Click here to view this media CNN’s Piers Morgan likes to cast himself as an outsider, but he is in many ways a classic Villager, since he shares the Beltway’s relentless fetish with “bipartisanship” and “centrism”. Of course, this has for many years just been a cover for allowing right-wingers to lie, distort, smear and bully relentlessly, all in the name of “bipartisanship”, while demanding that liberals apologize abjectly for any pushback deemed too uncivil. It’s allowed GOP operatives like Grover Norquist to manipulate the media narrative so that anything other than right-wing orthodoxy is derided and dismissed — even when right-wing orthodoxy is just certifiably insane . Thus we had Norquist on Morgan’s CNN show the other day, playing the same game — but this time, it became clear that right-wing insanity on the debt ceiling is becoming too much even for Villagers to handle. This time, Morgan — in a rare display of principle — actually tried to call Norquist out on the right’s ongoing and egregious violations of the Village’s standards for fairness and bipartisanship in this debate, particularly their insistence on blaming Obama and Democrats for an economic mess created by conservative misgovernance. Morgan tried to get Norquist to say just how much responsibility Republicans might have for our current economic miseries, and couldn’t get an honest answer. Instead, Norquist veered into a classic piece of misdirection from the guy who once was quoted saying that “bipartisanship is a form of date rape”: NORQUIST: We need to get away from partisan politics. MORGAN: Why don’t we — let’s put it all in the mix. NORQUIST: And solve the problem. MORGAN: Let’s put it all in the mix. All in the mix, everything taken into account, percentage of the current crisis down to Republican decisions versus Democrat. Give me a percentage. NORQUIST: Well, OK, the Republicans have put forward a budget under Ryan cut $6 trillion out of the Obama budget. Obama has accepted none of that so he’s 100 percent responsible. MORGAN: So President Obama is 100 percent responsible for our current financial crisis. NORQUIST: For the failure — for the failure to get our — get out spending down. MORGAN: Isn’t your answer exactly what the problem is? For you to sit there and just look me straight in the eye down this camera and say President Obama is 100 percent responsible for the financial crisis in America, it’s obviously complete hogwash. And that kind of partisan opinion is what is preventing any kind of sensible deal, a strategy being achieved, isn’t it? All Norquist could answer was to say that, yeah, Bush spent too much, but Obama has just put the pedal to the metal, blah blah blah. Never any acknowledgment that the meltdown occurred on Bush’s watch, and as a result of Bush’s policies, which were in fact broadly supported by conservative Republicans like Norquist throughout his tenure and which were never opposed by any conservative faction with any pull. Policies which, in fact, Republicans now propose as the solution to the same economic disaster they actually created. It was a classic display of right-wing insanity. And it’s only going to get worse.
Continue reading …“You know, in Journalism 101, if you're going to ask a question of someone like the president, what you do is, you take, respectfully, you take the opposition's best argument and you play devil's advocate,” NewsBusters publisher Brent Bozell argued on the July 14 edition of “Hannity.” But instead of taking that approach — which, Bozell noted, the famous liberal reporter Sam Donaldson took both with Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton — the media have been actively working with Obama to forward the Democratic narrative regarding the debt ceiling negotiations. [Video follows page break]
Continue reading …Friday’s strike sees Robert Peston and Laura Kuenssberg missing from TV and radio news, as Newsnight goes off air The strike by BBC journalists on Friday leaves the corporation’s TV and radio services without star reporters including Nick Robinson, Robert Peston and Laura Kuenssberg on one of the biggest days so far in the phone-hacking story following the resignation of Rebekah Brooks. BBC2′s Newsnight, which has enjoyed a ratings boost in the past two weeks as viewers have tuned in to catch up with comment and analysis of the latest twists and turns in the phone-hacking saga, is also off air on Friday night because of the 24-hour strike by members of the National Union of Journalists. The current affairs show, which was to have been presented by Gavin Esler, is being replaced by a 2010 repeat of Have I Got News For You. However, BBC1′s main news bulletin at 1pm went out as normal and the 6pm and 10pm bulletins are due to go ahead as planned. Robinson, the BBC political editor, and Kuenssberg, the chief political correspondent about to join ITV News as business editor, have been regular fixtures on TV and radio bulletins and the BBC News channel as key elements in coverage of the News International scandal played out at Westminster. Peston has also delivered several scoops about the unfolding story, leading rival media organisations to accuse News International of leaking stories to the BBC journalist. Viewers