As we already know, Pat Buchanan has been out there pushing a new book of his Suicide of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025? Buchanan showed up on Hannity’s show earlier this week where he was treated to the softball interview I posted about here — Pat Buchanan: America is Disintegrating Because White America is an Endangered Species . Needless to say, he didn’t get quite the same treatment when he appeared as a guest on Thom Hartmann’s radio show this Thursday. The relevant portion of the interview starts at just over three and a half minutes into the video above and the portion quoted below is about eight and a half minutes in. From Media Matters — Pat Buchanan Won’t Disavow Idea That Minorities Have Inferior Genes : Yesterday, radio host Thom Hartmann challenged guest Pat Buchanan over his recent writing about minorities and test scores. Hartmann said that “a lot of people are taking what you’re saying as code for inferior genes” and twice pressed Buchanan to disavow that theory. Buchanan did not, instead claiming that he doesn’t “know anything” about the topic. From The Thom Hartmann Program : HARTMANN: A lot of people are taking what you’re saying as code for inferior genes. Please tell me that’s not what you’re talking about. BUCHANAN: Well look, I’m not — don’t know anything about what genetics or something like that. What I’m saying is, is these are the test scores and we haven’t been able to — HARTMANN: So do you disavow that? BUCHANAN: Pardon? HARTMANN: Do you disavow that idea, that concept — BUCHANAN: Well, I don’t know anything about being — look. The Coleman Report — HARTMANN: I mean, you’re being quoted over on — BUCHANAN: The Coleman Report, and I think I’ve got in my book, the Coleman Report said what a child brings to school is far more important than what he finds in schools, in other words, heredity and home environment, nature and nurture. Do I know the differences, or what percentages, or this and that, of course not. I’m not going to get into that. I’m saying is here’s the test scores now, and this is the problem, and in our future, quite frankly, Hispanic Americans, and African Americans, because of test scores, because of the dropout rate is fifty percent, they’re going to be in the service economy and the rest of us are going to be up there in the knowledge industry and that doesn’t make for a united America. Much, much more that in the Media Matters post with details following this statement up so go read the entire post, but as they noted, Buchanan is actually fully aware of what Hartmann was asking him about, so his denial that he doesn’t “know anything about what genetics or something like that” is just flatly false. While Buchanan didn’t disavow the idea, he’s written about the matter throughout his career and was forced to clarify a controversial memo regarding the subject he wrote to President Nixon. The Boston Globe reported in a January 1992 article that as a White House aide, Buchanan “suggested in a memo to President Nixon that efforts to integrate the U.S. might only result in ‘perpetual friction’ because blacks and the poor may be genetically inferior to middle-class whites.” At the time of the report, Buchanan was running for president and under criticism for his history of controversial racial statements. The Globe reported that “Buchanan said yesterday he does not believe blacks are genetically inferior to whites and did not have that belief in the past. Buchanan said he sent the memo to Nixon as a routine matter of intellectual curiosity.” They wrapped the post up by noting Buchanan’s praise for some of the writings of white supremacist Sam Francis on the same topic he denied knowing anything about to Hartmann here: Near the conclusion of his section on race and education, on page 224, Buchanan quotes the writing of white supremacist Sam Francis, in which Francis writes that “the doctrine of equality is unimportant, because no one save perhaps Pol Pot and Ben Wattenberg really believes in it, and no one, least of all those who profess it most loudly, is seriously motivated by it…. The real meaning of the doctrine of equality is that it serves as a political weapon.” Buchanan eulogized Francis in a May 2005 column , writing, “When God created him, He endowed Sam with a great gift – one of the finest minds of his generation. Sam did not waste it.” In Buchanan’s book State Of Emergency , as noted by Think Progress’ Judd Legum, Buchanan lamented that Francis was fired after he suggested that only whites have the appropriate “genetic endowments” to keep America from collapsing.
Continue reading …Officials say death toll could be between 500 and 1,000 after magnitude 7.2 earthquake strikes Van province Up to 1,000 people are feared dead in a powerful earthquake in eastern Turkey, according to initial estimates. Turkey’s Kandilli Observatory said the death toll could be between 500 and 1,000. At least 35 buildings are reported to have collapsed. The earthquake, with a preliminary magnitude of 7.2, struck in the Van province near the Iranian border on Sunday. The epicentre was below the village of Tabanli, near the city of Van. “The quake was strongly felt in Van and neighbouring towns and caused damage and deaths, based on initial assessments,” the Turkish prime minister’s office said. Ten buildings collapsed in Van and 25-30 in neighbouring Ercis, officials said. Several strong aftershocks were reported. “There are so many dead. Several