts, markets were skeptical that the deal would stave off further contagion.

Asian stocks struggled most of the day but drew some comfort from a firmer start in Europe, where leading European shares (.FTEU3) rose 0.8 percent in early trade.

19 Portugal adopts budget, denies bailout pressure

By Axel Bugge and Shrikesh Laxmidas, Reuters

Fri Nov 26, 2:27 pm ET

LISBON (Reuters) – Portugal approved its 2011 austerity budget on Friday, vowing to spur growth and apply tough spending cuts as it seeks to avoid an Irish-style bailout.

Parliament adopted the budget hours after a Financial Times Deutschland report said that most euro zone countries and the European Central Bank (ECB) were pressing Lisbon to seek an international rescue package as Greece and Ireland had done.

But Prime Minister Jose Socrates said the budget’s passage, which concluded many months of political bickering that at one point threatened the government’s survival, removed Portugal from the crosshairs of the euro zone crisis.

20 Spain pledges more bank health checks, debt updates

By Fiona Ortiz and Martin Roberts, Reuters

Fri Nov 26, 12:31 pm ET

MADRID (Reuters) – Spain said it will publish results of extra health checks on its banks next spring and give monthly updates on its public debt, offering concessions to markets focused firmly on fears Europe’s debt crisis may spread.

But despite investor unease continuing to push up its debt costs, the country would resist pressures to accelerate fiscal reforms, a source at the prime minister’s office said.

“Those who are taking short positions against Spain are going to be mistaken,” Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero said in an interview with broadcaster RAC1 radio in which he “absolutely” ruled out the need for a Greek- or Irish-style bailout.

21 Starbucks accuses Kraft of hurting grocer sales

By Lisa Baertlein and Martinne Geller, Reuters

Sun Nov 28, 7:21 pm ET

LOS ANGELES/NEW YORK (Reuters) – Starbucks Corp has accused Kraft Foods Inc of mismanaging sales of its packaged coffee in grocery stores and wants to end their 12-year partnership due to Kraft’s “material breaches” of their contract.

According to documents obtained by Reuters, Kraft has disputed Starbucks’ claims, adding fuel to a fight that is sure to take center stage when Starbucks hosts its biennial investor conference in New York on Wednesday.

The Seattle-based coffee giant charged, among other things, that Kraft mismanaged store displays and marketing and failed to take “commercially reasonable measures to address the erosion of Starbucks market share,” according to an October 5 letter from Starbucks’ attorney Aaron Panner to Deanie Elsner, president of North American beverages at Kraft.

22 Autumn’s reminder of tumultuous spring

By Pedro Nicolaci da Costa, Reuters

Sun Nov 28, 3:01 pm ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – This year, autumn feels strangely like spring: Just as the U.S. economy appears to be blooming again, Europe looks increasingly withered.

The long-stagnant U.S. labor market is perking up again, and November should register another solid round of job gains. At the same time, Ireland’s plight has all but engulfed financial markets, just as Greece did in March, raising the specter of a regional domino-effect that might eventually imperil the U.S. recovery.

Disruptions in bank lending during the second quarter dented U.S. business confidence, leading to a summer lull in investment and hiring that many feared might send the country into a renewed slump.

23 Irish bailout gets lukewarm market response

By PAN PYLAS, AP Business Writer

1 hr 54 mins ago

LONDON – The euro67.5 billion ($89.4 billion) bailout of Ireland has done little to assuage investor concerns that Europe has finally got a grip on its debt crisis, with European stocks trading mostly lower Monday and the euro hitting a fresh two-month low.

The FTSE 100 index of leading British shares was down 3.25 points, or 0.1 percent, at 5,685.45, while Germany’s DAX fell 28.98 points, or 0.4 percent, at 6,820. The CAC-40 index in France was 17.11 points, or 0.5 percent, lower at 3,711.54.

Wall Street was poised to open higher – Dow futures were up 31 points, or 0.3 percent, at 11,061, while the broader Standard & Poor’s 500 futures rose 3.9 points, or 0.3 percent, to 1,187.30.

24 Spain’s leader vows deficit reduction amid crisis

By HAROLD HECKLE, Associated Press

Sat Nov 27, 11:56 am ET

MADRID – Spain’s prime minister mounted a vigorous defense Saturday of his nation’s economy and finances, insisting his administration will forge ahead with austerity measures and force troubled banks and regional governments to reveal information about savings and restructuring efforts.

Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero was responding to heavy market pressure that has put Spain in the spotlight as the country that could plunge the 16-nation euro zone into meltdown if it were to end up needing a bailout like those provided to Ireland and Greece.

Many investors believe Portugal could be next in line to need a bailout, and they fear Spain could then follow.

25 Bottled water firm closing namesake Fiji business

By PITA LIGAIULA, Associated Press

2 hrs 17 mins ago

SUVA, Fiji – Fiji Water on Monday closed its operations in the South Pacific country that gives the popular bottled drink its name, saying it was being singled out by the military appointed government for a massive tax increase.

A company statement announcing the decision did not say whether the company was shutting down permanently in Fiji, where an acquifer deep underground has been the source of one of the world’s most popular bottled water brands.

The company, owned by California entrepreneurs Lynda and Stewart Resnick, said it was closing its facility in Fiji, canceling orders from suppliers and putting on hold several construction contracts in the country.

26 FACT CHECK: Small business caught in tax battle

By TOM RAUM, Associated Press

2 hrs 44 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Newly empowered Republicans say President Barack Obama would subject as much as half the nation’s small business income to job-withering tax increases. Obama and his Democratic allies argue that allowing taxes to rise on the wealthiest Americans would affect only a handful of small business owners.

Both can’t be right. And both are playing number games as the lame-duck Congress prepares to take up one of the most contentious issues of the postelection season: what to do about an array of about-to-expire Bush-era tax cuts? If Congress fails to act, taxes will go up for essentially every American taxpayer on Jan. 1.

Neither party wants that to happen. Hoping to avoid a December train wreck, Obama has hinted at a possible compromise – perhaps extending the tax cuts for everybody for a year or two. But so far, the president and the Republicans, flush from their big midterm election gains, haven’t been able to bridge their differences.

27 USDA asked to approve GMO apple that won’t brown

By SHANNON DININNY, Associated Press

Mon Nov 29, 4:18 am ET

CASHMERE, Wash. – A Canadian biotechnology company has asked the U.S. to approve a genetically modified apple that won’t brown soon after its sliced, saying the improvement could boost sales of apples for snacks, salads and other uses.

U.S. apple growers say it’s too soon to know whether they’d be interested in the apple: They need to resolve questions about the apple’s quality, the cost of planting and, most importantly, whether people would buy it.

“Genetically modified – that’s a bad word in our industry,” said Todd Fryhover, president of the apple commission in Washington state, which produces more than half the U.S. crop.

28 Tax break for employer health plans a target again

By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR, Associated Press

Sun Nov 28, 1:21 pm ET

WASHINGTON – Job-based health care benefits could wind up on the chopping block if President Barack Obama and congressional Republicans get serious about cutting the deficit.

Budget proposals from leaders in both parties have urged shrinking or eliminating tax breaks that help make employer health insurance the leading source of coverage in the nation and a middle-class mainstay.

The idea isn’t to just raise revenue, economists say, but finally to turn Americans into frugal health care consumers by having them face the full costs of their medical decisions.

29 S. Africa mines plagued by mismanagement, neglect

By DONNA BRYSON, Associated Press

Sun Nov 28, 3:44 pm ET

ORKNEY, South Africa – Mawethu Mguli and hundreds of other workers at the gold mine in Orkney have gone months without pay at a time when gold is going for around $1,400 an ounce.

After the mine’s previous owners went bankrupt, the workers expected that a new partnership – headed by relatives of Nelson Mandela and President Jacob Zuma – would get operations back on track when it took over last year.

“Unfortunately, it didn’t turn out that way,” Mguli said softly as he sat in his dimly lit room in the mine dormitory. The mine northwest of Johannesburg remains idle and the workers are getting by on food handouts and odd jobs.

30 In air cargo capital, no fear over shipping rules

By ADRIAN SAINZ, Associated Press

Sun Nov 28, 11:17 am ET

MEMPHIS, Tenn. – As the busiest shipping season of the year begins, the specter of tighter security measures on air shipping after last month’s international mail-bomb scare might have sent a shiver through FedEx’s hometown.

It might have, if Memphians hadn’t spent decades watching the company’s planes fly into and out of what has grown into the world’s busiest cargo airport, and seeing its delivery trucks heading out in all directions, and generally spotting its name all over this Mississippi River city.

“Everywhere you look, FedEx is into everything here,” basketball fan Matt Hine said as he stood in the bustling lobby of the $250 million FedExForum, built six years ago to lure the Vancouver Grizzlies in a move that gave Memphis a status-affirming pro sports franchise.

