A hilarious parody of the the Valley Girl-speak of Meghan McCain’s “political” writing sounds, like, so much like Meghan McCain that she’s threatening to sue. “Firstly in the first place, some people had a question about my very obvious statement, ‘I don’t necessarily agree that Rick Perry is George Bush…
Continue reading …Power supplies and transport restored in Manila but rice crop threatened as Philippines assesses damage left by typhoon The Philippines has begun the job of cleaning up flooded areas and assessing the damage left by Typhoon Nesat, which caused the deaths of at least 18 people. Financial markets, government offices and some schools reopened on Wednesday, and train services resumed after power supplies were restored in the capital. The death toll had increased from seven on Tuesday evening with 35 people still missing, the national disaster agency said in a morning update as the typhoon moved over the South China Sea towards northern Vietnam and southern China. There were still nearly 48,000 people in evacuation centres, the agency added. It put initial estimates of damage at 100.3m pesos, (£1.46m), including 16.2m pesos (£240,000) of damage to agriculture, including to the key rice crop. The department of agriculture said it may release preliminary damage estimates on Wednesday. The storm passed across the Cagayan Valley, which was expected to account for about 10% of the country’s fourth-quarter rice crop. The government had cut rice imports this year to about 860,000 tonnes from a record 2.45m tonnes in 2010, and plans to make the country self-sufficient in its national staple in coming years. But any major damage to crops could force it to import more supplies, at a time when rice prices are rising. There was flooding across provinces in the north of Luzon, the Philippines’s main island, and authorities maintained warnings of storm surges and flash flooding. “People have to realise now, with the changing climate, typhoons are getting stronger, the pull of the monsoon is getting stronger,” the department of science and technology undersecretary, Graciano Yumul, said in a television interview. The sea wall at Manila Bay was badly damaged by storm surges, which swamped Roxas Boulevard and other waterfront areas, keeping the US embassy shut again on Wednesday. As Nesat departed, weather officials warned another was developing in the Pacific Ocean that could pick up strength and become a typhoon as it approaches north Luzon. “Our initial track line shows it may hit northern Luzon. But it may be too early to tell because it might still change course,” Yumul said. Philippines Natural disasters and extreme weather guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Ninety-one-year-old retired Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens told Bloomberg News that he thinks President Obama’s health care law will pass constitutional muster. He referenced a 2005 Supreme Court decision that held the federal government could outlaw state-sanctioned medical marijuana even if the substance didn’t cross state lines, which was based on a broad interpretation
Continue reading …Ninety-one-year-old retired Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens told Bloomberg News that he thinks President Obama’s health care law will pass constitutional muster. He referenced a 2005 Supreme Court decision that held the federal government could outlaw state-sanctioned medical marijuana even if the substance didn’t cross state lines, which was based on a broad interpretation
Continue reading …Get your own house in order first, miffed German officials are telling the US. They blasted American’s push to pump up a bailout fund as “stupid” idea. “I don’t understand how anyone can have such a stupid idea,” said German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schauble, referring to a US push to…
Continue reading …John Harris leaves the Labour conference to see if anyone is listening in West Kirby and the Tory-Labour marginal seat of Wirral West John Harris Elliot Smith John Domokos
Continue reading …Chris Christie gave a high-profile speech at the Ronald Reagan library last night and left Republicans who want him to run for president with a glimmer of hope. The New Jersey governor, asked if he’d enter the race, pointed to a Politico collection of earlier denials, but then didn’t offer…
Continue reading …In the first of a new series, Jon Savage is trawling the archive of British Pathe newsreels to pick out pop cultural gems. He starts in the 30s with the phenomenon of jitterbugging Pathe had a long history of covering club life and dancing trends – there is an excellent series called London’s Famous Clubs and Cabarets from the mid-20s – but after swing culture arrived in Britain in the late 30s, it presented this frankly staid, pre-pop newsreel with problems of tone and explication. Swing was a souped-up refashioning of 20s hot jazz that originated in African-American culture at clubs such as Harlem’s Savoy ballroom. Its associated dance, the Lindy Hop – marked by the breakaway, when partners abandoned strict tempo and improvised – was first noted by the writer Carl van Vechten in 1928. When it crossed over to white audiences, swing’s dances were all lumped together by the media under the name “jitterbug”. Benny Goodman clearly remembered seeing his first jitterbug in 1934, when a male dancer started to go “off his conk. His eyes rolled, his limbs began to spin like a windmill in a hurricane – his attention, riveted to the rhythm, transformed him into