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Microsoft and Quanta ink patent licensing agreement, Android continues to print money for its rival

Microsoft’s crossed yet another name off its patent licensing hit list , and this time the big red target lands squarely on Quanta. Under the undisclosed terms of the agreement, Android and Chrome-based devices manufactured by the Taiwanese OEM will be protected by Redmond’s vast patent portfolio. Of course, this means MS’ll receive royalties for granting access to its treasure trove of related IPs — of which it has no dearth of at the moment. In other news, Google continues to hope it’s all just a case of “opposite day.” Official PR in all its vagueness after the break. Continue reading Microsoft and Quanta ink patent licensing agreement, Android continues to print money for its rival Microsoft and Quanta ink patent licensing agreement, Android continues to print money for its rival originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 13 Oct 2011 14:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Nokia outs colorful 603 handset, coupled with NFC-equipped Luna Bluetooth headset

The leaves in your yard may be transitioning to the more subdued hues of autumn, but Nokia’s new 603 smartphone certainly isn’t. Available in six different back cover colors, this new Symbian Belle handset is powered by a 1GHz processor and boasts a 3.5-inch, capacitive touchscreen with 640 x 360 resolution. It also comes with 2GB of internal memory, a 32GB microSD slot and five megapixel camera, along with full NFC and Bluetooth 3.0 capabilities. Speaking of which, the folks in Espoo have also taken this opportunity to unveil their new Luna Bluetooth headset — an NFC-enabled, in-ear accessory that delivers up to eight hours of extended talk time, as well as a rainbow of colors (see an image after the break). As far as pricing goes, the 603 will set you back €200 (about $275), with the Luna headset sitting at €70 (around $96). Neither will hit the market until Q4 of this year, but you can find more information in the full PR, looming after the break. Continue reading Nokia outs colorful 603 handset, coupled with NFC-equipped Luna Bluetooth headset Nokia outs colorful 603 handset, coupled with NFC-equipped Luna Bluetooth headset originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 13 Oct 2011 15:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Libya war reaches endgame with 100 loyalists left fighting

Sirte stronghold edges close to falling with pro-Gaddafi troops stranded as rebels prepare to declare total victory The two men are singing in the back of a pick-up truck, sitting on the rails, their legs resting on a blanket that seems oddly lumpy. Sticking out from beneath it are two pairs of feet, one bare, one wearing socks. They are the feet of two pro-Gaddafi fighters killed in the fighting in the coastal city of Sirte. Thursday was a day of deaths on both sides. Government forces trying to enter the last pocket of Sirte held by pro-Gaddafi fighters were bogged down in a narrow street flooded with sewage and water. Sirte is an unremarkable town, its importance inflated by the fact that the deposed Libyan leader was born nearby and counts its main tribe among his staunchest supporters. But its fate is now being keenly watched around the world. The rebel government in Tripoli has declared – as foreign secretary William Hague told MPs in London – that its fall will mean the liberation of the entire country and trigger the start of a political process to build a new democracy. A street corner where, on Wednesday, it had been possible to walk and stare into a narrow canyon of shattered buildings, was at the centre of the battle. Instead of walking, one had to crawl as the pockets of defenders fired RPGs into buildings and at cars. In response government fighters pulled back a little and brought in tanks, placing them on a low, grassy rise crowned with a shattered white pavilion from where they could blast directly into the rooftop positions, setting fires, nibbling away at the concrete, filling the air with noise and dust. For the pro-Gaddafi fighters it is a hopeless situation. There is nowhere to go except deeper into an area of the city 750 metres wide by 500 metres deep that runs along the coast from the television station – with its pair of wrecked and punctured dishes – to the edge of District Two, overlooked by the pavilion and its sagging roof. The choices faced by Gaddafi’s loyalists are stark: to fight on and end up dead under a blanket like the men in the pick-up truck, or to come out, as one fighter in uniform did on Thursday morning. “You see that captive?” asked Ismail Taweel, a middle-aged fighter from the Harbus Katiba, a unit famous in Libya from the siege of Misrata, most of whose colleagues are in the desert near Bani Walid. He indicated a burly, bearded man with a face bruised from beating, crying with fear. “I want to ask him how many of them are left. I’ve just come from speaking to another captive. A Sudanese. He said there were few left and most were wearing green uniforms. We’re fighting the real soldiers now, not the mercenaries. He said some were trying to escape.” “They have one and a half square kilometres at most,” explained Dr Salah al-Obeidi, a commander from Benghazi who was a dentist before the war. “There are a hundred fighters, maybe a little more, holding us up. That is all.” Others put the number at 200. “They are finished. All they can do is surrender. There has been no attempt to negotiate with them,” Obeidi said. “We don’t negotiate with terrorists. We hear them talking on their radios. Talking about ‘rats’ and killing infidels.” Obeidi had a sheep in the back of his truck, ready to be slaughtered for the victory feast. When victory finally comes. On the roof of an unfinished building with a yellow water tank on top and the green flag of the Gaddafi troops, muzzle flashes were visible. Later the tanks tried to land their shells on top of it. Matthew VanDyke, the film-maker turned fighter who spent months in a Gaddafi jail, was at the front again on Thursday. “I was at the opening of the street yesterday fighting in my vehicle. Then we forced them back to the last buildings in the street, but now they have moved forward to the middle of the street again. The water comes up to the running boards. It is thigh deep when you go in and you can see the bullets hitting it. “A lot of the Gaddafi fighters have slipped out with the families escaping – guys you see of military age.” The Gaddafi forces left in Sirte cannot break out: there is no one to join. They cannot retake a town vast areas of which are now under government control. Why they fight on seems baffling to many of those facing them in these last days and hours of the battle for Sirte and indeed the war for Libya. As evening approached the dynamic of the stalled fighting seemed to change. An advance by government forces through an area of houses on the coast pushed from east to west beyond a tall aerial. Out of sight beyond a flooded series of streets it was possible to measure the progress only by smoke and by the sounds of the truck-mounted anti-aircraft guns and the explosions of tank fire and the recoilless rifles moving – it appeared – inexorably into the pocket. This is a battle that the government fighters now cannot lose. The only question is how many more must die before their victory is complete. Libya Middle East Africa Muammar Gaddafi Arab and Middle East unrest William Hague Peter Beaumont guardian.co.uk