31 Official: Dubai won’t need new debt bailout

By BRIAN MURPHY, Associated Press

Sun Nov 28, 1:27 pm ET

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates – Dubai’s top fiscal officials said Sunday the indebted city-state will likely not need another bailout, but noted that cash-boosting proposals such as asset sales and offering shares in state-run companies are under consideration.

The comments were part of a rare show-and-tell by Dubai’s financial braintrust to claim they have a handle on the debt crunch in the one-time Gulf boomtown.

The aim was to portray a sense of calm and optimism a year after the global economic slowdown slammed the brakes on Dubai’s white-hot growth, triggering fears of a broader default as details of the emirate’s huge debt load became apparent.

32 Qantas A380 returns to air after engine blowout

By ROHAN SULLIVAN, Associated Press

Sat Nov 27, 5:49 pm ET

SYDNEY – A Qantas A380 carrying more than 450 passengers, including the airline’s chief executive, took to the skies Saturday in the first flight by one of its superjumbos since a midair engine explosion three weeks ago triggered a global safety review.

Qantas CEO Alan Joyce said he was flying the first leg of the Sydney-Singapore-London flight as a sign of the airline’s conviction that it had completed all modifications and other checks on the Rolls-Royce engines, and the planes were safe to fly.

“We are 100 percent comfortable with it,” Joyce told reporters. “If we weren’t, we wouldn’t be restarting the operations today.”

33 Seafood sellers serve up celebs to swell sales

By CLARKE CANFIELD, Associated Press

Sat Nov 27, 2:13 pm ET

PORTLAND, Maine – Whether it’s East Coast swordfish, Alaska king crab or Louisiana shrimp, seafood sellers have their own hook to pump up sales: a celebrity.

For swordfish this fall, sellers didn’t turn to an actor, athlete or chef to push their product. Instead, it was the boat captain who caught the fish.

Swordfish sales soared at the Hannaford supermarket chain when the fish was promoted as being caught by Linda Greenlaw, a well-known Maine boat skipper featured on the Discovery Channel reality show “Swords: Life on the Line.”

34 Sweet success: Fannie May back after bankruptcy

By CARYN ROUSSEAU, Associated Press

Sat Nov 27, 4:18 pm ET

CHICAGO – A half-dozen years ago iconic chocolatier Fannie May, loved by Chicago candy devotees who passed down their affections for mint meltaways, caramels and vanilla buttercreams from generation to generation, was all but finished.

The candy company launched in 1920 was in bankruptcy. More than 200 of its retail stores were closed. Customers who worried they would never be able to buy the chocolates again stripped display cases and emptied shelves of the confections.

But six years after its 2004 near-meltdown, Fannie May has seen a turnaround and is thriving again thanks to what its executives say has been a mix of the old and the new: a strict adherence to decades-old chocolate recipes and growth and expansion in online and retail sales.

35 Higher gas prices won’t slow most holiday shoppers

By SANDY SHORE, AP Business Writer

Sat Nov 27, 1:17 pm ET

Many Americans are determined not to let higher gas be the Grinch that spoils their holiday spending plans.

Gas prices on average have risen about 17 cents since Labor Day, following a $12 increase in oil prices. By one analyst’s estimate, that means Americans are spending around $68 million more on gas each day than in early September.

While that sounds like a threat to sales of Barbie Video Girl dolls and even iPods, on an individual basis the increase amounts to $3 or $4 extra to fill up a car, a bit more for an SUV or a pick-up. Many motorists absorb the cost increases by skipping the gourmet coffee or passing on a movie. Or they drive less.

36 Progress made on protecting sharks, groups say

By ANGELA DOLAND, Associated Press

Sat Nov 27, 3:36 pm ET

PARIS – An international conservation conference in Paris made progress Saturday on protecting sharks but didn’t do anything to save the Atlantic bluefin tuna, which has been severely overfished to feed the market for sushi in Japan, environmental groups said.

Delegates from 48 nations spent 11 days in Paris haggling over fishing quotas for the Atlantic and Mediterranean, poring over scientific data and pitting the demands of environmentalists against those of the fishing industry.

Conservation groups said delegates took steps in the right direction with moves to protect oceanic whitetip sharks and many hammerheads in the Atlantic, though they had hoped for more. Sharks were once an accidental catch for fishermen but have been increasingly targeted because of the growing market in Asia for their fins, an expensive delicacy used in soup.

37 Big New York insider trading probe spawns another

By LARRY NEUMEISTER, Associated Press

Fri Nov 26, 10:46 pm ET

NEW YORK – An insider trading case last year that federal authorities said was the biggest ever is providing a recipe for another case that may be even bigger.

The current case is largely an extension of work that led to the arrest of Galleon Group founder Raj Rajaratnam in October 2009. The Galleon investigation marked the first time that federal authorities used wiretaps in an insider trading probe.

Similarly, wiretaps led to the first arrest in the latest case. Don Ching Trang Chu, a consulting firm executive, was arrested Wednesday for allegedly providing private information about a company’s corporate earnings to a hedge fund.

38 UN agency pushes new rules on air cargo security

By CHRIS HAWLEY, Associated Press

25 mins ago

NEW YORK – The U.N. agency that oversees aviation is pushing new guidelines for cargo security to counter al-Qaida’s new mail-bomb strategy, but is stopping short of calling for 100 percent screening of packages, as pilots and some U.S. lawmakers have urged.

The proposed changes by the International Civil Aviation Organization concentrate on “supply-chain security,” or checking outbound shipments before they even reach the airport. A draft of new guidelines will go out to all 190 member countries in the next few weeks, the agency says.

Governments are increasingly worried about cargo security as the holiday season swells the number of packages moving around the world.

39 Old plant begins to break spell over Salem, Mass.

By JAY LINDSAY, Associated Press

Sun Nov 28, 2:41 pm ET

SALEM, Mass. – “Not in my lifetime” is a retort the Salem Harbor Power Station’s opponents got used to hearing over years of warnings that the end was near for the hulking plant.

For six decades, the plant has stood over the historic port’s entrance like a smoking sentry, burning the coal and oil that made it a target for environmentalists while paying the millions in taxes that helped it win local loyalty.

But as tough pollution rules approach, the plant looks poised for that predicted exit. Early this month, plant owner Dominion’s chief financial officer, Mark McGettrick, told investors that within five years “we would expect Salem Harbor plant to shut down.”

On This Day in History: November 29

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.

November 29 is the 333rd day of the year (334th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 32 days remaining until the end of the year.

On this day in 1963, one week after President John F. Kennedy was fatally shot while riding in a motorcade in Dallas, Texas, President Lyndon Johnson establishes a special commission, headed by Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl Warren, to investigate the assassination.

After 10 months of gathering evidence and questioning witnesses in public hearings, the Warren Commission report was released, concluding that there was no conspiracy, either domestic or international, in the assassination and that Lee Harvey Oswald, the alleged assassin, acted alone. The presidential commission also found that Jack Ruby, the nightclub owner who murdered Oswald on live national television, had no prior contact with Oswald.

According to the report, the bullets that killed President Kennedy and injured Texas Governor John Connally were fired by Oswald in three shots from a rifle pointed out of a sixth-floor window in the Texas School Book Depository. Oswald’s life, including his visit to the Soviet Union, was described in detail, but the report made no attempt to analyze his motives.

 800 – Charlemagne arrives at Rome to investigate the alleged crimes of Pope Leo III.

1394 – The Korean king Yi Seong-gye, founder of the Joseon Dynasty, moved the capital from Kaesong to Hanyang, today known as Seoul.

1777 – San Jose, California, is founded as el Pueblo de San Jose de Guadalupe. It is the first civilian settlement, or pueblo, in Alta California.

1781 – The crew of the British slave ship Zong murders 133 Africans by dumping them into the sea in order to claim insurance.

1807 – The Portuguese Royal Family leaves Lisbon to escape from Napoleonic troops.

1830 – November Uprising: An armed rebellion against Russia’s rule in Poland begins.

1847 – The Sonderbund is defeated by the joint forces of other Swiss cantons under General Guillaume-Henri Dufour.

1847 – Whitman Massacre: Missionaries Dr. Marcus Whitman, his wife Narcissa, and 15 others are killed by Cayuse and Umatilla Indians, causing the Cayuse War.

1850 – The treaty, Punctation of Olmutz, signed in Olomouc means diplomatic capitulation of Prussia to Austrian Empire, which took over the leadership of German Confederation.

1864 – Indian Wars: Sand Creek Massacre – Colorado volunteers led by Colonel John Chivington massacre at least 150 Cheyenne and Arapaho noncombatants inside Colorado Territory.

1864 – American Civil War: Battle of Spring Hill – Confederate advance into Tennessee misses opportunity to crush Union army. Gen. Hood angered, leads to Battle of Franklin.

1872 – Indian Wars: The Modoc War begins with the Battle of Lost River.