buildings have collapsed. There is too much destruction,” Zulfikar Arapoglu, the mayor of Ercis, told NTV television. “We need urgent aid. We need medics.” Serious damage and casualties were reported in the district of Celebibag. The mayor, Veysel Keser, told NTV: “There are many people under the rubble. People are in agony, we can hear their screams for help. We need urgent help. “It’s a great disaster. Many buildings have collapsed, student dormitories, hotels and gas stations have collapsed.” Some houses collapsed in the province of Bitlis, and in nearby Mus the quake toppled the minarets of two mosques. NTV said Van’s airport was damaged and planes were diverted to neighbouring cities. Rescue workers and residents using their bare hands and shovels struggled to free people believed to be trapped under collapsed buildings, television footage showed. At least 50 people were treated for injuries in the courtyard of the state hospital in Van, said the state-run Anatolia news agency. Earthquakes are frequent in Turkey. In 1999, about 18,000 people were killed by two powerful earthquakes that struck north-western Turkey. Authorities blamed shoddy construction for many of the deaths. Turkey Natural disasters and extreme weather Middle East Europe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Document on former Libyan dictator’s website likely to further confuse debate over where he should be buried A will apparently written by Muammar Gaddafi expresses the wish that he be buried in Sirte, the town of his birth, next to “my family and relatives”. The will surfaced on Gaddafi’s website , Seven Day News, on Sunday. It is said to be the only surviving copy of three identical testaments given to the former Libyan dictator’s relatives. One relative was killed, the second arrested, and the third managed to escape amid fighting in Sirte, the BBC reported. In the will, Gaddafi urges his supporters to continue to resist foreign occupation. He also alludes to the fact that he chose to fight and die inside Libya rather than picking the in his view dishonourable route of foreign exile. He implies that he received “many offers” of support from other countries. The document, translated into English, states: “This is my will. I, Muammar bin Mohammad bin Abdussalam bi Humayd bin Abu Manyar bin Humayd bin Nayil al Fuhsi Gaddafi, do swear that there is no other God but Allah and that Mohammad is God’s Prophet, peace be upon him. I pledge that I will die as Muslim. Should I be killed, I would like to be buried, according to Muslim rituals, in the clothes I was wearing at the time of my death and my body unwashed, in the cemetery of Sirte, next to my family and relatives. I would like that my family, especially women and children, be treated well after my death. The Libyan people should protect its identity, achievements, history and the honourable image of its ancestors and heroes. The Libyan people should not relinquish the sacrifices of the free and best people. I call on my supporters to continue the resistance, and fight any foreign aggressor against Libya, today, tomorrow and always. Let the free people of the world know that we could have bargained over and sold out our cause in return for a personal secure and stable life. We received many offers to this effect but we chose to be at the vanguard of the confrontation as a badge of duty and honour. Even if we do not win immediately, we will give a lesson to future generations that choosing to protect the nation is an honour and selling it out is the greatest betrayal that history will remember forever despite the attempts of the others to tell you otherwise.” The testament is likely to further confuse the debate over where Gaddafi should be buried. His body is still being kept in a refrigerated warehouse in Misrata, four days after his capture and death at the hands of rebel fighters last Thursday. Libya’s National Transitional Council (NTC) in Tripoli has been paralysed with indecision over what to do with the body. Local NTC representatives in Misrata have refused to allow his burial in their town, and the stand-off threatens to overshadow the day of national liberation that the NTC is proclaiming on Sunday from Benghazi, the eastern city that was the first to rise up against Gaddafi’s 42-year rule, kicking off Libya’s eight-month revolution. The day is supposed to mark the beginning of the country’s formal transition to democracy. Speaking in Jordan on Sunday, Libya’s departing prime minister said talks were under way to form an interim government, replacing the NTC, within a month. “There are consultations which started to form an … interim government,” Mahmoud Jibril said, according to Reuters. “This process will take, I think, from one week to one month approximately. This is my expectation. It might go longer, it might be less than that.” Elections to Libya’s new national congress should follow as soon as possible afterwards, he said. But one of many obstacles facing Libya’s new provisional leadership is the question of whether, in the minutes following his capture in Sirte, Gaddafi was executed. Libya’s chief pathologist confirmed that he had died of a gunshot wound to the head. It is still unclear who fired the fatal shot, and under what circumstances, with Amnesty and other human rights groups pressing for a full investigation. Dr Othman al-Zintani carried out the autopsy on Gaddafi’s body at a morgue in Misrata. Speaking afterwards, he said