Click here to view this media Chuck Todd not only decided to take a cheap shot at the Obama’s this morning on MSNBC, but also managed to trivialize just who would be harmed if the Republicans continue their hostage taking on the debt ceiling. TODD: The Obama’s are millionaires according to new financial disclosure forms released yesterday. The forms show the President and First Lady Michelle Obama hold assets between $2.8 million and $11.8 million and are you ready for this? Almost all of their investments are in T-bills. So nobody would be hurt more by the debt ceiling not being raised than the President. Really, Chuck? No one else would be hurt more? If the Republicans put us into another recession or worse yet a depression, I think there are going to be a lot of other people who will come out that a lot worse than the President of the United States. I think somehow the Obama’s would manage to recover. I can’t say the same for the millions of people who are just getting by now and for whom it might mean life and death if our country’s economy gets thrown into a tailspin. h/t David for the video
Continue reading …Ed Miliband urges prime minister to sack justice secretary for suggesting ‘date rape’ is not as serious as other kinds of rape Kenneth Clarke has become embroiled in a major row over sentences for rape after he appeared to suggest that “date rape” did not count as a serious offence, prompting calls for David Cameron to sack his justice secretary. Clarke took to the airwaves this morning in the face of a fierce reaction to the disclosure on Tuesday that he intends to increase the discount for an early guilty plea for rapists from 33% to 50%. But instead of calming the row, the justice secretary’s media appearances and explanations have only served to fuel the controversy. A rape victim broke down in tears after confronting Clarke when he appeared on the BBC Radio 5 Live, telling him his sentence discount plan was a disaster. During other television interviews Clarke appeared to claim that campaigners had only singled out rape because it injected a degree of “sexual excitement” into the argument over discounts for early guilty pleas. But it was his statement that no-one convicted of a “serious rape” would be released as quickly as those guilty of some “date rapes” that sparked a political furore with the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, challenging David Cameron over the matter at prime minister’s question time. More details soon… Kenneth Clarke Rape David Cameron UK criminal justice Alan Travis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Ed Miliband urges prime minister to sack justice secretary for suggesting ‘date rape’ is not as serious as other kinds of rape Kenneth Clarke has become embroiled in a major row over sentences for rape after he appeared to suggest that “date rape” did not count as a serious offence, prompting calls for David Cameron to sack his justice secretary. Clarke took to the airwaves this morning in the face of a fierce reaction to the disclosure on Tuesday that he intends to increase the discount for an early guilty plea for rapists from 33% to 50%. But instead of calming the row, the justice secretary’s media appearances and explanations have only served to fuel the controversy. A rape victim broke down in tears after confronting Clarke when he appeared on the BBC Radio 5 Live, telling him his sentence discount plan was a disaster. During other television interviews Clarke appeared to claim that campaigners had only singled out rape because it injected a degree of “sexual excitement” into the argument over discounts for early guilty pleas. But it was his statement that no-one convicted of a “serious rape” would be released as quickly as those guilty of some “date rapes” that sparked a political furore with the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, challenging David Cameron over the matter at prime minister’s question time. More details soon… Kenneth Clarke Rape David Cameron UK criminal justice Alan Travis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Lady Gaga’s relentless, shameless, sledgehammer pop nearly always hits the spot – if you ignore the cheesy saxophones There’s an unnerving moment that occurs when hearing Lady Gaga’s second album, Born This Way, for the first time. It comes as soon as the plodding keyboard chords ring out on opening track Marry the Night and you wonder if the stage is set for this to be the first of several self-indulgent ballads. It will be a fear familiar to anyone who tuned into Radio 1′s Big Weekend expecting a rapid-fire run through her storming pop hits and was met inexplicably with several minutes of jazz trumpet. Among the madness, the Madonna-comparisons and the meat dresses has Lady Gaga lost track of what made her little monsters fall in love with her in the first place? If so, it would certainly fit the most recent narrative – Lady Gaga’s rise to the top of the pop tree has landed on a particularly wobbly branch during this album’s promotional campaign. First fans grumbled that the title track bore remarkable similarity to Madonna’s Express Yourself . Then disapproving voices in the gay community complained that Gaga had hijacked their sexuality as a marketing tool. So intense was the chatter around Born This Way, in fact, there was even a backlash over the artwork . Such fears on the musical