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Libya war reaches endgame with 100 loyalists left fighting

Sirte stronghold edges close to falling with pro-Gaddafi troops stranded as rebels prepare to declare total victory The two men are singing in the back of a pick-up truck, sitting on the rails, their legs resting on a blanket that seems oddly lumpy. Sticking out from beneath it are two pairs of feet, one bare, one wearing socks. They are the feet of two pro-Gaddafi fighters killed in the fighting in the coastal city of Sirte. Thursday was a day of deaths on both sides. Government forces trying to enter the last pocket of Sirte held by pro-Gaddafi fighters were bogged down in a narrow street flooded with sewage and water. Sirte is an unremarkable town, its importance inflated by the fact that the deposed Libyan leader was born nearby and counts its main tribe among his staunchest supporters. But its fate is now being keenly watched around the world. The rebel government in Tripoli has declared – as foreign secretary William Hague told MPs in London – that its fall will mean the liberation of the entire country and trigger the start of a political process to build a new democracy. A street corner where, on Wednesday, it had been possible to walk and stare into a narrow canyon of shattered buildings, was at the centre of the battle. Instead of walking, one had to crawl as the pockets of defenders fired RPGs into buildings and at cars. In response government fighters pulled back a little and brought in tanks, placing them on a low, grassy rise crowned with a shattered white pavilion from where they could blast directly into the rooftop positions, setting fires, nibbling away at the concrete, filling the air with noise and dust. For the pro-Gaddafi fighters it is a hopeless situation. There is nowhere to go except deeper into an area of the city 750 metres wide by 500 metres deep that runs along the coast from the television station – with its pair of wrecked and punctured dishes – to the edge of District Two, overlooked by the pavilion and its sagging roof. The choices faced by Gaddafi’s loyalists are stark: to fight on and end up dead under a blanket like the men in the pick-up truck, or to come out, as one fighter in uniform did on Thursday morning. “You see that captive?” asked Ismail Taweel, a middle-aged fighter from the Harbus Katiba, a unit famous in Libya from the siege of Misrata, most of whose colleagues are in the desert near Bani Walid. He indicated a burly, bearded man with a face bruised from beating, crying with fear. “I want to ask him how many of them are left. I’ve just come from speaking to another captive. A Sudanese. He said there were few left and most were wearing green uniforms. We’re fighting the real soldiers now, not the mercenaries. He said some were trying to escape.” “They have one and a half square kilometres at most,” explained Dr Salah al-Obeidi, a commander from Benghazi who was a dentist before the war. “There are a hundred fighters, maybe a little more, holding us up. That is all.” Others put the number at 200. “They are finished. All they can do is surrender. There has been no attempt to negotiate with them,” Obeidi said. “We don’t negotiate with terrorists. We hear them talking on their radios. Talking about ‘rats’ and killing infidels.” Obeidi had a sheep in the back of his truck, ready to be slaughtered for the victory feast. When victory finally comes. On the roof of an unfinished building with a yellow water tank on top and the green flag of the Gaddafi troops, muzzle flashes were visible. Later the tanks tried to land their shells on top of it. Matthew VanDyke, the film-maker turned fighter who spent months in a Gaddafi jail, was at the front again on Thursday. “I was at the opening of the street yesterday fighting in my vehicle. Then we forced them back to the last buildings in the street, but now they have moved forward to the middle of the street again. The water comes up to the running boards. It is thigh deep when you go in and you can see the bullets hitting it. “A lot of the Gaddafi fighters have slipped out with the families escaping – guys you see of military age.” The Gaddafi forces left in Sirte cannot break out: there is no one to join. They cannot retake a town vast areas of which are now under government control. Why they fight on seems baffling to many of those facing them in these last days and hours of the battle for Sirte and indeed the war for Libya. As evening approached the dynamic of the stalled fighting seemed to change. An advance by government forces through an area of houses on the coast pushed from east to west beyond a tall aerial. Out of sight beyond a flooded series of streets it was possible to measure the progress only by smoke and by the sounds of the truck-mounted anti-aircraft guns and the explosions of tank fire and the recoilless rifles moving – it appeared – inexorably into the pocket. This is a battle that the government fighters now cannot lose. The only question is how many more must die before their victory is complete. Libya Middle East Africa Muammar Gaddafi Arab and Middle East unrest William Hague Peter Beaumont guardian.co.uk

