Rebecca Black received so much grief from classmates after her song Friday went viral that she opted for homeschooling. “When I walk by they’ll start singing ‘Friday’ in a really nasally voice,” the 14-year-old told ABC before last night’s live appearance on America’s Got Talent . “Or, you know, they’ll be…
Continue reading …Tallinn police evacuate and cordon off building as news website reports shooter may have taken hostage There has been a shooting inside the Estonian defence ministry in central Tallinn, officials said. Spokesman Peeter Kuimet said there had been an “incident involving guns” inside the ministry and that police are on the scene. The government said all employees have evacuated the building and police have cordoned off the surrounding area. The Postimees, a leading daily paper and website in Estonia, is reporting the shooter may have taken a hostage inside the ministry. The Delfi news website reported from the scene that there had been shots approximately 20 minutes apart and that two people jumped through a window and ran away after the second shot. Hannes Kont, the director of press at the fefence ministry, told the Associated Press that the minister, Mart Laar, was not in the building when the shooting started. Estonia Europe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Recovery will be longer and harder than we had hoped, chancellor tells recalled session of parliament The chancellor has used his emergency statement to parliament to say that recent events in the global economy had “vindicated” the government’s deficit reduction programme. He put in a bullish performance after the Bank of England downgraded its UK growth forecasts for the fifth time this year. George Osborne made the second of two emergency government statements after nine days of economic upheaval and one day after the Bank of England governor, Sir Mervyn King, warned of more economic “turbulence” ahead, saying “headwinds were becoming stronger by the day”. In his statement, Osborne acknowledged this squall of bad economic news, saying the FTSE had fared badly in the past month. “The huge overhang of debt means the recovery will be longer and harder than we had hoped,” he said. “This is the most dangerous time for the global economy since 2008, and we should be clear about that.” But he sought to turn events to his advantage, telling parliament Britain had become a “safe haven” for stock markets in recent days, with the unpredictability of stocks making an investment in UK bonds more attractive. Referring to recent market turbulence, he said: “The market for our government bonds has benefited.” The chancellor showed that Britain had now become a better credit risk than Germany according to the present market assessment. This was because of Britain’s deficit reduction package, which had reassured international markets the government had finances under control, and because bond traders were not angling to downgrade Britain’s sovereign credit worthiness. That bond yields were down was a “huge vote of confidence” in the UK, Osborne said. He spoke of “the reckless folly of those who said we were cutting too far and too fast”. “[It] vindicates the decision to get ahead of the curve, while other countries have remained paralysed. Ours is an unwavering commitment and we will not abandon Britain to the financial whirlpool.” Responding in the commons chamber, shadow chancellor Ed Balls said Osborne’s optimistic interpretation of bond yields going down had a worrying precedent. He pointed out that Japan’s bond yields fell before they went through a decade of stagnation, a fall which, he suggested, showed that international investors did not expect much future growth. The chancellor returned from his holiday in California, and the prime minister returned from Tuscany, to address MPs’ concerns about rioting as well as the world economy. The Bank of England cut its growth forecast for the year 2011 from 1.8% to 1.5%. UK manufacturing figures were also worse than expected: output fell by 0.4% in June. On Wednesday, the FTSE 100 fell 3% and it was rumoured on Thursday morning, hours ahead of the chancellor’s address, that France could see a credit downgrade similar to that announced by Standard & Poor’s in America, whose ratings downgrade triggered the latest share fall. In an attempt to avert such a downgrade, French president Nicolas Sarkozy said he would be announcing plans to reduce his country’s budget deficit within the week. Osborne said 500,000 private sector jobs had been created in the British economy during the last 12 months. He also mounted a trenchant defence of the government’s deficit reduction plan, saying that without it Britain might also risk having its credit worthiness downgraded, as America’s had been last week . He said the Treasury, Bank of England and Financial Services Authority were in agreement that British banks were sufficiently capitalised to deal with any second credit crunch on the