Supermarkets are cutting petrol prices after oil fell steeply in the past week – putting energy suppliers under pressure to lower household fuel bills Drivers have begun to benefit from cheaper fuel after falling oil prices started feeding through to lower pump prices. Household energy bills could also come down. As Brent crude fell below $100 a barrel for the first time in six months, Asda, Tesco and Morrisons began cutting petrol prices and analysts forecast that wholesale gas prices would follow. Analysts including Eliane Tanner, of Bank Sarasin & Cie, predicted that the price of oil, which hit $126 a barrel in April, could fall as low as $80 in the coming months as concerns about US and European debts raised the prospect of a double-dip recession. Such a decline would drag down the wholesale price of gas – which is closely aligned to oil – increasing the pressure on energy providers to reduce gas and electricity prices. Omar Rahim, editor of the Energy Trader Daily, predicted that wholesale gas prices for the season ahead, already 8% down on June levels, could decline by up to a fifth in the next few months. Falling oil and gas prices came after E.ON on Friday became the fourth of the “big six” energy providers to raise gas and electricity bills, by 18.1% and 11.4% respectively, blaming a 30% rise in wholesale gas prices this year. Although wholesale energy prices have risen significantly this year, they are still down about a third from their peak in 2008, while average domestic energy bills have risen to record levels. Asda is cutting its pump price by 2p a litre to 132.7p, while Tesco will reduce prices by 1p a litre. However, at an average of 136.58p-a-litre petrol is still less than a penny cheaper than the record of 137.43p on 9 May this year. Luke Bosdet at the AA said recent falls in the oil price – down nearly 8% this month – meant that in theory, petrol prices should be coming down. He noted that wholesale prices fell particularly sharply in the first five days of August and pointed out that such moves typically take about 10 days to feed through to the pump. Adam Scorer, director of external affairs at Consumer Focus, said: “Consumers will question whether they’re getting a fair deal if prices don’t come down as quickly when costs fall as they go up when costs rise.” He said: “Decreases in oil prices should be reflected in the costs passed on to consumers at the petrol pump and any fall in gas prices should lead to cuts in the prices customers have to pay to heat their homes.” Brent crude fell by more than $5 to $98.74 a barrel on Tuesday morning, its lowest level since February, before rebounding to $104.64 by the evening as markets put the sell-off on hold. While the outlook is uncertain, the market consensus is that the price will fall in the coming months, in line with the economic forecast. “Oil and other commodity prices are going down because of rising risk aversion and the economic slowdown. The role of speculators is not fully understood, although it seems likely that they have had also some impact on oil prices,” said Tanner of Bank Sarasin. “Low oil prices are good for the economy because they make things like [petrol] cheaper and leave people with more money to spend on other things. Oil prices are correlated to other commodities, such as base metals like copper,” Tanner added. Gold hit a fresh high, breaching $1,780 an ounce as increasingly risk-averse investors continued to use the precious metal as a safe haven. In the US, the price of West Texas Intermediate oil fell to $75.71 before bouncing into positive territory on hopes that the Federal Reserve was preparing another fiscal stimulus. West Texas Intermediate and Brent crude typically trade at different prices because they are different grades and different destinations. Oil Petrol prices Energy bills Oil and gas companies Tom Bawden Julia Kollewe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Newsweek's embarrassing cover photo of Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) garnered attention not only from conservative blogs, but also from the major networks and cable news. CNN ran Bachmann's wide-eyed picture on the latest Newsweek cover multiple times Tuesday morning, asking if the picture and harsh headline were examples of media maltreatment of conservative women presidential candidates.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Don’t say you weren’t warned . I said then and I say now – Michele Bachmann is no laughing matter. Her surge in Iowa may not be a flash in the pan and every time I hear her say, “…When I am elected President” – I reach for the Pepto. Still, the fact remains she’s captivating Iowa right now . If you thought Sarah Palin was bad, just wait for Bachmann. Check out the clip at the top from BillO’s show last night for an example of how she operates. Note how, after ducking questions about how she would handle “entitlement reform,” she leans into Bill and insists on sharing a bit of gossip that cannot be confirmed or denied. She says, confidentially, of course, that she and some others met at the White House with President Obama and