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Vali Damaskou at Nameless Dance Academy, Beirut – Lebanon Nantes by Beirut..-2.wmv My week Investigator UN Job Vacancy in Beirut | Jobs Corner: Career and … The position is located in the UNIFIL House in Beirut unit of the Office of Internal Oversight Services (OIOS), Investigations Division (ID). The incumbent will be stationed in Beirut , but report to the Chief of Unit at the Vienna … Rawi Hage on urban planning and sectarianism in Beirut | beirut … Behind his argument against Lebanon’s “divisive sectarianism”, Hage paints a bleak and unforgiving picture of today’s Beirut . He hints, with a “maybe”, at a glimmer of hope… My house in Lebanon is in what was historically known as the … “For some of these kids, it's like Beirut to finally get to school … That’s according to retired US basketball player, Jalen Rose, who was at the ESPN screening of the documentary “The Fab Five,” which Rose helped to produce; drink tea be content: NANTES – BEIRUT NANTES – BEIRUT . With the first sight of sun in months, I grabbed my sunglasses after school this morning and headed down to meet my friend at the gym. Wearing the outfit that had only graced the inside of my house last weekend, … Lebanese gather for protest against Hezbollah arms Lebanese gather for protest against Hezbollah arms. Beirut , March 13 (DPA) Supporters of outgoing Lebanese Premier Saad Hariri gathered in Beirut Sunday to protest the weapons arsenal held by the rival Shiite movement Hezbollah. … nasawiya says: RT: @MashallahTweet : Mashallah News / Beirut → The Art of Deception http://mashallahnews.com/?p=2012 #IWD #Lebanon # Beirut

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ABC Exploits Japanese Tragedy to Undermine Minor GOP-Proposed Domestic U.S. Budget Reduction

ABC’s Bill Weir inaccureately lectured Friday night: “Consider Japan's state of the art undersea sensors and tsunami gates, protecting key ports, while just last month, our House of Representatives voted to slash funding for the Hawaiian tsunami warning center that issued last night's alarm.” Then on Saturday’s World News , reporter Clayton Sandell found it newsworthy to highlight how “Democrats accuse Republicans of being irresponsible for proposing budget cuts to NOAA, the federal agency that provides forecasts and early warnings of natural disasters.” Sandell cued up a California Democrat with a loaded question: “NOAA's budget gets cut, are people's lives more at risk?” The Congressman, who represents the state’s northern coast , naturally, agreed: “Absolutely.” In fact, the funding “slash,” which is only proposed and is far from implementation since it hasn’t even passed in the House, is not for any specific program inside NOAA and is for a reduction of just 7 percent , which hardly means all of NOAA’s programs must be shut down since NOAA would still be able to spend 93 percent of what they spent in the previous fiscal year. From the Saturday, March 12 ABC World News with David Muir: CLAYTON SANDELL: The quake has also triggered a tsunami of political bickering in Congress. Democrats accuse Republicans of being irresponsible for proposing budget cuts to NOAA, the federal agency that provides forecasts and early warnings of natural disasters. SANDELL TO THOMPSON: If NOAA's budget gets cut, are people's lives more at risk? U.S. REPRESENTATIVE MIKE THOMPSON (D-CA): Absolutely. This is important stuff. It's public safety. It's an investment in our everyday lives. SANDELL: Republicans counter that it's up to NOAA how it spends its budget, as residents along the coast wonder how bad the next tsunami might be. Clayton Sandell, ABC News, Crescent City, California. From the Friday, March 11 ABC World News with Diane Sawyer: BILL WEIR: And consider Japan's state of the art undersea sensors and tsunami gates, protecting key ports, while just last month, our House of Representatives voted to slash funding for the Hawaiian tsunami warning center that issued last night's alarm. One more reason to look out for yourself…. DIANE SAWYER: And you were telling us they cut the funding for that kind of alert system. Thank you, Bill. — Brent Baker is Vice President for Research and Publications at the Media Research Center. Click here to follow him on Twitter.

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Operation Tomodachi

Operation Tomodachi | Advertise Opportunity HMM265 is supplying the 46s for Operation Tomodachi which means friendship in Japanese the release states. Forces Japan based at Yokota Air Base near Tokyo is the lead military command for. The operation name was chosen by the Japanese. … Operation Tomodachi | Hot Music TV Network HMM265 is supplying the 46s for Operation Tomodachi which means friendship in Japanese the release states. comgvFERJ March 12 2011 Permalink. After buying groceries for my house and also some more things to donate we hung out to help … The Simmons' in Japan: Operation Tomodachi Operation Tomodachi . Marines and sailors from III Marine Expeditionary Force are actively providing support for foreign humanitarian assistance and disaster relief operations in mainland Japan. The operation, known as Tomodachi, … Todays Operation Tomodachi are tomorrows Operation Tomodachi . comgvFERJ March 12 2011 Permalink. After buying groceries. Forces Japan based at Yokota Air Base near Tokyo. Photos Scenes from the earthquake. After … Operation Tomodachi | News On Twitter Operation Tomodachi was in full effect. After buying groceries. The name was chosen by the Japanese. Forces Japan based at Yokota Air Base near Tokyo … rai_8 says: RT @Lilalicht_8 : ううっ・・・ RT @take88 : くそう、不覚にもうるっとキタ。 QT @todo08 : それは泣ける・・・ QT @wako3999 : 米軍による救援活動作戦名が ” Operation Tomodachi “って泣いた。

