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Joss Stone plot: two men charged

Pair accused of targeting soul singer at her Devon home scheduled to appear before Exeter magistrates Two men have been charged over an alleged plot targeting the soul singer Joss Stone. Junior Bradshaw, 30, and Kevin Liverpool, 33, both from Manchester, were charged with conspiracy to commit robbery and conspiracy to commit grievous bodily harm. The charges come two days after police arrested two men close to Stone’s remote rural retreat in Devon. Bradshaw and Liverpool are due to appear before Exeter magistrates on Thursday. Stone , 24, issued a statement to reassure fans. She said: “I’d like to thank everyone for their concern but I’m absolutely fine and getting on with life as normal while the police continue with their enquiries.” Neighbour Simon Alsop, a 57-year-old farmer, said Stone was remaining calm. He said: “She came here for a coffee on Tuesday afternoon and she was all right. She was quite laid back and not in a major panic. “It all sounds a bit bizarre and very strange. It is quite scary really. I know the whole family well and they are very good neighbours. If Joss isn’t working she is often here. Joss is never there on her own. She usually has a small entourage of friends.” Florence Webber, 87, whose bungalow is near Stone’s house, said: “It is obviously frightening. You don’t expect anything like that in a quiet place like this.” Two men were arrested by Devon and Cornwall police on Monday morning, initially for allegedly possessing offensive weapons and being equipped to steal. Police stepped in after a neighbour reported that a Fiat Punto had been seen in the area. Stone was only 16 when she had her first hit, Fell In Love With A Boy, in 2004 and had just turned 17 when she won Brit awards in the British female solo artist and British urban act categories. Her soulful vocals saw her hailed in the United States as “the white Aretha Franklin” and she has enjoyed success on both sides of the Atlantic. Last month, the Sunday Times placed Stone, who grew up in Devon, as the fifth wealthiest British and Irish pop star aged under 30, with a fortune estimated at £9m. Extra police patrols were put on in the Cullompton area where the arrests were made to reassure local people. Police stood guard outside Stone’s property. Joss Stone Crime Steven Morris guardian.co.uk

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George Osborne: UK must end its reliance on the City

