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G20 summit expected to back IMF plan for bigger bailout fund

France’s biggest bank, BNP Paribas, unexpectedly downgraded by Standard & Poor’s A summit of G20 finance ministers in Paris on Saturday is expected to back moves by European leaders and the International Monetary Fund for a more substantial bailout fund to rescue indebted nations and prevent the eurozone’s collapse, according to sources close to the meeting. The IMF is expected to win support for an enhanced rescue facility, at the same time as eurozone nations move closer to adopting the so-called “big bazooka” of a huge insurance fund or wider guarantees to underwrite Greece and other ailing countries. As the finance ministers arrived in Paris, France’s biggest bank, BNP Paribas, was unexpectedly downgraded by Standard & Poor’s because of its weakening financial profile. BNP had been one of only three major global banks to be rated AA and the downgrade to AA minus came with an affirmation of ratings of other banks. The ratings agency now believes other banks are more likely to secure government support if they run into difficulty. While many analysts still expect Greece to default and repay only 40% to 50% of its debts, there is concern that a firewall will first have to be put in place to prevent a domino effect spreading to Portugal, Italy and Spain and banks holding large amounts of Greek debt. Speaking ahead of the G20 meeting, the chancellor, George Osborne, said he was confident that eurozone leaders, supported by the G20, would back more comprehensive measures to protect the currency union from breaking up. Osborne believes piecemeal reforms are likely to further undermine confidence and scupper efforts to end the crisis. Britain will also come under pressure from its European partners this weekend to lend its support to the financial transaction tax proposed by Brussels, and championed by the French president, Nicolas Sarkozy, the current chairman of the G20, as a way of taming speculation and raising funds from the financial sector. G20 leaders are expected to agree a set of measures to deal with the sovereign debt crisis at a meeting in Cannes next month. European Union leaders, including the prime minister, David Cameron, will assemble at an EU council meeting on 23 October. Many of the world’s largest investor groups have warned that failure to agree could trigger a run on the euro and the bankruptcy of several countries, possibly including Italy and Spain. The Italian prime minister, Silvio Berlusconi, narrowly survived a confidence vote on Friday , which he said would allow Rome to press ahead with budget cuts to bring about a balanced budget by 2013. Markets viewed the Italian vote and the mood of optimism in Paris as signals that progress was being made and that leaders would reach agreement on a coherent package in Cannes. The FTSE 100 climbed by 1.2% and the Dow Jones industrial average in New York opened up more than 1%. Osborne said: “The countdown to the Cannes summit of world leaders begins this weekend. The biggest boost to global and British growth would be a resolution to the eurozone crisis. “Momentum is now finally building towards that. We should use this weekend to keep up the pressure and step up the pace.” The eurozone has put in place a European financial stability facility (EFSF) worth €440bn (£382bn) to assure investors in European sovereign debt that their money is safe. Osborne believes that a €2tn fund is necessary to show that the bloc stands behind any country that gets into financial difficulties. In recent weeks EU officials have argued that the EFSF fund could be used as capital for a bank that needs to borrow further funds. Some officials have moved away from the idea, arguing that it amounts to the same highly leveraged institution that triggered the credit crunch. They argue that to save Italy and Spain from being locked out of international credit markets an insurance fund could be created that would guarantee the first 20% of private-sector losses on Spanish and Italian bonds, and perhaps 30% on those of more peripheral, weaker countries. The move would bypass the European Central Bank, which has fretted about using its balance sheet to issue huge guarantees or loans. Germany has made positive noises and Paris has indicated that an insurance scheme may be acceptable. European debt crisis Financial crisis Euro Currencies European monetary union Europe European Union Europe Phillip Inman David Gow Heather Stewart guardian.co.uk

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Liam Fox quits as defence secretary

