Prime Time

It’s Junior League travel day and at least the Yankees have spared themselves the indignity of losing in the Stadium.

Tonight we get to see the Phillies blow my brackets, a rematch of Halladay v. Lincecum that was such a boring entertaining  matchup in an inside your eyelids kind of way in Game 1.  I do hope the Phillies win so I can watch the end of the series instead of napping.

But the big news is that they’re apparently going to run Korea after all.  Hamilton is promising not to give up, but frankly he needs a couple of big DNFs from Webber.  Practice starts tonight at 1 am on Speed.  Qualifying tomorrow, also @ 1.

Broadcast premiers mostly.  Mostly.

Later-

No Dave, 10/4.  No Jon or Stephen at all.  No Alton.

My mind is a raging torrent, flooded with rivulets of thought cascading into a waterfall of creative alternatives.

God darnit, Mr. Lamarr, you use your tongue prettier than a twenty dollar whore.

Take this down. I want rustlers, cut throats, murderers, bounty hunters, desperados, mugs, pugs, thugs, nitwits, halfwits, dimwits, vipers, snipers, con men, Indian agents, Mexican bandits, muggers, buggerers, bushwhackers, hornswogglers, horse thieves, bull dykes, train robbers, bank robbers, ass-kickers, shit-kickers and Methodists.

Could you repeat that, sir?

Zap2it TV Listings, Yahoo TV Listings

Evening Edition

Evening Edition is an Open Thread

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 French unions step up pressure on Sarkozy with demo call

by Charles Onians, AFP

51 mins ago

PARIS (AFP) – French unions step up pressure on President Nicolas Sarkozy to cave in on pension reform, calling for more mass strikes and street protests as parts of the country start to run dry following fuel blockades.

The call for workers to join two new days of nationwide demonstrations next Thursday and on November 6 came after another day of unrest across France that saw protestors blocking key sites and clashing with police.

“Strengthened by the support of workers, the young and a majority of the population… the labour organisations have decided to continue and to broaden the mobilisation,” the main unions said in a joint statement.

2 French students clash with police ahead of new protest

by Charles Onians, AFP

Thu Oct 21, 12:25 pm ET

PARIS (AFP) – French protestors blocked key sites and clashed with police Thursday as unions called for further mass nationwide protests against President Nicolas Sarkozy’s bid to raise the retirement age.

With no fuel left in more than a quarter of petrol pumps, police are playing what unions dubbed a game of cat and mouse with protestors at refineries and fuel depots in a bid to prevent the country grinding to a halt.

Even US pop star Lady Gaga called off two Paris concerts set for the weekend “as a result of the logistical difficulties due to the strikes in France,” her website said, “as there is no certainty that the trucks can make it.”

3 French pensions protests intensify

by Charles Onians, AFP

Thu Oct 21, 5:29 am ET

PARIS (AFP) – French protestors Thursday blocked transport hubs and fuel depots as unions met to decide on a next day of nationwide action against President Nicolas Sarkozy’s bid to raise the retirement age.

With no fuel left in more than a quarter of French petrol pumps, police are playing what unions have described as a game of cat and mouse with protestors at depots and refineries in a bid to prevent the country grinding to a halt.

The head of the powerful CGT union Bernard Thibault said that faced with government “intransigence” there was “no reason to stop these protests” and “we recommend further action from next week.”

4 Bolivian silver mountain risks collapse

by Jose Arturo Cardenas, AFP

Thu Oct 21, 10:40 am ET

POTOSI, Bolivia (AFP) – The mountain holding one of the world’s greatest silver deposits is at risk of collapse after five centuries of exploitation, Bolivian officials say, calling for moves to save the historic site.

“It looks like an hour glass that is slowly sinking,” said Celestino Condori, president of the civil committee of Potosi, an organization dedicated to enforcing sustainable procedures for the rampant mining that is hollowing out the mountain in a bid to reach its silver, lead, zinc and tin.

Potosi, once South America’s wealthiest city due to the silver mine within the conical mountain which looms above it, is now even more treacherous for miners than usual, because of regular landslides prompted by some 90 kilometers (55 miles) of tunnels within the hulking Cerro Rico, or “rich hill”.

5 G20 will vow to avoid forex undervaluation: draft statement

AFP

Thu Oct 21, 11:25 am ET

GYEONGJU, South Korea (AFP) – G20 nations will pledge to “refrain from competitive undervaluation” of their currencies, according to a draft statement before a weekend meeting of finance ministers.

The draft obtained by Dow Jones Newswires suggests the world’s top economies are eager to allay fears of a currency war, even if no immediate solution to the forex disputes is in sight.

The Group of 20 will “move towards (a) more market-determined exchange-rate system”, the draft said, reflecting an often-used US expression meant to discourage countries from intervening in currency markets.

6 Gays in limbo as US court reinstates military ban

AFP

Thu Oct 21, 6:24 am ET

SAN FRANCISCO (AFP) – An appeals court has let the US government temporarily reinstate a ban on gays serving openly in the military, frustrating the hopes of those left in limbo by the judicial tug-of-war.

But campaigners for the rights of gays and lesbians said they were confident the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy would soon be over for good.

In the latest judicial twist, a three-judge appeals court panel in San Francisco lifted a lower court’s injunction issued last week that had barred the US military from continuing its 17-year-old ban while a lengthier stay of the rule is considered.

7 McClaren drivers vow to stay in F1 title race

by Gordon Howard, AFP

Thu Oct 21, 9:12 am ET

YEONGAM, South Korea (AFP) – British drivers Jenson Button and Lewis Hamilton vowed Thursday to keep alive McLaren’s hopes of winning this year’s Formula One world championship with podium finishes at the Korean Grand Prix.

With races in Brazil and Abu Dhabi to come after this weekend’s maiden Grand Prix in South Korea, 2008 world champion Hamilton trails leader Mark Webber of Red Bull Racing by 28 points in the standings.

Button, the defending champion, is a further three points in arrears. With 25 points on offer for a win, both McLaren drivers are desperate for a victory to keep themselves in title contention.

8 Top Putin aide confirmed as Moscow mayor

by Maria Antonova, AFP

Thu Oct 21, 7:37 am ET

MOSCOW (AFP) – Moscow’s parliament Thursday confirmed a close aide of Prime Minister Vladimir Putin as mayor after the firing of city strongman Yuri Luzhkov, in a vote denounced as a farce by the opposition.

The appointment of Sergei Sobyanin was overwhelmingly approved by the local parliament with all 32 deputies from ruling party United Russia in the 35-member chamber voting in favour of the Kremlin candidate.

But with the debate marked by speeches of lavish praise in favour of the new mayor and highly choreographed outbreaks of applause, the minority Communists condemned the vote as a pre-ordained farce.

9 Toyota recalls 1.5 mln cars over brake fluid leak

by Patrice Novotny, AFP

Thu Oct 21, 6:59 am ET

TOKYO (AFP) – Toyota on Thursday announced a safety recall of about 1.5 million vehicles worldwide to fix a brake fluid leak that it warned can gradually diminish braking performance.

The world’s largest automaker, which was battered by a global safety crisis earlier this year, said it would voluntarily recall 740,000 cars in the United States and almost 600,000 in Japan to fix the problem.

It was also recalling 50,000 autos in Europe, 60,000 in China, 30,000 in Australia and 50,000 in other Asian nations, said a Toyota spokesman in Japan.

10 China’s economic growth slows but still strong

by Allison Jackson, AFP

Thu Oct 21, 5:57 am ET

BEIJING (AFP) – China said Thursday its economy grew at a slower but still robust pace in the third quarter, which analysts said showed efforts to steer the country towards more sustainable growth were working.

Consumer prices rose at their fastest pace in nearly two years in September, official data showed — an apparent explanation for Beijing’s decision this week to hike interest rates for the first time since 2007.

Gross domestic product expanded 9.6 percent year-on-year in the third quarter, beating forecasts for 9.5 percent growth, according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) data.

11 East Timor puts underwater wonders on show

by Stephen Coates, AFP

Thu Oct 21, 3:55 am ET

DILI ROCK, East Timor (AFP) – He wanted to find a blue-ringed octopus. She was looking for a certain eel. Together the self-confessed “spoiled Americans” flew 30 hours to Asia’s newest country, East Timor, and found neither.

But scuba divers Brian and Gina Blackburn, from Houston, weren’t disappointed — they found new wonders which both amazed and humbled them.

“In the Caribbean, finding fan coral that big is impossible because the tourists have destroyed it,” Gina said as she dried off after a dive last week within sight of Dili’s ramshackle airport.

12 Appeals court stays ruling on gays in military

By Peter Henderson, Reuters

Thu Oct 21, 3:49 am ET

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – A federal appeals court ruled on Wednesday that the Pentagon may temporarily reinstate a ban on openly gay men and women in uniform while a lengthier stay in favor of the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy is considered.

The ruling by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco added to the disarray surrounding a landmark legal battle that already has forced the U.S. military to welcome openly gay recruits for the first time.

Siding with the Obama administration, a three-judge appellate panel lifted an injunction issued last week by U.S. District Judge Virginia Phillips that barred further enforcement of a law requiring gay men and lesbians in the armed forces to keep their sexual orientation private.

13 U.S. plan hits opposition at G20, FX accord remote

By Abhijit Neogy and Toni Vorobyova, Reuters

Thu Oct 21, 1:45 pm ET

GYEONGJU, South Korea (Reuters) – G20 officials are unlikely to reach an accord rejecting currency devaluations and capping current account balances, an informed source said on Thursday, after U.S. proposals ran into stiff opposition.

The swift rebuff of a U.S. call for numerical targets for “sustainable” trade surpluses and deficits underscored difficulties facing Group of 20 finance ministers gathering in South Korea to try to defuse tensions over currencies and economic imbalances.

The G20 source, who has direct knowledge of deliberations at the meeting, said the proposals had not found favor with India, China and other emerging economies, or even the likes of Germany, which has a large current account surplus.

14 Obama courts women voters on West Coast tour

By Caren Bohan, Reuters

14 mins ago

SEATTLE (Reuters) – President Barack Obama aimed his economic message at women voters on Thursday as he campaigned on the West Coast for women candidates crucial to his Democrats’ chances of keeping control of the U.S. Senate.

Obama will try to bolster incumbent Senators Patty Murray of Washington and Barbara Boxer of California with rallies and fund-raisers over the next two days, part of a four-day trip that is his longest campaign swing as president.

Standing in the backyard of one Seattle family’s home, Obama said women now constitute half the U.S. workforce and are responsible for more than half the income of middle-class families.

15 Special report: Conservative donors let Christine O’Donnell sink

By Mark Hosenball, Reuters

Thu Oct 21, 8:11 am ET

WILMINGTON, Delaware (Reuters) – Christine O’Donnell, the outspoken GOP candidate for Senate in Delaware, has a money problem.

Her shocking victory in the Delaware Republican primary was a breakthrough for the conservative Tea Party movement that has up-ended U.S. politics. But while her grassroots fund-raising has been more than respectable, O’Donnell’s tense relations with mainstream Republicans and her floundering campaign have led bigtime donors to shun her, albeit quietly.

Their reluctance to open their checkbooks underlines the GOP’s recent tightrope act: the Tea Party’s emergence as a major force has energized the conservative base and bolstered Republican prospects in the November 2 election. But the two camps often don’t see eye to eye — on policy as well as on politicians.

16 Gulf deepwater drilling freeze thawing slowly

By Braden Reddall, Reuters

Thu Oct 21, 2:09 pm ET

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Some leading offshore drilling contractors, after reporting declines in quarterly profits, said on Thursday there were encouraging signs for activity in the Gulf of Mexico next year despite a shortage of permits.

Noble Corp, the second-largest offshore drilling contractor by fleet size, said it was even possible one of its deepwater rigs could get back to work in the U.S. Gulf by the end of this year.

This month, the U.S. government lifted a moratorium on deepwater drilling imposed after the BP Plc blowout six months ago that led to a huge oil spill off Louisiana’s coast.

17 Groups sue BP for harm to endangered Gulf wildlife

Reuters

Thu Oct 21, 12:25 am ET

ATLANTA, Oct 21 (Reuters Legal) – U.S. environmental groups filed a suit on Wednesday against British-based oil giant BP Plc saying the world’s worst offshore spill inflicted “ongoing unlawful” harm on endangered wildlife in the Gulf of Mexico.

The suit is one of thousands of damages cases to stem from the spill from BP’s blown-out undersea Macondo well, which between April and July dumped millions of gallons of oil into the sea, fouling coastlines in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida. The well was capped in mid-July.