continent. Balls warned Osborne that events could push the world economy into a repeat of the 1930s depression and said his constituents wondered whether the chancellor was either “deeply complacent or in deep denial about the state the UK economy is in”. Britain’s growth had been “stagnant” over the last nine months. Osborne had previously suggested in an article for the Daily Telegraph that fresh measures would be brought in in the autumn to attempt anew to galvanise the British economy, writing “we will take further action this autumn. Indeed this crisis provides an opportunity to make some difficult trade-offs in favour of growth that might get parked in the ‘too difficult’ box in calmer times.” Among elements already in place, Osborne pointed to lower corporation tax rates, less regulation for small firms, welfare reform, planning changes and lower taxes for entrepreneurs. In the piece, Osborne defended the government’s cuts programme because of the market confidence it has afforded. He wrote: “In the latest phase of financial turbulence, the interest rates on our government debt have fallen as market participants hail UK assets as a safe haven. The alternative of more spending and yet more borrowing is now frankly ludicrous and places those who advocate it on the outer fringes of the international debate.” On Wednesday King said: “There are a number of headwinds to world and domestic growth, not least the private and public debt overhang. And these headwinds are becoming stronger by the day.” Economic growth (GDP) Bank of England Economics Inflation Interest rates Banking Global recession Global economy Financial crisis George Osborne Liberal-Conservative coalition Bonds Mervyn King Ed Balls House of Commons European debt crisis Stock markets Market turmoil Allegra Stratton guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …If you want to get inside America’s most famous statue, you’ll have to do it before October 28 or wait for at least a year. The Statue of Liberty will close for a year after the 125th anniversary of its dedication for a major renovation to improve safety and make…
Continue reading …Liberals like to describe themselves as the most compassionate ones, the ones that believe like Hubert Humphrey did that the moral test of a society is how it treats its vulnerable citizens in the dawn and the twilight of life. That's not the party line at the Daily Kos. Jon Stafford bluntly wrote on Wednesday night that “I often describe myself as 'Not Pro-Choice, Pro- Abortion .
Continue reading …‘I would like to bring attention to the people I’ve written about,’ says working-class writer of role, which commences in October Pulitzer prize winner Philip Levine , known for his detailed and personal verse about the working class, has been appointed the US’s new poet laureate. The Library of Congress announced on Wednesday that the 83-year-old Levine will succeed fellow Pulitzer winner WS Merwin this autumn. The laureate, who receives $35,000 (£22,000) and is known officially as the poet laureate consultant in poetry, serves from October through May. Richard Wilbur, Joseph Brodsky and Robert Pinsky are among the previous appointees. “I’m a fairly irreverent person and at first I thought: ‘This is not you. You’re an old union man,’” Levine said. “But I knew if I didn’t do this, I would kick myself. I thought: ‘This is you. You can speak to a larger public than has been waiting for you in recent years.’” Levine has received virtually every literary honour, but he is the least rarefied of poets. A Detroit native who as a young man worked in automobile plants, he has for decades chronicled, celebrated and worried about blue-collar life. Levine’s awards include the Pulitzer in 1995 for The Simple Truth and the National Book award in 1991 for What Work Is. “Philip Levine is one of America’s great narrative poets,” librarian of congress James H Billington said in a statement. “His plainspoken lyricism has, for half a century, championed the art of telling ‘the simple truth’ about working in a Detroit auto factory, as he has, and about the hard work we do to make sense of our lives.” In “Drum”, Levine writes of a hardware shop and of the men who “sweep, wash up, punch out, collect outside for a final smoke”. In “Coming Close”, he presents a “quiet woman” standing for hours before a polishing wheel. But who is she, really? Levine asks. “You must come closer to find out”: You must hang your tie and jacket in one of the lockers in favor of a black smock, you must be prepared to spend shift after shift hauling off the metal trays of stock bowing first, knees bent for a purchase then lifting with a gasp, the first word tenderness between the two of you The laureate has few official duties and poets have used the job to pursue a range of personal projects, from Billy Collins’s Poetry 180, which encourages the reading of verse in high school, to Robert Hass’s Watershed conference on nature writing. “I don’t want to