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Cain’s 9-9-9 Windfall for the Wealthy Deepens Debt and Hikes Middle Class Taxes

If nothing else, Herman Cain is a man who is very sure of himself. This week, Cain once again declared God told him to run for President . But on the same day Senate Republicans continued their unprecedented obstructionism by blocking President Obama’s jobs bill, Cain’s own 9-9-9 plan finally started to come under scrutiny. As it turns out, Cain’s simple scheme -like virtually every other recent GOP proposal – would produce mountains of debt and massively shift the tax burden to middle class Americans as the wealthy received yet another windfall from the U.S. Treasury. Of course, you’d never know from Cain’s confident prediction during Tuesday night’s Bloomberg GOP presidential debate . His prescription? Two things. Present a bold plan to grow this economy, which I have put my 9-9-9 plan on the table, and it starts with throwing out the current tax code and putting in the 9-9-9 plan. Secondly, get serious about bringing down the national debt. The only way we’re going to do that is, the first year that I’m president and I oversee a fiscal year budget, make sure that revenues equals [sic] spending. If we stop adding to the national debt, we can bring it down. The former pizza magnate might want to check his math. Because even Herman Cain never cut a slice so big. To “make sure that revenues equal spending,” Herman Cain would have to cut roughly $1.8 trillion (or 47 percent!) from the nation’s $3.8 trillion budget . Because as Bloomberg News explained, Cain’s two-step plan to blow up the current income tax, end both the capital gains and estate taxes and replace them with flat 9 percent individual, corporate and sales tax rates would unleash new rivers of red ink: Following the broad contours of Cain’s plan, the U.S. would have collected almost $2 trillion in 2010, according to a Bloomberg News calculation based on data from the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis. The U.S. actually collected almost $2.2 trillion that year, according to the White House Office of Management and Budget… Using 2010 figures, Cain’s plan would have collected $922.1 billion in revenue from the national sales tax with no exemptions, $912.7 billion at a 9 percent individual income tax with few deductions or other tax benefits, and $127.7 billion from a 9 percent tax on U.S. corporate income with no deductions. The federal government in 2010 actually collected $898.5 billion from individuals, including levies on capital gains; $191.4 billion from the corporate income tax; $864.8 billion from Social Security and retirement taxes; $141 billion in other taxes, such as estate and gift taxes; and $66 billion in excise taxes. This doesn’t include the taxes levied by states on retail sales and property. If anything, Bloomberg’s analysis understates the magnitude of the revenue problem. For example, in pre-recession 2007, total tax revenue was $2.6 trillion. The Center for American Progress estimated Cain’s 9-9-9 plan would have brought in only $1.3 trillion and thus “cut federal revenue in half.” It’s no wonder CAP’s Michael Linden concluded President Cain’s would be “bigger than any deficit since WWII, including the deficits of the past three years.” But that’s hardly the only poison in pizza man Herman Cain’s secret sauce for Americans. As Center for American Progress Vice President for Economic Policy Michael Ettlinger put it: “[Herman Cain's 9-9-9 plan] would be the biggest tax shift from the wealthy to the middle-class in the history of taxation, ever, anywhere, and it would bankrupt the country.” Because Cain’s 9 percent national sales tax makes no mention of a personal exemption , as economists including former Reagan Treasury official Bruce Bartlett : This means that the 47 percent of tax filers who now pay no federal income taxes will pay 9 percent on their total income. And elimination of the payroll tax won’t even help half of them because the earned income tax credit, which Mr. Cain would abolish, offsets both their income tax liability and their payroll tax payment as well. Meanwhile, the reduction of the top income tax rate from 35% to 9%, the zeroing out of the capital gains tax, and the elimination of the estate and gift taxes would mean yet another payday for the gilded-class, courtesy of working Americans. As Bartlett pointed out : Mr. Cain would abolish all taxes on capital gains. Such taxes typically generate more than $100 billion in federal revenue annually, according to the Tax Policy Center. According to the Joint Committee on Taxation, two-thirds of all capital gains are reported by those with incomes over $1 million. The result, as CAP’s Linden concluded , would be an unprecedented downward shift of the tax burden coupled with a jaw-dropping upward redistribution of wealth in the United States: Someone in the bottom quintile of earners — who currently pays about 2 percent of his or her income in federal taxes — would pay about 18 percent under Cain’s plan (9 percent on every dollar they make, plus 9 percent on every dollar they spent, which would likely be close to all of them). A middle-class individual would see his or her taxes go from about 14 percent to about 18 percent. But someone in the richest one percent of Americans would see his or her tax rate fall from about 28 percent to about 11 percent. As ABC News concluded, the “9-9-9 Plan Would Almost Double Taxes on Middle Class”: If you have a family of four with an income of just under $50,000, they would pay more under the Cain plan. Currently, they are taxed at just less than 7 percent and pay $3,400 in income tax. Under Cain’s plan, they would be taxed at 9 percent or pay $4,500. That’s $1,100 more. Although the family would save almost $4,000 in Social Security taxes, it would have to give up the child tax credit of $4,000. Furthermore, it would pay an additional national sales tax of 9 percent on everything purchased, including groceries and clothes, which totals about $2,000. That means under the Cain plan that family would be almost doubling its taxes, going from $3,400 to $6,500. Of course, if you have a sinking feeling that you’ve seen this movie before, that’s because you have. The Bush tax cuts , after all, siphoned off over $2 trillion from the U.S. Treasury in their first decade, and if made permanent, would drain another $4 trillion in the years to come. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities ( CBPP ) found that the Bush tax cuts accounted for almost half of the mushrooming deficits during his tenure. As another CBPP analysis forecast, over the next 10 years, the Bush tax cuts if made permanent will contribute more to the U.S. budget deficit than the Obama stimulus, the TARP program, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and revenue lost to the recession put together . And while those upper-class tax cuts produced the lowest federal tax burden 60 years in the highest income inequality in 80 , during Bush’s days in the Oval Office America’s so-called “job creators” produced a meager one million jobs. And now, Bush’s would-be Republican successors would make things much, much worse. 235 House Republicans and 40 GOP Senators voted for the Ryan budget would deliver $4.2 trillion in tax cuts while raising the onus on working Americans. Mitt Romney’s plan would cost the Treasury an estimated $6.5 trillion over the next 10 years even as he and his fellow One Percenters pocketed massive tax breaks. (Tim Pawlenty’s $11 trillion budgetary disaster was even worse.) But when it comes to red ink and wealth redistribution, Godfather’s pizza man Herman Cain takes the cake. Which is why Cain’s God apparently wanted him to run for President. As Edward Kleinbard , a former chief of staff to the congressional Joint Committee on Taxation put it: “Either Herman Cain is the tax messiah or is proposing a system that has no correspondence to real-world tax systems.” On that second point, Americans can be certain.

