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Continue reading …Campaigners say US president became weak-kneed over closure of Guantánamo bay and that spying restrictions are gone The Obama administration has disappointed civil rights campaigners who had expected him to reverse most of the post-9/11 restrictions introduced by the Bush administration. On becoming president in January 2009, Obama promised to close Guantánamo Bay within a year. He did order an end to waterboarding but Guantánamo remains open and almost all the rest of the Bush era anti-terrorism apparatus, from the Patriot Act through to increased surveillance is still in place. Measures once considered only for emergency use are being consolidated. “I did not like it when the violations of rights were temporary but now, because of Obama going along with the changes, they are becoming a permanent fixture of our legal landscape,” said Michael Ratner, president emeritus of the Centre for Constitutional Rights (CCR), which has been battling since the civil rights campaigns of the 1960s. Ratner, who was among the first, small group of lawyers to fight on behalf of the Guantánamo detainees, said Obama had the chance to close Guantánamo but became weak-kneed about it. “Indefinite detention, restrictions on habeas corpus, rendition, all these continue under Obama. We still have military commissions under Obama.” He added: “All the restrictions on government surveillance and spying that we fought for and won in the 1970s, are gone. We are back to square one. There are no restrictions on the FBI. None. They are targeting Muslims in particular. One’s religion has become a key criteria for surveillance.” Michelle Richardson, a lawyer specialising in national security at the American Civil Liberties Union, echoed some of Ratner’s points. “We definitely think there has been quite a significant shift and there is much more government snooping. It started with the Patriot Act, which made it easier to spy on people who aren’t suspected of doing anything wrong.” There were fewer than 1,000 people being wiretapped before 9/11 for intelligence purposes and “now we don’t know how many”, she added. Richardson said the public is split between those who think the government is over-reacting and those who think the measures are justified. “The government has done a good job of keeping people in a state of emergency,” she said, adding that it was too soon to say whether the balance will change. The scales might tip if people begin to be denied benefits or jobs because they are on terrorist lists, she said. But Benjamin Wittes, a senior fellow in public law at the Brookings Institution, is less convinced that America is any less free today than it was before 9/11. Wittes said: “I am not convinced we are less free. If you talk to someone walking on the street – other than in Washington, where we feel more of the brunt because we are more of a target – I would be surprised if they felt less free.” He suggested three categories of freedom. The first affects large numbers of people; the only post-9/11 example of such is airport security; this, Wittes said, is not a constraint on freedom as it allows people to fly. The second category is people who are non-Americans and has zero affect on Americans walking round the streets. Guantánamo is in this category. The third category is surveillance. “There is no doubt there has been an increase in wiretapping. It is a substantial increase, not dramatic. It is not awesome. Most of it is public. The wild card in this is the National Security Agency warrantless wiretapping and we do not know the volume of this.” What about waterboarding? “I agree that countries that engage in torture are less free than those who do it. If you accept it was torture, the question is still more complicated,” Wittes said. It is still a country that in a moment of crisis involved a small number of dangerous people and then stopped. Is that country less free? I think that is extravagant. I am more sympathetic to the CIA than most people.” The bottom line, for Wittes, is that waterboarding has stopped. Obama administration United States US politics Guantánamo Bay FBI September 11 2001 Human rights Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Younis al-Mauritani detained in western city of Quetta with two other members of terror group Younis al-Mauritani, a senior al-Qaida commander believed by some experts to be the organisation’s “foreign minister”, has been captured by Pakistani security forces working with the CIA, the Pakistani army said on Monday. Mauritani – who was detained in the western city of Quetta with two other al-Qaida members – played a central role in the group’s plots against the west, the army said. He is the most high profile al-Qaida figure to have been arrested in Pakistan for several years, and his detention marks another blow to the group following the deaths of Osama bin Laden in a US raid on 2 May and the second in command, Atiyah Abd al-Rahman, in a CIA missile strike last month. The discovery that Bin Laden had been living in Pakistan for several years caused acute embarrassment to the country’s authorities, which have been under intense pressure to prove they are committed to the fight against al-Qaida. In the years immediately following the 9/11 attacks, a series of leading al-Qaida figures were captured in Pakistan, but there have been fewer high-profile arrests in recent years. “Mauritani was tasked personally by Osama bin Laden to focus on hitting targets of economical importance in United States of America, Europe and Australia,” a statement from the Pakistani military said. “He was planning to target United States economic interests including gas and oil pipelines, power generating dams and strike ships and oil tankers through explosive-laden speed boats in international waters.” According to the statement, Mauritani was arrested with the help of US intelligence agencies, showing that anti-terror co-operation between the countries is continuing despite the deep tensions between Islamabad and Washington following the death of Bin Laden. He had reportedly been planning a major attack in Europe, which triggered