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John Fund Pushes for More Austerity Measures on the News of S&P Downgrade

Click here to view this media You’ve just got to love what passes for “straight news” over at the Fox/Republican cable channel. During one of their “breaking news” segments after the news that Standard and Poor’s decided to downgrade the AAA credit rating of the Unites States, who did they bring in to do some “objective” analysis? The American Spectator and Wall Street Journal ‘s resident hack, John Fund . And what was Fund’s reaction to the downgrade? More austerity measures naturally. And what did Fund completely ignore? This tidbit from the report issued by Standard and Poor’s on their decision for making the downgrade. (h/t Jamie) Compared with previous projections, our revised base case scenario now assumes that the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts, due to expire by the end of 2012, remain in place. We have changed our assumption on this because the majority of Republicans in Congress continue to resist any measure that would raise revenues, a position we believe Congress reinforced by passing the act. Fund naturally thinks we should be taking it out on the hides of everyday working Americans to do something about our budget deficit. Ignoring completely that the Republicans have been the ones being absolutely rigid in their position that there will be no tax increases since they’re all afraid their Uncle Grover will primary them. I think we just got a preview here of what we’re going to see from Fox 24/7 over the next week as they try to explain what happened with this downgrade. No questioning of whether we should even trust the ratings agency that got it all so wrong before the meltdown of the financial industries and more demands that we go after Social Security and Medicare and Medicaid or these vultures will never be satisfied. UPDATE: And right on cue, one of our newly elected TeaBircher Republicans in the Senate, Mike Lee was chiming some of the same talking points in another “breaking news” segment following the one with Fund. Not only was he calling for austerity measures, but he was also still touting their ridiculous balanced budget amendment as well. And of course the problem in Lee’s mind with protecting his rich campaign donors is that Washington is spending too much (code for they’re doing things to help out working people and not corporate welfare or funding our military industrial complex) and they’re borrowing too much. And of course with him also ignoring that the wealthiest 1% are being taxed at the lowest rates in ages and that we have a revenue problem they refuse to fix. I’m just wondering how much worse things have to get in the United States before the majority of the public starts to get wise to these liars because they actually start paying attention to what’s going on and how ridiculous these talking points from the GOP are that do not match up to reality in any way, shape or form. Click here to view this media

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John Fund Pushes for More Austerity Measures on the News of S&P Downgrade

Click here to view this media You’ve just got to love what passes for “straight news” over at the Fox/Republican cable channel. During one of their “breaking news” segments after the news that Standard and Poor’s decided to downgrade the AAA credit rating of the Unites States, who did they bring in to do some “objective” analysis? The American Spectator and Wall Street Journal ‘s resident hack, John Fund . And what was Fund’s reaction to the downgrade? More austerity measures naturally. And what did Fund completely ignore? This tidbit from the report issued by Standard and Poor’s on their decision for making the downgrade. (h/t Jamie) Compared with previous projections, our revised base case scenario now assumes that the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts, due to expire by the end of 2012, remain in place. We have changed our assumption on this because the majority of Republicans in Congress continue to resist any measure that would raise revenues, a position we believe Congress reinforced by passing the act. Fund naturally thinks we should be taking it out on the hides of everyday working Americans to do something about our budget deficit. Ignoring completely that the Republicans have been the ones being absolutely rigid in their position that there will be no tax increases since they’re all afraid their Uncle Grover will primary them. I think we just got a preview here of what we’re going to see from Fox 24/7 over the next week as they try to explain what happened with this downgrade. No questioning of whether we should even trust the ratings agency that got it all so wrong before the meltdown of the financial industries and more demands that we go after Social Security and Medicare and Medicaid or these vultures will never be satisfied. UPDATE: And right on cue, one of our newly elected TeaBircher Republicans in the Senate, Mike Lee was chiming some of the same talking points in another “breaking news” segment following the one with Fund. Not only was he calling for austerity measures, but he was also still touting their ridiculous balanced budget amendment as well. And of course the problem in Lee’s mind with protecting his rich campaign donors is that Washington is spending too much (code for they’re doing things to help out working people and not corporate welfare or funding our military industrial complex) and they’re borrowing too much. And of course with him also ignoring that the wealthiest 1% are being taxed at the lowest rates in ages and that we have a revenue problem they refuse to fix. I’m just wondering how much worse things have to get in the United States before the majority of the public starts to get wise to these liars because they actually start paying attention to what’s going on and how ridiculous these talking points from the GOP are that do not match up to reality in any way, shape or form. Click here to view this media