when they asked about Medicare, he said “Obamacare.” She sort of expanded on that to suggest that Medicare would devolve into subsidized, means-tested private health insurance. Yes, that’s what Michele Bachmann says the President said. But wait. That’s Paul Ryan’s plan. No worries, Fox viewers, Michele Bachmann creates whatever reality she wants to live in, especially if it stokes anxiety and fear about the scary black man in the Oval Office. That brings me to Ryan Lizza’s fabulous backgrounder on Bachmann in the New Yorker. It’s a 9,000-word masterpiece. And tucked inside, Lizza lets us in on some of Michele Bachmann’s bizarre beliefs. Remember that so-called slavery “gaffe ?” It wasn’t a gaffe. Bachmann’s comment about slavery was not a gaffe. It is, as she would say, a world view. In “Christianity and the Constitution,” the book she worked on with Eidsmoe, her law-school mentor, he argues that John Jay, Alexander Hamilton, and John Adams “expressed their abhorrence for the institution” and explains that “many Christians opposed slavery even though they owned slaves.” They didn’t free their slaves, he writes, because of their benevolence. “It might be very difficult for a freed slave to make a living in that economy; under such circumstances setting slaves free was both inhumane and irresponsible.” What nonsense. Utter and complete baloney. The “Eidsmoe” referred to in that quote is John Eidsmoe, Bachmann’s mentor and professor at Oral Roberts University. Eidsmoe isn’t simply Bachmann’s mentor. John wrote about how Bachmann embraces even his most bizarre beliefs back in June. He sums it up thus: What she’s done like the rest of the social conservatives these days is adopt Ayn Rand and Milton Friedman’s economic theological principles and incorporated them into their many forms of Evangelical Christianity and that will help her in the GOP primary. I would augment that a little with what Alex Pareene wrote on Salon: Even in a post-Glenn Beck world where far-right extremism has become fairly normalized and occasionally embraced by a Republican Party that used to at least act embarrassed about its neo-Confederates and John Birchers and straight-up theocrats, Bachmann’s ideological background is both radically anti-American (in the sense that America is a pluralist nation founded on Enlightenment values and not a pro-slavery Christian theocracy) and way, way outside the “mainstream.” She’s not just a hard-right-winger — and not just a slightly dim “nut” — but a full-on fringe character, a bigot following a bizarre strain of born-againism that even your average American evangelical would find too conspiracy-obsessed and ahistorical to be palatable. Speaking of John Birchers, it seems fairly clear they play a large role in Bachmann’s politics. From Lizza’s article: Around this time, Bachmann became interested in the writings of David A. Noebel, the founder and director of Summit Ministries, an educational organization founded to reverse the harmful effects of what it calls “our current post-Christian culture.” He was a longtime John Birch Society member, whose pamphlets include “The Homosexual Revolution: End Time Abomination,” and “Communism, Hypnotism, and the Beatles,” in which Noebel argued that the band was being used by Communists to infiltrate the minds of young Americans. Bachmann once gave a speech touting her relationship with Noebel’s organization. “I went on to serve on the board of directors with Summit Ministries,” she said, adding that Summit’s message is “wonderful and worthwhile.” She has also recommended to supporters Noebel’s “Understanding the Times,” a book that is popular in the Christian homeschooling movement. And then there is J Steven Wilkins . Wilkins is the leading proponent of the theory that the South was an orthodox Christian nation unjustly attacked by the godless North. This revisionist take on the Civil War, known as the “theological war” thesis, had little resonance outside a small group of Southern historians until the mid-twentieth century, when Rushdoony and others began to popularize it in evangelical circles. In the book, Wilkins condemns “the radical abolitionists of New England” and writes that “most southerners strove to treat their slaves with respect and provide them with a sufficiency of goods for a comfortable, though—by modern standards—spare existence.” African slaves brought to America, he argues, were essentially lucky: “Africa, like any other pagan country, was permeated by the cruelty and barbarism typical of unbelieving cultures.” Echoing Eidsmoe, Wilkins also approvingly cites Lee’s insistence that abolition could not come until “the sanctifying effects of Christianity” had time “to work in the black race and fit its people for freedom.” Here’s a more recent example of Wilkins’ belief structure, from a recent blog post decrying the minimum wage: It works this way: If I’m a business owner, I might be willing to hire 4 unskilled workers at $4.00 per hour until they learn the job and prove themselves capable and dependable and worth a raise. But if you force me to pay a minimum wage of $7.25 per hour, I might hire only