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Cain’s 9-9-9 Windfall for the Wealthy Deepens Debt and Hikes Middle Class Taxes

If nothing else, Herman Cain is a man who is very sure of himself. This week, Cain once again declared God told him to run for President . But on the same day Senate Republicans continued their unprecedented obstructionism by blocking President Obama’s jobs bill, Cain’s own 9-9-9 plan finally started to come under scrutiny. As it turns out, Cain’s simple scheme -like virtually every other recent GOP proposal – would produce mountains of debt and massively shift the tax burden to middle class Americans as the wealthy received yet another windfall from the U.S. Treasury. Of course, you’d never know from Cain’s confident prediction during Tuesday night’s Bloomberg GOP presidential debate . His prescription? Two things. Present a bold plan to grow this economy, which I have put my 9-9-9 plan on the table, and it starts with throwing out the current tax code and putting in the 9-9-9 plan. Secondly, get serious about bringing down the national debt. The only way we’re going to do that is, the first year that I’m president and I oversee a fiscal year budget, make sure that revenues equals [sic] spending. If we stop adding to the national debt, we can bring it down. The former pizza magnate might want to check his math. Because even Herman Cain never cut a slice so big. To “make sure that revenues equal spending,” Herman Cain would have to cut roughly $1.8 trillion (or 47 percent!) from the nation’s $3.8 trillion budget . Because as Bloomberg News explained, Cain’s two-step plan to blow up the current income tax, end both the capital gains and estate taxes and replace them with flat 9 percent individual, corporate and sales tax rates would unleash new rivers of red ink: Following the broad contours of Cain’s plan, the U.S. would have collected almost $2 trillion in 2010, according to a Bloomberg News calculation based on data from the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis. The U.S. actually collected almost $2.2 trillion that year, according to the White House Office of Management and Budget… Using 2010 figures, Cain’s plan would have collected $922.1 billion in revenue from the national sales tax with no exemptions, $912.7 billion at a 9 percent individual income tax with few deductions or other tax benefits, and $127.7 billion from a 9 percent tax on U.S. corporate income with no deductions. The federal government in 2010 actually collected $898.5 billion from individuals, including levies on capital gains; $191.4 billion from the corporate income tax; $864.8 billion from Social Security and retirement taxes; $141 billion in other taxes, such as estate and gift taxes; and $66 billion in excise taxes. This doesn’t include the taxes levied by states on retail sales and property. If anything, Bloomberg’s analysis understates the magnitude of the revenue problem. For example, in pre-recession 2007, total tax revenue was $2.6 trillion. The Center for American Progress estimated Cain’s 9-9-9 plan would have brought in only $1.3 trillion and thus “cut federal revenue in half.” It’s no wonder CAP’s Michael Linden concluded President Cain’s would be “bigger than any deficit since WWII, including the deficits of the past three years.” But that’s hardly the only poison in pizza man Herman Cain’s secret sauce for Americans. As Center for American Progress Vice President for Economic Policy Michael Ettlinger put it: “[Herman Cain's 9-9-9 plan] would be the biggest tax shift from the wealthy to the middle-class in the history of taxation, ever, anywhere, and it would bankrupt the country.” Because Cain’s 9 percent national sales tax makes no mention of a personal exemption , as economists including former Reagan Treasury official Bruce Bartlett : This means that the 47 percent of tax filers who now pay no federal income taxes will pay 9 percent on their total income. And elimination of the payroll tax won’t even help half of them because the