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Burma earthquake death toll mounts

At least 65 people reported dead after magnitude 6.8 quake hits Burma near border with Thailand A strong earthquake that toppled homes in north-east Burma has killed at least 65 people, and there are fears the death toll will mount as conditions in more remote areas become known. The quake on Thursday night, measured at a magnitude 6.8 by the US Geological Survey, was centred just north of the town of Tachileik in the mountains along the Thai border, but was felt hundreds of miles away in the Thai capital, Bangkok, and the Vietnamese capital, Hanoi. Burma state radio announced on Friday that 65 people had been killed and 111 injured in the quake, but was updating the total frequently. It said 244 houses, 14 Buddhist monasteries and nine government buildings were damaged. An official from the UN’s World Food Programme said there were many casualties and serious damage in Mong Lin village, five miles (8km) from Tachileik. State radio said 29 were killed there and 16 injured. The state-run New Light of Myanmar newspaper reported that 15 houses collapsed in the town of Tarlay, where state radio said 11 were killed and 29 injured. Another UN official said a small hospital there was partially damaged as well as a bridge, making it difficult to gain access to the town. The newspaper said another two people were killed in Tachileik, including a four-year-old boy. It said a further six people were injured in the town, which is just across the border from Mae Sai in Thailand’s Chiang Rai province. In Mae Sai, one woman was killed when a wall fell on her, according to Thai police, but damage was otherwise minimal. The second UN official said medicine would be sent to the affected areas along with an assessment team in cooperation with the Burma Red Cross Society. Both UN officials spoke on condition of anonymity. Most of rural Burma, which is one of Asia’s poorest countries, is underdeveloped, with poor communications and other infrastructure, and minimal rescue and relief capacity. The government tightly controls information, and in 2008 delayed reporting on – and asking for help with – cyclone Nargis, which killed 130,000 people. The junta was widely criticised for what were called inadequate preparations and a slow response to the disaster. Somchai Hatayatanti, the governor of Chiang Rai province, said dozens of people suffered minor injuries on the Thai side of the border. Cracks were found in buildings in downtown Chiang Rai city, about 55 miles from the epicentre, including a provincial hospital and city hall. The tops of the spires fell off from at least two Buddhist temples. A relief centre was being set up on Friday in Mae Sai. “We are worried that the area might be hit with stronger quakes. There was another quake at 7am this morning,” said Somsri Meethong of the Mae Sai district office, referring to an aftershock. “I had to run again like last night. What we have seen on TV about Japan added to our fear.” Burma Natural disasters and extreme weather guardian.co.uk

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Trump burnishes his birther credentials: “Show us the birth certificate”

The leftist harridans on the View did not take kindly to The Donald confirming his status as a birther. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : I Hate The Media Discovery Date : 23/03/2011 17:55 Number of articles : 5

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Trump burnishes his birther credentials: “Show us the birth certificate”

The leftist harridans on the View did not take kindly to The Donald confirming his status as a birther. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : I Hate The Media Discovery Date : 23/03/2011 17:55 Number of articles : 5

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There’s more to lovemaking than penile-vaginal intercourse, says Pamela Stephenson Connolly I was a widow of 55 and met a 60-year-old widower and we eventually married. I find intercourse painful so we make up for it by cuddling and fondling each other’s sensitive parts. I