two new employees (or I might hire no new employees in hopes that my present workers can take up the slack). S o, instead of having 4 teenagers earning $4.00 per hour, now only two have a job and two have nothing (unemployment increases). But what is especially unspoken (and consequently largely unknown) is that the evil effects of raising the minimum wage hit young black teens the hardest. In 2007 (when the latest hikes in the minimum wage began to be put in place), the unemployment rate among black teens was 29 percent. Today (after the minimum wage hikes) that rate has risen to almost 42 percent. Thanks to the “wisdom” of Congress the number of unemployed black teens is almost 13 percent higher than it was four years ago (according to a report in today’s Wall Street Journal) Got that? Minimum wage raises the unemployment rate of young African-Americans. Because evidently too many employers think…what? Either he’s arguing that the “markets” don’t value the African-American labor force enough to pay them more than slave’s wages (yes, I intended that term), or they’re not worth a minimum wage in the first place. Therefore, we as a society are supposed to reward that by slashing the minimum wage down to pre-1970 levels. It boggles the mind. Perhaps the final and most bizarre Bachmann belief is her slavish devotion to liberty. Liberty defined by Bachmann, anyway. Liberty is the concept—or at least the word—most resonant with the Republican Party’s Tea Party faction, which Bachmann’s Presidential aspirations depend upon. It is a peculiarity of the current political moment that a politician with a history of pushing sectarian religious beliefs in government has become a hero to a libertarian movement. But Bachmann’s merger of these two strands of ideology is not unique. In fact, the Pew Research Center, in its recent quadrennial study of the American electorate, noted that “the most visible shift in the political landscape” since 2005 “is the emergence of a single bloc of across-the-board conservatives. The long-standing divide between economic, pro-business conservatives and social conservatives has blurred.” The two wings are now united by the simplest and most enduring strain of conservative ideology: a dislike and distrust of government. Religious and fiscal conservatives have been moving toward this kind of unity for decades, and Bachmann, in her crusades against abortion, education standards, gay marriage—as well as in her passionate opposition to raising the debt ceiling—has always cast government as the villain, often using terms that echo Schaeffer’s post-Roe warning that America risked falling into the hands of “a manipulative and authoritarian élite.” Which brings me back to the echoes of Richard Nixon I hear in Michele Bachman. Echoes Rick Perlstein wrote about in Nixonland . Even though I’ve quoted it before, it’s worth quoting again: “What Richard Nixon left behind was the very terms of our national self-image: a notion that there are two kinds of Americans. On the one side, the “Silent Majority.” The “nonshouters.” The middle-class, middle American, suburban, exurban, and rural coalition who call themselves, now, “Values voters,” “people of faith,” “patriots,” or even, simply, “Republicans” — and who feel themselves condescended to by snobby opinion-making elites, and who rage about un-Americans, anti-Christians, amoralists, aliens. On the other side are the “liberals,” the “cosmopolitans,” the “intellectuals,” the “professionals” — “Democrats,” who say they see shouting in opposition to injustice as a higher form of patriotism. Or say “live and let live.” Who believe that to have “values” has more to do with a willingness to extend aid to the downtrodden than where, or if, you happen to worship — but who look down on the first category as unwitting dupes of feckless elites who exploit sentimental pieties to aggrandize their wealth, start wars, ruin lives. Both populations — to speak in ideal types — are equally, essentially, tragically American. And both have learned to consider the other not quite American at all. The argument over Richard Nixon, pro and con, gave us the language for this war.” Nixon may have given us the language, but 30-plus years has given them time to refine, polish, and mold it into a candidate who inspires this kind of response: Sitting on the edge of a metal folding chair in a sweltering parking lot, Donna Fouts, 73, doesn’t seem to care that Bachmann planned to vote against the debt-ceiling compromise that would ensure the arrival of her Social Security check and the military benefits owed to her sons and nephews. “Well, I’m sick of all them other politicians that tell me what to do with my life,” she answers. “Something about her tells me to follow her.” Beware Bachmann.
