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Nigerian ‘baby farm’ raided – 32 pregnant girls rescued

Teenage mothers were allegedly forced to give up newborns to human traffickers in southern city of Aba Nigerian police have raided an alleged “baby farm” where teenage mothers were forced to give up their newborns for sale to human traffickers. Thirty-two pregnant girls were rescued from a maternity home run by a trafficking ring in the southern city of Aba, police said. The girls, mostly of school age, were allegedly locked up at the Cross Foundation clinic so they could produce babies to be sold for illegal adoption or for use in ritual witchcraft. Bala Hassan, the Abia state police commissioner, said: “We stormed the premises of the Cross Foundation in Aba three days ago following a report that pregnant girls aged between 15 and 17 are being made to make babies for the proprietor. “We rescued 32 pregnant girls and arrested the proprietor, who is undergoing interrogation over allegations that he normally sells the babies to people who may use them for rituals or other purposes.” Hassan added that four babies, already sold in an alleged deal but not yet collected, were also recovered in the raid. Estimates of the girls’ ages varied. Geoffrey Ogbonna, another police spokesman, was quoted by CNN: “There are about 30 pregnant young ladies; the eldest was 20 years old. Some belong in secondary, even in primary school.” A doctor arrested at the clinic said the babies had been handed over to social welfare for adoption. Some of the rescued girls told police that the hospital owner gave them $192 (£118) for newborn boys and $161 for newborn girls after they were sold. Dr Hyacinth Orikara, proprietor of the Cross Foundation, is likely to face charges of child abuse and human trafficking, police said. Buying or selling babies can carry a 14-year jail sentence. Orikara, reportedly a university graduate and employee of the Abia state health management board, denied the allegations, claiming the home was a foundation to help teenagers with unwanted pregnancies. Human trafficking is ranked the third most common crime in Nigeria after financial fraud and drug trafficking. At least 10 children are sold every day across the country, according to the UN. Traffickers are seldom caught. Babies are sold for up to $6,400 each, depending on the sex, the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons says. Teenagers with unplanned pregnancies are sometimes lured to clinics and then forced to hand over their babies. The children are often put up for illegal adoption or, in some parts of the country, killed as part of witchcraft rituals because they are thought to make charms more powerful. The police carried out similar raids on such clinics in neighbouring Enugu state in 2008. A Nigerian woman was jailed in Britain three years ago for trying to smuggle a baby into the country in order to get on the list for a council flat. Human trafficking Nigeria Africa Children Human rights David Smith guardian.co.uk

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Mitt Romney presidential nomination announcement – live

Mitt Romney makes his official bid for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination at Bittersweet Farm, New Hampshire 11.35am ET: In case you think Bittersweet Farm is a strange place to announce his bid for the nomination, the farm has a long tradition of hosting Republican events thanks to its owners, who are also Romney supporters. Seacoast Online reports more background: Bittersweet Farm has been the site of many Republican rallies and events over the years. The Scammans have hosted former President George W. Bush, former New Hampshire Governor John H Sununu and his son, former US Senator John E Sununu. The aide said Romney appreciates the farm’s “rich political history” as well as the traditions of the New Hampshire primary and the state’s role in picking a presidential nominee. The formal announcement will come during a noon cookout featuring hamburgers, hot dogs and chili made using the recipe of Romney’s wife, Ann. All proceeds from the sale of food will go toward the American Legion Post 35′s global war on terror memorial fund. And anyway, Michele Bachmann is going to make her announcement in the Iowa town of her birth: Waterloo. Talk about optics – although of course the British have good memories of Waterloo. 11.30am ET: The big question of course is: can Mitt Romney win the Republican nomination? And the answer isn’t clear. Although polls regularly show Romney as the leading candidate among Republicans, polls taken this far out from the start of the primary season – which doesn’t start until February 2012 with the Iowa caucuses – are worse than useless. Polls taken at this point in 2007 confidently predicted that Hillary Clinton would be battling Rudy Guiliani for the presidency in 2008. And in 2003 the polls unanimously decalred that Howard Dean would be the Democratic nominee. On Intrade, the financial-style predictions market , Romney is also the clear front-runner with a 29% rating – well ahead of his major rivals Tim Pawlenty (19%) and Jon Huntsman (16%). But below the top three sits Sarah Palin on a mere 6.5% – but the uncertainty over Palin’s plans is keeping that number low. Should Palin announce it would surely shoot up. Preamble: Can you feel the Romentum? After months of gearing up, today Mitt Romney officially throws his hat into the ring for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination, with an announcement at 12 noon (5pm BST) in the crucial first primary state of New Hampshire. We’ll be following the announcement here live – but there’s no doubt that Romney is intending to run, as he has made clear by his actions ever since the 2008 election. Romney’s announcement remarks will take place at Bittersweet Farm in Stratham , about an hours drive outside of Manchester, New Hampshire. Will it be a bittersweet moment for Romney and his supporters? If you want to watch the event live on your computer, Romney’s campaign website will be offering a video stream from 12 noon ET. Mitt Romney US elections 2012 Republicans New Hampshire US politics United States Richard Adams guardian.co.uk

