Evening Edition

Evening Edition is an Open Thread

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 Suicide bomber kills 16 at Russian market

by Dina Teziyeva, AFP

26 mins ago

VLADIKAVKAZ, Russia (AFP) – A suicide car bomber killed at least 16 people and injured more than 100 Thursday at a market in the Russian Caucasus, the deadliest militant strike for months in the troubled region.

Officials said the blast in the city of Vladikavkaz in North Ossetia was caused by a suicide bomber who drove up to a local market in an explosives-packed car and whose headless body was later discovered.

The head of the FSB security service, Alexander Bortnikov, announced Thursday evening that three people had been detained on suspicion of involvement in the attack.

2 White House weighs direct plea to halt Koran burning

by Juan Castro Olivera, AFP

58 mins ago

GAINESVILLE, Florida (AFP) – The White House Thursday weighed whether to appeal directly to a Florida pastor to call off a planned Koran burning ceremony amid mounting fears it will unleash a wave of violence.

US President Barack Obama warned if the incendiary gesture goes ahead as planned on Saturday’s anniversary of the September 11 attacks it will provide “a recruitment bonanza for Al-Qaeda.”

“This could increase the recruitment of individuals who’d be willing to blow themselves up in American cities, or European cities,” Obama told ABC, as the US State Department issued a travel warning for Americans worldwide.

3 Defiant Florida church says Koran burning to go ahead

by Mike Bernos, AFP

Wed Sep 8, 5:20 pm ET

GAINESVILLE, Florida (AFP) – A small Florida church Wednesday shrugged off a wave of global outrage and vowed to go ahead with a Koran burning ceremony, as local officials drew up plans to tamp down the protest.

Condemnation rained in from top US officials, the military, the Vatican and other religious leaders, but the church refused to rethink plans to torch the Islamic holy book on the anniversary of the September 11, 2001 attacks.

“As of this time we have no intention of canceling,” Pastor Terry Jones told a press conference, adding his evangelical church, the Dove World Outreach Center, had received numerous messages of support.

4 Georgia eyes tourist future for one-time rebel hotspot

by Michael Mainville, AFP

Thu Sep 9, 12:13 pm ET

BATUMI, Georgia (AFP) – On a lush strip of Georgia’s Black Sea coast holiday-makers bask in the sun as construction crews hammer away building beachfront luxury hotels, in what was once an isolated, decrepit rebel enclave.

Adjara, a semi-tropical region on Georgia’s southwestern border with Turkey, was ruled for some 15 years after the fall of the Soviet Union by Aslan Abashidze, a Moscow-backed separatist strongman who ran it as his personal fiefdom.

Cut off from the rest of the country by armed guards, and a hotbed of organised crime, Adjara’s economy stagnated and its long beaches, famed as a Soviet-era resort destination, lay mostly empty.

5 Battle of oil titans as BP seeks to shift blame for spill

by Mira Oberman, AFP

Wed Sep 8, 5:45 pm ET

CHICAGO (AFP) – BP sought to spread the blame for the Gulf of Mexico oil disaster Wednesday, setting off a battle of oil industry giants with tens of billions of dollars in potential fines and legal liabilities at stake.

The British energy giant released a report concluding that a “sequence of failures” were to blame for the April 20 explosion that killed 11 people and unleashed 4.9 million barrels of oil in the worst-ever maritime spill.

While admitting some mistakes, BP exonerated its well design and apportioned a large share of the blame to faults made by rig owner Transocean and contractor Halliburton, which cemented the well.

6 Obama seeks to mend frayed bond with voters

AFP

Wed Sep 8, 6:02 pm ET

CLEVELAND, Ohio (AFP) – US President Barack Obama Wednesday admitted some of his policies were unpopular and had not revived the economy quickly enough, but sought to rekindle his frayed bond with American voters.

“It’s still fear versus hope, the past versus the future,” Obama said in economically bereft Ohio, pleading with voters to chose “moving forward” with him, rather than “sliding backward” with Republicans.

Obama, seeking to reframe the political debate ahead of November elections in which Democrats fear thumping losses, slammed his foes for pitching the economy into a historic crisis, and “moralizing” about the ballooning deficit.

7 UN chief in Rwanda faces Kigali ‘outrage’ over report

AFP

Wed Sep 8, 12:29 pm ET

KIGALI (AFP) – UN chief Ban Ki-moon met Rwanda’s president here Wednesday in a bid to defuse his government’s anger over allegations contained in a UN report that Rwandan forces committed war crimes in DR Congo.

Ban told journalists in Kigali after the meeting that both he and President Paul Kagame had been “disappointed” the report outlining alleged atrocities by Rwandan troops had been leaked.

Kagame, who as president is commander in chief of his country’s armed forces, had threatened to pull Rwanda’s troops out of international peacekeeping missions in Sudan in a signal of Kigali’s fury.

8 Fed sees ‘widespread’ signs US economy is slowing

by Andrew Beatty, AFP

Wed Sep 8, 5:43 pm ET

WASHINGTON (AFP) – The US economic recovery is showing “widespread” signs of slowing, the US Federal Reserve warned Wednesday, as it gears up for a key policy meeting later this month.

The central bank reported “continued growth in national economic activity” between mid-July and the end of August, “but with widespread signs of a deceleration.”

The latest Beige Book report, an economic survey which will guide a September 21 policy meeting, painted a dour picture of the health of the economy, with an uneven recovery across the country and across sectors.

9 US fighting losing war in Afghanistan: Taliban leader

by Lynne O’Donnell, AFP

Thu Sep 9, 11:57 am ET

KABUL (AFP) – The leader of the Taliban said the West is losing the war in Afghanistan and called on Afghans to repel the “invading infidels” as experts urged the US to scale back its troops and goals.

Mullah Mohammad Omar, the one-eyed Taliban chief believed to be in hiding in Pakistan, said on Wednesday that strategists behind the nine-year-old Afghan war realised they were mired in “complete failure”.

The United States and NATO have 150,000 troops in Afghanistan aiming to quell the insurgency that began soon after the Taliban regime was overthrown in a US-led invasion in late 2001.

10 Euro MPs demand France ‘suspend’ Roma expulsion

by Alain Jean-Robert, AFP

Thu Sep 9, 9:12 am ET

STRASBOURG (AFP) – France came under fresh fire for expelling Roma migrants Thursday as the European Parliament demanded it “immediately suspend” removal of the Gypsies.

It was the second time this week that Euro MPs had taken the floor to lambast President Nicolas Sarkozy’s stand on the issue while debating the plight of Roma across Europe in general.

But France’s Immigration Minister Eric Besson, in Bucharest for talks with Romanian authorities on the issue, hit back immediately, saying there was “no question” of Paris complying.

11 Obama: Koran-burning could lead to suicide bombings

By Ben Gruber, Reuters

1 hr 6 mins ago

GAINESVILLE, Florida (Reuters) – President Barack Obama warned on Thursday that an obscure Christian pastor’s plan to burn the Koran could provoke al Qaeda suicide bombings, as foreign leaders urged Washington to intervene.

“This is a recruitment bonanza for al Qaeda,” Obama said in an ABC television interview. “You could have serious violence in places like Pakistan or Afghanistan. This could increase the recruitment of individuals who would be willing to blow themselves up in American cities or European cities.”

The international police agency Interpol warned governments worldwide of an increased risk of terrorist attacks if the planned burning went ahead and the U.S. State Department issued a warning to Americans traveling overseas.

12 Health reforms trigger spending shift

By Susan Heavey, Reuters

Thu Sep 9, 3:08 am ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – New U.S. reforms are poised to dramatically shift the nation’s healthcare spending, not only curbing Medicare costs but also pumping more money toward the private sector as roughly 32 million people gain coverage.

Although the law has little impact on overall healthcare spending, government researchers said they expect sharp changes in the U.S. healthcare sector as the bulk of the recently passed law starts taking effect in 2014.

The survey, conducted by Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) auditors and released on Thursday, is likely to fuel the debate over whether the reform law truly reins in healthcare spending, now already more than one-sixth of the nation’s economy.

13 New York finally sees progress at Ground Zero site

By Daniel Trotta, Reuters

Thu Sep 9, 12:50 pm ET

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Nine years after the September 11 attacks, visible progress is finally being made toward rebuilding the World Trade Center site known as Ground Zero.

Delays from political, security and financing concerns have dominated the public image of the roughly $11 billion project in the absence of a gleaming new skyscraper or memorial to those who died when al Qaeda hijackers destroyed the Twin Towers.

But while rapid, visible progress has been made since the last anniversary of the attacks, that has captured little attention. Instead, the debate about Ground Zero has shifted to other concerns, such as the proposed Islamic cultural center to be built two blocks from the site.

14 U.S. slips in WEF’s competitiveness rankings

Reuters

Thu Sep 9, 5:22 am ET

BEIJING (Reuters) – Switzerland remains the world’s most competitive economy, while the United States has fallen from second to fourth after losing the top spot last year, according to the World Economic Forum’s annual rankings issued on Thursday.

Sweden, in second spot, and Singapore in third leapfrogged the United States in the WEF’s Global Competitiveness Report 2010/2011.

Last year the Asian city-state ranked third and Sweden fourth. There were no newcomers in the WEF’s top 10, although Germany climbed to fifth from seventh.

15 Mysterious N.Korea keeps world guessing on rare meeting

By Jeremy Laurence, Reuters

Thu Sep 9, 5:21 am ET

SEOUL (Reuters) – North Korea’s capital is ready for its biggest political event in decades: giant billboards proclaim an event to make the country’s “history shine forever,” the dress rehearsals are complete and the army is ready.

But like all things in secretive North Korea, the event — a conference of the ruling Worker’s Party (WPK) which is widely expected to anoint Kim Jong-il’s son as his successor — is shrouded in mystery.

The gathering of the country’s ruling elite comes at a critical time for the destitute North after a botched currency reform late last year triggered inflation and wiped out ordinary citizen’s savings.

16 Afghanistan seeks to dilute foreign anti-graft role

By Sayed Salahuddin, Reuters

Thu Sep 9, 5:26 am ET

KABUL (Reuters) – Afghanistan will limit foreign involvement in two major anti-crime units in a move likely to worry its Western backers and stoke fears about President Hamid Karzai’s commitment to fighting endemic graft.

Afghanistan is one of the world’s most corrupt countries and Washington fears the problem is helping to boost the Taliban-led insurgency and complicate efforts to strengthen government control so U.S. and other foreign troops can begin withdrawing from July 2011.

While still reliant on money and support from the West, Karzai has lately been trying to assert his independence from his Western backers ahead of a September 18 parliamentary election, most recently by issuing a ban on most foreign private security firms.

17 Obama: U.S. can’t afford to extend tax cuts for rich

By Patricia Zengerle, Reuters

Wed Sep 8, 8:33 pm ET

PARMA, Ohio (Reuters) – President Barack Obama, fighting to keep Democrats in charge of Congress, said on Wednesday the United States could not afford to extend Bush-era tax cuts for the rich and accused Republicans of being fiscally irresponsible.

On a campaign trip to Ohio less than two months before November 2 congressional elections, Obama admitted his economic policies had not worked as quickly as hoped, but said his party and proposals were still better placed to boost the U.S. economy.

Obama’s comments, laced with political rhetoric, came amid a growing verbal battle with Republicans over tax cuts for wealthy Americans enacted under former President George W. Bush and set to expire at the end of this year.

