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Anti-Gay Christianist Hate Group Launches Ad Denouncing Harvey Milk Day

From the virulently anti-gay Save California. Subscribe to Joe.My.God. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Joe. My. God. Discovery Date : 18/05/2011 15:16 Number of articles : 5

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Newcastle scrapyard blaze closes city streets

Two people treated for minor injuries and residents evacuated as black smoke drifts over city Fifty firefighters are tackling a spectacular fire in the east end of Newcastle upon Tyne that has sent clouds of black smoke billowing over the famous Byker Wall flats. Residents have been warned to stay inside and shut all doors and windows as thick smoke poured from tyres and oil-soaked car wrecks at a scrapyard in nearby Albion Row. A small number of local people were evacuated from their homes in Northumberland Row but are expected to be allowed back within hours. Six staff working at the yard left after raising the alarm, when smouldering smoke in a six-month-old pile of scrap suddenly burst into flames. The column of smoke could be seen from miles and led to anxious calls to police from people across Northumbria and county Durham. Hundreds of people gathered to watch as crews fought to stop the fire spreading to a neighbouring timber yard. The scrapyard’s managers said there was a 2,000-litre fuel store on the site, and emergency services are trying to check whether the scrap contained potentially dangerous chemicals. Two people have been treated by paramedics for minor injuries. No other buildings have been affected. Northumbria police closed local roads, including Leighton Street and Byker Bank, which runs by the 1960s Byker Wall above the Tyne. A further two roads, Ford and Lime Streets, were later closed and Albion Row was sealed off. The alarm was raised at 12.25pm. It has been too dangerous for forensic teams to start checking for possible causes of the blaze. The Byker Wall was designed as a “village in the sky” by the architect Ralph Erskine. Its 620 flats and maisonettes were built in the 1970s and have been the setting for many TV series and films. Newcastle Martin Wainwright guardian.co.uk

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Barack Obama’s Middle East speech – live coverage

Follow live updates as President Obama makes a key speech on the ‘Arab spring’ and the US’s role in the Middle East 4.20pm BST / 11.20am ET: PJ Crowley, the former State Department spokesman, tweets his thoughts on what Obama needs to do today: We’ll find out in about 20 minutes or so. 4.10pm BST / 11.10am ET: The New York Times puts Obama’s speech today into the context of a busy week for Middle East diplomacy: Thursday’s speech at the State Department is designed to be the first in a series of rhetorical opportunities for the president. On Friday, he will meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for a conversation that will be closely watched by the Jewish community in the United States. And this weekend, Mr Obama will address the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, the largest pro-Israel lobby in the United States. Together, the post-speech events will give the president a chance to assert his support for Israel early in the 2012 campaign cycle. 4pm BST / 11am ET: If you want to watch Obama’s speech from the State Department from the comfort of your computer or iPad, the White House is offering a live video stream here . Good morning from Washington DC, where Barack Obama’s speech on the remarkable ‘Arab spring’ and the shape of US foreign policy in the region is eagerly awaited. Obama is scheduled to begin speaking at 11.40am eastern time, that’s 4.40pm BST and 6.40pm EEST in Damascus. Here’s how the Guardian’s Washington bureau chief Ewen Macaskill previewed the speech earlier today , saying it is Obama’s most important speech on the region since his visit to Cairo in 2009: The speech will deal mainly with the Arab spring, hailing the benefits of democracy and respect for human rights, in spite of America’s long-time support for authoritarian regimes in the region. Senior Obama administration officials, briefing on the speech, said he will take a fresh look at the Middle East after a decade of tension and division. With the winding down of the Iraq war and the death of Osama bin Laden, “we are turning a page”, one official said, adding that the democracy movements reinforced this. My colleague Matthew Weaver has done an excellent job blogging the latest Middle East unreast and anticipation of Obama’s speech today, which you can read right here . Barack Obama Arab and Middle East unrest US foreign policy Obama administration Middle East United States Egypt Syria Israel Libya Tunisia Palestinian territories Richard Adams guardian.co.uk

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Barack Obama’s Middle East speech – live coverage