Continue reading …Investigators say it appears Sheila Decoster was standing on porch when she leaned over, lifted lid on bin, and fell inside A woman who died after falling face-first into a recycling bin and wasn’t noticed until her husband came home had become stuck in a position in which she couldn’t breathe, a Toledo, Ohio, coroner said. Sheila Decoster, 62, was inside the bin for several hours before she was found on Friday, said Lucas County deputy coroner Diane Barnett. Her husband saw her legs sticking out of the container that sits alongside their porch. “Honestly, I thought it was a dummy,” Richard Decoster said. “I shook her leg and called her name, and I knew she was gone.” The couple, who were married for 43 years, kept their recycling and rubbish bins next to their porch, which does not have a railing. Investigators said it looked like Sheila Decoster was standing on her porch when she leaned over, lifted the lid on the bin and fell inside. Her husband said she had some medical issues, including dizzy spells and an aneurism on her brain, which could explain why she fell. She also had back problems and a recent knee-replacement surgery. There were many complaints about the large recycling bins when they were distributed two years ago. Residents said they were too big and difficult to move, especially for older and disabled people. “It’s tragic, but I think it’s definitely an extreme example,” said city spokeswoman Jen Sorgenfrei. Ohio United States guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Dan Savage’s new video threatens to redefine ‘Rick’ if Santorum makes anti-gay remarks, but is such guerrilla blackmail justified? Back in the heady, Bush-dominated days of 2003, prickly sex advice columnist and guerrilla gay rightser Dan Savage waged a culturally successful war with then Senator Rick Santorum (Republican, Pennsylvania), after Santorum made public statements comparing homosexuality to bestiality and pedophilia. Savage, himself a content and settled gay man now with a husband and child, launched an internet campaign to create a neologism that described “the frothy mixture of lube and fecal matter that is sometimes a byproduct of anal sex” . The new word? Santorum. The newly coined term quickly rose to the top of Google rankings, thus forever associating Senator Santorum’s last name, were one to do an internet search, with one of the more unseemly, albeit common, aspects of gay sex. A mean, irreverent and not undeserved cultural victory! Now, eight strange and changing years later, Santorum is running for president of the United States under the banner of his tried-and-true ultraconservative Christian ideology. In response to this new campaign, and Santorum’s unwavering commitment to associating homosexuality with the darker and most abhorrent reaches of sexual subculture, Savage has created a new video, hosted on the Funny or Die comedy website , threatening to go after Santorum’s first name. In the video – which is mostly “bleeped out”, to create the sense of a truly disgusting and monstrous sexual act that is also likely a string of nonsense dirty words – Savage says that he will not redefine the name “Rick” if Santorum agrees to stop going after the gays in such determined fashion. Another mean, irreverent, funny, preemptive cultural victory for Savage? Not necessarily. The left’s response to the vitriol of the Fox News-stoked American political right surrounding President Obama’s election victory has been, in typical Democratic Pollyanna fashion, a call to cease the angry rhetoric, to make politics about polite discourse again, rather than the snarling bed of conspiracy theorising, wild accusations (“Obama is a Kenyan Muslim!”), and Hitler comparisons it became in 2008 and, with the ascendancy of the Tea Party movement, beyond. “There is too much meanness!” political spokespersons of the left cried, frustrated with being deemed anti-American pro-Communist nü-Fascists. Now that we are nominally in power, finally, we want to stop the madness. But of course, in actual practice, the left can still, in the bloggier corners of society, dish it out just as nastily as the right – Sarah Palin is a vituperative viper with “a secret non-baby”, Michele Bachmann is an addled Christian space alien. A formal call for reason and bipartisanship looks pretty hypocritical when you scan the scattershot, informal pages of, for instance, Daily Kos comments. The right has, of course, pointed out this double standard, and it does seem that a campaign like Savage’s new one offers more fuel for criticism. Last year, Savage became something of a beatified folk hero for creating the feel-good, gently revolutionary “It Gets Better” campaign , a series of YouTube videos made in reaction to a rash of tragic gay suicides (committed by young people feeling alone and desperate), which softened his go-for-broke offender reputation. Dan Savage was someone we could all love, all of a sudden, because he said nice things about family and hope! But now, the Savage of old comes rearing back with an admittedly slightly tongue-in-cheek Funny or Die video going after his defeated foe Rick Santorum. It’s probably too much. While we on the queer left (and our queer-friendly allies) might get a chuckle out of the latest anti-Santorum campaign – Santorum being a perfectly frustrating avatar of nasty bigotry couched in piousness – Savage’s latest effort gives the bigots too much power by deigning even to address them. Santorum and his