18 BP points fingers in oil spill blame game

By Tom Bergin and Ayesha Rascoe, Reuters

Wed Sep 8, 9:10 pm ET

LONDON/WASHINGTON (Reuters) – BP Plc and its Gulf of Mexico oil well partners traded blame on Wednesday after an internal BP investigation tried to downplay the company’s role in the world’s biggest offshore spill.

The 193-page BP report offered a preview of how the British oil giant plans to vigorously defend itself against lawsuits arising from the disaster and any charges of gross negligence, which carry fines potentially in excess of $20 billion.

BP accepted some responsibility for the disaster but pointed the finger at what it said were major failures by Transocean Ltd, the operator of the ill-fated Deepwater Horizon oil rig, and oil services company Halliburton, which cemented the deep-sea well that ruptured on April 20.

19 Errant drone near DC almost met by fighter jets

By LOLITA C. BALDOR, Associated Press Writer

1 hr 20 mins ago

WASHINGTON – The U.S. military almost launched fighter jets and discussed a possible shoot-down when an errant Navy drone briefly veered into restricted airspace near the nation’s capital last month, a senior military official said Thursday.

The incident underscores safety concerns with unmanned aircraft as defense officials campaign to use them more often during natural disasters and for homeland security.

Navy Adm. James Winnefeld Jr., head of Northern Command, said Thursday that the August mishap could hamper the Pentagon’s push to have the Federal Aviation Administration ease procedures for drone use by the military in domestic skies.

20 Obama admonishes pastor to call off Quran ‘stunt’

By NANCY BENAC, Associated Press Writer

1 hr 39 mins ago

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama sternly admonished a Florida pastor Thursday and appealed to him to call off plans to torch the Quran, saying Saturday’s planned protest on the anniversary of the Sept. 11 terror attacks was a dangerous “stunt” that could imperil U.S. troops abroad and incite suicide bombers on American soil.

American Muslim leaders urged members to remain calm if the pastor doesn’t back down from a threat that already has inflamed passions around the globe. Interpol, the international police organization, issued an alert to its 188 member-countries warning of a “strong likelihood” of violent attacks if the burn goes forward.

FBI agents met with the Rev. Terry Jones at his Dove Outreach Center, an independent church in Gainesville with about 50 members. At issue are his plans to stage an “International Burn-a-Koran Day” on the ninth anniversary of the terror attacks.

21 Apple publishes guidelines for app approval

By PETER SVENSSON, AP Technology Writer

2 hrs 43 mins ago

NEW YORK – Apple Inc. on Thursday gave software developers the guidelines it uses to determine which programs can be sold in its App Store, yet it reserved for itself broad leeway in deciding what makes the cut.

The move follows more than two years of complaints from developers about the company’s secret and seemingly capricious rules, which block some programs from the store and hence Apple’s popular iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch devices.

The guidelines go some way toward addressing those complaints and broadening the discussion about Apple’s custodianship of the App Store.

22 Highway deaths fall to lowest level since 1950

By KEN THOMAS, Associated Press Writer

2 hrs 29 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Traffic deaths have plummeted across the United States to levels not seen in more than a half-century, spurred by technology, safety-conscious drivers and tougher enforcement of drunken driving laws.

The Transportation Department said Thursday that traffic deaths fell 9.7 percent in 2009 to 33,808, the lowest number since 1950. In 2008, an estimated 37,423 people died on the highways.

Government and auto safety experts attributed the improvement to more people buckling up, side air bags and anti-rollover technology in more vehicles and a focus in many states on curbing drinking and driving. Economic conditions were also a factor.

23 Suicide car bombing in southern Russia kills 17

By SERGEI VENYAVSKY, Associated Press Writer

2 mins ago

ROSTOV-ON-DON, Russia – Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin blamed extremists “without souls, without hearts” for a suicide car bombing that killed 17 people Thursday in the crowded central market of a city in the North Caucasus.

It was the fourth terrorist attack at the market in a decade, and while no one claimed responsibility, the Kremlin has been trying to contain Islamic militancy in the mountainous southern region of Russia.

Nearly 140 were wounded in the bombing in Vladikavkaz, the capital of North Ossetia, with about a half-dozen hospitalized in very serious condition.

24 Dynasty speculation on North Korea’s founding day

By HYUNG-JIN KIM, Associated Press Writer

Thu Sep 9, 8:20 am ET

SEOUL, South Korea – North Korea celebrated its 62nd anniversary Thursday with odes to supreme leader Kim Jong Il and pilgrimages to his late father’s statue amid hints that a political meeting believed aimed at promoting his son as successor is imminent.

There is widespread speculation that Kim will use the conference to give his third and youngest son, Kim Jong Un, a key Workers’ Party position as part of plans to extend the family dynasty to a third generation.

Kim Jong Il, known as the “Dear Leader” in North Korea’s cult of personality, himself took over leadership after his father, North Korea’s founder Kim Il Sung, died of heart failure in 1994 – communism’s first hereditary transfer of power.

25 PROMISES, PROMISES: FAA fatigue rules finally near

By JOAN LOWY, Associated Press Writer

Thu Sep 9, 10:36 am ET

WASHINGTON – After a regional airliner crashed in western New York a year and a half ago, killing 50 people, the Obama administration promised swift action to prevent similar tragedies. High on the list: new rules governing the number of hours pilots may work, to prevent tired flight crews from making fatal errors.

Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood wrote in June 2009 that the Federal Aviation Administration was in a hurry and wouldn’t wait for Congress “to add mandatory layers to airline safety,” nor even for crash investigators to complete their work, “because air passengers deserve action. And, they deserve it now.”

It’s taken 15 months and a half-dozen missed deadlines, but the FAA is finally about to propose new regulations on how many hours airlines can schedule pilots to be on duty or in the cockpit. A draft was submitted to the White House Office of Management and Budget for review last week, and a proposed rule is likely to be published within days, industry officials said. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to address the issue publicly. A House hearing on the proposal is scheduled for next week.

26 Regret, apology not part of BP’s oil spill report

By HARRY R. WEBER, MICHAEL KUNZELMAN and DINA CAPPIELLO, Associated Press Writers

Thu Sep 9, 5:40 am ET

NEW ORLEANS – BP’s long-awaited internal report on what it believes went wrong when a rig exploded and started the massive Gulf oil spill never mentions the words blame, regret, apology, mistake or pollution. The word fault shows up 20 times, but only once in the same sentence as the company’s name.

BP took some of the blame, acknowledging among other things that it misinterpreted a key pressure test of the well that blew out and eventually spewed 206 million gallons of oil into the Gulf. But in a possible preview of its legal strategy, it also pointed the finger – and plenty – at its partners on the doomed rig.

The highly technical, 193-page report released Wednesday attributes the worst offshore oil spill in U.S. history and the deadly rig explosion that set it off to a complex chain of failures both human and mechanical. Some of those problems have been made public over the past 4 1/2 months, such as the failure of the blowout preventer to clamp the well shut.

27 A whole different Playboy channel – for the blind

By MICHAEL GRACZYK, Associated Press Writer

Thu Sep 9, 7:08 am ET

HOUSTON – Suzi Hanks reads Playboy magazine for the articles. And the jokes. And the letters and cartoons.

And yes, for the pictures.

Each week, for an hour, Hanks snuggles close to a microphone in a tiny soundproof closet, reading – and describing in great detail – portions of the latest Playboy issue for the blind.

28 New report: more grandparents raising grandkids

By DAVID CRARY, AP National Writer

53 mins ago

NEW YORK – The number of U.S. children being raised by their grandparents rose sharply as the recession began, according to a new analysis of census data. The reasons, while somber, were not all economic.

These grandparents often give themselves high marks as caregivers, but many face distinctive stresses as they confront unanticipated financial burdens and culture shock that come with the responsibilities of child-raising.

In all, roughly 7 million U.S. children live in households that include at least one grandparent, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of the most recent Census Bureau data, from 2008. Of that number, 2.9 million were being raised primarily by their grandparents – up 16 percent from 2000, with a 6 percent surge just from 2007 to 2008.

29 Appeals court blocks Pa. town’s immigration law

By MICHAEL RUBINKAM, Associated Press Writer

1 hr 54 mins ago

ALLENTOWN, Pa. – A federal appeals court ruled Thursday that Hazleton, Pa., may not enforce its crackdown on illegal immigrants, dealing another blow to 4-year-old regulations that inspired similar measures around the country.

The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelphia said that Hazleton’s Illegal Immigration Relief Act usurped the federal government’s exclusive power to regulate immigration.

“It is … not our job to sit in judgment of whether state and local frustration about federal immigration policy is warranted. We are, however, required to intervene when states and localities directly undermine the federal objectives embodied in statutes enacted by Congress,” wrote Chief Judge Theodore McKee.

30 Report: LA officer involved in previous shootings

By RAQUEL MARIA DILLON, Associated Press Writer

Thu Sep 9, 12:44 pm ET

LOS ANGELES – The police officer who shot and killed a knife-wielding man whose death has sparked three days of violent protests in Los Angeles had been involved in two previous shootings while on duty, according to a media report.

The Los Angeles Times report came as hundreds of people returned to the streets for a third night of protests over the fatal shooting of Manuel Jamines, 37, sporadically throwing rocks and bottles at officers and setting scattered rubbish fires.

Earlier Wednesday evening, police Chief Charlie Beck faced an angry crowd at a community meeting intended to quell the violence.

31 Backers of NYC mosque appear divided, regretful

By DAVID B. CARUSO, Associated Press Writer

Thu Sep 9, 12:31 pm ET

NEW YORK – The backers of a proposed Islamic center near ground zero are expressing regrets about creating a firestorm with a plan they thought would be simple and noncontroversial.

Hisham Elzanaty, an Egyptian-born businessman who says he provided a majority of the financing to gain control over the two buildings where the center would be built, told The Associated Press that he has always viewed the project primarily as an investment opportunity, and would sell some of the site if the price is right.

And the imam slated to lead the spiritual component of the center told CNN that if he had realized how some Americans would react to the location, he would have picked some other spot.

32 Soldier’s father: Army was warned of murder plot

By GENE JOHNSON, Associated Press Writer

Thu Sep 9, 6:08 am ET

SEATTLE – The father of a U.S. soldier serving in Afghanistan says he tried nearly a half dozen times to pass an urgent message from his son to the Army: Troops in his unit had murdered an Afghan civilian, planned more killings and threatened him to keep quiet about it.

By the time officials arrested suspects months later, two more Afghans were dead.

And much to Christopher Winfield’s horror, his son Adam was among the five Fort Lewis-based soldiers charged in the killings.

33 New Muslim college welcomes freshmen in California

By TERENCE CHEA, Associated Press Writer

Thu Sep 9, 5:44 am ET

BERKELEY, Calif. – Amid the uproar over the proposed mosque near ground zero in New York, a new Islamic college recently opened its doors in California with plans to educate a new generation of Muslim-American leaders.

Founded by three prominent Islamic scholars, Zaytuna College in Berkeley is a small school with just five faculty members and 15 students in its inaugural freshman class. The school wants to become the country’s first fully accredited Muslim academic institution.

Zaytuna College is opening at a time when fierce opposition to the proposed Islamic community center and mosque near the former World Trade Center has left many American Muslims feeling under siege.

34 Appeals court lets government halt torture lawsuit

By PAUL ELIAS, Associated Press Writer

Thu Sep 9, 1:22 am ET

SAN FRANCISCO – A sharply divided federal appeals court on Wednesday threw out a lawsuit challenging a controversial post-Sept. 11 CIA program that flew terrorism suspects to secret prisons.

