The Week In Review 9/5 – 11

223 Stories served.  31 per day.

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

Economy- 36

Sunday 9/5 6

Monday 9/6 3

Tuesday 9/7 6

Wednesday 9/8 7

Thursday 9/9 4

Friday 9/10 5

Saturday 9/11 5

Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Iran- 24

Sunday 9/5 3

Monday 9/6 7

Tuesday 9/7 9

Wednesday 9/8 1

Thursday 9/9 2

Friday 9/10 1

Saturday 9/11 1

International- 35

Sunday 9/5 8

Monday 9/6 2

Tuesday 9/7 6

Wednesday 9/8 5

Thursday 9/9 7

Friday 9/10 4

Saturday 9/11 3

Pakistan Flooding- 3

Tuesday 9/7 1

Wednesday 9/8 1

Saturday 9/11 1

National- 93

Sunday 9/5 10

Monday 9/6 2

Tuesday 9/7 11

Wednesday 9/8 19

Thursday 9/9 19

Friday 9/10 20

Saturday 9/11 12

Gulf Oil Blowout Disaster- 9

Sunday 9/5 3

Wednesday 9/8 3

Thursday 9/9 3

Science- 13

Sunday 9/5 3

Monday 9/6 1

Tuesday 9/7 1

Wednesday 9/8 2

Thursday 9/9 3

Friday 9/10 1

Saturday 9/11 2

Sports- 6

Sunday 9/5 2

Monday 9/6 1

Tuesday 9/7 1

Wednesday 9/8 1

Friday 9/10 1

Arts/Fashion- 4

Tuesday 9/7 1

Thursday 9/9 1

Friday 9/10 1

Saturday 9/11 1

Rant of the Week: Jon Stewart’s MSNBC’s Political Narrative

The Daily Show With Jon Stewart
Are You Ready for Some Midterms? – MSNBC’s Political Narrative
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show Full Episodes Political Humor Tea Party

Eat At Your Own Risk

(2 pm. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

This will be ignored at the risk to food safety,  health concerns related to the eating seafood caught in the Gulf and the entire wild life environment.

Scientists Find Thick Layer Of Oil On Seafloor

Scientists on a research vessel in the Gulf of Mexico are finding a substantial layer of oily sediment stretching for dozens of miles in all directions. Their discovery suggests that a lot of oil from the Deepwater Horizon didn’t simply evaporate or dissipate into the water – it has settled to the seafloor.

The Research Vessel Oceanus sailed on Aug. 21 on a mission to figure out what happened to the more than 4 million barrels of oil that gushed into the water. Onboard, Samantha Joye, a professor in the Department of Marine Sciences at the University of Georgia, says she suddenly has a pretty good idea about where a lot of it ended up. It’s showing up in samples of the seafloor, between the well site and the coast.

“I’ve collected literally hundreds of sediment cores from the Gulf of Mexico, including around this area. And I’ve never seen anything like this,” she said in an interview via satellite phone from the boat.

Joye describes seeing layers of oily material – in some places more than 2 inches thick – covering the bottom of the seafloor.

“It’s very fluffy and porous. And there are little tar balls in there you can see that look like microscopic cauliflower heads,” she says.

Meanwhile the White House, the FDA, the Louisiana Seafood Promotion & Marketing Board and a host of celebrity chefs have their collective heads up their butts

It isn’t “sexy news” to discuss a higher percentage of cancers for small children who eat Gulf seafood more than once a month. But pointing out to the media that the FDA has flawed testing protocols and have ignored safety concerns is news. NOAA using only 12 shrimp to prove the safety of 5,000 miles of the Gulf should be news to the media.

This Monday the media will be shoveling shrimp into their mouths and they might be concerned for their own health if they aren’t concerned for others.

It’s not my job to care about the little kids and pregnant women eating Gulf seafood. Nine years from now when questions are being asked about sick kids the folks at the FDA can say, “Nobody could have anticipated…”

Where have I heard that line before?

h/t to Peter Daou and spocko @ FDL

Punting the Pundits

Punting the Punditsis an Open Thread. It is a selection of editorials and opinions from around the news medium and the t 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.

Dana Milbank: John Maynard Keynes, the GOP’s latest whipping boy

“In the long run we are all dead,” the great 20th-century economist John Maynard Keynes once stipulated.

As usual, Keynes was right, and in this case it’s probably for the better: Keynes didn’t live to see the Republicans of 2010 portray him as some sort of Marxist revolutionary. . . . .

Or perhaps, more ominously, these Republicans know exactly what they are saying when they reject Keynesian intervention: that the government should do nothing to help the millions out of work or to rebuild confidence in the economy.

Glen Greenwald: America the Exceptional

Even for those who believe they’re inured to the absurdities of imperial irony, this is almost too extreme to process:

The New York Times, Wednesday:

A federal appeals court on Wednesday ruled that former prisoners of the C.I.A. could not sue over their alleged torture in overseas prisons because such a lawsuit might expose secret government information. . . .