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At Ellis Island, Sarah Palin attacks the DREAM Act: It ‘usurps’ legal immigration

Click here to view this media Yesterday, while making a photo op of Ellis Island on her bus tour of the East Coast, Sarah Palin made plain she’s with the nativist wing of the Tea Party — which is to say, pretty much the mainstream of today’s Republican Party — in opposing the DREAM Act: PALIN: The immigrants of the past, they had to literally and figuratively stand in line and follow rules to become U.S. citizens. I’d like to see that continue. And unfortunately, the DREAM Act kind of usurps that-the system that is a legal system to make sure that immigrants who want to be here legally, working hard, producing and supplying revenue and resources for their families, that they’re able to do that right and legally. Unfortunately, the DREAM Act doesn’t accomplish that. Not that facts or reason ever matter much with Palin, but Andrea Nill at ThinkProgress does point out that, in fact, the DREAM Act perfectly fits Palin’s description: Actually, the DREAM Act aims to accomplish precisely what Palin described. Under the DREAM Act bill that Republicans killed last December, applicants would have had to go through a rigorous process of background checks, in addition to paying taxes, learning English, and either serving in the military or attending college. They would have then received a “conditional nonimmigrant” status and would be required to “stand in line” for ten years before being granted legal immigrant status. The Congressional Budget Office estimated that the same bill would reduce the deficit by $1.4 billion over ten years. Today’s Republicans are so deeply in the thrall of their nativist wing that they can’t even bring themselves to endorse a common-sense piece of immigration legislation like the DREAM Act. Instead, they succumb to the pack of lies that the nativists sell . They will regret this deeply, and soon. I’m looking forward to seeing Sarah Palin trying to sell her “Latino outreach” in the 2012 election. Bet it goes over about as well as Sharron Angle’s ill-fated stab.

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Tory-led council outsources jobs to India

Unions say Birmingham council has begun exporting IT posts and warns of thousands of job loses if other town halls follow suit Union leaders have attacked a Tory-led council over its involvement in the “export” of up to 100 jobs to India, amid warnings that the move could be “the tip of the iceberg” that could see thousands of taxpayer-funded jobs go overseas. Unite claimed Birmingham city council, a Conservative-Liberal Democrat run authority led by the Conservative Mike Whitby, is the first town hall in the country involved in plans to move jobs to India for work paid for by taxpayers. A redundancy notice for 70 IT posts has already been served. Officials said they feared more council jobs in Birmingham and other local authorities could also go abroad as private companies delivering public services prepare to go to “any length” to cut costs for profit. Another union cited jobs being “shipped out” as it launched a strike ballot of nearly 10,000 members at Birmingham city council over job cuts, workers’ pay and conditions. The union is balloting against plans known as the Birmingham contract, which it claims breaks away from nationally agreed terms and conditions, abolishes payments for weekend and out of hours working and weakens workers’ rights in grievances and disciplinaries. It said the ‘contract’ will have a disproportionate impact on low paid women workers. Unison said that, to add “insult to injury”, staff who face redundancy at the arms-length IT company are being told they must train up their replacements in India before they go. But the council said the new staff contracts were designed to make the authority “fit for the challenges facing the public sector” and contribute to the budgetary savings it has to make. Alan Rudge, the cabinet member for equalities and human resources, said: “There is a clear need to bring our organisation into line with other leading employers, and the new Birmingham contract will make the council more resilient to future pressures through the reduction in costs and the introduction of broad job groups.” Service Birmingham, a joint venture between the outsourcing firm Capita and the council, confirmed it has already transferred 17 “back office” IT support roles to India and has issued formal notice of redundancy plans for local workers ahead of the transfer of a further 38 roles in the summer. A further 45 jobs will be transferred to India later in the year if the first two phases of transfer go well, according to a spokesman. In a statement, Service Birmingham said: “It is important to emphasise this is a very small element of the work we do for the council, and we remain absolutely committed to our Birmingham workforce.” The Unite national officer, Peter Allenson, said: “It beggars belief that council workers will be forced to train workers from overseas to do their jobs so Capita and Birmingham council can lift and shift them abroad. “Unite is demanding that Birmingham city council halts its plans. We fear this could be just the tip of the iceberg and other councils could follow suit. Thousands of public sector jobs could go. Once these jobs go, they will not come back.” He added: “The blame lies firmly with private companies prepared to go to any length to cut costs for profit and this Tory-led council which is encouraging them to get away with it.” A council spokesman insisted the transfer of jobs to India “is a story about Service Birmingham” and referred all comments to its spokesman. The council has a one-third stake in the venture. Capita, through the Service Birmingham company, has the contract for the council’s IT and call centre services until 2021. It is also working on the authority’s business transformation programme, which has been running since 2005 and aims to save the council £1bn in costs by 2016. Despite the planned redundancies, Service Birmingham said it was committed to increasing local workforce numbers. “Offshore staff will only ever represent a fraction of Service Birmingham’s 1,100 workforce,” the statement said. “In addition, we will honour our jobs promise to employ an additional 520 people in the Birmingham area by 1 April 2011, 720 by 1 April 2013 and 800 by the end of 2016.” The council plans to cut £300m from the city budget by 2015 as well as shed 7,116 jobs, which Unison says represents 37% of the council workforce. The union claims that, once part-time jobs are factored in, the total job losses increase to 10,000, which will have a “devastating impact on council services”. Mark New, a regional organiser for the union, said: “Members are upset and angry and Unison is asking them to take a stand against these savage cuts. To add insult to injury, the council plans to outsource more jobs to India. “The massive job cuts, the pay freeze and privatisation, will leave the council struggling to provide decent services to people in Birmingham. “Birmingham council is cutting back too hard and too fast. The cuts will devastate whole communities and the local economy, as well as the lives of council workers and their families.” Local government Public sector cuts Public services policy Public finance Conservatives Liberal Democrats Hélène Mulholland guardian.co.uk

