Prime Time

Well, what I’ll be watching is the Little League World Series on ESPN 2; Fairfield All-Stars vs. Pearland, Texas.  However the games only last 6 innings and there’s a definite possibility things will go badly even though we root, root, root for the home team so you’ll want some viewing alternatives.

There is Throwball, the Farves @ the 49ers.  Might be good for yucks.  TV Guide will be a thin sliver beneath the 16th repeat of Mannequin in 3 days.  Thanks for nothing assholes.

TheMomCat will be watching True Blood because she gets HBO.  I’ll note for the record that the two leads just got married.

Later-

Mostly networks are repeating tonight’s premiers, some of which I’ve tried to note above.

MSNBC has To Catch a Predator for you Chris Hansen fans followed by Sex Bunker.  The executives responsible for these abominations are motherfucking perverts.  Literally.

Adult Swim has the Season 3 Premiers of Boondocks It’s a Black President, Huey Freeman and Metalocalypse Renovation Klok (both repeats).  Also the first Season Finale of Dino Stamatopoulos’ new project Mary Shelley’s Frankenhole.

Yahoo TV Listings

Evening Edition

Evening Edition is an Open Thread

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 WikiLeaks founder points at Pentagon over rape claims

by Igor Gedilaghine, AFP

2 hrs 7 mins ago

STOCKHOLM (AFP) – WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange said in an interview published Sunday he believed the Pentagon could be behind a rape allegation against him that was swiftly dropped by Swedish authorities.

His comments came as prosecutors justified their treatment of the 39-year-old Australian, whose whistleblowing website is embroiled in a row with Washington over the publication of secret Afghan war documents.

The Aftonbladet newspaper quoted Assange as saying he did not know who was “hiding behind” the rape claim, which prompted prosecutors to issue a warrant for his arrest on Friday but which was cancelled the following day.

2 Australian PM vows stability despite polls crisis

by William West, AFP

Sun Aug 22, 12:26 pm ET

MELBOURNE (AFP) – Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard Sunday vowed to keep the country stable after a voter backlash produced a rare hung parliament, raising fears of political paralysis and economic pain.

Gillard, whose Labor Party slumped in elections just two months after she deposed an elected leader, said she planned to form a minority government to resolve what analysts called Australia’s biggest political crisis in decades.

“We have robust democratic institutions and processes, and as prime minister I will continue to provide stable and effective government… while the final votes are counted in this election,” she said.

3 Pakistan evacuates thousands in flooded south

by Hasan Mansoor, AFP

Sun Aug 22, 9:06 am ET

KARACHI (AFP) – Pakistani authorities evacuated tens of thousands from flood-threatened areas in the south on Sunday but insisted that the 2.5 million people of Hyderabad were safe from the nation’s worst-ever inundation.

The weak civilian government has faced an outpouring of fury over sluggish relief efforts, while officials are warning the country faces ruinous economic losses of up to 43 billion dollars, ahead of IMF talks this week.

The month-long floods have killed 1,500 people and affected up to 20 million nationwide, according to official tallies, with the threat of disease ever-present in the miserable camps sheltering penniless survivors.

4 China closes factories as green deadline looms

by Allison Jackson, AFP

Sun Aug 22, 2:07 am ET

BEIJING (AFP) – China, facing the risk of embarrassment if it misses a looming environmental deadline, has ordered thousands of companies to close high-polluting plants as its leadership vies to retool economic growth.

Beijing has pledged to slash China’s energy consumption per unit of gross domestic product by 20 percent between 2006 and 2010, as the world’s biggest greenhouse gas emitter seeks to reduce pollution and clean up its environment.

Official data suggest China is likely to miss the year-end deadline — potentially causing red faces for top leaders who have trumpeted efforts to curb emissions growth and develop renewable energy.

5 Four US soldiers killed in day of Afghan violence

by Usman Sharifi, AFP

Sun Aug 22, 11:51 am ET

KABUL (AFP) – Four US soldiers were killed Sunday while fighting the Taliban in Afghanistan, NATO said, as the insurgents appeared to step up their campaign against officials and election candidates.

The four American troopers died in three separate incidents, in eastern and southern Afghanistan, NATO’s International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said.

ISAF spokesman US Air Force Master Sergeant Jason Haag confirmed all four were Americans.

6 Egypt steps up hunt for stolen Van Gogh painting

by Ines Bel Aiba, AFP

Sun Aug 22, 11:33 am ET

CAIRO (AFP) – Egypt on Sunday stepped up the search for a Van Gogh painting valued at 55 million dollars stolen in broad daylight from a Cairo museum where the surveillance cameras and alarms had long been defunct.

The work identified as “Poppy Flowers” was stolen from the Mahmoud Khalil museum on Saturday after it was cut out of its frame.

Police were focusing their search on the country’s air and sea ports, a security official told AFP, adding that museum staff will be interrogated and that state prosecutors have launched two separate investigations.

7 Calm in Haiti after Jean candidacy rejected

by Clarens Renois, AFP

Sun Aug 22, 6:07 am ET

PORT-AU-PRINCE (AFP) – UN peacekeepers patrolled Haitian communities Sunday after electoral officials rejected international hip-hop star Wyclef Jean’s candidacy in Haiti’s November 28 presidential election.

But despite fears of unrest, the city appeared calm.

Jean, who has a strong following among Haiti’s youth, was the best known of the 15 candidates disqualified from running.

8 Pakistan battles economic pain of floods

by Sajjad Tarakzai, AFP

Sun Aug 22, 2:11 am ET

ISLAMABAD (AFP) – Pakistan is courting IMF help to alleviate the threat of economic ruin as enormous floods wipe out farmland and industry, triggering UN warnings that the restive country faces years of pain.

Authorities Sunday were evacuating people from a town and flood-hit villages in the south from encroaching floodwaters, which nationwide have killed 1,500 people and affected up to 20 million, according to official tallies.

Pakistan’s weak civilian government has faced an outpouring of public fury over sluggish relief efforts, while officials warn the country faces economic losses of up to 43 billion dollars.

9 Pakistan braced for more floods as aid tops $800 million

By Robert Birsel, Reuters

Sun Aug 22, 8:33 am ET

SHADADKOT, Pakistan (Reuters) – More than $800 million has been donated or pledged to help Pakistan’s flood victims, the foreign minister said in Sunday, as hundreds of thousands of people in the south feared more destruction.

Rising waters in Sindh province threatened to wreak havoc in U.S. ally Pakistan in a catastrophe that has made the government more unpopular and may help Islamist militants gain supporters.

Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi expressed gratitude for the $815.58 million in international assistance to ease the suffering from one of the worst disasters in Pakistan’s history.

10 Markets nervous as Australia faces hung parliament

By Rob Taylor, Reuters

Sun Aug 22, 8:40 am ET

MELBOURNE (Reuters) – Australia’s two major parties wooed independent lawmakers on Sunday after an inconclusive election left the nation facing its first hung parliament since 1940 and set up financial markets for a sell-off.

The Australian dollar and shares were likely to fall when trading resumes on Monday, analysts said, with the vote count threatening to drag on for days and both the ruling Labor party and opposition seemingly unable to win a majority.

“The uncertainty is going to be a real killer to the financial markets,” said economist Craig James of Commsec, suggesting the Australian dollar could fall a cent or more.

11 Big-spending novices now lag in Florida campaigns

By Jane Sutton, Reuters

Sun Aug 22, 10:55 am ET

MIAMI (Reuters) – A pair of wealthy outsiders who spent their way to prominence in Florida’s Senate and governor’s races now lag behind the political insiders backed by the party hierarchies in Tuesday’s primary election.

The free-spending novices, real estate billionaire Jeff Greene and healthcare multimillionaire Rick Scott, held double-digit leads over their opponents in July but slipped steadily as their rivals turned the spotlight on the newcomers’ business dealings and character.

“Money can only go so far,” said Peter Brown, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute. “It made two guys nobody ever heard of front-runners. It can’t necessarily get you over the top.”

12 US troops unlikely to resume combat duties in Iraq

By LOLITA C. BALDOR, Associated Press Writer

18 mins ago

WASHINGTON – It would take “a complete failure” of the Iraqi security forces for the U.S. to resume combat operations there, the top American commander in Iraq said as the final U.S. fighting forces prepared to leave the country.