But while the bulk of the cases have been brought by affected individuals, like fishermen, hoteliers and companies, this one brought by conservation groups focuses on endangered sea turtles, whales, birds and Florida manatees.

18 U.S.-Pakistani officials tackle difficult issues

By David Alexander, Reuters

Thu Oct 21, 12:18 am ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – President Barack Obama praised the movement of U.S.-Pakistani relations toward a strategic partnership on Wednesday even as his national security team sought greater pressure on extremist safe havens in Pakistan.

Obama told visiting officials attending the U.S.-Pakistan Strategic Dialogue — including Foreign Ministers Shah Mehmood Qureshi and Army chief General Ashfaq Kayani — he would not visit Pakistan during his trip to South Asia this year. But he said he would travel to Pakistan in 2011 and would host President Asif Ali Zardari in Washington as well.

Obama underscored the importance of the strategic dialogue “in moving our relationship toward a true partnership based on mutual respect,” the White House said in a statement. Both sides agreed “on the importance of cooperating toward a peaceful and stable outcome in Afghanistan,” it said.

19 Geithner suggests major currencies "in alignment": report

Reuters

Thu Oct 21, 12:42 am ET

GYEONGJU, South Korea (Reuters) – Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner suggested that he sees no reason for the dollar to sink further against the euro and the yen, saying these major currencies are “roughly in alignment,” the Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday.

In an interview with the newspaper, Geithner also emphasized that the United States was not pursuing a deliberate policy of devaluing the dollar.

This echoed comments he made on Monday in Palo Alto, California, saying “No country around the world can devalue its way to prosperity.”

20 Clashes, protests in French tensions over pensions

By ANGELA CHARLTON, Associated Press Writer

29 mins ago

PARIS – Police used tear gas and water cannon against rampaging youth in Lyon on Thursday while the French government showed its muscle in parliament, short-circuiting tense Senate debate on a bill raising the retirement age to 62.

Despite growing pressure, President Nicolas Sarkozy held firm on a measure he says is crucial to the future of France, heightening the standoff with labor unions that see retirement at 60 as a hard-earned right.

Defiant unions announced two more days of protest, one on Nov. 6 – long after the bill is likely to become law. The bold action suggested that opponents believe they have the power to force the government’s hand.

21 Iraqi leaders not following US advice on gov’t

By LARA JAKES and QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA, Associated Press Writers

30 mins ago

BAGHDAD – American influence has so dwindled in Iraq over the last several months that Iraqi lawmakers and political leaders say they no longer follow Washington’s advice for forming a government.

Instead, Iraqis are turning to neighboring nations, and especially Iran, for guidance – casting doubt on the future of the American role in this strategic country after a grinding war that killed more than 4,400 U.S. soldiers.

“The Iraqi politicians are not responding to the U.S. like before. We don’t pay great attention to them,” Shiite lawmaker Sami al-Askari, a close ally of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, said Thursday. “The weak American role has given the region’s countries a greater sense of influence on Iraqi affairs.”

22 Toyota recalling 1.53 million cars globally

By MALCOLM FOSTER, Associated Press Writer

32 mins ago

TOKYO – Toyota is recalling 1.53 million Lexus, Avalon and other models, mostly in the U.S. and Japan, for brake fluid and fuel pump problems, the latest in a string of quality lapses for the world’s No. 1 automaker.

Toyota Motor Corp. said Thursday that it will call back for repairs about 740,000 cars in the U.S. and 599,000 in Japan. The remainder are in Europe and other markets around the world. Honda Motor Co. also said it would recall an undetermined number of vehicles because of the same issue.

Over the past year, Toyota has recalled more than 10 million cars and trucks worldwide for a variety of problems, from faulty gas pedals and floor mats that can trap accelerators, to braking problems in its Prius hybrid. In August, Toyota recalled 1.33 million Corolla sedans and Matrix hatchbacks in the U.S. and Canada because their engines may stall.

23 Last year’s moonshot splashed up lots of water

By ALICIA CHANG, AP Science Writer

1 hr 44 mins ago

LOS ANGELES – When NASA blasted a hole in the moon last year in search of water, scientists figured there would be a splash. They just didn’t know how big. Now new results from the Hollywood-esque moonshot reveal lots of water in a crater where the sun never shines – 41 gallons of ice and vapor.

That may not sound like much – it’s what a typical washing machine uses for a load – but it’s almost twice as much as researchers had initially measured and more than they ever expected to find.

The estimate represents only what scientists can see from the debris plume that was kicked up from the high-speed crash near the south pole by a NASA spacecraft on Oct. 9, 2009.

24 Vets stand guard over Christian flag in NC town

By TOM BREEN, Associated Press Writer

1 hr 23 mins ago

KING, N.C. – The Christian flag is everywhere in the small city of King: flying in front of barbecue joints and hair salons, stuck to the bumpers of trucks, hanging in windows and emblazoned on T-shirts.

The relatively obscure emblem has become omnipresent because of one place it can’t appear: flying above a war memorial in a public park.

The city council decided last month to remove the flag from above the monument in Central Park after a resident complained, and after city leaders got letters from the American Civil Liberties Union and Americans United for the Separation of Church and State urging them to remove it.

25 NPR fires news analyst after remarks about Muslims

By BRETT ZONGKER, Associated Press Writer

25 mins ago

WASHINGTON – NPR has fired longtime news analyst Juan Williams, also a commentator on the Fox News Channel, after he told Bill O’Reilly that he gets nervous on an airplane when he sees people in Muslim dress.

In a statement late Wednesday, National Public Radio said it was terminating Williams’ contract as a senior news analyst over his comments on Fox’s “The O’Reilly Factor.”

NPR executives had previously complained about his remarks on Fox and asked him to stop using the NPR name when he appeared on O’Reilly’s show.

26 GOP lawmaker looks to increase scrutiny of Obama

By LARRY MARGASAK, Associated Press Writer

37 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Anyone who’s spent much time near parked cars has likely heard Rep. Darrell Issa’s stern voice: “Protected by Viper. Stand back.” After next month’s election, Americans may be hearing a lot more from the millionaire congressman and car alarm inventor.

Already President Barack Obama’s chief antagonist in Congress, Issa, R-Calif., will take over the main House investigating committee and control its probes of the White House and the federal bureaucracy.

One liberal Democrat, Sen. Al Franken of Minnesota, predicts that Issa (pronounced EYE’-suh) will use subpoena power as chairman of the Oversight and Government Reform Committee to conduct a “witch hunt in an effort to bring down the Obama administration.”

27 Fearing rout, Obama, Dems reach to female voters

By LIZ “Sprinkles” SIDOTI and DARLENE SUPERVILLE, Associated Press Writers

19 mins ago

SEATTLE – In a last-ditch effort to prevent electoral disaster, President Barack Obama and Democratic allies are vigorously wooing women voters, whose usually reliable support appears to have softened.

From blunt TV ads to friendlier backyard chats, they’re straining to persuade women that it’s the Democrats who are on their side and it’s in women’s vital interest to turn out and vote in the Nov. 2 elections that could give Republicans control of one or both houses of Congress.

In Seattle on Thursday, Obama told local women and others that “how well women do will help determine how well our families are doing as a whole.” Accompanied by women who own businesses, he spoke in a family’s backyard about the economy’s effects on women and outlined ways he said his policies have helped them.

28 Jobless claims fall to 452K, but remain elevated

By CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER, AP Economics Writer

Thu Oct 21, 10:32 am ET

WASHINGTON – Fewer people applied for unemployment benefits last week, but the drop wasn’t enough to reverse a big increase the previous week.

Applications for jobless benefits fell by 23,000 to a seasonally adjusted 452,000, the Labor Department said Thursday.

The decline comes after the department substantially revised the previous week’s figure to show a rise of 26,000. That was double the increase initially reported.

29 Election Day is over for millions of early voters

By NANCY BENAC and LIZ “Sprinkles” SIDOTI, Associated Press Writer

Thu Oct 21, 10:38 am ET

WASHINGTON – Election Day is already over for more than 3 million Americans, and a surprising number of them are Democrats.

Republicans clearly are gaining ground in turning out early voters compared with their showing two years ago, but figures from the first batch of states that offer clues about 2010 early voting patterns still give Democrats an edge in a number of states and big counties.

“If people thought the Democrats were just going to roll over and play dead in this election, that’s not what we’re seeing,” said Michael McDonald, a George Mason University professor who tracks early voting nationally. “They’ve got to be feeling a little bit better with the numbers that they’re seeing.”

30 Study: Women give more to charity than men

By DONNA GORDON BLANKINSHIP, Associated Press Writer

Thu Oct 21, 6:57 am ET

SEATTLE – Women across nearly every income level gave significantly more to charity than men, nearly twice as much in some cases, according to a study by the Center on Philanthropy at Indiana University.

Nonprofits have long suspected that women were the driving forces behind many of the gifts they receive, but they haven’t had much proof. But the results of this study are so decisive and consistent, they can stop wondering, said Debra Mesch, director of the university’s Women’s Philanthropy Institute.

The study offered several factors the researchers thought contributed to the growing generosity of women: More women are working and their incomes have grown, more have college degrees that yield greater earning power, and the percentage of women who make more money than their working husbands is now about 26 percent.

31 Report faults state prisons’ treatment of mothers

By DAVID CRARY, AP National Writer

Thu Oct 21, 6:58 am ET

The number of women in America’s state prisons has reached a record high, yet many states have inadequate policies for dealing with the large portion of them who have children or are pregnant, according to a new 50-state survey.

The report, being released Thursday by the National Women’s Law Center and the Rebecca Project for Human Rights, analyzes policies in three areas – prenatal care, shackling of pregnant women during childbirth, and community-based alternatives to incarceration enabling mothers to be with their children.

Only one state, Pennsylvania, received an A.

32 Appeals court keeps military’s gay policy for now

By LISA LEFF, Associated Press Writer

Thu Oct 21, 10:41 am ET

SAN FRANCISCO – A federal appeals court has frozen a judge’s order halting the military’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy, even as the Pentagon has announced it will accept openly gay recruits.

A three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Wednesday temporarily granted the U.S. government’s request for a freeze on the judge’s order.

The appellate court instructed lawyers for the gay rights group that brought the lawsuit successfully challenging the policy to file arguments in response by Monday.

33 Why US lawyers fight for law on gays Obama opposes

By MARK SHERMAN, Associated Press Writer

Thu Oct 21, 6:57 am ET

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama opposes the Pentagon’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy on gays in the military, so why are Obama administration lawyers in court fighting to save it?

The answer is one that perhaps only a lawyer could love: There is a long tradition that the Justice Department defends laws adopted by Congress and signed by a president, regardless of whether the president in office likes them.

This practice cuts across party lines. And it has caused serious heartburn for more than one attorney general.

Beltway Bullshit.

34 G20 finance chiefs face tough task on currencies

By KELLY OLSEN, AP Business Writer

Thu Oct 21, 3:39 am ET

GYEONGJU, South Korea – Global finance mandarins get another chance this week to defuse international currency tensions as a festering dispute over exchange rates overshadows debate about reforming the world economy.

Finance ministers and central bank governors from the Group of 20 rich and emerging nations, along with key officials from international finance and lending organizations, meet Friday and Saturday in the South Korean city of Gyeongju. Their deputies meet Thursday.

The gathering comes just two weeks after they failed at a meeting in Washington to iron out differences that have led to fears the world could descend into a so-called currency war that causes another downturn.

35 UN envoy asks Myanmar for ‘signal’ before election

By JOHN HEILPRIN, Associated Press Writer

6 mins ago

UNITED NATIONS – The U.N.’s human rights envoy to Myanmar appealed Thursday to its military rulers “to send a strong signal” to the world that it will hold a genuine election, by releasing democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi and almost 2,100 political prisoners.

U.N. envoy Tomas Ojea Quintana cast more doubt on the legitimacy of the ruling junta’s planned Nov. 7 election, the first in two decades.

“I believe that the Myanmar government needs to send a strong signal to the international community about its commitment to hold genuine elections. An unconditional and immediate release of prisoners of conscience would be such a signal,” said Quintana, an Argentine lawyer.

36 Ind. ends food aid for developmentally disabled

By CHARLES WILSON, Associated Press Writer

2 hrs 36 mins ago

INDIANAPOLIS – Indiana has quietly ended a state grocery benefit paid to hundreds of developmentally disabled people who advocates say have no money of their own to buy food.

