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If you’re browsing the Twittersphere right now, you might notice that the trending topics list is saturated with pop music references. Many TTs are due to last night’s MTV Video Music Awards, but some are there thanks to the work …

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Mayor Bloomberg Responds to El Bloombito [Video]

[caption id="attachment_180118" align="alignleft" width="300" caption="Usted use Tweetdeck? (YouTube)"] [1][/caption] Mayor Michael Bloomberg made a visit to Engine 166/Ladder 86 Fire Company on Staten Island today, to thank the firefighters there for their work and hold his second post-Irene press conference. With clear skies and the city back to work, the mood was light enough for a daring reporter… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The New York Observer Discovery Date : 29/08/2011 20:47 Number of articles : 3

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Whitehall emails reveal the hidden costs of promoting free schools

Cash for Conservative project fast-tracked to charity which was sole bidder for the work, part of the ‘big society’ agenda The controversial Tory initiative to set up free schools received fast-track public funding after fierce lobbying from Michael Gove’s inner circle of advisers, according to leaked emails. Civil servants were urged that the New Schools Network (NSN) – a charity providing advice and guidance to set up the schools – should be given “cash without delay”, in a disclosure which will heighten concern over the government’s lack of transparency about the wider free schools programme. The charity, which is headed by a former Gove adviser, was subsequently given a £500,000 grant. No other organisation was invited to bid for the work. The award was made after an email from Dominic Cummings, a Tory strategist and confidant of Gove, called for: “MG telling the civil servants to find a way to give NSN cash without delay.” Cummings went on to work for the charity on a freelance basis. Sent after the election last May, his message goes on to say: “Labour has handed hundreds of millions to leftie orgs – if u guys cant navigate this thro the bureauc then not a chance of any new schools starting!!” The existence of the email can be revealed as the first 24 free schools prepare to open their doors to pupils. The first wave of free schools includes one which has the journalist Toby Young as its chair of governors, two Jewish faith schools, a Hindu school and a Sikh school. At least three of the schools – Discovery new school in West Sussex, St Luke’s in north London, and Canary Wharf college – will have a Christian ethos. The Maharishi school in Lancashire, which was founded by the Beatles’ guru Maharish Mahesh Yogi and teaches children to meditate, has become a state school as part of the programme. The schools will be the most prominent part of the Tories’ “big society” vision, although in many cases faith organisations, education companies or existing academy sponsors have taken the lead rather than groups of parents or teachers. The government has declined to reveal the costs of funding individual free schools but estimates the overall budget for buildings at between £110m to £130m. It has also declined requests under the Freedom of Information Act to identify the groups applying to open free schools next year. In the email Cummings sets out a timetable for the creation of free schools. He outlines a list of demands – from a “legislative/regulatory timetable” to a “big early july conference with hundreds coming (paid for by dcsf)”. Legislation to enable the creation of free schools was pushed through parliament last summer under procedures usually reserved for counter-terrorism measures. The government held a free schools conference – which David Cameron addressed by videolink – in January. The message was addressed to Gove; his senior policy adviser Sam Freedman; Rachel Wolf, who heads the NSN; and Gove’s special adviser Henry de Zoete. Lisa Nandy, a Labour member of the education select committee, said: “This is definitive proof that this was a way of diverting taxpayers’ money to pay for a political agenda, at a time when the government was making huge spending cuts. Just shortly after that grant was announced they cancelled Building Schools for the Future – it’s pretty shocking. “This confirms what many suspected, that there is a political agenda behind the decision to hand over the money to the New Schools Network. Gove has serious questions to answer – this message is addressed to him, the money was handed over shortly afterwards in a fog of confusion.” A further leaked email reveals the blurred boundaries which existed between Gove’s team and the New Schools Network. In the email, Wolf is asked by one of Gove’s staff to provide the prime minister with a “line to take” after a Tory councillor in Birmingham raised concerns that a free school in his city had the potential to be “socially divisive and undermine … community cohesion”. Wolf worked as a special adviser to Gove while he was shadow education secretary. On its website, the New Schools Network describes itself as an “independent charity” which has been given a government grant to act as the first point of contact with free school proposers. Nandy said the email indicated that the NSN had been given public money to act as “a propaganda machine for a political agenda”. “What they are asking for is a way to play down the negative impact of free schools. They gave this contract to the New Schools Network to provide independent, impartial advice to people setting up free schools. That should surely include advice on the downside of setting up new schools, not just the positive. They were given taxpayers’ money in order to act as a propaganda machine for a political agenda.” The email from Cummings gives an indication of the attitude towards the civil service by those around Gove. He writes that: “There needs to be an announcement soon about indicative timetables for new schools and what is going to be achieved before august. Forcing the conference in july will force the department to focus on it.” Another leaked email exchange indicates that Cummings was closely involved in government work. This email exchange shows that he was invited to a “prep session” ahead of the spending review last October. According to the emails, this involved “posing challenging questions to SoS [Gove] to ensure that his briefing is adequate and to iron out any detailed narrative.” Wolf said that Cummings started work for the NSN as a volunteer at the end of June, and freelanced for them from July to December last year. She said: “He initially volunteered then we hired him as a freelancer paid by the half day. He did various projects – mostly publications, communications and strategy. He averaged about 10 days a month. “We were always extremely clear about what specific jobs he was doing for us. He had a standard freelance contract like the others we hire. Those jobs were not about Michael [Gove] and politics. We hired him because he’s really, really good and we know that he believes in what we’re doing, and he helped us out a lot. “I’m confident we didn’t do anything that was inappropriate. We’re obviously very mindful of our obligations as a charity.” Wolf said the NSN had not received any government funds since mid-July this year and was being financed entirely by donors. Cummings said the NSN has “unique abilities”, and without it there would not have been any free schools this year. “It was no secret that I thought NSN should be funded as fast as possible so that new schools could open as fast as possible – I said the same thing to senior officials many times.” Free schools Michael Gove Education policy Secondary schools Primary schools Jeevan Vasagar guardian.co.uk

