Democratic Unionist MP denies violence was caused by loyalists’ insistence on marching past Catholic Ardoyne area North Belfast MP Nigel Dodds has blamed “militant republicans” opposed to the peace process for organising a sustained riot in the Ardoyne area that lasted into the early hours of Wednesday morning. The Democratic Unionist MP said the violence, which lasted for more than six hours, had nothing to do with an Orange Order march past the area. Dodds pointed out there had also been a peaceful protest against the parade. Police officers came under attack for the second night running, with petrol bombs and missiles thrown by youths from Ardoyne. There were also pockets of trouble elsewhere, with two cars hijacked and burned in the nationalist Market area of central Belfast. A riot in Derry’s Bogside led to seven arrests, including that of a 14-year-old boy. The violence at the Brompton Park and Estoril Gardens entrances to Ardoyne continued into the early hours of Wednesday morning. Several police officers were injured, as well as a press photographer who was hit with a plastic baton round. Police fired dozens of plastic bullets at rioters and repeatedly deployed water cannon after coming under attack from a crowd of up to 200 people. At one stage a petrol bomb exploded on an officer’s head as he stood on the Crumlin Road shortly after 10pm. Colleagues doused the flames with a fire extinguisher and the officer escaped unhurt. The rioters also set fire to water cannon with petrol bombs. The attackers kept up a constant barrage of stones, bottles and other missiles for several hours once a controversial Orange Order parade had passed the Ardoyne shops shortly after 7pm on Tuesday night. The disturbances took place on the most important day in the Ulster loyalist marching calendar, just a few hours after previous riots that had left 24 police officers injured. Most of the violence on Monday happened in the Broadway area of Belfast close to the Falls Road, where local republican youths fought running battles with riot squad officers who were blocking their way to a loyalist area across the M1 motorway. On Tuesday night the tension continued on the Crumlin Road as Orangemen were verbally absued by groups of nationalist women as they returned from a rally in the south of the city. The women sang the Irish national anthem and hurled verbal insults at the marchers. Ardoyne residents have consistently opposed the loyalist parade passing their area and last night a number tried to stage a counter march just before loyalists arrived back from the city centre. When nationalists were prevented from doing so the violence erupted. The latest disturbances also expose divisions in Ardoyne between mainstream republicans who support the peace process and those who back republican dissidents’ armed campaigns. One former member of the Irish National Liberation Army told the Guardian those who took part in the street disorder were future recruits for dissident republican organisations who oppose the power sharing settlement in Northern Ireland. Northern Ireland Henry McDonald guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Campaign supported by Michele Bachmann and the Tea Party movement fails to muster two-thirds majority needed A Republican campaign to defend America against a sweeping assault on personal freedoms – or energy-saving lightbulbs as they are more commonly known – went down in defeat on Tuesday night. The result is a rejection of one of the great causes of the conservative Tea Party movement: the repeal of a 2007 law promoting environmentally efficient lighting. Presidential contender Michele Bachmann and talk show hosts Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck had dismissed the legislation as an assault on personal freedom. In a speech in New Orleans last month Bachmann declared: “President Bachmann will allow you to buy any lightbulb you want.” But Tuesday night’s vote in the House of Representatives failed to muster the two-thirds majority needed under special rules invoked by Republicans to fasttrack the repeal. The bill did get a 233-193 majority in the House, however, and Joe Barton the Texan Republican behind the measure told US politics website Politico he would try again to get the legislation through – by any means. “We can put it on an appropriations bill”, he said. “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.” The Texan said he had originally counted on getting more than 300 votes for the measure including help from some Democrats. But the Republicans’ hopes of using the defence of old-fashioned 100 watt bulbs as a rallying cry for freedom had already begun to dim by Tuesday night. The party cast the 2007 measure, which was signed into law by George Bush, as an outright ban on the familiar 100 watt bulb, and even an affront to its inventor Thomas Edison. In their view encouraging the adoption of curly lightbulbs was yet another example of government overreach by Barack Obama. Saving the lightbulb was not a