Barn Owl — the heavy, minimalist, trance-inducing collaboration between Bay Area guitarist Jon Porras and Evan Caminiti — have released a stunning new LP, titled Lost in the Glare. On this release, the guitars are complemented by a Farfisa organ, … Continue reading → Broadcasting platform : Vimeo Source : Boing Boing Discovery Date : 19/09/2011 20:31 Number of articles : 3
Continue reading …Hospitals in Sana’a unable to cope with the number of casualties as security forces clashed with anti-government groups For the past few weeks Change Square in Sana’a has belonged to Yemen’s young revolutionaries. It has been filled with dancing and singing to protest against the regime of President Ali Abdullah Saleh. But there was no singing on Monday. Instead, the square was filled with the echoes of gunfire and screams as the young demonstrators carried their injured friends to safety, their blood dripping in a long crimson trail that led to the field hospital. It was the bloodiest day yet in Yemen’s nine-month uprising, with more than 22 killed and at least 350 wounded. The carnage followed an attack on Sunday that left 30 dead and set the scene for the violence that has broken new ground in the stand-off between anti-government groups and loyalist security forces. On Monday night Sana’a’s hospitals said they were unable cope with the number of casualties. Demonstrators were urgently calling for blood donors and trying to ferry the wounded to hospitals on Sana’a’s outskirts. Many of the wounds appeared to have been caused by high-calibre rounds fired into the crowds from anti-aircraft guns. One protester, Ridwan al-Sabahi, was mourning his comrades on the outskirts of Change Square. “They were amongst us yesterday and are dead today,” he said. “We were all laughing and dreaming of the day when Yemen will be democratic and free.” The blood of the “martyrs” had not been spilt in vain, he said, adding: “We will never forgive Saleh and his family.” Saleh, who was wounded during an explosion as he prayed in a mosque earlier in the year, remains in Riyadh as the guest of the Saudi Arabian monarch, King Abdullah, who on Monday received him in his palace. The day’s violence was vividly illustrated by a live video stream from a field hospital set up by protesters after skirmishes with forces loyal to the president. A dead 10 month-old girl with a head wound brought to the hospital was identified as Anas al-Suaidi, shot by a sniper. Soon afterwards a screaming man with no right arm arrived. At another hospital around 23 bodies were laid out in a makeshift morgue. As night fell the shooting appeared to have spread across Sana’a as rebel units clashed with loyalist forces in a series of running battles across the city. There were reports that security forces loyal to Saleh’s son, Ahmed, were stationed near several of the hospitals treating the defected soldiers. The road to the airport was closed and flights were delayed. Mohammed al-Sabri, the spokesman for the opposition dialogue committee, said: “The massacre that the Saleh regime is continuing will not be forgotten and those who kill protesters will stand trial, sooner or later.” Ahmed Qurshi, president of a Yemeni children’s rights organisation, said: “Tens of children were shot over the last two days by government troops. Is this the democracy the Saleh regime claims it is seeking?” Anti-government activists in the capital blame state media for the chaos in Yemen, claiming they openly provoke attacks. “Open government media outlets and you will see why the government is portraying these youths as outlaws rather than seekers of democracy,” said Ali Abdul Jabbar, director of the Sana’a based Dar al-Ashraf Research Center. Yemen’s government blamed al-Qa’ida elements it claimed were inciting trouble inside the anti-government movement for sparking Monday’s violence. “The government of Yemen expresses its sorrow and condemnation for all acts of violence and bloodshed as those that happened yesterday in Sana’a,” foreign minister Abu Bakr al-Kurbi told the UN human rights council. “The government will investigate and hold accountable all those who were in charge of these acts,” he added. As he spoke government helicopters patrolled the skies of Sana’a and reportedly targeted homes and property of senior opposition leaders. The youth of Yemen, who have been a driving force behind attempts to remove Saleh and his regime from office after three decades, this week lamented that their revolution had persistently played second fiddle to the events in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya, which had captured international imagination and won broad regional appeal. “Nine whole months protesting in the streets under the burning sunlight, and still no one appreciates our peaceful efforts,” said Nujood Saleh, a youth activist in Sana’a. “The Libyan revolution succeeded by the use of force while we are still suffering. We insist on peaceful strategies to achieve freedom and democracy.” Another activist had a different take on events from here. “We are not scared to use weapons, said Abdullah Mujalli. “But we know that the crisis is like a matchstick. When it burns it will burn everything around it – and quickly.” Yemen Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Martin Chulov guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Rescue workers in helicopters and earth movers raced to reach Indian villages cut off by mudslides after a powerful earthquake killed 53 people and damaged more than 100000 homes in the remote Himalayan region of India and Nepal. (Sept. 19)