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During the ultimate scene of betrayal in the movie Wall Street , a young stockbroker named Bud Fox learns that his idol, the golden-calf worshipping Gordon Gekko, has not only lied to him but left his father’s company exposed to the whims and hunger of the wolves of Wall Street. In a climactic moment, Fox asks Gekko: “How much is enough? How many yachts can you water ski behind?” Even though this film was mid-1980s fare, well, the more things change, the more they stay the same. Perhaps not for the actor who played Bud Fox, Charlie Sheen, who should share Natalie Portman’s Oscar for real-time transformation into the Black Swan. But for the rest of us, who have watched as greed has become the foundational structure upon which much of our modern economy is built, it is often difficult to see how we might close the Pandora’s Box and return to saner times. You know, back when being Donald Trump wasn’t considered an asset in a hair-club-for-men commercial, much less a race to be President of the United States. There is nowhere this greed is more pervasive than among those companies responsible for the health of roughly 300 million of Americans – Big Pharma. You know, the guys who got a better sweetheart deal from George Bush’s Medicare prescription drug benefit than Ana Nicole Smith did from that old rich guy. Later, re-importation from Canada and bulk negotiation for Medicare prescription drugs were written out of any Obama health-care plan , even though each was at the heart of Democratic Party campaign promises in 2006 and 2008. Maybe money can not buy you love – but the halls of Congress have a more Heidi-Fleiss-kind-of ethic to them. Steve Lendman of RINF.com, in providing a summary of David Sirota’s bestselling book, Hostile Takeover , clarifies : This industry is one of the most profitable in the country making about 18 cents profit on every dollar of sales; it is aided by government using our tax dollars to fund about one third of all research on new drugs the industry gets at no charge; the industry spends about twice as much on advertising, promotion and administrative costs as they do on R & D to develop new drugs; the prices charged for prescription drugs in the US are inordinately high compared to the rest of the world and are rising at about four times the rate of inflation; these rising costs plus those for most all health services are rising so fast, companies are forcing their employees to pay a greater share of them or are reducing overall health care benefits. Ever feel like you are the bank and they are Dillinger? If not, you probably should. I can attest to their greed personally, from working with preeminent plaintiff’s lawyer Ed Blizzard, who has challenged the right of pharmaceutical companies to poison Americans , like it is part of their business model. It is Blizzard who made Vioxx drug-maker Merck pay dearly – to the tune of $4.85 billion – for the scores of Americans who lost mothers, fathers, brothers and sisters, because Vioxx promised to help with arthritis and instead delivered sudden cardiac arrest. Click here to view this media [Vioxx & Phen-Fen-Slaying attorney Ed Blizzard On The Nicole Sandler Show] Now, because a lack of any regulation , Americans are being poisoned by hip implants created by Johnson & Johnson subsidiary Depuy Orthopaedics Inc., that are not only not tracked by any regulated registry, but in many cases were never even tested before being put into people’s bodies – so the inside of victims hips could come to resemble a post-Deepwater Horizon Gulf of Mexico. You can tell they’re confident that their 93,000 recalls, which they had been warned about as early as 2008, but did not do anything to address until 2010 , aren’t proof of any wrongdoing. That is probably why Depuy’s President, David Floyd, just resigned. Even worse, the chromium poisoning that is destroying victims’ bone and muscle is nothing new, in fact, you may remember a town of people who got cancer due to its ill effects from the movie Erin Brockovich. Now, they have Depuy and Johnson & Johnson to thank for this honor. So one understands we are talking about real people here, one of Blizzard’s clients, 58 year-old construction worker Larry Barnett of Modesto, Illinois, “suffered debilitating pain – he had trouble even walking or standing after receiving the part” and now is “at much greater risk for cancer.” Barnett told reporter Mike Cronin of The Daily, that Depuy’s ASR hip replacement has “screwed up my life for three years.” This man was a hard-working construction worker, who “only wants to get back to work”. One wonders if any pharmaceutical company had to give up income for three years, which they would do first – hand off the bill to American taxpayers or make Canada accept re-importation of drugs from the United States for 150 percent of the price. As Blizzard has said, “nobody signed up for an oil spill in their body.” They did not sign up for cancer either. So let me ask the question this time, as Sheen is a bit preoccupied with other matters: When is enough, enough? Follow Cliff Schecter On Twitter: @Cliffschecter This column was first published at Al Jazeera English