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Tottenham in flames as protesters riot

Two police patrol cars, a passenger bus and several shops were attacked and set alight in north London as violence erupted Two police patrol cars, a passenger bus and several shops were attacked and set alight in north London as violence erupted following a protest to demand justice over a fatal police shooting. Police on horseback and officers in riot gear clashed with scores of rioters armed with makeshift missiles in the centre of Tottenham as thick, black smoke swirled through the air. At one point, rioters broke through police ranks and attempted to storm Tottenham’s police station, pelting officers with bricks and bottles. A Metropolitan Police spokesman said the trouble began when “missiles” were thrown at parked patrol cars at 8.30pm. He said one was pushed, blazing, into the middle of Tottenham High Street. Neither of the two officers who had been driving the cars were injured. As the violence spread, a double decker bus was set upon. Witnesses said the vehicle exploded in flames after attackers threw home made bombs through its windows. Nearby shops were also set ablaze. Hundreds of residents gathered to watch the unrest and there several were reports of attacks on bystanders. At one point rioters were seen beating up a man attempting to take film footage of the scene. Resident David Akinsanya, 46, said several shop windows had been smashed. “It’s really bad,” he said. “There are two police cars on fire. I’m feeling unsafe. It looks like it’s going to get very tasty. I saw a guy getting attacked.” “The police seem very frightened at the moment, people are unstoppable,” Tottenham resident Maria Robinson told the BBC. “They’ve broken into various businesses, jewellery shops, bookies, it’s absolutely crazy. They’ve beaten up a man for talking to the fire brigade.” Social networking site Twitter was abuzz with messages of support and condemnation for the riots. The violence broke out at dusk after about 120 people marched on Tottenham police station to express anger over the death of local man Mark Duggan last Thursday. Police were unable to confirm whether the violence was connected to outrage over the death of Duggan, 29, who was shot in a police anti-firearms operation in Tottenham. A family friend of Duggan, who gave her name as Nikki, 53, said the father-of-four’s friends and relatives had organised the protest to demand “justice for the family”. “They’re making their presence known because people are not happy,” she added. “This guy was not violent. Yes, he was involved in things but he was not an aggressive person. He had never hurt anyone.” Duggan had been shot in an exchange of fire after the police’s Trident operational command unit, which deals with gun crime in the black community, stopped the vehicle he was travelling in. A police officer was said to have escaped injury in the shoot out when a bullet lodged in his radio. Local MP David Lammy called for calm, saying the community was anxious over what had happened. Nearby Broadwater Farm, where the marchers set off from yesterday, was the scene of riots in 1985 in which a police constable, Keith Blakelock, was killed by attackers wielding knives and machetes. Protest Sarah Bolesworth Barry Neild guardian.co.uk

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Police cars attacked in Tottenham

Two patrol cars attacked after members of a community where a young man was shot dead by police took to the streets Two patrol cars have been attacked after members of a community where a young man was shot dead by police took to the streets to demand “justice”. The 29-year-old, named locally as father-of-four Mark Duggan, died at the scene in Tottenham, north London, on Thursday. About 120 people marched from the local Broadwater Farm area to Tottenham Police Station, forcing officers to close the High Road and put traffic diversions in place. After night fell, two police cars parked about 200 yards from the police station were set upon. A Metropolitan Police spokesman said: “Missiles were thrown at them. One was set alight and one was pushed into the middle of the High Road.” Officers were being dispatched to disperse the crowd, he said. He could not confirm that those responsible for the trouble were connected to the protest. A family friend of Mr Duggan, who gave her name only as Nikki, 53, said the man’s friends and relatives had organised the protest because “something has to be done” and the marchers wanted “justice for the family.” Some of those involved lay in the road to make their point, she said. “They’re making their presence known because people are not happy,” she added. “This guy was not violent. Yes, he was involved in things but he was not an aggressive person. He had never hurt anyone.” Mr Duggan had been travelling in a minicab on Thursday and was gunned down after an apparent exchange of fire. A police officer’s radio was found to have a bullet lodged in it afterwards, suggesting they may have narrowly escaped being struck. Officers had been attempting to carry out an arrest under the Trident operational command unit, which deals with gun crime in the black community, according to the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC). An IPCC spokesman said that at around 6.15pm on Thursday, officers from Trident, accompanied by officers from the Specialist Firearms Command (CO19), stopped a minicab to carry out an arrest. “Shots were fired and a 29-year-old man, who was a passenger in the cab, died at the scene,” he said. It is believed that two shots were fired by a firearms officer, equipped with a Heckler & Koch MP5 carbine. A non-police issue handgun was recovered at the scene as well as the police radio. “Both the radio and the handgun are being sent for expedited forensic tests,” the spokesman said. “The exact sequence of events is subject to the IPCC investigation. A CO19 officer was taken to hospital as a precautionary measure but has since been discharged.” Local MP David Lammy has called for calm, saying the community was anxious over what had happened. A police officer, PC Keith Blakelock, was hacked to death in 1985 following a riot in Broadwater Farm from where the marchers set off this afternoon. Gun crime guardian.co.uk