1877 – Thomas Edison demonstrates his phonograph for the first time.

1881 – The city of Spokan Falls (today Spokane, Washington) is officially incorporated as a city.

1890 – The Meiji Constitution goes into effect in Japan and the first Diet convenes.

1890 – At West Point, New York, the United States Naval Academy defeats the United States Military Academy 24-0 in the first Army-Navy football game.

1910 – The first US patent for inventing the traffic lights system is issued to Ernest E. Sirrine.

1913 – Federation Internationale d’Escrime, the international organizing body of competitive fencing is founded in Paris, France.

1915 – Fire destroys most of the buildings on Santa Catalina Island, California.

1922 – Howard Carter opens the tomb of Pharaoh Tutankhamun to the public.

1929 – U.S. Admiral Richard Byrd becomes the first person to fly over the South Pole.

1943 – The second session of AVNOJ, the Anti-fascist council of national liberation of Yugoslavia, is held in Jajce, Bosnia and Herzegovina, determining the post-war ordering of the country.

1944 – The first surgery (on a human) to correct blue baby syndrome is performed by Alfred Blalock and Vivien Thomas.

1944 – Albania is liberated by the Albanian partisans.

1945 – The Federal People’s Republic of Yugoslavia is declared.

1947 – The United Nations General Assembly votes to partition Palestine (The Partition Plan).

1950 – Korean War: North Korean and Chinese troops force United Nations forces to retreat from North Korea.

1952 – Korean War: U.S. President-elect Dwight D. Eisenhower fulfills a campaign promise by traveling to Korea to find out what can be done to end the conflict.

1961 – Project Mercury: Mercury-Atlas 5 Mission – Enos, a chimpanzee, is launched into space. The spacecraft orbited the Earth twice and splashed-down off the coast of Puerto Rico.

1963 – U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson establishes the Warren Commission to investigate the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.

1965 – Canadian Space Agency launches the satellite Alouette 2.

1967 – Vietnam War: U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara announces his resignation.

1972 – Nolan Bushnell (co-founder of Atari) releases Pong (the first commercially successful video game) in Andy Capp’s Tavern in Sunnyvale, California.

1983 – Soviet war in Afghanistan: The United Nations General Assembly passes United Nations Resolution 37/37, stating that Soviet Union forces should withdraw from Afghanistan.

1987 – Korean Air Flight 858 explodes over the Thai-Burmese border, killing 155.

1990 – Gulf War: The United Nations Security Council passes United Nations Security Council Resolution 678, authorizing “use all necessary means to uphold and implement” United Nations Security Council Resolution 660 “to restore international peace and security” if Iraq did not withdraw its forces from Kuwait and free all foreign hostages by January 15, 1991.

2007 – The Armed Forces of the Philippines lay siege to The Peninsula Manila after soldiers led by Senator Antonio Trillanes stage a mutiny.

2007 – A 7.4 magnitude earthquake occurs off the northern coast of Martinique. This affected the Eastern Caribbean as far north as Puerto Rico and as far south as Trinidad.

Holidays and observances

   * Christian Feast day:

         o Brendan of Birr

         o Cuthbert Mayne

         o Radboud of Utrecht

         o Saturnin

   * Liberation Day or Dita e Çlirimit (Albania)

   * Republic Day (Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia)

   * William Tubman’s Birthday (Liberia)

   * International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People (United Nations)

Morning Shinbun Monday November 29




Monday’s Headlines:

Climate change scientists warn of 4C global temperature rise

USA

Intolerance and the Law in Oklahoma

American exceptionalism: an old idea and a new political battle

Europe

Beer giant accused of tax evasion in India and Africa by ActionAid

Basque party will repudiate all violence

Middle East

Egypt’s election magic turns the opposition almost invisible

Saudi women sue male guardians who stop marriage

Asia

War games start in Korea under menacing shadow of the North

Japan spreads the satoyama message

Africa

Wanted president at summit

How ethnicity colors the Ivory Coast election

Latin America

Haiti candidates denounce election

Cables shine light into secret diplomatic channels

The confidential material was obtained by WikiLeaks and released despite requests by the U.S. government not to do so

By Scott Shane and Andrew W. Lehren

WASHINGTON  – A cache of a quarter-million confidential American diplomatic cables, most of them from the past three years, provides an unprecedented look at backroom bargaining by embassies around the world, brutally candid views of foreign leaders and frank assessments of nuclear and terrorist threats.

Some of the cables, made available to The New York Times and several other news organizations, were written as recently as late February, revealing the Obama administration’s exchanges over crises and conflicts. The material was originally obtained by WikiLeaks, an organization devoted to revealing secret documents. WikiLeaks intends to make the archive public on its Web site in batches, beginning Sunday.

The anticipated disclosure of the cables is already sending shudders through the diplomatic establishment, and could conceivably strain relations with some countries, influencing international affairs in ways that are impossible to predict.

Climate change scientists warn of 4C global temperature rise

Team of experts say such an increase would cause severe droughts and see millions of migrants seeking refuge

Damian Carrington The Guardian, Monday 29 November 2010  

The hellish vision of a world warmed by 4C within a lifetime has been set out by an international team of scientists, who say the glacial progress of the global climate change talks that restart in Mexico today makes the so-called safe limit of 2C impossible to keep. A 4C rise in the planet’s temperature would see severe droughts across the world and millions of migrants seeking refuge as their food supplies collapse.

“There is now little to no chance of maintaining the rise in global surface temperature at below 2C, despite repeated high-level statements to the contrary,” said Kevin Anderson, at the University of Manchester, who with colleague Alice Bows contributed research to a special collection of Royal Society journal papers published tomorrowtoday. “Moreover, the impacts associated with 2C have been revised upwards so that 2C now represents the threshold [of] extremely dangerous climate change.”

USA

Intolerance and the Law in Oklahoma



Editorial

For a few days this month, it was illegal in Oklahoma for a state judge to base a court decision on Islamic religious law or consider any form of international law. It was a manufactured problem; the issue has never come up in the state’s courts. But more than 70 percent of voters in Oklahoma still approved a state constitutional amendment to that effect, apparently persuaded by anti-Islamic activists, and a few cynical politicians, that Oklahoma was about to be brought under Islam’s heel.

American exceptionalism: an old idea and a new political battle



By Karen Tumulty Washington Post Staff Writer  

Is this a great country or what?

“American exceptionalism” is a phrase that, until recently, was rarely heard outside the confines of think tanks, opinion journals and university history departments.

But with Republicans and tea party activists accusing President Obama and the Democrats of turning the country toward socialism, the idea that the United States is inherently superior to the world’s other nations has become the battle cry from a new front in the ongoing culture wars. Lately, it seems to be on the lips of just about every Republican who is giving any thought to running for president in 2012.

Europe

Beer giant accused of tax evasion in India and Africa by ActionAid

UK-listed drinks firm denies claims it diverted up to £20m through havens

Felicity Lawrence The Guardian, Monday 29 November 2010  

The world’s second-largest beer company, SABMiller, is avoiding millions of pounds of tax in India and the African countries where it makes and sells beer by routing profits through a web of tax-haven subsidiaries, according to a report published by ActionAid today.

The company, whose brands include Grolsch, Peroni and Miller, and African beers Castle and Stone Lager, is accused by the development charity of siphoning profits out of developing countries and parking them offshore.

Basque party will repudiate all violence  

The Irish Times – Monday, November 29, 2010

PADDY WOODWORTH

BASQUE PRO-INDEPENDENCE radicals formerly associated with the banned Batasuna party announced at the weekend that they were forming a new party, still to be named, whose constitution would explicitly reject political violence in all circumstances.

Batasuna was made illegal under Spain’s controversial Political Parties’ Law in 2001, which was upheld by the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg in 2009, and which provides for the banning of groups that do not condemn terrorist acts.

This is the latest in a series of steps that distances the radicals from the Basque terrorist group Eta, which called a cessation of “offensive operations” on September 5th. It puts the group under greatly increased pressure to dissolve itself altogether, since it now appears it no longer has any significant political allies in the Basque country.

Middle East

Egypt’s election magic turns the opposition almost invisible

Mubarak’s campaign workers hand out meat and beatings, reports Robert Fisk

Monday, 29 November 2010  

Sobhi Salah Moussa looked pretty crushed as he stood in the hospital courtyard in this scruffy little town, as well he might. Despite the town being top-heavy with plainclothes cops and squads of riot police – the normal theatrical backcloth for all Egyptian elections – poor old Sobhi of the Muslim Brotherhood, a lawyer and still (up until yesterday’s elections, at least) a sitting member of parliament, had just been duffed up by President Hosni Mubarak’s National Democratic Party thugs.

In fact, the NDP’s lads had helped to padlock the hospital gates to prevent the white-haired and much-bruised Sobhi Moussa from leaving.