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New Japan quake fear as nuclear crisis grows

• Up to 10,000 feared dead in Miyagi prefecture alone • Cooling system fails at a second nuclear plant • Japan PM: “worst crisis since WWII” • 190 people exposed to radiation • Original quake upgraded to magnitude 9 • Over 250 aftershocks so far • NEWS: Japan nuclear crisis worsens Here’s a summary of events today so far: • The original earthquake to hit Japan has been upgraded to a magnitude of 9.0 • The struggle to control a nuclear crisis at two power stations continues . Officials said there is a risk of a second explosion at the Fukushima power station but Yukio Edano, chief cabinet secretary, said the facility could withstand the impact. Technicians are battling to cool a third reactor after a blast at reactor one on Saturday. Technicians are pumping sea water into the reactor in a bid to prevent a nuclear meltdown. The size of the evacuation zone around Fukushima is now 20km. • The Japanese prime minister has called the disaster the worst crisis since WWII . There are also reports that up to 10,000 are feared dead in the Miyagi prefecture alone and up to 190 people exposed to radiation after cooling system fails at a second nuclear plant. • More than 250 aftershocks have rocked Japan since the original earthquake on Friday. The US Geological Survey said 30 of these were in excess of magnitude 6 . Japan’s meteorological agency said there was a 70% chance of a magnitude 7 aftershock striking in the next three days. • The huge rescue effort now includes 100,000 Japanese soliders, around 40% of its armed forces. International rescue teams are heading towards the region including a UK team. Tokyo’s vice-mayor said 44,000 meals of crackers, 643,000 of instant rice and 57,000 units of condensed milk are on their way to the disaster area, along with 384,000 blankets and 9000 portable toilets. • Stories of rescues and tragedies are beginning to emerge, including from Hiromitsu Shinkawa, a 60-year-old man rescued after being swept out to sea with only his roof as a makeshift raft. Our correspondent Jonathan Watts in Miyagi prefecture interviewed Harumi Watanabe who said she was unable to rescue her elderly parents from their house before the wave hit. • The UK Foreign Office has set up contact numbers for assistance for British nationals and has advised against all non-essential travel to Japan. It has also issued information about the status of Japanese airports. 12.07pm: A gallery of remarkable images from the Guardian’s Dan Chung who is in tsunami-ravaged Shiontona. 11.54am: Associated Press has this report from Banda Aceh in Indonesia of the reactions of survivors of the 2004 tsunami watching the pictures of the devastation in Japan: Tears streamed down Maisara Mucharam’s face as she watched aerial shots of the tsunami pummeling Japan’s coast and remembered the day, six years ago, when her youngest daughter was ripped out of her arms by the heavy salty sea. Survivors of the 2004 tsunami that started off Indonesia sat glued to their TV sets, stroking each other’s hands, as images of last Friday’s disaster in northern Japan flashed repeatedly across the screen. “I heard someone screaming and ran to see what was going on,” said Mucharam, who also lost her husband and two other daughters. “I tried, but couldn’t stop watching,” the 38-year-old said, her voice trembling. “It was exactly the same, except they have this horrible footage, events unfolding right before your eyes.” 11.41pm: The full piece from our Asia environment correspondent Jonathan Watts who is in Shintona, Miyagi prefecture talking to survivors and relief workers is live. Here’s some of it: The nearby bay is filled with cars, concrete and half-sunken homes that have floated away from their foundations. A railway line has been ripped from the ground and twisted vertically like a garden fence. Cars and motorbikes lie broken and so roughly re-parked by the tsunami that some balance precariously on their bonnets. Emergency and media helicopters buzz overhead and the bereaved sob by the side of the road. The air is rich with the rotting smell of disaster and death. Self-defence force personnel and rescue workers search for bodies amid the the mud. Their work is sporadically interrupted by earthquake alerts and tsunami warnings, but they do not have to look far. When found the dead are wrapped in blue tarpaulins and laid on military stretchers. In Shintona their numbers rose as quickly as the dozen or so rescue workers were able to find and carry them. “We have found 50 bodies today and there’ll be more,” said an officer in the self defence forces as his team took a quick lunchbreak. “We’re putting more efforts into rescue elsewhere as there is very little chance of