With a major military milestone in sight, Gen. Ray Odierno said in interviews broadcast Sunday that any resumption of combat duties by American forces is unlikely.

“We don’t see that happening,” Odierno said. The Iraqi security forces have been doing “so well for so long now that we really believe we’re beyond that point.”

13 4 US troops killed in eastern Afghanistan

By RAHIM FAIEZ, Associated Press Writer

19 mins ago

KABUL, Afghanistan – Four U.S. troops were killed in fighting in eastern and southern Afghanistan on Sunday, and a former guerrilla leader who battled Soviet invaders decades ago was killed by a roadside bomb in the country’s north.

Three of the U.S. casualties died in insurgent attacks and one was killed by a homemade bomb, NATO said.

The deaths bring the number of international forces killed in Afghanistan this month to 42, including 28 Americans, according to a count by The Associated Press. Sixty-six American troops were killed in July, making it the deadliest month for U.S. forces in Afghanistan since the 2001 invasion.

14 Rallies over mosque near ground zero get heated

By VERENA DOBNIK, Associated Press Writer

7 mins ago

NEW YORK – The proposed mosque near ground zero drew hundreds of fever-pitch demonstrators Sunday, with opponents carrying signs associating Islam with blood, supporters shouting, “Say no to racist fear!” and American flags waving on both sides.

The two leaders of the construction project, meanwhile, defended their plans, though one suggested that organizers might eventually be willing to discuss an alternative site. The other, Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, said during a Middle East trip that the attention generated by the project is actually positive and that he hopes it will bring greater understanding.

Around the corner from the cordoned-off old building that is to become a 13-story Islamic community center and mosque, police separated the two groups of demonstrators. There were no reports of physical clashes but there were some nose-to-nose confrontations, including a man and a woman screaming at each other across a barricade under a steady rain.

15 Farms recalling eggs share suppliers, other ties

By MARY CLARE JALONICK, Associated Press Writer

21 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Two Iowa farms that recalled more than a half-billion eggs linked to as many as 1,300 cases of salmonella poisoning share suppliers of chickens and feed as well as ties to an Iowa business routinely cited for violating state and federal law.

Food and Drug Administration investigators have yet to determine the cause of the salmonella outbreaks at Wright County Egg and Hillandale Farms. The FDA investigation could take months, and sources of contamination are often difficult to find.

The number of illnesses, which can be life-threatening, especially to those with weakened immune systems, is expected to increase. The most common symptoms are diarrhea, abdominal cramps and fever eight to 72 hours of eating a contaminated product.

16 LA unveils $578M school, costliest in the nation

By CHRISTINA HOAG, Associated Press Writer

1 hr 1 min ago

LOS ANGELES – Next month’s opening of the Robert F. Kennedy Community Schools will be auspicious for a reason other than its both storied and infamous history as the former Ambassador Hotel, where the Democratic presidential contender was assassinated in 1968. With an eye-popping price tag of $578 million, it will mark the inauguration of the nation’s most expensive public school ever.

The K-12 complex to house 4,200 students has raised eyebrows across the country as the creme de la creme of “Taj Mahal” schools, $100 million-plus campuses boasting both architectural panache and deluxe amenities.

“There’s no more of the old, windowless cinderblock schools of the ’70s where kids felt, ‘Oh, back to jail,'” said Joe Agron, editor-in-chief of American School & University, a school construction journal. “Districts want a showpiece for the community, a really impressive environment for learning.”

17 Watch out for Yellowstone bears – they’re hungry

By MATTHEW BROWN, Associated Press Writer

24 mins ago

BILLINGS, Mont. – Yellowstone’s grizzlies are going to be particularly hungry this fall, and that means more dangerous meetings with humans in a year that is already the area’s deadliest on record.

Scientists report that a favorite food of many bears, nuts from whitebark pine cones, is scarce. So as grizzlies look to put on some major pounds in preparation for the long winter ahead, scientists say, they will be looking for another source of protein – meat – and running into trouble along the way.

Wildlife managers already report bears coming down off the mountains and into areas frequented by hunters, berry pickers and hikers.

18 Calif. GOP hopes statewide slate lifts others, too

By JULIET WILLIAMS, Associated Press Writer

23 mins ago

SAN DIEGO – For the first time in memory, California Republicans have a diverse statewide slate of candidates to field this fall, a lineup their state party chairman calls “an inspirational ticket.” Coupled with national momentum for conservatives, the California GOP is hoping this might be their breakthrough year.

Yet it’s far from clear whether voters in California, where Democrats have a nearly 15-point voter registration advantage, will see the same glitter the GOP faithful perceive.

Their candidates have been pushing for smaller government, fewer regulations on businesses and lower taxes. Democrats have countered that the Republican Party is just promoting what it always has – a pro-business agenda that punishes the middle class and working class.

19 AP Exclusive: Japanese mayor defends dolphin hunts

By JAY ALABASTER, Associated Press Writer

1 hr 36 mins ago

TAIJI, Japan – As children in inner tubes bob on the calm waters of this small ocean cove, a 550-pound (250-kilogram) dolphin zips through the crowd in pursuit of raw squid tossed out by a trainer.

Niru, a Risso’s dolphin caught locally, seems unbothered by all the people and the squeals of surprise and delight. The cove is packed – it’s a bright summer Sunday and hundreds of families have come.

But in two weeks, the waters of the cove will turn blood red, as it becomes a holding pen for annual hunts that capture and kill hundreds of dolphins each year.

20 Wyclef Jean: I’m not giving up my bid for prez yet

By TAMARA LUSH, Associated Press Writer

2 hrs 25 mins ago

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti – Hip-hop singer Wyclef Jean said Sunday that he is not abandoning his presidential bid just yet and will try to get the courts to overturn a decision disqualifying him from the race.

Speaking to The Associated Press by telephone from his home in Croix des Bouquets, Jean said his lawyers will file an appeal with the national electoral dispute office.

Jean said that he has a document “which shows everything is correct” and that he and his aides “feel that what is going on here has everything to do with Haitian politics.”

21 Thousands stay in Pakistan floods to protect homes

By TIM SULLIVAN, Associated Press Writer

Sun Aug 22, 10:43 am ET

HAMDANI LEGARI, Pakistan – The old man stepped carefully through his village, dodging craters as deep as graves where they had been mining soil for embankments to hold back the floodwaters. Already, nearly half this village of tenant farmers had been destroyed. The crops wiped out.

But Mohammed Ayoub and his neighbors weren’t leaving, not unless all the mud houses collapsed. It wasn’t about pride, or a farmer’s love for his village or the land he sows. It was a straightforward financial equation: They couldn’t afford to lose what little they had left.

If, to an outsider, their belongings might look inconsequential – some goats, a couple buffalos, cheap metal cooking pots and transistor radios – it was everything to them. And with no way to take their possessions with them, they were not going to leave them for the looters.

22 Swedish prosecutors defend WikiLeaks about-face

By KARL RITTER, Associated Press Writer

2 hrs 10 mins ago

STOCKHOLM – Swedish prosecutors defended their handling of a rape allegation against the founder of WikiLeaks, saying Sunday that they had made no mistakes in issuing an arrest warrant and withdrawing it less than a day later.

Wikileaks founder Julian Assange said the short-lived warrant had damaged his group nonetheless.

The Swedish Prosecution Authority said an “on-call” prosecutor issued an arrest warrant for Assange late Friday only to see it revoked the next day by a higher-ranked prosecutor, who found no grounds to suspect him of rape.

23 Busch sweeps all 3 Bristol races

By JENNA FRYER, AP Auto Racing Writer

Sun Aug 22, 12:10 am ET

BRISTOL, Tenn. – As Kyle Busch crossed the finish line for a three-race sweep, his crew quickly credited the driver for his role in the record-setting moment.

“We are in the presence of greatness,” a team member said over the radio.

Indeed, they were.

24 In new posters, Mubarak’s son for Egypt president?

By MAGGIE MICHAEL and TAREK EL-TABLAWY, Associated Press Writers

Sun Aug 22, 9:59 am ET

CAIRO – Posters have sprouted up around Egypt promoting President Hosni Mubarak’s younger son as the country’s next leader, in the most overt campaign yet for a controversial father-son succession in this key U.S. Arab ally.