Saudi women sue male guardians who stop marriage  

No woman can travel, gain admittance to a public hospital or live independently without a guardian  

By MAGGIE MICHAEL  

CAIRO – Year after year, the 42-year-old Saudi surgeon remains single, against her will. Her father keeps turning down marriage proposals, and her hefty salary keeps going directly to his bank account.

The surgeon in the holy city of Medina knows her father, also her male guardian, is violating Islamic law by forcibly keeping her single, a practice known as “adhl.” So she has sued him in court, with questionable success.

Adhl cases reflect the many challenges facing single women in Saudi Arabia.

Asia

War games start in Korea under menacing shadow of the North

 

By Donald Kirk in Seoul Monday, 29 November 2010

A powerful flotilla of a dozen American and South Korean warships, led by the US aircraft carrier George Washington, wrapped up its first day of war games in the Yellow Sea yesterday, against a background of menacing moves by North Korea and efforts by China to tamp down the tensions.

While the flotilla churned the waters well south of the scene of North Korea’s attack last week on a small South Korean island, satellite imagery revealed that North Korean forces had rocket systems ready for firing and surface-to-air missiles on launch pads near the North Korean shoreline.

Japan spreads the satoyama message



By Matthew Knight for CNN

November 29, 2010


It is a country that provides the world with much of its modern technology, but Japan is now adding some old-fashioned rural wisdom to its exports list in an effort to stem nature loss around the world.

The Satoyama Initiative has been set up by Japan’s Ministry of the Environment and the United Nations University Institute of Advanced Studies (UNU-IAS) in an attempt to promote traditional Japanese land conservation around the world.

While its widely recognized that conservation of unspoilt wildernesses is vital to preserve eco-systems, the fight to preserve and promote biodiversity in human-influenced habitats is equally urgent.

Africa

Wanted president at summit  

Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir, wanted on war crimes charges, will attend an African-European summit in Libya this week, former President Thabo Mbeki said.

Nov 29, 2010 12:31 AM | By Reuters



The International Criminal Court has issued arrest warrants for Bashir, alleging he masterminded genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity during the country’s seven-year conflict in the Darfur region.

Libya, which is hosting the Africa-European Union summit today and tomorrow, is not a member of the Hague-based court and is under no obligation to arrest Bashir once he enters its territory.

However, his attendance would cause a diplomatic dilemma for representatives of the EU, all of whose members have signed the court’s charter and are bound to co-operate with it and enforce its arrest warrants

How ethnicity colors the Ivory Coast election

Third-place candidate Henri Konan Bédié threw his support behind Alassane Ouattara in Sunday’s Ivory Coast election, but how many from Mr. Bédié’s Baoulé ethnic group actually voted for a Muslim northerner?

By Marco Chown Oved, Contributor  

Yamoussoukro and Abidjan, Ivory Coast

Voting along ethnic lines is still a reality in the fledgling democracies of West Africa.

A glance at the results of the recent election in Guinea shows that the phenomenon is alive and strong. There, Alpha Condé, who received a mere 18 percent in the first round of voting, was able to pick up the “anyone but a Peul” vote, and rode a wave of discontent against the country’s majority ethnicity into the presidency earlier this month.

In neighboring Ivory Coast, sitting president Laurent Gbagbo says he’s putting an end to this kind of thinking.

Latin America

Haiti candidates denounce election  

Nearly all the major candidates in presidential poll call for election to be cancelled over fraud and violence.

Aljazeera

Nearly all of the major candidates in Haiti’s presidential election have called for the country’s election to be scrapped amid allegations of fraud and reports that large numbers of voters were turned away from polling stations throughout the nation.

Twelve of the 18 candidates endorsed a joint statement denouncing Sunday’s voting as fraudulent and called on their supporters to show their anger with demonstrations against the government and the country’s Provisional Electoral Council (CEP).

The statement included all of the major contenders except Jude Celestin, who is backed by the Unity party of Rene Preval, the outgoing president.

“It is clear that Preval and the CEP was not prepared for elections,” said candidate Anne Marie Josette Bijou, who read the statement to a cheering crowd that sang the national anthem and chanted “arrest Preval”.

Ignoring Asia A Blog

Pique the Geek 20101128: Kitchen Chemistry and the Interstellar Terrorist Threat

In the kitchen, oftentimes we desire to thicken a sauce or a broth without significantly changing its flavor.  There are several ways to do this, and the physicochemical principles behind them are quite different in many cases.  One way of thickening things is just to reduce them (i.e., boil them down), but that often involves chemical changes that alter flavor.

Other ways of thickening things including adding small amounts of rather bland ingredients that cause the sauce or other material to become thicker without extreme heating, or to create a complex emulsion that thickens materials due to physical rather than chemical changes.  We shall examine some of both this evening.

First, we should investigate the interstellar terrorist threat.  This is ONLY satire, but I can not pass up a good joke when one occurs to me, and this one involves quite a nice sight gag.  I have reason to believe that the foiled Portland, OR planned attack was not actually planned by a religious extremist, but actually by a Kazon operative posing as one.  For those of you unfamiliar with the Star Trek:  Voyager series, the Kazon are inhabitants of the Delta Quadrant and are quite warlike, sort of like Klingons without much honor.

The evidence that I present is a photograph of the accused, would be terrorist first, and a photograph of an actual Kazon from the Delta Quadrant.  Obviously, there has been a bit of surgical alteration to make the would be terrorist appear to be human, but it obvious that he is actually a Kazon.  I changed my mind and did not post the pictures for fear of being thought of being in poor taste about a serious matter.  If anyone is interested, I can include them as a reply to a comment.

The questions are:  how did he cross 70,000 light years to get here, and why?  My guesses are that there was some cooperation with the Borg to cross such vast distances as to the how, and to interfere with human scientific and technological advancements as the why.  In any event, we have more to worry about than just human enemies.

Well, enough at this poor attempt at humor.  We have food to thicken!  As mentioned earlier, some things can be thickened just by reducing them, but obviously there has to be some sort of nonvolatile material to concentrate for this to happen.  One simple example is taking sugar water and boiling it until it becomes a syrup.  With careful temperature control the flavor is not much changed, but this is hardly an acceptable method to use to thicken a gravy or non sweet sauce, since that much sugar would certainly change its flavor significantly.

One common was to thicken savory (and, for that matter, sweet) sauces (I use the term henceforth to include gravies) is to add some kind of starch to it and cook it a little, until the starch gelates.  Gelation is the process wherein starch (and some other food molecules) begin to interact with water in such a manner that the starch becomes very hydrated and the long starch molecules (high polymers of glucose, a simple sugar) begin to unwind from a highly organized structure to a disorganized one where these long molecules, with their attached water molecules, begin to entangle with each other, forming a three dimensional network that entraps more water droplets (remember, most food is predominately water) and thickens.

Starch can be added in several forms.  Two of the most common in use are wheat flour and cornstarch.  For proper flavor, wheat flour needs to be precooked before adding to the sauce, or the sauce will taste like raw flour unless it is cooked for a very long time, and the risk of sticking becomes quite real then.  Usually flour is made into a roux first, then the liquid is added.  A roux is a mixture of flour and some kind of fat that is cooked until the flour no longer has a raw flavor.  Roux can range in doneness from white (just cooked long enough to dispel the raw flour taste) to almost black (one of the secrets to Cajun cooking).  Now, it is not quite that simple to make a good roux.

For example, a classic white sauce is made with butter (novice and poor cooks sometimes use margarine), flour, and salt, along with other seasonings better added later to keep them from scorching.  I have made roux for many, many years and find that salt is necessary during cooking the flour in the fat to make a good one.  I believe that is due to the fact that salt inhibits the formation of gluten from the proteins in the flour, assuring a lump free final product.  I also think that the flavor is improved when salt is added during the initial step as well.

To make a good roux from butter, it is necessary to cook all of the water out of the butter first.  Butter in the United States is about 88% milkfat and 12% water, with a little bit of milk solids (sugars and proteins) as well.  If that water is not removed before the flour is added, it will gelate the starch in the flour before the flour finishes cooking, and with only 12% water, local concentrations will build up and practically guarantee a lumpy final product.  So, either use clarified butter or heat regular butter up until all of the water boils away, but do not brown it.

Then add flour and a little salt and heat gently with constant stirring (in a heavy skillet, I prefer cast iron) until the raw flour taste is gone but the flour has not browned at all.  Then with constant, vigorous stirring, add milk and cook the mixture until it comes to the simmer.  White pepper (if you do not like the black flecks from regular pepper) can then be added, and other seasonings to suit your particular project.  I prefer to stir with a fork, but a whisk is also good.  In my experience the trick is to put all of the milk in at once while stirring vigorously, and keep stirring until it is done.