• First coalition Tory cabinet minister to resign • Relentless revelations about Adam Werritty to blame • Philip Hammond named as new defence secretary The prime minister lost his first Conservative cabinet minister on Friday when Liam Fox folded under the pressure of relentless revelations about a close friend and the access he gained to the heart of government. Performing a reluctant reshuffle, David Cameron made minimal moves to the frontbench from his constituency home in Oxfordshire, replacing Fox by phone with the transport secretary, Philip Hammond, who in turn was succeeded by Justine Greening. No 10 said Fox had crumpled under the weight of this week’s news stories and could not bear to contemplate another weekend of claims surrounding his friendship with his best man, Adam Werritty. Fox’s departure came only hours after Werritty had been back for a second interview with the cabinet secretary, Gus O’Donnell. He has been conducting an inquiry into claims that his friendship with Fox potentially jeopardised national security and raised issues around conflicts of interest. Sources said Werritty’s evidence had not impressed O’Donnell and that the cabinet secretary was concluding Fox had repeatedly broken the ministerial code. Downing Street insisted it did not push Fox and that the prime minister had been prepared to tough out the relentless coverage and wait for O’Donnell’s report to be concluded. However, senior figures began to question whether he could survive that long with new allegations that emerged on Friday. They showed that some of the businessmen who were funding Werritty’s trips abroad had an interest in influencing defence policy. The Guardian was poised to report that two of Werritty’s financial backers had defence interests. This put into question Fox’s repeated assertion that neither he nor Werritty had profited from the 40 occasions they had met over the last 16 months. Fox had been insisting up until Friday morning that he would tough out the crisis, telling aides that he believed the O’Donnell inquiry would exonerate him from serious wrongdoing. He had also believed that his apology on Monday would take the sting out of any criticism from O’Donnell. But that changed quickly when word began spreading around Whitehall that the investigation was going to draw some harsh conclusions: both about Fox’s personal conduct, and the mosaic of business arrangements that Werritty was involved in. “I don’t think the resignation was a done deal until early in the afternoon,” said one Whitehall official. But the mood music from the Cabinet Office was that the inquiry was going to be very damaging. It didn’t leave Liam very much choice. He didn’t get a chance to say too many goodbyes. He was in his car on the way home by the time the statement came out.” Fox will now join the backbenches, where he enjoys some popularity, but he has been so wounded by the last week that the chances of his being a standard bearer for rightwing discontent have waned. While he will receive considerable sympathy for falling out of a top-level job he had spent his life working towards, many Tory MPs believe the revelations week have damaged him beyond repair politically. The shadow defence secretary, Jim Murphy, said Fox had his “deepest sympathy”, though Labour’s reaction also contained criticism of Cameron for allowing Fox to survive through the week. A Downing Street source acknowledged there had been some ambiguity about whether the report now needed to be completed, though O’Donnell is likely to continue with his work. Fox sent a resignation letter to the prime minister at just after 4pm but actually resigned in a phone conversation with Cameron. In his resignation statement, he repeated a formulation he had used in his apology in the Commons on Monday when he and his supporters thought he could still ride out the issue. He said: “I mistakenly allowed the distinction between my personal interest and my government activities to become blurred. The consequences of this have become clearer in recent days. I am very sorry for this. I have also repeatedly said that the national interest must always come before personal interest. I now have to hold myself to my own standard.” Fox said he was “proud also to have played a part in helping to liberate the people of Libya, and I regret that I will not see through to its conclusion Britain’s role in Afghanistan, where so much progress has been made. Their bravery, dedication and professionalism are second to none.” In his return letter, the prime minister emphasised that Fox and his wife Jesme Baird have “always been good friends” and that Fox had been a “key” member of his team who had done a “superb job” over the last seventeen months. He said: “On Libya, you played a key role in the campaign to stop people being massacred by the Gaddafi regime and instead win their freedom. You can be proud of the difference you have made in your time in office, and in helping our party to return to government.” Fox was a well-liked secretary of state for defence for his part in overseeing a successful campaign in Libya, though he did disagree with the prime minister over funding cuts to the armed forces. But the welter of allegations about Werritty, 34, eventually forced him to take a decision he had resisted all week. “He was fighting on too many fronts to survive,” said one official. The Guardian was the first newspaper to highlight Werritty’s closeness to Fox, which had been privately causing alarm at the MoD for months. A key issue was whether Werritty could be shown to have benefited financially from the friendship; that key link appeared to emerge on Friday. The Times reported that a corporate intelligence company with a close interest in Sri Lanka, and a venture capitalist keen on strong ties were said to have funded him with donations totalling £147,000. The MoD insisted that Fox’s resignation would not change the department’s strategy of reform. “The department knows where is it going. We have established a clear direction of travel and everyone will support the new secretary of state,” said an official. “That won’t be a problem for people in the MoD. We have got used to change.” Greening’s promotion is well won with an increased tally of women in cabinet an unexpected boon for the prime minister in a situation otherwise distracting for Cameron. Greening, who held the post in opposition immediately before the election, is economically fluent and ahead of the growth review to be delivered on 29 November, she strengthens the economic voices in cabinet. Liam Fox Liam Fox and Adam Werritty links Adam Werritty Defence policy Conservatives Allegra Stratton Nick Hopkins Rupert Neate guardian.co.uk