traditional Republican cause, however. The original 2007 bill had strong Republican support; it was even crafted in part by Fred Upton, now the chair of the House energy and commerce committee. Upton, anxious to reinforce his conservative credentials, has since recanted: he voted for the repeal of the measure. The defence of the 100 watt bulb seemed in the Republican mind to be a winner until the run-up to the vote, when lighting manufacturers such as Philips and General Electric joined the White House, Democrats, and environmental organisations in opposing the Republican campaign. Steven Chu, the energy secretary, told reporters last week the 2007 measure was actually aimed at raising efficiency standards for all new bulbs by more than 25% beginning in 2012. The companies pointed out, meanwhile, that they were already shifting to newer LED and compact fluorescent bulbs. It also became more difficult for Republicans to maintain the argument that the new energy-saving bulbs were a burden on consumers. Although energy-saving lightbulbs do cost more than the old-fashioned variety, environmental organisations argued that the new standards would save the average American household around $85 a year (£50) in electricity costs. Energy United States Energy efficiency Ethical and green living Republicans US politics Suzanne Goldenberg guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Supplier to Nike, Adidas, Puma, H&M and Lacoste accused of discharging dangerous chemicals into Chinese water systems A Chinese conglomerate supplying Nike, Adidas, Puma and other leading brands has discharged hormone-disrupting chemicals and other toxins into the country’s major water systems, according to a new Greenpeace investigation that raises questions about corporate responsibility for the firms they do business with. The environmental pressure group has also linked hazardous textile plants in the Yangtze and Pearl river deltas to Lacoste, H&M and half a dozen other international fashion brands despite many of those companies’ claims to set high environmental standards in their supply chains. The allegations follow a series of high-profile pollution scandals at Chinese firms that provide materials for multinational corporations. Chinese environmental activists say these cases highlight the hypocrisy of western outsourcers who promise high safety standards for rich consumers at home even as they trade with firms that benefit from lax environmental regulations overseas. In their one-year investigation into China’s textile industry – the world’s largest, with 50,000 mills – Greenpeace campaigners collected samples from factory discharge pipes and sent them for analysis at laboratories at Exeter University and in the Netherlands. They discovered a range of persistent pollutants in the wastewater from two major plants. The Youngor facility in Ningbo, near Shanghai, was found to have discharged nonylphenol, an endocrine disruptor that builds up in the food chain, perfluorinated chemicals, which can have an adverse effect on the liver and sperm counts, as well as a cocktail of other toxins. These chemicals were detected in small quantities, but they are hard to break down so they tend to accumulate in nature to dangerous levels. Many were found in fish during an earlier study of toxins in the Yangtze food chain. Although the chemicals are not yet illegal in China, they are banned in the EU and many developed nations. Youngor is China’s biggest integrated textile firm and boasts some of the country’s most advanced technology for dyeing, weaving and printing. Its Ningbo plant is also home to an in-house research centre and a Japanese-made sewage treatment system. Greenpeace says Nike, Adidas, Puma, H&M and Lacoste have confirmed a business relationship with Youngor though all denied making use of the plant’s wet processes, which are likely to be responsible for the pollution discharges into the Fenghua river. Adidas said its only relationship with the Youngor is for the cutting and sewing of fabrics. “Adidas does not source fabrics from Youngor Group, which would involve the use of dyestuffs, chemicals and their associated water treatment processes,” the company said in a statement. “We continue to engage with Greenpeace and have offered our full support and cooperation. In response to questions from the Guardian, Puma also said its involvement was limited to a non-polluting subsidiary that it regularly audited. “Our relationship to Youngor Group is, according to our information, restricted to the ready-made garments factory Youngor Knitting, which is not involved in any discharges into the Fenghua and does not operate any industrial wet processes. We are currently in contact and discussion with Greenpeace and open for further cooperation on our chemicals policies.” H&M said its business partner, Ningbo Youngor Yingchen Uniform, was a discrete legal entity within the Younger International Garment City complex that did not contribute to discharges into the Fenghua river. The