By cooking the roux longer, deeper colors and more complex flavors and scents are produced, mostly by the Maillard browning reactions where protein and carbohydrate react at high temperature to produce hundreds of delicious aromas.  For example, when I fry chicken I use vegetable oil for the fat (either soy or canola, but canola is a healthier choice) and remove the cooked chicken after it is done, keeping it warm in a slow oven.  Then I drain off all of the fat except what I want to make the roux, carefully keeping the delicious browned bits of breading from the chicken in the skillet.

Then I add flour and a little salt and slowly cook the roux until it is just past golden brown.  It is important not to cook it over too hot a fire, because if you scorch it bitterness sets in quickly.  Have your milk ready to add, because you do not want to stop stirring.  Add all of the milk (I often use half milk and half water) at once, stirring all the while.  Gravies like this are a bit more robust than white sauces, so you can bring it to the boil rather than the simmer without harm.  Just keep stirring to prevent lumps (except for the browned bits from the chicken) and to keep the gravy from sticking and scorching on the bottom of the skillet.  Voila la!  No lumps and no uncooked flour taste.

The other major way of introducing starch into a sauce is by using cornstarch.  Unlike flour, cornstarch does not need to be cooked before addition, since it does not have a raw flour flavor.  I made giblet gravy the other day like this:

I also added the drippings from the pan in which I had cooked the turkey (after separating the fat from them).  This was too salty, but full of flavor, so all I had to do was dilute the gravy base with water to get the salt level right.  I brought it to the boil, then stirred in a thin paste of cornstarch and cold water.  Once it returned to the boil, it had thickened.  It was not quite thick enough to suit me, so I stirred in a little more starch paste until I got it where I wanted it.  Done!

By the way, if you have more gravy than you can eat, take out what you want to freeze before you add the starch.  Freezing damages the network and thawed gravies tend to go quite runny.  Just take out however much you want to freeze before adding the starch and freeze it, then when you want it later thaw it and add starch then

It is critical to add the cornstarch as a thin paste in water.  If you do not hydrate the starch first, the surface of the dry starch will gelate on contact with water, forming balls (lumps) that, no matter what you do, will not go away.  The only way to save a gravy when this happens is to strain the lumps out and try again.

There are other ways to add starch to liquids to thicken them.  One way is to stir in something like cream of wheat or oatmeal (two old tricks for thickening things like chili or pasta sauce) and let it cook for some time.  Neither of those have a raw flour flavor, so it is not required that you cook them over high heat like raw flour.

Another starch commonly used to thicken things like fruit pie fillings is quick cooking tapioca.  Since it is already gelated, you can just stir it into the pie filling without fear of lumping, pour the filling into the crust, and than bake.

There are several other starches, like arrowroot, potato, and rice flour that have some uses, but overall potato starch seems to do the best job.  Some of the other ones tend to get stringy, and stringy gravy is not to my liking.

A completely different class of thickening agents are proteins.  The two most common ones are gelatin and eggs.  Everyone is familiar with the fruit flavored dessert gelatin products, but actually you make gelatin every time that you cook animal bones and cartilage.  Remember the drippings from my turkey?  After I had set the container of it in the refrigerator to solidify the fat so that I could skim it off, the aqueous portion was much stiffer even than the dessert gelatin products.  The gelatin is formed by moist cooking of collagen, the connective tissue in animals, breaking it down from a tough, almost inedible material to the smooth material that we know as gelatin.

That is the main reason that tough cuts of meat are most successfully cooked by slow, moist methods, like braising (aka pot roasting).  If you check a pot roast with a cooking thermometer, it will be done as soon as it reaches around 160 degrees F.  However, it will be so tough that you can not chew it!  Allowing it to continue to cook in moist heat will convert the tough collagen to softer gelatin, and almost as if by magic the roast becomes very tender.  By the way, that long cooking is too much for the vegetables, so add them at around an hour before serving time.

Gelatin is very, very forgiving, liquefying and resolidifying over and over as the temperature is changed.  Unless you char it, it is almost impossible to ruin anything thickened by gelatin.  Starch thickened materials are also fairly robust, within the limits that I mentioned earlier.

Eggs, on the other hand, are extremely delicate and have to be cooked with care.  However, they are an excellent thickening agent for many, many dishes.  The archetypical one is just eggs themselves.  As eggs are cooked (slowly is always best), they go from a mostly watery mass to successively thicker and thicker materials, the extreme of which is the hard cooked (NOT hard BOILED!!!) egg.  Well, just cooking eggs by themselves is fine, but they are also useful for thickening other foods.

Eggs thicken by a different process than starch.  I already described how starch thickens (gelatin uses a similar mechanism).  Eggs thicken because of the denaturation (aka coagulation) of proteins.  However, the final result is a network of, in this case, coagulated protein that holds water within the network.  Unlike starch or gelatin, foods thickened with eggs can easily be ruined by getting them too hot.

When that happens, the delicate network of coagulated protein degenerates into tight lumps, squeezing the water out of it as it collapses.  Unlike starch or gelatin thickened materials, once the egg proteins have overcoagulated, there is no recovery of them because the protein network has irreversibly become compact.  This is why custards can be so difficult to cook properly.

There is another problem with eggs.  At the concentration normally used to thicken things, the protein in eggs it just about at its limit to begin with, and care has to be taken.  If undercooked, the network never firms up properly and the result is too thin.  If overcooked, the network collapses and the result is basically water with lumps in it.  Undercooking is better, but just right is best.  It is possible to make thickened foods just by using eggs, but it is easier to use some other ingredients to hedge your bets.

An old trick is to add some starch, either as flour or in other forms to reinforce the network of egg protein.  Thus, traditional pie fillings and puddings are made with flour or cornstarch plus eggs, and pumpkin pie is reinforced by the pectins in the pumpkin itself.  (Pectin is a complex carbohydrate that makes jelly gel).  Tomatoes also have a lot of pectins and make fair thickeners.  But we are talking about eggs.

It is almost impossible to thicken a food with egg unless it contains either salt or acid, such as lemon juice.  It turns out that the proteins in eggs have an overall net negative charge, and so repel each other.  When salt or acid is added, the positive ions from these materials neutralize some of the negative charge on the egg proteins, allowing them to knit together as they are cooked.  One of the reasons that lemon and chocolate pie fillings are so easy is that both contain acidic ingredients (most folks do not realize that cocoa, except for the so-called “Dutch process” kind, is quite acidic).

Likewise, quiche contains a good deal of salt which stabilizes the egg protein network.  So while eggs are excellent thickening agents, they are much more difficult to handle than most of the others.  It takes practice to get it right.  If you are really interested in learning how to thicken with eggs, take a standard egg custard recipe and play around with it until you can get it to turn out every time.  It might be helpful if you have a dog or cat to keep the failures from going completely to waste.

There is yet another method to thicken foods, and it is entirely physical, with no cooking involved.  This has to do with forming an emulsion between two fluids (usually, but emulsions involving solids are not unknown), either both liquids for a gas and a liquid.  An emulsion is a physical mixture wherein one material (the continuous phase) supports billions and billions of small droplets of the material dispersed in it (the divided phase).

One of the most well known examples of a liquid in liquid emulsion is mayonnaise.  In it water is the continuous phase and oil is the divided phase.  You say, but, Doc, oil and water do not mix, at least for long!  You are correct.  We have a trick to make it work:  an emulsifying agent.  Generally, emulsifying agents have both fat and water attracting “ends” of their molecules.  Technically, the water attracting end is called hydrophilic and the fat attracting end is called lipophilic (from Greek words meaning water or oil, and philos, “love”).  Alternately, they are called lipophobic and hydrophobic, from the Greek root phobos, “fear”.

In mayonnaise, the emulsifying agent is egg yolk, particularly a component of it called lecithin.  Lecithin has the proper two ends, and acts to stabilize the emulsion by reducing the repulsion betwixt the water and the oil.  Interestingly, mayonnaise contains both salt and acid, necessary not only for flavor but to keep those pesky negatively charged proteins mentioned earlier from causing mischief.  Most commercial mayonnaise also contains a little mustard, the starch in which also stabilizes the emulsion a little.  Mustard also has a lot of pectin related carbohydrates that also stabilize the emulsion.

Making mayonnaise is easy, and illustrates how emulsions are formed.  Interestingly, in mayonnaise the continuous phase is water, but only comprises a minor part of the dressing.  Around 90% of the emulsion is oil, and the 10% water is happy to keep it suspended if a couple of precautions are taken.  Let us make a pint right now as a thought experiment.

The way that I do it is to use either a blender or a food processor.  You can also use a regular mixer, or even a whisk if you have strong arms.  The first thing to do is to get the continuous phase ready to accept the divided phase.  We do this by taking a whole egg (some recipes call for only the yolk, and it is the working part, but I have not been able to see much difference), two tablespoons of either vinegar or lemon juice (I like one of each), half a teaspoon of salt, and a squeeze (around 1 or two teaspoons) of yellow mustard.