Follow live updates as President Obama makes a key speech on the ‘Arab spring’ and the US’s role in the Middle East 4.20pm BST / 11.20am ET: PJ Crowley, the former State Department spokesman, tweets his thoughts on what Obama needs to do today: We’ll find out in about 20 minutes or so. 4.10pm BST / 11.10am ET: The New York Times puts Obama’s speech today into the context of a busy week for Middle East diplomacy: Thursday’s speech at the State Department is designed to be the first in a series of rhetorical opportunities for the president. On Friday, he will meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for a conversation that will be closely watched by the Jewish community in the United States. And this weekend, Mr Obama will address the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, the largest pro-Israel lobby in the United States. Together, the post-speech events will give the president a chance to assert his support for Israel early in the 2012 campaign cycle. 4pm BST / 11am ET: If you want to watch Obama’s speech from the State Department from the comfort of your computer or iPad, the White House is offering a live video stream here . Good morning from Washington DC, where Barack Obama’s speech on the remarkable ‘Arab spring’ and the shape of US foreign policy in the region is eagerly awaited. Obama is scheduled to begin speaking at 11.40am eastern time, that’s 4.40pm BST and 6.40pm EEST in Damascus. Here’s how the Guardian’s Washington bureau chief Ewen Macaskill previewed the speech earlier today , saying it is Obama’s most important speech on the region since his visit to Cairo in 2009: The speech will deal mainly with the Arab spring, hailing the benefits of democracy and respect for human rights, in spite of America’s long-time support for authoritarian regimes in the region. Senior Obama administration officials, briefing on the speech, said he will take a fresh look at the Middle East after a decade of tension and division. With the winding down of the Iraq war and the death of Osama bin Laden, “we are turning a page”, one official said, adding that the democracy movements reinforced this. My colleague Matthew Weaver has done an excellent job blogging the latest Middle East unreast and anticipation of Obama’s speech today, which you can read right here . Barack Obama Arab and Middle East unrest US foreign policy Obama administration Middle East United States Egypt Syria Israel Libya Tunisia Palestinian territories Richard Adams guardian.co.uk

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Barack Obama’s Middle East speech – live coverage

Follow live updates as President Obama makes a key speech on the ‘Arab spring’ and the US’s role in the Middle East 4.20pm BST / 11.20am ET: PJ Crowley, the former State Department spokesman, tweets his thoughts on what Obama needs to do today: We’ll find out in about 20 minutes or so. 4.10pm BST / 11.10am ET: The New York Times puts Obama’s speech today into the context of a busy week for Middle East diplomacy: Thursday’s speech at the State Department is designed to be the first in a series of rhetorical opportunities for the president. On Friday, he will meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for a conversation that will be closely watched by the Jewish community in the United States. And this weekend, Mr Obama will address the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, the largest pro-Israel lobby in the United States. Together, the post-speech events will give the president a chance to assert his support for Israel early in the 2012 campaign cycle. 4pm BST / 11am ET: If you want to watch Obama’s speech from the State Department from the comfort of your computer or iPad, the White House is offering a live video stream here . Good morning from Washington DC, where Barack Obama’s speech on the remarkable ‘Arab spring’ and the shape of US foreign policy in the region is eagerly awaited. Obama is scheduled to begin speaking at 11.40am eastern time, that’s 4.40pm BST and 6.40pm EEST in Damascus. Here’s how the Guardian’s Washington bureau chief Ewen Macaskill previewed the speech earlier today , saying it is Obama’s most important speech on the region since his visit to Cairo in 2009: The speech will deal mainly with the Arab spring, hailing the benefits of democracy and respect for human rights, in spite of America’s long-time support for authoritarian regimes in the region. Senior Obama administration officials, briefing on the speech, said he will take a fresh look at the Middle East after a decade of tension and division. With the winding down of the Iraq war and the death of Osama bin Laden, “we are turning a page”, one official said, adding that the democracy movements reinforced this. My colleague Matthew Weaver has done an excellent job blogging the latest Middle East unreast and anticipation of Obama’s speech today, which you can read right here . Barack Obama Arab and Middle East unrest US foreign policy Obama administration Middle East United States Egypt Syria Israel Libya Tunisia Palestinian territories Richard Adams guardian.co.uk

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Sony Chief Howard Stringer Likens Hackers To Mujahideen