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Michael Mansfield condemns police brutality at student demo

Leading human rights lawyer claims riot squad tactics were aimed at halting political protest One of Britain’s most prominent human rights lawyers has likened “heavy-handed” and politicised treatment of student protesters to the brutal victimisation of the miners during the strikes of the Thatcher era. Michael Mansfield QC said “outrageous” tactics were being employed to quash political protest and peaceful demonstrations in the UK, within politics, the police and the judiciary. Known for taking on some of the highest-profile cases of recent years – including the Stephen Lawrence murder trial, the Guildford Four case and the defence of Barry George, who was acquitted of the murder of Jill Dando – Mansfield revealed that he is to leave partial retirement to act on behalf of Alfie Meadows, a 20-year-old student who suffered head injuries during a tuition fees protest last December. Meadows, who was left with brain damage after being allegedly struck on the head with a police officer’s baton, is awaiting trial on charges of violent disorder. Mansfield said the right to protest in Britain was under serious threat and that people who wanted to go on peaceful demonstrations now had to weigh up the risks they faced from heavy policing and draconian sentencing. “We praise those in the Arab spring and condemn the force used against them by their governments, yet allow our own rights to be eroded,” he said. “What is happening here? A direct attack is being made on the right of people to go out on the streets and show their solidarity and unity with others of the same opinion and hold peaceful protest.” His warning came amid controversy at unusually harsh prison sentences handed down to students Charlie Gilmour, 21, and Francis Fernie, 20. Fernie was jailed for a year for throwing two sticks at police lines at TUC anti-cuts protests. Gilmour was sentenced to 16 months for “outrageous and deeply offensive behaviour”. He had thrown a bin at a Rolls-Royce carrying Prince Charles, kicked at shop windows and swung off a war memorial. Both claimed to have “got carried away in the heat of the moment” and offered profuse apologies. Gilmour’s mother, Polly Samson, who is married to Pink Floyd guitarist Dave Gilmour, called her son’s sentence a waste of taxpayers’ money. An appeal is to be heard this week. She believes students were paying a “very heavy” price under a “catch-all” charge of violent disorder. Cambridge University has not confirmed whether Gilmour will be allowed to continue his studies after serving his sentence. Mansfield and other leading legal figures believe Gilmour and Fernie were made scapegoats to show disapproval of public objections to government policy at a time when the process of democracy was weakened by the disempowering of politicians by the expenses scandal. “There is a direct comparison to what was going on during the miners’ strike,” said Mansfield, “a shameful tradition… of riot squads or tactical support groups or response units, whatever you want to call them. They go in hard and heavy, and the whole idea is to intimidate.” He attacked the brutality that can come from a “unit mentality”. “When there is a culture of a unit, they share a uniform, they share an ethos, things can get out of control and that is something that has run from Blair Peach through to Ian Tomlinson [the newspaper vendor who died after being attacked by a police officer] and I fear the police still haven’t got their heads round this at all. “They have to be reminded that there is a right to peaceful protest in Britain and it worries me how many cases that shouldn’t ever have left the ground are ending up in the courts when there may have been an inconvenience to the public, a trespass, but nothing criminal.” He said it was a low-level politicisation. “I don’t think it’s done at cabinet level, but there is a very strong consciousness in the echelons of power of making examples of people.” Mansfield, who has been asked to stand for the chancellorship of Cambridge University, says that a 1966 UN agreement commits states to aim to provide free further education , so tuition fee protesters were on the side of the law. Many lawyers are concerned at the age of those facing court for little more than getting over-excited or scared by police kettling techniques and horse charges. Some 200 officers have been assigned to finding those who took part in the UK Uncut sit-ins and the tuition fees protests. Raj Chada, a lawyer with Hodge Jones & Allen who represented Jonathan May-Bowles, the man jailed for throwing shaving foam at Rupert Murdoch, said he had real concerns that a person now arrested during a political protest could expect harsher treatment than someone who committed a similar offence when not at a protest: “The fact they are at a political protest is now being treated as an aggravating factor, rather than a mitigating factor.” The tough approach by police and judges was having its desired effect, he said: “When I have spoken to protesters, some on the fringes say they do not want to go on protests any more. There are real concerns that the judiciary is being unduly harsh on political protesters.” Judge Price, who presided over the Gilmour and Fernie cases, refused their appeals for community service orders. Police Protest Students Michael Mansfield Human rights Tuition fees Tracy McVeigh Mark Townsend guardian.co.uk

