enlarge That’s Nikki Haley, Tea Party darling and new Governor of South Carolina speaking on the steps of the Statehouse in Columbia. Originally scheduled to include an appearance by The Donald, this tea party rally was anticipated to have around 2,000 participants. Unfortunately, Trump was made a chump by Obama and dropped all ego-glorifying pretension to running for president, which included backing out of this South Carolina appearance. So there’s Nikki Haley, all by her lonesome…. literally : Trump’s decision to not enter the GOP presidential race left local Tea Party leaders stewing about the way they had been treated. But about 30 people were on hand Thursday to thank Gov. Nikki Haley, lawmakers and activists for their work to require more on-the-record Legislative votes. It was all part of a tough week for the state’s Tea Party movement. On Wednesday, the S.C. House reversed course and approved a controversial sales tax break for online retailer Amazon. Thursday, the S.C. Senate voted down a proposal that would have rebated any better-than-expected state tax collections to income tax filers. Columbia Tea Party chairman Allen Olson expected as many as 2,000 would have attended Thursday’s rally had Trump been there. But The Donald, a favorite of many who attended the group’s Tax Day rally with U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., elected to not run and dropped the rally from his schedule. “It was a kick in the gut, but it gives you a chance to regroup,” said Olson. “He’s a businessman. He showed his worth.” And frankly, he showed the worth of the tea party. Thirty attendees, huh? Yeah, that’s a powerful and influential group. Contrast that to the 2,500 who came out in March to protest state budget cuts to education and health care . But who do you think the media will ask about–appeasing those 30 never-say-die tea partiers or the thousands of populists fighting for education and healthcare?
Continue reading …enlarge That’s Nikki Haley, Tea Party darling and new Governor of South Carolina speaking on the steps of the Statehouse in Columbia. Originally scheduled to include an appearance by The Donald, this tea party rally was anticipated to have around 2,000 participants. Unfortunately, Trump was made a chump by Obama and dropped all ego-glorifying pretension to running for president, which included backing out of this South Carolina appearance. So there’s Nikki Haley, all by her lonesome…. literally : Trump’s decision to not enter the GOP presidential race left local Tea Party leaders stewing about the way they had been treated. But about 30 people were on hand Thursday to thank Gov. Nikki Haley, lawmakers and activists for their work to require more on-the-record Legislative votes. It was all part of a tough week for the state’s Tea Party movement. On Wednesday, the S.C. House reversed course and approved a controversial sales tax break for online retailer Amazon. Thursday, the S.C. Senate voted down a proposal that would have rebated any better-than-expected state tax collections to income tax filers. Columbia Tea Party chairman Allen Olson expected as many as 2,000 would have attended Thursday’s rally had Trump been there. But The Donald, a favorite of many who attended the group’s Tax Day rally with U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., elected to not run and dropped the rally from his schedule. “It was a kick in the gut, but it gives you a chance to regroup,” said Olson. “He’s a businessman. He showed his worth.” And frankly, he showed the worth of the tea party. Thirty attendees, huh? Yeah, that’s a powerful and influential group. Contrast that to the 2,500 who came out in March to protest state budget cuts to education and health care . But who do you think the media will ask about–appeasing those 30 never-say-die tea partiers or the thousands of populists fighting for education and healthcare?
Continue reading …A white tiger in a field in Hedge End near Southampton caused police emergency measures until identified as a life-size toy “Typical tiger country has three main features,” reads an entry on Tigerpedia.com , online authority on all things tiger-related. “It will always have good cover, it will always be close to water and plenty of prey.” So perhaps it should have come as no surprise to Hampshire police when they were alerted to the presence of a white tiger in a field in Hedge End, near Southampton on the south coast. The force quickly liaised with a local zoo to arrange a tranquiliser dart, before scrambling a helicopter and team of police officers to pursue the beast, only to later discover that the tiger was in fact a life-sized soft toy. Police were contacted at 4pm on Saturday afternoon by “several” members of the public, each reporting the presence of a white tiger in a field in Hedge End. One of the callers had examined the predator through the zoom lens of his camera, and