anyone surviving here.” 11.33am: Japanese prime minister Naoto Kan has urged Cabinet members to ensure “maximum efforts” are made to save as many people as possible, Kyodo news agency has reported . He has also met the heads of the Tokyo Electric Power Company , which runs the Fukushima nuclear plant, and Toshiba , which supplied some of the equipment used in the facility, to discuss the crisis. Electricity providers have warned that consumers could face a week or more of rolling electricity black-outs from tomorrow, due to the shortages caused by shutting down power plants. “There is a high possibility that service areas of Tokyo Electric and Tohoku Electric will face an abnormal situation in which a great deal of supply shortage will occur,” the industry minister Banri Kaieda told reporters. His ministry has urged large firms to restrict their use of air conditioning, neon lighting and hot water to help conserve the supply. Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano has said the government will use its contingency funds of some 200bn yen ($2.44bn) to pay for the relief effort. But Kyodo says the president of the opposition Liberal Democratic Party has said it will meet the government to discuss a possible temporary tax increase to fund relief work. 11.13am: Associated Press is reporting that Japan’s prime minister has called the disaster the worst crisis since World War II when two nuclear bombs were dropped of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. He has urged country to unite. 10.59am: The UK Foreign Office is advising against all non-essential travel to Tokyo and the North East of Japan . It has set up contact numbers for assistance: British nationals in Japan who require assistance should contact the Foreign Office helpline in London: +44 20 7008 0000 (from Japan) or 020 7008 0000 (in the UK). You can also e-mail the Foreign Office on japan.earthquake@fco.gov.uk or skype (text not call) on “fcojapan”. It has issued the following information about the status of Japanese airports: Sendai – Closed Sado – Closed Iwate-Hanamaki – Closed Misawa – Closed NRT/Tokyo Narita – Open, although flights to and from the airport are experiencing some disruptions. There are some train and bus services to the airport but traffic is heavy and serious disruptions in travelling to Narita continue. 1700 people are currently at Narita airport; airport authorities are distributing sleeping bags and food. HND/Tokyo Haneda – Open, though flights are subject to cancellation. UKB/Kobe Airport – Open KIX/Osaka – Open KIJ/Niigata – Open Amori – Partially open Akita – Partially open Misawa – Partially open Yamagata – Partially open Shonai – Partially open Odate Noshino – Partially open Fuksushima – Partially open 10.40am: The Tokyo Electric Power Company which operates the Fukushima Daiichi and Fukushima Daini nuclear power stations has confirmed that a crane operator has been killed at the Daini plant . The operator was trapped in the crane operating console of the exhaust stack and was transferred to the ground at 5:13pm on Saturday and confirmed the death at 5:17pm. In an update early on Sunday morning , the International Atomic Energy Agency said that four workers had been injured by the explosion at Unit 1 reactor of the Daiichi plant . In addition, one worker was exposed to higher-than-normal radiation levels that fall below the IAEA guidance for emergency situations. And at Fukushima Daini, four have been injured. 10.06am: This map from the US Geological Survey shows the aftershocks that have hit the region since Friday. There have been over 250 aftershocks , with 30 of those in excess of magnitude 6. 9.47am: Justin McCurry in Tokyo reports that Japan’s meteorological agency on Sunday upgraded last Friday’s earthquake from magnitude 8.8 to 9.0 , although it is still referring to this estimate as an “interim value”. It occurred 130km off the Pacific coast of Tokoku region at a depth of 24km. It is advising people to be vigilant for further tsunamis, landslides and further building collapses. It is also warning that there is a 70% chance of a magnitude-7 aftershock striking the country in the next three days.There will be a 50% risk over the three subsequent days. 9.39am: Japan’s Daily Yomiuri has this powerful eyewitness piece on the “hellish sight” of Kesennumma in Miyagi prefecture, hit by quake, tsunami and fires: Black smoke belched from fires that continued to spread even after daybreak in this city on the Sanriku Coast with a population of 75,700. All but the platform of Minami-Kesennuma Station on the JR Kesennuma Line was swept away by tsunami as if it had never existed. Also hit by tsunami, the city’s central community center near the station was flooded to the second-floor ceiling, forcing people evacuated there to stay overnight on the third floor, community center officials said. Many wrecked cars and trucks lay amidst heaps of rubble, while broken houses were swept down the Okawa river along the JR line. The water continued to ebb and flow with waves from the sea. 9.36am: In a a small indication of the massive relief effort now underway, Tokyo vice-mayor @inosenaoki says 44,000 meals of crackers, 643,000 of instant rice and 57,000 units of condensed milk are on their way to the disaster area, along with 384,000 blankets and 9000 portable toilets. 