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John Kerry: Media Has ‘Responsibility’ to ‘Not Give Equal Time’ to Tea Party

John Kerry has waded into the media waters and now wants the news to cut out conservatives he doesn’t agree with. During a discussion of the debt deal and the economy on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” Friday, the current Massachusetts senator and former presidential candidate lambasted the Tea Party and conservatives and the idea that they should be given “equal time” in the media. According to him, their ideas… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Blaze Discovery Date : 05/08/2011 15:35 Number of articles : 3

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Somali famine refugees draw hope from Islamists’ Mogadishu withdrawal

Prime minister says al-Shabaab fighters have now left 90% of the capital, raising prospect of faster delivery of humanitarian aid Islamist fighters have pulled out from many bases in the Somali capital in a move that could speed up the delivery of humanitarian services to famine victims, the prime minister has said. Somali prime minister Abdiweli Mohamed Ali estimated the al-Shabaab militants now have vacated 90% of the capital. The African Union had said last week that militants had left 60% of Mogadishu. Ali said the government wanted to send security forces into the new areas vacated by the militants, who are linked to al-Qaida, describing the withdrawal as the “first phase of the new war”. The militants insisted it was merely a tactical withdrawal before a counterattack. “We shall fight the enemy wherever they are,” al-Shabaab spokesman Sheikh Ali Mohamed Rage told a local radio station. Fighters have blocked many aid organisations from the south and have complicated efforts to help those in Mogadishu. More than 29,000 children under the age of five have died in the last 90 days in the country’s south alone, according to US estimates. Residents reported al-Shabaab militia leaving their positions overnight but it was not clear if they had left the city. Since it was born from the ruins of another radical Islamist group in 2007, al-Shabaab has never abandoned Mogadishu entirely. Ali said he saw about 150 fighters leaving the northwest of the capital, adding that they may have left town due to a lack of finances and disagreements between leaders. Lieutenant-Colonel Paddy Ankunda, a spokesman for the 9,000-strong African Union peacekeeping forces in Mogadishu, said al-Shabaab had melted into the population and would become more difficult to deal with. “We need more troops now than ever before. The area has become too big for the force to cover,” he said. Sodio Omar Hassan, who was seeking treatment for her child’s malaria at a hospital set up by African Union peacekeepers, said people were angry at al-Shabaab’s response to the relief effort. She said militia groups declined to grant the UN permission to distribute maize and cooking oil in territory it controls. “People are angry now they are dying,” she said. “Al-Shabaab don’t bring us anything.” More than 12 million people in the Horn of Africa need immediate food aid but al-Shabaab proclaims it would be better to starve than accept Western aid. The UN says 640,000 children are acutely malnourished in Somalia. Somalis who have fled the famine zones say that militants are threatening refugees who leave the south, and often stop – and sometimes kill – the men.Somalia has been mired in war and anarchy for two decades, and piracy flourishes off its coastline. In a sign of how desperate the famine has become, many Somalis have fled from rural areas to Mogadishu, a war zone where AU peacekeepers have been battling the al-Shabab militants daily. Somalia Famine Africa African Union United Nations guardian.co.uk

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Chess row over gay rights T-shirt