   “To this date, not a single victim of the Bush administration’s torture program has had his day in court,” [the ACLU’s Ben] Wizner said. . . . “If this decision stands, the United States will have closed its courts to torture victims while providing complete immunity to their torturers.”

Yahoo! News, yesterday:  

Iraq to pay $400 million for Saddam’s mistreatment of Americans

   Iraq has quietly agreed to pay $400 million in claims to American citizens who say they were tortured or traumatized by Saddam Hussein’s regime after his 1990 invasion of Kuwait.

snip

But we invade, occupy and destroy Iraq — while severely abusing, torturing and killing their citizens — and then demand, as a condition for our allowing the end of crippling sanctions, that they fork over hundreds of millions of dollars in compensation to American torture victims, even though it all happened 20 years ago, under an Iraqi regime that no longer even exists.  They hate us for our Freedoms.

Nicholas D. Kristof: Is This America?

For a glimpse of how venomous and debased the discourse about Islam has become, consider a blog post  in The New Republic this month. Written by Martin Peretz, the magazine’s editor in chief, it asserted: “Frankly, Muslim life is cheap, most notably to Muslims.”

Mr. Peretz added: “I wonder whether I need honor these people and pretend that they are worthy of the privileges of the First Amendment, which I have in my gut the sense that they will abuse.”

Thus a prominent American commentator, in a magazine long associated with tolerance, ponders whether Muslims should be afforded constitutional freedoms. Is it possible to imagine the same kind of casual slur tossed off about blacks or Jews? How do America’s nearly seven million American Muslims feel when their faith is denounced as barbaric?

This is one of those times that test our values, a bit like the shameful interning of Japanese-Americans during World War II, or the disgraceful refusal to accept Jewish refugees from Nazi Europe.

Frank Rich: Time for This Big Dog to Bite Back

 NO, he can’t. President Obama can’t reverse the unemployment numbers by Election Day. He can’t get even a modest new stimulus bill past the Party of No, and even if he could, there would be few jobs to show for it until (maybe) 2011. Nor can he rewrite the history of his administration. Its signal accomplishments to date are an initial stimulus package that was overrun by the calamity at hand and a marathon health care battle as yet better known for its unseemly orgy of backroom wrangling than its concrete results. While that brawl raged, the White House seemed indifferent to the mounting number of Americans being tossed onto the Great Recession scrapheap. . . . .

As many have noted, the obvious political model for Obama this year is Franklin Roosevelt, who at his legendary 1936 Madison Square Garden rally  declared that he welcomed the “hatred” of his enemies in the realms of “business and financial monopoly, speculation, reckless banking, class antagonism, sectionalism, war profiteering.” As the historian David Kennedy writes in his definitive book on the period, “Freedom from Fear,” Roosevelt “had little to lose by alienating the right,” including those in the corporate elite, with such invective; they already detested him as vehemently as the Business Roundtable crowd does Obama.

Though F.D.R. was predictably accused of “class warfare,” his antibusiness “radicalism,” was, in Kennedy’s words, “a carefully staged political performance, an attack not on the capitalist system itself but on a few high-profile capitalists.” Roosevelt was trying to co-opt the populist rage of his economically despondent era, some of it uncannily Tea Party-esque in its hysteria, before it threatened that system, let alone his presidency. Only the crazy right confused F.D.R. with communists for taking on capitalism’s greediest players, and since our crazy right has portrayed Obama as a communist, socialist and Nazi for months, he’s already paid that political price without gaining any of the benefits of bringing on this fight in earnest.

F.D.R. presided over a landslide in 1936. The best the Democrats can hope for in 2010 is smaller-than-expected losses. To achieve even that, Obama will have to give an F.D.R.-size performance – which he can do credibly and forcibly only if he really means it. So far, his administration’s seeming coziness with some of the same powerful interests now vilifying him has left middle-class voters, including Democrats suffering that enthusiasm gap, confused as to which side he is on. If ever there was a time for him to clear up the ambiguity, this is it.

On This Day in History: September 12

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

September 12 is the 255th day of the year (256th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 110 days remaining until the end of the year.

On this day in 1940, Lascaux cave paintings discovered

Lascaux is the setting of a complex of caves in southwestern France famous for its Paleolithic cave paintings. The original caves are located near the village of Montignac, in the Dordogne département. They contain some of the best-known Upper Paleolithic  art. These paintings are estimated to be 17,000 years old. They primarily consist of primitive images of large animals, most of which are known from fossil evidence to have lived in the area at the time. In 1979, Lascaux was added to the UNESCO World Heritage Sites list along with other prehistoric sites in the Vezere valley.