The complaint was filed by five terrorism suspects who were arrested shortly after 9/11 and say they were flown by a Boeing Co. subsidiary to prisons around the world where they were tortured. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals cited national security risks when it dismissed the men’s case in a 6-5 ruling Wednesday.

The case could have broad repercussions on the national security debate as it makes its way toward the Supreme Court, and it casts a spotlight on the controversial “extraordinary rendition” program the Bush administration used after 9/11.

35 Chicago mulls future without Daley power at helm

By DON BABWIN and SOPHIA TAREEN, Associated Press Writers

Wed Sep 8, 11:06 pm ET

CHICAGO – The last time Chicago was left without a Daley at the helm, the next mayor was thrown out of office by voters angry because he couldn’t keep snow off the streets.

The “City that Works” then became known as “Beirut on the Lake,” its council dissolved into a racially divided stalemate as remnants of the once-mighty Chicago Machine stonewalled reforms pushed by the city’s first black leader.

Within a few years of his election in 1989, Mayor Richard M. Daley brought that to an end by building his own machine – not with the patronage army his father used to amass and keep political power, but by sharing the spoils of city government, selectively doling out contracts and forcing factions to work together.

36 Ind. activist to head federal anti-carp campaign

By CARLA K. JOHNSON and JOHN FLESHER, Associated Press Writers

Wed Sep 8, 6:41 pm ET

CHICAGO – John Goss, an environmental activist and former state official from Indiana, was appointed Wednesday as the Obama administration’s point man in the fight to prevent Asian carp from gaining a foothold in the Great Lakes.

Goss will oversee efforts by federal, state and local agencies to halt the advance of bighead and silver carp, which are on the verge of invading Lake Michigan through Chicago-area waterways. Scientists say if the voracious carp become established in the lakes, they could damage the food chain and a $7 billion regional fishing industry.

Goss has served as executive director of the National Wildlife Federation’s Indiana affiliate for four years. Previously, he was director of the state Department of Natural Resources and served as vice chairman of the Great Lakes Commission, an agency representing the region’s eight states.

37 NJ Gov. Christie plans to campaign in Iowa

By GEOFF MULVIHILL, Associated Press Writer

Wed Sep 8, 6:18 pm ET

HADDONFIELD, N.J. – New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, already a tough-talking, budget-slashing, union-bashing regular on cable news talk shows, denies he’s considering a presidential run whenever he’s asked.

But that’s not keeping him from planning a trip next month to Iowa, the state with the nation’s first presidential caucus that makes it a destination for those with big political aspirations.

“He’s becoming a national politician on a platform to compete with 36 other people who want to be president in 2012,” said Steffen Schmidt, a political science professor at Iowa State University. “No one comes to Iowa unless they want to be president.”

38 Obama won’t yield on tax hike for wealthiest

By JULIE PACE and TOM RAUM, Associated Press Writers

Wed Sep 8, 6:06 pm ET

CLEVELAND – Politically weakened but refusing to bend, President Barack Obama insisted Wednesday that Bush-era tax cuts be cut off for the wealthiest Americans, joining battle with Republicans – and some fellow Democrats – just two months before bruising midterm elections.

Singling out House GOP leader John Boehner in his home state, Obama delivered a searing attack on Republicans for advocating “the same philosophy that led to this mess in the first place: cut more taxes for millionaires and cut more rules for corporations.”

Obama rolled out a trio of new plans to help spur job growth and invigorate the sluggish national economic recovery. They would expand and permanently extend a research and development tax credit that lapsed in 2009, allow businesses to write off 100 percent of their investments in equipment and plants through 2011 and pump $50 billion into highway, rail, airport and other infrastructure projects.

39 Fla. pastor on fringe of US Christian life

By RACHEL ZOLL, AP Religion Writer

Wed Sep 8, 5:04 pm ET

NEW YORK – The Florida pastor who plans to burn the Quran on the anniversary of 9/11 is rooted in Pentecostal tradition that believes Christians are engaged in a modern-day spiritual battle with evil.

For Terry Jones and his Dove World Outreach Center, Islam is that evil, a world view drawn from his politics and theology – as well as an apparent thirst for publicity for his tiny, independent church.

“Our burning of the Quran is to call the attention that something is wrong,” Jones said Wednesday at a brief news conference outside his Gainesville church. “It is possibly time for us in a new way to stand up and confront terrorism.”

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.

New York Times Editorial: Torture Is a Crime, Not a Secret

Five men who say the Bush administration sent them to other countries to be tortured had a chance to be the first ones to have torture claims heard in court. But because the Obama administration decided to adopt the Bush administration’s claim that hearing the case would divulge state secrets, the men’s lawsuit was tossed out on Wednesday  by the full United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. The decision diminishes any hope that this odious practice will finally receive the legal label it deserves: a violation of international law.

snip

The state secrets doctrine is so blinding and powerful that it should be invoked only when the most grave national security matters are at stake – nuclear weapons details, for example, or the identity of covert agents. It should not be used to defend against allegations that if true, as the dissenting judges wrote, would be “gross violations of the norms of international law.”

All too often in the past, the judges pointed out, secrecy privileges have been used to avoid embarrassing the government, not to protect real secrets. In this case, the embarrassment and the shame to America’s reputation are already too well known.

The Talking Dog: Transparency You can Believe In

Surprise, surprise. Obama and Holder sold us out on the grand daddy of them all– the political decision to keep the promise it made at no cost… no fear of filibuster, no need to bribe Bart Stupek or Ben Nelson, no nothin’… just a willingness to honor Obama’s own God damned campaign promises. Too much to ask. Too much to ask.

As the great Charlie Savage tells us in this piece in the Grey Lady, a sharply divided panel of the (almost) full 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco, by a 6-5 vote, issued a decision upholding the Bush Administration’s Obama Administration’s assertion of a “state secrets” as a get out of jail free card for torturers, in this case, to short circuit a lawsuit brought by the ACLU against Boeing’s Jeppesen subsidiary, a/k/a, the torture taxi company, which supplied specially outfitted aircraft used by the CIA in extraordinary rendition international f***ing Wild West kidnappings of people from anywhere on Earth for transport to torture.

Interestingly, what I haven’t seen being reported are the implications of a pair of recusals. The first is an evident recusal on the 9th Circuit itself, that of former Justice Dept. Legal Counsel Jay Bybee, now a Judge on… the 9th Circuit. I did not see Bybee’s name on the decision, and as he is clearly an active member of the Court, I’m guessing that as an architect of the “torture is legal if we do it” policy (or at least the guy who history will find as the guy who signed off on the memos that John Yoo wrote to David Addington’s order)…recused himself. One assumes Bybee’s participation would have made the decision 7-5 to reverse, but it is somewhat interesting to me that it hasn’t been commented on.

The Optimist:

E.J. Dionne Jr.: Obama raises stakes and redefines debate for the midterm election

President Obama decided this week to raise the stakes in this fall’s election by making the choice about something instead of nothing but anger.

In the process, he will confront a deeply embedded media narrative that sees a Republican triumph as all but inevitable. Paradoxically, such extravagant expectations may be the GOP’s biggest problem — by raising the bar for what will constitute success and by discouraging necessary strategic adjustments should our newly combative president begin to alter the political battlefield.

Until Obama’s Labor Day speech in Milwaukee and his statement of principles Wednesday near Cleveland, it was not clear how much heart he had in the fight or whether he would ever offer a comprehensive argument for the advantage of his party’s approach.

In the absence of a coherent case, Republicans were winning by default on a wave of protest votes. Without this new effort at self-definition, Obama was a blur: a socialist to conservatives, a sellout to some progressives, and a disappointment to younger Americans who wondered what happened to the ebullient, hopeful guy they voted for.

That’s why the Milwaukee-Cleveland one-two punch mattered. The first speech showed Obama could fight and enjoy himself in the process. The second speech spelled out why he has chosen to do battle.

The Pessimist:

David Broder: The Obama era, phase two

Nov. 2 is likely to be marked as the official start of Phase Two of the Obama presidency, but in some respects, the turn to the right that will mark his tenure became visible in this first week in September.

The signs were there in the polls signaling the likelihood of large Republican gains in the midterm election, in the word that the White House may have to find a new chief of staff, and in the policy announcements about Obama’s new economic fixes.

All the major media completed their first rounds of post-Labor Day reporting and polling this week and pronounced, with one voice, that voters are ready to strip the Democrats of one, if not both, of their congressional majorities. The failure of the economy to generate any momentum for significant growth during the summer months has deepened national pessimism. And little is likely to jolt it into a climb before November.

Joe Conason: Why they want to burn the Quran

Conservatives encourage (or ignore) demonizing of Islam — and then claim to be infuriated by Pastor Jones

Had Gen. David Petraeus never condemned a Florida church’s ceremonial destruction of the Quran scheduled for Saturday, Sept. 11, it is hard to imagine that many of his admirers on the political right would have protested. But with the general’s warning that video of such a provocative act of hate would endanger the lives of American personnel abroad, both military and civilian, and serve the purposes of our enemies, he etched a line of demarcation. Suddenly, prominent right-wing commentators sprang forth to agree that burning books is beyond the limit of tolerable intolerance and denounced Pastor Terry Jones and his Dove World congregation as stupid, tasteless, repugnant and all too reminiscent of Nazism.

Or at least some did, even as Republican politicians remained silent on the Florida outrage. What should have been an opportunity for reflection on the national mood of Muslim-bashing bigotry — and especially how that mood was conjured — instead became an occasion to preen and pretend that the little band of idiotic rubes in Florida could not possibly have been inspired by the “sophisticated” critics of Islam on Fox News, talk radio and the Internet.

Gal Collins: The 5 Percent Doctrine

A minister in Gainesville, Fla., has created an international uproar by vowing to burn the Koran on Sept. 11. This is under the theory that the best way to honor Americans who died at the hands of religious extremists is to do something that is both religious and extreme.

I am not going to mention his name, since he’s already been rewarded with way too many TV interviews for a person whose seminal career achievement has been building a thriving congregation of about 50 people.

The Koran-burning has been equated, in some circles, with the fabled ground zero mosque. This is under the theory that both are constitutionally protected bad ideas. In fact, they’re very different. Muslims building a community center in their neighborhood on one hand. Deliberate attempt to insult a religion that is dear to about 1.5 billion souls around the globe on the other.

This week, New York City was visited by another minister, with the depressing title of “Internet evangelist” who announced plans to build a “9/11 Christian center at ground zero” in response to “the lies of Islam.” This guy, who is from Tampa, drew an estimated crowd of 60 people. Does that make him more popular than the minister from Gainesville? Plus, is there something in the water in Florida?

Nicholas D. Kristof: The Healers of 9/11

This weekend, a Jewish woman who lost her husband in the 9/11 attacks is planning to speak at a mosque in Boston. She will be trying to recruit members of the mosque to join her battle against poverty and illiteracy in Afghanistan.

The woman, Susan Retik, has pursued perhaps the most unexpected and inspiring American response to the 9/11 attacks. This anniversary of Sept. 11 feels a little ugly to me, with some planning to remember the day with hatred and a Koran-burning – and that makes her work all the more exhilarating.

In the shattering aftermath of Sept. 11, 2001, Ms. Retik bonded with another woman, Patti Quigley, whose husband had also died in the attack. They lived near each other, and both were pregnant with babies who would never see their fathers.

Devastated themselves, they realized that there were more than half a million widows in Afghanistan – and then, with war, there would be even more. Ms. Retik and Ms. Quigley also saw that Afghan widows could be a stabilizing force in that country.