front, however, do not last long – Marry the Night’s softer stylings are soon sent packing by what Gaga had always promised would be “sledgehammering dance beats”. It’s a pattern that holds throughout Born This Way. No matter how a song begins – pizzicato strings, operatic vocals, 80s rawk guitar – it’s soon engulfed in buzzsaw synths and robo-precise rhythms. This is shameless, club-orientated pop that aims for instant impact. Gaga has made much of the various themes on offer – religion (Judas, Bloody Mary), freedom (Road to Love), identity (Hair, Born This Way) – and these messages are hammered home rather than hinted at. Nobody expected Born This Way, hyped by Elton John as a “new gay anthem”, to reference post-queer theory texts, but it’s safe to say that subtlety isn’t one of its strong points. Elsewhere, Hair uses follicles as a metaphor for freedom – not exactly a brave new concept for anyone who’s seen the 60s musical Hair (or caught the sermon from Danny in Withnail & I for that matter). Trite lyrics abound (“I just want to be free, I just want to be me”) but these weaknesses can also be strengths, and there’s something admirable about the way the aforementioned trio of tracks address confused teenagers in search of their identity. Bad Kids, in particular, is a Vince Clarke-esque stormer listing a series of flaws (“I’m a jerk”, “I’m a bitch”, “I’m a selfish punk”) that places Gaga, like Pink, as a mainstream pop star addressing outsider America. That said, when the music drops out midway, Gaga could have come back with a slightly more hard-hitting line than “I’m a twit”. Born This Way boasts a pop vision flexible enough to be both serious (Americano embraces Latino sounds to tackle Arizona’s immigration laws) and surreal (Road to Love is Journey’s Don’t Stop Believin’ only, er, about unicorns) yet it almost always hits its target. Scheiße might be influenced by the decadent Berlin techno scene but, crucially, it has a ridiculously catchy chorus. Indeed, anyone disappointed with the singles from Born This Way, none of which lived up to Bad Romance or Poker Face, can take comfort in the fact that they are by no means the standout tracks here. So relentless is the pace, in fact, that towards the end of this mammoth album (14 songs, plus bonus tracks), when those sledgehammer beats bash you one too many times, you do start to wish for a nice little piano ballad as a breather. That finally comes with the penultimate Yoü and I , which aims for a Hey Jude style singalong but – owing to its determination to have someone playing kitchen sink in the background – ends up as bloated as Oasis’ All Around the World. The occasional drift towards indulgence is not a total surprise. With release dates given away as “gifts” on Twitter, gigs that start out in embryonic eggs and the release of the album as a stream with an arguably bizarre choice of newspaper group , Born This Way is by far the most hyped album of 2011. Clearly one to play this down, Gaga told fans last year: “I promise to give you the greatest album of the decade.” This is not that album, even by the standards of a pop star who thrives on stretching the imagination. Gaga has surrendered her artier leanings in the quest for a pure pop record, the consequences of which are that it occasionally strays too far into cheese territory. The saxophones on Edge of Glory, for instance, are apparently a homage to Bruce Springsteen but would be equally at home on Take That’s Million Love Songs. Marry the Night, meanwhile, doesn’t quite shake off the feeling that its chorus had a previous incarnation as Dr Alban’s It’s My Life . But then this, perhaps, has always been the thrilling paradox of Lady Gaga – that she can be the most exciting, confounding and mind-bogglingly creative artist on planet pop while still sounding like an early-90s Tampax advert. Rating: 4/5 Lady Gaga Pop and rock Tim Jonze guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …In stance that directly opposes Andrew Lansley’s, Clegg says NHS regulator should protect interests of patients and push collaboration rather than promote competition Nick Clegg, the deputy prime minister, has set himself on a collision course with the health secretary, Andrew Lansley, by signalling his determination to veto a key plank of the government’s controversial NHS reforms. Clegg has singled out the role of Monitor, the NHS regulator, as the area of the embattled NHS bill that needs the “most substantial changes” and has said descriptions of the body as an economic regulator should be removed on the grounds that the NHS cannot be regulated as if it were just a utility “like electricity or telephones”. In the blueprint of his health and social care bill, Lansley proposed that Monitor, which currently scrutinises hospital finances, is also given the duty of promoting competition in the provision of health services. However, in a stance which directly opposes the one taken by Lansley, Clegg believes Monitor should instead promote and protect the interests of the patient, and push NHS collaboration. Simon Burns, a Conservative health minister, sought to play down the impact of Clegg’s opposition to the idea of an NHS regulatory body, insisting that it would not derail NHS reforms. “No it doesn’t at all,” he told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme. “As you know, we have a pause at the moment, we are listening, we have