earned income tax credit, which Mr. Cain would abolish, offsets both their income tax liability and their payroll tax payment as well. Meanwhile, the reduction of the top income tax rate from 35% to 9%, the zeroing out of the capital gains tax, and the elimination of the estate and gift taxes would mean yet another payday for the gilded-class, courtesy of working Americans. As Bartlett pointed out : Mr. Cain would abolish all taxes on capital gains. Such taxes typically generate more than $100 billion in federal revenue annually, according to the Tax Policy Center. According to the Joint Committee on Taxation, two-thirds of all capital gains are reported by those with incomes over $1 million. The result, as CAP’s Linden concluded , would be an unprecedented downward shift of the tax burden coupled with a jaw-dropping upward redistribution of wealth in the United States: Someone in the bottom quintile of earners — who currently pays about 2 percent of his or her income in federal taxes — would pay about 18 percent under Cain’s plan (9 percent on every dollar they make, plus 9 percent on every dollar they spent, which would likely be close to all of them). A middle-class individual would see his or her taxes go from about 14 percent to about 18 percent. But someone in the richest one percent of Americans would see his or her tax rate fall from about 28 percent to about 11 percent. As ABC News concluded, the “9-9-9 Plan Would Almost Double Taxes on Middle Class”: If you have a family of four with an income of just under $50,000, they would pay more under the Cain plan. Currently, they are taxed at just less than 7 percent and pay $3,400 in income tax. Under Cain’s plan, they would be taxed at 9 percent or pay $4,500. That’s $1,100 more. Although the family would save almost $4,000 in Social Security taxes, it would have to give up the child tax credit of $4,000. Furthermore, it would pay an additional national sales tax of 9 percent on everything purchased, including groceries and clothes, which totals about $2,000. That means under the Cain plan that family would be almost doubling its taxes, going from $3,400 to $6,500. Of course, if you have a sinking feeling that you’ve seen this movie before, that’s because you have. The Bush tax cuts , after all, siphoned off over $2 trillion from the U.S. Treasury in their first decade, and if made permanent, would drain another $4 trillion in the years to come. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities ( CBPP ) found that the Bush tax cuts accounted for almost half of the mushrooming deficits during his tenure. As another CBPP analysis forecast, over the next 10 years, the Bush tax cuts if made permanent will contribute more to the U.S. budget deficit than the Obama stimulus, the TARP program, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and revenue lost to the recession put together . And while those upper-class tax cuts produced the lowest federal tax burden 60 years in the highest income inequality in 80 , during Bush’s days in the Oval Office America’s so-called “job creators” produced a meager one million jobs. And now, Bush’s would-be Republican successors would make things much, much worse. 235 House Republicans and 40 GOP Senators voted for the Ryan budget would deliver $4.2 trillion in tax cuts while raising the onus on working Americans. Mitt Romney’s plan would cost the Treasury an estimated $6.5 trillion over the next 10 years even as he and his fellow One Percenters pocketed massive tax breaks. (Tim Pawlenty’s $11 trillion budgetary disaster was even worse.) But when it comes to red ink and wealth redistribution, Godfather’s pizza man Herman Cain takes the cake. Which is why Cain’s God apparently wanted him to run for President. As Edward Kleinbard , a former chief of staff to the congressional Joint Committee on Taxation put it: “Either Herman Cain is the tax messiah or is proposing a system that has no correspondence to real-world tax systems.” On that second point, Americans can be certain.