company said its code of conduct only applied at suppliers with which it had a business relationship. “However, we share the general concern about discharges of hazardous chemicals into the environment,” H&M said. “That is why we run a set of activities and procedures to limit and eliminate hazardous chemicals and improve overall environmental standards throughout our value chain and the entire industry.” Greenpeace says the foreign firms need to insist upon higher standards throughout their supply chains. In addition, the group says the brands have a moral obligation to phase out hazardous chemicals not just in the final product sold to first-world consumers but also in the industrial process that affect workers and the environment in developing nations. “These companies are doing business with a polluter. We are not accusing them of being evil, we are challenging them to take the lead on eliminating toxins,” said Li Yifang, who headed the investigation at the Greenpeace China office. “There is no safety limit for these chemicals because they accumulate. So we ask Nike and the others to help phase them out over a reasonable time frame. That would send a signal to the whole industry.” The other polluter accused in the report was Well Dyeing Factory in Zhongshan, Guangdong Province, which is said to have discharged a range of heavy metals, including chromium and copper, in addition to alkylphenols, nonylphenols and other organic chemicals. Greenpeace noted the factory released hazardous effluent into the Shiji River at night – a common practice by factories in China that want to avoid scrutiny from governmental inspectors. Many other factories are likely to be guilty of even worse pollution but their activities go undetected because they bury their discharge pipes or mix their emissions with the effluent from other industrial plants. Greenpeace says it has approached both Chinese firms with its findings. Youngor has reportedly agreed to work with the environmental group to eliminate toxic chemicals, while Well Dyeing has denied it has a problem. China has been the world’s biggest exporter of textiles since 1995, but other industries have made a big impact on the economy and environment. Last year, a coalition of Chinese environmental groups traced a link between lead and cadmium contamination scandals and the production of materials for mobile phone batteries and computer circuit boards for foreign technology companies. In a follow-up study earlier this year, the activists reporteddischarge violations at several Chinese firms that are thought to be part of Apple’s supply chain. Many foreign firms privately complain that environmental groups hold them to higher standards than their Chinese counterparts, which undermines their competitiveness. The campaigners respond that the big companies profit from their brand reputation and thus have a greater responsibility to set a positive example. Pollution Retail industry Greenpeace China Activism Jonathan Watts guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …As the internet has overtaken newspapers as an information source, convincing readers to shell out the dough for online news has proven an uphill battle . Now two papers are trying a new approach: entice customers with discounted Android tablets and pre-loaded content apps. The Philadelphia Media Network, which owns the Philadelphia Inquirer and the Philadelphia Daily News , is planning a pilot program for mid-August which will offer around 2,000 tablets; if successful, it could expand to more readers. The combined price of hardware and a one- to two-year daily subscription should be about half of retail. So far we have few details on what you’ll get for your money, but expect a WiFi tablet from a major manufacturer, with 3G and/or 4G possible in the future. If you’re from the city of brotherly love and want more details on this early-stage plan, see the video after the break. Continue reading Philly papers to offer subscribers discounted Android tablets that make terrible birdcage lining (video) Philly papers to offer subscribers discounted Android tablets that make terrible birdcage lining (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 13 Jul 2011 00:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Click here to view this media As John wrote about yesterday, Alan Grayson is going to run for Congress again in Florida. He joined Ed Schultz to talk about the current negotiations going on right now over raising the debt ceiling and he didn’t have too many kind words about our social safety nets being put on the table and for Republicans being given a complete pass for claiming we have to make huge cuts to the budget without explaining what those cuts are. As Grayson noted, if we ended a lot of our ill advised military adventures, that would go a really long way towards balancing our budget rather than asking it be taken our of the hides of everyday Americans. Ed Schultz asked Grayson about President Obama putting Social Security on the