fervid supporters won’t pay much attention to the nuances of the joke; they’ll merely see it as yet another personal attack lobbied by a sexual radical obsessed with scary dirty talk. And in a time when, for better or worse, LGBT activists are struggling and succeeding to push their just causes into the mainstream (this year’s New York City pride parade was as tame and square, yet celebratory, as any Fourth of July parade), Savage’s endeavour to turn our side of the argument, well, savage again is probably losing us ground in the political cachet game in the pursuit of a few mild laughs. I don’t know how seriously anyone really takes Dan Savage. But he has proven, as evidenced by a tear-inducing Google ad that highlighted the success of the “It Gets Better” initiative, a fairly resonant cultural figure. And though Rick Santorum’s beliefs and policies are vile and regressive, I think we’re at a juncture where we need to kill the opposition with, if not kindness, a certain high-minded betterness. If Santorum wants to blabber on about animal- and kid-screwing, he’s free to do so. But we here in the bourgeois queer movement should, I think, try to keep the rhetoric as elevated as possible. Savage has become a mainstream cultural hero, and whether it’s merely comedy or not, a new call to sully an individual’s name with a particularly blue schoolyard joke seems only petty and time-wasting. The likable Savage already, ahem, creamed Santorum. There’s no honour in kicking a frothy mixture of lube and fecal matter when he’s already down. Gay rights Republicans Sex US politics Tea Party movement United States Richard Lawson guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Government looking into soundproofing for underwater construction sites to protect whales and porpoises in Baltic The German government is investigating ways to “bubble-wrap” underwater construction sites to protect whales and porpoises in the Baltic Sea from noise pollution from offshore wind farms. The mammals rely on echo-location to hunt and navigate and researchers say noise from pile-driving work to install the turbines interferes with the animals’ ability to find each other and their prey. Karsten Brensing, a biologist at the Whales and Dolphins Conservation Society said: “These animals are so dependent on their acoustic sense … we need an acoustically clean environment. But a report by the Federal Agency for Nature Conservation has suggested an ingenious solution. A “bubble curtain” could contain the disturbance. Using simple, low-cost technology, bubbles released from pipes on the seafloor would create a sound-insulating barrier. Germany is a leader in the field of wind-power technology and with the country’s phase-out of nuclear power, incentives are being offered to encourage the expansion of offshore wind farms. A Greenpeace campaigner, Thilo Maack, believes that if “bubble curtains” can mitigate the impact on wildlife, they should be used. But he also said quieter construction methods such as drilling need to be investigated. “We have to be sure that the wind parks don’t harm harbour porpoises and other marine mammals,” Maack said. “On the other hand, we need these renewable energies to fight the consequences of climate change.”.” Marine life Whales Germany Europe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …News Corp boss likely to be quizzed on plans for succession – but queries on phone hacking ruled out on legal advice Rupert Murdoch will address Wall Street for the first time since the phone-hacking scandal escalated in the UK in a conference call with analysts to discuss News Corporation’s full-year results on Wednesday. It will be the first time US analysts have been able to quiz the News Corp boss since the scandal that has seen the closure of the News of the World and the end of his bid to take full control of profitable UK satellite broadcaster BSkyB. Insiders said he will make a prepared statement, but analysts will be warned that questions about allegations of phone hacking and illegal payments to police in the UK will not be accepted on the grounds they could prejudice a later trial. Sources said Murdoch’s statement will not be as contrite as the ones he made in July in London, when he declared his appearance before the Commons culture select committee was “the most humble day of my life”. He is however expected to be quizzed on succession plans and whether, at 80, the News Corp chairman and chief executive is willing to hand over the reins to trusted lieutenant Chase Carey, the deputy chairman, president and chief operating officer. He may also face questions about the future plans for his son James, who until recently was seen as his heir apparent and was due to move to New York to take over as deputy chief operating officer. The company announced earlier in August that Rupert’s daughter, Elisabeth, had decided not to take up a seat on the board. Wall Street investors will be most interested, however, to discoverMurdoch’s plans for the $12bn (£7.5bn) earmarked for News Corp’s purchase of the 61% of BSkyB it did not already own. Some $3.2bn of this has already been set