a terror alert in Germany late last year. The detention also confirmed that many of al-Qaida’s leaders remain in hiding in Pakistan. al-Qaida Pakistan Global terrorism Saeed Shah guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Sarah Palin is usually quick to attack those who make jokes about her children, but Mama Grizzly was strangely silent Saturday when a conservative comedian said that liberals were “special needs children” like her son Trig, who has Down Syndrome. “The left should love Sarah Palin,” comedian Eric Golub, who also blogs at Andrew Breitbart’s Big Hollywood , noted at the tea party-affiliated “Restoring America” rally in Indianola, Iowa. “She has a beautiful, adorable special needs child… For that reason alone, the left should worship Sarah Palin and adopt her as one of their own. Because the leftist haters are an entire political ideology of special needs children.” “And unlike Trig, they are not very lovable,” he added. “All you hear from them is gimme, gimme, I need, I want, I deserve, I’m entitled. No, you don’t. When you’re four years old it’s mildly adorable. When you’re 64 like Barbara Boxer, Hillary Clinton or the Pelosi-raptor, it is intolerable.” He continued: “On the subject of four-year-olds, my friend and his wife recently adopted a baby boy… and I affectionately refer to this child as ‘the boy.’ And the more I look at ‘the boy,’ the more he reminds me of the president.” In her speech following Golub, Palin broke with her tradition of lashing out at comments about her children and ignored the comedian’s jokes. Last year , after the Fox television show Family Guy presented a mentally character whose mother was the former Governor of Alaska, Palin wrote on Facebook that the episode felt like a “kick in the gut.” Her daughter Bristol added: “Shouldn’t we be willing to say that some things just are not funny? Are there any limits to what some people will do or say in regards to my little brother or others in the special needs community?” Palin also called for then-White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel to be fired after he suggested that some liberals were “retarded.”
Continue reading …Click here to view this media This Sunday’s Meet the Press was themed “The Politics of the Economy: What’s Holding America Back?” which featured a discussion between an uncharacteristically wide variety of thinkers across the political spectrum. It is, in part, a discussion we desperately need as we’re thrown into this political turmoil between the Tea Party Republicans and the rest of the country. We are struggling at this crossroads to decide what kind of country we want to be. In the past, I’ve had many disagreements with Thomas Friedman about the role he believes my generation should play as we begin to take over the country. But today, much like that fabled broken clock, I found myself in much agreement as Friedman spoke about the differences between the Greatest Generation and the Baby Boom Generation. He argues this problem began not in 2008, instead it began after the Cold War ended in 1980: “We had a generational shift. We went from the Greatest Generation which the philosophy basically was “save and invest” and we are still living off of their saving and investing. To the Baby Boom Generation whose philosophy turned out to be “borrow and spend.” And we’ve really shifted from a generation born in The Depression, World War 2, and the Cold War, these were serious people. They wouldn’t think of shutting down the government for a minute, ok. To a generation basically that is much less serious. We’ve gone from basically the values of the Greatest Generation, which my friend philosopher Doug Simon calls “sustainable values.” Values that sustain. To a Baby Boom Generation whose values are situational values. Do whatever the situation allows. You put them all together and I think you really account for a lot of the hole we’re in right now structurally.” Friedman goes on to say, that instead of being the drivers of innovation and a world leader that, we spent the 2000′s “chasing the losers of globalization instead of the winners,” referring to our wars across the Middle East. Friedman discusses the “Five Pillars” which enabled us to grow and thrive as a country and as a government for 200 years. “We didn’t get here by accident. As a great country. We actually won at every historical turn. How did we win in every historical turn? Because we had a formula for success. That you can actually date back to Hamilton but you certainly see it in Lincoln. It was five pillars: basically educate our people up to and beyond whatever the level of technology is. Whether it’s the cotton gin or the supercomputer. Immigration: attract the world’s most talented and energetic people. Third, infrastructure. Have the world’s best infrastructure. Fourth, have the right rules for enchanting capital formation and risk taking and preventing recklessness. And last, government-funded research. Put those together, stir, bake for 200 years and you get the United States of America. If you take all five of those, David, and you look at the last decade, which we call ‘the terrible 2′s,’ possibly the worst if not the worst decades in American History. Education (makes a downward gesture). Infrastructure (makes a downward gesture). Immigration (makes a downward gesture). Rules for Capital Investment, how’d you like that sub-prime crisis? (makes a downward gesture) Research and Development (makes a downward gesture). So all five of our pillars of success have been weakened. That’s the underlying theme here. And that’s what we’ve got to be looking; that’s what the President has got to be out there defending.” Earlier in the program, Friedman said that he believes there are two types of countries: HIEs and LIEs. In Friedman vernacular, that means high imagination enabling countries and low imagination enabling countries and details the ease of building a product and bringing it to market. “Forget developing and developed. . . . what isn’t a commodity is this (Friedman says snapping his fingers meaning ideas). If you look at the countries that are thriving today, look at Israel – start-up nation. We’re