table during these debt ceiling negotiations and I don’t necessarily agree with the way Schultz characterized it since unfortunately we don’t know enough details about what either side is offering up during these negotiations. That said, I do agree that I don’t think our social safety nets should have been put out there as a bargaining chip so that the Obama administration might be able to use to make the Republicans look like the unreasonable fools that they are if they still refuse to make a deal. The problem with making that offer is what if the Republicans take it? Then what? Anyway, par for the course, Grayson as usual didn’t pull too many punches here with how he feels about all of this. Transcript below the fold. SCHULTZ: Welcome back to THE ED SHOW. One of the things we‘ve been talking about is whether President Obama will draw a line in the sand when we need him to. Is the president trying to strengthen Social Security and Medicare? Or is he talking about crucial cuts? Let‘s bring in former congressman, Alan Grayson, who has been a fighter for the left since the day he got on the national scene. Congressman, good to have you with us tonight. I want to listen to part of what President Obama said today about the entitlements and Medicare. Here it is. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) OBAMA: The vast majority of Democrats on Capitol would prefer not to have to do anything on entitlements. And I‘m sympathetic to their concerns because they are looking out for folks who are already hurting and already vulnerable. And there are a lot of families out there and seniors who are dependent on some of these programs. And What I try to explain to them is: number one, if you look at the numbers, then, Medicare in particular, will run out of money, and we will not be able to sustain that program. (END VIDEO CLIP) SCHULTZ: Alan Grayson, you have been a man known for your unvarnished opinion. If you were in Congress today, what would be your advice and how would you handle this? FMR. REP. ALAN GRAYSON (D), FLORIDA: I would not vote for any cuts in Medicare, I would not vote for any cuts in Social Security, and I‘d grabbing everybody else by the collar and telling them they should do the same. Look, you know, the Republicans have been saying now for months that we need to cut $2 trillion out of the budget over the next 10 years, without ever saying what they would cut. They got a free ride for the past two months or three months talking about all these wonder cuts that are going to reduce the deficit, reduce the debt, without ever saying what they are. Now, I know a way to cut $2 trillion out of the deficit in the next 10 years. You could end the wars. You could end the wars in Afghanistan, you could end the war in Iraq, and Libya, those wars cost us $157 billion last year, and the cost is going up, not down. If you want to save $2 trillion, how about peace? Why don‘t we give that a try? SCHULTZ: Social Security is even a bigger deal, it seems like. Although Harry Reid was on “Meet the Press” I think a couple of months ago, said we didn‘t have a problem. But I guess now, the president wants to put it on the table. The president has acknowledged it‘s not part of the deficit problem, and I think that‘s starting to sink with in Americans. Here it is. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) OBAMA: With respect to Social Security, Social Security is not the source of our deficit problems. Social Security, if it is part of a package, would be an issue of how do we make sure Social Security extends its life and is strengthened. (END VIDEO CLIP) SCHULTZ: So, strengthened means cuts, OK? Let‘s get the code language out here. Any time you want to strengthen something, you are going ask consumers, who pay into the program that‘s been successful for all these decades, that they just got to do more for the top 2 percent. So, if it‘s not the source of the problem, why in the hell do we have to address it now? What do you think? GRAYSON: Because Washington has now divided between the meanies and weanies. That‘s the real two-party system today in Washington. The meanies and weanies. The meanies want to take Social Security and Medicare away from grandma and grandpa. The weanies are quite willing to go along with it and compromise. Well, people need Social Security and Medicare to live. And there‘s no compromise between life and death. There‘s no middle ground. The average person who retires in America today has less than $50,000 in savings. That‘s good for one, maybe two years, and those people live for close to— SCHULTZ: Yes. GRAYSON: There is no way anybody in America can get by without Social Security and Medicare, and that‘s what right wing in America wants to take away. I say, no, no compromise. We need to strengthen Social Security and Medicare. I want to see Medicare cover dental work. I want to see Medicare cover hearing aids. I want to see Medicare cover actual medical needs. SCHULTZ: Is this president weak? Why isn‘t he saying what