The cave was discovered on September 12, 1940 by four teenagers, Marcel Ravidat, Jacques Marsal, Georges Agnel, and Simon Coencas, as well as Marcel’s dog, Robot. The cave complex was opened to the public in 1948. By 1955, the carbon dioxide  produced by 1,200 visitors per day had visibly damaged the paintings. The cave was closed to the public in 1963 in order to preserve the art. After the cave was closed, the paintings were restored to their original state, and were monitored on a daily basis. Rooms in the cave include The Great Hall of the Bulls, the Lateral Passage, the Shaft of the Dead Man, the Chamber of Engravings, the Painted Gallery, and the Chamber of Felines.

Lascaux II, a replica of two of the cave halls – the Great Hall of the Bulls and the Painted Gallery – was opened in 1983, 200 meters from the original. Reproductions of other Lascaux artwork can be seen at the Centre of Prehistoric Art at Le Thot, France.

 1213 – Albigensian Crusade: Simon de Montfort, 5th Earl of Leicester, defeats Peter II of Aragon at the Battle of Muret.

1229 – The Aragonese army under the command of James I of Aragon disembarks at Santa Ponca, Majorca, with the purpose of conquering the island.

1609 – Henry Hudson begins his exploration of the Hudson River while aboard the Halve Maen.

1683 – Austro-Ottoman War: Battle of Vienna – several European armies join forces to defeat the Ottoman Empire

1814 – Battle of North Point: an American detachment halts the British land advance to Baltimore in the War of 1812.

1846 – Elizabeth Barrett elopes with Robert Browning.

1847 – Mexican-American War: the Battle of Chapultepec begins.

1848 – Switzerland becomes a Federal state.

1857 – The SS Central America sinks about 160 miles east of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, drowning a total of 426 passengers and crew, including Captain William Lewis Herndon. The ship was carrying 13-15 tons of gold from the San Francisco Gold Rush.

1874 – The District of Maple Ridge, British Columbia, Canada is founded.

1890 – Salisbury, Rhodesia, is founded.

1897 – Tirah Campaign: Battle of Saragarhi

1906 – The Newport Transporter Bridge is opened in Newport, South Wales by Viscount Tredegar.

1910 – Premiere performance of Gustav Mahler’s Symphony No. 8 in Munich (with a chorus of 852 singers and an orchestra of 171 players. Mahler’s rehearsal assistant conductor was Bruno Walter)

1919 – Adolf Hitler joins the German Workers Party.

1930 – Wilfred Rhodes ends his 1110-game first-class career by taking 5 for 95 for H.D.G. Leveson Gower’s XI against the Australians.

1933 – Leo Szilard, waiting for a red light on Southampton Row in Bloomsbury, conceives the idea of the nuclear chain reaction.

1938 – Adolf Hitler demands autonomy and self-determination for the Germans of the Sudetenland region of Czechoslovakia.

1940 – Cave paintings are discovered in Lascaux, France.

1940 – An explosion at the Hercules Powder Company plant in Kenvil, New Jersey kills 51 people and injures over 200.

1942 – World War II: RMS Laconia, carrying civilians, Allied soldiers and Italian POWs is torpedoed off the coast of West Africa and sinks with a heavy loss of life.

1942 – World War II: First day of the Battle of Edson’s Ridge during the Guadalcanal campaign. U.S. Marines protecting Henderson Field on Guadalcanal are attacked by Imperial Japanese Army forces.

1943 – World War II: Benito Mussolini, dictator of Italy, is rescued from house arrest on the Gran Sasso in Abruzzi, by German commando forces led by Otto Skorzeny.

1944 – World War II: The liberation of Serbia from Nazi Germany and the Chetniks continues. Bajina Bašta in western Serbia is among those liberated cities. Near Trier,

American troops enter Germany for the first time.

1948 – Invasion of the State of Hyderabad by the Indian Army on the day after the Pakistani leader Jinnah’s death.

1952 – Strange occurrences, including a monster sighting, take place in Flatwoods, West Virginia.

1958 – Jack Kilby demonstrates the first integrated circuit.

1959 – Premiere of Bonanza, the first regularly-scheduled TV program presented in color.

1959 – The Soviet Union launches a large rocket, Lunik II, at the moon.

1964 – Canyonlands National Park is designated as a National Park.

1966 – Gemini 11, the penultimate mission of NASA’s Gemini program, and the current human altitude record holder (except for the Apollo lunar missions)

1970 – Palestinian terrorists blow up three hijacked airliners in Jordan, continuing to hold the passengers hostage in various undisclosed locations in Amman.

1974 – Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia, ‘Messiah’ of the Rastafari movement, is deposed following a military coup by the Derg, ending a reign of 58 years.

1977 – South African anti-apartheid activist Steve Biko is killed in police custody.

1979 – Indonesia is hit with an earthquake that measures 8.1 on the Richter scale.

1980 – Military coup in Turkey.