For the last decade, it has been believed that Gamal Mubarak is being groomed to succeed his 82-year-old father, who has ruled Egypt for nearly 30 years. But the idea of father-son succession has raised deep opposition among many Egyptians.

Even some within the ruling party are thought to be unconvinced, and Gamal – a 46-year-old investment banker turned politician – has little popular base.

25 AP Enterprise: Spill bound BP, feds together

By HARRY R. WEBER, Associated Press Writer

Sat Aug 21, 9:34 pm ET

NEW ORLEANS – For months, the U.S. government talked with a boot-on-the-neck toughness about BP, with the president wondering aloud about whose butt to kick.

But privately, it worked hand-in-hand with the oil giant to cap the runaway Gulf well and chose to effectively be the company’s banker – allowing future drilling revenues to potentially be used as collateral for a victim compensation fund.

Now, with a new round of investigative hearings set to begin Monday on BP’s home turf and the disaster largely off the front pages, there’s worry BP PLC could get a slap on the wrist from its behind-the-scenes partner. That could trickle down to states hurt by the spill and hoping for large fines because they may share in the pie.

26 Man whose conviction was overturned still fighting

By BILL DRAPER, Associated Press Writer

24 mins ago

LEE’S SUMMIT, Mo. – After Ted White Jr. was wrongfully convicted of molesting his 12-year-old stepdaughter, his parents poured everything they had into clearing their son’s name.

When he won his freedom after finding out that the detective who led the sex-abuse investigation was his estranged wife’s secret lover, White wanted someone to pay – to pay the legal bills and to pay for what he went through during his nearly six years behind bars.

Now, more than five years after his release, he’s still waiting for the Kansas City suburb of Lee’s Summit to do what it once promised – pay the multimillion-dollar court judgment against former Detective Richard McKinley.

Rant of the Week: Stephen Colbert : The Word

The Colbert Report
The Word – What If You Threw a Peace and Nobody Came?
www.colbertnation.com
Colbert Report Full Episodes 2010 Election Fox News

No Way Out: The Greatest Depression, & Becoming The USSR

(2 pm. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

Daniel Tencer writing at RawStory Friday reported that “The US economic recovery in recent quarters is little more than a “cover-up” and the world is headed for a “Greatest Depression,” complete with social unrest and class warfare, says a renowned economic forecaster. Gerald Celente, head of the Trends Research Institute, told Yahoo! News’ Tech Ticker that there’s no risk of a “double-dip recession” because the first “dip” never ended.”

“We’re saying there’s no double dip, it never ended,” Celente said. “We’re looking at the Greatest Depression. There’s no way out of this without [rebuilding] productive capacity. You can’t print [money to get] out of it.”

“Celente said the current unemployment rate, if it were measured as it was measured during the Great Depression, would be around 17.5 percent. And he expects that number to rise to around 22 percent in the coming years.”

“One of the good businesses to get in to may be guillotines,” Celente quipped. “Because there’s a real off-with-their-heads fever going on. People are really fed up.”

“We went from a country that used to be merchants, craftspeople, manufacturers, to clerks and cashiers,” Celente said. “We have to bring manufacturing back to America.”

Celente also talked with Tech Tickers interviewers Friday about his view of the direction of the US ’empire’, saying that what he and Trends Research Institute sees is effectively America ‘becoming’ the USSR: “In a lot of ways, it’s empire decline. They ran the cold war race and they lost. We’re still in the race”, “We’re also seeing similarities, of the United States breaking up like the USSR did”. “The country is too big to be run by a bunch of people in tight suits, white shirts and red ties. They’re not pulling it off. They’re empty suits.”, he opines.

Celente describes some of the similarities, including:

A rotten political system: He compares politicians (Democrats and Republicans alike) to “Mafioso” and says campaign contributions are really thinly disguised “bribes and payoffs.”

Crony capitalism: Like in the USSR of old, Celente laments that so much of America’s wealth (93%) is controlled by such a small group small portion of its population (10%). Owing to that concentration of wealth, the government makes policies designed to reward “the bigs” at the expense of average citizens (see: Bailouts, banks).

Military-industrial complex: The USSR went bankrupt fighting the cold war and Celente fears the U.S. is “squandering its greater but still finite resources on a gargantuan defense budget, fighting unwinnable hot wars and feeding an insatiable military stationed on hundreds of bases worldwide.”

Crossposted now at DailyKos, fwiw…

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.

The Sunday Talking Heads:

This Week with Christiane Amanpour:

Lots of exclusive interviews this Sunday, Afghanistan’s President, Hamid Karzai and Daisy Khan, wife of Imam Feisal Abdul-Rauf, a lead organizer of the controversial Islamic center near Ground Zero who will be joined by Rabbi Joy Levitt, head of the Jewish Community Center in Manhattan, considered a model for the Islamic center.

The Roundtable with the usual suspects, George Will, former Clinton Labor Secretary Robert Reich, Judy Woodruff of the PBS News Hour and Bloomberg’s Al Hunt, who will look at the Iraq withdrawal and the Afghanistan surge.

Face the Nation with Bob Schieffer:

His guests are Gen. Ray Odierno, Commander of U.S. Forces in Iraq, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and Greg Mortenson, Author of “Three Cups of Tea and Stones into Schools”.

The Chris Matthews Show:

Mr. Matthews guests will be Gloria Borger, CNN, Senior Political Analyst, Dan Rather, HDNet, Global Correspondent, John Heilemann, New York Magazine, National Political Correspondent and Michele Norris, NPR

Host, All Things Considered. They will discuss 50 years since the historic Kennedy-Nixon Campaign: parallels for Obama and will the GOP yield to its right wing as it did in the Goldwater year?

Meet the Press with David Gregory :

Mr. Gregory’s guest will be GOP Leader Sen. Mitch McConnell who talk about the up coming November elections. Fmr. House Majority Leader Dick Armey (R-TX) versus Gov. Jennifer Granholm (D-MI). will debate spending and your taxes & the Tea Party’s impact on the future of American politics.

Later the Roundtable discussion on the withdrawal of combat troops from Iraq, the controversy over a Muslim groups plans to build a mosque near Ground Zero in Manhattan, and the renewed economic downturn with Republican Candidate for New York Governor, Fmr. Rep. Rick Lazio, The Atlantic’s Jeffrey Goldberg; The Wall Street Journal’s Paul Gigot, and BBC World News America’s Katty Kay.

State of the Union with Candy Crowley:

U.S. Commander in Iraq Gen. Ray Odierno will join Ms Crowley to discuss the withdrawal of combat troops from Iraq and the future of the region. Then former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Richard Myers (Ret.), former U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Zalmay Khalilzad and the former Commander of U.S. Central Command Admiral William Fallon (Ret.) will discuss Iraq. Then she will be joined former Democratic National Cmte. Chairman Howard Dean  on the upcoming midterm elections, the Obama administration’s economic agenda, and his recent comments regarding the proposed Islamic Center at Ground Zero.

Let’s see if Dr. Dean can explain exactly what he meant by “compromise”.

Fareed Zakaris: GPS:

Mr. Zakaris is joined by Peter Beinart of the Daily Beast and Brett Stephens of the Wall Street Journal in an intelligent debate on why the project should or shouldn’t go forward. Imran Kahn, the cricket legend and now one of Pakistan’s most prominent politicians, will discuss the devastating floods in Pakistan and just how poor the Pakistani government’s response has been.

The GPS panel, including Niall Ferguson of Harvard University, looks at what the future holds for China and just what this means for the United States.

Alberto Gonzales: Changing the 14th Amendment won’t solve our immigration crisis

Most recently, some politicians and concerned citizens have expressed a desire to amend the 14th Amendment of our Constitution, which says in Section 1, “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.” Proponents want to discourage undocumented mothers from crossing our borders to give birth to children derogatorily referred to as “anchor babies,” who by law are American citizens. Such a change is difficult to carry out, as it should be, requiring a new amendment ratified by three-quarters of the states.

I do not support such an amendment. Based on principles from my tenure as a judge, I think constitutional amendments should be reserved for extraordinary circumstances that we cannot address effectively through legislation or regulation. Because most undocumented workers come here to provide for themselves and their families, a constitutional amendment will not solve our immigration crisis. People will certainly continue to cross our borders to find a better life, irrespective of the possibilities of U.S. citizenship.