was convinced the animal was real, and threatening. A police officer, who has not been named, was duly dispatched to the field to investigate, and was able to “confirm” that there was indeed a tiger lurking in the grass. Several more officers were sent to the field, and air support called in, but not before nearby Marwell Zoo was contacted by police. “They gave us the option to dart and tranquilise the animal rather than destroy it,” explained a police spokeswoman. She added that officers cleared a nearby golf course and were prepared to close the M27 motorway should the tiger make a run for it, but in the end that proved unnecessary. “After a brief stalk through the Hedge End savannah, the officer realised the tiger was not moving and the air support using their cameras realised there was a lack of heat source,” the spokeswoman said. “The tiger then rolled over in the down draft and it was at that point it became obvious it was a stuffed life-size toy.” It is understood that the tranquiliser dart was not used. On Sunday police revealed a photograph of the tiger, which is being treated as lost property. A spokeswoman said officers had been unable to confirm the owner of the toy, or determine how it had come to be in a field in Hedge End. “The life-sized stuffed animal, of the kind that can be won at funfairs, is being treated as lost property,” she said in a statement. “Police are keen to reiterate that they have a duty to protect the public and therefore take calls of this nature as seriously as any other calls reporting potential dangers to members of the public. There is no further information on this incident available as police continue to focus on more urgent matters.” Animals Police Wildlife Adam Gabbatt guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media As Cenk Uygur noted here, apparently the current Chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform wasn’t doing much oversight of his own company. And as he noted, ironically this is the same man who once made the statement that “There will be a certain degree of gridlock as the president adjusts to the fact that he has been one of the most corrupt presidents in modern times.” Par for the course, Republican hypocrisy knows no bounds. Here’s more from The San Diego Union-Tribune. Company Issa founded underpaid tariffs : The Vista car-alarm company once owned by Congressman Darrell Issa was paying about half the required tariffs on certain parts it imported from China for years and paid an estimated $2.5 million in back duties earlier this year to rectify the situation. Issa no longer owns DEI Holdings Inc., although he is still on the board of the company, which is being sold to Boston-based Charlesbank Capital Partners for $285 million in cash. In a prepared response to questions from The Watchdog, Issa said he was aware of the misclassifications and participated in efforts to resolve them. “Once these issues came to the attention of the board of directors, we called for an independent review by expert counsel,” he wrote. “My understanding is the company has made appropriate tariff adjustments and disclosures both to Customs and our independent auditors.” DEI said the classifications were corrected as quickly as possible when the problem was discovered early in 2010. In the first quarter of this year, the company reported the underpayments to Customs and Border Protection, the federal agency that enforces tariffs. Former DEI executive Mike Wilhelm noted that the disclosure was made a year after the fact, and only after he filed a whistle-blower complaint with Customs on March 14 of this year. “They weren’t going to do it unless I forced them to,” said Wilhelm, a DEI vice president who resigned over the issue in March after 10 years with the company. “Frankly, I became ashamed to work there.” Read on…
Continue reading …This year’s floods have brought more hardship along the Mississippi, but have efforts to control the river made matters worse? The Riverwalk Casino in Vicksburg was one of the last gambling establishments operating on the Mississippi during these historic floods, and the management lined the drive with insistent signs. “Still open”, they said, “Still happy”. Another sign, an electric one, bragged about the new decor. Workers had stuck pink plastic flamingos on the 4ft sand wall. The river had swallowed up the lawn and trees and was lapping at the parking lot. But a few people were still placing bets inside. After all, Americans have been taking their chances with the Mississippi for centuries. It has been more than 250 years since European settlers began building earthen embankments, or levees, on the Mississippi. It has been more than 80 years since America established a flood control system on the river that was supposed to prevent future catastrophes. It has been 40 years since Congress moved to compel local authorities to relocate people from