Continue reading …Check out the video for Jennifer Lopez’s new song, “Papi”! In the video, a series of suitors follows the 42-year-old entertainer, and they do whatever it takes to try and win her heart! PHOTOS: Check out the latest pics of Jennifer Lopez Over the weekend, Jennifer joined her estranged husband, Marc Anthony, to celebrate his birthday at a Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Just Jared Discovery Date : 19/09/2011 19:30 Number of articles : 4
Continue reading …Click here to view this media (h/t Heather at VideoCafe ) Dick Cheney is still on his book tour and Sunday he disgraced CBS with an appearance on Face The Nation . Not only has he proclaimed that he was the Decider in Chief of the Bush administration during the 9/11 attacks in his book and the military refused his order to shoot civilian planes down, but he had the audacity to lie about how the Iraq invasion escalated into a full blown civil war after the invasion was over. He responded to Colin Powell’s criticisms of the job he did as VP. COLIN POWELL: “He says that I went out of my way not to present my positions to the President but to take them outside of the administration. That’s nonsense. The President knows and I had told him what I thought about every issue of the day. Mister Cheney may forget that I’m the one who said to President Bush ‘If you break it, you own it, and you’ve got to understand that if we have to go to war in Iraq, we’ve to be prepared for the whole war, not just the first phase.’ And Mister Cheney and many of his colleagues were not prepared for what happened after the fall of Baghdad. Remember, Cheney was the one who kept telling America that the Iraq conflict was in its last throes (as far back as 2005) over and over again as the violence kept escalating. Schieffer actually asked the right question. SCHIEFFER: Let me just ask you this…was it a mistake to get rid of all the people in the army? To disband the army as they did? CHENEY: Well, it may have been a mistake. It wasn’t as though we had total control over everything. In effect, what happened for a large part of it was they just packed up and went home. They disappeared back into the countryside and went back to their private lives. So they weren’t there, it wasn’t as though they’d all found a place where they were waiting for us to come in and take command of the army. What was that? The army’s response to being disbanded by the Bush administration immediately destroyed what fragile peace there was and turned the Sunnis Muslims against the Shiite Muslims, leading to a horrifying blood bath. Probably the single decision that triggered the hostilities was when Paul Bremer was appointed in Iraq and he unceremoniously told Saddam’s former army members that they were not allowed to be part of the newly forming government . Sweeping away remnants of pre-war Iraq, L. Paul Bremer, the top U.S. civilian administrator in Iraq, on Friday dissolved the Iraqi Armed Forces, the ministries of Defense and Information, and other security institutions that supported Saddam Hussein’s regime. An American senior coalition official said the move effectively disbands the Army, the Republican Guard and the Revolutionary Command Council, among others, and cancels any military or other ranks conferred by the previous regime. — It also put an estimated 350,000 to 400,000 soldiers out of work, as well as an estimated 2,000 Information Ministry employees. A deal had been brokered to keep the fragile peace in Iraq by the military leadership and Bremer, who has a history of destabilizing countries by defaulting on their promises without even consulting them. Gen. Peter Pace, then the vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said at a meeting of the Council on Foreign Relations in February 2004 that the decision to disband the Iraqi Army was made without the input of the joint chiefs. “We were not asked for a recommendation or for advice,” he said. These troops were angry and didn’t take their Tonka trucks and go home as Cheney depicted here. They picked up their guns started the civil war. Director Charles Ferguson explained much in his excellent documentary “No End In Sight” The worst mistake, however, was the disbanding of the Iraqi Army in May 2003, two months after the invasion. This was a decision made by only a few men — specifically Bremer in his capacity as the head of the occupation authority, and his aide Walter Slocombe — and against the advice of just about everyone with any on-the-ground knowledge of the situation. (According to Ferguson, it’s unclear if President Bush approved of the idea.) Bremer and Slocombe apparently believed that the Iraqi Army had to be rendered powerless, though others explain to Ferguson that Bremer and Slocombe were confusing the army with the Republican Guard. The Guard consisted of Baath Party loyalists; the Iraqi military was a professional force that had always tried to keep its distance from the Hussein regime. When the war began, the army had faded into the countryside, leaving the Guard to do the bulk of the fighting. Once the Americans prevailed, according to Lawrence Wilkerson, Colin Powell’s chief of staff, Iraqi military officers indicated their willingness to work with the occupiers, but instead they and their troops were stripped of their positions and careers. An estimated 500,000 to 800,000 men, 7 to 10 percent of the Iraqi work force, lost their jobs. And they had guns. “More than any other single action,” Ferguson says, the order to disband the army “created the Iraqi insurgency.” C&L had Charles Ferguson on for a live chat when his film was released in 2007.