As the nation’s former chief law enforcement officer and a citizen who believes in the rule of law, I cannot condone anyone coming into this country illegally. However, as a father who wants the best for my own children, I understand why these parents risk coming to America — especially when there is little fear of prosecution. If we want to stop this practice, we should pass and enforce comprehensive immigration legislation rather than amend our Constitution.

Frank Rich: How Fox Betrayed Petraeus

THE “ground zero mosque,” as you may well know by now, is not at ground zero. It’s not a mosque but an Islamic cultural center containing a prayer room. It’s not going to determine President Obama’s political future or the elections of 2010 or 2012. Still, the battle that has broken out over this project in Lower Manhattan – on the “hallowed ground” of a shuttered Burlington Coat Factory store one block from the New York Dolls Gentlemen’s ClubHere’s what’s been lost in all the screaming. The prime movers in the campaign against the “ground zero mosque” just happen to be among the last cheerleaders for America’s nine-year war in Afghanistan. The wrecking ball they’re wielding is not merely pounding Park51, as the project is known, but is demolishing America’s already frail support for that war, which is dedicated to nation-building in a nation whose most conspicuous asset besides opium is actual mosques.

So virulent is the Islamophobic hysteria of the neocon and Fox News right – abetted by the useful idiocy of the Anti-Defamation League, Harry Reid and other cowed Democrats – that it has also rendered Gen. David Petraeus’s last-ditch counterinsurgency strategy for fighting the war inoperative. How do you win Muslim hearts and minds in Kandahar when you are calling Muslims every filthy name in the book in New York?  – will prove eventful all the same. And the consequences will be far more profound than any midterm election results or any of the grand debates now raging 24/7 over the parameters of tolerance, religious freedom, and the real estate gospel of location, location, location.

(emphasis mine)

Nicholas D. Kristof: Taking Bin Laden’s Side

Is there any doubt about Osama bin Laden’s position on the not-at-ground-zero mosque?

Osama abhors the vision of interfaith harmony that the proposed Islamic center represents. He fears Muslim clerics who can cite the Koran to denounce terrorism.

It’s striking that many American Republicans share with Al Qaeda the view that the West and the Islamic world are caught inevitably in a “clash of civilizations.” Anwar al-Awlaki, the American-born cleric who recruits jihadis from his lair in Yemen, tells the world’s English-speaking Muslims that America is at war against Islam. You can bet that Mr. Awlaki will use the opposition to the community center and mosque to try to recruit more terrorists.

In short, the proposed community center is not just an issue on which Sarah Palin and Osama bin Laden agree. It is also one in which opponents of the center are playing into the hands of Al Qaeda.

Thomas L. Friedman: Surprise, Surprise, Surprise

I just saw the movie “Invictus” – the story of how Nelson Mandela, in his first term as president of South Africa, enlists the country’s famed rugby team, the Springboks, on a mission to win the 1995 Rugby World Cup and, through that, to start the healing of that apartheid-torn land. The almost all-white Springboks had been a symbol of white domination, and blacks routinely rooted against them. When the post-apartheid, black-led South African sports committee moved to change the team’s name and colors, President Mandela stopped them. He explained that part of making whites feel at home in a black-led South Africa was not uprooting all their cherished symbols. “That is selfish thinking,” Mandela, played by Morgan Freeman, says in the movie. “It does not serve the nation.” Then speaking of South Africa’s whites, Mandela adds, “We have to surprise them with restraint and generosity.”

I love that line: “We have to surprise them.” I was watching the movie on an airplane and scribbled that line down on my napkin because it summarizes what is missing today in so many places: leaders who surprise us by rising above their histories, their constituencies, their pollsters, their circumstances – and just do the right things for their countries.

David Sarota: Military Leaders on Iraq Combat: “Our Mission Has Not Changed”

While it may be comforting to see all the “Breaking News” graphics implying that the Iraq War is effectively over, and while it may be reassuring to watch punditry portraying war analysis as a post-mortem, the reality is that this war continues.

Maureen Dowd: Going Mad in Herds

The country is having some weird mass nervous breakdown, with the right spreading fear and disinformation that is amplified by the poisonous echo chamber that is the modern media environment.

The dispute over the Islamic center has tripped some deep national lunacy. The unbottled anger and suspicion concerning ground zero show that many Americans haven’t flushed the trauma of 9/11 out of their systems – making them easy prey for fearmongers.

Many people still have a confused view of Muslims, and the president seems unable to help navigate the country through its Islamophobia.

The Week In Review 8/15 – 21

247 Stories served.  35 per day.

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

Economy- 28

Sunday 8/15 2

Monday 8/16 4

Tuesday 8/17 6

Wednesday 8/18 5

Thursday 8/19 7

Friday 8/20 2

Saturday 8/21 2

Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Iran- 28

Sunday 8/15 4

Monday 8/16 4

Tuesday 8/17 5

Wednesday 8/18 4

Thursday 8/19 4

Friday 8/20 3

Saturday 8/21 4

Pakistan Flooding- 25

Sunday 8/15 3

Monday 8/16 3

Tuesday 8/17 2

Wednesday 8/18 4

Thursday 8/19 5

Friday 8/20 5

Saturday 8/21 3

International- 38

Sunday 8/15 6

Monday 8/16 5

Tuesday 8/17 3

Wednesday 8/18 4

Thursday 8/19 5

Friday 8/20 10

Saturday 8/21 5

National- 85

Sunday 8/15 9

Monday 8/16 11

Tuesday 8/17 14

Wednesday 8/18 18

Thursday 8/19 12

Friday 8/20 13

Saturday 8/21 8

Gulf Oil Blowout Disaster- 17

Sunday 8/15 3

Monday 8/16 5

Wednesday 8/18 2

Thursday 8/19 2

Friday 8/20 3

Saturday 8/21 2

Science- 9

Sunday 8/15 2

Monday 8/16 1

Tuesday 8/17 1

Wednesday 8/18 1

Thursday 8/19 2

Friday 8/20 1

Saturday 8/21 1

Sports- 16

Monday 8/16 4

Tuesday 8/17 3

Wednesday 8/18 1

Thursday 8/19 4

Friday 8/20 1

Saturday 8/21 3

Arts/Fashion- 1

Friday 8/20

On This Day in History: August 22

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

August 22 is the 234th day of the year (235th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 131 days remaining until the end of the year.

on this day in 1950, Althea Gibson became the first African American on the US Tennis Tour.

On this day in 1950, officials of the United States Lawn Tennis Association (USLTA) accept Althea Gibson into their annual championship at Forest Hills, New York, making her the first African-American player to compete in a U.S. national tennis competition.

Growing up in Harlem, the young Gibson was a natural athlete. She started playing tennis at the age of 14 and the very next year won her first tournament, the New York State girls’ championship, sponsored by the American Tennis Association (ATA), which was organized in 1916 by black players as an alternative to the exclusively white USLTA. After prominent doctors and tennis enthusiasts Hubert Eaton and R. Walter Johnson took Gibson under their wing, she won her first of what would be 10 straight ATA championships in 1947.

In 1949, Gibson attempted to gain entry into the USLTA’s National Grass Court Championships at Forest Hills, the precursor of the U.S. Open. When the USLTA failed to invite her to any qualifying tournaments, Alice Marble–a four-time winner at Forest Hills–wrote a letter on Gibson’s behalf to the editor of American Lawn Tennis magazine. Marble criticized the “bigotry” of her fellow USLTA members, suggesting that if Gibson posed a challenge to current tour players, “it’s only fair that they meet this challenge on the courts.” Gibson was subsequently invited to participate in a New Jersey qualifying event, where she earned a berth at Forest Hills.

snip

Though she once brushed off comparisons to Jackie Robinson, the trailblazing black baseball player, Gibson has been credited with paving the way for African-American tennis champions such as Arthur Ashe and, more recently, Venus and Serena Williams. After a long illness, she died in 2003 at the age of 76.

Ms. Gibson became the first African American woman to join the Ladies Professional Golf Association  tour, in 1963, retiring in 1978.

 392 – Arbogast has Eugenius elected Western Roman Emperor.

565 – St. Columba reports seeing a monster in Loch Ness, Scotland.

851 – Erispoe defeats Charles the Bald near the Breton town of Jengland.