and listeners tuning in to BBC News programmes on Friday morning found disruption to the breakfast shows on BBC1 and Radio 5 Live and Radio 4′s Today . BBC1′s Breakfast was off air, replaced by a BBC News channel simulcast, while the regular 5 Live Breakfast hosts Nicky Campbell and Rachel Burden were replaced by Ian Payne and Julia Bradbury. Listeners to Radio 4′s Today were treated to a repeated documentary about the Russian communist revolution in the runup to 7am. However, from 7am the BBC’s flagship radio news programme ran pretty much as normal with regular presenters Sarah Montague and Justin Webb, who is in Japan reporting on the aftermath of the tsunami that struck earlier this year. The World at One and PM, Radio 4′s flagship evening news programme at 5pm, are also off air. The 1pm World at One news programme was replaced by a 15-minute bulletin, with the rest of the hour-long show taken up by a repeat of an edition of The Prime Ministers on 19th-century statesman Robert Peel. In place of PM will be a repeated of the contemporary history show Document, about the Polaris missile, with an edition of Soul Music at 5.30pm. Radio 4′s 8pm political discussion show Any Questions has also been taken off air. Replacing the scheduled broadcast of the panel programme which usually hosted by Jonathan Dimbleby will be an omnibus edition of Radio 4′s series exploring Winston’s Churchill’s life outside politics, Churchill’s Other Lives. Saturday’s edition of the follow-up call-in programme Any Answers will be replaced by an edition of My Teenage Diary, according to the BBC. The late night Radio 4 news programme The World Tonight is giving way to an edition of Meeting Myself Coming Back just after the 10pm news bulletin. Radio 5 Live is running a slightly slimmed-down news service with short news bulletins on the hour and half hour, with 15-minute bulletins planned for 1pm, 5pm and 6pm. The BBC World Service’s English-language service will be running five-minute news at the top of the hour and two minutes on the half hour. Picket lines were mounted from midnight on Friday outside BBC premises across the country, with the NUJ predicting a “solid response” to the walkout. The BBC admitted it expected widespread disruption to services and said it was disappointed by the industrial action and apologised to viewers and listeners. Negotiations with the NUJ over compulsory redundancies at BBC World Service and BBC Monitoring continued until the eve of the strike, but no agreement was reached. The NUJ general secretary, Michelle Stanistreet, accused the BBC of “provoking” a strike over a handful of job losses, but the corporation said there were 100 posts for which compulsory redundancy was “regrettably unavoidable”. Stanistreet said the union offered a number of solutions to the dispute, adding that an offer from the conciliation service Acas for peace talks had not been taken up by BBC management. “There are so many people who want to leave the BBC that this could be resolved through negotiations. The NUJ has a longstanding policy of no compulsory redundancies, and it is clear that our members at the BBC are fully prepared to stand up for their colleagues under threat,” she said. “Jobs are being saved and created at management level, but journalists are losing theirs. It is hard to avoid the conclusion that BBC management wants thousands of its journalists to go on strike rather than settle the dispute.” A BBC spokesman said: “We are disappointed that the NUJ is intending to strike and apologise to our audience for any disruption to services this may cause. “We have had to reduce the number of posts in World Service and BBC Monitoring by 387, following significant cuts to the central government grants that support these services. In a significant majority of cases we have been able to reach this through voluntary redundancy or redeployment. “However, there are in excess of 100 BBC posts for which compulsory redundancy is regrettably unavoidable, and this is our focus, regardless of whether staff are members of unions.” A further 24-hour strike is due to take place on 29 July. •
Continue reading …Friday’s strike sees Robert Peston and Laura Kuenssberg missing from TV and radio news, as Newsnight goes off air The strike by BBC journalists on Friday leaves the corporation’s TV and radio services without star reporters including Nick Robinson, Robert Peston and Laura Kuenssberg on one of the biggest days so far in the phone-hacking story following the resignation of Rebekah Brooks. BBC2′s Newsnight, which has enjoyed a ratings boost in the past two weeks as viewers have tuned in to catch up with comment and analysis of the latest twists and turns in the phone-hacking saga, is also off air on Friday night because of the 24-hour strike by members of the National Union of Journalists. The current affairs show, which was to have been presented by Gavin Esler, is being replaced by a 2010 repeat of Have I Got News For You. However, BBC1′s main news bulletin at 1pm went out as normal and the 6pm and 10pm bulletins are due to go ahead as planned. Robinson, the BBC political editor, and Kuenssberg, the chief political correspondent about to join ITV News as business editor, have been regular