flood-prone areas, or protect them through insurance. And it has been more than 15 years since Bill Clinton ordered a White House study to determine what could be done to reduce flood damage. So why has this year’s flooding of the Mississippi brought so much hardship to so many people? After Illinois, Kentucky, Arkansas and Tennessee, the swollen river is expected to reach its high water mark in southern Louisiana this week before emptying in the Gulf of Mexico. The authorities say they are confident their preparations will keep New Orleans above water. But small communities in Louisiana will face their worst flooding over the next week, and the waters are likely to stay until mid-June. Seen one way, the floods are an act of nature, beyond human control – and America got off relatively lightly. Despite extensive property damage, with predictions that more than a million acres of land would go underwater, only four deaths due to flooding have been recorded so far, in Arkansas and Mississippi. Industries, population centres and shipping in the Mississippi have been protected. Unlike in Hurricane Katrina, the Army Corps of Engineers, which is in charge of flood control, has had no levee failures. Looked at another way, the flooding was entirely predictable. Damage to homes and fields in the Mississippi’s way should have been avoidable. For all the effort over the years put into controlling the Mississippi, for many individuals – and even entire towns – there is only the illusion of safety. John Scroggins, 79, thought he knew all there was to know about floods. He spent 32 years as a civilian technician in the Army Corps of Engineers fighting floods. When he moved to the Magnolia Road are of Vicksburg in 1960, he knew it was a flood-prone area, but thought the possibility was relatively remote. His home, south of the city, is in what is known as a 100-year flood area. That does not mean it will flood only once every 100 years, but that there is a 1% chance of flooding each year. That is more than it seems at first. A house in a 100-year flood area has a one in four chance of getting flooded in the life of a standard 30-year mortgage. Scroggins decided that was an acceptable risk. He also believed he could outwit the Mississippi by building a foot higher than recorded flood levels. The extra foot would save him from having to buy flood insurance, he said, which he thought would be two or three times the cost of a homeowners’ policy. “The flood has never, never been here before, even in 1927,” which is the worst flood on record, he said. “It was always down there in the weeds. This is the grand-daddy of all floods, right up there beside Noah’s. If it hadn’t been for that we would never have seen water here. It’s always been down yonder.” Scroggins found himself paddling around to his next-door neighbour’s house in a flat-bottomed boat. His own property remains above water for now – but only because of a Herculean effort. Scroggins brought in 23 truckloads of sand and built a 5ft wall around it. Now he and his wife are virtual prisoners. Most of the neighbours have left. Scroggins worries that his wife, Wanda, 77, will break a hip if she clambers over the barrier. And if his homemade levee breaks, it will all be a wasted effort. On the opposite side of town, Shirley Burns watched her rented house in the Kings area fill up with people. Like other areas north of Vicksburg, Kings is mainly African-American, low-lying and flood-prone. Mira Jean Gordon arrived after the water in her house reached knee-level and the city turned the electricity off. Loretta Bunch turned up to report that the Waterville Estates, built to replace the old flood-prone housing, was taking on water. The basketball court and playground were inundated. Burns stayed glued to the large flatscreen TV. The waters had risen above the windows on two rows of houses on the other side of the tracks. Burns’s house sat a few inches higher. “It hasn’t affected us. It’s not in our yard yet,” she said. She would pack up and leave when the time came. But where to? “It’s not like you can just pick up and go. There are expenses involved and there is no storage facility available anyway,” she said. Floods are to be expected, she said, at least in these low-lying areas. “It’s a recurring thing. It skipped last year, but it’s been flooding for years.” There is complacency and resignation. Flood experts argue that America’s flood protection standards are lax compared with those in other countries. Authorities have hesitated to relocate people to safer ground, or to enforce laws that compel local authorities to provide flood protection and require homeowners to get flood insurance. “We have been very good at letting people continue to live in harm’s way,” said George Galloway, who was commander of the Army Corps at Vicksburg in the 1970s. “But how much longer can we continue to do that since we