Fear Factor

So yesterday we saw in real time the panicky Institutional Democratic strategy of scaring the “professional” Left into Clapping Louder! LOUDER!!! unravel before our eyes.  Yet this lefty among others was oddly unmoved.  Why is that?

Perhaps it has something to do with an analysis like this-

Why Should I Care? Leaders Lack Good Reasons to Vote For Democrats – or Against Republicans

By: Jon Walker, Wednesday September 8, 2010 6:45 pm

For the past two years, Democrats have at every turn repeated the completely fictitious “you need 60 votes in the Senate” myth to duck accountability and justify their wasteful corporate giveaways. Even if the Democrats do manage to hold on to the House and Senate, they will have only tiny majorities in both. With only 53 Democratic senators, there is no hope that Democrats can pass anything substantial-things on which they have already failed to act -as long as they are committed to giving the Republican minority some sort of quasi-parliamentary veto power.

On the flip side, there is no way Republicans can win the House and a 60-seat majority in the Senate (let alone the 67-vote majorities they would need to override an Obama veto). I’ve been told for two years a mere 59 Democrats in the Senate are powerless due to the filibuster; by this same logic, we have nothing to fear from Republican gains because they will never be able to get anything through a Democratic filibuster, and even if they do, Obama can veto it.



Given the Democrats’ Congressional paralysis of the last year, and Obama’s veto power, the fear mongering over sweeping Republican changes is baseless. I’ve heard only two legitimate policy cases for why a Democratic base would really not want Republicans to take the House this year. The first is that Obama is a secret conservative who will happily join a triumphant Speaker Boehner in passing the Republican platform. (Note: claiming your president is secretly excited to work against the party’s own platform is not a good way to increase base enthusiasm.) The second is that if Republicans control the House, Obama won’t be able to take a piss without Darrel Issa subpoenaing the urinal, making it impossible for Obama to get anything done. Sadly, this argument would resonate better if Obama had used his powers during some part of the current session to bypass Republican obstruction and advance progressive goals (like quickly putting Elizabeth Warren in charge of the CFPB, for instance).

Rahm’s golden parachute is insufficient.  We need heads on pikes and changes in policy.

On This Day in History: September 9

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

September 9 is the 252nd day of the year (253rd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 113 days remaining until the end of the year.

On this day in 1776, Congress renames the nation “United States of America”.

On this day in 1776, the Continental Congress formally declares the name of the new nation to be the “United States” of America. This replaced the term “United Colonies,” which had been in general use.

In the Congressional declaration dated September 9, 1776, the delegates wrote, “That in all continental commissions, and other instruments, where, heretofore, the words ‘United Colonies’ have been used, the stile be altered for the future to the “United States.”

The Lee Resolution, also known as the resolution of independence, was an act of the Second Continental Congress declaring the United Colonies to be independent of the British Empire. First proposed on June 7, 1776, by Richard Henry Lee of Virginia, after receiving instructions from the Virginia Convention and its President, Edmund Pendleton  (in fact Lee used, almost verbatim, the language from the instructions in his resolution). Voting on the resolution was delayed for several weeks while support for independence was consolidated. On June 11, a Committee of Five  was appointed to prepare a document to explain the reasons for independence. The resolution was finally approved on July 2, 1776, and news of its adoption was published that evening in the Pennsylvania Evening Post and the next day in the Pennsylvania Gazette. The text of the document formally announcing this action, the United States Declaration of Independence, was approved on July 4.

 9 – Arminius’ alliance of six Germanic tribes ambushes and annihilates three Roman legions of Publius Quinctilius Varus in the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest.

1000 – Battle of Svolder, Viking Age.

1379 – Treaty of Neuberg, splitting the Austrian Habsburg lands between the Habsburg Dukes Albert III and Leopold III.

1493 – Battle of Krbava field, a decisive defeat of Croats in Croatian struggle against the invasion by the Ottoman Empire.

1513 – James IV of Scotland is defeated and dies in the Battle of Flodden Field, ending Scotland’s involvement in the War of the League of Cambrai.

1543 – Mary Stuart, at nine months old, is crowned “Queen of Scots” in the central Scottish town of Stirling.

1739 – Stono Rebellion, the largest slave uprising in Britain’s mainland North American colonies prior to the American Revolution, erupts near Charleston, South Carolina.

1776 – The Continental Congress officially names its new union of sovereign states the United States.

1791 – Washington, D.C., the capital of the United States, is named after President George Washington.

1801 – Alexander I of Russia confirms the privileges of Baltic provinces.

1839 – John Herschel takes the first glass plate photograph.

1850 – California is admitted as the thirty-first U.S. state.

1850 – The Compromise of 1850 transfers a third of Texas’s claimed territory (now parts of Colorado, Kansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Wyoming) to federal control in return for the U.S. federal government assuming $10 million of Texas’s pre-annexation debt.

1863 – American Civil War: The Union Army enters Chattanooga, Tennessee.

1886 – The Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works is finalized.

1914 – World War I: The creation of the Canadian Automobile Machine Gun Brigade, the first fully mechanized unit in the British Army.

1922 – Greco-Turkish War of 1919-1922 ends with Turkish victory over the Greeks.

1923 – Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the founder of the Republic of Turkey, founds the Republican People’s Party.

1924 – Hanapepe Massacre occurs on Kauai, Hawaii.

1926 – The U.S. National Broadcasting Company is formed.

1940 – George Stibitz pioneers the first remote operation of a computer.

1942 – World War II: A Japanese floatplane drops an incendiary bomb on Oregon.

1943 – World War II: The Allies land at Salerno and Taranto, Italy.

1944 – World War II: The Fatherland Front takes power in Bulgaria through a military coup in the capital and armed rebellion in the country. A new pro-Soviet government is established.

1945 – Second Sino-Japanese War: Japan formally surrenders to China.

1947 – First actual case of a computer bug being found: a moth lodges in a relay of a Harvard Mark II computer at Harvard University.

1948 – Republic Day of Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

1956 – Elvis Presley appears on The Ed Sullivan Show for the first time.

1965 – The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development is established.

1965 – Hurricane Betsy makes its second landfall near New Orleans, Louisiana, leaving 76 dead and $1.42 billion ($10-12 billion in 2005 dollars) in damages, becoming the first hurricane to top $1 billion in unadjusted damages.

1966 – The National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act is signed into law by U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson.

1970 – A British airliner is hijacked by the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and flown to Dawson’s Field in Jordan.

1971 – The four-day Attica Prison riot begins, which eventually results in 39 dead, most killed by state troopers retaking the prison.

1991 – Tajikstan gains independence from the Soviet Union.

1993 – The Palestine Liberation Organization officially recognizes Israel as a legitimate state.

2001 – Ahmed Shah Massoud, leader of the Northern Alliance, is assassinated in Afghanistan by two al Qaeda assassins who claimed to be Arab journalists wanting an interview.

Aggregate Demand

More Economics.

The Tortoise Economy

by Robert Reich

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

After a typical recession, growth surges until the economy reemerges from whatever hole it fell into and returns to its normal growth path. Usually that surge isn’t difficult to accomplish once the upswing begins because all the assets the economy needs to get back to its old path are readily available – lots of people who have been laid off or have come into the job market and been unable to find work, unused office and retail space, factories and equipment that had been idled. After the economy returns to normal and almost all these people and physical assets are back to work, growth slows to its normal pace.

But this time it’s not happening that way. More than two and a half years after the Great Recession began, many months after we hit bottom and when in a normal “recovery” we’d expect growth to surge, the opposite is happening. Growth is slowing.



The underlying problem is structural, not cyclical. There will be no return to normal because normal got us into the hole in the first place. And the normal kind of prescriptions can’t possibly get us out. Until the economy is restructured so more Americans share in its gains, the economy won’t make many gains. We’ll be forever trying to scale a wall that can’t be, because the vast majority of Americans lack the purchasing power to move upward.

The current battle is over the extension of the Bush Tax Cuts.  Whether for the rich or just those under $250K they are by definition NOT STIMULATIVE.  It doesn’t add anything to aggregate demand because it’s money you already have.  It is not being spent to create new demand.

Likewise business tax cuts.  Businesses are already sitting on $2 Trillion that they are not spending because there is no demand for the goods and services they produce.  They are awash in cash and credit and giving them any more is like pushing a string.

That leaves Government and they have 2 choices, give money to people who will spend it (which is why giving to the poorest is the most stimulative, because they’ll definitely spend and not save it thus creating demand), OR spending it themselves.  The only “stimulative” part of Obama’s new proposal is the $50 Billion spent on Infrastructure and it’s not enough.  The rest of the money is wasted pushing string and if you claim to care about “deficits” (and the bond market says you shouldn’t even if you’re not a Modern Monetary Theorist) you’re a hypocritical liar to support that and not the spending.

IF you wish to increase aggregate demand AND not increase the deficit THEN you should be talking about explicitly redistributionist policies that take money away from those who are not spending it to create demand and giving it to those who will.

Supply side economics is “Voodoo Economics”.  It has been tried and it has failed.  Spectacularly.

The most economically productive period in American History is the 40s, 50s, and 60s when the concentration of wealth was lower, the marginal tax rates higher, and business more regulated.

It’s amazing to me that those most anxious to turn back the clock socially are the most reluctant to do so economically.

Morning Shinbun Thursday September 9




Thursday’s Headlines:

US soldiers ‘killed Afghan civilians for sport and collected fingers as trophies

Spiral galaxy like our own shines with pink clouds

USA

We will burn hundreds of copies of the Koran, insists Florida church

Political controversy over Islam surrounds 9/11 anniversary

Europe

Turkish rafting guides still risking lives, says father of drowned schoolgirl

Spanish arson suspect is former forest ranger

Middle East

Robert Fisk: The lie behind mass ‘suicides’ of Egypt’s young women

U.S. Says Killings Won’t Affect Iraq Mission

Asia

Pakistan stares into a void

Andal Jr massacre executor

Africa

Fear of fresh violence in Nigeria

Latin America

Fidel Castro: Cuban model no longer works

US soldiers ‘killed Afghan civilians for sport and collected fingers as trophies

Soldiers face charges over secret ‘kill team’ which allegedly murdered at random and collected fingers as trophies of war

Chris McGreal in Washington

The Guardian, Thursday 9 September 2010


Twelve American soldiers face charges over a secret “kill team” that allegedly blew up and shot Afghan civilians at random and collected their fingers as trophies.

Five of the soldiers are charged with murdering three Afghan men who were allegedly killed for sport in separate attacks this year. Seven others are accused of covering up the killings and assaulting a recruit who exposed the murders when he reported other abuses, including members of the unit smoking hashish stolen from civilians.

Spiral galaxy like our own shines with pink clouds

As a relatively nearby galaxy that is quite prominent in the southern skies, NGC 300 actually can be seen with regular binoculars  

By Denise Chow

The wispy arms of a spiral galaxy similar to our own Milky Way can be seen in striking detail in a new image from the European Southern Observatory.

NGC 300, located in the Sculptor Group of galaxies about 6 million light-years from Earth, was photographed by the Wide Field Imager (WFI) at ESO’s La Silla Observatory in Chile.

The many energetic star-forming regions along NGC 300’s spiral arms are visible in the picture as red and pink clouds.

USA

We will burn hundreds of copies of the Koran, insists Florida church

Pastor Terry Jones is sticking to his plan to send an incendiary anti-Islam message – unless God gives orders to the contrary

By David Usborne in Gainesville, Florida Thursday, 9 September 2010

A pile of as many as 200 copies of the Koran will be burnt on a patch of lawn outside a small Christian church here on Saturday on the ninth anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks in spite of calls to desist yesterday from the White House and the Vatican, one of its pastors told The Independent last night.