fixtures on TV and radio bulletins and the BBC News channel as key elements in coverage of the News International scandal played out at Westminster. Peston has also delivered several scoops about the unfolding story, leading rival media organisations to accuse News International of leaking stories to the BBC journalist. Viewers and listeners tuning in to BBC News programmes on Friday morning found disruption to the breakfast shows on BBC1 and Radio 5 Live and Radio 4′s Today . BBC1′s Breakfast was off air, replaced by a BBC News channel simulcast, while the regular 5 Live Breakfast hosts Nicky Campbell and Rachel Burden were replaced by Ian Payne and Julia Bradbury. Listeners to Radio 4′s Today were treated to a repeated documentary about the Russian communist revolution in the runup to 7am. However, from 7am the BBC’s flagship radio news programme ran pretty much as normal with regular presenters Sarah Montague and Justin Webb, who is in Japan reporting on the aftermath of the tsunami that struck earlier this year. The World at One and PM, Radio 4′s flagship evening news programme at 5pm, are also off air. The 1pm World at One news programme was replaced by a 15-minute bulletin, with the rest of the hour-long show taken up by a repeat of an edition of The Prime Ministers on 19th-century statesman Robert Peel. In place of PM will be a repeated of the contemporary history show Document, about the Polaris missile, with an edition of Soul Music at 5.30pm. Radio 4′s 8pm political discussion show Any Questions has also been taken off air. Replacing the scheduled broadcast of the panel programme which usually hosted by Jonathan Dimbleby will be an omnibus edition of Radio 4′s series exploring Winston’s Churchill’s life outside politics, Churchill’s Other Lives. Saturday’s edition of the follow-up call-in programme Any Answers will be replaced by an edition of My Teenage Diary, according to the BBC. The late night Radio 4 news programme The World Tonight is giving way to an edition of Meeting Myself Coming Back just after the 10pm news bulletin. Radio 5 Live is running a slightly slimmed-down news service with short news bulletins on the hour and half hour, with 15-minute bulletins planned for 1pm, 5pm and 6pm. The BBC World Service’s English-language service will be running five-minute news at the top of the hour and two minutes on the half hour. Picket lines were mounted from midnight on Friday outside BBC premises across the country, with the NUJ predicting a “solid response” to the walkout. The BBC admitted it expected widespread disruption to services and said it was disappointed by the industrial action and apologised to viewers and listeners. Negotiations with the NUJ over compulsory redundancies at BBC World Service and BBC Monitoring continued until the eve of the strike, but no agreement was reached. The NUJ general secretary, Michelle Stanistreet, accused the BBC of “provoking” a strike over a handful of job losses, but the corporation said there were 100 posts for which compulsory redundancy was “regrettably unavoidable”. Stanistreet said the union offered a number of solutions to the dispute, adding that an offer from the conciliation service Acas for peace talks had not been taken up by BBC management. “There are so many people who want to leave the BBC that this could be resolved through negotiations. The NUJ has a longstanding policy of no compulsory redundancies, and it is clear that our members at the BBC are fully prepared to stand up for their colleagues under threat,” she said. “Jobs are being saved and created at management level, but journalists are losing theirs. It is hard to avoid the conclusion that BBC management wants thousands of its journalists to go on strike rather than settle the dispute.” A BBC spokesman said: “We are disappointed that the NUJ is intending to strike and apologise to our audience for any disruption to services this may cause. “We have had to reduce the number of posts in World Service and BBC Monitoring by 387, following significant cuts to the central government grants that support these services. In a significant majority of cases we have been able to reach this through voluntary redundancy or redeployment. “However, there are in excess of 100 BBC posts for which compulsory redundancy is regrettably unavoidable, and this is our focus, regardless of whether staff are members of unions.” A further 24-hour strike is due to take place on 29 July. •
Continue reading …Thirty governments and groups including Nato and Arab League recognise Libya’s transitional council as ‘legitimate authority’ Libyan rebels fighting to overthrow Muammar Gaddafi have won recognition as the country’s “legitimate authority” from the entire international contact group co-ordinating policy on the crisis. Franco Frattini, Italy’s foreign minister, announced the largely symbolic move at an Istanbul meeting of the group – one of a swath of political and economic measures designed to ratchet up pressure on Gaddafi. Britain also announced it was deploying four more fighter aircraft to take part in Nato’s bombing campaign. “The entire Libyan contact group decided to recognise the NTC [national transitional council] as the legitimate authority of Libya,” Frattini