1983 – A Wells Fargo depot in West Hartford, Connecticut, United States, is robbed of approximately US$7 million by Los Macheteros.

1983 – The USSR vetoes a UN Security Council Resolution deploring the Soviet shooting down of a Korean civilian jetliner on September 1.

1988 – Hurricane Gilbert devastates Jamaica; it turns towards Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula 2 days later, causing an estimated $5 billion in damage.

1990 – The two German states and the Four Powers sign the Treaty on the Final Settlement With Respect to Germany in Moscow, paving the way for German re-unification.

1992 – NASA launches Space Shuttle Endeavour on STS-47 which marked the 50th shuttle mission. On board are Mae Carol Jemison, the first African-American woman in space, Mamoru Mohri, the first Japanese citizen to fly in a US spaceship, and Mark Lee and Jan Davis, the first married couple in space.

1992 – Abimael Guzman, leader of the Shining Path, is captured by Peruvian special forces; shortly thereafter the rest of Shining Path’s leadership fell as well.

1994 – Frank Eugene Corder crashes a single-engine Cessna 150 into the White House’s south lawn, striking the West wing and killing himself.

1999 – Indonesia announces it will allow international peace-keepers into East Timor.

2001 – Ansett Australia, Australia’s first commercial interstate airline, collapses due to increased strain on the international airline industry, leaving 10,000 people unemployed.

2003 – The United Nations lifts sanctions against Libya after that country agreed to accept responsibility and recompense the families of victims in the 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103.

2003 – In Fallujah, US forces mistakenly shoot and kill eight Iraqi police officers.

2005 – Hong Kong Disneyland opens in Penny’s Bay, Lantau Island, Hong Kong.

2007 – Former Philippine President Joseph Estrada is convicted of the crime of plunder.

2008 – The 2008 Chatsworth train collision between a Metrolink commuter train and a Pacific Union Freight Train kills 25 people.

F1: Monza

Ferrari on the front row.  Well, first and third.  Good for them as the hometown team I suppose.

In fact Ferrari is a team in trouble and has threatened to concentrate on next year’s development if they don’t get a good result.  Frankly no result is going to move them beyond an eventual 3rd place because they’re just too far behind.  Also, that’s what they did last year and look where it’s got them.

It’s not only that the car isn’t fast, their engine is not reliable and almost every team that uses it, including Ferrari, is on their last one with 6 races to go (including this one).  If you use any above the allotted 8 for the season there’s a 10 spot Grid penalty and starting position is very important in Formula One.

They’re not the only ones with engine problems, for some inexplicable reason Mark Webber from Red Bull has elected to race a used engine when almost every other team has switched to a new one.  Not just that, but this engine has had 2 problems during the practice sessions and inexplicable because he has 2 spares.  The reason this is significant is because Webber and Hamilton are the only ones with a realistic shot at the Drivers’ Championship and Red Bull and McLaren are only 1 point apart in the Team Championship.

The other technically interesting point is the dueling aero setups.  Some drivers and teams have opted for a larger wing and are relying on F-Ducts to spoil the airflow over it to reduce drag on the parts of the track where you don’t need so much downforce.  Everyone else is just going for a smaller wing all the way around which has the additional advantage of being lighter.  You can see this play out on the McLaren team where Button, using the F-Duct, is starting 2nd and Hamilton, using the small wing, is starting 5th.  Hamilton was a little squirrely during Qualifying.

All of the top ten are starting on Option (Soft) Tires that only have 2 or 3 laps on them, but they won’t last and because the field is so closely matched it’s unlikely that anyone is going to be able to gain enough of a lead to pit without losing position.  This is somewhat of an advantage for Button who has shown an uncanny ability to tread (heh, heh, get it?) lightly on his tires, but were I a back marker like Schumacher or Petrov I’d start Primes and drive them into the ground.

My Qualifying Commentary, Speed Channel Racecast, Formula One Official Website.

Starting Grid and Standings below.

Starting Grid

Grid Driver Team Q Time Laps
1 Fernando Alonso Ferrari 01:21.962 23
2 Jenson Button McLaren-Mercedes 01:22.084 21
3 Felipe Massa Ferrari 01:22.293 25
4 Mark Webber RBR-Renault 01:22.433 26
5 Lewis Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes 01:22.623 17
6 Sebastian Vettel RBR-Renault 01:22.675 23
7 Nico Rosberg Mercedes GP 01:23.027 23
8 Nico Hulkenberg Williams-Cosworth 01:23.037 23
9 Robert Kubica Renault 01:23.039 18
10 Rubens Barrichello Williams-Cosworth 01:23.328 26
11 Adrian Sutil Force India-Mercedes 01:23.199 16
12 Michael Schumacher Mercedes GP 01:23.388 19
13 Kamui Kobayashi BMW Sauber-Ferrari 01:23.659 17
14 Sebastien Buemi STR-Ferrari 01:23.681 19
15 Vitaly Petrov Renault 01:23.819 17
16 Jaime Alguersuari STR-Ferrari 01:23.919 19
17 Pedro de la Rosa BMW Sauber-Ferrari 01:24.044 16
18 Jarno Trulli Lotus-Cosworth 01:25.540 10
19 Heikki Kovalainen Lotus-Cosworth 01:25.742 11
20 Vitantonio Liuzzi Force India-Mercedes 01:25.774 3
21 Timo Glock Virgin-Cosworth 01:25.934 11
22 Lucas Di Grassi Virgin-Cosworth 01:25.974 10
23 Bruno Senna HRT-Cosworth 01:26.847 11
24 Sakon Yamamoto HRT-Cosworth 01:27.020 10