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Celebrity Planned Parenthood Boosters Ignore Reality

When, in a recent New York Times interview, Comedian Chelsea Handler expressed disgust with the MTV show “16 and Pregnant,” pro-lifers (and fans of traditional morality) might have had reason to hope. “Getting rewarded for being pregnant when you're a teenager?” she fumed, “Are you serious? I mean, that makes me want to kill somebody.” Unfortunately, that somebody is a fetus. She went on to speak proudly of her own experience. “I had an abortion when I was 16,” she stated. “Because that's what I should have done. Otherwise I would now have a 20-year-old kid. Anyway, those are things that people shouldn't be dishonest about it.” This should come as no surprise to defenders of life, since for years now the media and those in the spotlight of American fame have contributed to the continued undermining of a culture of life, and have downplayed or simply ignored unpleasant stories that undermine the pro-abortion position. In February, the pro-life group Live Action released a hidden-camera video of a New Jersey Planned Parenthood employee giving advice to a man posing as a pimp about obtaining abortions and birth control for the underage foreign prostitutes he traffics. The networks ignored the story for a week. During the subsequent House of Representatives effort to defund the organization, only ABC mentioned the Live Action video as a cause. In fact, the networks during that month preferred to cover the Charlie Sheen's meltdown 20 times more than the Planned Parenthood scandal, the Culture and Media Institute found . While the news media prefer to ignore the debate over Planned Parenthood's federal funding, many celebrities haven't. Actress Scarlett Johansson came out swinging in support of Planned Parenthood, taking time out of her acting career to put on a show for Planned Parenthood's supporters, and filming an ad that urged the public to contact Congress and tell them not to cut funding. In her ad she desperately pleaded, “Every year, Planned Parenthood provides essential care to millions of women, men, and teens. For many people – especially those with low incomes – Planned Parenthood is their only source of health care. Let your Members of Congress know where you stand. Go to IStandWithPlannedParenthood.org . Sign the petition.” Johansson ignored the 8,000 Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHC's) that offer many of the same health services as Planned Parenthood, including others Planned Parenthood does not, at little or no cost. Johansson also mourned the lack of money for things like breast exams if funding was to be cut, but failed to mention that mammograms are not actually offered by Planned Parenthood. Singer Katy Perry, in a recent article in Vanity Fair , talked about her strict religious upbringing and how it supposedly tainted her view of Planned Parenthood: “Growing up, seeing Planned Parenthood, it was considered like the abortion clinic … I was always scared I was going to get bombed when I was there … I didn't know it was more than that, that it was for women and their needs. I didn't have insurance, so I went there and I learned about birth control.” Perry claims her upbringing misled her about Planned Parenthood, but Planned Parenthood is doing some misleading of its own. According to its 2011 fact sheet , with figures from 2009, abortion only makes up three percent of its services. However, the same fact sheet noted that Planned Parenthood served three million people and performed 332,278 abortions. This means 11 percent of its patients received an abortion, not three percent. Johansson and Perry are not the only stars rushing to Planned Parenthood's side. During the budget cutting debate, many others spoke out . Lisa Edelstein of “House M.D.” cut an ad for the left-wing group MoveOn.org that featured lies and scare tactics to oppose Planned Parenthood's defunding. Singer Hayley Williams, Oscar-winner Gweneth Paltrow and actress Julianne Moore did their part parroting the group's talking points. Still, there are some celebrities coming out on the side of life. Supermodel Kathy Ireland recently told FOX411's Pop Tarts, “I think Planned Parenthood needs to reassess and look at what their values are, what their mission is, what their goals are, and do they deserve government funding?” But the most surprising recent exception to the pro-abortion celebrity echo chamber came from rock n' roll. Rock star and Aerosmith front man Steven Tyler revealed in Aerosmith's autobiography Walk This Way , just how gut-wrenching his own personal experience with abortion was. In the mid-70s, Tyler had become the legal guardian of his teenaged girlfriend and eventually conceived a child with her. Friends persuaded Tyler abortiona was necessary and he persuaded his reluctant girlfriend to have an abortion in the fifth month of pregnancy, a decision that would come to haunt them both. He reflected in Walk This Way: “It was a big crisis. It's a major thing when you're growing something with a woman, but they convinced us that it would never work out and would ruin our lives … You go to the doctor and they put the needle in her belly and they squeeze the stuff in and you watch. And it comes out dead. I was pretty devastated. In my mind, I'm going, Jesus, what have I done?” The abortion of his first child affected Tyler in ways noticeable even to others; his friend Ray Tabano remembers “it really messed Steven up because it was a boy. He was there, he saw the whole thing and it [messed] him up big time.” Tyler faced guilt and trauma that he tried to escape through his use of drugs. Like so many men and women who have faced the reality of an abortion, the guilt followed him: “It affected me later when I tried to get my real wife pregnant. I was afraid. I thought we'd give birth to a six-headed cow because of what I'd done with other women. The real-life guilt was very traumatic for me. Still hurts.” Obviously Tyler was not the only one affected by this abortion. Julia Holcomb, the teenager who carried Tyler's first child for five months and then was persuaded to abort, has also recently come out to speak about the event . Though she and Tyler seem to disagree about some of the specifics of the events surrounding their relationship, the share a deep regret for the abortion. She wrote: “It was a horrible nightmare I will never forget. I was traumatized by the experience. My baby had one defender in life; me, and I caved in to pressure because of fear of rejection and the unknown future. I wish I could go back and be given that chance again, to say no to the abortion one last time. I wish with all my heart I could have watched that baby live his life and grow to be a man.” The story of Tyler and Holcomb demonstrates the reality of abortion, the pain, the guilt, the trauma, and the killing which accompanies the procedure which so many celebrities laud as necessary and freeing. There's good news for the pro-life movement: more Americans than ever see abortion as morally wrong. But, highlighting their cultural disconnect from their audiences, celebrities are rallying around Planned Parenthood and the culture of abortion.