1138 – Battle of the Standard between Scotland and England.

1485 – The Battle of Bosworth Field, the death of Richard III and the end of the House of Plantagenet.

1559 – Bartolome Carranza, Spanish archbishop, is arrested for heresy.

1642 – Charles I calls the English Parliament traitors. The English Civil War begins.

1654 – Jacob Barsimson arrives in New Amsterdam. He is the first known Jewish immigrant to America.

1717 – Spanish troops land on Sardinia.

1770 – James Cook’s expedition lands on the east coast of Australia.

1780 – James Cook’s ship HMS Resolution returns to England (Cook having been killed on Hawaii during the voyage).

1791 – Beginning of the Haitian Slave Revolution in Saint-Domingue.

1798 – French troops land in Kilcummin harbour, County Mayo, Ireland to aid Wolfe Tone’s United Irishmen’s Irish Rebellion.

1827 – Jose de La Mar becomes President of Peru.

1831 – Nat Turner’s slave rebellion commences just after midnight in Southampton, Virginia, leading to the deaths of more than 50 whites and several hundred African Americans who are killed in retaliation for the uprising.

1848 – The United States annexes New Mexico.

1849 – The first air raid in history. Austria launches pilotless balloons against the Italian city of Venice.

1851 – The first America’s Cup is won by the yacht America.

1875 – The Treaty of Saint Petersburg between Japan and Russia is ratified, providing for the exchange of Sakhalin for the Kuril Islands.

1864 – Twelve nations sign the First Geneva Convention. The Red Cross is formed.

1901 – Cadillac Motor Company is founded

1902 – Theodore Roosevelt becomes the first President of the United States to ride in an automobile.

1914 – World War I: in Belgium, British and German troops clash for the first time in the war.

1922 – Michael Collins, Commander-in-Chief of the Irish Free State Army is shot dead during an Anti-Treaty ambush at Beal na mBlath, County Cork, during the Irish Civil War.

1926 – Gold is discovered in Johannesburg, South Africa.

1932 – The BBC first experiments with television broadcasting. (See also Timeline of the BBC.)

1941 – World War II: German troops reach Leningrad, leading to the siege of Leningrad.

1942 – World War II: Brazil declares war on Germany and Italy.

1944 – World War II: Romania is captured by the Soviet Union.

1949 – Queen Charlotte earthquake: Canada’s largest earthquake since the 1700 Cascadia earthquake

1950 – Althea Gibson becomes the first black competitor in international tennis.

1952 – The penal colony on Devil’s Island is permanently closed.

1962 – An attempt to assassinate French president Charles de Gaulle fails.

1962 – The NS Savannah, the world’s first nuclear-powered cargo ship, completes its maiden voyage.

1963 – Joe Walker in an X-15 test plane reaches an altitude of 106 km (66 mi).

1966 – Labor movements NFWA and AWOC merge to become the United Farm Workers Organizing Committee (UFWOC), predecessor of the United Farm Workers.

1968 – Pope Paul VI arrives in Bogotá, Colombia. It is the first visit of a pope to Latin America.

1972 – Rhodesia is expelled by the IOC for its racist policies.

1978 – The Frente Sandinista de Liberacion or FSLN occupies national palace in Nicaragua.

1989 – The first ring of Neptune is discovered.

1989 – Nolan Ryan strikes out Rickey Henderson to become the first Major League Baseball pitcher to record 5,000 strikeouts.

1992 – FBI HRT sniper Lon Horiuchi shoots and kills Vicki Weaver during an 11-day siege at her home at Ruby Ridge, Idaho.

1996 – Bill Clinton signs welfare reform into law, representing major shift in US welfare policy

2003 – Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore is suspended after refusing to comply with a federal court order to remove a rock inscribed with the Ten Commandments from the lobby of the Alabama Supreme Court building.

2004 – A version of The Scream and Madonna, two paintings by Edvard Munch, are stolen at gunpoint from a museum in Oslo, Norway.

2006 – Pulkovo Aviation Enterprise Flight 612 crashes near the Russian border over eastern Ukraine, killing all 170 people on board.

2007 – The Texas Rangers rout the Baltimore Orioles 30-3, the most runs scored by a team in modern MLB history.

2007 – The Storm botnet, a botnet created by the Storm Worm, sends out a record 57 million e-mails in one day

Morning Shinbun Sunday August 22




Sunday’s Headlines:

Katrina’s poisoned legacy

Pirate radio tries to beat repression in paradise

USA

In Striking Shift, Small Investors Flee Stock Market

Before salmonella outbreak, egg firm had long record of violations

Europe

Irish terror groups target Conservative party conference in Birmingham

Russia kills suspected mastermind of Moscow Metro disaster

Middle East

Israeli army’s female recruits denounce treatment of Palestinians

As Mission Shifts in Iraq, Risks Linger for Obama

Asia

Debts pushing Pakistan to the brink of ruin

Japan and India in nuclear co-operation talks

Africa

Somali fighters killed in blasts

Katrina’s poisoned legacy

Five years on from the floods that devastated New Orleans and fatally damaged the Bush presidency, the waters have gone, but many of the wounds remain.

By Philip Sherwell in New Orleans

Published: 8:00AM BST 22 Aug 2010


To the roar of the faithful, the New Orleans Saints ran out at the Superdome stadium for their first home game since the perpetual under-achievers claimed American football’s top prize this year.

For the long-suffering fans of a team popularly known as “the Aints” during the lean decades, their crowning as Superbowl champions for the first time was reason enough to celebrate.

But as New Orleans prepares for Sunday’s fifth anniversary of the devastating impact of Hurricane Katrina, it is just as important for the soul of the city that the Superdome has finally shed its status as a grim reminder of that spectacle of human suffering and despair.

Pirate radio tries to beat repression in paradise

Fiji’s democratic opposition hopes to evade military leader’s draconian censorship

By Roger Maynard Sunday, 22 August 2010

This is a story about repression in what many people would think of as some kind of paradise.

In a move inspired by pirate radio stations of the 1960s, political activists in the South Pacific are planning to position a Dutch-registered merchant vessel in international waters off the coast of Fiji to defy censors in the military dictatorship.

Opponents of the coup leader and self-appointed Prime Minister, Commodore Frank Bainimarama, hope to have the station broadcasting news and interviews by the end of next month in an effort to circumvent draconian media laws imposed on the island state’s press, radio and television.

USA

 In Striking Shift, Small Investors Flee Stock Market



By GRAHAM BOWLEY

Published: August 21, 2010


Renewed economic uncertainty is testing Americans’ generation-long love affair with the stock market.

Investors withdrew a staggering $33.12 billion from domestic stock market mutual funds in the first seven months of this year, according to the Investment Company Institute, the mutual fund industry trade group. Now many are choosing investments they deem safer, like bonds.

If that pace continues, more money will be pulled out of these mutual funds in 2010 than in any year since the 1980s, with the exception of 2008, when the global financial crisis peaked.

Before salmonella outbreak, egg firm had long record of violations



By Alec MacGillis

Washington Post Staff Writer

Sunday, August 22, 2010


The Iowa egg producer that federal officials say is at the center of a salmonella outbreak and recalls of more than a half-billion eggs has repeatedly paid fines and settled complaints over health and safety violations and allegations ranging from maintaining a “sexually hostile work environment” to abusing the hens that lay the eggs.

In the past 20 years, according to the public record, the DeCoster family operation, one of the 10 largest egg producers in the country, has withstood a string of reprimands, penalties and complaints about its performance in several states.

Europe

Irish terror groups target Conservative party conference in Birmingham

• Republican dissidents see attack as ‘top prize’ on hit list

• Tory MP Patrick Mercer says threat to mainland is ‘worrying’


Mark Townsend and Toby Helm

The Observer, Sunday 22 August 2010


Irish republican dissident groups are targeting the Conservative party conference this autumn, raising fears of a repeat of the 1984 Brighton attack that nearly killed the then prime minister, Margaret Thatcher.

Sources in Northern Ireland said that the October conference in central Birmingham had emerged as the prize target on a hit list drawn up by resurgent republican paramilitaries. Patrick Mercer, ex-chairman of the Commons subcommittee on counter-terrorism, said former senior police and army intelligence officers had informed him that dissident splinter groups had discussed targeting David Cameron’s first conference as prime minister.