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Journalist Chris Hedges goes to Canada, ends up on Fox News

Click here to view this media This interview actually took place last week on the CBC but I just got around to seeing it. Seems they have A-holes up there as well, even on their public broadcasting network. Chris Hedges is probably one of America’s best journalists and doesn’t suffer fools gladly. At the end of the interview he vowed it would be his last one with that CBC show. The exchanges between the crypto-fascist venture capitalist/investor O’Leary and Hedges grabbed most of the attention, but Hedges’ simple but lucid replies to those questions the media seems to have the most trouble with (“What does OWS stand for?”, “Aren’t they all just dirty hippies?”, “What do they want?”) are instructive and persuasive. via the blog Creekside : Yesterday CBC continued its ongoing snide, dismissive, and condescending coverage of the third week of Occupy Wall Street with an interview with author/activist/Pulitzer Prize winner Chris Hedges on its “inside the business world” show, the Lang and O’Leary Exchange. After the by now obligatory opening protestations of puzzlement as to what OWS is all about – “low budget” and “pretty nothing burgers” as blowhard host Kevin O’Leary described it – he then responded to Hedges’ patient explanation by calling him “a left wing nutbar”. The transcript begins a few minutes into the 7 minute clip and you can skip ahead past the introduction if you like. (Note: Hedges wasn’t actually in Canada for this interview, as he was about to speak at OccupyDC in Washington.) O’Leary : So what exactly is everyone complaining about? And also give me a sense of how much momentum this movement has because it’s pretty nothing burgers so far – just a few guys, guitars. Nobody knows what they want – they can’t even name the names of the firms that they’re protesting against – very weak, low budget. Hedges : I wouldn’t agree with that assessment at all. They pulled thousands of people into the street last night and here in Washington when everyone marched past the Bank of America, they were shouting Shame! Shame! Shame! They know the names of these firms and they know what these firms have done not only to the American economy but to the global economy, and the criminal class who runs them. Fill-in for Lang : Well Kevin made this point that nobody knows what they want. What do you say to that? We know that this is a very diverse group, there are many different agendas at play … what is the sense you have of what this movement would like to see happen? Hedges : They know precisely what they want ; they want to reverse the corporate coup that’s taken place in the US and rendered the citizenry impotent and they won’t stop until that happens and frankly if we don’t break the back of corporations, we’re all finished anyway since we’re rapidly trashing the ecosystem on which the human species depends for survival. This is literally a fight for life – it’s that grave, it’s that serious. Corporations, unfettered capitalism, as Karl Marx understood, is a revolutionary force – it commodifies everything – human beings, the natural world which it exploits for profit until exhaustion and collapse. The bottom line is we don’t have much time left – we are on the cusp of perhaps another major banking crisis in Europe, defaults in Greece, followed by Spain, Portugal. There’s been no restrictions, no regulations on Wall Street – they’ve looted the US Treasury, they’ve played all the games that they were playing before and we’re about to pay for it all over again. O’Leary : Listen don’t take this the wrong way but you sound like a left wing nutbar. If you want to shut down every corporation, every bank, where are you going to get a job? Where are you gonna work? Where’s the economy gonna go? Hedges : Corporations don’t produce anything and O’Leary : Oh really!? Hedges : No. Financial corporations on Wall Street O’Leary : Are you driving a car to the protest? Hedges : They are speculators. I’m talking about the financial institutions like Goldman Sachs. They don’t manufacture, they don’t make anything – they gamble, they use money, and they believe falsely that money is real as we dismantle our manufacturing base and send jobs over the border to Mexico and finally into the embrace of China. Fill-in for Lang : Well I see that you and Kevin could get into an actually huge argument here. Hedges : Well you know I don’t usually go on shows where people descend to character assassination. if you want to discuss issues, that’s fine but this sounds like Fox News and I don’t go on Fox News. Either you discuss the issues and … look, you have had very eloquent writers – people like John Ralston Saul in Canada who have laid this out with incredible lucidity – and to somehow attack this critique by calling someone a nutcase engages in the kind of trash talk that’s polluted the corporate airwaves.