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Housing benefit changes ‘could force 11,000 disabled people out of homes’

Homeless charity Crisis says young disabled people who can no longer afford flats could end up being forced to live on the streets Controversial government changes to housing benefit could see 11,000 young disabled people forced out of their flats, putting them at risk of homelessness, according to campaigners. The homeless charity Crisis says the government’s own figures (pdf) show that almost one in five of the 62,500 people in England, Scotland and Wales affected by the proposed extension of the Shared Accommodation Rate (SAR) have a disability. From 1 January 2012, single people aged 25-34 will only be able to claim housing benefit based on the cost of a room in a shared house rather than a modest one-bed flat, bringing them into line with existing rates for people under 25. The average loss will be £41 a week. This will force many disabled people into housing that is inappropriate for their condition, said Crisis. Although 4,000 of the most vulnerable disabled claimants will be exempt because they need help through the day or night, most ill and disabled people will be forced to move into cheaper accommodation, often outside the area where they live. In a survey of housing professionals published by Crisis last month, 87% said they already had problems finding appropriate properties for people on SAR and 72% believed there was not enough shared accommodation in their area. Leslie Morphy, chief executive of Crisis, said: “This disturbing cut will force people suffering serious physical disabilities or mental illness to share with strangers, even if it damages their health. “Government claims that discretionary funding will be able to support those who need it just don’t add up. “We are deeply concerned that some of the disabled people affected by this will end up homeless, and in the worst cases rough-sleeping.” James, 31, from Coventry, who is on incapacity benefit, faces a cut of £43 a week in his benefit, which will force him to leave the small one-bedroom flat he has lived in since 2008. He has Asperger’s syndrome, a form of autism; a hereditary condition that results in severe mobility problems; and has suffered from ulcerative colitis, a form of inflammatory bowel disease. He says his Asperger’s makes it hard for him to live with strangers, and he fears that the stress of moving from his home will trigger health problems. He says there are no affordable one-bedroom flats where he lives. “I think it’s going to be horrific. I just won’t have the money to stay where I am. It will basically be ‘look for the least terrible option’.” James says he is frustrated by being unable to work. He says he has applied for jobs without success. “One of the things I’m most frustrated by is people saying I’m workshy. This is not a ‘lifestyle choice’. I’m not living in luxury at the taxpayer’s expense, I’m living in penury at the taxpayer’s expense, and I hate it, I hate living on handouts.” According to an equality impact assessment carried out by the Department for Work and Pensions, the average loss per week is £41, rising to £45 a week in the south east and £87 a week in London. The highest losses will be incurred by young people renting in Camden (a loss of £116 a week), Brent (£111), Islington (£109), Tower Hamlets (£109) and Westminster (£108). The Department for Work and Pensions said the measure, which it hopes will save £200m a year, was to ensure greater fairness so that people on housing benefit face similar “affordability choices” to those not on benefits. Disability Housing benefit Communities Housing Patrick Butler guardian.co.uk