The state Family and Social Services Administration withdrew the grocery benefit just weeks after it announced it would no longer reduce the benefit for those who receive food stamps, which a lawsuit claimed was a violation of federal law that prohibits food stamps from being counted against other benefits.

The lawsuit was filed in July by the American Civil Liberties Union and Indianapolis attorney Steven Dick on behalf of Dick’s 26-year-old autistic son. Dick said he believed the state ultimately decided to end the grocery benefit altogether because it could no longer factor in food stamps.

37 Did your ancestor fight at Saratoga? You can check

By CHRIS CAROLA, Associated Press Writer

Thu Oct 21, 2:40 pm ET

STILLWATER, N.Y. – Descendants of Revolutionary War soldiers who fought in one of history’s most important battles can now find their American ancestors in a computer database, and some day they might be guided by GPS to the exact spots where their relatives faced musket fire, cannon barrages and bayonet charges.

History buffs spent 12 years gleaning information from 200-year-old military documents to assemble the list of thousands who participated in the Battles of Saratoga. The database, recently unveiled at Saratoga National Historical Park, contains the names of about 15,000 of the more than 17,000 soldiers of the Continental Army and various state militias who defeated the British here in 1777.

About 2,500 more American names are being added, while the names of most of the 9,000 enemy combatants – British soldiers, German mercenaries, Canadians and loyalists – are expected to join the database in several years, according to Eric Schnitzer, a National Parks Service ranger and park historian. The names of some of the Native Americans who fought here – Oneidas for the Americans, Mohawks for the British – also will be added, he said.

38 AU calls for air and naval blockade of Somalia

By JOHN HEILPRIN, Associated Press Writer

Thu Oct 21, 2:22 pm ET

UNITED NATIONS – The African Union sought U.N. approval Thursday for a naval and air blockade of Somalia, as well as more troops and aid to fend off piracy and terrorism in the struggling Horn of Africa nation.

The AU’s commissioner for peace and security, Ramtane Lamamra, urged the U.N. Security Council to authorize a blockade while seeking far more international aid and a contingent of 20,000 AU-led troops, up from the current authorization of 8,000. He also asked the council to approve hiring up to 1,680 police. The AU peacekeeping force, operating under the U.N. mandate, now has about 6,000 troops.

With Somalia lacking a fully functioning government since 1991, Lamamra called for a major escalation of troops and other resources to deter the pirates operating off the country’s coast and the al-Qaida-linked al-Shabab Islamist rebels who control much of Somalia.

39 Oregon gov’s race matches seasoned pro, fresh face

By NIGEL DUARA, Associated Press Writer

Wed Oct 20, 11:23 pm ET

PORTLAND, Ore. – Chris Dudley wasn’t given much of a chance when he got into the Oregon governor’s race.

He had no real political experience, and his main claim to fame was a 17-year NBA career in which he was one of the worst free-throw shooters in basketball. He has struggled in debates and acknowledged that he didn’t vote much during his basketball career.

But Dudley may have a chance to defeat former two-term Democratic Gov. John Kitzhaber, thanks to a remarkable fundraising effort that has drawn on his connections from pro sports and interest from the national GOP.

40 Federal law takes on crimes against Indian women

By SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN, Associated Press Writer

Wed Oct 20, 11:11 pm ET

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. – Federal and tribal officials hope a new law aimed at improving the judicial landscape in Indian Country will also help them combat “disturbing” crime statistics involving American Indian women.

According to federal data, one in three Indian women will be raped in their lifetimes, while two-fifths will suffer from domestic violence. The chance an Indian woman will be the victim of a violent crime is three and a half times greater than the national average, recent numbers shows.

“The statistics in Indian Country regarding violence against women are disturbing to say the least. It’s incumbent upon us to take appropriate action,” said Wizipan Garriott, policy adviser to Assistant Interior Secretary of Indian Affairs Larry Echo Hawk.

41 Crystal Cathedral teeters on the edge

By GILLIAN FLACCUS, Associated Press Writer

Wed Oct 20, 10:47 pm ET

GARDEN GROVE, Calif. – Capitalizing on the emerging car culture of Southern California in the 1950s, the Rev. Robert H. Schuller started a drive-in church and built it into an international televangelist empire, symbolized by the soaring glass Crystal Cathedral and its weekly “Hour of Power” show.

Now Schuller’s life’s work is crumbling.

Citing debts of more than $43 million, the organization declared bankruptcy this week in a collapse blamed by some on its inability to keep up with the times and a disastrous attempt to hand the church over to Schuller’s son.

More From The Doctor

I mean, it’s only a Nobel Prize in Economics so what the fuck does he know anyway?

To choose austerity is to bet it all on the confidence fairy

The mystical belief is that a smaller deficit will lead to an investment boom. What Britain really needs now is another stimulus

Joseph Stiglitz, The Guardian

Tuesday 19 October 2010 22:00 BST

Lower aggregate demand will mean lower tax revenues. But cutbacks in investments in education, technology and infrastructure will be even more costly in future. For they will spell lower growth – and lower revenues. Indeed, higher unemployment itself, especially if it is persistent, will result in a deterioration of skills, in effect the destruction of human capital, a phenomena which Europe experienced in the eighties and which is called hysteresis. Lower tax revenues now and in the future combined with lower growth imply a higher national debt, and an even higher debt-to-GDP ratio.

Matters may be even worse if consumers and investors realise this. Advocates of austerity believe that mystically, as the deficits come down, confidence in the economy will be restored and investment will boom. For 75 years there has been a contest between this theory and Keynesian theory, which argued that spending more now, especially on public investments (or tax cuts designed to encourage private investment) was more likely to restore growth, even though it increased the deficit.

The two prescriptions could not have been more different. Thanks to the IMF, multiple experiments have been conducted – for instance, in east Asia in 1997-98 and a little later in Argentina – and almost all come to the same conclusion: the Keynesian prescription works. Austerity converts downturns into recessions, recessions into depressions. The confidence fairy that the austerity advocates claim will appear never does, partly perhaps because the downturns mean that the deficit reductions are always smaller than was hoped.

Punting the Pundits

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

Joe Cirincione: British Budget Collapse Foreshadows Cuts to Come in U.S. Defense Budget

Great Britain’s cuts, particularly to its nuclear forces, are the canary in the defense budget mine. Just as massive deficits forced the conservative UK government to cut deep into its military programs, the United States will soon have to choose: update its force structure or cling to obsolete Cold War posture?

The UK may have waited too long to make the cuts. It is now forced to cut military personnel by 10 percent, and scrap an aircraft carrier and the entire fleet of Harrier jump jets (a very versatile, though very dangerous, fighter jet in which I once flew).

Less controversial is the plan to delay a decision on building a new generation of nuclear-armed submarines to replace the four existing Trident subs, each armed with 16 missiles carrying a total of 48 hydrogen bombs per sub.

Johann Hari: The Tea Party’s Wildest Dreams Come True — in Britain. The Result? Disaster

Margaret Thatcher is lying sick in a private hospital bed in Belgravia — but her political children have just pushed her agenda further and harder and deeper than she ever dreamed of. The government of David Cameron just took the Tea Party’s deepest fantasies — of massive budget cuts, introduced immediately — and imposed them on Britain. When was the last time Britain’s public spending was slashed by more than 20 percent? Not in my mother’s lifetime. Not even in my grandmother’s lifetime. No: It was in 1918, when a conservative-liberal coalition said the best response to a global economic crisis was to rapidly pay off this country’s debts. The result? Unemployment soared from six percent to 19 percent, and the country’s economy collapsed so severely that they lost all ability to pay their bills, and the debt actually rose from 114 percent to 180 percent. “History doesn’t repeat itself,” Mark Twain said, “but it does rhyme.”

George Osborne, the finance minister, has just gambled Britain’s future on an extreme economic theory that has failed whenever and wherever it has been tried. In the Great Depression, we learned some basic principles. When an economy falters, ordinary people — perfectly sensibly — cut back their spending and try to pay down their debts. This causes a further fall in demand and makes the economy worse. If the government cuts back at the same time, then there is no demand at all, and the economy goes into freefall. That’s why virtually every country in the world reacted to the Great Crash of 2008 — caused entirely by deregulated bankers — by increasing spending, funded by temporary debt. Better a deficit we repay in the good times than an endless depression. The countries that stimulated hardest, like South Korea, came out of recession first.

Bob Cesca: The Republican Swindle About ‘Obamacare and Stimulus’

If you happen to be a swing voter who’s considering the Republican slate next month, you’re being tricked. That’s not to say you’re an idiot, but the Republicans are doing an excellent job masking over what they really stand for, and millions of Americans seem to be falling for it.

The Republican strategy for this midterm election is simple: Treat voters like easily manipulated hoopleheads. The GOP and its various apparatchiks are spending untold millions of dollars, much of it from anonymous donors and, perhaps, even some illegal foreign donors, in order to play out this nationwide swindle. They’re investing heavily on the wager that Americans are so kerfuffled by the slow-growth (but growth nevertheless) economy that they’re willing to buy any line of nonsense as an alternative solution.

Regarding that nonsense, just about every GOP solution and every GOP idea reveals either a hilariously obvious contradiction or an utterly transparent hypocrisy. Say nothing of unchecked awfulness like Southern Strategy race-baiting or bald-faced lies. But it doesn’t seem to matter much because they’ve buried most of it under heaping piles of inchoate outrage and fear. Just like always. It’s not unlike the 2000s all over again. They’re engaging in the same bumper sticker sloganeering and myopic agitprop, but with updated content for 2010.

David Weigel: Nobody Is Safe

How Republicans are forcing Democrats to spend money in previously “safe” districts.

Here are two numbers that show the depth of the Democrats’ problems this year. The first is $40,248. That’s how much Rep. Barney Frank’s Republican opponent raised in 2008. The second is $200,000. That’s how much Barney Frank just loaned his current campaign for re-election.

Frank’s opponent is Sean Bielat, a first-time candidate half Frank’s age, and if he doesn’t win this race it hardly matters. As of Sept. 30 he had raised $613,419. He’s built local and national fan bases. He’s pinned Frank down, when in a typical year Frank could do a quick threat assessment, realize just how safe he is in his suburban Massachusetts district, and dole out money to fellow Democrats.

“It’s lights out as far as [Frank] helping other candidates,” said Lisa Barstow, Bielat’s campaign spokesperson. “Democrats have relied on him for largesse to help them in their own races. He hasn’t had a serious challenge in 20 years. So this is going to have a significant effect on Republican races.” Oh, and on Frank’s personal loan: “Nothing could be more delightful!”

Michael Moore: Michigan Blues

I have a rule of thumb that’s served me well my whole life: whenever corporate executives begin talking about how they support “free markets” and “competition,” check to see if you still have your wallet.

That’s because no one — not Karl Marx, not Fidel Castro, not your niece who owns the only lemonade stand on the block — hates competition more than corporations. The whole goal of a corporation is to crush all the competition. When corporate executives start pushing for “free market policies,” what they mean is a government that lets them become a monopoly.

Don’t believe me? Well, count how many corporate CEOs (and Republican politicians) stand up and cheer for the Obama administration today:

   The Justice Department sued Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan on Monday, asserting that the company, the state’s dominant health insurer, had violated antitrust laws and secured a huge competitive advantage by forcing hospitals to charge higher prices to Blue Cross’s rivals.

   The civil case appears to have broad implications because many local insurance markets, like those in Michigan, are highly concentrated, and Blue Cross and Blue Shield plans often have the largest shares of those markets. […]

Dahlia Lithwick: Would You Like To Leave a Message?

Why Ginni Thomas made that weird phone call to Anita Hill

The only question left to ponder, at the bizarre news of Ginni Thomas’ “olive branch” phone call to Anita Hill, seeking an apology for “what you did with my husband” (not to but with-never mind) is: Why?

The cynic in me believes that there is no gender/race dispute the Tea Party is not willing to exploit for recruitment purposes, that reminding us all of the ugliest moment in American identity politics is no accident just two weeks before an election. The realist in me wonders whether Mrs. Thomas possibly believed this would stay private. She’s a brilliant tactician and a superb communicator: She couldn’t possibly have expected that ham-fisted attempt at reconciliation would have gone unreported.

But the depressive in me suspects that Ginni Thomas simply doesn’t care what any of us think of her attempt to reach out and touch someone she hates. Why would she? She and her husband long ago passed a point at which they worry about how they will be portrayed in the mainstream press. They stopped reading it years ago. They both live in a world in which the facts of Hill v. Thomas don’t matter. There are no facts. There are just “our” beliefs and “their” beliefs, just as there is “our” media and “theirs” and “our” Civil War history and “theirs.” To criticize either Thomas has always been to join in the imagined conspiracy against them.