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Networks Grill Perry on Jeffress and Religious ‘Can of Worms’ Opened on Campaign Trail

Texas Governor Rick Perry conducted interviews with all three network morning shows on Friday and all used controversial comments made by Dallas pastor Robert Jeffress as a line of attack. This despite Perry having already distanced himself from the pastor's remarks labeling Mormonism a “cult.” On NBC's Today, co-host Matt Lauer led the charge by leveling this accusation against the Perry campaign: “…the issue of faith was really introduced – the can of worms was opened by a surrogate of your own campaign…” On ABC's Good Morning America, co-host George Stephanopoulos wouldn't let the issue go: “The Romney campaign…have called on you to repudiate him and his comments. Will you do that?…do you want his support, or will you repudiate that?…do you repudiate Reverend Jeffress?” On CBS's Early Show, co-host Chris Wragge asserted: “Now, you haven't dissociated yourself from those comments, and some people – New Jersey Governor Chris Christie – said that makes you unfit for the presidency.” Wragge then asked: “Do you want to take this opportunity to distance yourself from those comments, or are you okay with it?” On each broadcast, Perry had to correct the interviewer: > To Lauer: “We've distanced ourselves from those comments. I clearly said that I did not agree with his comments…”

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News Corp faces revolt by quarter of shareholders

Advisory bodies and campaigners urge investors to oppose up to 13 of media firm’s 15 directors amid phone-hacking allegations Up to 25% of shareholders are expected to protest against Rupert, James and Lachlan Murdoch retaining their positions on the News Corporation board at the embattled media group’s annual meeting in Los Angeles next week. A string of advisory bodies and corporate governance campaigners have issued recommendations to vote against up to 13

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It’s C&L’s Two Week Solidarity Pizza Anniversary!

enlarge Two weeks ago Amato put in a couple dollars to get us started buying pizzas for the Occupy protesters across the country. Then you guys stepped up. We’ve raised over $21,000 and fed over 26 cities pizza. You guys haven’t stopped giving and the protesters haven’t gone home, so we are not ending our drive either. If you want to participate here’s the PayPal: For me this was the way I knew I could let these guys know we appreciate what they’re doing. And you guys are the driving force behind this. Thank you! It’s been an amazing two weeks (we never thought it would last this long) the protesters have said they’re in it for the long haul – so are we!