a whirling dervish.” Jitterbugging was still a minority style in the UK before the second world war. In January 1939, Pathe bought in an American newsreel of a dance competition in Cincinnati, Ohio and entitled it Jitterbug Mania (see above). The brief English voiceover emphasises the strangeness and indeed the madness of this US import, while the original commentary introduces the style’s buzzwords: “hep cats and hep chicks”, “everything’s copasetic”, “Cincinatti’s leading rug-cutters and sharpies kick up the dust.” Swing culture became more firmly entrenched in the UK with the arrival of American GIs after 1942. At the end of 1943, Pathe produced two more films on the topic. Rhythm (see above) is an odd mixture of innovation and condescension that reflects just how bizarre American youth culture (the term was coined by the sociologist Talcott Parsons in 1942) must have seemed to British adults. Within just over two minutes, the piece cuts from a funky jazz drama to a disgruntled adult trying to shut out the noise, from the same adult, now a doctor, measuring the drummer’s heartbeat to a series of almost psychedelic electrical waves and animated diagrams. It ends with the briefest of clips showing Gene Krupa with the Benny Goodman Orchestra. There was no doubt about it, this was an alien import – a virus, almost (hence the medical, spacey feel of Rhythm) that threatened to infect British youth. What was needed was a firm hand, and that’s what we get in Jive Dance (see below) from November 1943. Walking down the stage stairs in full evening dress, dance teacher Josephine Bradley will quite clearly brook no nonsense. As Lou Praeger’s band strikes up a swing riff and the dancers begin to fling themselves around, she observes: “Well ladies and gentlemen, I think you will agree that that this is hardly a dance that will grace our ballrooms.” However “from it has evolved another dance, the jive” – and this is what Bradley and her two assistants proceed to lead us through. It’s strange to see the wildness of swing dancing approached in the style of strict tempo but the final shots, of an enthusiastic Hammersmith Palais audience, are much more like it: the exuberance of dance culture in one of its most celebrated venues. • The British Pathe archive contains 90,000 newsreels, from 1910 until the 70s. Jon Savage’s exploration of its wealth of pop material will appear on an occasional basis. Pop and rock Jazz Dance Jon Savage guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Reginald Davis, 77 of Wanneroo, Perth, charged with 16 offences committed between 1949 and 1972, says Scotland Yard A pensioner in Australia has been charged with a 23-year campaign of London child sex attacks dating back to 1949. Reginald Davis, 77, of Wanneroo, Perth, will appear before magistrates on Wednesday accused of 16 historic offences, including several counts of raping a child under 12. The offences are alleged to have taken place in the capital until 1972, Scotland Yard said. He was charged with four child rapes, three attempted rapes, eight indecent assaults and one count of inciting a child to commit gross indecency. The majority of the attacks took place in the 1950s. He appears in custody at Westminster magistrates’ court this afternoon, Scotland Yard said. Crime Child protection Children Australia guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Arabic news channel denies Samer Allawi has Hamas links and says his human rights were breached Al-Jazeera has denied allegations that its Kabul bureau chief has links to Hamas and accused Israeli authorities of “blatant breaches of human rights” over its treatment of the journalist. Samer Allawi was detained by the Israeli military for 49 days following a visit to his family in the West Bank. The Arabic news channel’s journalist was released from detention on Monday after a plea bargain resulted in a suspended jail sentence and a £900 fine. A spokesman for al-Jazeera said Allawi faced “false accusations” and suffered “psychological trauma” as a result of his detention. Shin Bet, Israel’s intelligence agency, said Allawi had admitted to agreeing to “to carry out military or organisational activity as required by Hamas”. This included “criticising American actions in Afghanistan and voicing support for the Palestinian ‘resistance’”, the agency said in a statement. The al-Jazeera spokesman denied these accusations. “While Samer has been released, the grounds for his extended detention are inexcusable: the false accusations made against him changed over the weeks as one accusation changed to another, finally settling upon an assertions that a Hamas official made a request to him at an open press conference,” the spokesman said. “Mr Allawi’s detention has been completely baseless. There was no clear process to this military detention. We continue to hold the Israeli authorities responsible for these blatant breaches of human rights and for causing psychological trauma for Mr Allawi, his wife, children, and his extended family through this ordeal.” Salim Wakim, the journalist’s lawyer, said Allawi had refused Hamas requests and that his client had been sentenced for “very, very, very trivial crimes”. Al-Jazeera also claimed Allawi was regularly denied access to his lawyer, his family, and medical attention, and called upon the Israeli authorities to “desist from harassing and impeding al-Jazeera and any other journalists from undertaking their professional responsibilities as reporters”.
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