Driver Standings

Rank Driver Team Points
1 Lewis Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes 182
2 Mark Webber RBR-Renault 179
3 Sebastian Vettel RBR-Renault 151
4 Jenson Button McLaren-Mercedes 147
5 Fernando Alonso Ferrari 141
6 Felipe Massa Ferrari 109
7 Robert Kubica Renault 104
8 Nico Rosberg Mercedes GP 102
9 Adrian Sutil Force India-Mercedes 45
10 Michael Schumacher Mercedes GP 44
11 Rubens Barrichello Williams-Cosworth 30
12 Kamui Kobayashi BMW Sauber-Ferrari 21
13 Vitaly Petrov Renault 19
14 Vitantonio Liuzzi Force India-Mercedes 13
15 Nico Hulkenberg Williams-Cosworth 10
16 Sebastien Buemi STR-Ferrari 7
17 Pedro de la Rosa BMW Sauber-Ferrari 6
18 Jaime Alguersuari STR-Ferrari 3
19 Heikki Kovalainen Lotus-Cosworth 0
20 Karun Chandhok HRT-Cosworth 0
21 Lucas di Grassi Virgin-Cosworth 0
22 Jarno Trulli Lotus-Cosworth 0
23 Bruno Senna HRT-Cosworth 0
24 Timo Glock Virgin-Cosworth 0
25 Sakon Yamamoto HRT-Cosworth 0

Team Standings

Rank Team Points
1 RBR-Renault 330
2 McLaren-Mercedes 329
3 Ferrari 250
4 Mercedes GP 146
5 Renault 123
6 Force India-Mercedes 58
7 Williams-Cosworth 40
8 BMW Sauber-Ferrari 27
9 STR-Ferrari 10
10 Lotus-Cosworth 0
11 HRT-Cosworth 0
12 Virgin-Cosworth 0

MoDo is an Idiot

But her sister Peggy is an Obamacan, in this case meaning a Republican who voted for Obama.

What Peggy says

Peggy thinks the president has done fine managing W.’s messes in Iraq and Afghanistan. And she lights up at the mention of his vice president, Joe Biden. But she thinks Obama has to get “a backbone” if he wants to lure her back to the fold. “He promised us everything, saying he would turn the country around, and he did nothing the first year,” Peggy says. “He piddled around when he had 60 votes. He could have pushed through the health care bill but spent months haggling on it because he wanted to bring some Republicans on board. He was trying too hard to compromise when he didn’t need the Republicans and they were never going to like him. Any idiot could see that.

“He could have gotten it through while Teddy Kennedy was still alive – he owed the Kennedys something – and then the bill was watered down.

“He hasn’t saved the economy, and now he’s admitting he’s made very little progress. You can’t for four years blame the person who used to be president. Obama tries to compromise too much, and he doesn’t look like a strong leader. I don’t watch him anymore. I’m turned off by him. I think he’s an elitist. He went down to the gulf, telling everyone to take a vacation down there, and then he goes to Martha’s Vineyard. He does what he wants but then he tells us to do other things.

Emphasis mine.

Morning Shinbun Sunday September 12




Sunday’s Headlines:

Record gains for U.S. poverty with elections looming

Earth, wind and fire: How tapping into the natural world is going mainstream

USA

On 9/11, commemorations accompanied by focus on Islam

Obama’s electoral coalition is crumbling

Europe

Merkel ally quits after claiming Nazis didn’t start war

An ill wind blows for Denmark’s green energy revolution

Middle East

Iran: women on the frontline of the fight for rights

Turkey votes on reforms to constitution

Asia

China rethinks its controversial one-child policy

Middlesbrough Ladies’ North Korean football tour guarantees place in history

Africa

Congo examines mass graves to find proof of revenge genocide on Hutus

Latin America

Eight months after Haiti earthquake, a nation hangs on

Record gains for U.S. poverty with elections looming

Ranks of working-age poor approaching 1960s levels, demographers claim

By HOPE YEN, LIZ SIDOTI  

WASHINGTON – The number of people in the U.S. who are in poverty is on track for a record increase on President Barack Obama’s watch, with the ranks of working-age poor approaching 1960s levels that led to the national war on poverty.