Russia kills suspected mastermind of Moscow Metro disaster

Russia says its security forces have killed Magomedali Vagabov, a top militant thought to have been behind the attacks on the Moscow Metro, which killed 40 people in March.  



The Islamist militant suspected of being the mastermind behind two suicide attacks on the Moscow subway in March has been killed during a clash with police in the Caucasus region of Dagestan, according to Russia’s national anti-terror committee.

Magomedali Vagabov, whom Russia describes as the number-two figure after Doku Umarov in the Islamist insurgency that is plaguing the Russian Northern Caucasus, was killed in the city of Gunib in the mountains of Dagestan, along with four other militants.

“Vagabov was the organizer of the suicide bombings on the Moscow Metro, was actively involved in recruiting youth for the underground and organized the training for the suicide bombers,” the committee said in a statement.

Middle East

Israeli army’s female recruits denounce treatment of Palestinians

Facebook images of an Israeli servicewoman posing with blindfolded Palestinians have caused a storm. Now two former female conscripts have spoken out about their own experiences

Harriet Sherwood

The Observer, Sunday 22 August 2010


It was a single word scrawled on a wall at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem that unlocked something deep inside Inbar Michelzon, two years after she had completed compulsory military service in the Israeli Defence Force.

The word was “occupation”. “I really felt like someone was speaking the unspoken,” she recalled last week in a Tel Aviv cafe. “It was really shocking to me. There was graffiti saying, ‘end the occupation’. And I felt like, OK, now I can talk about what I saw.”

As Mission Shifts in Iraq, Risks Linger for Obama

NEWS ANALYSIS

By PETER BAKER

Published: August 21, 2010  


WASHINGTON – The official end of America’s combat mission in Iraq next week will fulfill the campaign promise that helped vault President Obama to the White House, but it also presents profound risks as he seeks to claim credit without issuing a premature declaration of victory.As columns of vehicles crossed the border and troops arrived to happy homecomings last week, Mr. Obama released a restrained written statement and made a one-sentence reference at a pair of fund-raisers.

Asia

Debts pushing Pakistan to the brink of ruin

The flooding crisis has weakened an economy already struggling to cope with its heavy financial burden. Omar Waraich reports from Islamabad

Sunday, 22 August 2010

Pakistan’s already creaky economy has been pushed to the verge of ruin by the devastating floods of the past month.

With foreign aid only now beginning to trickle in, the impoverished country has been forced to take out further loans while pleading for outstanding ones to be restructured.

Already burdened by heavy debt, the country’s economy has suffered a major setback. Funds will have to be poured into reconstruction efforts while many sectors of the economy, especially agriculture, will suffer losses for up to several months, if not years. So far, the floods have covered a fifth of the country, cost at least 1,600 lives, displaced 4.6 million people, destroyed roads, bridges and schools, damaged power stations and dams, and swamped millions of acres of agricultural land.

Japan and India in nuclear co-operation talks



The BBC  22 August 2010

The Indian and Japanese foreign ministers have held talks on a civil nuclear co-operation agreement.

The Japanese minister, Katsuya Okada, said the decision to start negotiations had been one of the toughest he had ever had to make.

Speaking at a news conference in Delhi, he said that if India conducted nuclear tests Japan would suspend cooperation.

Japan has been hesitant to sign a deal because India is not a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

Mr Okada was holding talks with his counterpart, S M Krishna, during the two-day state visit, an Indian foreign ministry statement said.

Africa

Somali fighters killed in blasts



SUNDAY, AUGUST 22, 2010  

Ten Somali anti-government fighters have been killed by their own bombs after the devices they were preparing went off prematurely in the capital, Mogadishu, the government says.

The mostly foreign fighters died in two separate incidents, 10 while preparing a car bomb and another as he planted a roadside bomb, the information ministry said on Saturday.

“They are three Pakistanis, two Indians, one Afghani, one Algerian, and two Somalis, [and] a leader who was in charge of praying for suicide bombers before they were dispatched,” the ministry said in a statement.

Ignoring Asia A Blog

Prime Time

More Turn Left Racing, the Irwin Tools Night Race.  SNL repeat- Zach Galifianakis hosts, Vampire Weekend performs.

Later-

Boondocks Season 3 Finale, GitS: SAC Interceptor and Decoy (episodes 4 & 5 of the Stand Alone Complex series)

Yahoo TV Listings

Evening Edition

Evening Edition is an Open Thread

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 Sweden cancels rape arrest warrant for Wikileaks founder

by Igor Gedilaghine, AFP

40 mins ago

STOCKHOLM (AFP) – Swedish prosecutors abruptly withdrew an arrest warrant for Wikileaks founder Julian Assange Saturday, saying the head of the website that has riled the Pentagon was no longer suspected of rape.

An investigation into a molestation charge however remained open against the 39-year-old Australian — whose whistleblower site is in coming weeks set to unveil thousands more secret documents about the war in Afghanistan.

Assange and his aides claimed he was the victim of dirty tricks, with a Twitter message attributed to the former hacker saying: “The charges are without basis and their issue at this moment is deeply disturbing.”

2 Australia set for hung parliament as voters punish PM

by Talek Harris, AFP

24 mins ago

SYDNEY (AFP) – Australia faced its first hung parliament in 70 years Saturday after a furious voter backlash against Prime Minister Julia Gillard, who ousted an elected leader just eight weeks ago.

Gillard, who became the country’s first woman prime minister in a sudden party coup, was lagging her conservative rivals in national polls by 70 seats to 72, public broadcaster ABC said as vote counting went deep into the night.

The Labor leader, 48, conceded her centre-left party would not gain the 76 seats needed for an outright majority and would rely on the support of parliament’s projected four independent lawmakers.

3 Aid pours in but UN warns of long road ahead for Pakistan

by Sajjad Tarakzai, AFP

2 hrs 24 mins ago

ISLAMABAD (AFP) – UN chief Ban Ki-moon praised the global community as emergency donations for Pakistan neared 500 million dollars, but warned the flood-stricken nation faces “years of need”.

The Financial Tracking Service (FTS), a UN database that aims to track all donations, showed late Friday that 490.7 million dollars in funding had been collected, with another 325 million dollars pledged.

The United States has given the most, followed by Saudi Arabia and Britain.

4 Late tries give All Blacks Tri-Nations title

by David Legge, AFP

2 hrs 42 mins ago

SOWETO, South Africa (AFP) – New Zealand scored two tries in the final three minutes to snatch a 29-22 victory over South Africa at Soccer City Saturday and clinch the Tri-Nations title.

Captain and flanker Richie McCaw dived over in one corner and replacement back Israel Dagg in the other as the Springboks slumped to a fourth consecutive loss in the southern hemisphere championship after leading for 64 minutes.

It was also a memorable day for All Blacks fly-half Dan Carter, whose third penalty goal 29 minutes into the first half raised his Test tally to a world record 1113 points as he overtook veteran England pivot Jonny Wilkinson.

5 Pakistanis brace for more destructive flooding

By Robert Birsel, AFP

Sat Aug 21, 11:12 am ET

SHAHDADKOT, Pakistan (Reuters) – Residents of a southern Pakistani town fled rising flood waters on Saturday in a new frontline of a disaster that has raised questions about the stability of the U.S.-backed government.

Authorities struggled to shore up an embankment holding back a growing tide on the edge of Shahdadkot, in Sindh province, which aid groups say is still highly vulnerable to floods that have raged through Pakistan for three weeks/

A heavy stream of trucks, tractors and donkey carts transported people away, repeating scenes played out throughout the catastrophe that has made more than four million homeless.

6 Guantanamo judge says sees no torture of Canadian

Reuters

2 hrs 55 mins ago

MIAMI (Reuters) – A military judge has ruled there is no credible evidence that a Canadian prisoner on trial in Guantanamo on murder and terrorism conspiracy charges was tortured into confessing after his capture in Afghanistan.

In a written ruling released by the Pentagon on Friday, Army Colonel Patrick Parrish gave his arguments for rejecting a motion by lawyers of Omar Khadr requesting that confessions made by Khadr to U.S. interrogators should not used as evidence in his trial on grounds they were obtained through torture.

A military tribunal trying Khadr opened proceedings last week at the Guantanamo Bay naval base in Cuba but was suspended for at least a month on August 13 after his main defense lawyer fell ill and was flown to the United States for treatment.