9.19am: Our correspondent Jonathan Watts is in Shiontona, Miyagi prefecture. He has been speaking to survivors of the tsunami. One woman, Harumi Watanabe said she rushed home from work to save her elderly parents but was unable to get them out of the house quickly enough. “There wasn’t time to save them. They were old and too weak to walk so I couldn’t get them in the car in time,” she said. When the wave hit the house, her mother and father were ripped from her grasp and dragged under-water. “I stood on the furniture, but the water came up to my neck. There was only a narrow band of air below the ceiling. I thought I would die,” said Watanabe. Early indications are that older people will make up a high proportion of the dead because they were unable to act on the tsunami warnings in time. “There are many old people here. We have evacuation drills, but people could not get to the meeting place in time. The tsunami was beyond our expectations. We must reflect on our shortcomings,” said Jiro Saito, head of the local disaster countermeasures committee. Watts reports that further round the coast in Minami Shirazu, close to 10,000 people are reportedly missing after the town was engulfed by the tsunami. The full story will be online shortly. 8.50am: Agence France Presse has more details of the extraordinary story of the 60-year-old man rescued after being swept 15km out to sea by the tsunami: A Maritime Self-Defence Force destroyer rescued 60-year-old Hiromitsu Shinkawa after discovering him floating on a piece of roof in waters off Fukushima Prefecture, two days after the disaster struck. The man, from the city of Minamisoma which has been virtually obliterated, was swept out along with his house after the massive tsunami tore into Japan’s northeast following a 8.9-magnitude earthquake on Friday. He is conscious and in “good condition” after his rescue which took place around 12:40 pm (0340 GMT), ministry officials said, adding that he was transported to hospital by helicopter. “I ran away after learning that the tsunami was coming,” Shinkawa told rescuers according to Jiji Press. “But I turned back to pick up something at home, when I was washed away. I was rescued while I was hanging to the roof from my house.” 8.40am: These remarkable interactive graphics from ABC in Australia and the New York Times use before-and-after pictures of the disaster zone to demonstrate the extent of the devastation. Another New York times interactive allows you to zoom in on a scene of devastation in Sendai, northern Japan. This interactive map help convey the scale of the disaster. 8.31am: One very welcome piece of good news: astonishingly, a 63-year-old man was rescued after his home was swept 15km out to sea by the tsunami, Japanese media are reporting. Rescuers in a helicopter spotted him waving from the rooftop near Futabacho, Fukushima prefecture. 8.19am: Good morning, we’re continuing our live coverage as Japan tackles the aftermath of Friday’s devastating 8.9 magnitude earthquake and the ensuing tsunami. Tokyo has doubled the number of rescuers to 100,000 and is still struggling to control the crisis at two nuclear power stations. The developments today: • Up to 10,000 people may have died in Miyagi prefecture, a police official there has told broadcaster NHK. Miyagi was the area worst-hit by the double disaster. The previous estimate of the death toll was around 1,800, although police had said they were unable to make contact with 9,500 people in the devastated town of Minamisanriku. • Japan is still struggling to control the crisis at two nuclear power plants damaged in Friday’s huge earthquake and tsunami. The emergency cooling system has failed at another reactor . • As many as 190 people may have been exposed to radiation. Potentially unsafe levels have been detected in 22 people. • Aftershocks also continue to hit the region , with two tremors of 6.2 magnitude earlier today. • Millions remain without power and drinking water and reports from the disaster zone suggest many survivors are struggling to find food. • International rescue teams are arriving in Japan. You can read yesterday’s live coverage here . Japan earthquake and tsunami Japan Tania Branigan James Randerson guardian.co.uk

