COPLEY, Ohio — A northeast Ohio man ran through his small town neighborhood Sunday shooting eight people, including his girlfriend and her brother, before he was shot and killed in an exchange of gunfire with police, authorities said. Eight people, including the gunman, were killed. Witnesses told reporters at least one of the victims was a child. Police did not have a motive and did not release the names or ages of the gunman or the victims but provided a chronology of the shootings that began around 11 a.m. in a middle-class neighborhood of Copley, a town of about 14,000 west of Akron. “A person running through the neighborhood and firing a gun” prompted calls to police, Copley Police Department said in a news release late Sunday. At a home, the gunman shot his girlfriend, ran to a home next door and shot her brother and four others, then chased two people through some yards and shot one of them, police said. He went into a third home and shot another person before leaving and exchanging gunfire with a police officer and a former police officer. One of the man’s victims was taken to a hospital. The person’s condition was not known Sunday evening. The names and ages of the victims and the gunman weren’t being released until police could tell family members, some of whom are out of state, Copley police Sgt. Eric Goodwin said. The Akron Beacon Journal reported that Copley School Superintendent Brian Poe said a township trustee told him two Copley High School students were killed during the shootings and a third youth, an 11-year-old, was also killed. Poe said the trustee told him the 11-year-old was not a Copley student. A neighbor, Gilbert Elie, said he was getting ready for church when he heard gunshots and cries for help in the wooded neighborhood. He went to a house across the street and said he found a shocking scene: the woman who lived there lying in the driveway, her husband shot near the garage, and their young granddaughter and another woman shot in the front seat of a vehicle, the windows apparently blown out by gunfire. A third woman came out of the house next door and tried to talk to Elie, he said, but their brief exchange ended abruptly when a man followed her out of the house and shot her, sending the 75-year-old Elie running for safety behind a truck. “She was talking to me, and he come up behind her and shot her, so I figured, maybe I’m next,” he told The Associated Press. He hid until he could see the gunman was gone, then returned home. Police arrived, and Elie said he heard a second round of shots coming from behind the houses and assumed officers had killed the gunman. Elie described the gunman as unfriendly, a rarity on a street where most neighbors offer a wave in passing. He often worked on his car outside his house but never waved at anyone, Elie said. Police said they had received several reports of a person running through a neighborhood firing a gun and moving quickly throughout the neighborhood. Brian and Diane Cross said they were riding on a motorcycle Sunday morning when they heard gunfire. They said they heard a loud bang and saw a man with a gun chasing another man. Brian Cross, 53, said they drove a half mile to a service station to call 911, but “Copley police was already on it, and they were flying by us.” Jeff Kirby of nearby Norton said he was visiting his mother’s home a block from the shootings around 10:30 a.m. when he heard gunfire – about 15 shots with several pauses between them. Kirby, 53, said the last gunfire he heard occurred about the same time he heard sirens in the neighborhood. The neighborhood remained blocked off by police late Sunday. About 200 people assembled at a park around sunset for an impromptu candlelight vigil for the shooting victims in their town and crime victims elsewhere. The Rev. Jeff Bogue of the Grace Church of Greater Akron prayed with them, saying it’s troubling that “such evil would come to our little township.” Some residents said they set up a memorial fund. Copley Township is about 40 miles south of Cleveland. ___ Franko reported from Columbus. Associated Press writer JoAnne Viviano in Columbus contributed to this report.
Continue reading …On Sunday's Meet the Press on NBC, host David Gregory allowed Massachusetts Senator John Kerry to blame Standard and Poor's downgrade of U.S. debt on the Tea Party without challenge . However, minutes later, in an interview with Arizona Senator John McCain, Gregory was quick to accuse Republicans of “politicizing” the issue by criticizing Democrats. After quoting a statement from House Speaker John Boehner on the downgrade – which cited the unwillingness of Democrats to curb massive government spending as a cause – Gregory fretted to McCain: “Do you not see this downgrade as something akin to war that should galvanize political leadership on both sides of the aisle, rather than politicizing it?” Earlier in the exchange, Gregory was happy further Kerry's assertion that it was a “Tea Party downgrade,” arguing: “There were Republicans and Democrats who said Tea Party members, a lot of them freshmen conservatives, were digging in and, actually, some used the word 'hostage,' holding the whole process hostage because they would not raise any taxes at all.” McCain condemned the depiction of Tea Party members of Congress as hostage-takers: “And by the way, talking about hostages, of lately the Democrats have been calling us terrorists. So we need to lower that level of rhetoric, obviously.” Responding to McCain's observation that President Obama had failed to lead in the debt ceiling debate, Gregory declared: “The President was dealing….John Boehner was dealing. They were coming up with a plan. They couldn't sell it. Was this really failed presidential leadership?” Here is a transcript of Gregory's August 7 exchange with McCain over the debt downgrade: 10:44AM ET DAVID GREGORY: Joining me now, Senator John McCain, Republican of Arizona, ranking member of the Senate Armed Services Committee.