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African refugees feared drowned off Tunisian coast

Boats carrying migrants fleeing Libya capsize in rough seas near Kerkennah leaving 250 still missing after 570 rescued About 250 people are missing in the Mediterranean sea after vessels carrying them illegally to Europe got into difficulty off the Tunisian coast, a Tunisian security official has reported. Tunisian coastguards and military rescued 570 people, but many others went into the water when a stampede to get off the small fishing boats – combined with the effect of rough seas – capsized some of the vessels, the official said. “Search operations are still continuing. About 250 people are missing,” said the official from the southern Tunisian port of Sfax, where survivors were taken. “We haven’t found a single body so far.” “Five hundred and seventy people have been rescued. Most of them are in good health and they are in the military barracks in Sfax and some are in hospital. Among those who were hospitalised, three have died,” he said. “They are all of African nationalities and they were on small fishing boats,” said the official, who was speaking on condition of anonymity. The boats encountered problems on Tuesday about 12 miles (20km) off the Tunisian island of Kerkennah as they headed for Italy, the Tap state news agency said. They were carrying refugees fleeing violence in neighbouring Libya. Thousands of people fleeing upheavals in north Africa have been heading to Italy on rickety boats in recent months, creating an immigration crisis in Lampedusa, an Italian island situated halfway between Tunisia and Sicily. Tunisia Refugees Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Libya Africa guardian.co.uk

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UK ecosystem assessment warns of decline in green space

Defra report points out £30bn annual health and welfare benefits from maintaining natural assets Maintaining the UK’s green spaces would reap at least £30bn a year in health and welfare benefits, according to the first attempt to put a price on the natural environment. About a third of the UK’s natural assets – including green spaces, rivers, wetlands and important wildlife habitats – is in danger of being lost to development or degraded through neglect, says a report by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra). The national ecosystem assessment found a marked decline in urban green space, with 10,000 playing fields sold between 1979 and 1997, while only 10% of the UK’s allotments remain. The health benefits of living with a view of green spaces are given a value of up to £300 per person per year, the report says, because they provide areas for exercise and looking at nature lifts people’s spirits. Living close to rivers, coasts and wetlands is also a boon – benefits to residents are about £1.3bn a year. Bob Watson, chief scientific advisor to Defra and co-author of the report, said the assessment should be used to shape government policy at national and local level. “Putting a value on these natural services enables them to be incorporated into policy in the same way that other factors are. We can’t persist in thinking of these things as free. We have to become much better at managing our ecosystems,” he said. While such “ecosystem services” are worth £30bn a year, failing to look after the UK’s natural environment would cost at least £20bn a year, the assessment found. Inland wetlands are worth £1.5bn a year in improving water quality alone and pollinators such as bees are worth at least £430m a year to agriculture. Although the authors were reluctant to put a single figure on the value of the natural environment, the report shows it runs into hundreds of billions of pounds. “Green spaces and blue spaces [such as rivers] have an incredible value. Urban planners need to recognise that value,” said Professor Ian Bateman, co-author of the report. Caroline Spelman, secretary of state for the environment, said: “The assessment is a vital step forward in our ability to understand the true value of nature and how to sustain the benefits it gives us. I want our children to be the first generation to leave the natural environment in a better state than it was left to them.” However, the government has been accused of failing to look after the UK’s natural environment by classifying dozens of environmental and countryside regulations as “red tape” that may be axed as part of its promised “bonfire of regulations”. Within the next few weeks, the government is expected to issue its natural environment white paper, which will draw on the ecosystem assessment. It is expected to include measures to protect areas of beauty and scientific interest, as well as proposals on green spaces. Conservation Wildlife Biodiversity Green politics Rivers Fiona Harvey guardian.co.uk

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Total recall: why retromania is all the rage

