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Vatican sexual abuse inquiry into Ealing Abbey given short shrift

One campaigner said the announcement was a public relations exercise akin to ‘putting Dracula in charge of a blood bank’ Alleged victims of sexual abuse have reacted coolly to the news of a Vatican investigation into a London abbey, and have called for inquiries into other Roman Catholic institutions where children are claimed to have been mistreated. The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in Rome has ordered an “apostolic visitation” to uncover the scale of abuse at Ealing abbey, where monks and lay teachers have been accused of mistreating children at a neighbouring school, St Benedict’s, over decades. It is the first inquiry of its kind into sexual abuse in Britain. Father David Pearce, a priest at Ealing abbey, was jailed in 2009. Groups supporting alleged victims have questioned the effectiveness and integrity of an internal inquiry, especially given that its findings will remain secret. The abuse is alleged to have dated from the 1960s to 2009. Pete Saunders, of the National Association for People Abused in Childhood, said it was a public relations exercise and akin to “putting Dracula in charge of a blood bank”. Anne Lawrence of Ministry and Clerical Sexual Abuse Survivors , said although the Ealing inquiry showed the Catholic hierarchy was beginning to understand the concept of institutional responsibility, there were other schools and other places that warranted investigation. There were, she alleged, “more than 20 schools where there was systematic abuse and we would like to see inquiries into all of them”. Relations between the church and survivor groups are already under strain. Earlier this month the Guardian revealed that victim support groups had pulled out of discussions led by the National Catholic Safeguarding Commission (NCSC) and the Catholic Safeguarding Advisory Service (CSAS). They described them as shambolic, toothless and unlikely to achieve anything by May 2012, when the pope’s deadline for a progress report expires. The talks were intended to come up with a care package for survivors of clerical sexual abuse. Graham Wilmer, who heads the Lantern Project and says he was abused by a Catholic priest as a teenager, said: “We were prepared to talk to [the institution] that had harmed us, even though it was uncomfortable … [But] we can’t trust them. What has effectively has happened is nothing.” The Catholic church in England and Wales has not suffered the same fate as those in Ireland and the US, which have been left reeling by abuse allegations. It has defended its child protection procedures, describing them as robust, and has apologised for past behaviour. But there is evidence to suggest that for all its commitment to healing and contrition, old attitudes prevail. Two civil cases show the church continuing to engage in a war of attrition with victims who were abused as children. It has denied responsibility for the alleged sexual abuse of a Portsmouth woman by one of its priests, saying the cleric was not an employee. Should the church win, it will avoid having to pay compensation to victims in the future. In another case, involving more than 150 former pupils suing for an estimated £8m for sexual and physical abuse they claim to have suffered at St William’s boys home in Market Weighton, Yorkshire, the diocese of Middlesbrough is contesting a court ruling that it is jointly liable with the De La Salle Brotherhood, a Catholic order of lay teachers, for the alleged abuse. St William’s was owned by the diocese but many of the staff were members of the Brotherhood. Claims were first launched in 2004 when the home’s former principal, Brother James Carragher, was jailed for 14 years for abusing boys. The appeal will be heard next July in the supreme court. Catholicism Religion Christianity Vatican Child protection London Riazat Butt guardian.co.uk

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Rick Perry proposes flat tax, corporate tax cut