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Robert Sheer: Obama Hires a Hustler

One day as Wall Street was crashing, President George W. Bush had the temerity to plaintively ask his treasury secretary, Henry Paulson: “How did this happen?” Paulson, who headed Goldman Sachs before taking the Treasury job, remarks in his memoir: “It was a humbling question for someone from the financial sector to be asked–after all, we were the ones responsible.”

That’s an honest enough admission about the culpability of the financial community in bundling the toxic derivatives packages still disastrously undermining the economic health of the nation. Even more startling was Paulson’s admission in his memoir that he, at the time he was advising the president, still did not know that home mortgages were at the heart of those troubling securities that his former company had marketed to others with such wild abandon.

Were President Barack Obama to ask that question about the origins of this crisis of Tom Donilon, one of his closest aides whom he recently appointed to the critical job of national security adviser, Donilon would find it even more awkward to invoke the defense of ignorance. As the chief lobbyist for Fannie Mae from 1999 to 2005, he was far more intimately involved than Paulson in the manufacturing of this crisis. He successfully pressured Congress to give Fannie Mae the green light to speed past any sound regulation. Indeed, had Congress endorsed the barest semblance of regulation of the Fannie Mae-led housing scam, it would have been stillborn instead of being a very much alive Frankenstein creation.

June Thomas: Bring On the Pain

Will Britain’s massive spending cuts drive Brits onto the streets?

To call the speech British finance minister George Osborne made to the House of Commons Wednesday afternoon “highly anticipated” does the term a disservice. Shortly after the Conservatives formed a government with the Liberal Democratic Party in early May, Osborne announced that he would outline his plans to cut $130 billion from the budget on Oct. 20. The early months of the new administration were conducted in the shadow of this impending “comprehensive spending review.”

The cuts announced today were massive-for details, see the BBC’s summary-but because the media had spent the summer predicting where the ax would fall, many commentators focused on the strategy rather than the size. Writing in the Guardian, Jackie Ashley said, “It’s the oldest game in the book: for a couple of weeks before the chancellor’s statement, swamp the media with scare stories … and hey presto, George Osborne, in denying all these rumours today, can try to make it look as though Christmas has come early.”

Other columnists in the liberal Guardian declared that the government had chosen to kick Britain’s lamest dogs. Said Jonathan Freeland, “The cold, hard political calculation is that it makes more sense for the coalition to hit the poorest and weakest-by making swingeing cuts to welfare-than to whack the middle class or the powerful.” Meanwhile, Osborne “pacified other more crucial voting blocs”-the elderly and other sympathetic groups who know how to mount a heartstring-tugging protest. Aditya Chakrabortty agreed; he reckoned Osborne’s “strategy for achieving his spending cuts is to pick losers”-to minimize the impact on groups that know how to lobby or wield political influence.

On This Day in History: October 21

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

October 21 is the 294th day of the year (295th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 71 days remaining until the end of the year.

On this day in 1959, On this day in 1959, on New York City’s Fifth Avenue, thousands of people line up outside a bizarrely shaped white concrete building that resembled a giant upside-down cupcake. It was opening day at the new Guggenheim Museum, home to one of the world’s top collections of contemporary art.

Guided by his art adviser, the German painter Hilla Rebay, Solomon Guggenheim began to collect works by nonobjective artists in 1929. (For Rebay, the word “nonobjective” signified the spiritual dimensions of pure abstraction.) Guggenheim first began to show his work from his apartment, and as the collection grew, he established The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation in 1937. Guggenheim and Rebay opened the foundation for the “promotion and encouragement and education in art and the enlightenment of the public.” Chartered by the Board of Regents of New York State, the Foundation was endowed to operate one or more museums; Solomon Guggenheim was elected its first President and Rebay its Director.

In 1939, the Guggenheim Foundation’s first museum, “The Museum of Non-Objective Painting”, opened in rented quarters at 24 East Fifty-Fourth Street in New York and showcased art by early modernists such as Rudolf Bauer, Hilla Rebay, Wassily Kandinsky, and Piet Mondrian. During the life of Guggenheim’s first museum, Guggenheim continued to add to his collection, acquiring paintings by Marc Chagall, Robert Delaunay, Fernand Leger, Amedeo Modigliani and Pablo Picasso. The collection quickly outgrew its original space, so in 1943, Rebay and Guggenheim wrote a letter to Frank Lloyd Wright pleading him to design a permanent structure for the collection. It took Wright 15 years, 700 sketches, and six sets of working drawings to create the museum. While Wright was designing the museum Rebay was searching for sites where the museum would reside. Where the museum now stands was its original chosen site by Rebay which is at the corners of 89th Street and Fifth Avenue (overlooking Central Park). On October 21, 1959, ten years after the death of Solomon Guggenheim and six months after the death of Frank Lloyd Wright the Museum opened its doors for the first time to the general public.

The distinctive building, Wright’s last major work, instantly polarized architecture critics upon completion, though today it is widely revered. From the street, the building looks approximately like a white ribbon curled into a cylindrical stack, slightly wider at the top than the bottom. Its appearance is in sharp contrast to the more typically boxy Manhattan buildings that surround it, a fact relished by Wright who claimed that his museum would make the nearby Metropolitan Museum of Art “look like a Protestant barn.”

Internally, the viewing gallery forms a gentle helical spiral from the main level up to the top of the building. Paintings are displayed along the walls of the spiral and also in exhibition space found at annex levels along the way.

Most of the criticism of the building has focused on the idea that it overshadows the artworks displayed within, and that it is particularly difficult to properly hang paintings in the shallow windowless exhibition niches that surround the central spiral. Although the rotunda is generously lit by a large skylight, the niches are heavily shadowed by the walkway itself, leaving the art to be lit largely by artificial light. The walls of the niches are neither vertical nor flat (most are gently concave), meaning that canvasses must be mounted proud of the wall’s surface. The limited space within the niches means that sculptures are generally relegated to plinths amid the main spiral walkway itself. Prior to its opening, twenty-one artists, including Willem de Kooning and Robert Motherwell, signed a letter protesting the display of their work in such a space.

 1096 – People’s Crusade: The Turkish army annihilates the People’s Army of the West.

1512 – Martin Luther joins the theological faculty of the University of Wittenberg.

1520 – Ferdinand Magellan discovers a strait now known as Strait of Magellan.

1600 – Tokugawa Ieyasu defeats the leaders of rival Japanese clans in the Battle of Sekigahara, which marks the beginning of the Tokugawa shogunate that in effect rules Japan until the mid-nineteenth century.

1774 – First display of the word “Liberty” on a flag, raised by colonists in Taunton, Massachusetts in defiance of British rule in Colonial America.

1797 – In Boston Harbor, the 44-gun United States Navy frigate USS Constitution is launched.

1805 – Napoleonic Wars: Battle of Trafalgar: A British fleet led by Vice Admiral Lord Nelson defeats a combined French and Spanish fleet off the coast of Spain under Admiral Villeneuve. It signals almost the end of French maritime power and leaves Britain’s navy unchallenged until the twentieth century.

1805 – Napoleonic Wars: Austrian General Mack surrenders his army to the Grand Army of Napoleon at the Battle of Ulm. 30,000 prisoners are captured and 10,000 casualties inflicted on the losers.

1816 – The Penang Free School is founded in George Town, Penang, Malaysia, by the Rev Hutchings. It is the oldest English-language school in Southeast Asia.

1824 – Joseph Aspdin patents Portland cement.

1854 – Florence Nightingale and a staff of 38 nurses are sent to the Crimean War.

1861 – American Civil War: Battle of Ball’s Bluff – Union forces under Colonel Edward Baker are defeated by Confederate troops in the second major battle of the war. Baker, a close friend of Abraham Lincoln, is killed in the fighting.

1867 – Manifest Destiny: Medicine Lodge Treaty – Near Medicine Lodge, Kansas a landmark treaty is signed by southern Great Plains Indian leaders. The treaty requires Native American Plains tribes to relocate a reservation in western Oklahoma.

1879 – Using a filament of carbonized thread, Thomas Edison tests the first practical electric incandescent light bulb (it lasted 13½ hours before burning out).

1892 – Opening ceremonies for the World’s Columbian Exposition are held in Chicago, though because construction was behind schedule, the exposition did not open until May 1, 1893.

1895 – The Republic of Formosa collapses as Japanese forces invade.

1902 – In the United States, a five month strike by United Mine Workers ends.

1912 – During the First Balkan War, Kardzhali is liberated by Bulgarian forces

1921 – President Warren G. Harding delivers the first speech by a sitting President against lynching in the deep south.

1921 – George Melford’s silent film, The Sheik, starring Rudolph Valentino, premiers.

1933 – Adolf Hitler withdraws Nazi Germany from the League of Nations

1944 – The first kamikaze attack: A Japanese plane carrying a 200 kilograms (440 lb) bomb attacks HMAS Australia off Leyte Island, as the Battle of Leyte Gulf began.

1945 – Women’s suffrage: Women are allowed to vote in France for the first time.

1945 – Argentine military officer and politician Juan Peron marries actress Evita.

1959 – In New York City, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, opens to the public.

1959 – President Dwight D. Eisenhower signs an executive order transferring Wernher von Braun and other German scientists from the United States Army to NASA.

1965 – Comet Ikeya-Seki approaches perihelion, passing 450,000 kilometers from the sun.

1966 – Aberfan disaster: A slag heap collapses on the village of Aberfan in Wales, killing 144 people, mostly schoolchildren.

1967 – Vietnam War: More than 100,000 war protesters gather in Washington, D.C.. A peaceful rally at the Lincoln Memorial is followed by a march to The Pentagon and clashes with soldiers and United States Marshals protecting the facility. Similar demonstrations occurred simultaneously in Japan and Western Europe.

1969 – A coup d’etat in Somalia brings Siad Barre to power.

1973 – John Paul Getty III’s ear is cut off by his kidnappers and sent to a newspaper in Rome; it doesn’t arrive until November 8.

1973 – Fred Dryer of the then Los Angeles Rams becomes the first player in NFL history to score two safeties in the same game.

1975 – Game 6 of the World Series is played between the Boston Red Sox and Cincinnati Reds. The game would be won on a home run off the left field foul pole at Fenway Park hit by Carlton Fisk in the bottom of the 12th inning, ending perhaps the greatest baseball game played in World Series history.

1977 – The European Patent Institute is founded.

1978 – Australian civilian pilot Frederick Valentich vanishes in a Cessna 182 over the Bass Strait south of Melbourne, after reporting contact with an unidentified aircraft.

1979 – Moshe Dayan resigns from the Israeli government because of strong disagreements with Prime Minister Menachem Begin over policy towards the Arabs.

1983 – The metre is defined at the seventeenth General Conference on Weights and Measures as the distance light travels in a vacuum in 1/299,792,458 of a second.

1986 – In Lebanon, pro-Iranian kidnappers claim to have abducted American writer Edward Tracy (he is released in August 1991).

1987 – Jaffna hospital massacre is carried out by Indian Peace Keeping Force in Sri Lanka killing 70 ethnic Tamil patients, doctors and nurses.

1994 – North Korea nuclear weapons program: North Korea and the United States sign an agreement that requires North Korea to stop its nuclear weapons program and agree to inspections.

1994 – In Seoul, 32 people are killed when the Seongsu Bridge collapses.

2003 – Images of the dwarf planet Eris are taken and subsequently used in its discovery by the team of Michael E. Brown, Chad Trujillo, and David L. Rabinowitz.

Morning Shinbun Thursday October 21




Thursday’s Headlines:

What’s So Bad About Parallel Societies?

USA

Efforts to Prosecute Blackwater Are Collapsing

Florida activists read between the lines on foreclosure paperwork

Europe

French fuel blockades force thousands to call off their holidays

Eastern Europe confronts fake medicines trade

Middle East

A three-handed game in the Middle East

 Israeli settlers building 544 new homes

Asia

Nato surge on Taliban stronghold drives civilians into the line of fire

Beijing warned its belligerence on islands is ruining relations with Tokyo

Africa

Crackdown on Egyptian media before poll

Backlash as miners shot by Chinese overseers

Latin America

Student becomes new police chief in Mexican town

China ‘trying to block publication of UN Darfur report’

Beijing is trying to prevent the release of a report which says Chinese bullets have been used against Darfur peacekeepers, unnamed UN diplomats say.