NEW YORK — Security has been restored. Come back and play. This was the message delivered to PlayStation aficionados by Sony’s chief executive, Howard Stringer, during a Tuesday morning sit-down with a handful of reporters. Some 36 hours earlier, the company had flipped the switch on its popular online game network, resuming service for many of its customers. Sony had shut the network down three weeks earlier following a brazen breach by hackers who broke into files that held personal information for as many as 100 million customers, including credit card numbers. “We are up and running, and we are safer than ever,” Stringer declared, kicking off a vigorous workout of that reassuring phrase. But these declarations soon faded into less comforting acknowledgements about the nebulous threat of hackers in an era of broadening connectivity. Reassurance gave way to resignation about the remaining vulnerabilities -– not just for Sony, but for all companies, not to mention the tens of millions of people increasingly entrusting banking information, photographs, medical histories, libraries and intimate fragments of their lives to the memory banks of the Internet. “It’s a realization that we all had, that no system is 100 percent safe,” said Kazuo Hirai, who oversees Sony’s online game division, and has been at the center of managing the security breach. “This requires constant monitoring and constant vigilance.” It is known as cloud computing — storing information not on your own device, but on someone else’s server. This phrase is starting to sound more apt by the day, and not in a good way, as if the clouds are a barrier to clarity giving cover to bad elements. Who else has access to your data, and where are the threats? Who knows? Such details are maddeningly obscured by the amorphous nature of the threats at issue. When pirates first broke into Sony’s servers last month, the company said it found evidence that Anonymous, a loosely organized collective of hackers, had played a role. That prompted an unusual public disavowal from Anonymous, deepening the mystery. Sony still does not know who broke into its servers, its executives said Tuesday –- this, despite hiring several security firms and engaging law enforcement agencies, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation. “We continue to hire people to investigate,” Stringer said, “but we haven’t found any evidence to point the finger at anybody.” Despite adding security measures, conducting myriad tests and studying the results in granular detail, Sony says it cannot offer assurances that its networks are today impenetrable to mischief-making outsiders. “Who can stop whom?” Stringer said. “It’s a kind of escalating competition between good and bad. These are the new rules of cyberspace.” Like perhaps any chief executive atop a multinational empire, Stringer carries himself with the confidence that befits someone accustomed to commanding thousands of people at points around the globe, his pronouncements capable of altering sizable flows of money. He spends his life hopscotching from Sony’s offices in Japan to its Hollywood movie studios to his residence in London. On this day, he sat in a grey power suit and a silk tie, his pressed shirt adorned with glinting cufflinks, as he presided over a paneled conference room on the 35th floor of the Sony Tower in midtown Manhattan. A high definition video conference system linked up Sony executives in Japan. But despite the veritable army of resources he commands, recent months have confronted Stringer with a series of lessons in the limits of power in the modern-day world. He spent much of March in Japan, grappling with the impacts of the devastating earthquake and tsunami, attending to blackouts, parts shortages and the human dimension of a full-scale disaster. Just as that crisis relented, hackers delivered another, forcing the company to shut down its popular online game services. In the wake of the hacking incursions, Sony has faced a barrage of criticism that it did not do enough to protect itself against the threat, with one expert telling a Congressional panel that the company had used outdated gear — even as he admitted that he did not really know this was the case. As Stringer portrays it, the incident has brought home the reality that the world is essentially infected by unseen threats against which no company can fully inoculate itself. Asked if governments can be helpful, Stringer said it was encouraging to see the White House last week press Congress to deliver legislation aimed at limiting cyber-security threats. But he cautioned against hoping this would produce a fix: Governments themselves engage in hacking against other governments, he said, adding that these operations function like veritable training programs for freelance hackers, who put their skills to use however they choose. “You know cyber theft is going on between governments,” Stringer said. “Everyone recognizes the defense agencies and security agencies around the world have very very sophisticated hackers that can hack quite a lot of secrets.” He noted reports of state-sponsored hacking involving China, Russia, Iran and Israel. “If you train your best minds to hack sophisticated nuclear entities around the world, you’re going to get some brilliant people, and when they’re unemployed they will turn to other endeavors.” Stringer indulged a metaphor that could hardly sow assurance, likening hackers to the spawn of the Afghan mujahideen militias trained and aided by American forces to attack their Soviet occupiers in the 1980s. Among the more prominent mujahideen to emerge from that period: Osama bin Laden, who took his arms and skills and folded them into a new enterprise known as al Qaeda. Adding to the discomfiting nature of the threat is the lack of clarity about the motivations of those involved, rendering defense complex. Stringer recalled how online piracy burgeoned with music, as people sought ways to share files instead of shelling out large sums of money for albums from major labels. Then, the action shifted to movies on DVD. These episodes were propelled by clear financial motive. But the latest target is harder to grasp — online games that are served up free. “There’s a lot of moral ambiguity,” he said, offering up the common lament of a commander seemingly forced to battle ghosts. “We’re all wrapped in the same shroud.”