it was “obvious” the former dictator had died from a bullet to the head. He did not elaborate, but appeared to be referring to the entry wound clearly visible on the left side of Gaddafi’s head, shown in numerous shots of his body screened around the world. “He died because of a gunshot wound to the head.” al-Zintani said: “There are still several issues. We have to pass [the report] to the prosecutor general. But everything will be revealed publicly. Nothing will be hidden.” Libya Muammar Gaddafi Middle East Africa Luke Harding guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …In this video the always-fantastic Jay Smooth, of Ill Doctrine , spends just over four minutes offering his perspective on the Occupy Wall Street movement. He likes it. And, he says, more importantly, the media coverage and treatment of the protests is telling us a lot about who’s in bed with who, politically speaking. ( View original at http://thesocietypages.org/socimages ) In this video the always-fantastic… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Sociological Images Discovery Date : 19/10/2011 23:28 Number of articles : 5
Continue reading …Camp occupants reluctant to leave, saying they have been told there are no safety issues, but St Paul’s remains closed An impasse between St Paul’s Cathedral and the protest camp that has spent eight days at its walls remains apparently deadlocked, with activists saying they will not consider church officials’ request for them to move elsewhere until they receive a fuller explanation as to why this is necessary. On a usual Sunday the 400-year-old London landmark would be full of worshippers and visitors. But the doors have been bolted since Friday evening when the dean, the Right Reverend Graeme Knowles, announced that the cathedral would remain shut until further notice because the 200 or so tents and marquees along its western edge posed a fire and safety risk. A scheduled wedding took place on Saturday, with the celebrants using a side door, but worshippers for morning services on Sunday were faced with a notice directing them to the nearby church of St Vedast. A special evensong involving visiting choirs to mark the 150th anniversary of the Hymns Ancient and Modern publication has been moved to Southwark Cathedral, south of the Thames. Some would-be worshippers were caught out. “We didn’t know, so we’re very disappointed,” said a woman from a visiting American family forced to suddenly revise their plans for the day. But most tourists remained largely positive about the Occupy the London Stock Exchange camp, a protest against the perceived excesses of the global financial system. “I suppose you could say we’re part of the 99% as well,” said Levin Brunner, an IT consultant from Munich, using the term coined by activists for the bulk of people who do not enjoy stellar salaries and annual bonuses. “We have similar protests in Germany, so we knew this was taking place and we have a lot of sympathy for it. It’s very interesting for tourists to see, anyway.” On Saturday the activists set up a second base at Finsbury Square , a grassed area on the fringes of London’s financial district, currently home to about 60 tents. The movement says this is not intended to be a replacement for the camp at St Paul’s, but more of an overspill as the first site is now too full to accept more tents. Activists face intense pressure to reconsider the St Paul’s camp, not least for the resonance of being seen as responsible for the closure of a national landmark for the first time since the second world war. Church officials say the closure is costing St Paul’s about £20,000 a day in lost revenue. But the protesters are deeply reluctant, strongly hinting that they believe the Corporation of London, which governs the City district, has joined financial institutions to place at least implicit pressure on St Paul’s to take action. The Occupy the London Stock Exchange movement says it has spoken to both the fire service and local health and safety officials and has been told there are no safety issues. “Until the cathedral was shut we were in regular contact with them and relations were good. But since Friday they haven’t talked to us,” said one protester, Sean, who was acting as a media spokesman. “We’ve asked for details about the fire and health and safety issues, but we’ve heard nothing.” The cathedral remains resolute. On Saturday its canon chancellor, the Reverend Dr Giles Fraser, who a week before had welcomed what he described as a legitimate protest, issued a statement urging the protesters to leave . He said: “I remain firmly supportive of the right of people peacefully to protest. But given the strong advice that we have received that the camp is making the cathedral and its occupants unsafe then this right has to be balanced against other rights and responsibilities too.” Occupy London Occupy movement London Peter Walker guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …UPDATE, 10.22: NPR, having failed to pressure WDAV into getting rid of Lisa Simeone as the host of “World Of Opera,” has gone ahead and done the next best thing. The AP reports that NPR “will no longer distribute the member station-produced program “World of Opera” to about 60 stations across the country.” WDAV will distribute the show themselves. These are some extraordinary measures that NPR has taken to ensure that the people who use their airwaves to discuss opera do not have any evident political