“We are pretty much set on it right now,” insisted Dave Ingram, an associate pastor at the Dove Outreach Centre in Gainesville, which plans to stage what it is calling its “International Burn-A-Koran Day”. He and the senior pastor at the church, Terry Jones, did not rule out suspending the event if called to do so “by God”.

Political controversy over Islam surrounds 9/11 anniversary



By Dan Balz and Jon Cohen

Washington Post Staff Writers

Thursday, September 9, 2010; 12:02 AM


For almost a decade, the annual commemoration of the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, has been seen as a day of national unity and sober remembrance. This year, contentious issues of religious freedom and national identity threaten to color the ninth anniversary of those tragic events.

Controversies over calls to burn the Koran and an ongoing debate over a proposed mosque and Islamic cultural center near Ground Zero in New York are drawing particular attention as the anniversary nears, sparking questions about how 9/11 became so politicized.

Europe

Turkish rafting guides still risking lives, says father of drowned schoolgirl

Despite death of nine-year-old Cerys Potter in July, rafts on Dalaman river still taking perilous risks, investigation reveals

Paul Lewis in Fethiye

The Guardian, Thursday 9 September 2010


Hundreds of British tourists are risking their lives on a perilous stretch of river in Turkey where white-water rafts are being overloaded with passengers and intentionally capsized.

An investigation into rafting on the Dalaman river has revealed the risks involved when boats are flipped on rocks so that dramatic footage of rafters scrambling around the capsized boats can be sold to passengers on £40 DVDs.

Spanish arson suspect is former forest ranger

The Irish Times – Thursday, September 9, 2010  

JANE WALKER in Madrid

SPANISH POLICE are questioning a former forest ranger they believe is responsible for starting three separate fires that have swept through the Valencia region of southwest Spain. Others are burning in the nearby areas of Murcia and Alicante.

Serafin Castellano, head of security of Murcia region, said he believed that at least one of the fires in his region was also a case of arson. It is always considered suspicious when fires break out simultaneously on several fronts.

Middle East

Robert Fisk: The lie behind mass ‘suicides’ of Egypt’s young women

Part three of our series demolishes the official claim that Egypt, where a farmer decapitated his own daughter, has no ‘honour’ killings

Thursday, 9 September 2010

There’s a sewer outside Azza Suleiman’s office, a hot ditch in which the filth of one of Cairo’s worst slums has been reduced to a slowly moving swamp of black liquid. A blue mist of exhaust fumes and dust moves down alleyways thick with scarved women, men in white robes, coffee sellers, donkey carts and garbage boys, the five- and six-year-olds who come down from the Mokkatam hills to gather up Cairo’s garbage every morning. Some of it feeds their goats and – yes – the pigs bred in the rotting suburbs. A veil of smog lies over this misery. But a veil of a different kind lies over Egypt, a covering which Azza Suleiman is determined to tear away.

U.S. Says Killings Won’t Affect Iraq Mission



By STEVEN LEE MYERS  

BAGHDAD – The killing of two American soldiers by an Iraqi soldier at a military base north of Baghdad was a “deliberate act” but would not undermine the new American mission to advise Iraq’s security forces, the American military said in a statement on Wednesday.

The deaths – the first American casualties here since President Obama declared the official end to American combat in Iraq last week – appeared to have stemmed from an argument that escalated into gunfire, according to Iraqi officials and a relative of the Iraqi soldier involved.

Asia

Pakistan stares into a void

 

By Syed Saleem Shahzad

NOWSHERA, Khyber Pakhtoonkhwa province – The coalition government of Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari, the brainchild of the United States for an anti-Taliban political force that could effectively fight and support the American war in South Asia, has proved itself incompetent in the face of the country’s unfolding flood disaster.

Devastating floods over the past month have affected more than 20 million people and laid waste a fifth of the country’s land mass. The real fear now is that in the much-anticipated anarchy in the coming weeks, a fiercely anti-American Islamic revolution could break out if correct and timely steps are not taken as the waters recede and lay bare ruined lives

Andal jr massacre executor  

First witness for prosecution bares premeditation

Father and son had it all planned out.


Thursday, 09 September 2010  

A witness to the planning of what turned out to be last year’s massacre of 57 civilians, including 31 journalists, on Wednesday told a court that the

patriarch of a politically powerful clan in southern Mindanao and his youngest son had covered the bases weeks before the actual mass murder.

At the start of the trial of the wholesale killing, though, it was Andal Ampatuan Jr. who stood as the prime suspect in the Philippines’ worst politically motivated slaughter.

Ampatuan Jr, a former mayor of a town in Maguindanao province in his 40s and heir apparent to one of the most powerful Muslim political clans in the South, faces life in prison if convicted of the November 23, 2009 murders that shocked the world.

Africa

Fear of fresh violence in Nigeria

Prison break by armed rebel group Boko Haram raises new fears of violence as security is tightened in country’s north.

Last Modified: 09 Sep 2010 02:54 GMT  

A prison break by an armed group known as Boko Haram has raised fears of renewed violence in northern Nigeria just months before elections.

The group staged a raid on the prison on Tuesday night in the town of Bauchi, freeing more than 100 followers.

The attack left the prison in ruins and showed the group, which is seeking to institute sharia [Islamic law] in the country, had access to the sophisticated weapons it needed to overpower prison guards.

Nigeria’s interior minister said on Wednesday the rebels had “overwhelming firepower” and guards were unable to stop them.

Latin America

Fidel Castro: Cuban model no longer works

Atlantic Monthly interviews touch on Iran, nuclear weapons, dolphins

By Jeff Franks

HAVANA – Fidel Castro said Cuba’s economic model no longer works, a U.S.-based journalist reported on Wednesday following interviews with the former president last week.

Jeffrey Goldberg, a writer for the Atlantic Monthly magazine, wrote in a blog that he asked Castro, 84, if Cuba’s model – Soviet-style communism – was still worth exporting to other countries and he replied, “The Cuban model doesn’t even work for us anymore.”

The comment appeared to reflect Castro’s agreement, which he also expressed in a column for Cuban media in April, with his younger brother President Raul Castro, who has initiated modest reforms to stimulate Cuba’s troubled economy.

Ignoring Asia A Blog

Prime Time

Well this is interesting, Keith on Dave without a cancellation by Johnny "Wet Start" McCain.

The new episode of Man v. Wild, Fan v. Wild, is an interesting concept.  They had a contest to pick a fan to tag along with Bear.  Should be fun.

Later-

Dave hosts Julianna Margulies, Keith Olbermann and The Black Angels.  Jon has Tim Kaine (loser), Stephen Biden and Odierno as part of his salute to the Troops special.  Alton does Choux.

Boondocks, It’s Goin’ Down, the Season 3 Finale.  Highly watchable, number 3 on my list.

Zap2it TV Listings, Yahoo TV Listings

Evening Edition

Evening Edition is an Open Thread

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 BP takes share of blame for Gulf of Mexico oil spill

by Ben Perry, AFP

28 mins ago

LONDON (AFP) – Energy giant BP sought to spread the blame for the Gulf of Mexico oil spill Wednesday as it defended itself against tens of billions of dollars in potential fines and legal liabilities.

As expected in the findings of its own inquiry, BP did not admit “gross negligence” for the April 20 explosion that killed 11 people and unleashed 4.9 million barrels of oil in the worst-ever maritime spill.

The disaster was due to a “sequence of failures” BP said, as it exonerated its well design and apportioned a large share of the blame to mistakes made by rig owner Transocean and Halliburton, which cemented the well.

2 Florida church says Koran burning will go ahead

by Mike Bernos, AFP

39 mins ago

GAINESVILLE, Florida (AFP) – A small Florida church Wednesday brushed aside global outrage and vowed to go ahead with burning some 200 Korans, as local officials drew up plans to try to tamp down the protest.

Despite international condemnation led by US officials, military and religious leaders, the church said its event to torch the Islamic holy book on the anniversary of the September 11, 2001 attacks would take place.

“As of this time we have no intention of canceling,” Pastor Terry Jones told reporters in a press conference, adding his church the Dove World Outreach Center has received numerous messages of support.

3 US appears powerless to stop Koran-burning ceremony

by Mike Bernos, AFP

Tue Sep 7, 11:04 pm ET

GAINESVILLE, Florida (AFP) – The United States appeared powerless to stop a Florida church from burning hundreds of Korans on the anniversary of 9/11 despite fears of global repercussions.

The White House added its voice to growing concern from military leaders that the incendiary move by a group of American evangelicals could trigger outrage around the Islamic world and endanger the lives of US soldiers.

“It puts our troops in harm’s way. And obviously any type of activity like that that puts our troops in harm’s way would be a concern to this administration,” said White House spokesman Robert Gibbs.

4 Obama seeks to mend frayed bond with voters

AFP

33 mins ago

CLEVELAND, Ohio (AFP) – US President Barack Obama Wednesday admitted some of his policies were unpopular and had not revived the economy quickly enough, but sought to rekindle his frayed bond with American voters.

“It’s still fear versus hope, the past versus the future,” Obama said in economically bereft Ohio, pleading with voters to chose “moving forward” with him, rather than “sliding backward” with Republicans.

Obama, seeking to reframe the political debate ahead of November elections in which Democrats fear thumping losses, slammed his foes for pitching the economy into a historic crisis, and “moralizing” about the ballooning deficit.

5 UN chief in Rwanda faces Kigali ‘outrage’ over report

AFP

Wed Sep 8, 12:29 pm ET

KIGALI (AFP) – UN chief Ban Ki-moon met Rwanda’s president here Wednesday in a bid to defuse his government’s anger over allegations contained in a UN report that Rwandan forces committed war crimes in DR Congo.

Ban told journalists in Kigali after the meeting that both he and President Paul Kagame had been “disappointed” the report outlining alleged atrocities by Rwandan troops had been leaked.

Kagame, who as president is commander in chief of his country’s armed forces, had threatened to pull Rwanda’s troops out of international peacekeeping missions in Sudan in a signal of Kigali’s fury.

6 Struggle to agree UN summit kickstart for Millennium goals

by Tim Witcher, AFP

Wed Sep 8, 12:24 pm ET

UNITED NATIONS (AFP) – World powers are moving slowly toward an accord on the strategy to be embraced at a looming United Nations summit aiming to get the lofty Millennium Development Goals back on track.

Ten years after more than 150 leaders set eight ambitious targets for 2015 — ranging from cutting child mortality rates by two thirds, to halving the number of people living in absolute poverty and spreading access to the Internet — none are likely to be reached, experts say.

Fallout from the financial crisis, a lack of will and bad policies have been blamed by aid groups and experts for the millions of children still dying needlessly from treatable illnesses, to a lack of work for the poor and inequality faced by women.

7 Dublin intends to wind down part of Anglo Irish Bank

by Andrew Bushe, AFP

2 hrs 55 mins ago

DUBLIN (AFP) – The Irish government on Wednesday said it planned to split state-rescued Anglo Irish Bank into two banks, with one half eventually being sold or wound down, in the hope of satisfying the EU.

Anglo Irish will be split into a so-called Funding Bank and an Asset Recovery Bank. The former will guarantee deposits, while the state will seek to offload the latter.

The decision followed a Cabinet briefing by Finance Minister Brian Lenihan and talks he held earlier this week with the European Commission and European Union counterparts.