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NPR's Steve Inskeep, who used “deceitful sophistry” to contend that his network's audience leaned right in a Thursday WSJ column , also claimed in the same piece that “not much of the media pays attention to the middle of the country, but NPR and its local stations do.” But an affiliate in his home state of Indiana touted the findings of pro-ObamaCare organization, while leaving out anything from opponents. Brandon Smith of Indiana Public Radio led his Wednesday report on the one-year anniversary of the signing of the legislation by trumpeting how ” Families USA, a non-partisan, national health care advocacy organization , released state-by-state data on the potential impact of the law.” Despite running a sound bite from Ron Pollack, the executive director of the organization, and highlighting some of their data specific to Indiana, Smith didn't point out Family USA's liberal political leanings . NPR correspondent Julie Rovner also omitted the organization's ideological affiliation on Wednesday's Morning Edition , the very program which Inskeep hosts. During the second half of his report, the Indiana journalist did offer something contrary to Pollack's talking points by citing Seema Verma, a “state health care reform consultant,” who noted that “the cost to Hoosiers [residents of Indiana] will primarily be in Medicaid expansion….Verma says Indiana has not yet explored ways to pay that additional cost.” Despite this alternate view, Smith didn't devote any time to any explicit critics of ObamaCare. One wonders how Iskeep can forward the notion that NPR and its affiliates make an ” honest and honorable effort to keep American informed ,” given this slanted coverage at both the national and local level. The full transcript of Brandon Smith's March 23 report for Indiana Public Radio: BRANDON SMITH: In conjunction with the anniversary [of the signing of the "Affordable Care Act"], Families USA, a non-partisan, national health care advocacy organization, released state-by-state data on the potential impact of the law. Families USA executive director Ron Pollack says a year to consider the legislation hasn't necessarily answered all of the public's questions. RON POLLACK, FAMILIES USA: There is abundant confusion about what's in this legislation to begin with, and there's probably a greater confusion about what's available right now. SMITH: According to the Families USA data, nearly a million Hoosiers enrolled in Medicare can receive preventative health measures, like mammograms, colonoscopies, and flu shots for free. Pollack says there's no way to know how many of those people are actually using those services now. He also says the Congressional Budget Office found that if people take advantage of the health care bill, the country would actually save money. But state health care reform consultant Seema Verma says the cost to Hoosiers will primarily be in Medicaid expansion. SEEMA VERMA: Anywhere between 350,000 to an additional half a million people could come on to our Medicaid program. That's one in four Hoosiers. SMITH: While the federal government pays for the expansion in its first three years, beginning in 2014, Verma says the state then takes on 10% of the cost, which estimates put between $2.6 and 3.1 billion over 10 years. Verma says Indiana has not yet explored ways to pay that additional cost. For Indiana Public Broadcasting, I'm Brandon Smith. — Matthew Balan is a news analyst at the Media Research Center. You can follow him on Twitter here .

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As the Tea Partiers run wild in Montana, the folks with common sense start to turn away