know with climate change we are going to have more floods than in the past?” In the 1990s, Galloway led a White House study into improving flood protection. It concluded that most people living in flood areas – up to 7 million across the country – did not fully understand the risks they faced. Most do not insure their homes or belongings against floods. Some might not even realise they are living in a flood-prone area. Others might think they are safe because they are living behind a levee, even though the standards for levees are relatively loose. “We have deceived ourselves into believing we are safe from floods, and that is not the case,” said Galloway. In the Louisiana town of Vidalia, it was getting harder to maintain that illusion as the town worked desperately to protect its prime real estate from floods. A development was planned to rival the grander town of Natchez across the river, with a convention centre, a 102-room hotel, a beauty salon, a surgery centre, a 40-bed hospital offering specialised care for patients on respirators, and a mobile home park. But it was entirely exposed, built between the Mississippi and the levee that protected much of the town. By last week, each building was a mini-fortress ringed with Hesco barriers. But it was the convention centre, the town’s pride, that was in most danger. Water was shooting up out of the grounds like a geyser, spewing chunks of earth and undermining the flood defences. Guy Murray, the town’s project manager, went nearly 48 hours without sleep overseeing the effort to plug the cantaloupe-sized hole, known as a sand boil, bringing in 250,000 tonnes of sand to stabilise the situation. Asked why the town chose to build on the wrong side of flood protections, Murray got a strange look on his face. The development was the pet project of his grandfather, the former mayor. “This was just a freak thing out of everybody’s control,” Murray said. “Every building is two feet above the 100-year flood line. This is just a God-given event. Nobody could have ever seen a river this high, ever.” Sheri Rabb, the spokeswoman for the town, laughed at the idea that the flood would force a rethink of development plans. Vidalia is counting on another chain hotel moving in, and was busy wooing other businesses. She said the town, which is relatively dilapidated, had not set a budget for fighting the flood. There was no need to rethink development plans. “This was just a fluke,” she said. “The water did come up in 2008 but this flood was unpredictable, like a tornado.” Why would a town bet so much on an unsafe proposition? America has been in training for a great flood since 1927, when the Mississippi rose so furiously it washed over or broke through more than 140 earthen embankments. About 500 people were killed and half a million left homeless. In the aftermath, Congress undertook to build a flood control system that would span the entire river. It was the most ambitious public works project in US history. It would be unthinkable in today’s budget-cutting times. The Army Corps of Engineers took up its mission in a red-brick building on a high, dry bluff in the centre of Vicksburg. As these floods got under way, military officials and civilian bureaucrats from the corps reviewed the latest data from the Mississippi: how high was the water rising, how much strain was the river exerting on the levees? Their mission, as it has been for 80 years, was to control the oil refineries and other industries that line the banks of the Mississippi from Baton Rouge to New Orleans. Essentially, the plan has operated as a federal subsidy for the refineries along the river and for the rich farmland inside the flood plain, said Craig Colten, an environmental geographer at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge. “It has protected those industries. There has been no major flooding of those industries on the lower stretch of the river since 1927.” The Army Corps of Engineers established a system of 3,500 miles of levees and giant spillways. They would refine a protocol for triggering flood defences. Under orders laid out in acts of Congress from 1928, once water reaches a certain height or pressure, the corps commander is committed to certain responses – blowing up levees in Missouri, or opening up giant floodways in Louisiana – to reduce strain on levees around strategic areas. But some flood experts blame the corps for the very crisis it is facing now. They say it has lulled the public into a false sense of security about its ability to manage the Mississippi. Over the years, individuals and communities moved increasingly into flood-prone areas around the Mississippi because land is cheap, and because they were persuaded the risk of floods is low. It is becoming evident that the Army Corps of Engineers and other forecasters have underestimated the frequency of severe flooding along the Mississippi. “We