Census figures for 2009 – the recession-ravaged first year of the Democrat’s presidency – are to be released in the coming week, and demographers expect grim findings.

Earth, wind and fire: How tapping into the natural world is going mainstream

Ten people, ten different ways to change your lifestyle, to save money and the planet. They talk to Gervase Poulden and Matt Chorley about what they’ve given up and what they’ve gained in their efforts to reduce their carbon footprint  

Sunday, 12 September 2010

Water

In short supply in many parts of the world, water will be come even more scarce as demand grows. Average consumption in the UK, at 146 litres per person a day, is only slightly less than the 152 litres used daily 15 years ago.

The heatwaves and water restrictions of recent years have, however, encouraged some, such as 34-year-old Neil McNiven, an electronics engineer from Kidwelly, Carmarthenshire, to do more to save water.

USA

On 9/11, commemorations accompanied by focus on Islam



By Ann Gerhart and David A. Fahrenthold

Washington Post Staff Writers

Sunday, September 12, 2010; 12:28 AM


Moments of silence and reminders of American freedoms have become the healing rites of Sept. 11. On Saturday, heated arguments about the legacy and lessons of the terror attacks nine years ago finally seeped into the day itself.

Heightened anxieties over a fringe pastor’s plan to burn copies of the Koran and demonstrations centering on a planned mosque near New York’s Ground Zero set a newly divisive tone – one that suggested deepening discord over the role of Islam in America.

Obama’s electoral coalition is crumbling

The swing voters who turned out in droves to support the president aren’t likely to back his party in November. Even core supporters express unhappiness with Democrats.

By James Oliphant and Kathleen Hennessey

Reporting from Washington – Nearly two years ago, the political world could only marvel at the breadth of voter support for Barack Obama.

The new president had won over voters once thought to have abandoned his party for good. He’d found new reservoirs of support among groups many thought were tapped out.

He energized a coalition – made up of blacks, women, Latinos, young voters and large numbers of suburbanites – that some believed would keep Democrats in power for years to come.

Europe

Merkel ally quits after claiming Nazis didn’t start war



By Tony Paterson in Berlin Saturday, 11 September 2010

In Poland, she remains Germany’s most hated living politician. Her unashamedly revanchist political views once prompted a Warsaw news magazine to portray her on its front cover clad in a sinister, swastika-covered Nazi SS uniform.

But yesterday, Erika Steinbach, probably the last surviving bête noire in Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservative government, took the first step towards bowing out of politics altogether after she started an explosive row over who was to blame for starting the Second World War.

An ill wind blows for Denmark’s green energy revolution

Denmark has long been a role model for green activists, but now it has become one of the first countries to turn against the turbines.  

By Andrew Gilligan

Published: 8:00AM BST 12 Sep 2010  


To green campaigners, it is windfarm heaven, generating a claimed fifth of its power from wind and praised by British ministers as the model to follow. But amid a growing public backlash, Denmark, the world’s most windfarm-intensive country, is turning against the turbines.

Last month, unnoticed in the UK, Denmark’s giant state-owned power company, Dong Energy, announced that it would abandon future onshore wind farms in the country. “Every time we were building onshore, the public reacts in a negative way and we had a lot of criticism from neighbours,” said a spokesman for the company. “Now we are putting all our efforts into offshore windfarms.”

Middle East

Iran: women on the frontline of the fight for rights

From the mother sentenced to death by stoning to the lawyer arrested for defending opposition activists, women are prominent symbols of Iran’s struggle for democracy



Peter Beaumont

The Observer,     Sunday 12 September 2010  


When Shahrzad Kariman finally saw her imprisoned daughter Shiva Nazar Ahari earlier this month, it was for a brief moment outside the Tehran courtroom where the 26-year-old human rights campaigner had been brought. “We could see her for a few minutes,” Kariman told the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran last week. “Just enough to hug her. But we couldn’t ask her how the court session went… We didn’t know what the charges were prior to the court session.”

The charges against Nazar Ahari are among the most serious that can be levelled in Iran: muharebeh (enmity against God), a crime, in theory punishable by death, originally intended to be used against armed gangs and pirates, not dissidents.

Turkey votes on reforms to constitution

The people of Turkey have begun voting in a referendum on changing the constitution, which was drafted under military rule in the early 1980s.

The BBC  12 September 2010

The government says it wants to bring the constitution more in line with European Union standards.

Opponents argue that the governing party, which has its roots in political Islam, is seeking dangerous levels of control over the judiciary.

The referendum is expected to produce a close result.

There are 26 amendments to the constitution on the table.

They are mostly small and somewhat technocratic alterations, which many find difficult to understand, says the BBC’s Jonathan Head in Istanbul.