7 Obama chides Republicans on corporate campaign cash

By Jeff Mason, Reuters

Sat Aug 21, 12:16 pm ET

VINEYARD HAVEN, Massachusetts (Reuters) – President Barack Obama revved up his effort on Saturday to curb corporate influence on political campaigns, chiding Republicans for keeping the public “in the dark” by opposing a reform bill.

In his weekly radio and Internet address, Obama said Americans are seeing the ramifications of a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that allowed companies and other groups to spend unlimited amounts of money on political advertising.

Democrats support a bill that would blunt the impact of the court’s January ruling. Republicans have blocked it.

8 Americans still associate Islam with violence

By Daniel Trotta, Reuters

Fri Aug 20, 2:37 pm ET

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The furor over plans to build a Muslim cultural center near the World Trade Center site shows nine years of efforts to separate Islam from association with terrorism have largely failed, experts say.

“I’d take it one step further. I’d say that it’s far, far worse today than it was in the immediate aftermath of 9/11,” said Reza Aslan, a writer and scholar on religion, using the shorthand for the attacks of September 11, 2001.

Public opinion polls show more than 60 percent of Americans oppose building the proposed Muslim cultural center and mosque two blocks from the site known as “Ground Zero.”

9 Lies to cover up crime often draw charges

By Jeremy Pelofsky and James Vicini, Reuters

Sat Aug 21, 1:03 am ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The high-profile cases of pitching great Roger Clemens and former Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich highlight a well-worn strategy by prosecutors: if you can’t bust them for the crime, try nailing them for lying about it.

Prosecutors often charge suspects with making false statements to investigators in part because that is often easier to prove than the more serious allegations and can be used to elicit help from witnesses, especially in corruption and terrorism cases.

Clemens, whose storied professional baseball career included a record seven Cy Young Awards for best pitcher, was indicted on Thursday for perjury, making false statements and obstructing a congressional investigation into players using performance-enhancing drugs. If convicted on all charges, he could face up to 30 years in prison and a $1.5 million fine.

10 BHP sets Potash bid but may need to pay much more

By Michael Smith and Euan Rocha, Reuters

Fri Aug 20, 6:05 pm ET

SYDNEY/TORONTO (Reuters) – BHP Billiton formally launched its hostile takeover bid for Potash Corp on Friday but a poll of investors suggested the world’s biggest miner would need to significantly raise its $39 billion offer to capture the top fertilizer producer.

Potash Corp is already soliciting bidders willing to pay more than BHP’s offer of $130 a share, a source close to the matter said, prompting speculation that China, one of the world’s biggest potash importers, may join the fray.

The source said Potash Corp was confident it could attract a competing bid, given the expectation for rising demand for potash, an important crop nutrient.

11 Wyclef Jean rejected as Haiti candidate

By Joseph Guyler Delva, Reuters

Sat Aug 21, 12:17 am ET

PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters) – Haiti’s provisional electoral council ruled on Friday that hip-hop star Wyclef Jean did not meet a residency requirement to run as a presidential candidate in the nation’s November 28 election.

Singer-songwriter Jean, 40, an international celebrity who is popular in his impoverished and earthquake-ravaged homeland, was rejected from the list of approved candidates read aloud by the council on Friday night.

Jean was among 34 presidential candidates vying for a spot in the election to choose a successor to President Rene Preval, who cannot run again after two terms. The council approved 19 candidates and rejected 15.

12 Sweden withdraws warrant for WikiLeaks founder

By KARL RITTER, Associated Press Writer

47 mins ago

STOCKHOLM – Swedish authorities revoked a short-lived arrest warrant for the founder of WikiLeaks on Saturday, saying a rape accusation against him lacked substance.

Julian Assange, who was believed to be in Sweden, remained under suspicion of a lesser crime of molestation in a separate case, prosecutors said.

The nomadic 39-year-old Australian dismissed the allegations in a statement on WikiLeaks’ Twitter page, saying “the charges are without basis and their issue at this moment is deeply disturbing.”

13 Oil spill adds to housing woes for Katrina victims

By SHELIA BYRD, Associated Press Writer

51 mins ago

LAKESHORE, Miss. – Pete Yarborough, a trucker who hauled seafood until the BP oil spill hit, and about 800 other households are under pressure to buy or get out of the state-owned cottages they’ve been living in since Hurricane Katrina left them homeless.

Yarborough’s 400-square-foot cottage sits on cinder blocks 13 feet above sea level, 7 feet lower than post-Katrina standards require. He can buy the cottage for $351, but it would cost about $23,000 to raise it in the flood-prone area, and Yarborough can’t afford that.

If he doesn’t buy the cottage, the state will begin the process of evicting him. State officials had hoped to end the cottage program by Aug. 29, the fifth anniversary of the storm, but they concede the process of evicting the residents will take a couple of more months.

14 New guidelines could rule out many oil claims

By CURT ANDERSON, AP Legal Affairs Writer

Sat Aug 21, 12:56 am ET

MIAMI – A flower shop in Florida that saw a drop-off in weddings this summer is probably out of luck. So is a restaurant in Idaho that had to switch seafood suppliers. A hardware store on the Mississippi coast may be left out, too.

The latest guidelines for BP’s $20 billion victims compensation fund say the nearer you are geographically to the oil spill and the more closely you depend on the Gulf of Mexico’s natural resources, the better chance you have of getting a share of the money.

Also, a second set of rules expected this fall will require that businesses and individuals seeking compensation for long-term losses give up their right to sue BP and other spill-related companies – something that could save the oil giant billions.

15 Australian PM says elections too close to call

By ROD McGUIRK, Associated Press Writer

49 mins ago

CANBERRA, Australia – It could take more than a week to learn who will govern Australia after a cliffhanger election – the closest in nearly 50 years – and the winner may have to woo the support of a handful of independent lawmakers in order to assume power.

Prime Minister Julia Gillard, Australia’s first female prime minister who seized power in an internal Labor Party coup only two months ago, said Saturday she will remain the nation’s caretaker leader during the “anxious days ahead” as vote-counting continues.

The Australian Electoral Commission website said early Sunday that center-left Labor and the conservative Liberal Party-led coalition each had 71 seats, meaning neither could achieve the 76-seat majority.

16 GOP candidate in Conn. hammers Democrat on honesty

By SUSAN HAIGH, Associated Press Writer

4 mins ago

HARTFORD, Conn. – Richard Blumenthal’s words are haunting him again. Already forced to apologize for saying he had served “in” Vietnam in the Marine Reserve rather than stateside, the state attorney general’s campaign for U.S. Senate is now being challenged to explain his assertion that he had “never taken PAC money” and has “rejected all special interest money.”

Federal records show that he has accepted $480,000 in political action committee money since he made that claim in January. Moreover, his Republican opponent, former World Wrestling Entertainment CEO Linda McMahon, points to nearly $17,000 Blumenthal received as a state legislative candidate in the 1980s – a figure Blumenthal’s campaign does not dispute.

Blumenthal’s campaign insists he did not lie – as McMahon says – when he said in an interview on MSNBC the day after he announced he was running for the seat of retiring Sen. Chris Dodd that he had never taken PAC money. His campaign says he was referring only to his 20 years as attorney general.

17 Tide starts where it finished: No. 1

By RALPH D. RUSSO, AP College Football Writer

2 hrs 15 mins ago

NEW YORK – Alabama will start this season where it ended last season.

The Crimson Tide is on top.

Coach Nick Saban has the Tide rolling the way Bear Bryant did in his day, first in The Associated Press preseason poll for the first time since 1978.

18 Chamber emerges as formidable political force

By JIM KUHNHENN, Associated Press Writer

2 hrs 15 mins ago

WASHINGTON – At times subtle, at times loud, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce is spending record amounts on lobbying and in election battlegrounds, elbowing into the nation’s politics in unprecedented ways for the business community.

The country’s largest business lobby has pledged to spend $75 million in this year’s elections. That’s on top of a lobbying effort that already has cost the organization nearly $190 million since Barack Obama became president in January 2009.

Those numbers alone, together with what chamber officials say is a network of online backers that can amplify the pro-business message, give the group clout as a virtual third party and a powerful voice in what laws are made and who’s elected to write them.