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Victoria Jackson Goes to Occupy Wall Street and Gets in Over Her Head

(h/t The Political Carnival ) This is your brain . And this is your brain on Glenn Beck . Victoria Jackson employs so few braincells I’m actually amazed that she can navigate the greater New York state highway system to make it down to the Occupy Wall Street. I’m guessing that Jackson thought that she could pull a “gotcha” and catch a few DFH smoking their joints and banging on their bongos and convince them to accept Christ in their life and go Republican. But Jackson has been outsourcing all her thinking to the GB Network for so long that she came completely unarmed for this battle of wits. She found a few outrageous players that look for camera time that you see at any protest, no doubt infusing her with false confidence. But when she actually interviewed some participants, she found that not only were they intelligent and well-spoken, but like Kryptonite to conservatives, armed with facts. They refused to take her bait of degenerating this down to a partisan quibble, they pointed out that they were focused on systemic failures (oops…too many syllables for Victoria?) and they basically left her looking even more pathetic. But that’s not hard, is it? EDITOR’S NOTE: Why did she post this?

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UK tells Libya to form interim government after taking over Sirte

Transitional council also asked to investigate torture, illegal detentions and other human rights abuses reported by Amnesty Britain is urging Libya’s rebel administration to move swiftly to form an interim government once it declares the country liberated — with the defeat of Gaddafi loyalists in Sirte now looking imminent. It has also pressed the National Transitional Council to investigate evidence of torture and illegal detentions in a new Amnesty International report into abuses that risk tarnishing the “new” Libya with practices associated with the old regime. Foreign secretary William Haguetold MPs on Thursday that leaders of the NTC “have confirmed their clear understanding of the need for quick formation of a new, inclusive government.” The NTC has said political change will begin when most fighting is over. If Sirte falls then resistance is likely to be confined to Bani Walid, a sizeable but isolated town south of Tripoli, where Muammar Gaddafi’s son Saif al-Islam is rallying loyalists. Hague also said that Nato air operations to protect Libyan civilians — in the language of UN resolution 1973 —would continue “for as long as is necessary at the request of the NTC.” Russia, China and other countries complain that Nato has exceeded the mandate granted by the UN security council in March and has in effect intervened in a civil war between the regime and rebels. Foreign Office officials said that Britain’s mission in Tripoli had urged the NTC to investigate an Amnesty report that revealed a pattern of beatings and ill-treatment of captured Gaddafi soldiers, suspected loyalists and alleged mercenaries. It said that since August, when the Tripoli uprising took place, armed militia have arrested and detained up to 2,500 people in the capital and al-Zawiya. None of the detainees seen by Amnesty had been shown any arrest warrant and many were effectively abducted from their homes. Detainees were almost always held without legal orders by local councils or armed brigades — far from the oversight of the ministry of justice. “The Amnesty report raises serious questions which the NTC needs to investigate and we have pressed them to take action”, an FCO official said. “Anyone who has committed such abuses must be held to account, so that the new Libya shows a clear break with the past. The NTC leadership has declared their commitment to human rights. But despite what is a challenging situation on the ground, orders from the top need to be translated into action”. The NTC official responsible for justice, Mohammed al-Alagi, said that abuses would be investigated. “People will be held to account,” said spokesman Guma el-Gamaty. “We have been living with human rights violations for 42 years. No-one is trying to hide anything.” Hague warned too that no country should give shelter to fugitives. Muammar Gaddafi, Saif al-Islam and intelligence chief Abdullah Senussi are all wanted on charges of crimes against humanity by the International Criminal Court and are still at large. Other members of the family and regime have taken refuge in Niger, Algeria and Tunisia. The NTC meanwhile approved an investigation into another Gaddafi son, Saadi, over the murder of Bashir al-Ryani, a footballer who played for Libya in the 1980s. He was tortured and killed in December 2005. Saadi is in Niger, where the government says he is under surveillance but it is unlikely to extradite him to a country where he would not be given a fair trial and risked the death penalty. Libya Middle East Africa Amnesty International Muammar Gaddafi Foreign policy Nato Human rights Ian Black guardian.co.uk