Asia

China rethinks its controversial one-child policy

The country’s social engineering has been too successful, reports Clifford Coonan in Beijing  

Sunday, 12 September 2010  

China’s one-child policy, probably the most audacious exercise in social engineering the world has ever seen, could be up for review, as Beijing policymakers worry about the effects of a population ageing fast, with insufficient numbers of youngsters to support them.

There is speculation that a gradual rollback of the policy – first imposed 31 years ago – will start next year with pilot schemes in the five provinces of Heilongjiang, Jilin, Liaoning, Zhejiang and Jiangsu.

Middlesbrough Ladies’ North Korean football tour guarantees place in history  

Women’s team from Teesside will become first from Britain to play on North Korean soil

Carole Cadwalladr

The Observer,     Sunday 12 September 2010


North Korea, the most secretive country on earth, the nation George Bush located on the Axis of Evil, where the flame of Marxism-Leninism still burns strong, will this week welcome its first British football team: 14 Teesside women players aged from 17 to 23, and their manager, Marrie Wieczorek.

On Thursday, Middlesbrough FC Ladies set off on a football tour with less bar-hopping (it’s illegal to leave your hotel without your guide) and probably more talk about dialectical materialism than usual. “I think it is going to be a bit of a culture shock,” says Wieczorek. “The whole place is shrouded in secrecy.”

Africa

Congo examines mass graves to find proof of revenge genocide on Hutus

As a UN report suggests Rwandan complicity in slaughter of refugees, forensic scientists hope to find the evidence    

Ofelia de Pablo and Javier Zurita in Goma Tracy McVeigh in London

The Observer,     Sunday 12 September 2010


Forensic science experts examining mass graves in the Democratic Republic of the Congo could provide further evidence of a Tutsi-led retaliatory genocide of Hutu civilians in the mid-1990s.

A diplomatic row is raging over a draft of a UN report, leaked to the press late last month, that accuses Rwandan President Paul Kagame’s troops of massacring Hutu refugees who had fled to neighbouring Zaire, now Congo, after the 1994 genocide in Rwanda of Tutsis and moderate Hutus that left 800,000 dead. The intervention of Kagame’s forces has been credited with ending the 1994 killings.

Latin America

Eight months after Haiti earthquake, a nation hangs on

Those displaced by the Haiti earthquake continue to live in overcrowded camps, well into a hurricane season that regularly brings heavy rains.

By Alice Speri, Correspondent  

Port-au-Prince, Haiti

Almost eight months after a devastating earthquake killed up to 300,000 and left some 1.5 million Haitians homeless, recovery has been slow. Equipment to remove some of the 20 million cubic meters of rubble that for months have lined the capital’s streets has finally arrived. The displaced continue to live in overcrowded camps, well into a hurricane season that has caused no major damage but regularly brings heavy rains.”There is a real threat that temporary camps will turn into permanent slums,” says Julie Schindall, a spokesperson for Oxfam, one of 800 NGOs operating here. “The government has a responsibility to implement a resettlement plan and they have to do it now.”

Ignoring Asia A Blog

Haiti: It’s Not Any Better

(2 pm. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

It is now eight months since the devastating earthquake struck Haiti virtually leveling its capital Port au Prince. It’s not any better. One of the biggest obstacles to progress is the ruble and there is no one in charge.

Haiti Earthquake: Just 2 Percent Of Quake Debris Has Been Cleared

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti – From the dusty rock mounds lining the streets to a National Palace that looks like it’s vomiting concrete from its core, rubble is one of the most visible reminders of Haiti’s devastating earthquake.

Rubble is everywhere in this capital city: cracked slabs, busted-up cinder blocks, half-destroyed buildings that still spill bricks and pulverized concrete onto the sidewalks. Some places look as though they have been flipped upside down, or are sinking to the ground, or listing precariously to one side.

By some estimates, the quake left about 33 million cubic yards of debris in Port-au-Prince – more than seven times the amount of concrete used to build the Hoover Dam. So far, only about 2 percent has been cleared, which means the city looks pretty much as it did a month after the Jan. 12 quake.

Government officials and outside aid groups say rubble removal is the priority before Haiti can rebuild. But the reasons why so little has been cleared are complex. And frustrating.

Heavy equipment has to be shipped in by sea. Dump trucks have difficulty navigating narrow and mountainous dirt roads. An abysmal records system makes it hard for the government to determine who owns a dilapidated property. And there are few sites on which to dump the rubble, which often contains human remains.

The Importance of Letting Things Go 20100911

Negative feelings certainly has a victim.  That victim is he or she who holds them in an unreasonable manner.  This is not a “9/11” post, but any similarities might well be noted.

I have written on the Big Orange for a very long time, sometimes with better and sometimes with poorer results.  Those of you who have read my posts will know that, several years ago, I was accused of a heinous crime, and was innocent of it.

Here is what happened Tuesday past.  I thing that it might be of interest to people.