8 Formula One: Ferrari escape further punishment from FIA

AFP

1 hr 37 mins ago

PARIS (AFP) – Formula One giants Ferrari were spared further punishment for giving drivers Fernando Alonso and Felipe Massa team orders during the German Grand Prix, according to an Italian Automobile official on Wednesday.

Ferrari told Massa to let Alonso pass him during the Grand Prix in July for which they initially received a 100,000 dollar fine.

And having attended a FIA hearing in Paris, Angelo Sticchi Damiani, the president of the Italian Automobile Commission, told Italian reporters that the fine had been confirmed but no new penalties imposed.

9 Angelina Jolie calls for more Pakistan flood aid

by Claire Truscott, AFP

Wed Sep 8, 10:17 am ET

ISLAMABAD (AFP) – Hollywood star Angelina Jolie urged people on Wednesday to put aside corruption fears and donate cash to help Pakistan’s 21 million flood victims, as she ended a tour of areas devastated by deluges.

Pakistan’s government has been heavily criticised at home and abroad over perceived corruption, which many attribute to the slow pace of donations to the UN’s flood appeal, which has raised two thirds of its 460 million dollar goal.

“I don’t want some people to use it (corruption) as an excuse not to give assistance,” Jolie told reporters at the UN refugee agency’s Islamabad office.

10 French unions call fresh protests against retirement at 62

by Roland Lloyd Parry, AFP

Wed Sep 8, 1:07 pm ET

PARIS (AFP) – French labour unions on Wednesday called for a second wave of strikes this month to challenge plans to raise the retirement age to 62, one day after over a million people took to the street in protest.

Six major unions issued a joint statement saying they were not satisfied by the minor modifications offered by President Nicolas Sarkozy to his plan to raise the minimum retirement age from 60 by 2018.

They called on French workers to make September 23 “a major day of strikes and demonstrations” to fight the reform, a cornerstone of Sarkozy’s agenda as he eyes the next presidential election in 2012.

11 Struggle to agree UN summit kickstart for Millennium goals

by Tim Witcher, AFP

Wed Sep 8, 12:24 pm ET

UNITED NATIONS (AFP) – World powers are moving slowly toward an accord on the strategy to be embraced at a looming United Nations summit aiming to get the lofty Millennium Development Goals back on track.

Ten years after more than 150 leaders set eight ambitious targets for 2015 — ranging from cutting child mortality rates by two thirds, to halving the number of people living in absolute poverty and spreading access to the Internet — none are likely to be reached, experts say.

Fallout from the financial crisis, a lack of will and bad policies have been blamed by aid groups and experts for the millions of children still dying needlessly from treatable illnesses, to a lack of work for the poor and inequality faced by women.

12 BP and partners trade blame for oil spill

By Tom Bergin and Ayesha Rascoe, Reuters

1 hr 18 mins ago

LONDON/WASHINGTON (Reuters) – A BP Plc investigation of the Gulf of Mexico disaster played down its own role in the world’s worst offshore oil spill and pointed the finger at what it said were failures by contractors.

The 193-page internal report made public on Wednesday drew fire from a prominent U.S. lawmaker and one of the contractors, Transocean Ltd, called it a “self-serving” attempt by the British energy giant to escape responsibility for the “fatally flawed” design of its deepsea Macondo well.

The report threatened to reignite public anger over the massive spill, which caused an environmental catastrophe along the U.S. Gulf Coast, devastated tourism and fishing in the area and damaged President Barack Obama’s popularity.

13 Florida pastor not backing down on Koran-burning

By Barbara Liston, Reuters

7 mins ago

GAINESVILLE, Florida (Reuters) – An obscure Christian pastor whose plan to burn copies of the Koran on September 11 has sparked an international outcry said on Wednesday he will go ahead with the event despite warnings it will endanger American troops in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Pastor Terry Jones, leader of a tiny Protestant church in Gainesville, Florida, which campaigns against what it calls “radical Islam,” is facing a barrage of calls from U.S. government, military and religious leaders, and from abroad, to cancel plans to publicly burn Islam’s holy book.

“We are not convinced that backing down is the right thing,” Jones, a gray-haired, mustachioed preacher with mutton-chop sideburns and author of a book titled “Islam is of the Devil,” told a crowd of reporters in a brief statement made in the grassy yard in front of his stone-and-metal church.

14 Special Report: The Tea Party goes to school

By Nick Carey, Reuters

Wed Sep 8, 8:45 am ET

HANNIBAL, Missouri (Reuters) – Some Tea Partiers admit mistakes were made. Others are quick to describe the movement’s recent efforts in the political arena as not quite ready for prime time.

But the conservative upstart is determined to shed its amateur status. To that end, members are literally going to school. They are taking part in training sessions, some of which are underwritten by established conservative groups like American Majority, the Leadership Institute and Americans for Prosperity.

Indeed, an up-close look at the Tea Party in 15 states over a three-month period during this summer’s political primaries showed a group striving to make the transition from unruly protesters to effective activists. Their near term goal is to gain a foothold at the most basic levels of government — from city councils to state assemblies.

15 BP report blames itself, others for oil spill

By HARRY R. WEBER, MICHAEL KUNZELMAN and DINA CAPPIELLO, Associated Press Writers

2 mins ago

NEW ORLEANS – BP took some of the blame for the Gulf oil disaster in an internal report issued Wednesday, acknowledging among other things that it misinterpreted a key pressure test of the well. But in a possible preview of its legal strategy, it also pointed the finger at its partners on the doomed rig.

The highly technical, 193-page report attributes the worst offshore oil spill in U.S. history and the rig explosion that set it off to a complex chain of failures both human and mechanical. Some of those problems have been made public over the past 4 1/2 months, such as the failure of the blowout preventer to clamp the well shut.

The report is far from the definitive ruling on the cause of the catastrophe. For one thing, government investigators have not yet begun to fully analyze the blowout preventer, which was raised from the bottom of the sea over Labor Day weekend.

16 Fla. minister determined to hold 9/11 Quran burn

By MITCH STACY, Associated Press Writer

2 hrs 21 mins ago

GAINESVILLE, Fla. – The leader of a small Florida church that espouses anti-Islam philosophy said Wednesday he was determined to burn copies of the Quran on Sept. 11, despite pressure from the White House, religious leaders and others to call it off.

Pastor Terry Jones said at a press conference that he has received a lot of encouragement for his protest, with supporters mailing copies of the Islamic holy text to his Gainesville church of about 50 followers. The plan is to incinerated the Qurans in a bonfire Saturday to mark the ninth anniversary of 9/11.

“As of right now, we are not convinced that backing down is the right thing,” said Jones, who took no questions.

17 Florida pastor has legal right to burn Qurans

By CURT ANDERSON, AP Legal Affairs Writer

Wed Sep 8, 3:10 am ET

MIAMI – Florida pastor Terry Jones will undoubtedly offend and infuriate many people around the world if he follows through on a plan to burn Muslim Qurans at his church this weekend.

The First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution will protect him, in the same way it allows the Ku Klux Klan to burn crosses and for protesters to torch the American flag.

The U.S. Supreme Court has made clear in several landmark rulings that speech deemed offensive to many people, even a majority, cannot be suppressed by the government unless it is clearly directed to intimidate someone or incite violence, legal experts said.

18 Clinton calls plan to burn Quran ‘disgraceful act’

By MATTHEW LEE, Associated Press Writer

Tue Sep 7, 8:53 pm ET

WASHINGTON – Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Tuesday called a Florida church’s threat to burn copies of the Muslim holy book to mark the ninth anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks a “disrespectful, disgraceful act.”

Others in the Obama administration weighed in against the proposed burning, including Attorney General Eric Holder, who called it idiotic and dangerous. A State Department spokesman branded the planned protest “un-American” while other officials warned that it could threaten U.S. troops, diplomats and travelers overseas.

The Christian minister organizing the Quran burning said he will go ahead in spite of the government’s concerns. Pastor Terry Jones of the Dove World Outreach Center, a small, evangelical Christian church in Gainesville, Fla., with an anti-Islam philosophy, said he had received more than 100 death threats and had taken to wearing a pistol on his hip.

19 Obama firm: Don’t extend tax breaks for wealthiest

By JULIE PACE, Associated Press Writer

1 hr 49 mins ago

CLEVELAND – President Barack Obama strongly defended his opposition to extending Bush-era tax breaks for the wealthiest Americans on Wednesday and delivered a searing attack on Republicans and their House leader for advocating “the same philosophy that led to this mess in the first place.”

Obama said the struggling U.S. economy can’t afford to spend $700 billion to keep lower tax rates in place for the nation’s highest earners despite a call by House Minority Leader John Boehner and other GOP leaders to do just that.

Speaking in the same city where Boehner, an Ohio Republican, recently ridiculed Obama’s economic stewardship, Obama said Boehner’s policies amount to no more than “cut more taxes for millionaires and cut more rules for corporations.”

20 Google search accelerates with ‘instant’ results

By MICHAEL LIEDTKE, AP Technology Writer

13 mins ago

SAN FRANCISCO – Google Inc. stepped on its Internet search accelerator Wednesday by adding a feature that displays results as soon as people begin typing their requests.

The change, called “Google Instant,” is the closest the 12-year-old company has come yet to realizing its founders’ ambition to build a search engine that reads its users’ minds.

The achievement wasn’t lost on Google co-founder Sergey Brin, who jokingly told reporters that the company’s lightning-quick computers are morphing into the “other third” of people’s brains.

21 Network for conservative entertainment launches

By DAVID BAUDER, AP Television Writer

1 hr 34 mins ago

NEW YORK – Actor Kelsey Grammer is an investor and public face supporting a new network that launched Wednesday with entertainment designed to appeal to political conservatives.

RightNetwork, whose first series, “Running,” follows the fortunes of a couple of Tea Party-backed candidates for public office, is also trying a new model to establish itself. It is initially making programming available through video-on-demand services, the Internet and through mobile phones, bypassing the route of traditional TV networks with a spot on channel lineups.

Investors hope that the support of a conservative audience that has made Fox News Channel and radio hosts such as Rush Limbaugh successful could also work for entertainment programming, said Kevin McFeeley, RightNetwork’s president.

22 Fed survey sees slower growth in East and Midwest

By JEANNINE AVERSA, AP Economics Writer

15 mins ago

WASHINGTON – The economy lost strength in late summer as factory production weakened in areas of the East Coast and Midwest.

A survey the Federal Reserve released Wednesday found the slower growth spreading to more regions of the country.

Of the 12 regions the Fed tracks, economic activity slowed or was mixed in five – New York, Philadelphia, Richmond, Atlanta and Chicago. Activity elsewhere was described as modest or pointed to positive developments.

23 European pressure mounts on Iran over stoning case

By RAF CASERT, Associated Press Writer

1 hr 39 mins ago

BRUSSELS – European Union nations and the continent’s biggest human rights organization slammed Iran on Wednesday for its plans to stone a woman convicted of adultery, increasing the global pressure on Tehran over a case it has tried to frame as a criminal matter and not one of human rights.

The plight of Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani , a 43-year-old mother of two, has cast a harsh light on Iran’s version of Islamic justice and taken multiple twists. Iran says it has put the stoning on hold for now but has also indicated Ashtiani could be hanged for her conviction of playing a role in her husband’s 2005 murder.

Even as Iran insists the case is a matter for its own courts and society, the global outcry has grown.

24 Oracle plans to give Hurd $950,000 annual salary

By ANDREW VANACORE, AP Business Writer

Wed Sep 8, 12:55 pm ET

NEW YORK – Oracle Corp. plans to pay newly appointed co-President Mark Hurd a base salary of $950,000 annually and said the ousted Hewlett-Packard Co. CEO is eligible for a target bonus of $5 million in the current fiscal year.