Continue reading …enlarge Credit: Perrspectives If nothing else, the 2012 Republican presidential contest has forced GOP White House hopefuls to run a gauntlet of ever more draconian pledges demanded by party purists . At the top of the list is the Grover Norquist’s Taxpayer Protection Pledge , which demands candidates “solemnly bind themselves to oppose any and all tax increases.” But at a time of record high income inequality , historically low federal taxes and rising national debt their party is largely responsible for producing, the GOP presidential wannabes must take a two-part vow about their own tax-cutting proposals: (a) If my tax cut plan is enacted, my family and I will save ________ in federal taxes every year. ((b) If my tax cut plan is enacted, it will add ________ trillion dollars to the national debt of the United States over the next decade. Call it the “MyTaxCut Pledge.” The need for the MyTaxCut Pledge became glaringly apparent after the 2008 presidential campaign. Republican nominee John McCain offered a Treasury-draining tax cut plan that would have produced a massive windfall for him and his heiress wife, Cindy. As the Center for American Progress explained at the time: McCain favors making the Bush tax laws permanent, and also plans to repeal the Alternative Minimum Tax, double the dependent exemption and offer tax breaks on business income…Had McCain’s tax proposal been in place in 2006, [they] would have done incredibly well – saving even more than they did under the existing Bush plan. John and Cindy McCain would have walked away with $373,429 in their pocket. McCain’s tax plan was radically more regressive than even that of President Bush – it would have delivered 58% of its benefits to the wealthiest 1% of American taxpayers. But John and Cindy’s winnings wouldn’t have ended there. As both the financial crisis and his slump in the polls deepened, John McCain proposed slashing capital gains taxes (a halving from 15% to 7.5%). Again, the gains from his scheme go overwhelmingly to the richest Americans (almost 60% of its benefits to families earning over $1 million a year), including his wife : The McCains made $746,395 in capitals gains last year. A new analysis by Michael Ettlinger, Vice President for Economic Policy at the Center for American Progress Action Fund, reveals that McCain’s capital gains cut would have reduced the McCains’ taxes by $55,980 in 2007. But the McCain’s proposed personal payday pales in comparison to the vault-stuffing espoused by his surrogate Meg Whitman . During her failed 2010 run for governor of California, the billionaire former eBay CEO proposed killing the state’s capital gains tax altogether . As the Los Angeles Times’ Michael Hiltzik noted, ending the capital gains tax would cost California up to $10 billion in revenue annually even as it would put tens of millions of dollars directly into Meg Whitman’s pocketbook. The Whitman campaign refused to tell me this week what percentage of Whitman’s income derives from capital gains (which can be defined as profits on stock, bond, real estate and other such investments). Whitman has thus far refused to make public her tax returns, which might hold a clue…Capital gains might even represent the majority of her income in some years. As Chris Kelly of the Huffington Post aptly put it, “Meg Whitman’s Tax Plan: She Stops Paying Hers.” That recent history suggests that the 2012 GOP presidential field should come clean about what their respective tax plans will do for their own personal finances. After all, by any standard most are wealthy , with Mitt Romney, Jon Huntsman and Herman Cain especially so. (Romney’s fortune has been estimated as high as $250 million dollars.) Alas, the odds of any of the Republicans taking the MyTaxCut Pledge are virtually zero. After all, as Politico reported earlier this year: A POLITICO survey of the major GOP hopefuls found that none are promising to making their tax returns public, as then-candidate Obama did in 2007 and 2008 — as well as during his Senate campaign in 2004 and later in 2006. But if the would-be Republican presidents won’t fess up about the personal bonanzas their tax policies are certain to produce, at least they could come clean about what they’ll do to the national debt. For example, the Paul Ryan budget plan supported by 235 House Republicans and 40 GOP Senators includes $4.2 trillion in tax cuts over the next 10 years. That’s the major