set up an independent future forum that is going and talking to and talking to people in the NHS, to the Royal Colleges, others who have an interest and involvement in the National Health Service seeking constructive ideas in which we can continue to improve and strengthen the bill.” Burns said that the idea was one of many put forward as part of the listening exercise designed to improve the bill. “The deputy prime minister had a meeting, I understand, with his members of parliament last night, discussed this, they have come up with some ideas, like a load of other people throughout the NHS, and all those ideas will be considered when listening process is over, and the decision will be taken that will be aimed at improving, strengthening the bill, and making sure that patient care is first class.” Evan Harris, a former Lib Dem MP and vice chairman of the party’s federal policy committee, said Burns was “wrong” to say Clegg’s comments were simply a contribution to the listening exercise. “We have made very clear that there will be no government majority for things not in the coalition agreement, like this mass marketisation of the health service, without Liberal Democrat MPs and peers,” he told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme. “They will not vote for Monitor to be an economic regulator so this is a veto.” In a presentation by the deputy prime minister to the weekly meeting of his parliamentary party and leaked to the Guardian, a page-long policy document signed by Clegg set out how he believes the regulator should be reconceived. “Instead of having a duty to promote competition, Monitor’s main duty should be explicitly to protect and promote the interests of patients,” Clegg wrote. A new role for Monitor has long been a running sore in the health secretary’s plans. Last week Steve Field, the man appointed by David Cameron to oversee the “pause” in the health legislation, said he also thought the proposed new role for Monitor should be scrapped. Instead, it should promote co-operation and collaboration and the integration of health services. Addressing fellow Liberal Democrat MPs and peers at a meeting last night, Clegg said he would “never let the profit motive get in the way of the essential purposes of the NHS”. The policy document said: “We cannot treat the NHS as if it were a utility, and the decision to establish Monitor as an ‘economic regulator’ was clearly a misjudgment, failing to recognise all the unique characteristics of a public health service, and opening us up to accusations that we are trying to subject the NHS to the full rigours of UK and EU competition law. Tory backbencher Peter Bone accused the Lib Dems of trying to exploit the issue for political reasons, having previously backed the reforms in cabinet and the House of Commons. Bone told Sky news that Clegg’s position as deputy prime minister meant he should be supporting government policy. If a Conservative minister had opposed the NHS reforms as Clegg had done, “he would have been fired by now”, said Bone. “Every minister must support it. If you can’t support the decision, you must resign from the government. Having voted for it in parliament, the only thing that seems to have happened is that the Liberal Democrats lost very badly in the local elections, lost the AV referendum and this seems to be more about shoring up Nick Clegg’s position as party leader rather than anything to do with improving the health bill.” The deputy prime minister should “row in” behind reforms which he said were in the interest of not only the country but of the patient as well. “It is right that we should listen and scrutinise the bill, but the idea that competition does not improve the health service is ridiculous. It drives up efficiency and makes NHS hospitals more effective. “Getting better value for money in the health service, and people getting treated better and quicker must be right. You have a prime minister who loves the NHS who made his first priority the NHS. “You have a health secretary with more experience than any other politician. Those are the people who should be listened to, not someone who is trying to do it for party political reasons, such as the deputy prime minister.” As Clegg seeks to establish a more distinct identity on issues like NHS reform after their dismal poll results earlier this month, former cabinet minister David Laws cautioned his Lib Dem colleagues not to put the coalition at risk by sniping at their Conservative partners. Laws’ comments, in his first interview since being barred from the Commons for seven days on Monday, will be seen as a warning to ministers like Chris Huhne and Vince Cable who have gone public with criticisms of Tory colleagues. Laws, who was suspended after the parliamentary standards commissioner found he breached expenses rules by claiming the rent he paid his male partner of nine years, said: “Our continued effective delivery of policies depends not just on shouting and our public profile, but on a trusting relationship between the key people in the coalition. “We could get our way over one or two key issues by storming off, voting against them, briefing against them, whatever. But when the next key issue is on the table and we need the co-operation of everybody in the coalition, will we get it? Maybe we won’t.” And he added: “The opportunity to make a difference in national politics is a