From synth pop to Hollywood remakes to collecting manual typewriters, we’re busy plundering the past. But why the fatal attraction? There’s no single thing that made me suddenly think, Hey, there’s a book to be written about pop culture’s chronic addiction to its own past . As the last decade unfolded, noughties pop culture became steadily more submerged in retro. Both inside music (reunion tours, revivalism, deluxe reissues, performances of classic albums in their entirety) and outside (the emergence of YouTube as a gigantic collective archive, endless movie remakes, the strange and melancholy world of retro porn), there was mounting evidence to indicate an unhealthy fixation on the bygone. But if I could point to just one release that tipped me over the edge into bemused fascination with retromania, it would be 2006′s Love , the Beatles remix project. Executed by George Martin and his son Giles to accompany the Cirque du Soleil spectacular in Las Vegas, the album’s 26 songs incorporated elements from 130 individual recordings, both releases and demos, by the Fab Four. Hyped as a radical reworking, Love was way more interesting to think about than to listen to (the album mostly just sounds off, similar to the way restored paintings look too bright and sharp). Love raised all kinds of questions about our compulsion to relive and reconsume pop history, about the ways we use digital technology to rearrange the past and create effects of novelty. And like Scorsese’s Dylan documentary No Direction Home, Love was yet more proof of the long shadow cast by the 60s, that decade where everything seemed brand-new and ever-changing. We’re unable to escape the era’s reproaches (why aren’t things moving as fast as they did back then?) even as the music’s adventurousness and innocence make it so tempting to revisit and replicate. For a moment there, Love looked like it might herald the opening of a new frontier of revenue-generation for rock legends keen to exploit their own archives. Would the Rolling Stones be next, I wondered? So far, surprisingly, the Beatles mash-up has proved to be a one-off, although Kate Bush’s “new” album Director’s Cut does rework songs from 1989′s The Sensual World and 1993′s The Red Shoes (a disappointing move for an artist once so forward-looking). But Love was a chart success and its platinum sales contributed to a remarkable statistic: the Beatles were the second-bestselling albums artist of the 2000s, shifting nearly 28m units. Indeed the Beatles book-ended the decade with 2000′s singles anthology 1 (whose 11.5m copies made it the best-selling album of the 21st century so far) and 2009′s massive reissue programme of the entire back catalogue. Now the Beatles are the Beatles: they tower over the history of pop, so why wouldn’t they be giving Eminem (the noughties No 1 bestseller with 33m) a run for his money? But think again, think comparatively: let’s contrast pop with other commercial art forms such as film or fiction. David Lean and Stanley Kubrick’s 1960s movies are epoch-defining classics and doubtless tick over nicely in DVD rental and TV airings, but neither dead director was breaking box office records this past decade. The quality fiction bestsellers of the 60s – zeitgeisty novels by JD Salinger, Philip Roth et al – remain a presence in our culture but did not trouble any noughties bestseller charts. Equally, there are no modern directors copping licks from Dr’s Strangelove and Zhivago, nor authors styling novels after Portnoy’s Complaint. But there are still bands ripping off the Beatles. Some are even pretty great, such as Tame Impala , whose latest LP Innerspeaker is a bit like the band decided Paperback Writer b/w Rain was rock’s unsurpassable peak and decided to stay there, for ever. Cinema isn’t immune to retromania. Directors such as Quentin Tarantino and Jim Jarmusch still gamely fly the postmodern flag with films that are pastiche genre exercises or larded with in-joke references to cinematic history. The remake has become a fixture of the movie business, not so much for pomo reasons but because it’s what people in the industry call a “presold concept”. Unlike with rock, where most of the biggest-grossing tours involve reunions or wrinkly legends from the 60s and 70s, people won’t go into the multiplexes to see a rereleased classic or blockbuster from yesteryear. But they will, seemingly, turn up for glitzy, pointless updates of major movies, such as the recent travesty of Arthur starring Russell Brand. TV has got in on the remake game, too, with new versions of The Prisoner, Charlie’s Angels, Hawaii Five-O, and Britcom faves such as Minder and The Likely Lads. You also have the retro-chic series Life on Mars and its sequel Ashes to Ashes, whose appeal depends heavily on the sensation of utter immersion in the past through a fetishistic focus on period details of clothing, decor, food and so forth. Nonetheless, there is no doubt that pop music is the area where retromania really runs rampant. There is something peculiar, even eerie, about pop’s vulnerability to its own history, the way the past accumulates behind it and hampers it, both as an actual sonic presence (on oldies radio, as reissues, through nostalgia tours and now via YouTube) and as an overpowering influence. If you want further proof, there is no better evidence than the record that at the time of writing enjoys its 16th week at No 1 in the UK album chart: Adele’s 21. In the US, her success (No 1 album for nine weeks, No 1 single with Rolling in the Deep) is so unusual for a British artist these days, it’s tempting to see it as a flashback to the glory days when the Beatles and Stones sold black American music to white America. Except that those bands were doing it with contemporary rhythm-and-blues. Adele is literally flashing back to black styles that date from the same era as the Beatles and the Stones. Adele is not quite as retro-fetishistic about it as Amy Winehouse, with her beehive, or Duffy, with her black-and-white video for Rockferry, her sample of Ben E King’s Stand By Me in Mercy, and her name’s echo of Dusty Springfield. But there is no doubt that her “anti-Gaga” appeal is based around the return to bygone values of gritty soulfulness. Adele’s 21 consists of “timeless” songcraft influenced by Motown, southern soul and country, framed by “organic” arrangements featuring horns, banjos and accordions, with the whole package given just the slightest lick of modern slickness. The production involvement of Rick Rubin almost proposes Adele as somehow already an iconic veteran like Johnny Cash, in need of reverent rescue in the form of a “stripped down” sound. I lived through the first revival of all this in the 80s, with Dexys Midnight Runners, Carmel, Style Council, the Christians, and the rest. It seemed corny and retrogressive then. In 1984, should someone have said to me, “If you want a vision of the future, imagine Alison Moyet emoting into a human face – for ever”, I’d have laughed at them. I’m not laughing now. And just wait until the industry – desperate and with dollars signs in its eyes – floods the market with facsimiles. Retro is not a completely new phenomenon, of course: pop has an extensive history of revivals and creative distortions of the musical past. What is different about the contemporary