you‘re saying? Why does he throw $4 trillion out on the table when he knows that‘s an unrealistic number? Is he just trying to prove a point that the Republicans are never going to deal with him? Hell, anyone could have told me that last week. GRAYSON: He is the president. He‘s the leader of my party. So, I don‘t know exactly what to say. But I do this—all of this compromise hasn‘t accomplished anything useful for anybody on our side. It hasn‘t done any good at all. The president should be saying to people, the Republican Party is cruel. The Republican Party is bigoted. The Republican Party cares about tax breaks for the rich. SCHULTZ: Congressman, there‘s a lot of people who need your voice. Are you going to get back into this political arena? GRAYSON: Ed, I announced today that I‘m running for Congress again. And already, at our Web site, congresswithguts.com, hundreds of people have made a contribution. So, yes, I‘m back. SCHULTZ: It‘s good to have you back. Former Congressman Alan Grayson with us tonight here on THE ED SHOW, thanks so much.
Continue reading …France, Britain and US acknowledge Nato military action alone unlikely to force Libya’s leader to step down Efforts to find a political solution to the Libyan crisis are intensifying as France, Britain and the US acknowledge that Nato military action alone is unlikely to force Muammar Gaddafi to step down. The UN and western countries are urging formal talks between the Benghazi-based rebels and the Gaddafi regime amid new signs that Tripoli might agree to discuss a transition of power. Alain Juppé, France’s foreign minister, provided the strongest indication yet of optimism about the outcome. “Emissaries are telling us Gaddafi is ready to go, let’s talk about it,” he said on Tuesday. “The question is no longer about whether Gaddafi goes but when and how.” François Fillon, the French prime minister, told the national assembly that a “political solution is taking shape”. Al-Baghdadi Ali al-Mahmoudi, Libya’s prime minister, told the French daily Le Figaro that the regime was ready to negotiate “unconditionally” as long as Nato action ended. Gaddafi would not be involved in talks, he said, and would “respect the will of the people”. France’s defence minister, Gérard Longuet, suggested on Sunday that Gaddafi could remain in Tripoli “in another room in his palace” and Nato could stop its bombing campaign while talks began. The push for a political solution is being spearheaded by the UN envoy, Abdel-Ilah al-Khatib, who met Mahmoudi in Tripoli at the weekend. Khatib told reporters: “I am urging the parties to increase their focus on working towards a political solution. We would like to see indirect discussions evolve into direct talks.” A key issue was agreeing on a body to manage a transition. It would have to be “all-inclusive and involve representatives from all political and social groups as well as a wide range of factions, regions and tribes.” He added, however, that there was a significant gap between the two sides. President Barack Obama is backing Moscow’s mediating efforts in Libya if they lead to Gaddafi stepping down. Italy, hosting Nato’s air operations, added its voice to the chorus on Tuesday. Franco Frattini, the foreign minister, told Algeria’s al Khabar newspaper: “We are convinced that the Libyan crisis requires a political solution characterised by an end to fighting; Gaddafi, who lacks all legitimacy, leaving the stage; and the launching of an inclusive democratic process involving all parts of Libyan society.” Western governments admit they are worried about the lack of a decisive blow by Nato, the mounting cost of the campaign and the weakness of the rebel forces, but say they are encouraged by a widening agreement about the desired political outcome. “There is a consensus on how to end the crisis, which is that Gaddafi has to leave power,” Juppé told France Info radio. “That [consensus] was absolutely not a given two or three months ago.” Initiatives by the African Union and South Africa have faded away. “There are indications that people around Gaddafi would envisage a solution that includes him being out of power rather than in,” said one diplomat. “We are hearing that from various people but it’s not yet set in stone. There is an emerging international consensus around a political track and momentum is building up, but there is no breakthrough.” Libya experts suspect that ideas about Gaddafi stepping down may be being floated without official authorisation to test western reactions. The approach of Ramadan, the Muslim month of fasting at the beginning of August, is also adding to pressure to find a way out of the impasse. Later this week the Libya international contact group meeting in Istanbul is expected to channel more cash to the Transitional National Council and step up efforts for a political settlement. Nato governments insist there can be no backtracking from the arrest warrant issued for Gaddafi by the international criminal court but continue to hope that he