had a 500-year flood in 1993, a 70-year flood in 2001, and a 200-year flood in 2008. What blows my mind is that I just published this paper in 2008 and every year since then we have had another 10-year flood,” said Robert Criss, a hydrologist at Washington University in St Louis. “The observed frequency of flooding is completely incompatible with the Army Corps estimates.” The forecasts at the time were based on a relatively short historic record. Snow and rainfall patterns change over time, altering the frequency and magnitude of floods. Climate change is also increasing the intensity of storms. Last April saw six times as much rain in the Ohio valley, which drains into the Mississippi, as in a normal year. Criss argues the Army Corps of Engineers forecasts have played down the flood risk, encouraging individuals and corporations to move into flood-prone areas where they are not safe. The corps’s levee-building strategy was also flawed because it did not give the rivers chance to move, Criss said. “We have actually made the flooding worse. Their homes are getting flooded all the time now,” Criss said. “We have got to start moving people and business out of the flood plain.” By the time General Michael Walsh, the commander of the Army Corps of Engineers, began fighting these floods, his mission was refined to its essence – do not let more than 35,000 cubic metres per second of water rush down the Mississippi towards New Orleans. But it came at a cost. The only way to keep flood waters out of New Orleans was to redirect them. The plan called for flooding the Atchafalaya basin, keeping New Orleans safe but condemning scattered hamlets to drowning. “He held off on that decision as long as he could. He hovered at the tipping point for three or four days,” said Charles Camillo, the corps’s official historian. “We might not have operated had it not been for that last rainstorm. That broke our backs. The rain came in, and we could not hold any more water back.” Once the giant steel gates were lifted on the Morganza spillway, the forests and scattered settlements of Louisiana’s Cajun country began to fill with water. According to initial predictions, Butte La Rose, which has about 800 year-round and part-time residents, would be under more than 20ft of water. Days after the first gates were opened, there was no sign of flooding. Officials said the water was moving slowly because the ground was so parched because of a recent drought. In the past few days, Butte La Rose has seen a procession of moving vans as people hurriedly load up their belongings before the mandatory evacuation order goes into effect on Monday. Most of the homes are flimsy affairs – hunting shacks or trailers – but it was a wrench for their owners to leave them. “Come time I will move out,” said Earl Quebedeaux, sitting on a dock at the back of his trailer eating stewed tomatoes out of a tin. “But I don’t believe the water is going to get that high. Last night it only came up a couple of inches, same thing the night before.” And if it does get that high? “Even if it destroys my trailer I’m going to come back. I’ll just build me a house boat.” United States Flooding Louisiana Mississippi Natural disasters and extreme weather Suzanne Goldenberg guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Libya conflict could cost UK taxpayers £1bn over six months as Gaddafi clings on and cost of involvement soars Britain’s involvement in the Libya conflict will cost the taxpayer as much as £1bn if it continues into the autumn as expected, according to expert analysis and data gathered by the Guardian. Two months after western powers began bombing Libyan targets to protect civilians in Operation Unified Protector, the cost to Britain so far in the dozens of bombs dropped, hundreds of sorties flown and more than 1,000 service personnel deployed is estimated at more than £100m, according to British defence officials. But defence economists have told the Guardian the costings are conservative. Francis Tusa, editor of the Defence Analysis newsletter, estimates that by the end of April, Libyan operations had already cost the UK about £300m and that the bill was increasing by up to £38m a week. Military chiefs have acknowledged that the air campaign would last six months. At this rate, the MoD’s own estimates will put the cost of war at about £400m, but the expert view is that the figure will top £1bn by September. Another defence analyst told the Guardian that £1bn was probably at the top end of the scale, but that it wouldn’t be a complete surprise in Whitehall if this was the final bill for six months of operations. “A lot of what they are doing out there is a substitute for training that would have cost anyway,” he said. “The final cost will depend on whether the Treasury is prepared to pay for replacements for all the bombs and missiles that have been used so far.” British warplanes