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Liberal Filmmaker Decries David Koch’s $100 Million Donation to NY Theater as Attempt to ‘Destroy Democracy’

Liberals endlessly harp on what they perceive as conservatives' greed. What really sticks in their craw is conservatives' generosity. An example of this occurred on Ed Schultz's radio show Monday with guest Robert Greenwald, a filmmaker specializing in left-wing agitprop at an outfit he modestly calls Brave New Films. Greenwald was describing a website he recently created, Koch Brothers Exposed, about energy magnates David and Charles Koch. The site includes a video of protesters outside a Lincoln Center theater named after David Koch when he pledged $100 million for badly-needed renovations three years ago. The demonstrators staged a “renaming ceremony” demanding the theater shed Koch from its name. Here's Greenwald elaborating on this to Schultz — GREENWALD: Well, we launched the Koch Brothers Exposed website, Facebook page and Twitter about two months ago when we first started with a video telling people the five worst things the Kochs had done. We got thousands of people responding to that. And then the other night in New York City we had a renaming ceremony. David Koch gave $100 million to call the New York State Theater in his name, David Koch Theater, and we had people out there with signs saying what it really should be called. We have people now on the Facebook and the website voting on what the real name of the theater should be, everything from I Killed The Middle Class, which was one of my favorites, to the Unclean Energy, to I'm Just Not That Into You Democracy. And if you go to the Koch Brothers Exposed website or Facebook page, you can kind of join. Now there's obviously satire there, Ed, but there's an important point behind it. And the important point is that these are, as you know and as a lot of your listeners know, they're giving hundreds of millions of dollars to destroy democracy, to buy their ideology, and to literally propagandize people. And it's very important that we use all the possible tools to educate people, to inform them, and to satirize what they're doing and how they're doing it. Obviously there's satire involved here, Ed, and just as obviously it could not be more churlish. I noticed in the “renaming ceremony” video at Koch Brothers Exposed that none of the protesters demanded the theater return the donation from Koch. Then again, why would they? Far better to reap the benefits of that donation while also maligning of a man whose politics they abhor. In other words, liberalism in a nutshell. Greenwald then quickly glossed over Koch's philanthrophic generosity over the years and suggested Koch is motivated by little more than playing political puppet-master on the right through his wealth — SCHULTZ: Pretty amazing what's going on. They must have someone who's organizing all of this in a team of people who are really watchdogs on issues and candidates in what we would call problem spots for them. How, I mean, I can't believe that the Koch brothers would be sitting down watching the cables every night and looking at all the websites, hey listen (in guise of Kochs' voices), we gotta throw two million over here! Well, we gotta throw another three, four, oh holy smokes, this guy polled well over in this state! Throw $5 million at this thing! How do they function? What do they do? GREENWALD: Well, they're actually very smart about their giving and very deep about their giving. First, they fund ideas through the think tanks. Then they fund people to take those ideas and go on television and cable to talk about it. Then they fund activist groups to take those ideas and work them. And then finally, they fund the elected officials. But they don't focus on the elected officials 'cause they're much smarter than that. They know that elected officials, in their words, read from a script. What they want to be able to do is write the script for the elected officials (to) read from. Greenwald gets to “and then finally” and leaves out what is most awkward for him on this — the Kochs have donated far more to cultural endeavors,

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Iraqi Police Targeted in Deadly Triple Blasts

Twin bombs that appeared timed to lure policemen out of their fortified headquarters in the northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk killed at least 27 people Thursday. A third blast targeting a police patrol brought the number of injured to 70. (May 19)

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Iraqi Police Targeted in Deadly Triple Blasts

Twin bombs that appeared timed to lure policemen out of their fortified headquarters in the northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk killed at least 27 people Thursday. A third blast targeting a police patrol brought the number of injured to 70. (May 19)

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Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3

Type: Video Games Title: Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 See all customer reviews Product Description: Modern Warfare is back. On November 8th, the best-selling first person action series of all-time returns with the epic sequel to the multiple Game of the Year award winner Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2. See the details

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