might yet flee to a country such as Zimbabwe, Belarus or Sudan – even though he has always insisted he will stay in Libya. Muammar Gaddafi Libya Nato Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Africa Ian Black guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Jon Stewart and The Daily Show, in the middle section of the above video, did an expose on the Rupertgate phone-hacking scandal that’s engulfing Murdoch and is beginning to bleed into his American operations. A report is circulating that 9/11 families were targeted as well. WIll Bunch: Over the last few days, many people — myself included — have asked variations of this question: Will the Rupert Murdoch/News of the World phone hacking scandal, which some are calling Britian’s Watergate , reach us here in America, where the modern-day Citizen Kane’s holdings including the Fox TV and movie empire as well as the Wall Street Journal and the New York Post. The answer may be yes: A report in a rival British tabloid the Daily Mirror makes an allegation that, if proven true, many Americans will find just as revolting as the phone hacking of 13-year-old morder victim Milly Dowler, maybe even more so. Did Murdoch’s London-based News of the World contact a New York City private investigator about phone hacking American victims of the 9/11 attacks? The pair chatted behind closed doors as a former New York cop made the 9/11 hacking claim. He alleged he was contacted by News of the World journalists who said they would pay him to retrieve the private phone records of the dead. Now working as a private investigator, the ex-officer claimed reporters wanted the victim’s phone numbers and details of the calls they had made and received in the days leading up to the atrocity. A source said: “This investigator is used by a lot of journalists in America and he recently told me that he was asked to hack into the 9/11 victims’ private phone data. He said that the journalists asked him to access records showing the calls that had been made to and from the mobile phones belonging to the victims and their relatives. “His presumption was that they wanted the information so they could hack into the relevant voicemails, just like it has been shown they have done in the UK. The PI said he had to turn the job down. He knew how insensitive such research would be, and how bad it would look.” Indeed. That said, this article raises more questions than it answers, and I would note a couple of major caveats. One, the story is pretty thinly sourced, as we say in the business. Two, the Mirror is a non-Murdoch-owned British tabloid driven by the same kind of competitive pressures that led to this whole scandal in the first place. But I think the significance is this: Given the scandal in the UK, the American activities of Murdoch-controlled journalists — at both his British publications and his U.S. enterprises — deserve closer scrutiny, including from law enforcement. Maybe Murdoch’s journalists’ alleged illegal activities stopped at the far shores of the Atlantic, but we should find out for sure. I’ve asked the question a few times as C&L has covered this story. Have Fox News and/or other Murdoch entities applied the same phone-hacking skills to the U.S.? Rupert Murdoch may be heading off to answer questions before Parliament. News Corp. chairman and CEO Rupert Murdoch has been asked to appear before British Parliament to answer question about his company’s phone hacking scandal, as well as his son James and News International chief executive Rebekah Brooks. The culture, media and sport select committee, which has published critical reports on the affair, has written to the trio of executives inviting them to appear, the Guardian reported. News International said in a statement: “We have been made aware of the request from the CMS select committee to interview senior executives and will cooperate. We await the formal invitation.” CREW is demanding an investigation into Murdoch’s stateside activities. Ellen at Newshounds has six good reasons to demand an investigation into the company’s activities here. And you can go to Media Matters for a petition demanding such action. Eric Boehlert writes: Scandal Woes Mount for Murdoch’s Wall Street Journal Publisher The revelation yesterday that Britain’s former Prime Minister, Gordon Brown, alleged that his personal information was obtained illegally by Rupert Murdoch’s Sunday Times only intensifies the pressure on Les Hinton, Murdoch’s longtime confidant and publisher of the Wall Street Journal. Hinton was already facing scrutiny for the phone hacking scandal because he oversaw Murdoch’s News of The World when the tabloid appears to have engaged in rampant phone hacking. Worse, Hinton oversaw an internal investigation into the matter that James Murdoch now acknowledges “wrongly maintained that these issues were confined to one reporter .” Now with the Brown allegations come additional woes: Brown accused the paper of getting his bank details, saying he was “genuinely shocked” by