Perry outlines “cut, balance and grow” plan that would lower the corporate rate and let Americans pay a flat income tax Republican Rick Perry outlined a broad economic proposal on Monday to let Americans pay a flat 20% income tax rate and allow corporations to bring profits home from abroad at a discount. The Texas governor is to lay out the “cut, balance and grow” plan on Tuesday in a speech in a Greenville suburb, part of an effort to recapture the imagination of conservatives still looking for an alternative to Republican front-runner Mitt Romney to challenge President Barack Obama in next year’s presidential election. Perry laid out his plan in a Wall Street Journal opinion article. The aim is to generate the economic growth to create jobs and reduce America’s 9.1% unemployment rate. That is the key issue in the 2012 campaign and the reason why Democrat Obama is considered beatable. Perry would give Americans a choice: pay a 20% flat tax or keep their current rate. To blunt criticism that a flat tax would cut taxes on the wealthy and increase them on the middle-class, he offered some sweeteners. His proposal would preserve popular tax deductions for home mortgage interest, charitable donations and state and local tax exemptions for families earning less than $500,000 a year. Perry is proposing the plan after consultations with Steve Forbes, the Republican who offered a flat tax plan in 1996 when he ran a losing race for the party’s presidential nomination. Forbes endorsed Perry on Monday. Perry would lower the corporate tax rate to 20% from from 35%. He would give U.S. corporations that have $1.4tn in profits parked overseas the opportunity to pay a discounted tax rate of 5.25% temporarily to encourage swift repatriation of the money. Companies have been lobbying Congress hard for legislation to create a repatriation “tax holiday.” Its fate may have been hurt by recent studies finding that an earlier tax holiday failed to create new US jobs, as had been promised. Perry said he would move the United States to a “‘territorial tax system” – as in Hong Kong and France, for example – that only taxes in-country income.’” Perry, whose campaign has been sagging after several shaky debate performances, is laying out his plan in South Carolina, a key state for any conservative seeking the White House. He said he would eliminate the tax on qualified dividends and long-term capital gains to “free up the billions of dollars Americans are sitting on to avoid taxes on the gain.” To help older Americans, he would eliminate a tax on Social Security retirement benefits and help those who see their benefits taxed if they continue to work and earn income in addition to Social Security earnings. Perry said he would also establish a goal of balancing the federal budget by 2020 but admitted it would be hard given the tax cuts he says are needed to re-energize economic growth. “It will be an extremely difficult task exacerbated by the current economic crisis and our need for significant tax cuts to spur growth. But that growth is what will get us to balance, if we are willing to make the hard decisions of cutting,” he said. Perry said US government spending is out of control and he would start moving toward fiscal responsibility by capping federal spending at 18% of US gross domestic product, banning future bailouts and passing a balanced budget amendment to the US Constitution. Republican presidential nomination 2012 Rick Perry US politics United States guardian.co.uk

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Rick Perry proposes flat tax, corporate tax cut

Perry outlines “cut, balance and grow” plan that would lower the corporate rate and let Americans pay a flat income tax Republican Rick Perry outlined a broad economic proposal on Monday to let Americans pay a flat 20% income tax rate and allow corporations to bring profits home from abroad at a discount. The Texas governor is to lay out the “cut, balance and grow” plan on Tuesday in a speech in a Greenville suburb, part of an effort to recapture the imagination of conservatives still looking for an alternative to Republican front-runner Mitt Romney to challenge President Barack Obama in next year’s presidential election. Perry laid out his plan in a Wall Street Journal opinion article. The aim is to generate the economic growth to create jobs and reduce America’s 9.1% unemployment rate. That is the key issue in the 2012 campaign and the reason why Democrat Obama is considered beatable. Perry would give Americans a choice: pay a 20% flat tax or keep their current rate. To blunt criticism that a flat tax would cut taxes on the wealthy and increase them on the middle-class, he offered some sweeteners. His proposal would preserve popular tax deductions for home mortgage interest, charitable donations and state and local tax exemptions for families earning less than $500,000 a year. Perry is proposing the plan after consultations with Steve Forbes, the Republican who offered a flat tax plan in 1996 when he ran a losing race for the party’s presidential nomination. Forbes endorsed Perry on Monday. Perry would lower the corporate tax rate to 20% from from 35%. He would give U.S. corporations that have $1.4tn in profits parked overseas the opportunity to pay a discounted tax rate of 5.25% temporarily to encourage swift repatriation of the money. Companies have been lobbying Congress hard for legislation to create a repatriation “tax holiday.” Its fate may have been hurt by recent studies finding that an earlier tax holiday failed to create new US jobs, as had been promised. Perry said he would move the United States to a “‘territorial tax system” – as in Hong Kong and France, for example – that only taxes in-country income.’” Perry, whose campaign has been sagging after several shaky debate performances, is laying out his plan in South Carolina, a key state for any conservative seeking the White House. He said he would eliminate the tax on qualified dividends and long-term capital gains to “free up the billions of dollars Americans are sitting on to avoid taxes on the gain.” To help older Americans, he would eliminate a tax on Social Security retirement benefits and help those who see their benefits taxed if they continue to work and earn income in addition to Social Security earnings. Perry said he would also establish a goal of balancing the federal budget by 2020 but admitted it would be hard given the tax cuts he says are needed to re-energize economic growth. “It will be an extremely difficult task exacerbated by the current economic crisis and our need for significant tax cuts to spur growth. But that growth is what will get us to balance, if we are willing to make the hard decisions of cutting,” he said. Perry said US government spending is out of control and he would start moving toward fiscal responsibility by capping federal spending at 18% of US gross domestic product, banning future bailouts and passing a balanced budget amendment to the US Constitution. Republican presidential nomination 2012 Rick Perry US politics United States guardian.co.uk