Put that in your blender and whir it until it looks pretty well mixed.  Now we are going to add a pint of salad oil, either soy or canola (olive oil gives erratic results for reasons that I will go into if there is any comment asking about it).  Running the blender at a medium speed, with the plug taken out of the top (use the top or you will have mayonnaise coated walls), add a tablespoon of oil and blend until homogeneous.  Now add another tablespoon and blend.  Keep on doing that until you notice it start to stiffen.

What we just did was to prepare the continuous phase and begin to disperse the divided phase into it.  Once the divided phase starts to form, you can add the oil faster.  The reason is that if you put a whole lot of oil in to begin with, you never break it into small enough droplets to stay suspended.  Once you have enough tiny droplets, they bump into the additional oil and help break it up.  It is like you just added millions of extra blades to your blender.  You can add the oil now in a steady stream, the rest of the pint going in over a couple of minutes.

Actually, that one egg and two tablespoons of vinegar would emulsify probably a quart of oil, but you really want some flavor from the acid and salt in the final product, so this makes a better tasting result.  If you are nervous about raw egg, you can buy pasteurized ones in some stores that eliminate the threat of egg borne disease.  Store the mayonnaise in the refrigerator and use within two weeks maximum.

I do not make mayonnaise any more because being alone I can not eat a pint of it in two weeks, so I opt for the store kind that has some preservative in it (and is also pasteurized) so I can eat it all before it goes off.  If you have a large family and you like mayonnaise, you can save money by making it yourself, IF you eat it all before it expires.  You can also adjust the flavor balance to obtain a product that you prefer.

My final example of a food thickened by forming an emulsion is whipped cream.  In this case, the continuous phase is water and the divided phase is air!  The fat and proteins in the cream are the emulsifying agents.  Sugar is added just for flavor, and cream will whip just as well without it.

To whip cream, try to find whipping cream that has not been ultrapasteurized.  Normal pasteurization is a more gentle process that does not damage the fats and proteins in the cream as badly and ultrapasteurization does.  Untrapasteurization involves much higher temperatures than normal pasteurization and preserves the emulsifying powers of the fat and protein much better.  You can whip untrapasteurized cream, but it collapses faster than that made from cream more gently treated.

At my place, the shelf life of whipped cream is rarely in issue!

It is important for all of your materials to be cold before you try to whip the cream.  I put the bowl and beaters that I plan to use in the freezer for half an hour or so, and the cream itself for about 20 minutes (you do not want ice to form in the cream, because that damages the structure of the emulsifiers).  When you are ready to go, pour the cream into the bowl and start beating it at high speed.  While it is possible to whip cream by hand with a whisk, it is extremely difficult because everything gets warm before you can whip enough air into it, unless you go outside on a really cold day.

Whip until peaks begin for form, then however stiff you want it.  Just before it gets stiff enough to suit you, whip in the sugar to taste.  I recommend using powdered sugar if you are going to serve the whipped cream right away, because granulated sugar tends to dissolve slowly at the cold temperatures and relatively low water content (whipping cream is around 35% fat, give or take, so only around 65% water) it may be gritty.  If you are going to hold it for half an hour or more, it does not matter.  I like to whip in a little vanilla, but that is just my taste.  Keep it cold until you serve it.

Do not whip past firm peaks, because you are likely to make butter instead of whipped cream.  As the milkfat warms up in the kitchen, it is possible for the softened fat to congeal into bits of butter, ruining the whipped cream.  This is one reason to start with really cold ingredients.

Whipped cream does not form as stable an emulsion as mayonnaise.  There are a couple of reasons for this.  First, the difference in mass of air and water is around 800 times less than the difference of mass betwixt oil and water, so the air tries to rise and escape because of nothing more than gravity.  Second, in mayonnaise there is so much oil in it that the water scarcely has a chance to evaporate.  In whipped cream, water is 65% of the liquid, so, just like a soap bubble, as the surface of the bubble dries out and thins, it pops.

I think that this has covered the subject sufficiently for tonight.  There are a number of different ways to thicken things, but they all involve forming either a network of long molecules like starch and cooked egg do, or by forming emulsions where the divided phase exerts force on the continuous phase.  I forgot to mention that the physics behind emulsions becoming thick has at least partially to do with the fact that the smaller the fluid particle, the more rigid the sphere, due to surface tension.  In emulsified items, the billions of extremely small particles of the divided phase act almost like ball bearings, and impede the flow of both the continuous phase and the divided phase.

Well, you have done it again!  You have wasted many perfectly good einsteins of photons reading this rather thick piece.  And even though John Bolton actually says that the current administration might have done something correctly when he reads me say it, I always learn much more than I could possibly hope to teach by writing this series.  Please keep those comments, questions, corrections, and other feedback coming!  Remember, no science or technology issue is off topic in the comments.  I shall stay on tonight as comments justify, and shall return tomorrow evening after Keith for Review Time to answer any late comment.

Warmest regards,

Doc

Crossposted at Docudharma.com and at Dailykos.com

Evening Edition

Evening Edition is an Open Thread

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 WikiLeaks unleashes flood of confidential US cables

by Joseph Krauss, AFP

1 hr 20 mins ago

WASHINGTON (AFP) – WikiLeaks on Sunday unleashed a torrent of US cables detailing a wide array of potentially explosive diplomatic episodes, from a tense nuclear standoff with Pakistan to Saudi Arabia’s king repeatedly suggesting bombing Iran, the New York Times reported.

The cables describe the bazaar-like bargaining over the repatriation of Guantanamo Bay detainees, a Chinese government bid to hack into Google, and quote Saudi King Abdullah as saying the United States should strike Iran to halt its nuclear program, telling it to “cut off the head of the snake.”

They also detail plans to reunite the Korean peninsula after the North’s eventual collapse, according to The New York Times, one of a handful of international media outlets that gained early access to the documents.

2 Wikileaks releases 250,000 diplomatic cables: NY Times

by Joseph Krauss, AFP

2 hrs 22 mins ago

WASHINGTON (AFP) – WikiLeaks has unleashed a torrent of more than a quarter million confidential US cables detailing a wide array of potentially explosive diplomatic episodes, the New York Times said Sunday.

The newspaper reported details of a tense standoff with Pakistan over nuclear fuel, plans to reunite the Korean peninsula after the North’s eventual collapse, bazaar-like bargaining over the repatriation of Guantanamo Bay detainees and a Chinese government bid to hack into Google.

The cables detail fresh suspicions about Afghan corruption, Saudi donors financing Al-Qaeda, and the US failure to prevent Syria from providing a massive stockpile of weapons to the Hezbollah militia in Lebanon since 2006.

3 Europe fixes Irish bailout, future euro fund

AFP

11 mins ago

BRUSSELS (AFP) – Europe and the IMF finalised Ireland’s bailout on Sunday, warning creditors they will also share the burden of future rescues as Brussels fights market moves on Portugal and Spain.

Finance ministers sealed the 85 billion euro (113 billion dollar) bailout agreement at emergency talks in Brussels timed to reassure the Asian financial markets before they reopen early Monday.

Finance ministers “unanimously agreed today to grant financial assistance,” to Ireland, said Jean-Claude Juncker, head of the 16-nation Eurogroup, whose decision was later ratified by the 27-member European Union.

4 EU ministers divided over Irish bailout interest rate

AFP

Sun Nov 28, 8:34 am ET

BRUSSELS (AFP) – Europe’s finance ministers met on Sunday to thrash out details of Ireland’s 85-billion-euro (113-billion-dollar) bailout, but France’s representative said they were still divided over the interest rate to be charged on the loan.

Sunday’s emergency meeting in Brussels is aimed at preventing Ireland’s debt crisis from spreading to other countries in the 16-member eurozone, with experts declaring that Portugal and Spain are also vulnerable.

“We still have a few little details in the composition to rework and to finalise, particularly on the interest rate,” said French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde as she arrived for the meeting.

5 Chaotic quake-hit Haiti votes for a new leader

by Stephane Jourdain, AFP

2 hrs 9 mins ago

PORT-AU-PRINCE (AFP) – Gripped by cholera, Haitians voted Sunday in national elections marred by allegations of fraud, searching for a new leader to rebuild a country shattered by a cataclysmic earthquake.

Voting day threatened to descend into chaos with reports of violence, polling stations being sacked and, with hours to go before polling stations closed, a leading candidate calling for the elections to be scrapped.

“There not only has been fraud, it is an utter scandal, the vote may as well have been kidnapped,” said a spokesperson for 70-year-old former first first lady Mirlande Manigat, leading pre-election opinion polls.

6 Disaster-ravaged Haiti heads to the polls

by Stephane Jourdain, AFP

Sun Nov 28, 8:08 am ET

PORT-AU-PRINCE (AFP) – Haitians vote Sunday for a new president and lawmakers in an election marred by violence and concerns about fraud, while a cholera epidemic eats away at the earthquake-ravaged country.