The BBC   21 October 2010

The report is being discussed by a United Nations committee which monitors sanctions against Sudan, including an arms embargo on Darfur.

Beijing says it is vaguely worded and full of flaws.

Ceasefires and peace negotiations have failed to end the conflict in the volatile western Sudanese region.

The report says that a dozen different brands of Chinese bullet casings have been found in Darfur, some at sites where attacks on UN troops took place.

The BBC’s Barbara Plett at the UN in New York says the allegations are controversial, but adds that China has the right to sell munitions to Khartoum as long as they are not used in Darfur.

What’s So Bad About Parallel Societies?

Germany’s Integration Blinkers

A Commentary by Henryk M. Broder

When Mr. Hu and his wife arrived in Germany 30 years ago, they were both in their early 20s, had no money to speak of and spoke not a word of German. All of their belongings could fit into two bags. To get started, they brought along a notebook with a few recipes and a scrap of paper with the addresses of some Chinese people who had been living in Germany for a while. Immediately after their arrival, they moved into a small attic apartment and began working — as kitchen help in a Chinese restaurant.

Since then, not much has changed — aside from the fact that the Hus now have their own restaurant, known for its authentic dishes, and that they now live in a roomy apartment which they own. Mr. Hu works in the kitchen, directing the labors of five cooks, while Mrs. Hu takes orders from the restaurant’s guests.

USA

Efforts to Prosecute Blackwater Are Collapsing



By JAMES RISEN

Published: October 20, 2010  


WASHINGTON – Nearly four years after the federal government began a string of investigations and criminal prosecutions against Blackwater Worldwide personnel accused of murder and other violent crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan, the cases are beginning to fall apart, burdened by a legal obstacle of the government’s own making.

In the most recent and closely watched case, the Justice Department on Monday said that it would not seek murder charges against Andrew J. Moonen, a Blackwater armorer accused of killing a guard assigned to an Iraqi vice president on Dec. 24, 2006. Justice officials said that they were abandoning the case after an investigation that began in early 2007, and included trips to Baghdad by federal prosecutors and F.B.I. agents to interview Iraqi witnesses.

Florida activists read between the lines on foreclosure paperwork

 

By Ariana Eunjung Cha

Washington Post Staff Write


WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – Nearly a year before the national furor over foreclosures began, Lisa Epstein, a nurse, ran into three other amateur sleuths who separately were investigating shoddy practices at mortgage companies.

While meeting for the first time in November at an old one-story law office in this city, the four strangers compared notes and began to piece together the scope of the problem: All over the United States, big financial firms might have been using fraudulent paperwork to evict struggling borrowersfrom their homes.

Europe

French fuel blockades force thousands to call off their holidays



By John Lichfield in Paris Thursday, 21 October 2010

One great French tradition, the right to strike, threatened to collide with another yesterday – the right to go on holiday.

As protests against pension reform continued to disrupt the country, the government hopes, and its opponents fear, that school half-term and All Saints’ holidays starting tomorrow will dampen the ardour of protesters.

A widespread shortage of petrol and diesel is, however, forcing hundreds of thousands of French people to cancel, or reconsider,their holiday plans.

Eastern Europe confronts fake medicines trade

 

by Mihaela Rodina  (AFP)

Eastern Europe is a key route in a multi-billion-dollar trade in often-dangerous counterfeit medicines that has grown exponentially on the Internet, experts said at a regional meeting this week.

More than 120 anti-counterfeit specialists from six Eastern European countries met in Romania on Wednesday and Thursday to step up the fight against a risky business estimated to be 75 billion dollars (54 billion euros) worldwide in 2010.

“There is an important Balkan route for fake medicines, which is the same as for heroin and other narcotics,” Hungarian customs officer Karolyi Szep told AFP at the meeting called by the world’s leading pharmaceutical company Pfizer.

Middle East

A three-handed game in the Middle East  



By Sami Moubayed  

DAMASCUS – The Middle East is witnessing a fury of diplomatic traffic. On Monday evening, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad went to Saudi Arabia for a meeting with King Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz only days after receiving Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki in Damascus.

Lebanese Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri had arrived in the Saudi capital a day earlier, while US Assistant Secretary of State Jeffrey Feltman landed in Beirut for talks with President Michel Suleiman, days after a state visit by Iranian President Mahmud Ahmadinejad to Lebanon.

Ex-US president Jimmy Carter wrapped up talks in Gaza and headed to Damascus where, along with a senior delegation from the Elders, he met members of Hamas on Tuesday while Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez is expected in the Syrian capital on Wednesday

 Israeli settlers building 544 new homes



By KARIN LAUB, Associated Press Writer

KARMEI TZUR, West Bank – Israeli settlers have begun building new homes at an extraordinary pace since the government lifted its moratorium on West Bank housing starts – almost 550 in three weeks, more than four times faster than the last two years.

And many homes are going up in areas that under practically any peace scenario would become part of a Palestinian state, a trend that could doom U.S.-brokered peace talks.

According to an Associated Press count, ground has been broken on 544 new West Bank homes since Sept. 26, when Israel lifted its 10-month freeze on most new settlement building..

Asia

Nato surge on Taliban stronghold drives civilians into the line of fire

As troops step up their attack on the militants’ Kandahar heartland, Julius Cavendish meets the ordinary people caught on the frontline

Thursday, 21 October 2010

The first eyewitness accounts of Nato’s assault on the final Taliban sanctuary threatening Kandahar City have begun to emerge, painting a picture of sporadic fire fights, steady progress by Afghan and coalition forces, and flight by those inhabitants wealthy or lucky enough to escape the violence.

Earlier this week, Nato began its final and critical phase of a major offensive designed to clear Kandahar, the spiritual home of the Taliban, with hundreds of troops carrying out an air assault on the main insurgent base in the region. In interviews with The Independent, tribal elders, government officials and civilians in Kandahar City provided vivid descriptions of special forces night raids and Nato’s bombardment of the area in the preceding month – designed to damage the local Taliban leadership – and the tactics the insurgents used to cow inhabitants before fleeing in the face of coalition firepower.

Beijing warned its belligerence on islands is ruining relations with Tokyo

 

JOHN GARNAUT

October 21, 2010


A leading figure in Japanese international relations who helped mend fences with China in the 1980s says Beijing’s ”diplomatic shock and awe campaign” over disputed islands in the East China Sea has reduced the relationship to ”ground zero”.

Yoichi Funabashi, editor in chief of Asahi Shimbun, said the consequences of China’s firebrand response would have a larger impact in Japan than Richard Nixon’s secret moves towards normalising US relations with China in the 1970s.

”Japan and China now stand at ground zero, and the landscape is a bleak, vast nothingness,” Funabashi wrote in a letter sent to dozens of high-ranking friends in China.

Africa

Crackdown on Egyptian media before poll

The Irish Times – Thursday, October 21, 2010

MICHAEL JANSEN

EGYPT’S PRESIDENT Hosni Mubarak yesterday issued a decree fixing November 28th for his country’s parliamentary elections. The ruling National Democratic Party (NDP), three other legal parties and the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood are set to compete for the 508 seats.

In the run-up to the poll, the government has been cracking down on the media, on mobile phones and on the Brotherhood. Egypt’s main satellite provider, Nilesat, has shut down 17 private television channels for violating broadcasting regulations.

Another 20 were threatened with suspension of their licences.

Backlash as miners shot by Chinese overseers



Aislinn Laing

October 21, 2010


JOHANNESBURG: A backlash against China’s powerful presence in the Zambian economy has been triggered by an incident in which 11 miners were shot by Chinese managers.

Police said the Chinese executives opened fire on workers protesting against poor pay and conditions at the Collum coalmine in the Sinazongwe district of Southern Province on Friday.

Eleven people were treated for wounds to the stomach, hands and legs and two are understood to remain in a critical condition.

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A foreign ministry official in Beijing said the shooting was a ”mistake” but the incident has led to demands to curb China’s dominant position in mining investments. It invested $402 million in Zambia’s mining industry last year.

Latin America

Student becomes new police chief in Mexican town

Marisol Valles, 20, who is studying criminology, has yet to make an arrest but is being called Mexico’s bravest woman  

Rory Carroll, Latin America correspondent

guardian.co.uk, Thursday 21 October 2010  


She is a petite 20-year-old college student who paints her nails pink, has an infant son and believes in non-violence: meet Marisol Valles, the newest police chief in Mexico’s drug war cauldron.

The town of Praxedis G Guerrero on the Texas border has astonished Mexico by appointing Valles to head a police force in the heart of a traditional route for narco-traffickers.

The criminology student has yet to make an arrest but has already been hailed Mexico’s bravest woman for taking such a post in Juarez valley, a strip of about a dozen towns and villages where shadowy groups slaughter and mutilate police and civilians with impunity.

Ignoring Asia A Blog  

Stiglitz: Economics Doctor’s Rx for the Problems

(10 am. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

Paul Krugman linked to this chart from a paper by Mary Daly of the San Francisco Fed with the comparison of the Japanese economy to the current US economic morass.

Photobucket

Joseph Stiglitz, Nobel Prize winner, doctor of economics and professor of economics at Columbia University, appeared today on the Dylan Ratigan Show and offered his advice for radical surgery to get the money and the jobs flowing again.

Ratigan:

“What is the risk of not dealing with the vicious cycle that is becoming joblessness in America, which leads to foreclosure in America, which leads to bank dysfunctionality, which leads to less investing and that vicious cycle that clearly has tremendous peril? What is that peril?”

Stiglitz:

“Well, I learned years ago that if we didn’t do it, we would be exactly where we are today and if we don’t do it now, we are likely to be entering into a Japanese style malaise, low growth, high unemployment, literally for years to come that should be unacceptable.”

See chart above and listen to Stiglitz offer his “radical surgical” solution.

Prime Time

Well tonight you have a chance to see my other surviving bracket get 1 game away from elimination.  About all I can say is that Atrios will be disappointed.  Both teams will be pitching their 3rd best so it will be a test of offense and bullpens.

All premiers on broadcast.

Later-

No Dave, Jon, or Stephen; 9/9, 10/11, 10/11.  No Alton.

BoondocksWingmen.

Zap2it TV Listings, Yahoo TV Listings

Evening Edition

Evening Edition is an Open Thread

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 Police break fuel blockades in France strike

by Roland Lloyd Parry, AFP

1 hr 7 mins ago

PARIS (AFP) – Police broke blockades at French fuel depots on Wednesday and skirmished with youths as the government warned of economic damage from prolonged strikes against its pensions reform.

More tear gas was fired and cars burned in Lyon and suburbs of Paris in a third day of minor riots, a day after nationwide protests brought a million people into the street.

With a third of France’s filling stations dry, according to the government, queues again formed at pumps as several fuel depots remained blockaded.

2 French police break fuel blockades in pensionstrike

by Roland Lloyd Parry, AFP

Wed Oct 20, 6:53 am ET

PARIS (AFP) – Police cleared protesters blockading French fuel depots on Wednesday as the government warned of economic damage from prolonged strikes against its plan to raise the retirement age from 60 to 62.

A third of France’s filling stations ran dry on Tuesday, the government said, while cars were set alight and police fired tear gas at rioters on the sidelines of protests that brought a million people into the street.

“If it is not stopped quickly, this disorder which is aimed at paralysing the country could have consequences for jobs by damaging the normal running of economic activity,” President Nicolas Sarkozy said in a statement Wednesday.

3 Britain unveils deep spending cuts to tackle record debt

by Danny Kemp and Katherine Haddon, AFP

1 hr 18 mins ago

LONDON (AFP) – Britain’s government unveiled the harshest spending cuts for decades on Wednesday, slashing budgets by around a fifth and taking the axe to the country’s comprehensive welfare system.

Finance minister George Osborne said nearly half a million public sector jobs would go as a result of the austerity measures, and the age at which state pensions are paid to men and women would rise to 66 by 2020.

Osborne insisted that the 83-billion-pound (130-billion-dollar, 95-billion-euro) package — watched around Europe by governments with similar deficit worries — marked “the day that Britain steps back from the brink.”

4 Afghans cancel one quarter of votes in parliament poll

by Waheedullah Massoud, AFP

Wed Oct 20, 12:36 pm ET

KABUL (AFP) – Afghan election authorities on Wednesday threw out 1.3 million votes over suspected fraud in last month’s parliamentary election, nearly a quarter of the 5.6 million cast.