aside for a share buyback scheme announced in the wake of News Corp’s withdrawal of the bid for the satellite broadcaster. It is Murdoch’s first conference call in a year and underlines the company’s determination to reassure US shareholders, alarmed by the scandal in the UK, that everything is back under control after the events of the past month. But it is a high-risk strategy as Murdoch, as could be seen at the parliamentary select committee, is prone to going off message. The results call, for the fourth quarter and the company’s full-year results for the 12 months to the end of June, will be preceded by a News Corp board meeting in Los Angeles on Tuesday Directors will updated on the internal investigation into the News of the World’s alleged payments to police and phone hacking. Murdoch is expected to set out a road map of potential landmines that face News Corp as police inquiries and civil actions over invasion of privacy continue, and Lord Leveson’s judicial inquiry into phone hacking and wider media practices gets under way in the autumn. News Corp’s internal investigation is being conducted with the help of Williams & Connolly, one of the most prestigious law firms in Washington. •
Continue reading …The Guardian’s Middle East editor will be online for two hours from 11.15am (UK time) on Wednesday to answer your questions about the uprisings in the region It is getting harder to follow the twists and turns of the Arab spring, and not only because the Middle East and north Africa are now in sweltering high summer as well as in the middle of the Ramadan fast. The label that was attached to the revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt earlier this year has stuck firmly, but it is looking a little worn – and in some cases irrelevant. There have always been significant differences in the circumstances of the countries affected. But they have much in common as well: young populations, lack of opportunities, authoritarian political systems, corruption and a lack of accountability by governments that have been tolerated by the west because of oil, strategic interests, fear of Islamists or attitudes to Israel. Reactions to the opening session of Hosni Mubarak’s trial in Cairo were a reminder that many across the region hope to see their own rulers brought to account. But Egypt’s own future looks deeply uncertain, with the military still firmly in control and a new constitution yet to be written. There are lots of interesting and important questions worth asking. But there are few easy or clear-cut answers. Will other Arab autocrats end up in the dock? Syria’s Bashar al-Assad seems intent on using all-out repression to save his regime – and accuses his enemies of fomenting sectarian violence. Now even ultra-conservative Saudi Arabia , which tolerates little dissent at home, has spoken out against Assad. Its Gulf neighbours have done the same even as they work to help Sunni-ruled Bahrain to contain Shia unrest that they blame – though with little evidence – on Iran. Unlike the Syrian president, King Abdullah has not killed 2,000 of his own people in the past five months – but he has tried to buy off dissent. So double standards are part of the story too. Libya looks like a special case. It is remote from the rest of the Arab world with a deeply unpopular leader. Nato’s intervention is proving far from decisive while the Benghazi-based opposition looks ineffective both as a military force and a future government. Opinions are deeply divided over the western response. Is Nato’s action a laudable example of the “responsibility to protect” – whose absence led to the slaughter of thousands Bosnian Muslims in the 1990s? Or was it a mistake to get involved in someone else’s civil war – however odious the regime. Is it simply hypocrisy to act in Libya and leave Syria alone? And what about Yemen , the poorest country in the Arab world? Do western oil interests mean that Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states will remain exceptions to hopes for change? Or is it still possible that the Arab spring will push them toward peaceful reforms? What role should the US and other western countries be playing? What about the Palestinians – still stateless and struggling? Some argue that this 21st century Arab awakening has helped heal the bitter rift between the Islamists of Hamas and the secular nationalists of Fatah. Now there is a new wrangle over the wisdom of asking the UN to recognise an independent Palestine at the UN general assembly next month. How will Israel react if that happens? And how different might the Middle East and north Africa look by the spring of 2012? I look forward to discussing these and other questions with you. • Post your questions from 11.15am (UK time) on Wednesday, when Ian Black will be online for two hours to answer your questions and debate the issues Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Ian Black guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Here’s Rick Perry’s Texas for you: While it seems his controversial prayer rally didn’t go over so well, you can’t say the same for a back-to-school event