not going to bail our way out of this crisis. We’re not going to stimulate our way out of this crisis. We’re ultimately going to educate, imagine, and invent our way out of this crisis.” Unfortunately, it appears that the Friedman is putting the cart before the horse. While the solution is no doubt going to be innovation, with the weakening of those five pillars consistently by conservative politics, where will these educated, imaginative and inventive people going to come from? In a totally separate portion of the program , historian Doris Kearns Goodwin and her son, Lt. Joseph K. Goodwin, talked about being part of the generation that began after the Cold War and the impact 9/11 had on what is now termed the Millennial Generation. He believes 9/11 presented a unique opportunity that was missed by leaders. After Pearl Harbor, our country was thrown into a great war in which the entire country was invested. Women immediately took over the work force as every man in the country became a soldier. Children collected rubber bands to be melted down; women drew “seams” on the back of their legs so that silk production could be redirected to parachutes instead of hose; food, gas and even clothing was rationed. In short, everyone sacrificed and contributed towards the war effort. After 9/11, America was never asked to sacrifice or contribute anything. Lt. Goodwin says this is the reason that he feels we’re have so much debt and financial troubles now, because we charged the wars on our credit card. As Friedman would say we allowed the situational values of our leaders enact a policy that cost us so much that our entire country stands on the brink of both an economic and even identity crash. Lt. Goodwin believes if we as a country had been asked to sacrifice as much as they were in WWII that maybe we wouldn’t be here. If Lt. Goodwin believes that 9/11 won’t be what defines a generation, perhaps the Millennials can decide to define themselves as the “Ideas Generation” that Friedman says is so needed to build us back into a stable economy and a world leader. In a recent piece by Mike Hais and Morley Winograd, authors of Millennial Makeover and the new book Millennial Momentum, the two authors argue that indeed this generation — which will comprise more than 1 in 3 adults by the end of the decade — can be the drivers of this economy if given the tools and authority to do so. Instead of the “taking to the street” philosophy that Friedman has advocated in the past, perhaps he can get on board with more of an innovative bandwagon.
Continue reading …Sarah Palin kept her presidential ambitions under wraps today in a 40-minute speech to thousands of very wet Iowans who had diligently waited for her in steady rain, the Des Moines Register reports. “We’re here because America is at a tipping point,” Palin said at the Des Moines Tea Party…
Continue reading …Ignoring a government ban on marches in London, hundreds of far-right activists held a protest in the capital today and some clashed with police. It was the first large-scale protest in London since a wave of looting and riots shook it and other major British cities in early August . Police…
Continue reading …America, we’re quite impressed with your taste in fast food. Proving that super-size isn’t always better, the ever-growing Five Guys beat out big boys McDonald’s and Subway as America’s favorite fast food joint, according to a Market Force survey. The firm asked 4,500 Americans to choose their favorite “quick-service” restaurant (quite a euphemism), and Five
Continue reading …Jet streams and ocean currents ensure that British weather is some of the most changeable on Earth It has been a year that has seen weather patterns turned upside down. In 2011, Britain had one of the finest springs on record. This was followed by one of our worst-ever summers. And the Met Office says there is more to come. At least, that is the message from forecasters and meteorologists who are studying the twists and turns of the British weather. The strange patterns of rain, wind and sunshine that have swept the nation reveal a fundamental truth, they have found. The UK is one of the most erratic, changeable places on Earth when it comes to weather. Inverted patterns of rain, sun and wind are simple facts of life and we had better get used to them. In 2009, somewhat shamefacedly, the Met Office decided to withdraw its seasonal forecasting service, amid recriminations over baking summers that had mysteriously failed to materialise . But there are good reasons why British weather forecasters often get it wrong. “We are a small island, in a temperate climate, at a high latitude with one of the world’s biggest oceans on one side of us, and a huge continent on the other,” said Helen Chivers, a forecaster at the Met Office. “The combination makes it very difficult to predict weather here. We can do it in the short term but not over long periods, unlike other parts of the world. For example, in the United States the weather is far easier to forecast because the country forms part of a very large landmass.” This point was backed by Alan Thorpe, director of the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts. “In some parts of the tropics, you can forecast weather up to four weeks away, but not in the UK. The best you can hope for is about five days to a week.” A key problem facing forecasters in Britain is the jet streams: these are narrow ribbons of fast-flowing air that are found at altitudes of around 35,000ft. They play a key role in bringing weather systems to Britain from America across the Atlantic. “The problem is that jet streams do not flow in straight lines. They can often coil like snakes – and that is what happened at the beginning of this year,” said Chivers. “They coiled above Britain in March, April and the first half of May and trapped a region of high pressure over the country. That brought fine weather to the country for those months.” Then the jet streams straightened out and pushed rainy weather across the Atlantic – dumping it on Britain. “The result was a bad summer,” said Chivers. “However, from what we can see at
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