very special one and we shouldn’t be sitting around in the corner of the political room sulking about the fact that we are in government and looking forward to the opportunity when we can return to the splendid irrelevance of opposition.” Health policy Health Public services policy NHS Nick Clegg Andrew Lansley Liberal Democrats Hélène Mulholland Allegra Stratton guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …David Norris and Gary Dobson are accused of being part of a racist white gang that ‘targeted and killed’ black teenager Two men are to stand trial accused of being part of a racist white gang that “targeted and killed” the black teenager Stephen Lawrence because of the colour of his skin, the court of appeal today said. The killing in 1993 in Eltham, south-east London, is one of the most high-profile unsolved murders in Britain. The men charged are David Norris, who has never before been charged over the stabbing, and Gary Dobson, who stood trial previously and was found not guilty. Dobson was acquitted of killing Lawrence, 18, after a private murder prosecution brought in 1996 by the parents of the talented youngster who dreamed of being an architect. A new law established in 2003 abolished the longstanding ban on people being retried for the same crime after being found not guilty, if “compelling” new evidence came to light. The appeal court agreed on Wednesday that new evidence was compelling enough to allow Dobson’s acquittal to be quashed. In effect, the appeal court, in a ruling by the lordchief justice of England and Wales, wiped the legal slate clean. This means Dobson and Norris will stand trial for the murder of Lawrence. Vikram Dodd guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Lib Dem leader says Monitor must not become an ‘economic regulator’ while National Audit Office condemns latest delay in NHS patient database Nick Clegg has singled out the role of Monitor, the NHS regulator, as the area of the embattled NHS bill that needs the “most substantial changes” and has said that all references to the body being an economic regulator “should be removed”. In a presentation by the deputy prime minister to the weekly meeting of his parliamentary party and leaked to the Guardian, Clegg circulated a page-long document in which he set out how he believes the regulator should be reconceived. “Instead of having a duty to promote competition, Monitor’s main duty should be explicitly to protect and promote the interests of patients,” Clegg wrote, saying the NHS cannot be regulated as if it was just a utility “like electricity or telephones”. A new role for Monitor has long been a running sore in the health secretary’s plans. Last week Steve Field, the man appointed by David Cameron to oversee the “pause” in the health legislation, said he also thought the proposed new role for Monitor should be scrapped. Instead, it should promote co-operation and collaboration and the integration of health services. It is known that the Lib Dems dislike health secretary Andrew Lansley’s proposal that Monitor become an “economic regulator”, but this is the first time a full critique has emerged with detailed alternative proposals. Clegg said: “We cannot treat the NHS as if it were a utility, and the decision to establish Monitor as an ‘economic regulator’ was clearly a misjudgment, failing to recognise all the unique characteristics of a public health service, and opening us up to accusations that we are trying to subject the NHS to the full rigours of UK and EU competition law. “I have come to the conclusion that we must not make this change. We must remove from the bill changes to establish Monitor as a competition authority. Monitor should be empowered to encourage informed patient choice and act against anti-competitive practices but only when this is in the interest of patients, individually and collectively, and in the interest of equality of access.” The Lib Dem document shows it wants to maintain the principles of collaboration and competition overseen by the NHS collaboration and competition panel – protocols which are understood to have insulated the NHS from the office of fair trading exercising the full force of competition act powers. Clegg writes: “The CCP should become an advisory body to Monitor. We should agree a memorandum of understanding between Monitor and the Office of Fair Trading on this basis. We will also need to retain Monitor’s role in relationship to foundation trusts to be clear they are not “undertakings’ within the terms of EU law. “Together these changes should mean we can be clear that we are making no substantive changes to the way in which competition law operates in relation to the NHS. “Instead of having a duty to promote competition, Monitor’s main duty should be explicitly to protect and promote the interests of patients, including recognising the ways in which those interests are met by integrated care. Monitor should be empowered to encourage informed patient choice and act against anti-competitive practices but only when this is in the interest of patients, individually and collectively, and in the interest of equality of access.” The party also calls for Monitor to have a role in ensuring there is no cherry-picking by providers of the most expensive treatments. The government is coming under increasing pressure, meanwhile, to abandon plans for a new NHS patient record system