New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg says undercover New York investigators illegally purchased semi-automatic pistols in Arizona, not long after the mass shooting in Tucson. He says it exposes a “dangerous gap” in federal gun laws. (Jan. 31)
Continue reading …Photo: Kelly Rossiter There was a bit of eye rolling from my husband when I said I was making a chickpea casserole. That’s probably because he remembers casseroles from his childhood, as do I. They were usually gloppy affairs with one of the main ingredients a canned cream soup. Cream of celery soup was the usual choice for my mother, who then added canned tuna and cooked macaroni. It remains one of her favourite meals to this day, and some forty years on, the thought of it still makes me gag. This casserole, I’m happy to say, bore no resemblance at all to the concoctions my mother made, and my husband actually … Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Image: World Ocean Observatory England has been hit by unusually cold winters for the last two years — the cold seasons of both 2009 and 2010 were more frigid than usual. And then there were those hacked climate emails — which were actually leaked from a famous research center right there in England — that breathless skeptics were eager to claim revealed that the whole global warming thing was a hoax. But wouldn’t you know it; those two favorite skeptic talking points haven’t gained much traction. The people of England still believe climate change poses … Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Two people in Iran were condemned to death yesterday for running porn sites, reports the AFP . “Two administrators of porn sites have been sentenced to death in two different (court) branches and (the verdicts) have been sent to the supreme court for confirmation,” said Iran’s prosecutor general. In December, an…
Continue reading …If the west attempts to thwart the radical nature of the uprising, it may play into the hands of Islamic fundamentalists The spread of the contagion of protest across north Africa, from Tunisia to Egypt and beyond, has not just been exhilarating, it has also given the lie to the myth that people in Muslim countries have a different mindset to those in the west, and that democracy and secularism are western concepts alien to the political culture of Egypt or Jordan or Yemen. What the demonstrators in Cairo and Tunis have been demanding is not an Islamic state, but a more open, democratic society, with freedom of expression and the protection of individual liberties. For many, however, the worry remains that the fall of Hosni Mubarak may lead not to a secular, democratic Egypt but to one in thrall to the fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood ; the fear, in other words, that Egypt in 2011 could go the way of Iran in 1979. The outcome of change – especially change as dramatic and anarchic as in Egypt – can never be certain. It could be that the Muslim Brotherhood grasps the reins of power in a post-Mubarak Egypt. But if it does so, it is as likely to have been because of the bad faith of secular politicians as of popular support for Islamism. The real story of the past 30 years is not the triumph of Islamism – Islamists have rarely won a mass following and there has been no second Iranian revolution – but rather of the naivety and cynicism of secular politicians, both in Muslim countries and in the west, creating opportunities for religious bigots. Again and again, secular politicians have first brutally suppressed religious groups, inflaming popular opinion, and then turned to such groups to hold more radical opponents at bay, so providing them with new influence and authority. Take Egypt. Gamal Abdel Nasser led an military coup in 1952, established a secular republic and savagely repressed the Muslim Brotherhood, executing its leader Sayyid Qutb in August 1966. A year later, Arab armies were routed by Israel in the six-day war. Nasser was humiliated and faced bitter opposition, not from Islamists, but radical secularists, who took to the streets in violent protest. Fearing the radicals more than the Islamists, Anwar Sadat , who became president after Nasser’s death in 1970, came to a rapprochement with the Muslim Brotherhood. He released their members from prison and encouraged them to organise against the left. The Islamists certainly held secular militants in check. But Sadat was unable to do the same with radical Islamists who now flourished in the spaces from which nationalists and radicals had been forced out. In the end Sadat paid the ultimate price, assassinated in October 1981 by members of Islamic Jihad – a group that he himself had encouraged. This has been a common story over the past 40 years. Secular regimes across the Arab world have unleashed the dogs of militant religion in an effort to keep in check leftwing radicals – only to be savaged themselves by the beasts they have let loose. “By making concession after concession in the moral and cultural domains”, the French sociologist Gilles Kepel has observed, governments in Muslim countries “gradually created a reactionary climate of “re-Islamisation”. They sacrificed lay intellectuals, writers, and other “westernised elites” to the tender mercies of bigoted clerics, in the hope that the latter, in return, would endorse their own stranglehold on the organs of state. After Sadat’s assassination, Hosni Mubarak took over as Egypt’s strongman. During his 30-year-long brutal rule, there have been deep tensions between secular and religious authorities, tensions that have often broken out into open conflict. But there has also been recognition by both sides of their mutual dependence. The Egyptian government has needed not just a police state but also a viable Islamist opposition to keep secular radicals in check. The Muslim Brotherhood is officially banned, but in practice tolerated. Its candidates are allowed to stand in elections as independents and now form the largest opposition group in parliament. The Islamists, in turn, have used the repressive policies of the government to promote themselves as the only legitimate oppositional voice. But they, as much as the government, despise and fear popular power and democratic institutions. The cynicism of secular politicians in Muslim countries has been matched only by the cynicism of western