told reporters. “So [there is] no other option but for Gaddafi to leave.” The recognition will be officially announced when the meeting’s final document is released later on Friday. Diplomats billed the move as a boost to the Benghazi-based rebel council, though it is legally complex since most contact group countries still maintain diplomatic relations with the Gaddafi regime and have embassies in Tripoli and Libyan missions in their own capitals. Britain has said for some time it regards the NTC as the legitimate representative of the Libyan people but it recognises states, not governments. “It’s a strong signal of support for the NTC and reflects the growing consensus that it is increasingly competent, is reaching out to Libyan people across the country and reinforces the point that Gaddafi must go,” said an Foreign Office spokesman. For some countries the decision may have legal implications with regard to making Libyan state assets frozen by UN sanctions available to the NTC. The UN envoy on Libya, Abdul-Elah al-Khatib of Jordan, is to be authorised to present terms for Gaddafi to leave power in a Turkish-drafted package that will include a ceasefire to halt fighting and usher in a political transition. It is unclear whether Gaddafi will be required to leave the country. The Libyan leader, wanted for crimes against humanity by the international criminal court, has repeatedly insisted he will not stand down. The contact group, meeting for the fourth time since the crisis began in March, is made up of more than 30 governments and international and regional organisations, including Nato, the EU and the Arab League. Libya Nato Arab and Middle East unrest European Union Middle East Africa Ian Black guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Thirty governments and groups including Nato and Arab League recognise Libya’s transitional council as ‘legitimate authority’ Libyan rebels fighting to overthrow Muammar Gaddafi have won recognition as the country’s “legitimate authority” from the entire international contact group co-ordinating policy on the crisis. Franco Frattini, Italy’s foreign minister, announced the largely symbolic move at an Istanbul meeting of the group – one of a swath of political and economic measures designed to ratchet up pressure on Gaddafi. Britain also announced it was deploying four more fighter aircraft to take part in Nato’s bombing campaign. “The entire Libyan contact group decided to recognise the NTC [national transitional council] as the legitimate authority of Libya,” Frattini told reporters. “So [there is] no other option but for Gaddafi to leave.” The recognition will be officially announced when the meeting’s final document is released later on Friday. Diplomats billed the move as a boost to the Benghazi-based rebel council, though it is legally complex since most contact group countries still maintain diplomatic relations with the Gaddafi regime and have embassies in Tripoli and Libyan missions in their own capitals. Britain has said for some time it regards the NTC as the legitimate representative of the Libyan people but it recognises states, not governments. “It’s a strong signal of support for the NTC and reflects the growing consensus that it is increasingly competent, is reaching out to Libyan people across the country and reinforces the point that Gaddafi must go,” said an Foreign Office spokesman. For some countries the decision may have legal implications with regard to making Libyan state assets frozen by UN sanctions available to the NTC. The UN envoy on Libya, Abdul-Elah al-Khatib of Jordan, is to be authorised to present terms for Gaddafi to leave power in a Turkish-drafted package that will include a ceasefire to halt fighting and usher in a political transition. It is unclear whether Gaddafi will be required to leave the country. The Libyan leader, wanted for crimes against humanity by the international criminal court, has repeatedly insisted he will not stand down. The contact group, meeting for the fourth time since the crisis began in March, is made up of more than 30 governments and international and regional organisations, including Nato, the EU and the Arab League. Libya Nato Arab and Middle East unrest European Union Middle East Africa Ian Black guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The 2010 elections, which changed the balance of power in the House, were driven by popular opposition to government spending, debt and the threat of tax increases. Yet even with the federal debt limit already breached and only days left to prevent a national default, the media continue to ignore the public's wishes. The theme of network reports on the debt ceiling battle is that some agreement MUST be reached so that the limit can be increased, but many Americans disagree with raising the debt limit and are more concerned about government spending. But that has barely been mentioned in stories. Polls taken by Gallup, CBS and AP have all registered significant worry about federal debt and opposition to an increase in the debt ceiling. But ABC, CBS and NBC coverage of the debt limit battle being waged on Capitol Hill has not reflected that fact. Out of 45 reports on the broadcast network's evening news