after the official spending watchdog warned that it was very likely to waste another £4.3bn in the next four years. The original aim of the £11.4bn NHS IT programme, to install a patient record database accessible from any point in the NHS in England by 2015, will fail, the National Audit Office warns. The £2.7bn spent so far on the system has not been value for money, it says, and the watchdog has no confidence the remaining £4.3bn will be any better spent. The nine-year-old project – the biggest civilian IT scheme attempted – has been in disarray since it missed its first deadlines in 2007. While its ambitions have been downgraded in recent years, the bill from the suppliers has remained largely unchanged, the report says. MPs appealed for the remaining contracts to be abandoned to prevent the £4.3bn going to waste. It amounts to more than a fifth of the £20bn efficiencies the NHS is attempting to achieve. Doctors warned against abandoning the project altogether, saying the modernisation of the paper-based patient record system should still be a priority. The NAO says the new patient records have been implemented in a tiny minority of trusts while other IT systems, such as the digitisation of x-ray images, have been achieved. But the original target to start introducing a database of medical records by 2007 was missed and, according to the current projections, it will not be achieved by the new 2014-15 deadline. The plans for one comprehensive system of patient records have been reduced to a patchwork of different systems across the country that threaten to clock up a new £220m bill to make them compatible with each other, the NAO says. Two of the four contractors have already pulled out, and the prime minister revealed last week that the government was considering terminating a third contractor, CSC, which has been put under review. That would most likely leave the contracts concentrated in the hands of BT, but even its work is under question by the NAO. Amyas Morse, head of the NAO, said: “The original vision for the national programme for IT in the NHS will not be realised. “The NHS is now getting far fewer systems than planned despite the department paying contractors almost the same amount of money. This is yet another example of a department fundamentally underestimating the scale and complexity of a major IT-enabled change programme. “The Department of Health needs to admit that it is now in damage-limitation mode. I hope that my report, together with the forthcoming review by the Cabinet Office and Treasury, announced by the prime minister, will help to prevent further loss of public value from future expenditure on the programme.” Richard Bacon, the Conservative MP for South Norfolk, who has campaigned to highlight the problems, said: “It is perfectly clear that throwing more money at the problem will not work. “This turkey will never fly and it is time the Department of Health faced reality and channelled the remaining funds into something useful that will actually benefit patients. The largest civilian IT project in the world has failed.” Officials will be called before the Commons public accounts committee to justify the continuation of the programme. Margaret Hodge, Labour chair of the committee, said: “It is deeply worrying to hear the NAO ‘has no grounds for confidence’ that the remaining planned spending of £4.3bn on care records systems will provide value for money.” Simon Burns, the health minister, said: “In the north, the Midlands and the east, only 4% of hospital records systems have been installed. “A decade on and £6.4bn down, all Labour managed to deliver was a patchy IT system that experts now confirm has failed its core objectives. This has been an expensive farce from the beginning.” Dr Chaand Nagpaul, a GP member of the British Medical Association’s working party on NHS IT, said: “We cannot turn the clock back, but this report provides useful lessons on how best to use resources in the future. Patient care needs to be supported by reliable information systems, and IT should continue to be a priority for the NHS.” NHS ‘needs managers’ The coalition’s plan to cut the number of NHS managers is not based on evidence and will damage the service just at the time it needs high-calibre bosses, according to the King’s Fund thinktank. Health secretary Andrew Lansley’s proposals to cut the number of managers by 45% and administration costs by 33% are “simply arbitrary” and should be rethought, it says in a report. The report also accuses ministers of “denigrating” NHS managers by referring to them as “pen-pushers” and warns that that will damage staff morale, deter skilled people from joining and discourage doctors from switching to management roles. David Cameron celebrated the recent rise in the number of doctors and fall in managers in a major speech on health on Monday. The government’s NHS shakeup is being undermined by the steady loss of quality managers, the influential thinktank also states. “Many experienced leaders have already been lost and this puts at risk delivery of the government’s plans”, says its study of NHS leadership and management. Lansley, meanwhile, will reveal more of his thinking about potential changes to the health and social care bill – including the politically charged issues of choice and competition – when he addresses a King’s Fund conference on Wednesday. Denis Campbell Health