The cancelled votes represent more than 23 percent of the ballots cast on September 18 for Afghanistan’s second parliament since the Taliban regime’s overthrow in a 2001 US-led invasion.

“The total number of ballots poured into the boxes was 5,600,000. The valid vote is 4,265,347 and the invalid vote is around 1,300,000,” said Fazil Ahmad Manawi, head of the Independent Election Commission (IEC).

5 Obama seeks immediate suspension of gay military order

AFP

1 hr 52 mins ago

SAN FRANCISCO (AFP) – US President Barack Obama’s administration asked an appeals court Wednesday to immediately suspend a judge’s decision to repeal a ban on gays serving openly in the military.

The US military said Tuesday it was accepting openly gay recruits for the first time in the country’s history, as District Judge Virginia Phillips of California refused to grant the Obama administration a stay on her court order.

The Justice Department urged the appeals court in San Francisco to immediately suspend Phillips’s repeal of the controversial “Don’t Ask Don’t Tell” policy, while it considered a reversal of her stay decision.

6 Pentagon to accept gay recruits after court ruling

AFP

Wed Oct 20, 12:08 pm ET

WASHINGTON (AFP) – The US military said it is accepting openly gay recruits for the first time in the country’s history, after a judge upheld an order ending a controversial ban on homosexual troops.

But the Pentagon warned that the so-called “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” rule could be reinstated, depending on the outcome of pending court decisions.

“Recruiters have been given guidance, and they will process applications for applicants who admit they are openly gay or lesbian,” spokeswoman Cynthia Smith told AFP, adding that recruiters have been instructed to remind applicants that the court’s decision could be reversed.

7 Ancient galaxy is more than 13 billion light years away

AFP

2 hrs 23 mins ago

PARIS (AFP) – European astronomers on Wednesday said a galaxy born in the childhood of the Universe lies at least 13 billion light years away, making it the remotest object ever observed.

Light from the galaxy UDFy-38135539 that reaches Earth today was emitted when the cosmos was only 600 million years old and mired in a primordial “fog” of hydrogen atoms, they said.

It has taken 13.1 billion years, travelling at 300,000 kilometres (186,000 miles) per second, for this smudge of infant light to arrive.

8 Russia unveils 60 billion dollar privatisation drive

by Stuart Williams, AFP

Wed Oct 20, 1:09 pm ET

MOSCOW (AFP) – Russia on Wednesday agreed a huge 5-year privatisation drive worth 60 billion dollars in a dramatic return to sell-offs after a decade that saw the government increase control over key assets.

First Deputy Prime Minister Igor Shuvalov announced that the government had taken its final decision and the plan only now required the approval of President Dmitry Medvedev.

“According to initial estimates, the state could receive 1.8 trillion rubles (58.5 billion dollars) from a full realisation of the privatisation plans,” he said in comments on state television, adding that 900 firms were slated for privatisation.

9 ECB official gives cool reaction to eurozone reforms

by William Ickes, AFP

Wed Oct 20, 12:29 pm ET

FRANKFURT (AFP) – European Central Bank chief economist Juergen Stark replied cautiously Wednesday to a European Union deal hailed as the eurozone’s “biggest reform” ever, saying that remained to be seen.

An agreement unveiled Tuesday would make it easier to sanction EU states that blow their budgets and create a permanent, Greek-style safety net for those that cannot cope.

This “was celebrated as a great day for Europe,” Stark noted on the sidelines of an ECB conference in Frankfurt.

10 Boeing swings to profit, hikes 2010 earnings outlook

AFP

Wed Oct 20, 12:28 pm ET

WASHINGTON (AFP) – US aerospace giant Boeing on Wednesday posted a quarterly profit that beat expectations and boosted its full-year earnings forecast as it delivered more jetliners.

The commercial plane maker and defense contractor said it swung into profit of 837 million dollars in the third quarter, compared with a 1.6-billion-dollar loss a year ago due to problems with its new 787 Dreamliner program.

Revenue topped expectations at 16.97 billion dollars, up from 16.69 billion a year ago.

11 Hormone therapy linked to increased cancer risk

AFP

Wed Oct 20, 7:00 am ET

WASHINGTON (AFP) – Menopausal women taking combined hormone therapy have an elevated risk of being diagnosed with a more advanced stage of breast cancer and dying from it, according to a new US study.

Researchers conducted a new analysis of a landmark, federally funded clinical trial known as the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI), which was halted in 2002 after data suggested women who took a combination of estrogen and progestin hormones faced a higher risk of breast cancer.

The study, published in this week’s edition of the Journal of the American Medical Association, also found that women who previously used hormone therapy and discontinued it after the WHI was terminated still faced a slightly higher breast cancer mortality rate than women not taking hormones.

12 Shots, tear gas fired at Indonesia protests

by Presi Mandari, AFP

Wed Oct 20, 6:11 am ET

JAKARTA (AFP) – Hundreds of protesters hurled stones and sticks at police who responded with tear gas Wednesday on the first anniversary of the swearing in of Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.

Chaotic skirmishes broke out between riot police and about 2,000 mainly student protesters outside the presidential palace in Jakarta, where the air filled with acrid gas.

Similar clashes erupted elsewhere in Jakarta and other towns on the main island of Java, as well as the South Sulawesi capital of Makassar where about 1,000 protesters set fire to cars and briefly detained a police officer.

13 France clears fuel blockades before pension vote

By Nick Vinocur, Reuters

27 mins ago

PARIS (Reuters) – President Nicolas Sarkozy sent in police to clear access to barricaded French fuel depots and restore supply as trade unions kept up their resistance on Wednesday to a pension reform due for a final vote this week.

Fuel imports hit a record high on Tuesday, the government said, as it tried to get round a 24-day blockade of France’s largest oil port, near Marseille, where 51 oil tankers lay idle in the Mediterranean, unable to dock.

With more than 3,000 service stations out of nearly 12,500 in France out of fuel, police could also be deployed to clear access to striking oil refineries, according to Sarkozy’s order.

14 Morgan Stanley falls further behind Goldman

By Steve Eder, Reuters

1 hr 5 mins ago

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Morgan Stanley reported a surprising third-quarter loss, suggesting the bank is losing hard-won ground in the battle with Goldman Sachs for Wall Street supremacy.

The firm’s $91 million loss, on weak volumes during one of the most difficult trading quarters in recent memory, came a day after Goldman overcame those same conditions to beat Street estimates with a $1.9 billion profit.

Despite results that could have spooked Wall Street a few quarters ago, Morgan Stanley shares were just fractionally lower in afternoon trading and the broader market was higher, the latest sign of a decoupling of banks from wider investment sentiment.

15 Mortgage applications slump as rates rise from lows

By Julie Haviv, Reuters

2 hrs 14 mins ago

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Mortgage applications slumped last week as interest rates on 15- and 30-year fixed-rate mortgages rose for the first time in six weeks, data from an industry group showed on Wednesday.

Interest rates, however, are not far from record lows and the drop in demand does not bode well for the housing market, which has been showing signs of improvement but remains highly vulnerable to setbacks.

The Mortgage Bankers Association said its seasonally adjusted index of mortgage applications, which includes both purchase and refinance loans, for the week ended October 15 decreased 10.5 percent. The four-week moving average of mortgage applications, which smooths the volatile weekly figures, was up 0.4 percent.

16 Fight over gays in US military moves to appeals court

By Peter Henderson, Reuters

11 mins ago

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – A landmark legal battle that forced the U.S. military to welcome openly gay recruits moved on Wednesday to a federal appeals court, where the Obama administration pressed its case to reinstate the policy known as “don’t ask, don’t tell.”

The administration asked the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to let the Pentagon resume its longtime prohibition on openly gay men and women in uniform while it appeals a lower-court ruling that struck down the ban.

The request for an emergency stay was filed with the three-judge panel in San Francisco even as some gay veterans expelled under the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy have sought to reenlist in a test of the lower-court decision.

17 U.S.-Pakistan dialogue faces prickly issues

By David Alexander, Reuters

Wed Oct 20, 7:25 am ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. and Pakistani officials on Wednesday begin a third round of wide-ranging talks to broaden relations beyond the war against Islamist insurgents, but analysts expected little headway because of differing strategic interests.

Officials plan to discuss everything from water to energy, but the three-day U.S.-Pakistan Strategic Dialogue will be overshadowed by the ongoing counterinsurgency campaigns in the Afghan-Pakistan border region and the strain the conflict has put on bilateral relations.

“Pakistani-U.S. relations have taken a hit in the past few weeks,” said Mark Quarterman, an analyst at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “It’s actually very timely that the U.S.-Pakistan Strategic Dialogue is occurring after this period so they can sit down and clear the air.”

18 Afghan leader sees hope for peace, reconciliation

By Hamid Shalizi, Reuters

Wed Oct 20, 12:43 pm ET

KABUL (Reuters) – Afghan President Hamid Karzai said on Wednesday hopes for peace and reconciliation after almost 10 years of war had increased.

But Karzai, in a long address at his presidential palace, made no direct reference to peace talks between his government and the Taliban and other insurgents.

He said Afghanistan and its allies were all working toward a settlement and that he hoped significant improvements would be achieved within one or two years.

19 Pentagon tells recruiters: You must accept gays

By Phil Stewart, Reuters

Tue Oct 19, 9:48 pm ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The Pentagon said on Tuesday it had told U.S. military recruiters to allow gays and lesbians to apply for service, as gay veterans tested a court order striking down the military’s ban on openly serving homosexuals.

California-based U.S. District Judge Virginia Phillips ordered the military a week ago to stop enforcing the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy and on Monday tentatively refused a Pentagon request to re-instate the 17-year-old ban.

Phillips issued a final decision late on Tuesday affirming her order.

20 U.N. study highlights price of nature to mankind

By Chisa Fujioka, Reuters

Wed Oct 20, 7:01 am ET

NAGOYA, Japan (Reuters) – Governments and businesses need an overhaul of policies and strategies to respond to the rapid loss of nature’s riches, worth trillions of dollars but long taken for granted, a U.N.-backed study said on Wednesday.

Damage to natural capital including forests, wetlands and grasslands is valued at $2-4.5 trillion annually, the United Nations estimates, but the figure is not included in economic data such as GDP, nor in corporate accounts.

That “invisibility” needs to change so steps can be taken to save ecosystems that are a vital source of food, water and income, said Pavan Sukhdev, study leader for The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity (TEEB), a U.N.-backed initiative.

21 Almost quarter of votes in Afghan election invalid: IEC

By Jonathon Burch, Reuters

Wed Oct 20, 1:23 pm ET

KABUL (Reuters) – Almost a quarter of the votes cast in Afghanistan’s parliamentary election last month were invalid, officials said on Wednesday, but they hailed the poll a success despite low turnout and thousands of complaints.

The top U.N. envoy in Afghanistan applauded the election body for its handling of the counting process, but said “considerable fraud” had been carried out on polling day and called for those responsible to be held accountable.

While announcing preliminary results, Afghanistan’s Independent Election Commission (IEC) said 5.6 million votes had been cast — more than a million above earlier estimates — but that it had thrown out 1.3 million of them for various reasons.

22 Investors and White House press banks over mortgages

By Al Yoon and Jeff Mason, Reuters

Wed Oct 20, 5:19 am ET

NEW YORK/WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Investors threatened to seek redress over questionable mortgage bonds and the White House warned it would hold lenders accountable for any illegal foreclosure practices, sending the shares of major banks lower on Tuesday.

A group of eight investors accused Bank of America of inappropriately bundling some mortgages into more than $47 billion of bonds. The bank said it would fight being held responsible for the investors’ losses.

With pressure mounting for a tougher response by the Obama administration just two weeks before congressional elections, a top Justice Department official was due to meet with housing industry regulators on Wednesday.

23 Consumer attorneys see flaws in foreclosure reboot

By Dan Levine, Reuters

Tue Oct 19, 6:53 pm ET

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Consumer attorneys say there are fresh examples of documentation problems in U.S. home foreclosure cases, even as major banks resume legal proceedings against delinquent borrowers.

Bank of America and GMAC Mortgage, two of the largest servicers of U.S. residential loans, have spent a few weeks poring over their foreclosure procedures after allegations surfaced that for years banks have not reviewed documents properly or have submitted false statements to evict delinquent borrowers.

Consumer attorneys doubt the banks have cured the problems, noting that the speed of the announcement that foreclosure proceedings were to resume would have necessitated huge resources devoted to document review.