programs between June 16 and July 12, only one mentioned a poll that showed public opposition to raising the debt ceiling. That's a mere 2 percent of reports. An additional two stories had some reference to what the public might think, but without polling data. Those two other stories included a politician and journalist's respective opinions about public sentiment. In one, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., said that that the public opposes tax increases but supports a balanced budget. In the other, Bob Schieffer claimed he knew what public opinion was without giving any poll to back it up. He declared, “I doubt that many people would argue with the president when he says it can only get worse if Congress does not find a way to raise the debt ceiling.” The network's willingness to ignore public opinion on the issue is shocking given the poll numbers. Gallup found that nearly twice as much opposition to an increase than support for one. In that July 7-10 poll, 42 percent of Americans indicated that they want their representative to vote against raising the debt ceiling, compared to only 22 percent who want them to vote for such a bill. A June AP/GFK poll taken between June 16 and 20 also showed more public opposition to raising the debt ceiling than support for increasing it. Gallup also found widespread fear of runaway spending. When asked “Which concerns you more – [the government would not raise the debt ceiling and a major economic crisis would result (or) the government would raise the debt ceiling but without plans for major cuts in future spending]?” A 51 percent majority said their greater concern would be raising the debt ceiling without plans to cut spending, compared to 32 percent worried about an economic crisis caused by not raising the limit. Obama's Social Security Threat As the debt limit debate has grown more heated plenty of unfair rhetoric has been tossed around, but President Obama's threat on July 12 that he ” cannot guarantee ” August Social Security payments “if we haven't resolved this issue” should have been soundly debunked by network reporters. After all, they had earlier cited experts who said that there was enough money “in the coffers” to pay for Social Security payments. There wouldn't be enough money for everything, but Social Security, disability and veterans' payments could be paid out according to numbers from MarketWatch and the Bipartisan Policy Center. Sadly on the networks, it did not incite outrage or much criticism. CBS “Evening News” aired the conversation between Scott Pelley and the president, which included Obama's refusal to guarantee those payments. But Pelley did not offer any criticism, contradiction or debunking of the social security threat during the broadcast. The next morning, only one of the broadcast morning shows was skeptical of Obama's statement. “The Early Show” on CBS replayed the Pelley interview and warned that ” it's about to get personal for many Americans. ” ABC's George Stephanopoulos uncritically summarized the president's remarks. Only NBC's “Today” thought Obama might be using it as a “scare tactic.” Mark Tapscott of the Washington Examiner did the math in his Beltway Confidential column July 12. Using numbers from MarketWatch and the Bipartisan Policy Center, Tapscott proved that there will be plenty of money in federal coffers to make August Social Security payments. He wrote that the government takes in $200 billion each month. Subtract $29 billion for interest on the national debt, $49.2 billion for Social Security, $50 billion for Medicare and Medicaid, $2.9 billion each for active duty military pay and veterans programs and you are left with $39 billion each month. “This is demagoguery of the worst sort because Obama has to know what he is saying is false. When you and I say something we know to be false, it's called a 'lie,'” Tapscott declared. Before Obama made the claim that Social Security payments might be at risk if a debt ceiling deal isn't reached, the networks knew that the third rail program wasn't at risk. Just two nights earlier on the July 10 CBS “Evening News,” Whit Johnson reported numbers from the Bipartisan Policy Center. “It says in the month of August the Treasury has to make $306 billion in payments, but it will take in only $172 billion. Under one scenario, that's enough to pay interest on the debt, Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, defense contractors and unemployment benefits. But there would be no money left for active duty military, federal workers and a slew of other programs,” Johnson said. Economist Mark Zandi was also interviewed by “Evening News” on June 28. He told Anthony Mason that the government would be forced to prioritize if the debt ceiling wasn't increased. “On August 2nd, the government won't have to cut Social Security payments or Medicare. But if it drags on for a couple or three, four weeks then yes, I think they'll have no choice but to cut almost everything that the government does, including Social Security and Medicare,” Zandi said. Obama's statement also exposed the government's misleading claims about the viability of Social Security. A blogger for Forbes.com reacted saying, “Well, either Obama and Geithner