The WikiLeaks founder has been denied bail on the grounds that his ties to the community are weak and he has the means to flee the UK. Assange, who was arrested Monday by appointment in London, is wanted in Sweden on sexual assault charges that he categorically denies. The Guardian: The 39-year-old Australian, who denies the allegations, was driven away in a white prison van after an extraordinary one-hour hearing at City of Westminster magistrates court. The district judge, Howard Riddle, ruled there was a risk Assange would fail to surrender if granted bail. Despite Jemima Khan, former wife of Pakistan cricketer Imran Khan, the campaigning journalist John Pilger, the British film director Ken Loach and others offering to stand surety totalling £180,000, the judge said Assange’s “weak community ties” in the UK, and his “means and ability” to abscond, were “substantial grounds” for refusing bail. Read more Related Entries November 18, 2010 Britain’s Modern Bride November 12, 2010 A Doctor in Your Pocket
Continue reading …On Tuesday, Elizabeth Edwards, who fought a very public battle with her husband John Edwards over his private life even as she fought cancer, died of the disease in North Carolina. The former presidential candidate and Elizabeth separated after the revelation of his affair with campaign videographer Rielle Hunter and remained estranged until her death. The Washington Post: She was named one of Time magazine’s 100 Most Influential People in the World in 2007. O, the Oprah magazine, called her “the most refreshing political spouse since Eleanor Roosevelt.” A Washington Post profile of Mrs. Edwards was headlined, “A Shoo-In For ‘Regular Person.’ ” The headline on a Frank Rich column in the New York Times was “Elizabeth Edwards for President.” Unlike a traditional political spouse, however, she refused to appear with her husband when in August 2008 he publicly admitted to having repeatedly lied about having an affair with campaign aide Rielle Hunter. After her husband admitted fathering a child with Hunter, the Edwardses separated. She had learned of the affair in early 2006 but stayed silent about it in public and campaigned for him, a tactic that annoyed some of her supporters, who noted that the Edwardses ran as a couple, telling the story of their romance and renewing their wedding vows on their 30th anniversary in 2007. Read more
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Sen. Joe Lieberman has said that the federal government has the right to shut down the whistleblowing website that released thousands of secret US documents and now the Connecticut senator has indicated that media outlets like The New York Times may be in danger too. Following the release of thousands of documents by government watchdog WikiLeaks, Lieberman told the Times that he wanted to use “all legal means” against the website. On Tuesday, the independent senator told Fox News’ Jenna Lee that the First Amendment may not even protect mainstream media outlets that publish documents obtained by WikiLeaks. “Julian Assange has written an editorial that points out or characterizes his organization as an underdog in the media world,” Lee noted. “He’s saying he’s a journalist, and he’s just providing information out there for the world citizens to see. He mentions that organizations like The New York Times have published his information which you’re classifying as state secret. So, are other media outlets that have posted what WikiLeaks has put out there also culpable in this and could be charged with something?” “I have said that I believe the question you’re raising is a serious legal question that has to be answered,” Lieberman replied. “In other words, this is very sensitive stuff because it gets into the America’s First Amendment. But if you go from the initial crime, Private Manning charged with the crime of stealing these classified documents, he gives them to WikiLeaks, I certainly believe that that’s a — WikiLeaks has violated the espionage act,” he said. “But then what about the news organizations, including the Times , that accepted it and distributed it? I know they say they deleted some of it, but I’m not here to make a final judgment on that,” Lieberman continued. “But to me New York Times has committed at least an act of bad citizenship. And whether they’ve committed a crime, I think that bears very intensive inquiry by the Justice Department,” he added. Lieberman’s position seems to be a slight change from last week, when he said the Times should not be prosecuted. “I don’t know if you can prosecute the Times under existing Supreme Court decisions,” he told Fox Business News’ Don Imus . “But I’ll tell you this, I wish the Times, just as an act of citizenship had said, ‘No, we’re not going to publish this stuff because it’s going to do the country damage,’” he said “You know, The New York Times , afterall, is The New York Times with all its stature and I wish this stuff had appeared somewhere else. I wouldn’t be for prosecuting the Times, but I would say I wish they had shown better citizenship.”