Chancellor outlines proposals to keep London as a global financial centre without risking the rest of the UK economy The chancellor, George Osborne, has set out plans to tackle the “British dilemma”, saying the country needed a settlement with the City that would keep London as a global financial centre without putting the rest of the economy at risk. Adopting a conciliatory approach to bankers in his Mansion House address, the chancellor sought to draw a line under the financial crisis by announcing the sale of Northern Rock – the Newcastle-based lender nationalised after becoming the centre of the first run on a high street bank in almost 150 years. There was speculation that the government may have to sell the bank for a loss. “Images of the queues outside Northern Rock branches were a symbol of all that went wrong, and its chaotic collapse did great damage to Britain’s international reputation,” the chancellor said. “Its return now to the private sector would help to rebuild that reputation.” Osborne said the economy was “on the mend” after the deep recession of 2008-09 but warned that the weakness of the financial sector together with the crisis in the eurozone and softness in the US economy was putting a brake on UK growth. Announcing his support for plans to ringfence high-street banking operations and the toughening up of City regulation under the Bank of England, the chancellor said the country was “within touching distance” of a “new settlement” with finance. “If we achieve it, then we will have answered the British dilemma – and put our country on the path to prosperity. I want the City of London to be a thriving centre of enterprise, more interested in serving its customers than in what government might do to it next. Resolving the British dilemma is the way to do that.” Sir Mervyn King, who will chair the first meeting of the Financial Policy Committee on Thursday – the body set up by Osborne to make sure banks do not take excessive risks en masse – also warned that the City cannot be “allowed to benefit from an unsustainable dependence on the UK taxpayer”. King added: “To allow that would be unfair to millions of people, not here tonight, who are now bearing the costs of the financial crisis. It is precisely because we do want to be an international banking centre with assets a multiple of annual UK GDP that we have to find a solution to the ‘too important to fail’ problem.” Buoyed by unemployment figures showing the biggest quarterly drop in the jobless total in 10 years, Osborne said: “Output is growing. Stability has returned. Britain is on the mend. But it is taking time.” He said the economy faced the problem of unwinding debts built up over a decade. “Of all the major economies in the world, Britain’s was the most over-borrowed. Our families were more in debt than any other in the G7. Our house-price bubble was bigger than America’s. Our government deficit higher than that of Greece.” He added that the financial system, which helped fuel the boom in the middle of the previous decade, was now responsible for holding the economy back. During the past 18 months, when the economy grew by 2.5%, the financial sector contracted by 4%. “Take the financial sector out of the equation, and economic growth in the rest of the economy during the recovery has actually been above its average rate of the last two decades. Put the financial sector into the equation, and economic growth has been below trend.” The chancellor said he was working on plans to ensure that the taxpayer was no longer “first on the hook” in the event that things went wrong in the City. But as he threw his weight behind the interim report of the Independent Commission on Banking under Sir John Vickers, he faced criticism for not waiting for the final recommendations due out on 12 September. The Liberal Democrat peer Lord Oakeshott said “we can’t rule out” that a full break-up of the banks might need to be considered by the time of the final report. The banking commission was a key part of the coalition agreement signed last year, and will report back to the chancellor and the business secretary, Vince Cable, who has called for a full separation of “casino” investment banks and high street lenders. Osborne said he would publish outlining draft legislation on Thursday that would give him power to close down the Financial Services Authority and put an end to the tripartite system of regulation involving the Treasury, the Bank and the FSA. “As a global financial centre that generates hundreds of thousands of jobs, a successful banking and financial services industry is clearly in our national economic interests. But we cannot afford to let it pose a risk to the stability and prosperity of the nation’s entire economy. “We should strive for global success in financial services, but that success should not come at an unacceptably high price.” George Osborne Economic policy Financial crisis Recession Economic growth (GDP) Financial sector Northern Rock Mervyn King Larry Elliott Jill Treanor guardian.co.uk

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On his June 15 program, MSNBC's Martin Bashir misled viewers with claims that GOP presidential candidates, including and especially Newt Gingrich, were dead set on “grounding NASA.” Yet not once did Bashir remind viewers it was President Obama who has been criticized by Apollo program veterans for ditching the agency's project to send missions back to the moon. “Coming up, Newt Gingrich likes Tiffany diamonds but not manned space flight,” Bashir teased viewers before a commercial break at 3:10 p.m. Eastern. “Why do he and the other GOP candidates want to ground NASA?” he added. “Next, Newt Gingrich and other GOP candidates want to ground NASA. The latest salvo in a concerted war on science?” Bashir provocatively asked on the way out to commercial break at 3:25 p.m., echoing a favored meme of MSNBC hosts that Republicans are anti-science. Back from commercial break at 3:30, Bashir noted that aired a clip of President John F. Kennedy from May 25, 1961, laying out his goal for the U.S. to reach the moon by the end of the decade. “Now I ask you to contrast that with what Newt Gingrich said at Monday's debate,” Bashir snarled, showing a clip of Gingrich lamenting “bureaucracy after bureaucracy” and “failure after failure” in NASA's work since the moon landings of the late '60s and early '70s. “Of course we now know how Mr. Gingrich likes to spend his money, but in difficult times, how much can America spend on space exploration?” Bashir

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Selective Outrage: L.A. Times Lashes Out at Tracy Morgan, Gives Palin-H8ing Comics Pass After Pass

To understand if a person or group is on the left or the right, look no further than what outrages them.