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NPR's On The Media is a weekly show produced by WNYC in New York. When there's a NPR scandal, they are not fair and balanced. They are liberal warriors. They have stated repeatedly that liberal bias is a “canard” that causes “false balance.”

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Israel approves West Bank homes after family murder

Binyamin Netanyahu approves hundreds of settler homes in West Bank after Palestinian militants kill family of settlers Israel has approved hundreds of settler homes after five members of an Israeli family – including three children – were knifed to death as they slept in a West Bank settlement over the weekend. The attack and the government’s response threatens to drive Israeli-Palestinian peacemaking even further out of reach. The settlement construction, approved on Saturday night by the Cabinet’s ministerial team on settlements, would take place in major West Bank settlement blocs that Israel expects to hold on to in any final peace deal, the prime minister’s office said in a text message to reporters. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who is under domestic pressure to respond harshly to the killings, is a member of that team. On Saturday, Netanyahu demanded international condemnation of the murders, that Palestinian militants said was in reprisal for Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and Gaza. Israeli soldiers mounted a massive search in the West Bank after a mother, father and three children, aged between three months and 11, were attacked with knives in their house in the settlement of Itamar, near the Palestinian city of Nablus. It was believed that two of the dead had their throats cut. The alarm was raised by the couple’s 12-year-old daughter who returned home from a youth event on the settlement to find the bloodstained scene. Two other children asleep in a separate room at the time of the attack were unharmed. The surviving children were being cared for by grandparents. The area was sealed off by Israeli police and soldiers. The army launched an operation in the nearby Palestinian village of Awata, arresting about two dozen young men. The dead were named as Udi Fogel, 36, his wife Ruth, 35, and children Yoav, 11, Elad, four, and Hadas, three months. The family previously lived in the Gush Katif settlement in the Gaza Strip, which was evacuated in 2005, and recently moved to Itamar. Rabbi Yaakov Cohen, a neighbour who entered the house with the 12-year-old girl, told the Ynet website that her two-year-old brother “was lying next to his bleeding parents, shaking them with his hands and trying to get them to wake up, while crying … The sight in the house was shocking.” According to an Israeli settlement security official who visited the scene of the attack, one or two intruders scaled the security fence surrounding Itamar and entered the family’s home through a window. The father, said the official, who did not want to be named, was a teacher in a religious school. The al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade, the armed wing of Fatah, the dominant political faction in the West Bank, said it had carried out the “heroic operation … in response to the fascist occupation against our people in the West Bank and Gaza Strip”. Netanyahu said: “I expect the international community to sharply and unequivocally condemn this murder, the murder of children. I have noticed that several countries that always hasten to the UN security council in order to condemn Israel, the state of the Jews, for planning a house in some locality … have been dilatory in sharply condemning the murder of Jewish infants. I expect them to issue such condemnations immediately, without balances, without understandings, without justifications. There is no justification and there can be neither excuse nor forgiveness for the murder of children.” He said he was disappointed in the reaction from the Palestinian Authority. Earlier he had blamed its “incitement against Israel” for the attack. The Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, telephoned Netanyahu to condemn the attack. “Violence will only bring more violence,” he said, urging a comprehensive agreement to end the conflict. Salam Fayyad, the Palestinian prime minister, said that “violence does not justify violence … whoever does it and whoever the victims are”. A statement from the White House said there was “no possible justification for the killings of parents and children in their home”. Britain’s foreign secretary, William Hague, denounced the attack as “an act of incomprehensible cruelty”. It was the first killing of settlers since four adults were shot dead near Hebron on the eve of direct talks between Israel and the Palestinians in September. The talks stalled following Israel’s refusal to extend a freeze on new settlement in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. The West Bank has seen few militant operations in recent years as the Palestinian Authority has stepped up security as part of its efforts to build the basis of a future state. Last month, Israel removed the Hawara checkpoint near Itamar. But there has been continued tension between Palestinian villagers and hardline settlers, with regular clashes over the destruction of olive trees. In the nearby Palestinian village of Awata, Khalil Shurrab said that “many, many soldiers” had come in the early hours, going house to house to round up people. Residents showed visitors rooms in houses that they said had been trashed by soldiers and spent tear gas canisters. Hilary Minch, a volunteer with a Christian monitoring group based near Nablus, said the army had used live ammunition and stun grenades. “The next 24 hours will be very tense,” she said. “The villagers fear retribution by the settlers.” Palestinian territories Middle East Israel Binyamin Netanyahu Harriet Sherwood guardian.co.uk

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Lib Dem conference blog – live