held just seven miles away the same day. From Democracy Now : Texas Gov. Rick Perry Leads Controversial Prayer Rally Texas Gov. Rick Perry led 30,000 people in prayer at a controversial rally in Houston this weekend titled “The Response: A Call to Prayer for a Nation in Crisis.” The seven-hour gathering was designed by Perry and sponsored in part by the American Family Association, which opposes same-sex marriage and has condemned Muslims. The event, which drew 30,000 participants, was also backed by the International House of Prayer, whose evangelical founder argues Oprah Winfrey is a Satanic religious leader. Though billed as an apolitical day of prayer for a nation in crisis, the response was filled with calls for an end to abortion and gave Perry the opportunity to appeal to Christian conservatives. Perry is widely expected to soon announce his candidacy for U.S. president. Critics denounced the gathering for blurring the lines between church and state. Texas Rally Dwarfed by Back-to-School Event The Response was dwarfed in comparison to Houston’s first-ever, citywide back-to-school event held just seven miles away on Sunday. An estimated 100,000 people showed up to receive free backpacks, school supplies, uniforms, haircut vouchers, immunizations and fresh produce. The demand for the much-needed supplies was so great officials were forced to shut the event down at 10:00 a.m. and turn people away. And it looks like Perry is about to finally announce his candidacy this week — Report: Rick Perry To Announce Presidential Run Saturday .
Continue reading …Joe Scarborough on Tuesday told his “Morning Joe” co-host an inconvenient truth that she and most of her colleagues in the media just can't handle. “A president that cannot control 45 backbenchers in the opposing Party in the House of Representatives is too weak to be President of the United States. It is that simple” (video follows with transcript and commentary): JOE SCARBOROUGH, CO-HOST: [Obama’s] a mediator. And he sits and, “What do you think? What do you think?” MIKA BRZEZINSKI , CO-HOST: Well. SCARBOROUGH: “We’ll go halfway.” He… BRZEZINSKI : Look. SCARBOROUGH: He doesn’t understand, Mika, he controls the world stage. He has a power with that bully pulpit that nobody else has and he will not use it. BRZEZINSKI : He controls the world’s stage unless the Republicans say they will not negotiate on anything. SCARBOROUGH: That’s just not true. That’s just not true. BRZEZINSKI : I want to read from Joe’s piece on Saturday. SCARBOROUGH: That is just not true. BRZEZINSKI : Hold on. EUGENE ROBINSON: Just to interject quickly, when he drew a line, when the President drew a line in the debt… BRZEZINSKI : Yes. ROBINSON: …in the debt ceiling debate, and when he said, you know, this and no further, I, it’s got to be a longer-term deal that gets us past the election, he got it. He got what he wanted. SCARBOROUGH: Right. ROBINSON: When he used the bully pulpit, he swayed public opinion. BRZEZINSKI : Who he already negotiated on way down in the House. ROBINSON: Exactly. Yeah, no that’s true. Wow. So after months of haggling, the only thing the most powerful man in the world got was a deal that kicked the can further down the road until after the election, and Brzezinski as well as Robinson, ever the dutiful shills, see that as a huge victory. Scarborough didn’t: SCARBOROUGH: A president that cannot control 45 backbenchers in the opposing Party in the House of Representatives is too weak to be President of the United States. It is that simple. Lyndon Johnson would have eaten these people up for breakfast and spit them out before lunch. BRZEZINSKI : Okay. These people though are the very people that I think don’t care… SCARBOROUGH: Ronald Reagan wouldn’t put up, I mean, a strong leader doesn’t put up with it. BRZEZINSKI : …about… SCARBOROUGH: It doesn’t matter whether they care or not. You make them irrelevant to the process if you’re strong enough to do that. Scarborough, who clearly is coming around to the obvious leadership deficiencies of this President, was spot on. As much as I love the Tea Party, a huge part of their success stems from the weakness of Barack Obama. A minority faction in one chamber of Congress should not be wielding the kind of power this fledgling movement is. Don't get me wrong, I am quite thrilled that this is the case, but agree with Scarborough that a Reagan, Johnson, or even a Clinton would have pushed back much more effectively. Consider that the real legislative impact of the Republican revolution in the '90s didn't happen until after their second successful election in 1996. Clinton stonewalled their budget and tax cuts until 1997 thereby furthering his own reelection. By contrast, Obama began caving to Tea Party demands in December weeks before any of them was sworn in. Now, eight months later, he has become almost irrelevant, a situation that as NewsBusters pointed out earlier has been enabled by his equally hapless fans in the media. This of course includes Brzezinski and Robinson. Maybe with more exchanges like this, they'll come around – but I wouldn't hold my breath.
Continue reading …