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How many times have you heard Glenn Beck tell his audience that Liberals and public schools are indoctrinating America to become socialists, Marxists, radical Muslims? Well, now there’s this from the Tampa12 Project. TAMPA — Here’s another option now that the kids are out of school: a weeklong seminar about our nation’s founding principles, courtesy of the Tampa 912 Project . The organization, which falls under the tea party umbrella, hopes to introduce kids ages 8 to 12 to principles that include “America is good,” “I believe in God,” and “I work hard for what I have and I will share it with who I want to. Government cannot force me to be charitable.” Organized by conservative writer Jeff Lukens and staffed by volunteers from the 912 Project, Tampa Liberty School will meet every morning July 11-15 in borrowed space at the Paideia Christian school in Temple Terrace. “We want to impart to our children what our nation is about, and what they may or may not be told,” Lukens said. He said he was not familiar with public school curriculum, but, “I do know they have a lot of political correctness. We are a faithful people, and when you talk about natural law, you have to talk about God. When you take that out of the discussion, you miss the whole thing.” Tampa Liberty is modeled after vacation Bible schools, which use fun, hands-on activities to deliver Christian messages. One example at Liberty: Children will win hard, wrapped candies to use as currency for a store, symbolizing the gold standard . On the second day, the “banker” will issue paper money instead. Over time, students will realize their paper money buys less and less, while the candies retain their value. “Some of the kids will fall for it,” Lukens said. “Others kids will wise up.” Another example: Starting in an austere room where they are made to sit quietly, symbolizing Europe, the children will pass through an obstacle course to arrive at a brightly decorated party room (the New World). Red-white-and-blue confetti will be thrown. But afterward the kids will have to clean up the confetti, learning that with freedom comes responsibility. Still another example: Children will blow bubbles from a single container of soapy solution, and then pop each other’s bubbles with squirt guns in an arrangement that mimics socialism . They are to count how many bubbles they pop. Then they will work with individual bottles of solution and pop their own bubbles. “What they will find out is that you can do a lot more with individual freedom,” Lukens said. While the Liberty school is the first of its kind in the Tampa Bay area, Lukens said a group in Kentucky ran a similar school , and he learned from their ideas. I pray for these children. Digby: These people are raising their kids to be insufferable, proselytizing Ayn Rand adolescents or black-clad teen-age loners who love Death Metal and hate their parents. Even though Ayn Rand hated religion that won’t stop Tea Partiers from passing her teaching on to their children. It’s such an odd mix of ideas when you enter in the obsession of turning back the clock to the the gold standard, but the insanity of it all makes perfect sense and it fits all together like a mega puzzle of the Moral Majority , South African Apartheid , Friedmanism and Randian selfishness.

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AP Headline: "’Hope’ And ‘Change’ Aren’t Enough To Inspire Voters"

I don't know about you, but I found the following headline from the Associated Press rather ironic: Obama 2012 Reelection Campaign: 'Hope' And 'Change' Aren't Enough To Inspire Voters Jim Kuhnhenn began his piece (emphasis added): As he weighed a presidential run back in 2006, President Barack Obama displayed a realistic sense of self-awareness: All the adulation he was receiving, he conceded then, was because he was a blank slate on which people could attach their aspirations. As he seeks re-election, his self-awareness is on display again, with a new conclusion. “It's not as cool to be an Obama supporter as it was in 2008, with the posters and all of that stuff,” he acknowledged to an intimate gathering of donors in Miami this week. It's a line he delivered with a chuckle, a variation on a theme that he is using with his base of supporters. But it holds an important truth for the Obama campaign: Obama is now a known quantity and he will not inspire voters this election the same way he did in the previous one . Well, Jim, how much was this “blank slate” due to the miserable job virtually every so-called news outlet in America including yours did in properly vetting the junior senator from Illinois after he first announced his candidacy in February 2007? Maybe if press members such as yourself would have spent their time digging into his background – ahem, kind of like you did going through 24,000 of former Alaska governor Sarah Palin's email messages last week – he wouldn't have been such a “blank slate.” Politicians hire advisers to assist them in creating personas the public will buy into. It is supposed to be the job of so-called journalists to pierce this veil and inform the citizenry what candidates are really about so they can make informed decisions when they head to the polls. Unfortunately, in the 21 months that followed Obama tossing his hat into the ring, the press totally abdicated its solemn responsibility to the public by not only refusing to properly investigate and report who this man from Chicago was, but also assisting him at every turn to captivate the electorate with nothing but smoke, mirrors, and empty promises about Hope and Change. This raises a very important question as a new presidential campaign begins in earnest: the public might no longer be conned by Obama's pathetic platitudes, but have the Obama-loving media come out from under the ether yet?