its methods. The allegations widen the scandal that brought down Britain’s best-selling newspaper, the News of the World, to other newspapers also owned by Murdoch’s News International media group. Brown expressed dismay at the allegations Monday night and has given investigators “all relevant evidence” he has about the matter, according to a statement from his office. “The family has been shocked by the level of criminality and the unethical means by which personal details have been obtained,” the statement said. “The matter is in police hands.” Brown alleges the Sunday Times’ sting took place over a ten-year period . And who oversaw the Sunday Times during key portions of that span? Since the scandal took off, their stock price has been failing so Murdoch bought back a ton of shares: Rupert Murdoch’s $5bn News Corp buyback halts share slide The Guardian publishes a very good op-ed on the media and its corrupt, elitist purposes: This media is corrupt – we need a Hippocratic oath for journalists Our job is to hold power to account. Instead, most of the profession simply ventriloquises the concerns of the elite. Is Murdoch now finished in the UK? As the pursuit of Gordon Brown by the Sunday Times and the Sun blows the hacking scandal into new corners of the old man’s empire, this story begins to feel like the crumbling of the Berlin Wall. The naked attempt to destroy Brown by any means, including hacking the medical files of his sick baby son, means that there is no obvious limit to the story’s ramifications. The papers cannot announce that their purpose is to ventriloquise the concerns of multimillionaires; they must present themselves as the voice of the people. The Sun, the Mail and the Express claim to represent the interests of the working man and woman. These interests turn out to be identical to those of the men who own the papers. So the rightwing papers run endless exposures of benefit cheats, yet say scarcely a word about the corporate tax cheats. They savage the trade unions and excoriate the BBC. They lambast the regulations that restrain corporate power. They school us in the extrinsic values – the worship of power, money, image and fame – which advertisers love but which make this a shallower, more selfish country. Most of them deceive their readers about the causes of climate change. These are not the obsessions of working people. They are the obsessions thrust upon them by the multimillionaires who own these papers. The corporate media is a gigantic astroturfing operation: a fake grassroots crusade serving elite interests. In this respect the media companies resemble the Tea Party movement , which claims to be a spontaneous rising of blue-collar Americans against the elite but was founded with the help of the billionaire Koch brothers and promoted by Murdoch’s Fox News.Journalism’s primary purpose is to hold power to account. This purpose has been perfectly inverted. Columnists and bloggers are employed as the enforcers of corporate power, denouncing people who criticise its interests, stamping on new ideas, bullying the powerless. The press barons allowed governments occasionally to promote the interests of the poor, but never to hamper the interests of the rich. They also sought to discipline the rest of the media. The BBC, over the last 30 years, became a shadow of the gutsy broadcaster it was, and now treats big business with cringing deference.
Continue reading …How can you tell that Rachel Maddow considers GOP Congresswoman Michele Bachmann a mortal threat to the Obama presidency? Because the MSNBC propagandist can't bear to let her viewers see or hear what Bachmann has to say. Instead, Maddow acts as censorious middleman, twisting Bachmann's remarks beyond recognition to all but Maddow's fellow denizens of the fringe left. Here's an example of Maddow doing this on her show July 7, trotting out three hoary falsehoods about Bachmann in the span of a minute (video clip after page break) — Polling second behind Mitt Romney in the latest Iowa and New Hampshire and national polls is this person, Minnesota congresswoman Michele Bachmann, who frankly, I have to say it and I don't mean it as an insult, I mean it as a true observation. Ms. Bachmann has frankly been a fringe figure in Congress for years now. Her career has been the kind where nobody batted an eye when she proposed amending the United States Constitution to stop our country from adopting the yen as our currency instead of the dollar because she thought that was a threat. Michele Bachmann has tried to argue that the census — the census! — is unconstitutional. Want to see where the census is in the Constitution? It's right there. They didn't have highlighters then, but if they had, that's the part. Michele Bachmann is the kind of member of Congress who warns us about secret concentration camps being set up by the government. Michele Bachmann has been, frankly, the most telegenic member of the Louie Gohmert-Steve King-Phil Gingrey late-night AM radio conspiracy theory fringe of the Republican Party in Congress. Notice how when Maddow makes these claims, she doesn't quote Bachmann or provide any clips of Bachmann making them. The reason is simple — if Maddow does this, her own claims fall apart. The closest Maddow comes to attribution is in the first of her three assertions, of Bachmann's alleged fear of the United States adopting the yen as its currency. To bolster this claim, Maddow showed a March 2009 press release from Bachmann's website, titled “Bachmann Demands Truth: Will Obama Administration Abandon Dollar for a Multi-National Currency?”