Oracle released the details of Hurd’s pay package in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Wednesday.

Hurd’s pay package includes stock options totaling 10 million shares. The company said Hurd’s options will carry an exercise price equal to the market value of the shares on the date they are granted, which the filing did not specify. If he stays with the company, Hurd will be awarded options to buy another 5 million shares each year for the next five years.

25 AP Exclusive: Back to work after salmonella case

By MARY CLARE JALONICK, Associated Press Writer

1 hr 33 mins ago

WASHINGTON – The peanut industry executive whose filthy processing plants were blamed in a salmonella outbreak two years ago that killed nine people and sickened hundreds more is back in the business.

Stewart Parnell, former president of the now-bankrupt Peanut Corp. of America, is working as a consultant to peanut companies as the federal government’s criminal investigation against him has languished for more than 18 months, The Associated Press has learned.

Parnell, who invoked the Fifth Amendment to avoid testifying before Congress in February 2009, once directed employees to “turn them loose” after samples of peanuts had tested positive for salmonella and then were cleared in a second test, according to e-mails uncovered at the time by congressional investigators.

26 US terror training in Yemen reflects wider program

By LOLITA C. BALDOR, Associated Press Writer

Wed Sep 8, 1:34 pm ET

WASHINGTON – Seldom visible in the Yemeni mountains, the elite U.S. commandos training the Yemen’s military represent the Obama administration’s quest to fight terrorism without inflaming anti-American sentiment.

That balancing act has become an administration trademark, funneling millions of dollars in aid and low-profile military trainers to countries like Pakistan and Yemen in order to take on a more diverse, independent and scattered al-Qaida network.

The scope and amount of the military training in Yemen has grown slowly, reflecting the Pentagon’s intention to tackle the terror threat while still being sensitive to fears that a larger American footprint in Yemen could help fuel the insurgency.

27 Chicago mayor race wide open as Daley steps aside

By DEANNA BELLANDI, Associated Press

1 hr 10 mins ago

CHICAGO – Mayor Richard M. Daley said Wednesday that he will not endorse anyone to replace him as leader of the nation’s third-largest city as speculation grew about who would emerge as a front-runner from a long list of potential contenders, including one-time aide and current White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel.

White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said Wednesday he has “no doubt” that Emanuel will weigh his future options now that the race for Chicago mayor is wide open. Emanuel has made no secret of wanting to run for Chicago mayor one day.

“Obviously something like that doesn’t come around a lot,” Gibbs told reporters traveling with the president to Ohio. “I presume that Rahm will take some time and make a decision about that.”

28 Grim outlook for Democrats puts House up for grabs

By JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS, Associated Press Writer

Tue Sep 7, 9:01 pm ET

WASHINGTON – Their control of the House in peril, Democrats are scratching to survive in races all across the country. Disgruntled voters, a sluggish economy and vanishing enthusiasm for President Barack Obama have put 75 seats or more – the vast majority held by Democrats – at risk of changing hands.

The party could become a victim of its own successes during the past two elections, when candidates were swept into power by antipathy for President George W. Bush and ardor for Obama. Now, eight weeks from Election Day, the Democrats are bracing for the virtual certainty of lost House seats and scrambling to hold back a wave that could hand the GOP the 40 it needs to command a majority

Obama, grasping for a way to turn the tide, on Wednesday plans to propose $30 billion in new investment tax breaks for businesses to go along with tens of billions in spending he called for on Labor Day to invigorate the slow recovery. But even if Congress acts on the requests – a long shot in a highly charged political season – there’s little time left for Democrats to salvage their election chances.

29 UN reports over 500 rapes in eastern Congo

By ANITA SNOW, Associated Press Writer

Tue Sep 7, 9:01 pm ET

UNITED NATIONS – The United Nations reported Tuesday that more than 500 systematic rapes were committed by armed combatants in eastern Congo since late July – more than double the number previously reported – and accepted partial responsibility for not protecting citizens.

U .N. Assistant Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Atul Khare told the U.N. Security Council that at least 267 more rapes occurred in another area of the country’s east, in addition to 242 rapes earlier reported in and around Luvungi, a village of about 2,200 people located about 20 miles (30 kilometers) from a U.N. peacekeepers’ camp.

“While the primary responsibility for protection of civilians lies with the state, its national army and police force,” said Khare, “clearly, we have also failed. Our actions were not adequate, resulting in unacceptable brutalization of the population of the villages in the area. We must do better.”

30 WTC steel column installed at ground zero

By DEEPTI HAJELA, Associated Press Writer

Tue Sep 7, 10:12 pm ET

NEW YORK – Officials hoisted a 70-foot piece of World Trade Center steel at ground zero Tuesday and vowed to open the Sept. 11 memorial by next year, although they acknowledged that the ongoing construction at the site would limit where and how the public could visit.

The memorial, with reflecting, waterfall-filled pools set above the footprints of the fallen towers, its wall of victims’ names, its trees and green spaces, is expected to open by the 10th anniversary of the 2001 attacks. Officials have said it would be open to the general public after that.

But the public will only be able to enter the memorial from the western edge of ground zero, while fenced boundaries that surround the site on three other sides of the 8-acre plaza will still be there, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Tuesday.

31 LA police quell 2nd protest over fatal shooting

By RAQUEL MARIA DILLON, Associated Press Writer

2 hrs 42 mins ago

LOS ANGELES – Demonstrators pelted police for a second night in a poor immigrant neighborhood following the fatal shooting of a Guatemalan day laborer who allegedly threatened people with a knife and then turned the weapon on a responding officer.

Officers fired at least two rounds of foam projectiles at demonstrators Tuesday night and 22 people were arrested, mainly for failure to disperse and unlawful assembly, Officer Karen Rayner said.

The disturbance erupted despite police Chief Charlie Beck’s pledge to conduct a full investigation into the Sunday afternoon shooting of Manuel Jamines, 37, in the Westlake district near MacArthur Park, a neighborhood packed with recent immigrants from Central America.

32 Iraq displays hundreds of recovered artifacts

By BARBARA SURK, Associated Press Writer

Tue Sep 7, 9:02 pm ET

BAGHDAD – Iraq displayed hundreds of recovered artifacts Tuesday that were among the country’s looted heritage and span the ages from a 4,400-year-old statue of a Sumerian king to a chrome-plated AK-47 bearing Saddam Hussein’s image.

The 542 pieces are among the most recent artifacts recovered from a heartbreaking frenzy of looting at museums and archaeological sites after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion and in earlier years of war and upheaval. The thefts swept a stunning array of priceless antiquities into the hands of collectors abroad.

So far, 5,000 items stolen since 2003 have been recovered. And culture officials said they hoped the display would encourage more nations to cooperate in the search for 15,000 pieces still missing from the Iraqi National Museum, one of the sites worst-hit by looters after the fall of Baghdad seven years ago.

33 Giddyup! NYC auction to trot out carousel horses

By ULA ILNYTZKY, Associated Press Writer

2 hrs 11 mins ago

NEW YORK – Intricately hand-carved carousel horses, tigers and bears and exquisitely rendered circus posters evoking a bygone era of the fairground as a Disney-esque attraction are going on the auction block.

Sixty antique circus posters and 50 carousel horses and other menagerie figures from the early 1900s are being sold Sept. 25 at Guernsey’s auction house in New York.

Among the carousel figures – consigned by different collectors – is a life-size tiger created by the Dentzel carving studio.

34 Toyota’s largest sedan is a comfy cruiser

By ANN M. JOB, For The Associated Press

Wed Sep 8, 12:15 pm ET

Toyota’s largest sedan sold in America, the Avalon, shows up on some interesting lists. It’s one of the 10 “most comfortable cars” in a Kelley Blue Book ranking. At Automotive.com, the Avalon is among the top 10 “cars for seniors,” and it’s one of the 10 “least expensive to insure” at Insweb.com.

Buyers of the 16.5-foot-long Avalon get a roomy, full-size car with many luxury features and appealing looks that were spruced up for 2011 by a new, shiny grille and higher rear trunk lid. The Avalon is, as Kelley Blue Book reports, eminently comfortable. At the same time, it’s not ostentatious or overwhelming, the way some luxury-branded sedans are.

It is, however, pricey.

35 AP Interview: Canada may determine crossing’s fate

By MATT VOLZ, Associated Press Writer

Wed Sep 8, 12:12 pm ET

HELENA, Mont. – If Canada makes good on its promise to shutter a little-used border post between Montana and Saskatchewan, there may be no choice but to close the U.S. side, even in the middle of an $8.5 million stimulus-funded upgrade, Sen. Jon Tester said Wednesday.

No decision has been made on the fate of Whitetail port, but a suspension of the renovation will continue while options are discussed, Tester told The Associated Press in a telephone interview from his farm in Big Sandy.

“I think it’s going to depend on what Canada does. If Canada closes it, I don’t see that we can have a one-way port,” Tester said. “If they’re willing to discuss (the options), that discussion needs to move ahead very quickly.”

36 Former NM gov is little known but has big ideas

By MIKE GLOVER, AP Political Writer

Wed Sep 8, 6:26 am ET

DAVENPORT, Iowa – Despite two terms as governor of New Mexico and recent visits to 26 states, most Americans have never heard of Gary Johnson.

The former Republican governor is mulling a run for president, and his libertarian views and small government platform fit the disenchantment many voters feel toward Washington. Among his supporters is Texas Republican Rep. Ron Paul, who drew a committed following in his 2008 campaign for president and was quoted in the conservative online website The Daily Caller as saying if he didn’t run again in 2012, the best candidate would be Johnson.

Johnson says he knows most people have never heard of him, but he’s hoping to change that.

37 Abstinent Mormon farmers grow barley for beer

By JOHN MILLER, Associated Press Writer

Wed Sep 8, 3:07 am ET

BOISE, Idaho – Idaho Sen. Mike Crapo might seem like an unlikely person to be pushing a bill to cut federal taxes on small beer-makers: A member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, he abstains from alcohol.

But Crapo’s effort, with senators from Oregon, Massachusetts and Maine, illustrates the deep bond between Idaho Mormons and the beer industry.

Mormon farmers raise barley for Budweiser and Negra Modelo beers, and last year, Mormons in the Idaho Legislature helped kill a plan to raise beer and wine taxes to fund drug treatment, fearing it could hurt farmers.

38 Imam: NYC Islamic center to include other faiths

Associated Press

Wed Sep 8, 12:32 am ET

NEW YORK – A proposed Islamic community center near ground zero will include separate prayer spaces for Muslims, Christians, Jews and people of other faiths, the imam behind plans for the facility wrote in an op-ed piece published online Tuesday.

Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf wrote in The New York Times that the attention surrounding the plans for the $100 million community center just blocks from the site of the Sept. 11 attacks “reflects the degree to which people care about the very American values under debate: recognition of the rights of others, tolerance and freedom of worship.”

He said it was critical that Americans “not back away” from completing the project.

39 Amid deadly attacks, Wyo. landfill draws grizzlies

By MEAD GRUVER, Associated Press Writer

Tue Sep 7, 8:39 pm ET

CLARK, Wyo. – From a grizzly bear’s perspective, the small landfill in this tiny northwest Wyoming community might smell like a buffet dinner, with dead livestock and meat processing waste dumped in a pit not far from the other trash.

Environmentalist Hilary Eisen with the Greater Yellowstone Coalition calls the situation in Clark “very worrisome,” with only a short wire fence standing between the landfill and any hungry grizzlies drawn by the scent.