Continue reading …Aspirin has been touted as a potential heart helper, and Tuesday, the British medical journal The Lancet released some evidence that the humble analgesic might also reduce the risk of dying from various forms of cancer, and by an impressive percentage in some cases. Gizmodo helpfully broke it down for those who don’t want to read the Lancet study : Gizmodo: • After 5 years of daily aspirin, death due to gastrointestinal cancers decreased by 54% • After 20 years, death due to prostate cancer decreased by 10% • After 20 years, death due to lung cancer decreased by 30% (among those with adenocarcinomas, typically seen in nonsmokers) • After 20 years, death due to colorectal cancer decreased by 40% • After 20 years, death due to esophageal cancer decreased by 60% Read more Related Entries November 18, 2010 Britain’s Modern Bride November 12, 2010 A Doctor in Your Pocket
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Well, President Obama’s press conference today, defending his deal on the Bush tax cuts, won’t exactly do much to mollify the people who, you know, actually voted for him in 2008. Especially this part: You know, so this notion that somehow we are willing to compromise too much reminds me of the debate that we had during health care. This is the public option debate all over again. So I pass a signature piece of legislation where we finally get health care for all Americans — something that Democrats have been fighting for for a hundred years — but because there was a provision in there that they didn’t get, that would’ve affected maybe a couple million people, even though we got health insurance for 30 million people, and the potential for lower premiums for a hundred million people, that somehow that was a sign of weakness and compromise. Now, if that’s the standard by which we are measuring success or core principles, then let’s face it, we will never get anything done. People will have the satisfaction of having a purist position and no victories for the American people. And we will be able to feel good about ourselves and sanctimonious about how pure our intentions are, and how tough we are — and in the meantime, the American people are still seeing themselves not able to get health insurance because of pre-existing conditions. Or not being able to pay their bills because their unemployment insurance ran out. That can’t be the measure of how we think about our public service. It’s clear that Obama is not speaking to his base here — rather, he’s only saying things that are certain to piss them off and demoralize them. He is, however, making his case to the larger media-consuming public, and particularly the Beltway Village, who buy rather easily into the notion that hippies need punching. It’s actually probably a smart short-term strategy, because it means there will be relatively little media blowback, since the pundit class will be on his side here. Long term? Well, we’ll see how willing the troops are to come out and re-elect somebody who’s been beating up on them publicly for the previous four years come 2012. Alex Pareene at Salon observes: While congressional Democrats are to blame for putting Obama in this position, and Obama’s hands were basically tied, he continues to imagine that his liberal critics are upset with the idea that compromises need to be made in order to accomplish progressive policy goals. Some of them are that stupid. But lots of them are actually critics of White House’s legislative strategy, and their apparent willingness to preemptively compromise before the negotiations have already begun. We’ll have the transcript up when it’s available.
Continue reading …This just in: The rich get richer. President Barack “Hope ‘n’ Change” Obama ticked a lot of people off on Monday by helping the affluent and entitled stay that way with his GOP-appeasing tax cut plan … Related Entries December 7, 2010 Leaks Suggest Iran Is Now Winning in the Middle East December 6, 2010 Obama’s Tax Cave Is Worse Than Expected
Continue reading …Image credit BlogTO Don Cherry has a penchant for fancy suits and is a commentator on the Canadian Broadcasting Company’s biggest show, Hockey Night In Canada. For some reason Toronto’s new mayor thought it appropriate that Cherry should place the chain of office around his neck, even though Cherry a) doesn’t live in Toronto, and b) is a millionaire who says “people are sick of elites and artsy people running the show.” and thinks Ford likes “lunch pail blue collar people”. But to top it all off, in To… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …There are many areas where the establishment press's terminology preferences are significantly out of sync with everyday usage by the general public. To name just two examples, the ever so PC press routinely replaces publicly favored and more informative terms such as “illegal immigrants” and “Muslim terrorists” with “undocumented workers” and “militants.” And of course, we can't forget the press's affection for “a certain late-term pregnancy-ending procedure,” when it's really “partial-birth abortion.” Though the disconnect I'm about to describe isn't as serious as the ones just noted, there is another area where press terminology is at wide variance with the public's preferences. That would be in how to describe the shopping season that occurs from Thanksgiving until the end of the year. For a while, the press's terminology choices seemed to be winning over retailers. But at least this year, that isn't so, as noted in an item at Advertising Age (HT to Tim Graham at NewsBusters, who tweeted on this about 10 days ago): read more
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