policy Health NHS Nick Clegg Liberal Democrats Polly Curtis Allegra Stratton guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Saif al-Adel, an Egyptian former special forces officer, has been named as the acting leader of al-Qaida, according to reports from Pakistan A fierce succession battle appears to be gripping the senior ranks of al-Qaida in the wake of the death of leader Osama bin Laden earlier this month, pitting regional affiliates against the central “hardcore” of the organisation. Reports from Pakistan named an Egyptian former special forces officer known as Saif al-Adel as the acting leader of al-Qaida. Al-Adel, who is in his late 40s, is a veteran militant who was close to bin Laden in the 1990s before being detained in Iran after fleeing Afghanistan following the ouster of the Taliban in 2001. According to Noman Benotman, a former Libyan militant now living in London, al-Adel was released from Iranian detention and returned to Pakistan last year. The report in the Pakistani The News newspaper identified al-Adel as having been chosen as “interim leader” of al-Qaida after a meeting at “an undisclosed location”. It also said that “none of sons of Osama Bin Laden has shown willingness” to take up a formal position within the organisation. One of the 54-year-old al-Qaida leader’s adult sons, Khaled, was killed with his father in the raid on Abbottabad. Others have been groomed for leadership roles but are currently too young or too inexperienced to command any real support. If confirmed, the appointment of al-Adel is a major blow to bin Laden’s close associate Ayman al-Zawahiri, the Egyptian extremist strategist who has long been seen as the group’s number two. Al-Zawahiri is reported to have been given the important, and usually shortlived, role of director of external or international operations for the group. This would nonetheless be something of a demotion for a man who was bin Laden’s closest associate and a major figure in his own right. It could also provide the first evidence of a major split within militant ranks. Senior al-Qaida-affiliated extremists in both Iraq and the Yemen have already pledged their support for al-Zawahiri, who is 59 and among the oldest contenders for the top position, and may not accept the leadership of al-Adel, even as an interim measure. “I tell our brothers in al-Qaida led by Ayman Al-Zawahiri, go on with God’s blessing and be glad that you have faithful brothers in the Islamic State of Iraq who are marching on the path of right,” Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi, recently appointed head of the al-Qaida affiliated Islamic State of Iraq (ISI), said in a statement posted on the internet last week. Al-Baghdadi is thought to have been named to his post by al-Zawahiri. Rashad Mohammed Saeed Ismail, a senior Yemeni cleric who was close to bin Laden and has been linked to the local “Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula” affiliate was quoted by the Yemen Times as saying that “Al-Zawahiri is the best candidate.” “He is the right person to take over. All wings of al-Qaida would approve of him and all Jihadist movements trust him greatly,” Ismail was reported to have said. According to Evan Kohlmann, an American specialist in jihadi forums on the internet, senior members on top-tier al-Qaida web forums already see al-Zawahiri as leader of al-Qaida. Kohlmann reported that some extremists have begun calling al-Qaida “Jund al-Ayman” which means “The Soldiers of Ayman [al-Zawahiri].” Security sources told the Guardian that until there is some kind of communication from verifiable al-Qaida sources – such as the statement announcing bin Laden’s death – it is impossible to be certain who will become overall leader. “There are a whole range of variables…different factions and people and a very dynamic situation. It’s pretty impenetrable,” said one official. “Until we see anything more solid, all these reports are speculative.” Al-Qaida has always been troubled by factional splits. Evidence has emerged of increasingly acrimonious disputes between Libyan, Egyptian and other elements in recent years. There are also generational differences as well as fierce debates over tactics and strategy. “Some leading figures inside al-Qaida argue [it] is too soft, others that it is too extreme. Some want a greater focus on Egypt; others want a greater focus on other countries such as the Yemen,” Benotman, the former militant, said recently. Maintaining the network of alliances built up by bin Laden will be one of the biggest challenges facing any future leader. One recent communication from al-Qaida’s “Fajr Media Centre” indicated a possible direction for the group following the death of bin Laden. “We say to every mujahid Muslim, if there is an opportunity, do not waste it,” the statement said, calling on followers around the world not to consult with any central leadership but “to carry out acts of individual terrorism with significant results, which only require basic preparation.” al-Qaida Global terrorism Osama bin Laden Pakistan Jason Burke guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Chris Ariens filed a report today at MediaBistro's TVNewser that opened with a reader's Tweet, which plaintively asked: “Did CNN really exclude Spitzer from Malveaux package on Sex Scandals & Politics? Hmm..” Ariens responds : The answer: yes it did.
Continue reading …