opinions. — Lisa Simeone, a freelance content provider for a pair of radio shows that are broadcast by National Public Radio, is under fire today for her tangential participation in the OccupyDC movement. Simeone, who has worked in radio for over two decades, is the host of a WDAV radio show called “World Of Opera,” and a freelancer for a program called “Soundprint”. She also participates in an activist organization called “Stop The Machine,” which is part of the broader Occupy movement. Simeone has, for a long time, blended her love for grassroots political activism with her talent for radio, without anyone objecting. Her involvement in the Occupy movement, however, seems to have been deemed by NPR to be a bridge too far. That NPR has a history of hasty personnel decisions and a pathological aversion to their employees being publicly exposed as having opinions surely does not help. Sure enough, the hammer is being lowered, and it’s being lowered rather awkwardly. Simeone, as it happens, is not an NPR employee, so what appears to be happening is that they are putting pressure on her employers to get rid of her. Wednesday night, she was fired from “Soundprint,” despite the fact that the show isn’t produced by NPR. According to reports, Simeone was read the NPR code of ethics at the time of her dismissal. But NPR was pretty hot to get Simeone dismissed from “World of Opera” as well, and until this afternoon, Simeone had to await word on whether she’d continue to be allowed to fully exercise her rights while simultaneously continuing to appreciate opera on the radio. (Erik Wemple gives good comedy on how Simeone’s politics could creep into her coverage of opera.) This morning, NPR posted a “clarification” on their website regarding the matter which suggested that the screws were being put to WDAV: We recently learned of World of Opera host Lisa Simeone’s participation in an Occupy DC group. World of Opera is produced by WDAV, a music and arts station based in Davidson, North Carolina. The program is distributed by NPR. Lisa is not an employee of NPR or of WDAV; she is a freelancer with the station. We’re in conversations with WDAV about how they intend to handle this. We of course take this issue very seriously. That we’re even having a conversation of the political leanings of someone who hosts a program on opera enthusiasm basically precludes the possibility that anyone is taking anything “very seriously.” And, indeed, when we reached out to NPR’s Director of Media Relations, Anna Christopher Bross, the task of taking it seriously became even harder. In an interview with the Huffington Post, Bross essentially admitted that she’d never actually verified whether Simeone was a “spokesperson” for “Stop The Machine” at all, and that NPR’s actions were prompted solely on hearsay. “It seems from media reports that she’s a spokesperson for ‘October 2011′ [a Stop the Machine campaign],” Bross said. When asked why she would characterize Simeone as a “spokesperson,” Bross reiterated, “We said ‘spokesperson’ because she was quoted as a spokesperson in many media reports and then other press said she had functioned in a spokesperson role.” When we asked what “other press” had made these claims, Bross replied, “I don’t know.” Officials at WDAV radio in Davidson, North Carolina, who produce “World Of Opera,” have resisted the pressure to fire Simeone. WDAV’s Lisa Gray wrote that Simeone “is an independent contractor of WDAV Classical Public Radio” and that her “activities outside of this job are not in violation of any of WDAV’s employee codes and have had no effect on her job performance … Ms. Simeone remains the host of World of Opera.” Simeone offered a rebuttal to NPR for the Baltimore Sun’s David Zurawik: “I’m not an NPR employee … I’m a freelancer. NPR doesn’t pay me. I’m also not a news reporter. I don’t cover politics. I’ve never brought a whiff of my political activities into the work I’ve done for NPR World of Opera. What is NPR afraid I’ll do — insert a seditious comment into a synopsis of Madame Butterfly?” In an interview with the Huffington Post, Simeone was just as emphatic. “My work has never suffered or betrayed my political activities,” she said. “Nobody has anything to complain about with regard to my work. What I’m doing on my own free time was exercising my right as an American citizen — not harming any of these entities.” Simeone is at a loss as to why “Soundprint” deemed it necessary to fire her: “It’s a documentary series. It consists of half-hour documentaries acquired from producers all over the world on all kinds of subjects. Two documentaries in one hour. My job was to listen to the documentaries and write an introduction. I was expected in my introduction to express a point of view. That’s a whole other irony. I’ve never hidden my political views. It’s not really a surprise where I stand politically. I haven’t lied.” As far as her involvement with the Occupy demonstrations, Simeone sums it up like this: “I did a lot of chanting … I did interviews with the press.” When she spoke to the media about Stop the Machine’s “October 2011″ campaign, she would identify herself as a member of the steering committee, not a spokesperson. And she didn’t camp out: “I’m a wimp and I need to sleep on a bed.” Soundprint’s Moira Rankin doesn’t see it that way. “Lisa is taking a leadership role, acting as a spokesperson as well as being on the steering committee. That is fine to do whatever she thinks