Voters will choose a successor to President Rene Preval, who is not running for re-election, as well as 11 of the country’s 30 senators and all 99 parliamentary deputies in the landmark vote.

Authorities have banned motorbike traffic and alcohol sales on election day as extra security measures.

7 Experts split on global warming, highland malaria link

by Boris Bachorz, AFP

Sun Nov 28, 7:45 am ET

NAIROBI (AFP) – Malaria cases in east African highland areas hitherto unaffected by the disease have caused worry that global warming is creating new mosquito breeding grounds but experts disagree on whether there is actually any link between the two.

“We have recently seen waves of epidemics in highland areas. … They have actually killed people,” said Dr. Amos Odiit, who was until October head of clinical paediatrics at Mulago hospital in the Ugandan capital Kampala.

The first cases of malaria in Uganda’s western Kabale region, which rises 2,000 metres above sea level, were reported in 2007, said Seraphine Adibaku, the head of the national programme against malaria.

8 I.Coast votes in violence-marred presidential polls

by Roland Lloyd Parry, AFP

Sun Nov 28, 6:57 am ET

ABIDJAN (AFP) – Voters flocked to polling stations in Ivory Coast Sunday in a crucial presidential election aiming to end a decade of instability, amid pleas for calm after a build-up marred by deadly violence.

Crowds massed peacefully to cast their ballots in the run-off between President Laurent Gbagbo and ex-prime minister Alassane Ouattara, AFP correspondents in several towns reported, after the polls opened at 7:00 am (0700 GMT).

“It’s the life of Ivory Coast that is at stake today,” one electoral official told a throng of voters in Abidjan’s Adjame district.

9 Saudi king urged U.S. to attack Iran: WikiLeaks

By Ross Colvin, Reuters

32 mins ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Saudi King Abdullah repeatedly urged the United States to attack Iran’s nuclear program and China directed cyberattacks on the United States, according to a vast cache of U.S. diplomatic cables released on Sunday in an embarrassing leak that undermines U.S. diplomacy.

The more than 250,000 documents, given to five media groups by the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks, provide candid views of foreign leaders and sensitive information on terrorism and nuclear proliferation filed by U.S. diplomats, according to The New York Times.

Among the revelations in Britain’s Guardian newspaper, one of the news organizations who received an advance look at the documents, King Abdullah is reported to have “frequently exhorted the U.S. to attack Iran to put an end to its nuclear weapons program,” one cable said.

10 EU backs Irish bailout

By Jan Strupczewski and Julien Toyer, Reuters

1 hr 43 mins ago

BRUSSELS (Reuters) – The European Union approved an 85 billion euro ($115 billion) rescue for Ireland Sunday and outlined a permanent system to resolve Europe’s debt crisis, in which investors could share the cost of any future default.

Finance ministers from the 16-nation euro zone, anxious to prevent market contagion engulfing Portugal and Spain, unanimously endorsed an emergency loan package to help Dublin cover bad bank debts and bridge a huge budget deficit.

“Ministers concur with the (European) Commission and the European Central Bank that providing a loan to Ireland is warranted to safeguard financial stability in the Euro area and in the European Union as a whole,” Jean-Claude Juncker, chairman of the euro area ministers, announced at a news conference.

11 Haiti votes under shadow of cholera and confusion

By Joseph Guyler Delva, Reuters

Sun Nov 28, 12:02 am ET

PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters) – Haiti votes on Sunday in elections roiled by a cholera epidemic, political tensions and voter confusion, seeking a leader to guide the impoverished Caribbean country’s recovery from a January earthquake.

The international community hopes the vote to select a new president and parliament and a third of the Senate can lead to a stable, legitimate government capable of administering billions of dollars of reconstruction aid pledged by donors.

Representing this world support, blue-helmeted U.N. peacekeepers are helping Haiti’s police to secure and protect more than 11,000 polling stations set up in schools, prefabricated wooden huts and even in tents in crowded quake survivors’ camps.

12 Leaked US cables reveal sensitive diplomacy

By MATTHEW LEE, Associated Press

24 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Hundreds of thousands of leaked State Department documents reveal a hidden world of backstage international diplomacy, divulging candid comments from world leaders and detailing occasional U.S. pressure tactics aimed at hot spots in Afghanistan, Iran and North Korea.

The classified diplomatic cables released by online whistle-blower WikiLeaks and reported on by news organizations in the United States and Europe provide often unflattering assessments of foreign leaders, including U.S. allies such as Germany and Italy.

The cables also contain new revelations about long-simmering nuclear trouble spots, detailing fears of Iran’s growing nuclear program and U.S. discussions about a united Korean peninsula as a long-term solution to North Korean aggression.

13 US asks WikiLeaks to halt document release

By MATTHEW LEE, Associated Press

Sun Nov 28, 8:55 am ET

WASHINGTON – The Obama administration has told whistleblower WikiLeaks that its expected imminent release of classified State Department cables will put “countless” lives at risk, threaten global counterterrorism operations and jeopardize U.S. relations with its allies.

In a highly unusual step reflecting the administration’s grave concerns about the ramifications of the move, the State Department late Saturday released a letter from its top lawyer to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange and his attorney telling them that publication of the documents would be illegal and demanding that they stop it.

It also said the U.S. government would not cooperate with WikiLeaks in trying to scrub the cables of information that might put sources and methods of intelligence gathering and diplomatic reporting at risk.

14 EU agrees on $89 billion bailout loan for Ireland

By GABRIELE STEINHAUSER and SHAWN POGATCHNIK, Associated Press

21 mins ago

BRUSSELS – European Union nations agreed to give euro67.5 billion ($89.4 billion) in bailout loans to Ireland on Sunday to help it weather the cost of its massive banking crisis, and sketched out new rules for future emergencies in an effort to restore faith in the euro currency.

The rescue deal, approved by finance ministers at an emergency meeting in Brussels, means two of the eurozone’s 16 nations have now come to depend on foreign help and underscores Europe’s struggle to contain its spreading debt crisis. The fear is that with Greece and now Ireland shored up, speculative traders will target the bloc’s other weak fiscal links, particularly Portugal.

In Dublin, Irish Prime Minister Brian Cowen said his country will take euro10 billion immediately to boost the capital reserves of its state-backed banks, whose bad loans were picked up by the Irish government but have become too much to handle. Another euro25 billion will remain in reserve, earmarked for the banks.

15 Fire set at mosque where terror suspect worshipped

By JONATHAN COOPER and NIGEL DUARA, Associated Press

1 hr 18 mins ago

CORVALLIS, Ore. – Anger over a Somali-born teen’s failed plan to blow up a van full of explosives during Portland’s Christmas tree lighting ceremony erupted in arson on Sunday when a fire damaged an Islamic center frequented by the suspect, authorities said.

Police don’t know who started the blaze or exactly why, but they believe the Islamic center in Corvallis was targeted because terror suspect Mohamed Osman Mohamud, 19, occasionally worshipped there.

Yosof Wanly, the imam at the Salman Alfarisi Islamic Center, said he was advised by friends to take his family out of their home because of the potential threat of hate crime, and members decried the alleged arson attack. No one was injured, and the fire was contained to one room.

16 Tax break for employer health plans a target again

By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR, Associated Press

Sun Nov 28, 1:21 pm ET

WASHINGTON – Job-based health care benefits could wind up on the chopping block if President Barack Obama and congressional Republicans get serious about cutting the deficit.

Budget proposals from leaders in both parties have urged shrinking or eliminating tax breaks that help make employer health insurance the leading source of coverage in the nation and a middle-class mainstay.

The idea isn’t to just raise revenue, economists say, but finally to turn Americans into frugal health care consumers by having them face the full costs of their medical decisions.

17 Muslim orphans caught between Islamic, Western law

By RACHEL ZOLL, AP Religion Writer

1 hr 56 mins ago

Helene Lauffer knew Muslim children – orphaned, displaced, neglected – needed homes in the United States. She knew American Muslim families wanted to take them in.

But Lauffer, associate executive director of Spence-Chapin, one of the oldest adoption agencies in the country, couldn’t bring them together.

The problem was a gap between Western and Islamic law. Traditional, closed adoption violates Islamic jurisprudence, which stresses the importance of lineage. Instead, Islam has a guardianship system called kafalah that resembles foster care, yet has no exact counterpart in Western law.

18 S. Africa mines plagued by mismanagement, neglect

By DONNA BRYSON, Associated Press

1 hr 6 mins ago

ORKNEY, South Africa – Mawethu Mguli and hundreds of other workers at the gold mine in Orkney have gone months without pay at a time when gold is going for around $1,400 an ounce.

After the mine’s previous owners went bankrupt, the workers expected that a new partnership – headed by relatives of Nelson Mandela and President Jacob Zuma – would get operations back on track when it took over last year.

“Unfortunately, it didn’t turn out that way,” Mguli said softly as he sat in his dimly lit room in the mine dormitory. The mine northwest of Johannesburg remains idle and the workers are getting by on food handouts and odd jobs.