retromania is the aspect of total recall, instant recall, and exact recall that the internet makes possible. Fans can drown themselves in the entire history of music at no cost, because it is literally all up there for the taking. From YouTube’s archive of TV and concert performances to countless music, fashion, photography and design blogs, the internet is a gigantic image bank that encourages and enables the precision replication of period styles, whether it’s a music genre, graphics or fashion. As a result, the scope for imaginative reworking of the past – the misrecognitions and mutations that characterised earlier cults of antiquity like the 19th-century gothic revival – is reduced. In music especially, the combination of cheap digital technology and the vast accumulation of knowledge about how specific recordings were made, means that bands today can get exactly the period sound they are looking for, whether it’s a certain drum sound achieved by Ringo Starr with help from the Abbey Road technicians or a particular synth tone used by Kraftwerk. Hence the noughties phenomenon of the 80s revival. It actually started in the later years of the 90s and just kept going: a friend quipped that it has now lasted longer than the actual 80s did. La Roux ‘s Elly Jackson, whose tunes could be placed right next to Yazoo or Eurythmics without the least bit of temporal disruption, declared recently that “synth pop is so over . . . If I see anything more 80s-themed, I’m going to bust”. The gall of the gal! Black Eyed Peas’s last big hit The Time borrowed its chorus from the 1987 smash (I’ve Had) The Time of My Life by Bill Medley and Jennifer Warnes, suggesting that the 80s-extraction industry has run out of good stuff. Peas’s maestro Will.i.am is also a pioneer of 90s recycling: the non-80s parts of The Time sound like boshing techno-rave from the early days of Berlin’s Love Parade. On the radio, every big R&B hit sounds less like R&B and more like Ibiza-trance or circa-1991 hip-house. Guest rappers such as Pitbull or Ludacris are obliged to spout party-hard inanities just like the MCs of Technotronic and CC & Music Factory once did. Head into the post-indie musical zones of NME/Pitchfork and most of what you encounter is “alternative” only in the sense of offering an alternative to living in the present: Fleet Foxes , with their beards and balladry modeled on their parents’ Crosby, Stills & Nash LPs; Thee Oh Sees ‘ immaculate 60s garage photocopies; the Vivian Girls ‘ revival of what was already a revival (C86 shambling pop). In indieland too we’re starting to hear 90s vibes creeping in, from Yuck ‘s grunge-era slacker-isms to Brother ‘s Gallagher-esque “gritpop”. The deeper you venture into the underground, the more music involves pilfering from the past. This is one of the central mysteries that propelled me through the writing of Retromania: how come the very kind of people who would have once been in the vanguard of creating new music (bohemian early adopter types) have switched roles to become antiquarians and curators? In the underground, creativity has become recreativity. The techniques involved are salvage and citation; the sensibility mixes hyper-referential irony with reverent nostalgia. Some of the music made in this spirit, from Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti to the output of labels such as Ghost Box and Not Not Fun , is among the most enjoyable and thought-provoking of our time. The book is not a lament for a loss of quality music – it’s not like the well-springs of talent have dried up or anything – but it registers alarm about the disappearance of a certain quality in music: the “never heard this before” sensation of ecstatic disorientation caused by music that seems to come out of nowhere and point to a bright, or at least strange, future. What seems to have happened is that the place that The Future once occupied in the imagination of young music-makers has been displaced by The Past: that’s where the romance now lies, with the idea of things that have been lost. The accent, today, is not on discovery but on recovery. All through the noughties, the game of hip involved competing to find fresher things to remake: it was about being differently derivative, original in your unoriginality. All the cool obscure resources such as Krautrock or acid-folk have been excavated long ago, which is why the likes of Oneohtrix Point Never, Hype Williams and LA Vampires started looking to 80s mainstream pop, megastars such as Hall & Oates, Michael McDonald and Sade. For today’s underground bands, enough time has elapsed that the overground sounds of yesteryear seem exotic and mysterious. Certainly it’s a lot less obvious to draw on this stuff than the Velvet Underground , Neu! or My Bloody Valentine . But as even these mainstream resources get exhausted – and when I talk about pop’s addiction to its own past, the analogy is less with drugs than with the west’s oil addiction – the cutting edge of hip music is looking to the pasts of foreign countries. For instance, the latest crush of Los Angeles cool-hunters such as Ariel Pink and Puro Instinct is Soviet new wave music, readily findable on YouTube. Associated with the youth subculture known as Stilyagi , the Soviet new wave offers a slightly askew mirror-image of western pop of the 80s. The hipster underground is also where musical retromania intersects with the related phenomenon of vintage chic. From the fad for collecting quaint manual typewriters (either as decorative objects or to actually use) to the continuing boom for vintage clothing, there is a striking parallel with underground musicians’s fetish for obsolete formats such as vinyl and cassette and with the antique-like trade in early analogue synthesisers . But the trend that is most emblematic of our time-out-of-joint culture is the vogue for digital photograph apps such as Hipstamatic and Instagram , which give snapshots the period look associated with cameras and film from the 70s and 80s. (See also ShakeIt , an app that mimics the Polaroid and works faster if you actually shake the iPhone.) What does it say about our era that so many people think it’s cool to place these pre-faded, instant-nostalgia filters on the images that will one day constitute their treasury of precious memories? When they look back to the early 21st century, their pics will look like they were taken two or three decades earlier, summoning up a long-lost era they don’t have any reason to feel nostalgic about. Just like retro video games such as Mega Man 9 that simulate quaint 8-bit visuals via a modern console, these retro-photo apps embody a central paradox of contemporary pop culture. We have all this futuristic technology at our disposal, endowing us with capabilities that would have seemed fantastical in 1972, but it is getting used as a time machine to transport us into yesterday, or to shuffle and share pop-cult detritus from long ago. We live in the digital future, but we’re mesmerised by our analogue past. Hipstamatic-style apps also raise another question: when we listen back to the early 21st century, will we hear anything that defines the epoch? Or will we just find a clutter of reproduction antique sounds and heritage styles? Pop and rock Retro games Games Apps Simon Reynolds guardian.co.uk