24 Yahoo disappoints on revenue forecast

By Alexei Oreskovic, Reuters

Wed Oct 20, 3:07 am ET

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Yahoo’s uninspiring quarterly sales forecast disappointed Wall Street and underscored how the one-time Internet leader is struggling to keep up with Google and Facebook.

Investors have pressured Yahoo, the leader in display advertising, and Chief Executive Carol Bartz to deliver growth and revive its stock price, amid talk that private equity firms are exploring a buyout of the $20 billion company.

“She was already on the hotseat. I don’t think she’s off the hotseat. The results have not shown any kind of real improvements,” analyst Yun Kim of Gleacher & Co said of Bartz.

25 Republican lead narrows in Colorado race: Reuters/Ipsos poll

By John Whitesides, Reuters

Tue Oct 19, 9:44 pm ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Republican Ken Buck has a dwindling lead over Democratic incumbent Michael Bennet, who has gained ground in Colorado’s U.S. Senate race since August, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll released on Tuesday.

Buck, a favorite of the conservative Tea Party movement, leads Bennet among likely voters by 48 percent to 45 percent. Buck led by 9 percentage points in August shortly after winning the Republican Senate nomination in a bitter primary fight.

More than half of Colorado voters say the struggling economy is the top issue and the state is on the wrong track, but Buck, a former prosecutor, has been unable to make political headway despite the sour voter mood.

26 Rebels stage suicide attack on Chechen parliament

Reuters

Tue Oct 19, 12:35 pm ET

GROZNY, Russia (Reuters) – Islamist rebels killed at least three people on Tuesday as they tried to seize Chechnya’s parliament in a brazen suicide attack that showed Russia is failing to quell the insurgency on its southern flank.

Chechnya’s Kremlin-backed leader, Ramzan Kadyrov, was not in the parliamentary compound in the Chechen capital Grozny when three rebels burst in at 8:45 a.m. (12:45 a.m. EDT), as deputies arrived for work.

One blew himself up and two others went on the rampage inside, spraying bullets and screaming “Allahu Akbar” (“God is Greatest”), a witness at the parliament building said.

27 Rioters rampage, protesters block French airports

By GREG KELLER, Associated Press Writer

54 mins ago

PARIS – Workers opposed to a higher retirement age blocked roads to airports around France on Wednesday, leaving passengers in Paris dragging suitcases on foot along an emergency breakdown lane.

Outside the capital, hooded youths smashed store windows amid clouds of tear gas.

Riot police in black body armor forced striking workers away from blocked fuel depots in western France, restoring gasoline to areas where pumps were dry after weeks of protests over the government proposal raising the age from 60 to 62.

28 AP-GfK Poll: Likely voters ready to embrace GOP

By LIZ “Sprinkles” SIDOTI, AP National Political Writer

34 mins ago

WASHINGTON – All signs point to huge Republican victories in two weeks, with the GOP now leading Democrats on virtually every measure in an Associated Press-GfK poll of people likely to vote in the first major elections of Barack Obama’s presidency.

In the final survey before Election Day, likely voters say the GOP would do a better job than Democrats on handling the economy, creating jobs and running the government.

Most also think the country’s headed in the wrong direction. More than half disapprove of Obama’s job performance. And even more don’t like the Democratic-controlled Congress.

29 Favre not disclosing details on meeting with NFL

By DAVE CAMPBELL, AP Sports Writer

14 mins ago

EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn. – Brett Favre isn’t talking about his meeting with an NFL official regarding the allegations he sent suggestive messages and lewd photos two years ago to a woman who worked for the New York Jets.

Speaking on a conference call with reporters in Green Bay ahead of Sunday night’s Vikings-Packers game, Favre called the NFL’s investigation into his alleged behavior a “league matter.” Minutes later, he also declined to answer a series of questions about the situation in his weekly Wednesday news conference with Minnesota media.

“That’s a league issue,” Favre said, “that I just have to leave at that.”

30 Thomas’ wife seeks apology from accuser Anita Hill

Associated Press

49 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Anita Hill is refusing to apologize for accusing then-Supreme Court justice nominee Clarence Thomas of sexually harassing her, in an issue that Thomas’ wife has reopened 19 years after his confirmation hearings.

“I have no intention of apologizing because I testified truthfully about my experience and I stand by that testimony,” Hill, now a Brandeis University professor, said in a statement released Tuesday night.

Thomas’ wife, Virginia, had left a voicemail message on Hill’s phone on Oct. 9 asking her to say she was sorry for the allegations that surfaced at Thomas’ confirmation hearings for a seat on the high court bench in 1991.

31 Afghan govt throws out nearly a quarter of ballots

By HEIDI VOGT, Associated Press Writer

53 mins ago

KABUL, Afghanistan – Afghanistan has thrown out nearly a quarter of ballots cast in last month’s parliamentary elections because of fraud, but it is still far from clear whether the public will accept the results as fair.

The full preliminary results from the Sept. 18 poll were released Wednesday after multiple delays as election officials struggled to weed out results from polling stations that never opened, along with bunches of ballots all cast for one candidate, or suspiciously split 50-50 between two people.

After last year’s fraud-marred presidential election, the government wanted to prove to the Afghan people and international allies that it is not mired in corruption but making strides for reform.

32 Obama’s 4-day campaign swing is his longest yet

By DARLENE SUPERVILLE, Associated Press Writer

Wed Oct 20, 1:48 pm ET

WASHINGTON – Two years ago, presidential candidate Barack Obama drew 60,000 people to a riverfront park rally in Portland, Ore. Another 15,000 couldn’t get in.

But political organizers don’t expect huge crowds when now-President Obama returns to Portland on Wednesday for the first time since that campaign heyday. Instead, the goal is for a far more modest showing of 5,000 people at a rally for Democratic gubernatorial candidate John Kitzhaber at the convention center.

It’s the mark of a presidency weighed down by a sluggish economy, high unemployment, a poor housing market, two wars and a public that largely disapproves of Obama’s performance in office.

33 Fed survey points to uneven growth across US

By JEANNINE AVERSA, AP Economics Writer

53 mins ago

WASHINGTON – The U.S. economy grew unevenly in early fall, with more than half the regions of the country expanding modestly while others struggled to grow.

A survey by the Federal Reserve released Wednesday found that seven of the Fed’s 12 regions reported moderate improvements in business activity. Three regions – Philadelphia, Richmond and Cleveland – described economic activity as mixed or steady. Only two regions – Atlanta and Dallas – suggested economic growth was slow.

The survey indicated that the economy isn’t weakening but is growing too sluggishly to drive down high unemployment, now at 9.6 percent. The jobless rate has been at or above 9.5 percent for more than a year.

34 Saudi prince in lurid murder case sentenced

By GREGORY KATZ, Associated Press Writer

Wed Oct 20, 12:03 pm ET

LONDON – Life in prison, with parole possible after 20 years. That was the sentence handed down Wednesday to a Saudi prince convicted of a killing so lurid it has shocked even London, with its long history of tawdry sex crimes dating back to Jack the Ripper.

The victim, Bandar Abdulaziz, had so many internal injuries, including bleeding on the brain and a fractured larynx, that pathologists could not pinpoint the precise cause of death after his body was found in the posh Landmark Hotel.

The killer was a Saudi prince who tried in vain to hide his homosexuality from the court and had been filmed on a closed-circuit camera mercilessly beating the victim – his paid manservant – in the hotel elevator.

35 Stimulus spending looms large in midterm contests

By KRISTEN WYATT, Associated Press Writer

Wed Oct 20, 12:29 pm ET

DENVER – A photo of President Barack Obama hangs on the wall in CoraFaye’s Cafe, a short walk from the Denver museum where Obama signed into law the most sweeping U.S. economic package in decades in an attempt to put people back to work and end the worst downturn since the Great Depression.

But the folks tucking into fried chicken and cornbread at CoraFaye’s roll their eyes when asked whether the 2009 stimulus made a difference.

“Are you kidding?” said Donn Headley Sr., a 61-year-old whose heating and air conditioning company closed last year because of slow business.

36 Troops discharged for being gay try to re-enlist

By ANNE FLAHERTY and JULIE WATSON, Associated Press Writers

Wed Oct 20, 9:49 am ET

SAN DIEGO – At least three service members discharged for being gay have begun the process to re-enlist after the Pentagon directed the military to accept openly gay recruits for the first time in the nation’s history.

The top-level guidance issued to recruiting commands last week and announced Tuesday marked a significant change in an institution long resistant and sometimes hostile to gays.

“Gay people have been fighting for equality in the military since the 1960s,” said Aaron Belkin, executive director of the Palm Center, a think tank on gays and the military at the University of California Santa Barbara. “It took a lot to get to this day.”

37 Karachi violence death toll rises to 52 in 4 days

By MOHAMMAD FAROOQ, Associated Press Writer

Wed Oct 20, 11:47 am ET

KARACHI, Pakistan – The death toll from four days of violence sparked by a contentious local election in Pakistan’s largest city rose to 52 on Wednesday when at least one person was shot and killed despite efforts to restore order.

Security forces patrolled the southern city of Karachi to prevent fresh violence and in many neighborhoods, businesses shut down while public transportation was scarce.

“The atmosphere of terror is everywhere,” said local resident Mohammad Sadiq. “People are scared to come out of their houses.”

38 Alarms over radiation from thyroid cancer patients

By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR, Associated Press Writer

Wed Oct 20, 3:45 am ET

WASHINGTON – Cancer patients sent home after treatment with radioactive iodine have contaminated hotel rooms and set off alarms on public transportation, a congressional investigation has found.

They’ve come into close contact with vulnerable people, including pregnant women and children, and the household trash from their homes has triggered radiation detectors at landfills.

Rep. Edward Markey, D-Mass., says the problem stems from a decision years ago by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to ease requirements that thyroid cancer patients remain in the hospital a few days after swallowing doses of radioactive iodine to shrink their tumors.

39 Ignored warnings, lax security led to 7 CIA deaths

By KIMBERLY DOZIER and ADAM GOLDMAN, Associated Press Writers

Wed Oct 20, 8:45 am ET

WASHINGTON – Warnings were ignored, security was lax and good judgment was lacking, leading to one of the worst tragedies in CIA history, when a double-agent suicide bomber killed seven CIA employees in Afghanistan last December.

That’s the view from the CIA director himself, speaking to reporters Tuesday, after a six-month internal review of the attack.

Yet Leon Panetta said no one will be disciplined or fired. He blamed the bombing on what he called “systemic failures,” which meant Jordanian intelligence warnings about the bomber weren’t shared and sufficient security measures weren’t taken.

40 Afghan-Taliban peace process may be overstated

By DEB RIECHMANN and KATHY GANNON, Associated Press Writers

35 mins ago

KABUL, Afghanistan – Over the past week, U.S. and Afghan officials have been revealing tantalizing tidbits about talks with Taliban leaders, raising hopes for a peaceful resolution to a war in its 10th year.

“The international community, our neighbors and our people are marching toward it with full strength,” President Hamid Karzai said in a speech Wednesday. “The rumors we are hearing from the Taliban and our other brothers say a lot of people are hopeful about this peace process.”

But some coalition officials, Afghans and people familiar with insurgent leaders say contacts with militants are nothing new and have been overstated – perhaps to split the ranks of fighters or create the impression in the West of progress in resolving the unpopular war.

41 Students allege police brutality after NY shooting

By JIM FITZGERALD, Associated Press Writer

2 hrs 26 mins ago

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. – Three college football players who saw a teammate get fatally shot by police outside a suburban bar were brutalized by officers and arrested when they tried to help their mortally wounded friend, their lawyer said Wednesday.

One player knows CPR and begged the police to let him try to save Danroy Henry, but instead “they put a gun to his ribs and they told him to back … up or he would be next,” attorney Bonita Zelman told The Associated Press.

She said the other two teammates were zapped with stun guns when they tried to intervene. They said Henry, “was on the pavement, handcuffed and dying, and no one was helping him,” she said.

42 Nevada Senate race turns uglier with Hispanic ad

By CRISTINA SILVA, Associated Press Writer

Wed Oct 20, 3:36 am ET

LAS VEGAS – A Republican campaign urging Latinos not to vote has been yanked from the airwaves amid an outcry from Democrats that it was a dirty trick against Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid in his hotly contested race against Republican Sharron Angle.

Reid sought to link the ad to Angle Tuesday as it drew a harsh rebuke from President Barack Obama, Hispanic leaders and candidates from both parties in Nevada. Angle’s opponents also pounced on the tea party favorite for her comments to Hispanic high school students that “some of you look a little more Asian to me.”