Click here to view this media Douglas Kennedy eagerly filed this report from the wilds of Montana this morning for Fox News, describing the exploits of a Montana Tea Party Republican legislator named Greg Hinkle, from Thompson Falls — just coincidentally the home of the Militia of Montana … Hinkle is a Republican state senator from Thomson Falls, and he recently proposed a law, likely the first of its kind, asking federal law enforcement to first seek approval of county sheriffs before any federal intervention in the state of Montana. He calls it “The Sheriffs First Bill.” “I believe that before any federal agency does any action within a county,” he explained, “they should cooperate with the sheriff, coordinate with the sheriff and go to him and say this is what we need to do in this county.” For instance, Hinkle would want the FBI to first notify a Montana sheriff before executing a search warrant or making an arrest in the state of Montana. At one point he allowed for arrest of any federal agent who didn’t comply, but has since taken out that language. He also reluctantly added a line that allows for federal agents to notify sheriffs “after the fact,” in order to get the bill through the Montana House of Representatives. Nonetheless, legal observers still call Hinkle’s bill “a clear violation of the Supremacy Clause of the U.S. Constitution.” “The federal government does not have to ask or even inform local law enforcement about what they are doing,” said James Cohen, a constitutional law professor at Fordham Law School in New York. “Sometimes they do because it’s convenient, but they do not have to.” Hinkle points out that the bill has already passed the Montana State Senate (with the original language) and is expected to pass the House in the next couple of weeks. He also says there’s a lot of support in Montana, a state which he says well remembers the deadly federal raids at Ruby Ridge, Idaho, in 1992 and Waco, Texas, in 1993. Funny that a parachuting reporter would forget this, but in reality, Montanans remember even better the longest armed standoff with federal agents in history: the 81-day FBI standoff in Jordan with the Montana Freemen. (Yes, yours truly was there. ) As Jim Lopach, a professor of constitutional law at the University of Montana, put it in a retrospective piece: Lopach said the real legacy of the standoff could be that it gave people a reason to consider how far and how deep devotion to political individualism should go. “It might be a moderating thing,” he said. “It might be that they saw the dangers of extremism.” In reality, Hinkle’s bill is one we’ve known about for awhile. It was one of a package of bills that Montana Patriot-movement leader Gary Marbut announced last September in Hamilton at a gathering I covered. (You can watch the video of Marbut describing it here. ) Tonight Marbut wants to talk about a new piece of sovereignty legislation he plans to promote in the state legislature, something he calls Sheriffs First. The bill would make it a crime in Montana for a federal officer to arrest, search or seize without advance written permission from the county sheriff, Marbut explains, to enthusiastic applause. “How that will work is, the federal officers might come to your local sheriff and say, ‘OK, here’s our probable cause, we believe there’s people at this location in your county who have a meth lab …and we wanna bust ‘em,’” Marbut says. “The sheriff might look it over and say, ‘Gosh, I’m glad you brought this to me, here’s your advance written permission, and I will send a couple deputies to help you.’ “Or the federal officers might come to the sheriff and say, ‘Here’s our probable cause, it leads us to believe there’s somebody in your county at this location who’s manufacturing firearms without a federal license. And we want to go bust them.’ The sheriff might say, ‘Sorry, we have a state law in Montana that authorizes that activity, it’s perfectly legal here, you may not go bust them, you do not have permission, and if you do, we can put you in Deer Lodge. We can put you behind bars in Montana for doing that.’” That brings out whoops alongside the applause. Kennedy’s fawning coverage at Fox concluded thus: “They can’t do it,” [Fordham law professor James Cohen] said. “They can’t pass a law that says the federal government, the FBI, the [Drug Enforcement Agency], whatever federal law enforcement agency, must contact the sheriff before engaging in law enforcement activities. It simply can’t be done.” Of course it can, said Hinkle. “How on earth could the states not challenge federal law?” he asked. “That’s the way our system of government works.” “The states are what created the federal government,” he added, “so the states should actually have more authority than the federal government.” This is one of the more breathtaking aspects of this legislation: It so clearly flies in the face of the Constitution as to be absurd, and yet its proponents are some of the loudest proponents of their version of so-called “constitutionalism.” These are the Tea Partiers who swept to power in Montana in the last election, and boy, are they making their mark. But it may not be the one they long for. Longtime Montanans are well acquainted with these kooks, and the more they rant and rage and embarrass the state, they more they turn people off. An AP story from a few weeks back pointed this out: HELENA, Mont. – With each bill, newly elected tea party lawmakers are offering Montanans a vision of the future. Their state would be a place where officials can ignore U.S. laws, force FBI agents to get a sheriff’s OK before arresting anyone, ban abortions, limit sex education in schools and create armed citizen militias. It’s the tea party world. But not everyone is buying their vision. Some residents, Democratic Gov. Brian Schweitzer and even some Republican lawmakers say the bills are making Montana into a laughingstock. And, they say, the push to nullify federal laws could be dangerous. “We are the United States of America,” said Schweitzer. “This talk of nullifying is pretty toxic talk. That led to the Civil War.” A tea party lawmaker said raising the specter of a civil war is plain old malarkey. “Nullification is not about splitting this union apart,” freshman Rep. Derek Skees said. “Nullification is just one more way for us to tell the federal government: ‘That is not right.” There’s been a substantial influx of these extremists into the state from elsewhere in the past decade, many of them drawn by cheap land and their own internalized mythology of the Western landscape what Montanans are like (think “rugged individualism”). Perhaps no one symbolizes this influx better than Chuck Baldwin, the erstwhile presidential candidate of the Constitution Party, who recently moved to the Flathead Valley from Florida. Baldwin held a shindig in Kalispell, where he was feted by local white supremacists and other supporters. He all but announced that he was planning to run for governor, in hopes of displacing Schweitzer. And he voiced the view of a lot of these newcomers: Baldwin went on to state that being born in Montana does not necessarily make one a Montanan. “There are a lot of people that were born in Montana but are not Montanans,” Baldwin said. “And there are a lot of people, like me, who were not born in Montana but we have been Montanans our whole lives.” (Baldwin arrived in the Flathead in October.) “Real Montanans love freedom,” he said. “Real Montanans will fight and die for the principles of truth, honor and freedom.” Here’s hoping he and his fellow Montana Tea Partiers run on that kind of platform. Sounds like a surefire winner with all the lifelong Montanans I know.