reason why the Ryan plan would add $6 trillion to the national debt over the next decade, which would ironically force Republicans to repeatedly raise the debt ceiling . The top tax rate would be lowered to 25% (from 35%), as would corporate taxes. As is almost always the case with GOP tax cut proposals, while the tax loopholes to be closed are left unmentioned even as the tax burden is dramatically shifted to lower and middle income Americans. (It should come as no surprise that Grover Norquist is now pressing Republican office seekers to sign a new pledge : enact the Ryan budget.) If Republican candidates refuse to be honest about the oceans of red ink their tax-planning plans will produce, here are some helpful reminders for the electorate. The ” Tax Relief Certainty Act ” co-sponsored by Senator Jim Demint (R-SC) and Rep. Mike Pence (R-IN) would make permanent the Bush tax cuts current set to expire on January 1, 2013. Those tax cuts aren’t merely the biggest driver of debt over the past decade and the next. As the New York Times explained today, the price tag is a staggering one: Letting all of the cuts expire at the end of 2012 would save $3.8 trillion over the next decade. Letting the tax cuts expire for those making more than $250,000 would save $700 billion. That would make a real dent in the $2.4 trillion in total deficit reduction envisioned in the debt limit deal. But when it comes to emptying the U.S. Treasury in order to pad the bank accounts of the richest Americans, self-proclaimed “Sam’s Club Republican” Tim Pawlenty takes the cake. That became abundantly clear in June when Pawlenty unveiled his economic plan diverting $11.6 trillion from the U.S. Treasury in order to give millionaires a 41% tax cut . His ” Better Plan ” would create two tax brackets of ten percent for those earning up to $50,000 and 25 percent above. (As with the Paul Ryan plan, the loopholes Tim Pawlenty would close remain unnamed.) In addition, the man who calls himself “T-Paw” insists, “we should eliminate altogether the capital gains tax, interest income tax, dividends tax, and the death tax.” (It is worth noting that less than one-quarter of one percent of U.S. families pay the estate tax , while George W. Bush’s last round of capital gains and dividend tax cuts in 2003 delivered 70 percent of their savings to “top 2 percent of taxpayers, those making more than $200,000.”) Pawlenty’s claim to that he could achieve to five percent economic growth over ten straight years – a feat never performed in modern American history – was rightly mocked across the political spectrum as ” fantasy “, ” magical “, ” wishful thinking ” and ” fuzzy math .” But the most jaw-dropping aspect of Tim Pawlenty’s economic hallucination is the unprecedented upward income redistribution it would produce. As Citizens for Tax Justice concluded, the 400 richest Americans – whose incomes doubled and tax rates were halved over the past decade – would enjoy a 73 percent reduction in their tax bills. As it turns out, the merely well-off and the fabulously rich would join the unimaginably wealthy in reaping the T-Paw Payday for the gilded class : Taxpayers with incomes in excess of $1 million would enjoy an average cut in personal income taxes of $288,822, a 41.4 percent cut. Taxpayers with incomes in excess of $10 million would enjoy an average cut in personal income taxes of $2.4 million, a 46.3 percent cut. The cost of the personal income tax cuts just for taxpayers with incomes in excess of $1 million would be $141.8 billion. If this all sounds familiar, it should. In 2008, John McCain briefly promised to balance the budget by 2013 even as his tax plan would have added $2 trillion more to the national debt. Acknowledging the fiscal reality, his chief economic adviser Douglas Holtz-Eakin walked back McCain’s comically impossible promise: “I would like the next president not to talk about deficit reduction.” At the end of the day, for Republicans there are only two certainties in life: debt and tax cuts . Which is why every Republican 2012 presidential candidate must take the MyTaxCut Pledge. Americans now struggling to make ends meet have the right to know how much the next Republican President would benefit from the tax cuts he or she would give him or herself. And after Ronald Reagan tripled the national debt and George W. Bush doubled it , we need to know what it will cost the rest of us. (This piece also appears at Perrspectives .)