“Listen to her latest, running ads on Hispanic television telling people not to vote,” Reid said. “She is trying to keep people from voting.”

43 Even in liberal bastions, GOP sees election chance

By GLEN JOHNSON and JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS, Associated Press Writers

Wed Oct 20, 3:01 am ET

HYANNIS PORT, Mass. – In the congressional district that’s home to the Kennedy family compound, a Kennedy public skating rink and a Kennedy museum, the heart of liberalism is beating uneasily.

Republican Jeff Perry is making a serious bid to take over a seat held by Democrats for nearly 40 years – and it’s just one of nearly 100 seats across the country that now appear under at least some threat of slipping away from the majority party and giving control of the U.S. House to the GOP.

At least 75 House seats – the vast majority held by Democrats – are at serious risk of changing hands, and roughly 25 more where Democrats were assumed to have the upper hand have tightened in recent weeks, raising the possibility that some could flip to the Republicans as well.

44 State lawmakers preparing citizenship legislation

By PAUL DAVENPORT and AMANDA LEE MYERS, Associated Press Writers

Tue Oct 19, 9:27 pm ET

PHOENIX – The state senator in Arizona who wrote the nation’s toughest law against illegal immigrants said Tuesday he’s collecting support across the country from legislators to challenge automatic U.S. citizenship to the children of illegal immigrants.

Arizona state Sen. Russell Pearce’s target is the 14th Amendment, but it is unclear how the state lawmaker can or will influence a federal statue.

“This is a battle of epic proportions,” Pearce said Tuesday during a news conference at the Arizona Capitol. “We’ve allowed the hijacking of the 14th Amendment.”

45 Founding Fathers’ papers to be accessible online

By ZINIE CHEN SAMPSON, Associated Press Writer

9 mins ago

RICHMOND, Va. – History buffs will soon be able to explore the private thoughts and official writings of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson and other Founding Fathers in a public, online clearinghouse of their letters, journals and other documents.

The University of Virginia Press is putting the published papers of Washington, Jefferson, John Adams, James Madison, Alexander Hamilton and Benjamin Franklin on a National Archives website that is expected to be accessible to the public in 2012.

When complete, the website will allow users to read, browse and search the text of tens of thousands of documents from the period.

46 Trick or Treat: Chocolate always a Halloween hit

By JENNIFER C. YATES, Associated Press Writer

1 hr 36 mins ago

MCKEESPORT, Pa. – In a block-long warehouse at the McKeesport Candy Co., wooden pallets are piled high with boxes of candy fangs, wax mustaches, peanut butter and chocolate pumpkins, even a bag of “blood” that resembles a hospital IV.

“The grosser the candy, the better it’s going to sell,” says owner Jon H. Prince.

While kids love gore and gimmicks when it comes to Halloween – how can you not love a pair of wax fangs? – experts say children still are drawn to the classics their parents favor when filling the family treat bowl every year.

47 Jeep flagship has refined, luxury feel

By ANN M. JOB, For The Associated Press

Wed Oct 20, 11:22 am ET

Jeep’s flagship Grand Cherokee sport utility vehicle is so improved for 2011, passengers might think they’re riding in a luxury vehicle.

The interior of the new Grand Cherokee is impressively quiet, with supportive seats and well-arranged controls. Exterior styling is more rounded and modern than before, and the new V-6 engine is more robust than its predecessor. Best of all, the vehicle rides in a nearly refined manner on pavement, while still capably handling rugged off-road duty when needed.

But don’t look for a bargain price. With seats for five, Grand Cherokees remain in the $30,000-and-above category, though starting retail price has declined by $499.

Punting the Pundits

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

Dean Baker: Timothy Geithner forecloses on the moratorium debate

By refusing to halt foreclosures to sort out the mortgage mess, the treasury secretary again shows his favour to Wall Street

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner is good at telling fairy tales. Geithner first became known to the general public in September of 2008. Back then, he was head of the New York Federal Reserve Board. He was part of the triumvirate, along with Federal Reserve Board chairman Ben Bernanke and then Treasury secretary Henry Paulson, who told congress that it had to pass the Tarp or the economy would collapse. . . . .

Now, Geithner has a new fairytale. This time, it is that if the government imposes a foreclosure moratorium, it will lead to chaos in the housing market and jeopardise the health of the recovery.

For the gullible, which includes most of the Washington policy elite, this assertion is probably sufficient to quash any interest in a foreclosure moratorium. But those capable of thinking for themselves may ask how Geithner could have reached this conclusion.

Amy Goodman: When Banks Are the Robbers

The big banks that caused the collapse of the global finance market, and received tens of billions of dollars in taxpayer-funded bailouts, have likely been engaging in wholesale fraud against homeowners and the courts. But in a promising development this week, attorneys general from all 50 states announced a bipartisan joint investigation into foreclosure fraud.

Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, GMAC and other big mortgage lenders recently suspended most foreclosure proceedings, following revelations that thousands of their foreclosures were being conducted like “foreclosure mills,” with tens of thousands of legal documents signed by low-level staffers with little or no knowledge of what they were signing.

Then the Obama administration signaled that it was not supporting a foreclosure moratorium. Not long after, Bank of America announced it was restarting its foreclosure operations. GMAC followed suit, and others will likely join in. So much for the voluntary moratorium.

Dana Milbank: A Tea Party of populist posers

On the morning of Oct. 14, a cyber-insurgency caused servers to crash at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

The culprits, however, weren’t attacking the chamber; they were well-meaning citizens who overwhelmed the big-business lobbying group with a sudden wave of online contributions. It was one of the more extraordinary events in the annals of American populism: the common man voluntarily giving money to make the rich richer. . . .

A movement of the plutocrats, by the political professionals and for the powerful: Now that’s something Tea Partyers should be mad about.

Katrina vanden Heuvel: Predator’s ball

“Apres nous, le deluge.” Surely the reactionary gang of five on the Supreme Court should have cited Louis XV in their Citizens United  decision overturning precedent to open the floodgates to corporate campaign spending. For all the fixation on Tea Partyers, what is most notable about this election is the rising tide of money that is lifting many Republican candidates — and how it ultimately contradicts the message that GOP contenders are delivering to voters.

Only two months ago, Democratic Party operatives were boasting that the war chests of Democratic incumbents would repel Republican challengers. That was then. In the last quarter, Republican challengers surpassed Democratic incumbents in fundraising.

More important, the campaigns have been aided by an unprecedented wave of independent expenditures — over $150 million and rising, the vast bulk spent on attack ads against besieged Democrats. Many of these contributions are anonymous, made to nonprofit institutions that don’t have to reveal their donors. Karl Rove, infamous as George Bush’s political “brain,” has essentially displaced the Republican National Committee with his American Crossroads and Crossroads GPS organizations, claiming that they will dispense over $50 million into the elections.

Richard Reeves: Waiting for Another Watergate

There is, to say, a heated debate going on about all this secret money. Two distinguished debaters, David Brooks of The New York Times and Al Hunt of Bloomberg News, have taken opposite (and extreme) sides of the argument.

Brooks’ analysis appeared Tuesday under the headline: “Don’t Follow the Money.”

Hunt wrote two days earlier under the headline: “Watergate Return Inevitable as Cash Floods Elections.”

They are both commenting on the same set of facts: Because of the new Supreme Court decision, spending on next month’s House and Senate elections may top $4 billion, a record. Undisclosed cash, most of it from unnamed corporations, could be between $250 million and $500 million.

The last time we ran an election in the shadows was 1972. Watergate. That year, with the re-election campaign of President Nixon, cash literally flowed into the White House to beat the date that new campaign regulations came into effect. There were little piles and drawers full of cash on the desks of middle-level campaign officials. Where did that money come from? No one really knew. Where did it go? No one knows how much there was or where it all ended up.

That was the lesson of giving and taking money without transparency or accountability. It damned near brought down the country. If Hunt is right, and I think he is, we are in for more of the same. The only question now is the timing of the next Watergate.

Joseph Stiglitz: It is folly to place all our trust in the Fed

In certain circles, it has become fashionable to argue that monetary policy is a superior instrument to fiscal policy – more predictable, faster, without the adverse long-term consequences brought on by greater indebtedness. Indeed, some advocates wax so enthusiastic that they support recent drives for austerity in many European countries, arguing that if there are untoward effects they can be undone by monetary policy. Whatever the merits of this position in general, it is nonsense in current economic circumstances.

A quarter-century ago proponents of monetary policy argued, with equal fervour, in favour of monetarism: the most reliable intervention in the economy was to maintain a steady rate of growth in the money supply. Few would hold that now, as the velocity of circulation turned out to be less constant than the monetarists anticipated. Countries seduced by apparent certainties of monetarism found themselves in a highly uncertain world.

Traditionally, monetary authorities focus policy around setting the short-term government interest rate. But, leaving aside the fact that with interest rates near zero there is little room for manoeuvre, the impact on the real economy of changes in the interest rate remains highly uncertain. The fundamental reason should be obvious: what matters for most companies (or consumers) is not the nominal interest rate but the availability of funds and the terms that borrowers have to pay. Those variables are not determined by the central bank. The US Federal Reserve may make funds available to banks at close to zero interest rates, but if the banks make those funds available to small and medium-sized enterprises at all, it is at a much higher rate.

Wendell Potter: Thank You, UnitedHealth Group. Your Jaw-Dropping Profit Announcement May Be Just What the Doctor Ordered.

ORLANDO — If you are hopeful that the consumer protections in the health care reform law actually wind up benefiting consumers more than the insurance industry, please send a thank-you note to executives at UnitedHealth Group, the largest U.S. health insurer.

United announced Tuesday morning that its third-quarter profit jumped 23% — much more than investors and analysts had expected — largely because it spent far less of its customers’ premiums on medical care than it did this time last year. When an insurance company spends less of every premium dollar it takes in on medical care, it has more left over to reward shareholders and a handful of senior managers who already are among the highest-paid executives on the planet. . . .

The timing of United’s embarrassment of riches, however, is causing great concern on Wall Street. Investors and analysts are keeping up with what is going on in Orlando more than anyone except perhaps insurance company executives. They know that the commissioners are expected to complete their work on the MLR regulations Thursday morning and send their recommendations to the Secretary of Health and Human Services, as the law stipulates. In a report Tuesday morning, Carl McDonald of Citigroup Investment Research wrote that United’s impressive numbers “couldn’t come at a worse time politically. We’re at a critical time juncture, as the Health and Human Services Secretary will soon provide final minimum MLR guidance and decide how often to grant MLR waivers. United beating its initial earnings guidance this year by over $1.6 billion pre-tax certainly doesn’t help the industry’s cause.”

You’re right, Carl. It is my pleasure to share your thoughts and the news about United’s big increase in earnings, made possible by the big decrease in its MLR, with all the commissioners down here in Orlando. By about noon on Thursday, we’ll find out whose side the commissioners are really on: consumers, whose interests by law they are supposed to protect, or insurance company executives and investors, who are far more interested in the value of stock options and earnings per share than they are with the health and well-being of their customers.

Yagil Hertzberg: How Democrats, Republicans compare

For years I have been trying to persuade supporters of the other major American party to change their mind and vote with me, to no avail. That is, until last week, when three politically minded friends came over for an evening of snacks and politics, and, halfway through the evening, I unleashed my new one-two approach to political persuasion.

First, I asked my friends how they would go about choosing a new dishwasher. We agreed that the responsible and rewarding method would be to ignore any marketing hype and instead follow the Best Buy recommendations by Consumer Reports. Because nobody mentioned the virtues or shortcomings of, say, Whirlpool’s executives as a valid criterion for choosing the appliance, I asked why they argue for hours about the perceived personalities of the candidates instead of comparing the track records of the major parties. My friends answered that it’s simple enough to summarize the essential properties of dishwashers, while the elections are about a large number of issues that defy easy tabulation. Therefore, they concentrate on the candidates, hoping that by choosing the right person for the job, the elected official will make the right decisions when dealing with all those different issues.

I used to share this view myself, but then I checked the numbers. I was surprised to find out that the results of comparing the track records of the two major parties fall neatly (with one exception) into two categories – economy and family values. In my analysis, I compared all administrations going back to 1960 and all states based on how they voted in the presidential elections since 1980.

It was time for the second phase. I presented my friends with a list of numbers. To overcome bias, I used symbols (A, B, C and D) to represent the two major parties under the two categories. All state-related numbers (including those for the District of Columbia) are per person.

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