Nick Clegg speaks at the Lib Dem spring conference, where delegates are also debating banks, legal aid the party’s future relations with the Tories. 9.17am: For the record, here are the latest YouGov GB polling figures. Labour: 44% (up 14 points since the general election) Conservatives: 33% (down 4) Lib Dems: 10% (down 14) Labour lead: 11 points Government approval: -30 9.10am: There’s some bad news for the Lib Dems this morning; support for the alternative vote is falling. Here’s the Press Association story about it. Public opinion is moving away from a change to the voting system for Westminster elections, according to a new poll. Using the question to be put to a referendum on the Alternative Vote (AV) in May, ComRes pollsters found that the No campaign was ahead for the first time. The poll, conducted for the Sunday Mirror and Independent on Sunday, suggested that support for a switch to AV had fallen to 34% from 40% last month. Those planning to vote against AV had increased from 30% to 37%. All previous polls using the wording of the referendum question have shown the Yes campaign in front. The question asked was: “At present, the UK uses the ‘first past the post’ system to elect MPs to the House of Commons. Should the ‘alternative vote’ system be used instead?” 8.45am: Alarm clock Britain is making a comeback. Today’s proceedings at the Lib Dem spring conference will be dominated by Nick Clegg’s speech and, according to the extracts released in advance, he’s going to reaffirm his commitment to speaking up for “alarm clock Britain”. When Clegg first floated this concept in an article in the Sun at the beginning of the year, the Times columnist David Aaronovitch said: “If anyone can find a worse written, more cliché-ridden, more meaningless, more patronising, more tin-eared collection of absurd propositions paraded as common sense, then I will give them £50.” As far as I know, Aaronovitch’s £50 remains unclaimed. But Clegg does not seem to mind. This is what he’s going to tell the conference. The banner at this conference says: In government, on your side. Some people have asked me: whose side, exactly? My answer is simple. We’re on the side of the people I call Alarm Clock Britain. The side of everyone who wants to get up and get on. People who, unlike the wealthy, have no choice but to work hard to make ends meet. People who are proud to support themselves but are only ever one pay cheque from their overdraft. People who believe in self-reliance but who don’t want to live in a dog-eat-dog world. Who want everyone who can to work hard but they want children, the elderly and the vulnerable to be looked after too. People who believe it is as wrong to opt out of tax as it is to opt out of working. Clegg is also going to insist that the Lib Dems are the party of the centre ground. Our opponents try to divide us with their outdated labels of left and right. But we are not on the left and we are not on the right. We have our own label: Liberal. We are liberals and we own the freehold to the centre ground of British politics. Governing from the middle, for the middle. Clegg’s speech will close the conference. But it’s not the only item on the agenda for the morning. Here’s a full list. 9am: Parliamentary party reports, with brief speeches from Alistair Carmichael, the chief whip, Lord McNally, the Lib Dem leader in the Lords, and Fiona Hall, the leader in the European Parliament. 9.20am: Emergency debate on a motion calling for tougher action on banks and bonuses. 9.50am: Debate on a strategy motion saying the Lib Dems should fight the next election as an independent party “with no preference for potential future coalition partners”. 11am: Simon Woolley, director of Operation Black Vote and one of the vice chairs of Yes to Fairer Votes, gives a speech on the alternative vote campaign. 11.15am: Debate on an access to justice motion calling for a proper impact assessment before further cuts are made to legal aid. 11.45am: Nick Clegg speech. I’ll be blogging from the conference throughout the morning. Nick Clegg Liberal Democrats AV Andrew Sparrow guardian.co.uk

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Did NPR Have a Dinner Party With Right-Wingers to Disprove They Really Believed NPR Was Biased?

In Friday's Washington Examiner, columnist Byron York plucked something off the Ron Schiller tapes that few have noticed: Schiller said NPR held a dinner party to discover whether conservatives actually believed the somehow amazing notion that NPR has a liberal tilt: NPR decided to do a little field research. “I asked one of my very conservative friends who lives in Washington if they would give a dinner of very conservative people in government,” Schiller said at the Feb. 22 lunch secretly recorded by conservative activist James O'Keefe. “The purpose of the dinner was to ask them if they really believed that NPR had a liberal bias or not. Is this just something that conservatives say to each other, or is this in fact true?” The dinner was arranged, and 10 conservatives attended, along with Ron Schiller and NPR head Vivian Schiller. (The two are not related.) The results of the evening, Ron Schiller said, were “very amusing.” “We began with everyone around the table taking this point of view that of course NPR is liberal, or perceived as liberal … and that there is a reason for that perception,” Schiller recounted. “And then, about half an hour into the dinner, one of the people said, 'Well, of course I listen to NPR every day because it's the only place I can get intelligent reporting. But it's still liberal.' And then the next person said, 'Well, of course I listen to it every day.' By the time we finished the dinner, every person around the room admitted that they listened to it every day.” York could not confirm any conservatives who actually attended this alleged dinner party for fans of “intelligent reporting.” He added: The lesson the NPR executives took from the dinner seems to be that because some Republicans listen to NPR — and they do — then they should support federal funding for the network. “It's politically advantageous to attack NPR and to paint it as liberal, even if in fact [you] listen to it and don't really think that it's all that liberal,” Schiller said on the video. Some conservatives (like me) listen to NPR almost every day knowing full well it's liberal, backwards and forwards. Listening to it a lot only underlines it. But that doesn't mean you like it. After all, some liberals listen to Rush Limbaugh every day. York then talked to Rep. Doug Lamborn, who wants to defund NPR but isn't at all interested in the question of biased content: Rep. Doug Lamborn, a conservative Republican from Colorado, is leading the fight in the House to defund NPR. I asked whether Lamborn had been invited to the Schiller dinner. “No,” he laughed. (He hadn't known about it until I told him.) But he was struck by the notion that anyone who listens to NPR must also support federal subsidies for NPR. “It's not an issue of whether they have quality programming or whether they have an ideological bias,” Lamborn says. “Those are valid questions, but the issue is whether we can afford something that's no longer essential.” Lamborn has no desire to see NPR disappear; he believes it can thrive on its corporate, foundation, and private support, without federal dollars. There's no doubt NPR can survive without federal dollars. But if defunding happened, it would just be another powerful liberal network, like ABC, or CBS. There's no cheering for that. Conservatives wouldn't like the programming any better — although they'd be happy not to be involuntary contributors.