is important. However it’s not compatible with being the host of documentary series on public radio,” said Rankin. “Our programs are broadcast over NPR. The listener doesn’t understand the difference between the host of a show on NPR and the host of Soundprint.” She apparently takes a dim view of her listeners’ intelligence. Rankin continued: “We are not a news program. We try to give context to the news. We do like to have writers have strong points of view when they are writing. That doesn’t mean they are writing from a political angle.” Of Simeone, she says, “She’s a very good writer, a very good presence on public radio. That’s not the issue. The issue is the integrity of what we put out every week. I agree that she should have full exercise of [her rights to assemble and demonstrate] but that doesn’t mean that she can also be a journalist.” NPR has an ethics policy for its journalists that precludes them from participating in “public relations work, paid or unpaid.” NPR’s Bross told the Huffington Post, “Other public radio people have read and used NPRs code of ethics because its a very strong code of ethics.” There are, however, allowable exceptions, “for certain volunteer nonprofit, nonpartisan activities, such as participating in the work of a church, synagogue or other institution of worship, or a charitable organization, so long as this would not conflict with the interests of NPR [and WAMU] in reporting on activities related to that institution or organization.” (Presumably, NPR’s frequent pledge drives are also an allowable exception to the ban on public relations work as well.) But NPR has to have known that Simeone has been a longtime political activist. She’s been upfront about her involvement with Stop The Machine since she joined up. Her bio on the organization’s website reads: “Lisa Simeone is a proud loudmouthed feminist and rabble-rouser. Her husband wonders whether her love of natty dressing might interfere with her participation in the revolution.” Along with other members, like Andy Shallal, David Swanson, and Chris Hedges, Simeone cut a video, announcing that she’d be participating in D.C. demonstrations. And back in March of this year, she was arrested while participating in an anti-war demonstration in front of the White House. No one seems to have been particularly bothered by that event at the time, and in all likelihood, it’s because of the reputation she’s earned for herself. Over at Poynter, Julie Moos points to this 1994 piece from the Baltimore Sun, titled “The familiar tones of Lisa Simeone rise in protest,” that emphasizes how Simeone managed to develop a reputation for balancing these two parts of her life”: In the four weeks since Baltimore County Judge Robert E. Cahill sentenced a man to 18 months in jail for killing his wife hours after finding her in bed with another man, Ms. Simeone has helped organize demonstrations at both the Towson courthouse and a judicial conference on domestic violence and discussed the case on her weekly interview program with Johns Hopkins professor Mark Crispin Miller. She was even more outraged 18 months ago when Baltimore County Judge Thomas J. Bollinger granted probation before judgment to a man found guilty of raping an unconscious 18-year-old. That case prompted Ms. Simeone to found a Baltimore chapter of the Women’s Action Coalition. On the air, Simeone hardly comes across as some raving ideologue. Her dulcet tones, which have wafted over Baltimore’s airwaves for more than a decade, have won her quite a following — including some people who disagree strongly with her views, but appreciate her voice and her taste in music. “She is someone blessed with a tremendous warm voice and manner and a good knowledge of classical music,” says conservative talk-radio host Ron Smith of WBAL, praising Simeone for restricting her views to her interview program. “She doesn’t directly espouse her views on the air that I’ve ever heard. You only hear about them when you read about them.” “I like her. I think she’s really fun,” says Les Kinsolving of WCBM radio, whose conservative credentials would seem to put him at odds with someone like Simeone. “She’s very attractive and fiery and fun. She’s a very colorful person and I enjoy her.” So Simeone is well known for being a grass-roots activist and a talented radio presenter, two sides that she’s successfully kept compartmentalized to everyone’s satisfaction, until now. Given how much of her identity is tied to activism, it’s simply not credible that any of her employers could have been ignorant of her involvement in these causes. Speaking with Zurawik, Simeone also noted the existence of a double standard: “This sudden concern with my political activities is also surprising in light of the fact that Mara Liaason reports on politics for NPR yet appears as a commentator on FoxTV, Scott Simon hosts an NPR news show yet writes political op-eds for national newspapers, Cokie Roberts reports on politics for NPR yet accepts large speaking fees from businesses. Does NPR also send out ‘Communications Alerts’ about their activities?” I’m guessing that no one has an objection to Liasson, Simon, or Roberts because they successfully project an air of indifference over the plight of people who are economically dislocated. NPR has had a troubled history in dealing with the way the human beings they employ tend to have opinions. When Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert brought their “Rally