overextend myself, but at the same time I would like to use the ‘bully pulpit’, as they call it, to bring attention to some of my concerns,” Levine says. “There’s a great deal of American poetry that’s hardly known and that should be known. As a poet who didn’t get published for a long time, I know what it’s like not to be read. The other thing I’d like to do is reach out to readers. I would like to bring attention to the kind of people I’ve written about.” US poet laureate Poetry Awards and prizes United States guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Highlights of this day in history: Start of the Watts riots in Los Angeles; President Ronald Reagan’s joke causes a Cold War flap; The Mall of America opens; ‘Roots’ author Alex Haley born; Painter Jackson Pollock killed in auto accident. (Aug. 11)
Continue reading …WASHINGTON — Speaking with a show panel on the country’s debt and credit rating on Tuesday, MSNBC’s Dylan Ratigan decried economic plans put forth by Democrats and Republicans alike, calling them “reckless, irresponsible and stupid.” After lawmakers on Aug. 2 agreed to raise the country’s $14.3 trillion debt ceiling and cut $2.4 trillion in spending over the next 10 years, national debate has centered on how that’s less than the $4 trillion Standard and Poor’s said it wanted when it downgraded the long-term U.S. rating from AAA to AA-plus on Aug. 5. That conversation, Ratigan said, misses the point entirely. “Tens of trillions of dollars are being extracted from the United States of America. Democrats aren’t doing it, Republicans are not doing it, an entire integrated system, financial system, trading system, taxing system, that was created by both parties over a period of two decades is at work on our entire country right now,” said Ratigan. “We’re sitting here arguing about whether we should do the $4 trillion plan that kicks the can down the road for the president for 2017, or burn the place to the ground, both of which are reckless, irresponsible and stupid.” After the show, lobbyist Jimmy Williams, who sat on Tuesday’s MSNBC panel, wrote to Ratigan to express support for his angry tirade. “I’m proud of you,” wrote Williams in an email obtained by The Huffington Post. “Someone just texted me and said, ‘You didn’t get to say anything!’ My response: ‘I didn’t need to.’” “Money in politics is pure, unadulterated corruption,” Williams continued. “Get rid of campaign contributions and the political parties will cease to exist because policy will prevail or politics. We have amended the US Constitution twice with regard to liquor but not once with regard to the buying and selling of our politicians. What’s wrong with this picture?” A viewer wrote in to say she had written a song on the subject, and suggested they collaborate on a video to draw attention to the issue. In his rant Tuesday, Ratigan blamed not only both houses of Congress but also the president for failing to address the root of the country’s economic problem. He said of President Obama, according to an MSNBC transcript: I would like him to go to the people of the United States of America and say, “People of the United States of America, your Congress is bought, your Congress is incapable of making legislation on healthcare, banking, trade, or taxes because if they do it, they will lose their political funding and they won’t do it. But I’m the President of the United States, and I won’t have a country that is run by a bought Congress. So I’m not going to work with a bought Congress and try to be Mr. Big Guy … I’m going to abandon the bought Congress like Teddy Roosevelt did, and I’m going to go to the people of the United States get rid of the bought Congress.” … Until a President says that’s the problem and says he’s going to fix it, there is no policy that I can possibly see no matter how brilliant your idea may be or your idea or my idea or her idea or your idea at home, is that idea will not happen as long as there’s a capacity to basically fire a politician who disagrees with me by taking funding away from him. Is that a fair assessment? In conversations with The Huffington Post Tuesday night, Ratigan contextualized the comments, calling the rant his truest and most piercing and emotional expression of fact since he’s been in broadcasting. He also said he hoped the president was up to the task of addressing the real economic issues. “In a nutshell, Hope without Courage is Lost,” he told HuffPost in an email correspondence Tuesday night. “And I don’t mean the destructive cowboy bravado of the Republican Party either! I mean true courage to observe truth and work through it together.” WATCH: Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy
Continue reading …On the first day of trading after Standard and Poor’s downgraded U.S. credit to AA+ from the top-level ranking of AAA, the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed down more than 630 points, or 5.5 percent, according to Google Finance. That is the sixth-worst total point drop in the history of the Dow Jones. The S&P 500 itself suffered an even larger percentage of 6.66 percent on Monday, or 79.9 points, ending at 1,119 points, according to Google Finance. From Stan Choe of the Associated Press: NEW YORK (AP) — Stocks plunged Monday as anxiety overtook investors on the first trading day since Standard & Poor’s downgraded American debt. The Dow Jones industrials fell 634.76 points. It was the sixth worst point decline for the Dow in the last 112 years and the worst one-day drop since December 2008. Every stock in the Standard & Poor’s 500 index declined Monday. Investors worried about the slowing U.S. economy, escalating debt problems threatening Europe and the prospect that fear in the markets would reinforce itself, as it did during the financial crisis in the fall of 2008. “‘What’s rocking the market is a growth scare,” said Kathleen Gaffney, co-manager of the $20 billion Loomis Sayles bond fund. “The market is under a lot of stress that really has little to do with the downgrade.” Instead, Gaffney said, investors are focused on “how Europe and the U.S. are going to work their way out of a high debt burden” if economic growth remains slow. Investors desperately looked for safe places to put their money and settled on U.S. government debt — even though it was the target of the downgrade Friday, when S&P removed the United States from its list of the lowest-risk countries. The price of Treasurys rose sharply, and yields, which move in the opposite direction from price, fell. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.34 percent from 2.57 percent Friday. That matches its low for the year, reached last week. “This is largely a flight to safety,” said Thomas Simons, money market economist with Jefferies & Co. “The bond market is really trading off of what’s going on in the stock market.” Money flowed out of stocks and into Treasurys. Gold set a record. It rose $61.40 to settle at $1,713.20. Crude oil, natural gas and other commodities fell sharply on worries that a weaker global economy will mean less demand. Oil fell 6.4 percent to settle at $81.31 per barrel. Fear is spreading quickly through the market, said Dimitre Genov, senior portfolio manager with Artio Global Investors. “It’s becoming a vicious cycle and could feed into consumers reducing their demand as well.” The Dow was down 5.5 percent a 10,809.85. The sharp drop extended Wall Street’s almost uninterrupted decline since late July, when the Dow was flirting with 13,000. It fell below 11,000 for the first time since November. The S&P 500 fell 79.92, or 6.7 percent, to 1,119.49. The Nasdaq composite index fell 174.72, or 6.9 percent, to 2,357.69. Stock markets in Asia began Monday’s global rout. The main stock index fell almost 4 percent in South Korea and more than 2 percent in Japan. European markets opened later and fell, too, with Germany down 5 percent and France 4.7 percent. In the U.S., stocks fell even as Moody’s, another major credit rating agency, stood by its top rating of Aaa for the United States. It said it could downgrade the U.S. if it doesn’t cut its deficit, “but it is early to conclude that such measures will not be forthcoming.” Financial markets also did not appear comforted by an afternoon statement by President Barack Obama, who said Washington needs more “common sense and compromise” to tame its debt. “Markets will rise and fall,” he said. “But this is the United States of America. No matter what some agency may say, we’ve always been and always will be a triple-A country.” S&P, in its downgrade, criticized dysfunction in the American political system. The downgrade wasn’t a total surprise but came when investors were already feeling nervous about the U.S. economy and European debt, among other problems. Last week, the Dow Jones industrial average fell almost 700 points. That was its biggest weekly point loss since October 2008, during the financial crisis. Counting Monday, the Dow has dropped in 10 of the last 12 trading days. It is down more than 1,900 points, or 15 percent, since July 21. The Russell 2000 index of small stocks has now lost nearly 25 percent from its most recent high on April 29. A decline of 10 percent or more off recent highs is considered to be a correction. But a drop of 20 percent or more is said to be the start of a bear market. The Nasdaq and S&P 500 are both down about 18 percent since the end of April. The Dow is down 16 percent. The last bear market for the S&P 500 ran from October 2007 until March 2009. The index lost 57 percent of its value during the downturn. S&P on Monday downgraded mortgage lenders Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and other agencies linked to long-term U.S. debt. Fannie and Freddie own or guarantee about half of all U.S. mortgages. Their downgrade could eventually mean higher mortgage rates. Worries about weaker profits that could result from a slowing economy have slammed the financial