19 Senator: Arms treaty less urgent than other issues

By MATTHEW LEE, Associated Press

Sun Nov 28, 12:22 pm ET

WASHINGTON – A leading Republican lawmaker on Sunday rejected the Obama administration’s assertion that ratification of a new arms control treaty with Russia is so pressing that it must be dealt with by the lame-duck Senate.

Sen. Jon Kyl of Arizona denied there was any partisanship behind his calls for a delay. He said the Senate has more urgent business to attend to in the weeks before it breaks for Christmas, including dealing with potential tax increases and funding the government through the rest of the budget year.

“It’s more a view of reality rather than policy,” he said. “These are higher priority items.”

20 Major candidates call for halt to Haiti election

By JONATHAN M. KATZ and BEN FOX, Associated Press

8 mins ago

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti – Nearly all the major candidates in Haiti’s presidential election called for Sunday’s election to be voided amid allegations of fraud and reports that large numbers of voters were turned away from polling stations across the quake-stricken country.

Twelve of the 19 candidates endorsed a joint statement denouncing the voting as fraudulent and calling on their supporters to show their anger with demonstrations against the government and the country’s Provisional Electoral Council, known as the CEP.

The statement included all of the major contenders but one: Jude Celestin, who is backed by the Unity party of President Rene Preval.

21 Full agenda as Congress tries to finish for year

By JIM ABRAMS, Associated Press

Sun Nov 28, 10:58 am ET

WASHINGTON – The unemployed and millionaires. Doctors and black farmers. Illegal immigrants hiding from the law and gays hiding in the military. Along with just about everybody else, they all have something at stake as Congress struggles to wrap up its work for the year.

Lawmakers, after taking Thanksgiving week off, arrive in town Monday along with the Capitol Christmas tree for the final stretch of the postelection session. Facing a daunting agenda, they could have that tree in their sights well into Christmas week.

At the top of the to-do list are the George W. Bush-era tax cuts, enacted in 2001 and 2003 and due to expire at year’s end. President Barack Obama and most Democrats want to retain them for any couple earning $250,000 or less a year. Republicans are bent on making them permanent for everybody, including the richest.

22 Big Ten race ends in 3-way tie

By The Associated Press

Sun Nov 28, 6:33 am ET

The Big Ten race won’t officially be decided until Dec. 5 when the final BCS standings come out.

No. 5 Wisconsin, however, left little doubt which of the three teams that tied for first would be going to the Rose Bowl.

The Badgers, No. 8 Ohio State and No. 11 Michigan State all finished 11-1 and 7-1 in conference. The BCS standings will be used to break the tie. Wisconsin held the advantage coming into the weekend and its 70-23 victory against Northwestern should keep the Badgers ahead of their rivals.

23 Opposition protests alleged fraud in Egypt vote

By MAGGIE MICHAEL and SARAH EL DEEB, Associated Press

1 hr 16 mins ago

CAIRO – Hundreds of Muslim Brotherhood supporters protested outside vote counting stations, scuffling with police and denouncing what they called widespread fraud in Egypt’s parliament elections on Sunday, as the government appeared to determined to ensure its monopoly on the legislature in uncertain political times.

The protests in Cairo and in the Mediterranean coastal city of Alexandria capped a day of voting in which many independent monitors were barred from polling stations amid reports of ballot box stuffing and vote buying. In some places, government candidates were seen passing out cash and food to voters near polling stations.

Overhanging Sunday’s parliamentary vote was the more significant presidential election set for next year. For the first time in nearly 30 years, there are questions over the presidential vote. The 82-year-old President Hosni Mubarak has had health issues, undergoing surgery earlier this year. His party says he will run for another six-year term, but that hasn’t resolved the speculation over the future of the country’s leadership.

24 NYC teacher caught up in Spanish curse debate

By CRISTIAN SALAZAR, Associated Press

14 mins ago

NEW YORK – It can be tossed off almost harmlessly like “damn” or dropped like an F-bomb.

On the streets of New York’s diverse Spanish-speaking neighborhoods, it can be heard expressing joy, frustration and outrage.

Perhaps most notoriously in pop culture, it punctuated the film dialogue of “Scarface” in 1983.

25 Goodwill thrives at San Francisco thrift store

By LISA LEFF, Associated Press

23 mins ago

SAN FRANCISCO – Before Goodwill Industries opened its newest retail outlet here, no one would have argued that San Francisco had a shortage of thrift stores for its avid recyclers and trendy hipsters. What the city did lack was enough jobs for its transgender population, a group with an unemployment rate thought to be twice the California average.

So when a prime piece of commercial real estate languished vacant in the predominantly gay Castro district, activists and city officials saw an opportunity to put a dent in the problem. The result is the nation’s first Goodwill, and perhaps the first store of any kind, designed as a jobs program for workers whose genders are different from the ones they had at birth.

Seven of the shop’s nine employees are transgender, most of them women who used to be men. Like the donated merchandise they collect and sell, all are looking for new lives. They were referred to Goodwill by the Transgender Economic Empowerment Initiative, a nonprofit training and employment service that also places workers with Macy’s, Trader Joe’s, Bank of America and other supportive companies.

26 California’s ailing Republicans: A dying breed?

By MICHAEL R. BLOOD, AP Political Writer

50 mins ago

LOS ANGELES – Republicans are relishing the coming of a new day on Capitol Hill. But across the country in California, the party of Nixon and Reagan is drifting toward obscurity.

The latest sign of imperiled health: In a year Republicans notched big victories in Congress, governor’s offices and statehouses around the nation, California Democrats made a clean sweep of eight statewide contests on Nov. 2. Democrats padded their majority in the Legislature, where the party controls both chambers and no congressional seats changed parties.

California counted more registered Republicans in 1988 than it does today, even though the state population has since grown by about 10 million. Setting aside the politically ambidextrous Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, whose celebrity eclipsed his Republican registration, the California GOP counts only a single victory in 21 statewide contests since 2002 – that of insurance commissioner in 2006.

27 A search for answers in ’75 SD reservation murder

By NOMAAN MERCHANT, Associated Press

2 hrs 47 mins ago

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. – A long-delayed murder trial may shed light on who ordered the decades-old killing of an American Indian Movement activist who was shot in the head and left to die on South Dakota’s Pine Ridge reservation.

John Graham, a Southern Tutchone Indian from Canada and former AIM member, heads to trial on murder charges this week in South Dakota court. Prosecutors allege Graham was one of three AIM activists who kidnapped and killed Annie Mae Aquash because AIM leaders believed she was a government spy.

Aquash’s death, which occurred 35 years ago next month, quickly became synonymous with the violent clashes between AIM and federal authorities in the 1970s. One person has been convicted of the murder, and another pleaded guilty this month in connection with her kidnapping.

28 Sudanese war orphans journey to US voting sites

By AMANDA LEE MYERS, Associated Press

Sun Nov 28, 12:30 pm ET

GLENDALE, Ariz. – Tut Gatyiel didn’t have a choice when he fled his home in Southern Sudan as a boy because of civil war.

He had no choice but to walk 1,000 perilous miles through the desert for three months to a refugee camp in Ethiopia, and he had no power to save the lives of his parents and other family members killed during the war.

Now for the first time in his life, Gatyiel has a choice about affairs in Southern Sudan.

The Week In Review 11/21 – 27

244 Stories served.  35 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.

No News on Thanksgiving, but plenty the rest of the week.

Economy- 70

Sunday 11/21 4

Monday 11/22 9

Tuesday 11/23 11

Wednesday 11/24 17

Friday 11/26 22

Saturday 11/27 7

Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Iran- 25

Sunday 11/21 7

Monday 11/22 2

Tuesday 11/23 2

Wednesday 11/24 3

Friday 11/26 7

Saturday 11/27 4

International- 51

Sunday 11/21 12

Monday 11/22 14

Tuesday 11/23 15

Wednesday 11/24 5

Friday 11/26 8

Saturday 11/27 2

Hatian Disaster- 11

Sunday 11/21 1

Monday 11/22 1

Wednesday 11/24 1

Friday 11/26 4

Saturday 11/27 4

National- 50

Sunday 11/21 4

Monday 11/22 12

Tuesday 11/23 4

Wednesday 11/24 14

Friday 11/26 9

Saturday 11/27 7

Gulf Oil Blowout Disaster- 2

Monday 11/22 1

Wednesday 11/24 1

Science- 19

Sunday 11/21 2

Monday 11/22 6

Tuesday 11/23 4

Wednesday 11/24 2

Friday 11/26 3

Saturday 11/27 2

Sports- 14

Sunday 11/21 2

Monday 11/22 2

Tuesday 11/23 1

Wednesday 11/24 2

Friday 11/26 2

Saturday 11/27 5

Arts/Fashion- 2

Tuesday 11/23 1

Friday 11/26 1

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