policy. Western governments have been concerned primarily not with promoting freedom but with maintaining stability. Where Islamists have threatened that stability, or challenged western interests, then western governments have been happy to see them brutally suppressed, even when they have came to power through the ballot box, as happened in Algeria in 1991 . But where fundamentalists have played a useful part in maintaining social order, or establishing western benefit, then the west has been happy to support them, from jihadis in Afghanistan in the 1980s to the Saudi regime today. The crushing of radical secular movements is one of the reasons that in recent years opposition protests in Egypt have been led mainly by the Muslim Brotherhood. What makes the current protests so different is that ordinary secular voices, repressed for so long by both religious and secular authorities, have finally broken out. The revolt reveals a democratic spirit that neither brutality nor bigotry has been able to crush. Having looked to Islamists to restrain popular dissent for the past four decades, once that dissent has spilled out into open opposition on the streets, the Egyptian regime tried to portray it as the work of the Muslim Brotherhood, in an effort to retain support from the west. In fact, far from organising the protests, the Brotherhood initially opposed them. But if anything could bolster its influence, it would be any attempt by western powers to thwart the democratic process, either by allowing remnants of the old regime to cling to power or by denying Islamists their democratic rights. How ironic it would be if fear of the Muslim Brotherhood should lead to policies that enhance both its moral authority and its claim to power. But, then, those are exactly the kind of policies that have shaped the Arab world over the past half-century. Western politicians have talked incessantly over the past week about the need for “stability”. It’s time they recognised that it’s the desire for stability above everything else, including democracy, that leads to the very instability they fear. The effervescence of popular democracy may be unsettling but it is something to be cherished far more than the stability of authoritarian rule, whether secular or religious. Egypt Middle East Islam Religion Kenan Malik guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …enlarge In Paul Ryan’s response to President Obama’s State of the Union address last week, he fretted over our social safety nets becoming hammocks. Here’s what he said: We are at a moment, where if government’s growth is left unchecked and unchallenged, America’s best century will be considered our past century. This is a future in which we will transform our social safety net into a hammock, which lulls able-bodied people into lives of complacency and dependency. So what I want to ask Congressman Paul Ryan is this: How’d it feel to rest in the hammock? How did it feel to know you could go to college and read crap like Ayn Rand because of that hammock? Because Paul Ryan, youngest child in a family of four, had a great big hammock hanging in his living room that sent him to college. One day as a 16 year old, Ryan came upon the lifeless body of his father. Paul Ryan, Sr. had died of a heart attack at age 55, leaving the Janesville Craig High School 10th grader, his three older brothers and sisters and his mother alone. It was Paul who told the family of his father’s death. With his father’s passing, young Paul collected Social Security benefits until age 18, which he put away for college . To make ends meet, Paul’s mother returned to school to study interior design. His siblings were off at college. Ryan remembers this difficult time bringing him and his mother closer. See how that worked? Congressman Paul Ryan loses his father at age 16, and Social Security steps up to ease the burden. Of course, his mother also received Social Security benefits as his father’s surviving spouse. Seems like it was such a great hammock for Ryan that he just doesn’t want anyone else to share it. [h/t Blue Texan ]
Continue reading …WASHINGTON (Reuters) — Consumer spending in the United States rose more than expected in December to post a sixth consecutive month of gains as households drew down on their savings to finance purchases, government data showed on Monday. The Commerce Department said spending increased 0.7 percent after rising by 0.3 percent in November. Economists polled by Reuters had expected spending, which accounts for about 70 percent of economic activity in the United States, to increase 0.5 percent last month. The spending figures were included in the government’s fourth-quarter gross domestic product report released on Friday, which showed the economy grew at a 3.2 percent pace on the…
Continue reading …You can call it a Valentine’s sale or a pre-iPhone 4 blow out, but any way you slice it there’s some pretty good deals on Android phones available from Verizon right now. That includes the Samsung Fascinate and Continuum , as well as the HTC Droid Incredible and Motorola Droid R2-D2 , which are all now available for just $100 on the usual two-year contract (the Fascinate deal is apparently today-only). Unfortunately, the sale doesn’t include the Droid X, Droid Pro or Droid 2 Global, but Verizon is promising some additional one-day only sales during its “ten days of sweet deals” from now until February 10th, so folks interested in one of those might not be out of luck just yet. Verizon drops Samsung Fascinate, Droid Incredible, Droid R2-D2 to $100 originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 31 Jan 2011 14:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Didn’t think it was possible to get suspended from preschool? It is—and 3-year-old Zoe Rosso found herself booted for a full month, thanks to a few too many potty accidents. Rosso was removed from a Montessori preschool in Arlington, Va.—escorted out, along with her mother, by the principal…
Continue reading …The US has given billions of dollars in illegal subsidies to Boeing, the World Trade Organization formally ruled today after months of investigation. The WTO has now found that both Boeing and Europe’s Airbus received illegal aid from their respective governments, leaving the US and European Union to negotiate a…
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