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Deadly tornadoes hit Massachusetts

Violent storms leave at least four dead and extensive damage in Springfield and surrounding area sparking state of emergency Tornadoes have roared through Massachusetts, killing at least four people. The storms caused extensive damage in Springfield, the state’s third-largest city. Authorities said two people died in West Springfield, one in Springfield and another in Brimfield. State police said 33 people were inured in Springfield, five of whom required surgery. The state governor, Deval Patrick, said the path of damage from the first and more powerful of the two tornadoes extended from Westfield, just west of Springfield, to the community of Douglas. He said the second cut a path from West Springfield to Sturbridge in the central part of the state. A state of emergency has been declared. Bob Pashko of West Springfield said he was leaving his doctor’s office when the storm started. “The next thing you know the TV says a tornado hit the railroad bridge in West Springfield,” said Pashko, 50. “It’s the baddest I’ve seen.” The Rev Bob Marrone of the First Church of Monson said the storm cleared a view he had never seen before across the valley where the town sits. “I can see the plywood of roofs, and see houses where most of the house is gone,” he said. “The road that runs up in front of my house … There’s so many trees down, it’s completely impassable.” The storm hit the Springfield area after a tornado watch was issued for much of the east coast, including Philadelphia, New York and Boston. Senator John Kerry said he would join Patrick in a planned tour of tornado damage on Wednesday night. Patrick said there was extensive damage in Hampden county, especially to homes and there were a number of live wires brought down. He said at least 48,000 homes were without electricity. The state has opened emergency shelters. Patrick repeated his call for superintendents in the 19 affected communities to cancel school on Thursday. He said state employees in those areas also are urged to stay home and off the roads to give cleanup crews a chance to work. The governor said he had received preliminary reports of looting in Springfield but that it had tapered off as heavy rains set in. Massachusetts Natural disasters and extreme weather United States guardian.co.uk

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