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Royal wedding refuseniks flee abroad

Four-day weekend to celebrate marriage of Prince William and Kate Middleton taken as chance to escape for early summer sun When David Cameron gave the nation an extra day off in honour of the wedding of a prince, he may not have reckoned on the impact. Far from pinning up some bunting or jostling for elbow room around the biggest flatscreen in the village on 29 April, many British people plan to leave the country and abandon the spectacle to the tourists. Bookings for foreign breaks have shot up, while online holiday companies are reporting that the number of people searching for April getaways is double last year’s. Travel agents are reporting from 30% to 56% rises in interest in their holidays, while Hotels.com says that the number of people searching for holidays for the week ending 29 April has increased by 212% compared with the same time in 2010. Thomas Cook has put an extra 100,000 sunshine breaks on sale to meet demand, a third more than usual, while Ryanair has reported a 65% increase in bookings. “It’s a bonanza for the foreign travel industry, which I’m sure the prime minister wasn’t expecting,” said Lonely Planet’s Tom Hall, who has been inundated with readers looking for advice on the best destinations. “And it’s an absolutely lovely time to be in the Caribbean.” Hall added: “There is a huge degree of interest making the most of the extra time that’s being offered. As pretty much anyone who works will back up, an opportunity like that is not to be missed. And, of course, hoteliers in this country are facing an influx of tourists coming into London for the wedding, so it’s a good time to leave town.” The extra day off on Friday, 29 April, means that millions of workers will enjoy two successive four-day weekends in quick succession: 22-25 April, taking in bank holidays on Good Friday and Easter Monday, and 29 April–2 May, taking in the royal wedding and the May Day bank holiday, with only a three-day working week in between. “Holidaymakers now only need to take five days’ annual leave to benefit from a 14-night holiday,” said Richard Calvert, managing director of Thomas Cook holidays, welcoming it as “great news for savvy travellers”. So far, the most popular destinations are places with plenty of early summer sunshine, such as Turkey, Egypt and the Canaries. European republics are also popular, especially with independent travellers. The travel firm Skyscanner said that Germany was the top destination for escapes over the 29 April weekend. For those keen to avoid the wedding but not able to leave these shores, an alternative event has been set up by a Welsh cultural group: the Escape The Wedding Camp at a campsite near Machynlleth. Balchder Cymru (Pride of Wales), a group set up to promote Welsh consciousness, is considering staging a march through Machynlleth on the day to celebrate the area’s links with their preferred Prince of Wales, Owain Glyndwr, who was crowned in the town in 1404. “We are giving people an opportunity to escape the razzledazzle and media hype that will take place when the wedding takes place. Not everyone will be celebrating,” said a spokesman for the group. On Oxford Street yesterday, a shop owner who didn’t want to be named admitted that there was little interest in Kate/Wills memorabilia. “Postcards are doing OK, but it’s a lot of Brits writing jokey, bitchy messages.” Tourists were buying union-jack-emblazoned products for their kitsch appeal. Paula Hilton, 26, from Lancaster, in London with her mother Elizabeth, 56, for the weekend, was buying her son a model of a London taxi. “I wouldn’t come near London on the day,” she said. “I’ll have a look at the dress in the paper or whatever, but I’m not invited so I’m not watching!” Many Londoners, meanwhile, are hoping to cash in on outsiders’ enthusiasm. The city’s hotels are racking up prices to take advantage of a possible 500,000 foreign visitors, while the websites Gumtree and London Rent My House have huge numbers of people offering to rent out their homes – while they, presumably, seize the opportunity to take a holiday. The writer Anthony Holden is one of those who have opted to join the anti-monarchist exodus: “I am certainly planning to flee the country, due to my republicanism, general hatred of the news coverage and the fact that because of Easter weekend it’s like the dead week between Christmas and New Year. I shall go somewhere to the sun and work on my new book,” he said. The campaign group Republic is hosting one of several “anti-royal wedding” street parties. Its spokesman, Graham Smith, said he’d expect a few hundred people at the London event. “We expect the majority in the middle who are largely apathetic to just go on holiday to ignore it that way, and I hope they have a good time. At least 20% of the population are opposed to the monarchy, and many more simply don’t care about it.” Polls and complaints to the BBC about coverage before the event showed an unexcited nation, he said, adding: “The public holiday blows a hole in the idea that the wedding will be an economic boost for Britain. The CBI has calculated an extra day off would cost the economy

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Will Media Attack Maher for Calling Koran ‘A Hate-filled Book’ and Saying Muslim Extremists are America’s Greatest Threat?