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On this week’s Real Time Conversation on What’s Trending, we talk to Josh King, a staff technologist at New America Foundation’s Open Technology Initiative, about “Internet in a Suitcase.” The open source software that will allow people to communicate in situations where the government has shut down access to the Internet. (June 14, 2011)

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On this week’s Real Time Conversation on What’s Trending, we talk to Josh King, a staff technologist at New America Foundation’s Open Technology Initiative, about “Internet in a Suitcase.” The open source software that will allow people to communicate in situations where the government has shut down access to the Internet. (June 14, 2011)

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On this week’s Real Time Conversation on What’s Trending, we talk to Josh King, a staff technologist at New America Foundation’s Open Technology Initiative, about “Internet in a Suitcase.” The open source software that will allow people to communicate in situations where the government has shut down access to the Internet. (June 14, 2011)

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Gregory Jaczko ‘unilaterally’ stopped work on US nuclear dump

Republicans demand resignation of nuclear agency head after he is found to have acted improperly in shutting down project Republicans in Congress demanded the resignation of the head of America’s nuclear agency on Tuesday after it emerged he acted improperly in stopping work on a controversial nuclear waste dump. Gregory Jaczko, who was appointed by Barack Obama to oversee safety at America’s 100 nuclear reactors, had unilaterally shut down preparatory work on the Yucca Mountain project, Hubert Bell, the inspector general of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), said in prepared testimony. Jaczko, who was supposed to be politically neutral, was also highly selective in sharing information with his fellow regulators at the NRC about the dump project. Some of those he did inform did not fully understand he was working to close the project. Those kept in the dark opposed plans to shut the dump. “He was not forthcoming with the other commissioners,” Bell said in his prepared testimony to the house energy and commerce committee. Jaczko did not break the law, Bell said. But his strategic control of information, and his management style, raised questions about his leadership and his political independence. Bell went over many of those concerns in an investigative report last week. Republicans in Congress are strongly pro-nuclear, and have been pushing the Obama administration to move forward on the Yucca Mountain dump as part of a plan to radically expand America’s fleet of nuclear reactors. Joe Barton, a Republican from Texas, insisted the NRC chairman step down. “He violated the law,” Barton said. Ed Whitfield, a Republican from Kentucky, said Jaczko had abused his authority. “I do think he needs to step down,” he said. Even Democrats in Congress criticised Jaczko’s management style, raising concerns about his temper. “Obviously he should work on his interpersonal skills,” said Henry Waxman, the California Democrat who once headed the committee. Underlining the Republican outrage was the accusation that Jaczko was acting at the behest of Obama and the Senate majority leader Harry Reid, who both want to shut down Yucca Mountain to please local interests in Nevada. Jaczko used to work for Reid, and Reid represents Nevada. The Democratic leadership argues instead that the original choice of siting the waste dump in Nevada was itself highly political. Obama promised in 2009 to cancel the project. Local opposition in Nevada has effectively kept Yucca Mountain in limbo for nearly 30 years. The federal government has spent $15bn (£9.16bn) on the project so far, and it is still 10 years away from completion. But the Fukushima nuclear disaster, which exposed the dangers of storing spent nuclear fuel at reactors, has given new urgency to safety concerns about nuclear waste. The US nuclear industry currently stores its nuclear waste at reactor sites scattered across the country. Obama, despite his opposition to the dump, remains a strong proponent of nuclear energy. The NRC is due to issue its first licence for a new reactor in more than 30 years. But America cannot significantly increase the number of reactors without coming up with a working solution on storage of nuclear waste. US politics Republicans Barack Obama United States Nuclear waste Energy Nuclear power Waste Suzanne Goldenberg guardian.co.uk

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