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Perry: Flat Tax Will Shrink Filing to Postcard

Republican presidential candidate Rick Perry is laying out the economic plan he’d try to put in place if he wins the White House. The Texas governor calls his proposal ‘Cut, Balance and Grow.’ It features a flat 20 percent income tax rate. (Oct. 25)

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Perry: Flat Tax Will Shrink Filing to Postcard

Republican presidential candidate Rick Perry is laying out the economic plan he’d try to put in place if he wins the White House. The Texas governor calls his proposal ‘Cut, Balance and Grow.’ It features a flat 20 percent income tax rate. (Oct. 25)

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Dramatic Rescue for Baby After Turkish Quake

A baby, her mother and grandmother were all rescued from a collapsed apartment building, some two days after a massive earthquake rocked eastern Turkey. But the government’s official death toll climbed above 430 Tuesday. (Oct. 25)

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Dramatic Rescue for Baby After Turkish Quake

A baby, her mother and grandmother were all rescued from a collapsed apartment building, some two days after a massive earthquake rocked eastern Turkey. But the government’s official death toll climbed above 430 Tuesday. (Oct. 25)

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Stanford builds super-stretchy skin sensor out of carbon nanotubes (video)

An artificial skin that senses pressure, pinches and touch sounds like a macguffin from The Outer Limits (the episode ” Valerie 23 ” if we recall correctly), but that’s what a team from Stanford University has cooked up on the back of its pick-up truck. Sensors made of silicon films with a matrix of liquid carbon nanotubes ensure the material snaps back to its original shape no matter how frequently it’s pulled about. When compressed, the electrical conductivity of the skin changes, and by measuring where and by how much, it knows the location and pressure of where you jab your fingers. The team wants to combine this super stretchy film with a much more sensitive sensor and if it can do it, then the technology could end up as an artificial skin for burn victims, covering prosthetic limbs or even replacing your multitouch display — just be careful, you might hurt Siri if you pinch-to-zoom her too hard. Continue reading Stanford builds super-stretchy skin sensor out of carbon nanotubes (video) Stanford builds super-stretchy skin sensor out of carbon nanotubes (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 Oct 2011 13:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Beavis And Butthead

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Beavis And Butthead

Beavis And Butt-Head 2011 Season 8 Episode 1 HD part 1 of 8 HD Beavis And Butt-Head 2011 Season 8 Episode 1 HD part 1 of 8 Watch Beavis And Butt-Head 2011 Season 8 Episode 1 HD part 1 of 8 Leaked JoeDestroyer says: RT @ uvtvmetalvideos : ♈ New BEAVIS AND BUTTHEAD Shake Weight Teaser: http://t.co/KbqS78nF HOT GIRLS: http://t.co/OkcNGbvZ

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Battle Field 3

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Battle Field 3

Battlefield 3 Multiplayer Keygen 25 October Battle field 3 unwrapping [PART1] Battlefield 3 Playthrough w/Chaosstorm “FUCKING EPIC!”

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