are lying to us now , or they and all defenders of the Social Security status quo have been lying to us for decades. It must be one or the other.” That blogger, Merrill Matthews, continued saying, “Here's why: Social Security has a trust fund, and that trust fund is supposed to have $2.6 trillion in it, according to the Social Security trustees. If there are real assets in the trust fund, then Social Security can mail the checks, regardless of what Congress does about the debt limit.” Faith in the Social Security ” trust fund ” however, is misplaced. For years there has been a pervasive myth spread by politicians and journalists who described Social Security as a “trust fund.” Matthews went on to expose the fallacy of the trust fund in his column, as many others have done before. The reality of course is that the government has been spending that money and replacing it with Treasury bonds (IOUs) for years. In 2010, the Business & Media Institute reported that as Social Security turned 75 years old, it was also running a $41 billion deficit (ahead of estimates). Back then Cato's Michael Cannon criticized media outlets (specifically The New York Times) for claiming the program can still “pay full benefits until 2037″ and current attention to the red ink does not “endanger benefits, because any shortfall can be covered by the trust fund.” Cannon reacted: “No. It. Can't. Because there are no funds in the Social Security 'trust fund'.” He characterized the entire idea as “an institutionalized, ritualized lie.” One that BMI found news outlets continued to promote.
Continue reading …Sellers pulling out after failing to get the price they wanted contribute to 29% of transactions being abandoned Almost one in three house sales collapsed in the first six months of 2011, according to data from the UK’s largest conveyancer 1st Property Lawyers . The firm said the rising number of sales falling through was due to buyers and sellers getting cold feet, the elimination of Home Information Packs and economic uncertainty. The 29% of abandoned transactions were chiefly the result of sellers withdrawing properties from the market (39% of the sales that fell through), with the elimination of Hips another major factor. Now a Hip is no longer a requirement, the cost of selling has fallen by £500, making it less of a financial burden to pull out of a transaction. This means less serious sellers can put a property on the market without suffering serious losses if they fail to get the price they are hoping for. HM Revenue & Customs figures show that there were 173,000 house sales in the UK in the first three months of the year, well down on the 459,000 recorded in the last quarter of 2006 when the housing market was nearing its peak. Buyers pulling out of the purchase is the second most common reason (23%) for abandoned sales, driven by nervousness in the marketplace about house prices and fuelled by fears over finances, general economic uncertainty and job security. On a more positive note, fewer purchases were dropped because buyers failed to secure a mortgage. Just one in 10 collapsed sales this year were caused by difficulties gettinng a home loan – down half from 15% in 2009 – as people have shifted their expectations around mortgage finance and know they need to get mortgage finance in place before house-hunting. Sales have also fallen through because of a chain collapsing (9% of failed transactions), unfavourable surveys (8%) and sellers withdrawing properties for sale and deciding to rent them instead (6%). Mark Montgomery, the 1st Property Lawyers commercial director, said: “A lot of this is about temporary changes to perspective and circumstance; where people have started a process, decided to sit tight for a bit, before eventually coming back to the market.” He said that real world factors of family sizes, schooling and personal circumstance drive the market, causing more sellers to sit tight and watch how the situation develops. “Expectations have not always been met,” he added. “Modest price rises after the initial post-credit crisis fall had raised the hopes of property-owners regarding what they might get on the market. This unrealistic idea of property values was reflected in the number of sellers aborting transactions once they realised they wouldn’t be getting what they wanted.” Just 3% of buyers withdrew their offer, according to 1st Property, while the same percentage of sellers said they had been gazundered, when buyers replace their original bid with a lower offer at the last minute – the opposite of the gazumping that took place when house prices were rising. Property House prices Housing market Real estate guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Student son of David Gilmour jailed for 16 months after admitting violent disorder at student fees demonstrations The son of the Pink Floyd guitarist David Gilmour has been jailed for 16 months for going on a drink and drug-fuelled rampage at a student fees protest. Charlie Gilmour admitted violent disorder after joining thousands demonstrating in Trafalgar Square and Parliament Square in London last year. During a day of riots he was seen hanging from a union flag on the Cenotaph and leaping on to the bonnet of