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BP gets go-ahead to expand North Sea drilling

• Cameron backs £4bn plan for ‘new Atlantic frontier’ • Greenpeace warns of oil spills and rising emissions BP faced fresh condemnation from environmentalists on Thursday after it got the go-ahead to invest £4bn to develop one of the North Sea’s largest oilfields off Shetland. The company has been criticised by green campaigners for trying to open up “a new Atlantic frontier” west of Shetland, to replace dwindling reserves in other parts of the North Sea. BP’s latest move to extract oil from the Clair Ridge field was immediately criticised by Greenpeace, which claimed it was now “frankly risible for David Cameron to claim that this government will be the ‘greenest ever’.” Greenpeace said: “While [energy secretary] Chris Huhne likes to portray himself as the good green guy of the cabinet, all those around him are pledging the UK to a dirty fuel future that will do only one thing: increase CO2 emissions and cause irreparable damage to the environment.” Green groups have already criticised BP for seeking permits to drill a potentially hazardous deep-water well 1,300 metres below the surface in the North Uist field – a seabed block named after the Hebridean island but located 80 miles north-west of Shetland. However, the prime minister threw his weight behind BP, declaring: “We should be looking to try and make these things happen rather than ruling them out.” The firm had planned to start drilling in the North Uist area last year but the launch date was postponed following the Deepwater Horizon disaster, in which 11 workers were killed and 4.9m barrels of oil leaked into the Gulf of Mexico. Now the company is pushing ahead, prompting environmental groups to write to Huhne urging him to withhold consent. They warn that a spill could be disastrous and that exploiting new oil reserves would be harmful to the climate. But during a visit to BP’s headquarters in Aberdeen, Cameron appeared to dismiss those concerns when he said: “There are some people who you will never reassure, who quite frankly would probably prefer we weren’t recovering oil from any part of the North Sea. I don’t think you’re going to convince them.” Cameron said he was delighted to give BP the go-ahead for the next phase of development of the huge Clair Ridge field, 50 miles from Shetland, which is not in deep water. He said it was “great news for Aberdeen and the country and provides a massive boost for jobs and growth”. BP said its Clair investment was its biggest in a single year in the North Sea and, together with other recently announced projects off the UK, should enable it “to maintain our production from the North Sea to around 200,000-250,000 barrels a day until 2030″. The UK energy group, headed by Bob Dudley, desperately needs good news after several international setbacks that resulted in shares falling. Besides the disastrous Mexican Gulf oil spill, BP’s joint venture in the Arctic with Russia’s Rosneft collapsed. So far this year, BP has announced North Sea investments worth £10bn, including contributions from its partners, Shell, Chevron and ConocoPhillips. Dudley said: “Although it began over 40 years ago, the story of the North Sea oil industry has a long way yet to run. BP has produced some 5bn barrels of oil and gas equivalent so far from the region and we believe we have the potential for over 3bn more.” BP said after a “decade of decline”, industry-wide oil investment in the North Sea and the Atlantic margin was now increasingly strongly once more. The announcement of the Clair scheme comes after BP and its partners revealed plans earlier this year for a £3bn redevelopment of the Schiehallion and Loyal oilfields, also to the west of Shetland. In addition, they are investing £700m in developing the Kinnoull field in the central North Sea. Cameron said: “We live in a very dangerous and difficult world. We do not want to be over-reliant on energy supplies from difficult parts of the world, from unstable parts of the world. And it is a huge national advantage having such a brilliant oil and gas industry here in Aberdeen and here in the North Sea. “We should treasure that and want to see it expand, want to see it grow, want to see it be part of a good and diversified energy industry in the UK.” According to BP, since the late 1960s, £300bn has been invested in exploration drilling and field developments on the UK continental shelf – and a similar figure has been paid in corporate taxes. BP alone has invested about £35bn into the UK North Sea, paying more than £40bn to the government in tax Dudley said: “We have a major presence in the North Sea today, operating around 40 oil and gas fields, four onshore terminals and a network of pipelines that transport almost half of the UK’s oil and gas production. And as demonstrated by these announcements, the region still offers competitive, attractive investment opportunities, which we will pursue.” Over the next few years, BP will be bringing onstream more major project developments in the UK than ever before over a similar period, it said. BP Oil Oil Scotland Energy industry Oil spills Greenpeace Energy Commodities Fossil fuels Oil and gas companies BP oil spill United States Pollution David Cameron Activism Richard Wachman guardian.co.uk