. Here are its first two paragraphs; the full statement can be read here — In response to suggestions by China, Russia, and other countries around the world calling on the International Monetary Fund to explore a multi-national currency, U.S. Representative Michele Bachmann (MN-6) has introduced a resolution that would bar the dollar from being replaced by any foreign currency. “Yesterday, during a Financial Services Committee hearing, I asked Secretary Geithner if he would denounce efforts to move towards a global currency and he answered unequivocally that he would,” said Bachmann. “And President Obama gave the nation the same assurances. But just a day later, Secretary Geithner has left the option on the table. The American people deserve to know.” Bachmann wasn't concerned with the dollar being replaced by the yen, as Maddow suggests. Bachmann wants to prevent the dollar from being replaced by a
Continue reading …Shares and bonds make up ground on frenetic day as hope grows for smooth introduction of austerity measures Italian shares and bonds made up ground on Tuesday as politicians of all stripes worked frantically to shore up confidence in their country and prevent it being sucked into the same maelstrom as Greece. The blue chip FTSE Mib index closed 1.2% up at 18,510.53 after a dizzying session that saw it dip 4.7% after the opening. Sentiment began to change with an auction of short-dated treasury bonds. Though the return demanded by investors soared, from just over 2.1% at the last such auction to almost 3.7%, the demand exceeded supply by more than half. That reflected a growing conviction that Silvio Berlusconi’s government could steer through a package of austerity measures swiftly, and without concessions. Parliamentary managers vowed the package, which aims to clip €40bn (£35.1bn) from the deficit, would be approved by the Senate on Thursday and in the lower house, the Chamber of Deputies, by Sunday. The finance minister, Giulio Tremonti, hastened back to Rome from a meeting of his EU counterparts in Brussels to cut a deal with the opposition on last-minute changes. One such involved limiting or scrapping an increase in the levy on treasury bonds that would have penalised smaller investors and curbed demand at a time when Italy’s debt managers sorely need buyers. By the afternoon, the spread on Italy’s benchmark 10-year bonds, relative to their German equivalents, was back below 3%, after touching almost 3.5%. That was nevertheless higher than Monday night’s close and still nearly a full percentage point above the level Barclays Capital estimated last month was the maximum sustainable in the long term. Tremonti’s austerity package only tackles one issue spooking markets – Italy’s giant public debt and a budget deficit he aims to close by the end of 2014. If anything, though, it could exacerbate another problem, which is Italy’s ultra-low growth – a persistent feature of its economy since 2001 when Berlusconi first returned to office. Some opposition politicians were advocating the formation of a cross-party “technical government” without Berlusconi once the austerity measures had been signed into law. The media tycoon also played a role in sparking the sell-off by openly decrying his finance minister in an interview published on Friday. Anna Finocchiaro, the upper house whip of Italy’s main opposition group, the Democratic Party, said: “Berlusconi is costing Italy too much.” Italy European debt crisis European banks FTSE Europe Silvio Berlusconi Stock markets Europe European monetary union Greece Barclays Banking John Hooper guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media President Barack Obama told CBS Evening News host Scott Pelley Tuesday that he couldn’t guarantee Social Security checks would go out on Aug. 3 if the debt ceiling was not raised. “Can you tell the folks at home that no matter what happens, Social Security checks are going to go out on Aug. 3?” Pelley asked. “This is not just Social Security checks,” Obama replied. “These are veterans’ checks, these are folks on disability, their checks. There are about 70 million checks that go out.” “Can you guarantee, as president, those checks will go out Aug. 3?” Pelley pressed. “I cannot guarantee those checks go out on Aug. 3 if we haven’t resolved this issue. Because there simply may not be the money in the coffers to do it,” Obama explained.
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