a Jaguar car that formed part of a royal convoy. He pleaded guilty in May to violent disorder and was warned by the judge Nicholas Price QC that he could face prison. “You must understand that your plea of guilty to violent disorder is a serious matter and it may be that the proper course would be one of immediate custody.” Gilmour was found on Friday to have also hurled a rubbish bin at the vehicle. The court heard that the Cambridge University student had turned to drink and drugs after being rejected by his biological father, the writer Heathcote Williams, and had taken LSD and diazepam in the hours leading up to the violence. Gilmour’s rock star father and his mother, the writer Polly Samson, watched from the public gallery as the 21-year-old was told he must serve half the jail term behind bars. Passing sentence at Kingston upon Thames crown court in Surrey, Price accepted that Gilmour’s antics at the Cenotaph on Whitehall did not form part of the violent disorder, but accused him of disrespect to the war dead. “Such outrageous and deeply offensive behaviour gives a clear indication of how out of control you were that day,” he said. “It caused public outrage and understandably so.” Gilmour’s conduct at the war memorial had prompted a deluge of “vituperative and in many cases obscene” emails and other forms of communication, the judge told him. These were, the judge added, “not just to you but, it is with deep regret, to your whole family, who were of course totally blameless”. Gilmour, who apologised afterwards for his behaviour, had claimed he had not realised the significance of the Cenotaph – an excuse the judge scoffed at. “For a young man of your intelligence and education and background to profess to not know what the Cenotaph represents defies belief,” he said. “You have shown disrespect to those who gave the ultimate sacrifice, to those who fell defending this country.” Crime Pink Floyd Tuition fees Higher education Students Student politics guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Politicians have renewed efforts against raising efficiency standards days after losing their effort to repeal the law It’s not yet lights out: Republicans have revived their effort to crush energy-saving lightbulbs, with a vote in the House of Representatives as early as Friday. Just days after losing their effort to repeal a law promoting more efficient lighting , Republicans – who claim the new standards are an assault on personal freedom – have revived their effort. The latest offering, put forward by the Texas Republican Michael Burgess, would seek to tack an amendment onto a broader bill cutting funds for environmental protection. Like the original, the bill to hinder the take-up of energy-saving bulbs would stop the federal government from enacting the provisions of a 2007 law raising efficiency standards of incandescent bulbs by 25%, starting from 2012. But it would not block city or state governments from promoting energy-saving lighting. Republicans – including presidential contender Michele Bachmann – have championed the cause of old-fashioned 100-watt bulbs as a fight for personal freedom and the legacy of Thomas Edison, who invented it. But a first attempt to get rid of the usurper – energy-saving LED and CFLs – was defeated in the House of Representatives on Tuesday night. The bill fell short of the two-thirds majority needed under rules invoked by the Republicans for speedy passage. However, it did get a majority, and Joe Barton, who has been leading the charge of the Republican light brigade, vowed then he would be back. “We can put it on an appropriations bill,” he told the US politics website Politico . “We can back it under a rule. I can try and go to some of the Democrats who didn’t vote for it and figure out a way to get them to consider voting for it in a different format.” Burgess told Politico he believed his bill had a better chance tacked onto a bigger spending measure. At the time, the 2007 law on lightbulbs and other energy measures was backed by prominent house Republicans and signed into law by George Bush. Tea Party conservatives, however, now cast it as a sign of government overreach by Barack Obama. But not all Republicans are on board. Politico reported this week that the House Republicans demand for cuts on environmental spending risked alienating the hunters who are a core constituency. Meanwhile, a group called Republicans for Environmental Protection called the focus on light bulbs an embarrassment to the party. The House’s defeat this week of bizarre legislation to turn back the clock on lighting efficiency was a victory for the economy, the environment, and common sense, Republicans for Environmental Protection said. “We regret that Congress was forced to waste its time voting on a foolish bill that was premised entirely on false claims and ignorance,” David Jenkins, an REP official, said in a statement. “Members of Congress and talk radio entertainers who knowingly peddled this falsehood and misled consumers are a national embarrassment and ought to be ashamed of themselves.” Energy efficiency Energy United States Republicans US politics Suzanne Goldenberg guardian.co.uk
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