industry since late July. As a group, financial stocks in the S&P 500 index fell 10 percent on Monday to their lowest level since July 2009. Bank of America plunged 20.3 percent, to $6.51, after AIG filed suit against the bank. The insurer alleged Bank of America sold it overvalued mortgage-backed securities. The bank denied the allegations. Its stock is down 51 percent this year, from $13.34. Stocks in other industries whose profits are closely tied to the strength of the economy also fell sharply. Energy stocks in the S&P 500 fell 8.3 percent, for example. The smallest losses came in safer industries such as consumer staples whose profits tend to be steadier, regardless of the economy. Even in a bad economy people will still buy things like toothpaste and bread. The Vix index, a measure of fear among investors, shot up 47 percent to its highest level since May 2010. The index shows how worried investors are that the S&P 500 will drop over the next 30 days. It does this by measuring prices for stock options that investors can buy to help protect their portfolios. Investors are also worried that Italy or Spain could become the next European countries to have trouble repaying its debts. Greece, Ireland and Portugal have already received bailout loans because of Europe’s 21-month-old debt crisis. The fears have pushed investors to shun Spanish and Italian bonds, which led to higher yields on the bonds. That resulted in even higher borrowing costs for the countries. The European Central Bank stepped in Monday and bought bullions of euros worth of their bonds. The move helped to lower yields on Spanish and Italian bonds, at least temporarily. Seeking to avert panic spreading across financial markets, the finance ministers and central bankers of the Group of 20 industrial and developing nations issued a joint statement Monday saying they were committed to taking all necessary measures to support financial stability and growth. “We will remain in close contact throughout the coming weeks and cooperate as appropriate, ready to take action to ensure financial stability and liquidity in financial markets,” they said. Worries about the U.S. economic recovery have been building since the government said that economic growth was far weaker in the first half of 2011 than economists expected. The economy grew at a 1.3 percent annual rate from April through June, below economists’ expectations. It expanded at just a 0.4 percent rate in the first quarter. The first half of 2011 was the slowest since the end of the recession. Then reports showed that the manufacturing and services industries barely grew in July. Job growth was better than economists expected last month. But the 117,000 jobs created in July were still well below the 215,000 that employers added in February, March and April, on average. The Federal Reserve will meet on Tuesday, but economists don’t expect much to come out of the meeting. The central bank’s key interest rate is already at a record of nearly zero, where it has been since 2008. The Fed has also already said that it plans to keep rates low for “an extended period.” Chairman Ben Bernanke said last month that the Fed could step in to help the economy if it further weakened. Fears about a weaker U.S. economy have overshadowed the profit growth that companies have reported for the second quarter. For the 441 companies in the S&P 500 that have already reported, earnings rose 12 percent in the second quarter from a year earlier. Revenue growth has also topped 10 percent for the first time in a year. Verizon Communications Inc. fell 3.9 percent after it was unable to come to terms with 45,000 workers on health care costs, pensions and other issues. More than 69 stocks fell for every one that rose on the New York Stock Exchange. Consolidated trading volume was heavy at 9.7 billion shares, nearly triple the volume in early July. ____ AP Business Writers Matthew Craft, David K. Randall and Daniel Wagner contributed to this report. This is a developing story
Continue reading …Rumors of international expansion seem to follow every streaming media company and Hulu has finally revealed plans to launch in Japan later this year. There’s not many details, but it appears the free side is staying home in favor of a Hulu Plus -only approach with plans to bring “premium feature films and TV shows” to PCs, TVs, phones and tablets. That it’s also avoiding a direct confrontation with Netflix across borders is also notable, as the other major all you can eat video service focuses on Latin America and Europe . Interested parties can sign up for updates at Hulu.jp, but how many yen they may have to spend is as much of a mystery as who is going to be Hulu’s lucky new owner . Hulu goes international, will launch in Japan later this year originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 10 Aug 2011 16:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
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