“Bears coming into places where humans are, such as garbage dumps or other places, and recognizing that as a food source, is one of the first steps toward creating a dangerous bear,” Eisen said.

Does the Obama Administration take Sexism and Women’s Votes Seriously?

That has been brought into question by the White House decision to accept Alan Simpson’s “apology” for his offensive ans sexist letter to Ashley Carson of the Older Women’s League. Donna L. Wagner, President of the Older Women’s League, sent a letter to President Barack Obama calling for Mr. Simpson to be “canned” and questioning the Obama Administration’s stand on sexism and sexual discrimination.

OWL’s members believe that choosing to keep Mr. Simpson as your co-chair sends a message that your Administration does not take sexism seriously and also that you are not concerned about Mr. Simpson’s views regarding Social Security. There are a number of occasions where racial discrimination appeared both within government and elsewhere, and where your Administration acted swiftly and appropriately to correct wrongdoing. Why is one form of discrimination any different from another?

As Jane Hamsher says, “Ouch”.

This is looking like a pattern of sexism in this White House. While the President has several women in his cabinet, only Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, can really be considered a close advisor with daily contact and immediate access. Yes, he has successfully appointed two women to the Supreme Court neither is really a liberal nor will be counsel to Mr. Obama.

Dawn Johnsen’s nomination, a more than qualified lawyer to head the Office of Legal Council, was left to languish for 14 months before she withdrew her name in frustration. The administration opined that her appointment was held up by holds from Republican and Blue Dog Senators but when Mr. Obama proceeded to make several recess appointments, Ms. Johnsen was not among them. Why?

Then there is that little matter of the President’s Economic Advisor, Larry Summers and his Treasury Secretary, Timothy Geithner and that now has the appearance of an “Old Boys Club”. Summers’ history of sexism is well known and the primary reason he was forced to resign as President of Harvard. The resignation of Christina Romer from the Council after her sage advice about the stimulus package size was completely eliminated from the report to the President, her access to the Oval office limited, as well as, testy clashes with Summers, is consistent with Mr. Summers’ past behavior towards women. Mr. Geithner doesn’t fare much better. His condescending exchanges with Elizabeth Warren during hearings by the Congressional Oversight Panel on TARP, are revealing in his contemptuous tone.

As has been pointed out by others this was not Timothy Geithner’s “first clash with women in power”.

One of his first acts in the role of Treasury Secretary was to attempt to push out FDIC Chairwoman Shelia Bair. As Rep. Barney Frank observed: “I think part of the problem now, to be honest, is Sheila Bair has annoyed the ‘old boys’ club…we have several regulators up in the tree house with a ‘no girls allowed’ sign…”

The other major problem the Obama Administration has is the recent passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act which is a major set back for women’s reproductive rights and access to safe, affordable abortions. The bill allows states to ban on abortion coverage in private insurance exchanges which are already  restricted in various federal medical programs. Now President Obama is seeking to ban access to abortions in high risk pools that puts women with life threatening health issues at even greater risk should they need the procedure as a life saving measure.

Michelle Chen of Colorline pointed out that is even worse for poor, minority and immigrant women

According to Raising Women’s Voices, while the federal subsidies and Medicaid expansions will broaden women’s access to the mainstream health care system, the new benefits come at the expense of reproductive health for the most vulnerable:

   * Women on Medicaid and those who will become eligible for Medicaid in 2014 will not be able to use their coverage for abortion services in most cases, except in the circumstances stated above, or if they live in one of the 17 states that use state-only dollars to provide abortion coverage under Medicaid.

   * Low-income women receiving care at Community Health Centers still will not be able to receive federally-subsidized abortion services, making it more difficult for CHCs to provide this care.

   * New funding for ineffective abstinence-only sex education. Title V, the federal abstinence-only-until-marriage program is resuscitated and given $50 million a year for five years.

Additionally, immigrants, regardless of legal status, will continue to face discriminatory restrictions under the pending health reforms. This includes a five-year mandatory wait to qualify for federal Medicaid services for green card holders, along with a total ban for undocumented women.

The health care system is at the cusp of major changes in the coming years, delivering a mix of help and hurt. But for the women whose reproductive health needs have always been ignored in Washington, the biggest change they’ll see could be from bad to worse.

These men and polices are supported by the Obama Administration and the Democratic Congress. If the President and the Democrats expect Independent, Liberal, and moderate Republican women to continue to vote for them, this isn’t the way to get their votes.

h/t to Jane Hamsher @ FDL

Glenn Greenwald @ Salon

Michelle Chen @ Colorlines

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.

What happened to the Republican lead over the Democrats that the MSM isn’t mentioning? It evaporated but as Steve Benen points out in the Washington Monthly it is “crickets” from everyone who was touting the 10 point lead that Republicans had last week.

SO MUCH FOR THE GREAT GALLUP FREAK-OUT…. Last week, Gallup’s generic-ballot tracking poll showed Republicans leading Democrats by 10, 51% to 41%. It was billed as the GOP’s biggest Gallup lead in the history of humanity, and the results generated massive media attention, including a stand-alone Washington Post piece on page A2. It was iron-clad evidence, we were told, of impending Democratic doom.

snip

Wouldn’t you know it, a week later, that massive, unprecedented, world-changing lead Republicans enjoyed is gone. The new Gallup numbers  show the GOP losing five points and Dems gaining five points, leaving the parties tied at 46%. Is there any coherent rationale to explain a 10-point swing in Dems’ favor over the last week? Of course not.

snip

Indeed, take Chris Cillizza, for example. Last week, the Gallup generic ballot was the lead story in his “Morning Fix” column, and he devoted more than 500 words to the results. Today, Cillizza’s “Morning Fix” column doesn’t mention the new Gallup results at all.

When the media culture decides poll results that Republicans like are more newsworthy than results Democrats like, there’s a problem.

So much for that “Liberal Press” bias. eh

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

Joan Walsh: Are Democrats toast in November?

Imagine Boehner hosting Lily Ledbetter for an equal-pay unsigning ceremony, while McConnell cuts kids’ health care!

Tuesday was the official first day of the political season, with Labor Day finally behind us, and I woke up to this screaming headline in Politico’s Playbook: “New wave of polls points to Nov. blowout – Stu Rothenberg moves 20 House races toward GOP.” Cable TV was dominated by similar apocalyptic reports from the future, mainly based on two new polls with bad news for Democrats.

The Wall St. Journal/NBC News poll found that Republicans have a 9 point advantage in generic national ballot preferences; the Washington Post/ABC poll found the GOP held a 13 point lead. (It’s worth noting, however, that Gallup’s weekly tracking poll, which found a 10 point GOP lead last week, has the parties tied today; go figure.) There was other disturbing news in the two media polls, most notably that voters have gotten less confident in the Democrats’ ability to fix the economy and now trust Republicans more on that front.

snip

I don’t want to sugarcoat the Democrats’ obstacles from here to November. It doesn’t look great. But there’s an MSM groupthink going on where for now, there’s a rush to be the one to declare the Dems are in the WORST trouble. Soon, someone will decide to get attention by going counterintuitive, and suggest things aren’t so bad for the Dems. Then, finally, we’ll have the actual election and know what happened.

Michael Tomasky: Taxes and inequality (and Lady Gaga’s meat bikini)

Peter Orszag, Obama’s former budget director, wrote a buzzy column (as in, it’s getting some) in the Times today in which he came out for extending the Bush tax cuts for all taxpayers, upper-bracket ones included, through 2013, and then letting them all expire (middle- and lower-brackets included).

Robert Gibbs came out today and said no, the president doesn’t agree, and he still supports letting the cut expire (which it will do next year, under the rules of how it was passed) for households earning more than $250,000 a year. So Obama is prepared to stand in the fire on this one.

I’m well aware that this is completely impossible, but it would be nice to think that Obama and the Democrats who are with him on this one could hold the line and actually not suffer much politically on this. Something like that could start to change the politics of taxes in this country.

snip

(And finally,) Lady Gaga: I wrote the headlines “taxes and inequality” and decided as I looked at it that it had to be one of the all-time boringest headlines, so I decided to spice it up a bit. Have you seen the photo? Call me a traditionalist, but I think this was a lot more shocking, and it was 44 years ago, back when we taxing people at rates that could sustain a civil society.

Adam Serwer: Burning Flags And Holy Books.

Gen. David Petraeus’ warning that a radical church’s decision to hold a Quran burning “could endanger troops and it could endanger the overall effort,” was punctuated by an angry protest in Kabul yesterday, where protesters burned American flags in effigy and called for President Barack Obama’s death in response.

I’ve long argued that the way Americans treat Islam and Muslims definitely has an effect on the fight against terrorism abroad, but I’m uncomfortable with Petraeus drawing a direct line of responsibility between whether or not American troops live or die and whether or not a group of radicals holds a “burn the Quran day.” There’s something about that statement that crosses the line for me — I just don’t think that in a democracy people in uniform are the proper arbiters of what constitutes appropriate free expression, even when it’s an event with fascist overtones as obvious as a public book burning. Suffice it to say that if Republican elites were committed to tamping down Islamophobic hysteria rather than exploiting it and Democratic officials were less timid about assembling a national-security narrative in which America was strengthened instead of weakened by its tolerance and religious plurality, we wouldn’t be here.

As Blue Texan points  out this morning in Early Morning Swim: Right-Wing Silent after Gen. Petraeus Condemns Koran Burning, Reports Keith Olbermann:

Well, yes – burning Korans is deeply stupid and inflammatory. But, um, so is haphazardly invading, bombing, Predator striking, torturing, and imprisoning hundreds of thousands of people, just for the hell of it.

Just sayin’.

Great video from Countdown well worth watching.

Michelle Chen: State Lawmakers Harden the Colorline in Reproductive Health

A handy legislative round-up from the Center for Reproductive Rights  sums up the many ways state lawmakers have worked to limit women’s reproductive freedom in the past legislative session. And what a year it’s been.

Leading the charge are a slew of proposed bans on abortion coverage in private insurance exchanges under the health care reform program. As of mid-July, five states (Arizona, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Tennessee) had enacted bans. Proposed bans in Florida and Oklahoma were narrowly thwarted by a governor’s veto.

Remember that various federal medical programs already contain abortion restrictions-which the White House may soon quietly but dramatically expand as the health care reform plan is implemented. But advocates point out that some of the recent state-level proposals would go much further, not only by targeting the private insurance market but also banning abortion entirely, without federal law’s explicit exemptions for rape and incest.

The draconian restrictions on women in the Health Care bill was ans still is my primary reason for opposing it. It would not upset me at all if a good portion of this bill were found unconstitutional or was repealed.

Katrina vanden Heuvel: Finding a way out of Afghanistan

Team B efforts have long played an influential role in determining the outcome of intra-elite debates on critical national security issues. In the 1970s, the CIA’s Team B report on Soviet military capabilities, together with the work of the Committee on the Present Danger, encouraged the Carter administration away from détente and toward an arms race with Moscow. And the Project for the New American Century, led by William Kristol and a passel of neo-cons, was influential in swaying the Bush administration toward the invasion of Iraq.

A Team B report to be formally released tomorrow by the Afghanistan Study Group — an ad hoc group of former government officials, well-known academics and policy experts assembled by the New America Foundation — has the potential to be similarly influential. At a moment when the administration and too many members of Congress have failed to explore alternatives to Gen. David Petraeus’s counterinsurgency strategy, the importance of this clear and cogent report can’t be understated.

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