are increasingly involved along with the French and Italians. According to data collected by the Guardian for the six weeks of aerial operations up to 5 May, the British have flown 25% of nearly 6,000 sorties over Libyan skies – second only to the Americans. The US total was inflated by an early surge, since when it has scaled back its operations. For the five weeks to 5 May , Britain flew more sorties than any other country. But British planes have been dropping far fewer bombs relative to the number of flights than their allies. So far, they have attacked about 300 targets, perhaps only 10% of the few thousands destroyed by Nato aircraft. Norway and Denmark have by some distance the highest ratio of bombs dropped in relation to population. The true cost of the operation will not be announced for weeks, according to defence officials. It is certain to be significantly more than the “tens of millions” stated in parliament by the chancellor, George Osborne, shortly after the bombing started. One other thing is certain: the cost of the bombs have been significantly more than the targets they have destroyed. The Nato operation was designed to implement a UN security council resolution authorising force to defend civilians. But after stopping Muammar Gaddafi’s forces wresting back chunks of the east of the country the campaign has had little discernible impact in recent weeks on Gaddafi’s stronghold in the capital. Tripoli has been heavily bombed for the past 10 days, with all Libyan fighting ships either sunk or damaged and many command posts and bunker complexes also hit. However, demonstrations in support of Gaddafi are still common and dissident groups are unwilling to engage his loyalist army, which still controls the west of the country. It is not only the cost that is worrying the Ministry of Defence, and, indeed, defence chiefs in the Pentagon. The reluctance of most countries to commit their air forces to action – Norway, which has dropped about 300 bombs, is to pull out at the end of June – is causing serious concern among military commanders throughout the alliance about whether Nato countries have the political will and military capability to continue operations that now have the stated aim of removing power from Gaddafi, his sons, and closet advisers. For Britain, the Libyan conflict has also presented military commanders and ministers alike with an uncomfortable reminder of the perilous state of the defence budget. As Paul Cornish, head of the international security programme at the thinktank Chatham House, has observed, many of the military capabilities used in and around Libya – HMS Cumberland, the Nimrod R1 eavesdropping plane, the Sentinental surveillance aircraft, and Tornado jets – are among the first casualties to be scrapped or their numbers reduced (in the case of Tornados) as a result of last year’s strategic defence and security review. “The obvious question to ask,” Cornish writes in the latest issue of The World Today, “is whether Britain could have made a contribution to the intervention in Libya had the crisis developed later in 2011 when most of the decommissionings, disbandments, and retirements would otherwise have taken place.” The US led the assault, during the first week flying more than 800 sorties in Libya, of which over 300 were strike sorties. It fired more than 200 Tomahawk cruise missiles from its ships. Britain has fired fewer than 20 Tomahawks, costing an estimated £1m each, from the submarine HMS Triumph. Britain, which has accounted for some 25% of all sorties, was so worried about the gap left by the US when it ceded command to Nato, and stood down its aircraft – including low-flying A10 tankbusting “Warthogs” and C130 gunships – that it urged Washington to think again. The Obama administration agreed only to deploy Predator drones. Libya Middle East Africa Defence policy Foreign policy Muammar Gaddafi Richard Norton-Taylor Nick Hopkins guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …NEW YORK — Fox News still dominates the cable news ratings, but chairman Roger Ailes wants something more: to help elect the next president. That’s the takeaway from Gabriel Sherman’s New York magazine cover story hitting newsstands Monday. Sherman, who’s currently writing a book on Fox News for Random House, looks at how Ailes — who built up a stable of possible presidential contenders after the 2008 election, including Sarah Palin — isn’t so pleased with their chances at beating President Barack Obama in 2012. Ailes doesn’t speak on the record in the article, but several Republicans close to the Fox News chief describe his concerns going into an election year. “He thinks things are going in a bad direction,” another Republican close to Ailes told [Sherman]. “Roger is worried about the future of the country. He thinks the election of Obama is a disaster. He thinks Palin is an idiot. He thinks she’s stupid. He