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Liberal columnists who were reliably opposed to Republican presidents warring against Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein (see Bush I and II) often do an about-face and strike up a martial tune when it's a Democratic president dropping bombs. Ask former New York Times columnist and good liberal Anthony Lewis, who pushed the Clinton administration to intervene in Bosnia-Herzegovina. The reliably dovish Times columnist Nicholas Kristof wrote from Cairo on Thursday to take the pro-war side in Libya – “ Hugs From Libyans ” – announcing that (to coin a phrase) we’re being welcomed as liberators in Benghazi. This may be a first for the Arab world: An American airman who bailed out over Libya was rescued from his hiding place in a sheep pen by villagers who hugged him, served him juice and thanked him effusively for bombing their country. Even though some villagers were hit by American shrapnel, one gamely told an Associated Press reporter that he bore no grudges. Then, on Wednesday in Benghazi, the major city in eastern Libya whose streets would almost certainly be running with blood now if it weren’t for the American-led military intervention, residents held a “thank you rally.” They wanted to express gratitude to coalition forces for helping save their lives. Doubts are reverberating across America about the military intervention in Libya. Those questions are legitimate, and the uncertainties are huge. But let’s not forget that a humanitarian catastrophe has been averted for now and that this intervention looks much less like the 2003 invasion of Iraq than the successful 1991 gulf war to rescue Kuwait from Iraqi military occupation. Kristof eventually addressed the obvious question – his fierce opposition (see third item) to the 2003 invasion of Iraq – while dismissing the concerns over constitutional propriety so vital to liberals during the Bush years. I opposed the 2003 Iraq invasion because my reporting convinced me that most Iraqis hated Saddam Hussein but didn’t want American forces intruding on their soil. This time my reporting persuades me that most Libyans welcome outside intervention. (Kristof merits a significant footnote in the debate over Iraq – it was a May 6, 2003 Kristof column , which used serial anti-war misleader Joseph Wilson as a then-anonymous source, that eventually led to Plame-gate, the so-called scandal that served as convenient tool for the media against the Bush administration and the war effort before it fizzled out into nothingness.) Kristof also wrote Thursday: Some Congressional critics complain that President Obama should have consulted Congress more thoroughly. Fair enough. But remember that the intervention was almost too late because forces loyal to Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi were already in Benghazi. Indeed, there was a firefight on Sunday right outside the hotel in Benghazi where foreign journalists are staying. A couple of days of dutiful consultation would have resulted in a bloodbath and, perhaps, the collapse of the rebel government.

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Cath Elliott

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I don’t know who MC NxtGen is, but his analysis of the threat Andrew Lansley’s proposals pose to the NHS is bang on I don’t know who the artist MC NxtGen is, but having watched his superb take down on YouTube of Andrew Lansley and his plans for the NHS – the Andrew Lansley Rap – I suspect he’s set for great things. Like a No

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Cath Elliott

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I don’t know who MC NxtGen is, but his analysis of the threat Andrew Lansley’s proposals pose to the NHS is bang on I don’t know who the artist MC NxtGen is, but having watched his superb take down on YouTube of Andrew Lansley and his plans for the NHS – the Andrew Lansley Rap – I suspect he’s set for great things. Like a No

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