Continue reading …Suspect in Fulwood case is believed to be grandson of one victim and nephew of the other A man has been arrested on suspicion of murdering his grandmother and one of his aunts, whose bodies were found in a burning bungalow shortly after 2am on Monday. Officers were called to the address in Fulwood, near Preston, in the early hours. A spokeswoman for Lancashire constabulary said: “On arrival the house was found to be on fire and inside were the bodies of two women. “A 21-year-old man was arrested at the scene on suspicion of murder and is currently in custody.” The man being questioned is understood to be the grandson of one of the victims, who was named locally as Maureen Allen. Neighbours said she used a wheelchair and was often seen looking after her garden in the quiet close of seven similar properties. Stephanie McDougall said that her mother, who lives next door to the burned-out bungalow, rang her in distress just before 2am. “My mother thought the house was on fire and someone had stabbed somebody. “I didn’t know them myself but they were nice people. It’s very upsetting. It’s shocking that something like this could happen here.” The other dead woman is understood to be the arrested man’s aunt. Police have sealed off the semi-detached property while it is searched by forensic officers and fire service specialists. The close was also sealed off, with only residents and visitors allowed in. One woman allowed through said it was her mother’s house. She spoke briefly to officers at the scene before driving away with a police escort. Lancashire constabulary said more details would be released later. Crime Martin Wainwright guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Mortgage Payment Calculator.mp4 Mortgages for Business -2-year Discount Tracker 70% LTV FC-Mortgage Calculator SecondMortgage2 says: Use a Mortgage Calculator to Avoid Taking Out What You Cannot Afford http://bit.ly/qzzuMd
Continue reading …On October 9th, lure your worst enemies to your house with promises of free puppies and pot cake (or potcake puppies ), strap them into chairs in front of your TV, glue their eyelids to their brows and torture their souls raw by forcing them to watch the Kim Kardashian wedding special on E!. Entertainment Weekly says that when Kris Humphries sacrifices himself to the Kardashian monster by marrying… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Dlisted Discovery Date : 04/08/2011 17:51 Number of articles : 3
Continue reading …John Boehner said he got 98 percent of what he wanted from the debt deal. That sounds about right, since Kossacks apparently got roughly two percent of what they wanted, judging from their rage-filled blasts this past week at Republicans, conservatives, the Tea Party, and businessmen. As usual, each headline is preceded by the blogger's name or pseudonym. Kos: You could call Republicans terrorists…
Continue reading …Each week our friends at Inhabitat recap the week’s most interesting green developments and clean tech news for us — it’s the Week in Green. It was a monumental week for the field of architecture as Inhabitat brought you a first look at the coming world’s largest skyscraper designed by Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill, and we saw a sparkling wave of 65,000 discarded compact discs sweep through the streets of Paris. We also learned that plans for Jean Nouvel’s massive MoMA ‘Death Spire’ has been revitalized, and we took a look inside an incredible Mumbai office that looks like something straight out of Star Wars. We also brought you an exclusive video interview with Juergen Mayer H. — the architect behind the world’s largest wooden structure in Seville, Spain. Green transportation tech heated up this week as well as researchers developed a breakthrough wireless EV charger that is 90 percent efficient and Nissan unveiled a system that lets your electric vehicle power your house. We also learned that it’s a bad idea to park your car in a bike lane in Lithuania — it might get run over by a tank ! On the lighter side of things, we showcased a solar-powered ice cream truck that is giving out free organic popsicles, a cool electric touring bus that comes complete with detachable bicycles, and we saw an intrepid inventor transform an old sofa into a water-worthy jet ski . The world’s energy landscape shift towards cleaner sources of power this week as Germany announced it will construct 2,800 miles of transmission lines for renewable energy and Japan rolled out a plant to transform unused rice paddies into solar farms . We also saw Yosemite flip the switch on the largest solar array in a National Park, and we shared six green camping gadgets that are perfect for hitting the trails. Finally, we showcased a crazy-looking brain cap that can control a computer and we spotted several great green gadgets for tech-savvy kids as Amazon announced plans to launch the first tablet computer for babies and Delaney rolled out a solar-powered transformer robot that could give Optimus Prime a run for his money. Inhabitat’s Week in Green: world’s largest skyscraper looks down at solar-powered ice-cream truck originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 07 Aug 2011 20:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Less than 10 days after taking over the House of Representatives in January, majority leader Eric Cantor was already working on using the debt ceiling to force massive spending cuts, reports the Washington Post in a lengthy analysis of how the GOP rebuilt a far-right majority after the drubbings it…
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