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Visualized: Google opens @Android Twitter, raises Ice Cream Sandwich effigy (video)

Now that Ice Cream Sandwich is officially coming our way next week , Google’s statue-makers ( Honeycomb , Gingerbread , Froyo ) wasted no time raising an idol in its honor. Video of the ceremony is after the break, helpfully pointed out by the brand new @Android Twitter account. Give ‘em a follow, won’t you? Continue reading Visualized: Google opens @Android Twitter, raises Ice Cream Sandwich effigy (video) Visualized: Google opens @Android Twitter, raises Ice Cream Sandwich effigy (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 13 Oct 2011 19:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Microsoft finalizes acquisition of Skype, Tony Bates shares his thoughts (video)

Well, it’s finally happened — Microsoft’s acquisition of Skype has just been finalized, a little more than five months after it was first announced. Under the $8.5 billion deal, Skype CEO Tony Bates will be named president of the new Skype Division of Microsoft, and will have to report directly to Steve Ballmer. Many Skype employees, meanwhile, will stay onboard at offices around the globe, including at outposts in Estonia, the Czech Republic, Russia, Sweden, the UK, Luxembourg, Japan, Singapore, Hong Kong and the US. In a post on the Official Microsoft Blog today, Bates seemed unsurprisingly enthusiastic about the acquisition, describing it as a marriage of two “disruptive, innovative, software-oriented companies.” The exec was less specific about the role his company would play within Redmond’s new architecture, but assured that Skype would be at the forefront of future communications initiatives across a variety of platforms. “Microsoft is committed to the ubiquity of the Skype experience – communication across every device and every platform will remain a primary focus,” Bates wrote. “And we’ve only scratched the surface.” Head past the break for Microsoft’s full PR, as well as the video address from Bates. Continue reading Microsoft finalizes acquisition of Skype, Tony Bates shares his thoughts (video) Microsoft finalizes acquisition of Skype, Tony Bates shares his thoughts (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 14 Oct 2011 02:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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SimLab SQ1: Korea’s adorably unstable robot dog (video)

After the recent score of creepy robots, it’s great to see a mechanical creature that doesn’t look like it would trample you to death if you insulted its parentage. This is the SimLab SQ1, built by the Korean software company as a testbed for a Government-funded giant version to rival the AlphaDog . After the break you’ll find a little motion picture of the SQ1 comically tottering around. Have your laughs now: it won’t nearly be so funny when it comes for you in the night. Continue reading SimLab SQ1: Korea’s adorably unstable robot dog (video) SimLab SQ1: Korea’s adorably unstable robot dog (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 14 Oct 2011 04:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Robert Galvin, former chairman and CEO of Motorola, dies at age 89

We’re very sorry to report that Robert W. Galvin, former chairman and CEO of Motorola , died this week in Chicago at the age of 89. Over the course of his nearly three-decade tenure at the helm, Galvin oversaw Motorola’s transformation from a mid-level radio and walkie talkie manufacturer into one of the world’s leading electronics makers. In the process, he cemented his legacy as one of the industry’s most forward-looking executives. The Marshfield, Wisconsin native first joined the company as a stockroom apprentice in 1940, and would go on to spend his entire career there (save for a tour of duty in World War II). He was named chairman and chief executive in 1959, following the death of his father and company founder Paul Galvin. Under the younger Galvin’s stewardship, Motorola expanded the depth and breadth of its operations, moving into emerging markets and focusing much of its efforts on the burgeoning cellular industry. Galvin spearheaded this transition, which saw Motorola introduce the first commercial cellphone in 1973, and the first cellphone network in the early 1980s. When he first took control, Motorola’s annual sales stood at around $290 million. By the time he retired as chairman in 1990, however, that figure had ballooned to $10.8 billion. Galvin went on to serve on the company’s board of directors until 2001 and, though he may have departed, his impact certainly won’t be forgotten anytime soon. “We will continue to honor Bob Galvin’s legacy here at Motorola Mobility,” said current chairman and CEO Sanjay Jha. “He was committed to innovation, and was responsible for guiding Motorola through the creation of the global cellular telephone industry.” Robert “Bob” Galvin is survived by his wife of 67 years, four children, 13 grandchildren and ten great-grandchildren. Continue reading Robert Galvin, former chairman and CEO of Motorola, dies at age 89 Robert Galvin, former chairman and CEO of Motorola, dies at age 89 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 14 Oct 2011 07:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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