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Hurricane Irene 2011: Weather Channel Streaker Disrupts Coverage (VIDEO)

Weather Channel reporter Eric Fisher was giving a live report about Hurricane Irene on Saturday when a streaker disrupted his coverage. Fisher said he was “pretty much speechless” about the swarms of people he saw reveling in the streets of Virginia Beach, even as Hurricane Irene whipped about all around him. Fisher clearly thought people were being foolish and reckless, but said he would “bite his tongue” to avoid being too frank about the situation. As if to prove his point, a group of young men in bathing suits ran past him during the live report he was giving, and one of them even flashed the camera–from behind and in front. Watch the footage below (warning: graphic video):

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JWoww’s Ring Steals the Show at VMA Red Carpet

The AP’s Natalie Rotman talks about MTV Video Music Awards fashion, Britney Spears tribute, and a breaking news of an engagement for Jersey Shore’s JWoww. (Aug. 29)

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Consumer Spending Rebounds, Up 0.8 Pct. in July

Consumer spending grew in July by 0.8 percent, the largest amount in five months. That followed a decline in June and helped ease fears that the US economy is on the verge of another recession. (Aug. 29)

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Bachmann: Hurricane is God’s Warning About Government Spending

Click here to view this media Republican presidential candidate Michele Bachmann told voters in Florida Sunday that Hurricane Irene and the recent East Coast earthquake were just God’s way of telling politicians to reign in government spending. “I don’t know how much God has to do to get the attention of the politicians,” Bachmann said during the speech in Sarasota. “We’ve had an earthquake; we’ve had a hurricane. He said, ‘Are you going to start listening to me here?’ Listen to the American people because the American people are roaring right now. They know government is on a morbid obesity diet and we’ve got to rein in the spending.” At least 21 people died over the weekend due to the storm. UPDATE: Bachmann made a similar claim at another event (via Scarce ). Click here to view this media

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HTC Sense 3.5 caught on camera, gets a manicured walkthrough (video)