To Restore Sanity And/Or Fear” to the District of Columbia, NPR employees were not allowed to participate, lest they become publicly exposed as people who like jokes, or performances from The Roots. As Danny Shea reported at the time: NPR has reminded its employees that they are not allowed to participate in the upcoming rallies led by Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert. “NPR journalists may not participate in marches and rallies involving causes or issues that NPR covers, nor should they sign petitions or otherwise lend their name to such causes, or contribute money to them,” Senior Vice President for News, Ellen Weiss, wrote in a memo Wednesday morning. “This restriction applies to the upcoming John [sic] Stewart and Stephen Colbert rallies.” NPR CEO Vivian Schiller forwarded the memo, sent initially to news staff, to the entire organization, telling employees that the note applied to “digital, programming/AIR, legal and communications” employees in addition to the news staff. “However, no matter where you work at NPR you should be very mindful that you represent the organization and its news coverage in the eyes of your friends, neighbors and others,” Schiller continued. “So please think twice about the message you may be sending about our objectivity before you attend a rally or post a bumper sticker or yard sign. We are all NPR.” And NPR has a similarly checkered past when it comes to dealing with the personnel decisions that arise as a result of their policy against opinions. When Juan Williams was cashiered for making remarks on “The O’Reilly Factor” about airplane passengers in “Muslim garb,” it was done in an extremely unprofessional manner: over the phone, without Williams being allowed to speak in his own defense. (Why NPR could not have simply offered a countering opinion to Williams’ own, continues to be confusing. It suggests that they were motivated more out of a dislike of Williams, and less out of a concern that Muslims should be allowed to travel on airplanes.) Simeone plans to continue to participate in the demonstrations in Freedom Plaza in Washington, D.C., regardless of how NPR feels about it. “I’m not an NPR journalist,” she said. “I wasn’t covering any of these issues for NPR. I was just an aware citizen.” [Would you like to follow me on Twitter? Because why not? Also, please send tips to tv@huffingtonpost.com -- learn more about our media monitoring project here.]
Continue reading …Deborah Bradley, the mother of missing Kansas City infant Lisa Irwin, has come under a cloud of suspicion, as police accuse her of being uncooperative and her recollection of events leading up to the disappearance seems to change. None of that appears to surprise Shirley Pfaff, who describes herself as Bradley’s former best friend. “She was my friend at one time and I loved to be around her, but when I [saw] the other side of her and got to know the true Debbie, I couldn’t even believe I trusted her with anything,” Pfaff told The Huffington Post. Bradley and Lisa’s father, Jeremy Irwin, reported their daughter missing on Oct. 4. Bradley and Irwin said the 10-month-old infant was discovered missing when the father returned home from working a night shift. They suggest she was kidnapped from an unlocked window as the mother and two other boys slept. The case has garnered national media attention and, Bradley went on NBC’s “Today” show on Monday to break a nine-day silence. She admitted she had been drinking “enough to be drunk” on the night of her baby’s disappearance and told NBC’s Peter Alexander that the last time she saw her daughter was actually at 6:40 p.m. on the night of her disappearance, not 10:30 p.m. as she had originally told police. Bradley has also admitted to failing a police-administered lie detector test. “They said that I failed when they asked me where she was [and] if I knew where she was,” Bradley said. Pfaff said she was surprised by Baby Lisa’s disappearance, but not by the inconsistencies surrounding Bradley’s story. “I am not shocked that her story has changed like the wind,” she said. “That’s typical Debbie.” Pfaff, who now lives in Erie, Pa., said she met Bradley in 2002 at Ft. Bragg, N.C. They were military wives at the time and lived across the street from each other. The couple’s kids played together and they quickly became close friends, she said. “When the story broke, it was a normal morning in my house,” Pfaff added. “I got up, put on a pot of coffee and turned on ‘Good Morning America’ like usual and I … heard ‘Deborah Bradley.’ I immediately thought, ‘This can’t be the Debbie I know.’ It just seemed unreal until I walked back into the living room after hearing her voice. I just about collapsed. It just made me sick because I just wouldn’t put this girl Debbie past anything crazy.” Despite clearing nearly 700 tips and leads in Baby Lisa’s disappearance, investigators say they have no suspects in the case. Nevertheless, Bradley has said she expects to be arrested, but told NBC News she hoped that would not happen. “I had absolutely nothing to do with it,” she said. “It’s a waste of time, money, energy and focus and people should be looking for [Lisa].” SEE PHOTOS: (Articles Continues Below) While authorities have declined to discuss many aspects of the case, they did spend a significant amount of time conducting an aggressive search of Bradley and Irwin’s house. “We were out at the house on a search warrant for a very long time yesterday