I have no intention of going into the details of what I was accused of, but the outcome was that I never went to trial because of exonerating DNA evidence and the real circumstances of the event.  With my attorney’s advice I pleaded to a  misdemeanor plea to disorderly conduct, because it would have taken a fortune to defend myself and that plea would make it go away.  I am not so sure of that wisdom now, but that is done.

Anyway, and this might get a little closer to the actual circumstances, the legal guardian of the person against whom I was supposed to have committed an offense was brutal in insisting on prosecution, even though the individual had a history of false accusations and of some felonies.  Anyway, I had to defend myself and hired the best attorney in the area.

It dragged on and on and on in court, and finally my attorney told me that they had nothing against me, but they wanted sort of a trophy to show, essentially, that no one gets away.  I gave him $2000 in cash, in addition to the $750 retainer, and less than $200 in court costs to the county.  The only caveat was that I was to have no contact with the “victim” for two years, and I honored that.  As a matter of fact, I had no contact with the entire family, right next door.

I lost my job over it, and I was making pretty good money at the time. Folks with security clearances can be let go for essentially nothing. Sequalae also caused me to lose my wife, and much of my carefully saved retirement money.

This is the picture of my life from early 2006 until just a couple of months ago.  The husband of the woman who wanted to prosecute me to “the fullest extent of the law” knew the real story, and was always friendly to me, when his wife was not watching.  He even told me that he knew that I was not guilty, but if his wife ever caught him talking with me that he would suffer.

Around June of this year, their youngest foster child (just last week turning 18 years of age), pushing around her out of wedlock baby in the stroller, asked me if I was “Cool” with her.  I never had anything against her in the first place, and told her that I was, and that I do not hold grudges anyway.  We talk often these days, me making sure that we are outside and that others can see our activities.  I might be stupid, but I do learn slowly.

Her mixed race 15 year old cousin and I had always gotten on well, and we have talked off and on just after the two year prohibition was over.  He is a nice kid.  But here is where it gets weird.

Last Tuesday, the youngest foster child came to my door and asked for help with her “mum”.  It turns out that she had fallen and could not get up in the kitchen.  The girl had taken her baby to a very nice lady across the street to be looked after for a while, and the girl could not pull on her “mum” because the girl, as she told me, had stitches in her throat because of a tonsillectomy the day before.

OK, now here I am.  I am being asked to help the woman that wanted to see my in prison for something that I did not do, and no one else with enough strength was available.  Many people would have just said, “NO!, She wanted me in prison!”  Many others would have referred the girl to 911, and get the paramedics to pick her up off of the floor.  Except for the “mum”, everyone had been nice to me since the “Event”.

This is just me, I guess.  I walked out the door and stood until the girl told her “mum” that I was there to help, and who I was.  I would not walk into that house without the girl who seemed to be realistic with me.  Then, there the “mum” was, in the floor of her kitchen.  She had righted herself to her back, but still could not get up off of the floor.

I told her to try to get her lets and feet under herself, and she did on the floor.  Then I stood behind her and told her to push with her legs as I put my arms under her shoulders to lift her.  On a “1, 2, 3”, she tried to get her legs back while I pulled up on her, under her shoulders like a rescue worker would.  Around 280 pounds is not easy to lift (I am not exaggerating), and I put everything that I had into it.  She began to move, but the girl, who was there, could not help because of her stitches.  I got her about half way up, and her head was sort of interfering with the lift because she planted the back of it in my abdomen, stopping the lift.

This was not working well, but I had the girl to take her hand from the front and pull her away from me, a bit.  Then I had the girl put the “mum’s” hand on a sturdy cabinet shelf, and betwixt the two of us, she regained her feet.  She sort of said thank you, but not very much, and I left as soon as she was upright.

To this day, she never has come to thank me personally.  I saved them a 911 call, and all I get is silence.  But at least no more persecution (as opposed to prosecution).  I feel better about the whole situation.

Jesus always said to love enemies.  Whilst I am not a Christian, I do believe that Jesus got lots of things right.

Now I can speak to the folks next door without any fear of bad things.  Actually, I helped the cousin fix a flat on his ATV Friday, and everyone was OK with it at their house.

Still, I have some fading harsh feelings towards her for her wanting me in prison for something that I did not do.  I am not sure that those will ever go away completely, but I also have better feelings about the whole thing because we seem to be proper neighbors now.

The moral of the story is just this:  the folks that you abuse for no reason just might be the ones upon whom you call when you are in real need.  So, do not abuse folks for unfounded reasons.

This is probably a very disjointed post, but I needed to tell the story that it is possible to reconcile with a perceived enemy.  I certainly do not want to be praised for being a Good Samaritan, because if the girl had not asked me personally, I would have let the “mum” lay there.  Does that make me a bad person?  Your thoughts are welcome, either praising or condemning me, or in between.

Warmest regards,

Doc

Crossposted at Dailykos.com and Docudharma.com

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