As NewsBusters has been reporting for over a week, America's media have been widely attacking House Homeland Security chairman Peter King (R-N.Y.) for conducting hearings about the threat of homegrown Muslim terrorists. On Friday's “Real Time,” host BIll Maher, in an interview with Muslim Congressman Keith Ellison (D-Minn.), called the Koran a “hate-filled book” while claiming “the threat potentially from radicalized Muslims is a unique and greater threat” than from “right-wing militias and Timothy McVeigh types” (video follows with transcript and commentary): BILL MAHER, HOST: So let me get to the part where I think you may not agree with me which is I do agree that there are other groups that pose a terrorist threat to this country. There are right-wing militias who are nutty and the Ku Klux Klan and abortion bombers and Timothy McVeigh types. I would say that the threat potentially from radicalized Muslims is a unique and greater threat. It is the greatest threat. Let me give you the reasons why I jotted down why. One, it's been going on a thousand years this problem between Islam and the west. We are dealing with a culture that is in its medieval era. It comes from a hate-filled holy book, the Koran, which is taken very literally by its people. They are trying to get nuclear weapons. I don't think Tim McVeigh would ever have tried to get a nuclear weapon because I think right-wing nuts they think they love this country and they are not trying to destroy this country. They want to get it away from the people they see as hijacking it. That’s different than Muslim extremists who want to destroy it. And also, it's a culture of suicide bombing, which is hard to deter from people who want to kill themselves. REPRESENTATIVE KEITH ELLISON (D-MINNESOTA): Well, I’ll tell you, Bill, I think you should investigate this issue a little more because I think that you're lumping together things that shouldn't be lumped together and you're casting a very wide net and therefore coming to the wrong conclusions. First of all, when you talk about they're trying to get nuclear weapons, are you referring to Iran? Who are you talking about? Al Qaeda? MAHER: I think anyone who is influenced by al Qaeda and the statements of Osama bin Laden, and that’s… ELLISON: Yeah, but Muslims aren't. I mean, there is 1.4 billion Muslims in the world. MAHER: Of course. No one is disputing that the vast, vast, giant majority of Muslims are not the problem. We're talking about a very small percentage, but it just takes one. That's what we're talking about when we're talking about terrorism, and obviously there is something that is going on that they're getting from the Koran. Maher here was almost sounding like a conservative. Shouldn't he be attacked for it? MAHER: Have you read Sam Harris’s book “The End of Faith?” He says… ELLISON: They’re not getting it from the Koran. You know Bill, I’m glad, let’s use this point for a moment, because as you know, as a student of religion, you know, you could there, books are complex, they’re compiled, and taking them out of context is a very easy thing to do. MAHER: I've heard this many times and I don't buy it. I’m sorry. Sam Harris says, “On almost every page the Koran instructs observant Muslims to despise non-believers.” ELLISON: That’s absurd. Ridiculous. MAHER: And he quotes it. Am I getting the wrong translation? Because that’s what every Muslim always tells me. ELLISON: No, you must be. MAHER: A lot of bad translations then. ELLISON: Well, why don't you read the part where it says that anyone who takes a life it’s as if he killed the whole world, and anyone who saves a life it's as if he saves the whole world? What about the one where it says let there be no compulsion in religion, and that it’s literally wrong to impose… MAHER: So then where are terrorists getting their instructions from? They’re getting it from something else. ELLISON: Like any ideologue, they will take things out of context to do what they want to do. If you listen to terrorist rhetoric, Bill, what they do is they cite politics, they cite political grievances. They don’t really use too much religion. As a matter of fact, when you find Muslims who reject terrorism as I do and almost everyone does, it often is for spiritual and religious reason and moral reasons, but when people want to justify it they justify it on political reasons. This is well-documented. Check out the Gallup poll, check out people who have studied this stuff. One of the things I think we can do to undermine terrorist ideology is actually to use people who know the Koran and to go after people like Anwar al-Awlaki who misquote it, misuse it, and don't really understand it. MAHER: Okay, I hope that happens. Alright, thank you for joining us, Congressman. I appreciate your time. Okay, let's join our panel. Oh, there I am getting in trouble with the liberals again. Notice at the end Maher said, “Oh, there I am getting in trouble with the liberals again.” But will he? When you consider the universal excoriation Rep. King has gotten in the past couple of weeks for holding hearings about basically this same issue, or what happens whenever any conservative makes similar points as to those Maher did Friday evening, shouldn't media members go after Maher's obvious “Islamophobia?” Or will this be another instance of liberals not caring when one of their own exhibits what certainly would be considered “hate-speech” if it came from a conservative?

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