Continue reading …New video of the deadly air show crash in Reno, Nev. has emerged. The crash killed ten people and sent 70 to the hospital, according to Forbes. The AP reported the plane that plummeted to the ground had undergone “radical changes” to compete in the air show.
Continue reading …Bratwurst Eating Championship, Winner Joey Chestnut Amazing Man (Joey Chestnut) eats 35 brats to win contest World Eating Champ, Wins Bratwurst Eating Championship (VIDEO) seomilwaukee says: Congrats Joey , I’ll stick to s bowl of super sugar crisp for breakfast: http://t.co/BQQIgeAW
Continue reading …Click here to view this media President Barack Obama Monday introduced his plan to trim the deficit, including a ” Buffett rule ” — named after billionaire Warren Buffett — which would ensure that people making over $1 million a year would pay a tax rate as high as the people that work for them. “Middle class families shouldn’t pay higher taxes than millionaires and billionaires,” the president declared. “That’s pretty straightforward. It’s hard to argue against that. Warren Buffett’s secretary shouldn’t pay a higher tax rate than Warren Buffett. There’s no justification for it.” “Anybody who says we can’t change the tax code to correct that, anyone who has signed some pledge to protect every single tax loophole so long as they live, they should be called out. They should have to defend that unfairness,” he added. “If their pledge [is] to keep that kind of unfairness in place, they should remember the last time I checked, the only pledge that really matters is the pledge we make to uphold the Constitution.” Obama went on to fire back at Republicans who had called his plan class warfare . “We’re already hearing the usual defenders of these kind of loopholes saying this is just class warfare. I reject the idea that asking a hedge fund manager to pay the same tax rate at a plumber or teacher is class warfare. I think it’s just the the right thing to do,” he said. “Both parties agree that we need to reduce the deficit by the same amount, by $4 trillion. So what choices are we going to make to reach that goal? Either we ask the wealthiest Americans to pay their fair share in taxes or we ask seniors to pay more for Medicare. We can’t afford to do both. Either we gut education and medical research or we’ve got to reform the tax code so that most profitable corporations have to give up tax loopholes that other companies don’t get. We can’t afford to do both. This is not class warfare; it’s math.”
Continue reading …The intrepid crew at RebelPundit is highlighting a key moment in the surprise appearance by Rep. Mike Quigley at the American Islamic College Conference in Chicago over the weekend. The Illinois Democrat addressed the group. RebelPundit was not impressed: “He rambled on about the typical racism and discrimination that the liberal left is so convinced America is rampantly infected with.” Quigley then… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Blaze Discovery Date : 19/09/2011 17:34 Number of articles : 2
Continue reading …The Pakistani Taliban said it was responsible for a suicide bombing targeting a senior police officer in Karachi Monday. Chaudhry Aslam was safe, but the attack killed at least 8 people _ 6 police officers and a mother and daughter. (Sept. 19)
Continue reading …