and into early this morning,” Kansas City police spokesman Capt. Steve Young told The Huffington Post. Police, with assistance from the FBI, were seen digging in the backyard of the residence and they hauled off several bags of items. “Some things were taken from the home but I can’t go into detail on what was taken or what was learned or not learned from the search yet,” Young said. “Should we learn something from this search that we think would benefit the case by making public, we will definitely be all over that.” Authorities had conducted previous searches of the home, as well as nearby wooded areas and a landfill. The parents’ attorney, Joe Tacopina, said he would contact The Huffington Post “as soon as possible” today; however, no call was received. Tacopina told People his clients are available to investigators to answer questions, but Young said “their level of cooperation is not what we believe it needs to be.” Although the parents’ level of cooperation with authorities remains in question, they have participated in a rash of recent TV interviews. According to Pfaff, Bradley often wants to be the center of attention. She also said her former friend has a dark side. She can be a con artist and is able to turn on fake tears. It is that side of her, Pfaff said, that destroyed their friendship. “I was friends with Debbie for some time [and] then the ‘friend’ I once grew fond of became a ‘problem’ I had to deal with on a daily basis,” she said. Pfaff said she was happy when the military transferred her husband. “Me and my ex-husband got orders to be stationed overseas in Europe shortly after mine and Debbie’s friendship diminished,” she said. “So I thought of that as a new clean slate for us, without all the drama Debbie created with and around us.” Pfaff would not elaborate on the exact problems she had with Bradley, but insisted she is not a “Debbie-basher.” “My intentions of speaking with the media [are] to shed some light on the Debbie I once knew, both good and bad,” she said. Contacted by The Huffington Post today, Baby Lisa’s aunt, Ashley Irwin, indicated the family believes the infant is alive and is still with her abductor. “We have no evidence, no leads and no idea where she is,” Irwin said. “We need everyone’s help to keep an eye out for her and bring her home as she could be anywhere. There is a $100,000 reward for her safe return. The offer of dropping her off somewhere safe, no questions asked, is still applicable.” Irwin declined to discuss the case further. “If you want any more details you’ll have to ask their attorney,” she said. Pfaff said she has followed the case in the news and is “completely shocked” that some people have been “actually vouching, claiming [Bradley] could never have done anything to baby Lisa.” She added: “I pray every night that the baby is found. For better or for worse, I just pray for her return and hope justice will be served for whoever has done anything with or to the innocent baby girl.” WATCH:
Continue reading …• France 7-8 New Zealand • Watch World Cup video highlights, interviews and more The team that had made no concession to the pragmatism of a knockout tournament finally succumbed and the New Zealand All Blacks staggered, mauling, tackling and grinding, to their first victory at the World Cup since 1987. They did it the ugly way, but they won. France, misunderstood, incomprehensible, were magnificent, dominating the second half, forcing the All Blacks to dig into the deepest reserves of their rugby obsession. They had a chance to win it, but François Trinh-Duc, a key player in their campaign of chaos, missed with a long penalty attempt with 17 minutes to go. All suspicions of a one-sided embarrassment vanished in the opening period. France played with an adventure verging on abandon, wonderment at their transformation only tempered by the clout to the head of Morgan Parra from the knee of Richie McCaw. The makeshift – for the purposes of this World Cup – fly-half gave way to Trinh-Duc, and while he was away New Zealand scored from a lineout, Jerome Kaino winning at the tail and dropping the ball back inside, on a pre-planned move, to the prop Tony Woodcock. It was a cruel tale of those that seized the day and those that failed. Piri Weepu, who had held the All Blacks together after the injury to Dan Carter, left the field a sorry figure, way off target with his kicking and the perpetrator of the mistake that turned the second half France’s way. The scrum-half’s careless little kick off the floor presented Trinh-Duc with a free gift and half a minute later the utterly brilliant Thierry Dusautoir was crossing for France’s try. New Zealand did not only have a problem at scrum-half, but at No10 too. Aaron Cruden, the stand-in for the stand-in for Dan Carter, went off with an injured knee and Stephen Donald, the last outside-half standing in the host nation, came on … and kicked the penalty that gave the All Blacks the one-point advantage that saved their day. It was a extraordinary match, New Zealand the devotees of attack, forced to defend for all their worth. This was a victory built on desperation, the forwards working on zero possession but inspired by the spirit of a nation that willed them to win. France lost, but how much they regained in dignity and courage. France remain without a world title from three finals. New Zealand have won their second title in their third final, by the skin of their teeth. Ugly tournament rugby won