helped boost her up. People like Sarah Palin haven’t elevated the conservative movement.” Ailes, a television titan, has schooled past presidential candidates on how to handle the media. Before helping Rupert Murdoch launch Fox News in 1996, Ailes worked as a strategist for Republican presidents Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush (whom he still talks to regularly). But Palin, a former Alaska Governor and current Fox News contributor, hasn’t always listened to Ailes’ sage advice, as Sherman reported a couple months back. Although Ailes reportedly told Palin to lie low after the Tucson shooting of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Ariz.), she still went ahead with the infamous “blood libel” video. So far, Ailes’ other presidential hopefuls aren’t exactly on the road to the White House. Former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee recently decided to continue hosting a Saturday night show on the network rather than run again for president. Fox contributor John Bolton, the U.N. ambassador under George W. Bush, hasn’t ruled out running but also hasn’t built any significant campaign infrastructure. Former House speaker Newt Gingrich and former Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.), both of whom recently left Fox News, have already hit some rough patches on the campaign trail. Gingrich, in a brutal first week rollout, angered the Republican establishment with a statement on “Meet the Press,” faced questions about a six-figure jewelry debt, and was even doused with glittery confetti in a straight-to-YouTube clip. And, of course, the statement! Meanwhile, Santorum ran into trouble this past week by claiming that Senator and former P.O.W. John McCain doesn’t understand “enhanced interrogation” techniques like waterboarding (which is widely considered a form of torture). Another GOP source told Sherman that “every single [Republican] candidate has consulted with Roger.” However, Ailes isn’t a big huge fan of any of them. Outside of running himself — a somewhat ridiculous idea floated in October 2009 — what’s Ailes left to do if he wants to elect a Republican in 2012? Paging Chris Christie! Sherman reports that Ailes called the New Jersey Governor a few months ago “and encouraged him to jump into the race.” That’s not the first time they’ve discussed the idea. Ailes brought Christie and talk show host Rush Limbaugh to his upstate New York home for dinner last summer. Despite Ailes’ courtship, Christie isn’t running. In the piece, Sherman also provides a behind-the-scenes look at Ailes’ split with Glenn Beck, network disputes over a Palin special, the 2009 feud with the White House, and how Fox News is trying to distance itself from the Tea Party movement — which it heavily promoted in 2009 — by now highlighting straight news stars like Bret Baier and Shepard Smith. (Disclosure: I previously worked with Sherman at the New York Observer). Fox News PR is notoriously aggressive in pushing back against any seemingly negative stories about the network. And even before the New York piece ran online, there was a bit of push-back from the network against the notion that Ailes and Palin are on the outs. Shortly after New York put out a press release Friday morning promoting the upcoming Fox News story, industry blog TVNewser published a response from Ailes in support of Palin. On Thursday, MSNBC host Chris Matthews blasted her recent appearance on Fox News — and Ailes for hiring her in the first place — as “pathetic.” Ailes, in his characteristically combative fashion, fired back: “People tell me all the time it was truly pathetic that I was the one who gave Chris Matthews his start on television.” So we’ll see how Ailes responds now after a Republican close to him anonymously claims he and Matthews may actually have the same opinion of Palin.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Well, it’s official; former Godfather’s Pizza CEO Herman Cain has formerly launched his presidential campaign today . And according to Fox News “political analyst” Angela McGlowan, if Cain just picks wingnut Rep. Allen West as his running mate, he can beat Obama in 2012. Alan Colmes explained why he disagreed: COLMES: Herman Cain… it’s not a coincidence that he announced his candidacy on doomsday. This is a guy who said he’d put no Muslims in his Cabinet. He said Muslims want to either convert you or kill you. He’s a birther. He has absolutely no chance whatsoever of becoming President of the United States. McGlowan interrupted Colmes and reminded him that “being that extreme” could win him the primary to which Colmes basically responded, bring it on if that’s who Republicans want to run in 2012. COLMES: If that’s who you want to have represent you. You want someone who can win the primary who could never win the general election, if that’s the way you want to go, be my guest. Have a good time. Have