It was only a matter of time before leaked screen shots of HTC’s Sense 3.5 became leaked video footage. Purportedly running on the OEM’s unreleased, ladies-only Bliss handset , XDA.cn has a hands-on of the Android-based UI that looks to be more of a refinement, than revolutionary update. So, what can we glimpse from this apparent sneak peek? The ROM, shown to be running atop Android 2.3.4 , now sports a more pared-down look, as evinced by the lock screen’s sleeker ring. There’s still the same seven homescreens on offer, although it now appears you can delete the contents of a selected screen by dragging it to the trash. Gone is the familiar home panel with its curved shape, in favor of two non-intrusive, dedicated app and phone buttons on the left and right sides of the screen. The widgets also look to have taken on a roomier size, and the volume can now be controlled via an on-screen widget. Aside from those minor tweaks, not much else has changed, but you can definitely see an improvement in the UI’s fluidity. Could this be HTC’s very next upgrade to its popular Android skin, or are we looking at a slickly-produced ROM? You can judge for yourself in the video after the break. Continue reading HTC Sense 3.5 caught on camera, gets a manicured walkthrough (video) HTC Sense 3.5 caught on camera, gets a manicured walkthrough (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 29 Aug 2011 15:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Knife Attack at China Daycare Center Wounds 8

A staff member slashed children with a knife at a daycare center for the children of migrant workers in eastern China on Monday, wounding eight children, one seriously. Video was supplied to the AP was already altered. (Aug. 29)

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(The above video uses satire to explain the mortgage crisis) Many Americans have no idea how to understand Europe’s financial problems because economics is not an easy topic to grasp while they are trying to sort out their own lives. We do hear from time to time how we’re linked in a global financial marketplace so what happens in France or Japan effects us too. What Americans have seen on TV are people rioting in the streets over government imposed “austerity” measures that hurt them. Want to be able to explain it to your friends and family members? Just use this article Digby found which puts into terms that are easy to understand: How To Turn A Continent into A Subprime CDO. Subprime Europe Why the push to emulate Europe suddenly from the right? Don’t you remember when right wing pundits and politicians used Europe as their punching bag, especially France during the Bush years? Anyway Digby found an article that explains what’s been happening to the Eurozone in a very easy way to understand. If you are having trouble unraveling the Eurozone crisis read this . It puts it into a perspective we here in the US can easily understand: The Eurozone today resembles a 2008 vintage subprime CDO. The Greek, Irish and Portuguese periphery is the riskiest junior tranche, the Italians and the Spanish are, appropriately, the mezzanine tranche, with France and Germany forming the senior tranche. And just like 2007-8, all the liquidity is drying up, as seen in the need for the banks from these sates to keep going to the ECB’s discount window. So all you need is a part of the junior tranche to default and the losses will rip through the junior into the mezzanine and will end up destroying the senior tranche as each bondholder dumps good to cover bad before the other guy does. Once again the CDO, despite its designer’s intent, stands or falls together, this time through contagion rather than correlation, but the principle is the same. What will cause the CDO to implode? Exactly the austerity policies Germany demands of everyone else, which as we now see, has slowed growth in Germany’s main markets and Germany itself, to a standstill. Such sustained slow or negative growth will make bondholders still more nervous. And yet the German response will be the same – more austerity – more rules – more councils of the same people who have kicked the can down the road for a year and a half, and more declarations of ‘unshakable commitments’ to the Euro that no one believes anymore. Europe has reached a point where its collective bank exposures are bigger than its collective bailout capacity. Like the CDO of legend, the income streams are running dry and correlation is rising to one. You can blame the state all you like, but its banking crisis at its core. The cover that the banks got from their bait and switch on the public is a one-time deal, and it is about to be rudely exposed. Read the whole thing . It’s not long. This old world’s in trouble, boys and girls. We constantly hear GOP politicians and pundits remark that America is broke and compare us to Greece if we don’t stop government spending . A nice fear-mongering tactic used by conservatives to try and scare Americans into believing stimulus spending in a time of a recession is akin to sending your grandmother to a death panel (you know, the lie of the year). And the only way we can save the US of A is to take the austerity approach that Europe has adopted even though it’s been a complete failure. So they say we must cut federal hiring, slash spending, reduce the federal deficits at all costs, cut taxes even lower than they are. Then we implement their version of a shared sacrifice where by our share is we raise the retirement age of our social safety nets and cutting costs to the programs by other reforms to the system in exchange for (their share) a few meaningless tax reforms (loop holes on corporate jets) that will raise some revenue in return.

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