the day; New Zealand won the final. It was all that counted. France: Médard, Clerc (Traille, 45), Rougerie, Mermoz, Palisson; Parra (Trinh-Duc, 22), Yachvili (Doussain, 75); Poux (Barcella, 65), Servat (Szarzewski, 64), Mas, Papé (Pierre, 69), Nallet, Dusautoir (capt), Harinordoquy. Try Dusautoir Con Trinh-Duc. New Zealand: Dagg, Jane, Smith, Nonu (SB Williams 75), Kahui; Cruden (Donald, 33), Weepu (Ellis, 48); Woodcock, Mealamu (Hore, 48), O Franks, Thorn, Whitelock (A Williams, 48), Kaino, McCaw (capt), Read. Try Woodcock Pen Donald. Referee: C Joubert (South Africa). Rugby World Cup 2011 New Zealand rugby union team France rugby union team Rugby union Eddie Butler guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Italian rider dies at the age of 24 • Simoncelli was hit by other bikes after crash Italian motorcyclist Marco Simoncelli has been killed in a crash at Sunday’s Malaysian MotoGP, organisers have said. Simoncelli fell on on lap two of the race, his helmet came off and the rider was hit by Colin Edwards and Valentino Rossi as he slid across the track. “As soon as I saw the footage it just makes you sick inside,” said the MotoGP champion, Casey Stoner. “Whenever the helmet comes off that’s not a good sign.” He was treated for his injuries but medical staff could not save his life. The organisers cancelled the race when the extent of Simoncelli’s injuries become apparent, having halted it immediately after the accident. Simoncelli’s death comes a week after British IndyCar driver Dan Wheldon was killed during a race in Las Vegas . Simoncelli, who was 24 years old, won the 250cc world title in 2008 before starting his career in MotoGP two years later. MotoGP Motor sport Tom Lutz guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …President says Afghans ‘will never betray their brother’, in TV interview aired days after Kabul visit by Hillary Clinton The Afghan president, Hamid Karzai, has said he would side with Pakistan in the event of war with the US, in a surprising political twist that is likely to disconcert his western allies. “If there is war between Pakistan and America, we will stand by Pakistan,” Karzai said in a television interview, placing his hand on his heart and describing Pakistan as a “brother” country. The offer was widely interpreted as a rhetorical flourish rather than a significant offer of defence co-operation. Despite recent tension between Pakistan and the US, open warfare is a remote possibility. Karzai, who is scrambling to ensure his political future in advance of the US military drawdown in 2014, needs Pakistani help to bring the Taliban to peace talks. And in the event of any conflict his army, which is wholly dependent on US money and training, would be in no position to back Pakistan. Nevertheless the interview with Geo, Pakistan’s largest network, was at stark variance with the tone of a visit to the region days earlier by Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, and David Petraeus, the CIA director. In Kabul, Clinton bluntly warned Pakistan that the US would act unilaterally if Islamabad failed to crack down on the Taliban-linked Haqqani network inside its North Waziristan sanctuary. Clinton then flew to Islamabad to deliver the message in person during a four-hour meeting with Pakistan’s top generals, calling on them to bring the Haqqanis to the negotiating table, kill the group’s leadership or pave the way for the US to do so. Karzai’s interview with Geo was aired barely 24 hours after Clinton left the region. Afghanistan owed Pakistan a great debt for sheltering millions of refugees over the past three decades, he said, and he stressed that his foreign policy would not be dictated by any outside power. “Anybody that attacks Pakistan, Afghanistan will stand with Pakistan,” he said. “Afghanistan will never betray their brother.” Karzai has wildly swung away from and then closer to Pakistan over the past 18 months as efforts to draw the Taliban into peace talks have gained momentum. First he welcomed the Pakistani military chief, General Ashfaq Kayani, and the ISI spy chief, General Shuja Pasha, to talks in Kabul. But then this month he flew to New Delhi to sign a “strategic partnership” with India that strengthened trade and security ties between the two countries but infuriated Pakistan, where it was seen as a fresh sign of Afghan perfidy. Karzai is trying to strike a delicate balance between reaching a peace deal and managing stringent criticism from non-Pashtuns groups and their political representatives, who accuse him of drawing too close to Pakistan. The latest comments reignited that criticism, as evidenced in lively debates on Afghan television talkshows on Sunday. Karzai has appeared increasingly isolated since the killing of his powerful half-brother Ahmed Wali Karzai and peace envoy Burhanuddin Rabbani. Analysts say Pakistani policy is driven by a desire to ensure that its arch-rival India does not enjoy political or military support from Kabul. Pakistan’s military and ISI spy service have offered to facilitate talks with the Taliban but cannot become a guarantor to their success, an official told the Dawn newspaper . “Pakistan must not be blamed in case of failure of attempts [by the US] for reconciliation with the Taliban as it does not spoon-feed them,” the official said. Hamid Karzai Afghanistan Pakistan US foreign policy United States Declan Walsh guardian.co.uk
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