Chess chief claims he was barred from presenting prizes at British championships because of his Stonewall T-shirt The president of the English Chess Federation has said he was barred from presenting prizes at the British chess championships in Sheffield because he was wearing a gay rights T-shirt. The red shirt bore the slogan “Some people are gay, get over it”, used by the gay rights group Stonewall in its educational literature. CJ de Mooi, an actor and a regular on the BBC quiz show Eggheads, claimed on Twitter that he had been prevented from presenting prizes to young winners because of the T-shirt, and said the decision was “disgusting”. He said: “I’ve worn this T-shirt regularly. There’s no dress code so do what you want – I thought chess was supposed to be educational and inclusive. “I’ll make an official statement when play is over. I stress this was not an ECF board (the members here were supportive) or venue decision.” Laura Doughty, deputy chief executive of Stonewall UK, said she was puzzled by the apparent ban. “We think our T-shirts are lovely and don’t see why anyone would object to anyone wearing one, least of all chess players.” Leonard Barden, the Guardian’s chess correspondent, said: “There has never been a dress code before. Its not something that happens in chess, its supposed to be non-discriminatory.” No one from the ECF or the Sheffield venue was available for comment. Gay rights Chess Tracy McVeigh guardian.co.uk

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Kerry to the Media: Stop Giving Equal Time to Every ‘Absurd Notion’

Click here to view this media Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) thinks the media made a big mistake by devoting equal time to every “absurd notion” during the debt ceiling debate. “And I have to tell you, I say this to you politely,” Kerry told MSNBC’s Joe Scarborough Friday. “The media in America has a bigger responsibility than it’s exercising today. The media has got to begin to not give equal time or equal balance to an absolutely absurd notion just because somebody asserts it or simply because somebody says something which everybody knows is not factual.” “It doesn’t deserve the same credit as a legitimate idea about what you do. And the problem is everything is put into this tit-for-tat equal battle and America is losing any sense of what’s real, of who’s accountable, of who is not accountable, of who’s real, who isn’t, who’s serious, who isn’t?” Fox News’ Greta Van Susteren offered only a partial quote from the Massachusetts senator Friday, as she expressed her outrage and suggested he was targeting the tea party. “This is really nuts,” she wrote. “Let me get this straight… he doesn’t think it is right to give ‘equal time and or balance’ to a position he does not agree with ?? or to book guests with opinions other than his own?? Really?? You got to be kidding! So, according to him, we are to only air HIS thoughts and his positions?” “I think he is attempting to intimidate the media from airing others’ ideas. That is wrong.”

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US suffers worst loss of life in Afghan war when helicopter crash kills 38

Seven Afghan and 31 Special Forces soldiers die after insurgents reportedly shoot down Chinook with rocket The United States suffered its worst loss of life of the nearly 10-year war in Afghanistan last night when a helicopter carrying 31 elite Special Forces soldiers crashed in the east of the country. Both the Taliban, via a spokesman reached by telephone, and Afghan officials in Wardak province, to the west of Kabul, said insurgents had successfully shot down the huge Chinook helicoter with a rocket. Publicly Nato would only confirm that “there was enemy activity in the area” and that the US-led alliance was still trying to work out what happened. US Air Force Captain Justin Brockhoff, a Nato spokesman, said: “We are in the process of accessing the facts.” However, a western official did give a figure of 37 people on board, who were all killed. Afghan president Hamid Karzai, in a statement of condolence, said 31 were US Special Forces, while another seven were members of the Afghan National Army (ANA). It is very unusual for Nato deaths from a single incident to reach double figures. The previous most deadly day for foreign troops was in June 2005 when 16 US soldiers were killed when a Taliban rocket hit a Chinook in the eastern province of Kunar. The crash happened at 3am when the helicopter was hovering over the town of Tangi Joi Zareen in the district of Saidabad, according to a spokesman for the provincial governor. Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid said Nato attacked a house in the district where insurgent fighters were gathering. He said eight insurgents also died in the fighting last night. Special Forces from many nations, including the UK, conduct up to half a dozen such operations every night, usually targeting mid-level insurgent commanders whose whereabouts is pinpointed by high-tech intelligence gathering teams. The successful downing of a helicopter, quite apart from the massive loss of life, will alarm war planners who rely heavily on Nato’s air superiority in the fight against the Taliban. They will want to discover whether the aircraft was downed by a lucky shot from rocket propelled grenade, a highly inaccurate weapon, or something more sophisticated. The Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s was greatly hindered by portable “Stinger” missile systems provided by the US and the far less effective “Blowpipe” provided by the UK. Nato forces have intercepted so-called “Manpads”, or “man-portable air defence systems”, illegally smuggled from Iran and there have been recorded incidents when they have been used. Classified military reports released by Wikileaks last year showed that the US military covered up a reported surface-to-air missile that shot down a Chinook helicopter over Helmand that killed seven soldiers. Afghanistan US military United States Nato Jon Boone guardian.co.uk

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