fun. MCGLOWAN: If he chooses Allen West, he could win. COLMES: Absolutely not. Allen West is another cuckoo for Cocoa Puffs far right extremist. McGlowan also went on to suggest that after the latest Fox attack on President Obama after his speech on the Middle East this week that Hollywood Jews are going to abandon him in droves. Media Matters has more on that — Right-Wing Media’s Deranged Attack: Obama “Sided With Terrorists” : Right-wing media unleashed a crazed onslaught after President Obama’s speech on the Middle East, outrageously asserting that Obama “sided with terrorists” by saying that the 1967 borders should guide negotiations over the formation of a Palestinian state. But this position is nothing new, and American Jewish groups praised today’s speech. Read on…
Continue reading …Three Afghan police killed as group of men wearing suicide vests shoot their way into compound on edge of Khost At least three Afghan police officers have been killed after gunmen wearing suicide vests stormed a government building in eastern Afghanistan. Three or four men armed with assault rifles and wearing explosives strapped to their bodies shot their way into a compound that houses the traffic department, on the edge of Khost. They killed a police guard as they entered and then took over the second floor of the building, from which they shot at police and soldiers outside, said General Raz Mohammad Oryakhail, the army commander for Khost province. Afghan security forces surrounded the compound, and officials believed some of the attackers were dead. The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack. In southern Afghanistan, US forces shot a governor’s spokesman in the foot as he arrived for work. Zalmai Ayubi said he had been shot for no reason. Nato said Ayubi had grappled with a guard as he “attempted to physically bypass security” at the Kandahar governor’s office. It said an investigation had begun. On Saturday, a Taliban suicide bomber on a mission to target foreign-run medical teams killed at least six Afghan medical students and wounded 23 others after infiltrating Kabul’s main military hospital. No foreign medical doctors or nurses were among the dead or wounded. Nato and Hamid Karzai, the Afghan president, condemned the bombing. The UN called it a violation of international humanitarian law. The Taliban have stepped up attacks as part of their spring offensive against Nato, Afghan government installations and officials. Insurgents also have promised revenge attacks after the killing of Osama bin Laden by US forces in Pakistan this month. Afghanistan Taliban guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Nine police officers among the dead after 10 bombs explode in and around Iraqi capital A series of explosions in and around Baghdad have killed 16 people, including 10 who died when a suicide bomber blew himself up in a crowd of police officers. At least nine of the dead were police. It was the third major attack this month in which security personnel were targeted and took the most losses. In total, at least 10 bombs exploded. The worst single attack came near Taji, 12 miles north of Baghdad, where police had gathered after a roadside bomb targeting a passing US military convoy blew up. When the police arrived on the scene, a suicide bomber walked into the crowd and blew himself up, police and hospital officials said. Seven police and three civilians died and 19 people, including 15 police, were injured. Earlier a car bomb exploded in Sadr City , injuring five people. Namiq Khazal, who lives nearby, said: “We woke up to a big blast nearby and the glass windows in front of the house were smashed. My young brother was injured by glass.” Minutes later in Sadr City, a bomb hidden in a pile of garbage exploded, killing one person and wounding five more. Another roadside bomb, this time targeting a police patrol, injured three policemen and four bystanders. Five explosions in the south-western Baghdad neighbourhood of Bayaa killed five people, including two policemen, and injured 15. There was no immediate claim of responsibility. The attacks came hours before British military operations in Iraq were due to come to an end with the completion of a Royal Navy mission to train Iraqi sailors. Most British forces pulled out of the country in 2009. The defence secretary, Liam Fox, paid tribute to the 179 British personnel who lost their lives in the eight-year deployment. He said of the last mission: “Royal Navy personnel have used their formidable skills and expertise to bring about a transformation in Iraq’s naval force. The Iraqi navy has a key role to play in protecting Iraq’s territorial waters and the oil infrastructure that is so vital to Iraq’s economy, and I am proud of the role British forces have played in making it capable of doing that job.” Iraq guardian.co.uk
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