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Vincent Tabak ‘joked with friends about police search for Joanna Yeates’s killer’

Court hears Tabak told friends that whoever murdered Yeates must be a ‘detached, crazy person’ to carry on acting normally The man accused of the murder of landscape architect Joanna Yeates joked about the police search for the culprit at a dinner party and offered a theory about the sort of character who would commit such a crime, his trial has heard. Vincent Tabak discussed the case with friends over a vegetable curry and said he believed that whoever murdered Yeates must have been a “totally detached, crazy person”, the jury was told. Tabak, a 33-year-old engineer, from the Netherlands, joked at the party that police had opened a drawer in his flat to see if there was a body there, it was claimed. Bristol crown court also heard that Tabak had been planning to marry his girlfriend, Tanja Morson, and start a family. Tabak has admitted the manslaughter of 25-year-old Yeates but denies murder. The prosecution claims he strangled her to death at her flat in Clifton, Bristol, on 17 December 2010, before putting her body into his car and dumping it on the verge of Longwood Lane, Failand. The jury was told about a dinner party that Tabak and Morson attended on 15 January. In a written statement one of the guests, Sarah Maddock, described how the conversation turned to Yeates. She said Tabak had said that whoever killed Yeates had to be a “totally detached, crazy person” to be able to “carry on acting normally after something like that”. Maddock described Tabak as perfectly normal at the dinner party and said he held his girlfriend’s hand under the table. She also revealed that Morson had told her of their plans to marry and start a family. Andrew Lillie, an engineer who hosted the party, said Tabak and Morson were recounting how police had searched their flat after Yeates went missing. His statement, read to the court, said: “Vincent just made a small remark about how police opened a drawer so they could look for a body. This was said in a light-hearted way.” The court also heard that Tabak drank champagne at a party the night after the alleged murder. He attended a friend’s birthday at a bar on Bristol harbourside but seemed “unwilling to talk” and “short”, according to Linda Marland, a witness. Jurors also heard more about the night Yeates was allegedly murdered . She had spent the early part of the evening with work colleagues at the Ram pub in Bristol. One colleague, Elisabeth Chandler, an office manager, said Yeates was dreading the weekend because her boyfriend, Greg Reardon, was away. Other colleagues described how Yeates told them she was going to spend the weekend baking bread and cakes. After leaving the pub, the prosecution says, she walked home and within a few minutes was attacked by Tabak. Florian Lehman told the court that he and his wife, Zoe, heard two screams as they walked up the path of a house opposite Yeates’s flat on their way to a party. He said: “We were through the gate and we were in the middle of the footpath between the gate and the entrance. That’s when I heard two screams. They were quite loud. They seemed to me to come from quite a distance. “The first scream was just for a moment, a scream and then a little pause, maybe just two seconds, and a second scream which was a lot shorter. The first one was louder. The first was longer.” Zoe Lehman said she also heard screams and a thud. “I heard a loud scream and turned around to have a look. The first one was loud, then there was a gap of about two seconds, then the second one was slightly less loud – a bit stifled. Then afterwards there was what sounded like furniture falling over, a thud.” Harry Walker, who lived behind Yeates’s flat, said he heard a scream at about 8.30pm. He told jurors: “I would say it was definitely a human noise. It was definitely not an animal. At the time I thought it must have been students out in the road as it was the end of term.” The trial continues. Joanna Yeates Crime Bristol Steven Morris guardian.co.uk

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