19 Dubai camel dairy hopes to milk health food market

By BRIAN MURPHY, Associated Press Writer

Sat Aug 21, 1:11 pm ET

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates – The camels know the drill by heart.

Just after dawn, they file on their own – always in groups of 12 – into metal stalls for milking. Workers attach automated pumps. The milk flows into a system of chilled pipes that empty into a sealed metal vat.

The next stop someday could be markets in Europe, and possibly beyond, under ambitious plans backed by Dubai’s ruler to expand the reach of the playfully eccentric brand name Camelicious.

20 NY candidate: Prison dorms for welfare recipients

By BETH FOUHY, Associated Press Writer

Sat Aug 21, 12:07 pm ET

NEW YORK – Republican candidate for governor Carl Paladino said he would transform some New York prisons into dormitories for welfare recipients, where they would work in state-sponsored jobs, get employment training and take lessons in “personal hygiene.”

Paladino, a wealthy Buffalo real estate developer popular with many tea party activists, is competing for the Republican nomination with former U.S. Rep. Rick Lazio. The primary is Sept. 14.

Paladino first described the idea in June at a meeting of The Journal News of White Plains and spoke about it again this week with The Associated Press.

21 Haiti ruling ends Wyclef Jean’s run for president

By TAMARA LUSH, Associated Press Writers

2 hrs 11 mins ago

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti – Singer Wyclef Jean’s high-profile bid for Haiti’s presidency ended after election officials on the earthquake-ravaged Caribbean nation disqualified his candidacy.

The Haitian-American hip-hop star expressed disappointment at the late Friday ruling, but called on his followers to act “peacefully and responsibly.”

“Though I disagree with the ruling, I respectfully accept the committee’s final decision, and I urge my supporters to do the same,” the former Fugees frontman said in a statement.

22 Captive bear that killed Ohio man is euthanized

By JEANNIE NUSS, Associated Press Writer

6 mins ago

COLUMBUS, Ohio – The father of a 24-year-old Ohio man who was killed by a captive bear says the animal is dead.

John Kandra says several relatives watched a veterinarian euthanize the bear on Saturday. It had attacked Kandra’s son, Brent, after he opened the bear’s cage for a routine feeding Thursday.

The bear’s owner, Sam Mazzola, had said Kandra’s family would decide its fate. Mazzola’s lawyer didn’t return a call for comment on Saturday.

23 6 Afghan police found dead in station house

By DEB RIECHMANN, Associated Press Writer

Sat Aug 21, 10:29 am ET

KABUL, Afghanistan – Six Afghan policemen were found dead Saturday in their station house in southern Afghanistan, where international troops are ramping up operations to take control of Taliban strongholds, an official said.

In the north, three Afghan policemen were accidentally killed by friendly fire, NATO said.

The bodies of the six policemen, who were shot, were found in Greskh district of southern Helmand province, said Dawood Ahmadi, a provincial spokesman. It wasn’t immediately clear who shot them, but insurgents fighting back against NATO forces also are targeting anyone who supports the coalition or the Afghan government.

24 AIDS activists: Chinese colleague detained

Associated Press

Sat Aug 21, 5:26 am ET

BEIJING – Police in central China have detained an AIDS activist who contracted the virus as a boy and whose tireless campaigning for the rights of those with the disease angered local authorities, his fellow activists said Saturday.

Under pressure to end Tian Xi’s campaigning, police from his home town of Gulu detained the 23-year-old on Tuesday and first held him at a county hospital before his family lost track of his whereabouts on Friday, the activists said.

Tian traveled frequently between Gulu and Beijing, petitioning officials in the capital to compensate him and others who contracted AIDS through tainted blood supplies. In recent weeks, Tian had obtained official documents in which leaders from Gulu and Xincai county, where the town is located, ordered police to stop his activism, according to the Chinese advocacy group Aizhixing and Sara L.M. Davis, a New York-based activist.

25 Cyberactivists unblock Wikileaks for Thai Netizens

By GRANT PECK, Associated Press Writer

Sat Aug 21, 5:26 am ET

BANGKOK – A group of anonymous Internet activists has set up a website to display information about Thailand that comes from the whistle-blower site Wikileaks, which is blocked to some viewers in the Southeast Asian country.

The group calling itself “Wikicong” said Friday it set up the thaileaks.info site as “a tool to break the censorship” – an apparent reference to alleged efforts by the Thai government to block access to the material, which includes a private video of the country’s Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn.

Some access to the main Wikileaks site has been blocked in Thailand since at least late June. It has been accessible, however, using some variants of the domain name, and through some local Internet service providers.

26 NYC imam’s goodwill tour comes amid mosque furor

By RACHEL ZOLL, AP Religion Writer

Sat Aug 21, 2:48 am ET

NEW YORK – The furor over the planned mosque and Islamic center near ground zero has put Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf in a curious position: At the same time he is being vilified in the U.S. for spearheading the project, he is traveling the Mideast on a State Department mission as a symbol of American religious freedom.

Some of the imam’s American critics said they fear he is using the taxpayer-funded trip to raise money and rally support in the Muslim world for the mosque.

“I think there is no place for this,” said the Rev. Franklin Graham, who is the son of evangelist Billy Graham and opposes the Islamic center and mosque. “Can you imagine if the State Department paid to send me on a trip anywhere? The separation of church and state – the critics would have been howling.”

27 Mosque flap tests limits of US tolerance

By ALLEN G. BREED, AP National Writer

Sat Aug 21, 12:15 pm ET

The word tolerance comes from the Latin “tolerare” – to bear. In our dictionaries, we define it as, among other things, the “freedom from bigotry or prejudice.”

Its meanings are almost as numerous as the people who express them, as recent entries in the visitor comment book at the Simon Wiesenthal Center’s Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles suggest.

It means “to respect other races even if u hate them,” says one commenter, signed only as G. “Acceptance,” says another, Alejandra, adding, “To me, tolerance is tinged with the negative aspect of `putting up with’ someone or something, but not fully embracing it.”

28 Nearly 50 percent leave Obama mortgage-aid program

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER, AP Economics Writer

Sat Aug 21, 2:49 am ET

WASHINGTON – Nearly half of the 1.3 million homeowners who enrolled in the Obama administration’s flagship mortgage-relief program have fallen out.

The program is intended to help those at risk of foreclosure by lowering their monthly mortgage payments. Friday’s report from the Treasury Department suggests the $75 billion government effort is failing to slow the tide of foreclosures in the United States, economists say.

More than 2.3 million homes have been repossessed by lenders since the recession began in December 2007, according to foreclosure listing service RealtyTrac Inc. Economists expect the number of foreclosures to grow well into next year.

29 Pakistan thanks world for opening wallets

By EDITH M. LEDERER, Associated Press Writer

Fri Aug 20, 7:13 pm ET

UNITED NATIONS – Pakistan thanked the world Friday for opening its wallets and said more than 20 million flood victims now know that nations and people around the globe are standing with them during the worst disaster the country has ever faced.

Wrapping up a hurriedly called two-day meeting of the U.N. General Assembly to spotlight the immediate need for aid, Pakistan’s U.N. Ambassador Abdullah Haroon said the initial outpouring from some 70 countries was “indeed heartening” and “a good beginning,” though he stressed that the country will need much more help in the months and years to come.

At the start of the meeting on Thursday, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said donors had given just half of the $460 million the U.N. appealed for to provide food, shelter and clean water for to up to 8 million flood victims over the next three months. He insisted all the money was needed now.

30 Army of diplomats takes the lead in fractious Iraq

By ROBERT BURNS, AP National Security Writer

11 mins ago

WASHINGTON – As the White House eagerly highlights the departure of U.S. combat troops from Iraq, the small army of American diplomats left behind is embarking on a long and perilous path to keeping the volatile country from slipping back to the brink of civil war.

Among the challenges are helping Iraq’s deeply divided politicians form a new government; refereeing long-simmering Arab-Kurd territorial disputes; advising on attracting foreign investment; pushing for improved government services; and fleshing out a blueprint for future U.S.-Iraqi relations.

President Barack Obama also is banking on the diplomats – about 300, protected by as many as 7,000 private security contractors – to assume the duties of the U.S. military. That includes protecting U.S. personnel from attack and managing the training of Iraqi police, starting in October 2011.

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