Wiretap transcripts, including alleged blackmail risk, could further damage standing of Italy’s prime minister Silvio Berlusconi was on Thursday braced for a tidal wave of new and reportedly compromising allegations about his private life as prosecutors confirmed the conclusion of an investigation into the supply of prostitutes and other women for parties at his Rome residence. Court papers included a claim that the man who provided women for the parties had offered a well-known Italian actor the chance to present the annual San Remo song contest if she agreed to sleep with the 75-year-old prime minister. Manuela Arcuri, the star of a string of TV dramas, said she refused. But Berlusconi’s associates fear far more damaging material is contained in 1,000 or so wiretap transcripts made during the inquiry that could now leak to the media. The prime minister, who is not a suspect in the investigation, is already under huge pressure from several quarters. Against a background of concern that Italy risks being dragged into a Greek-style debt crisis, rumours have been circulating that investigators recorded the prime minister as he made a grossly obscene reference to the German chancellor, Angela Merkel. The chancellor’s co-operation is vital to resolving the debt crisis on the euro zone’s southern flank. Interviewed on radio, a former Berlusconi minister, Rocco Buttiglione, said he did not know if the rumour was true, but if it were “how could someone in a situation like that lead the government?” he suggested. He added: “Does he not realise that he is dramatically damaging Italy?” His was not the only voice calling on Berlusconi to step down. In a front-page editorial, Italy’s top-selling daily, Corriere della Sera, said Italy was in “a situation at the limits of sustainability”. And it asked “how long it can go on without provoking serious damage?” Police this month arrested the alleged purveyor of women for Berlusconi’s parties, Giampaolo Tarantini, and his wife, on suspicion of blackmailing the prime minister through an intermediary. In a deposition, Berlusconi insisted he made voluntary payments to the couple because they were in a “very difficult situation”. The prosecutors believe more than €500,000 (£438,000) was handed over. According to leaked wiretap transcripts published on Thursday, after it was reported that an investigation had been launched, Berlusconi told the intermediary he should stay abroad. He reportedly added: “I will of course exonerate everyone.” Prosecutors in Naples have said they believe the money was paid to prevent Tarantini contradicting the prime minister’s insistence that he was unaware the women, some of whom spent the night, were paid. The prosecutors want to question Berlusconi, but he has avoided an encounter. This week they announced that, if he continued dodging them, they would ask a judge to order the police to bring him in. The prime minister’s vulnerability to blackmail is central to another evolving scandal. It was reported this week that a witness had told prosecutors in Milan that Berlusconi was, as he once claimed, in a long-term relationship. The witness, a Moroccan belly dancer, named his live-in girlfriend as a Montenegrin, named Katarina. The weekly L’Espresso identified her as Katarina Knezevic, 20, a former “Miss Montenegro”. It said she had a twin sister, and that in 2009 the pair, both of whom are models, had been photographed in Sardinia in the company of Madonna’s former husband, Guy Ritchie. Berlusconi mentioned an unidentified lover to rebut claims of wild parties at his home outside Milan. But the witness, who said she was a reluctant participant in “Bunga Bunga” sessions, confirmed the claims, adding that, jealous of the other women present, Knezevic had thrown herself down the stairs of the prime minister’s mansion. The Moroccan woman also described how a female associate of the prime minister, who is now a member of the regional parliament of Lombardy, had been one of two who dressed as nuns before stripping down to G-strings while pole dancing. The regional lawmaker denied the claim, but was embarrassed on Wednesday when she was photographed in the Milan fashion district while wearing a top emblazoned with the words: “I’m even better without the T-shirt.” Silvio Berlusconi Italy Europe corruption index Angela Merkel John Hooper guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The runway show of Gulnara Karimova, the daughter of Uzbekistan’s authoritarian leader, took place Thursday across town from official New York Fashion Week amid protests alleging forced child labor in the cotton fields of her home country. (Sept. 15)
Continue reading …enlarge Credit: Washington Post It comes as no surprise that Congressional Republicans are balking at President Obama’s $447 billion program forecast to produce as many as 1.9 million jobs . But while the GOP has opposed Obama’s calls for new tax revenue from the wealthiest Americans to pay for it, most of the Republican presidential field wants to give them yet another trillion dollar tax cut payday by eliminating the capital gains tax . With U.S. income inequality at its highest level in 80 years and the total federal tax burden at its lowest in 60, the last thing America needs to do is further reduce the capital gains tax. As a decade of data shows, the Treasury-draining Bush capital gains and dividend tax windfall for the wealthy not only failed to produce employment gains from America’s so-called ” job creators .” As the Washington Post detailed, “capital gains tax rates benefiting wealthy feed [the] growing gap between rich and poor.” Nevertheless, most Republicans are calling for a new capital gains tax rate: zero . As the Post explained, for the very richest Americans the successive capital gains tax cuts from Presidents Clinton (to 20 percent) and Bush (to 15 percent) have been “better than any Christmas gift”: While it’s true that many middle-class Americans own stocks or bonds, they tend to stash them in tax-sheltered retirement accounts, where the capital gains rate does not apply. By contrast, the richest Americans reap huge benefits. Over the past 20 years, more than 80 percent of the capital gains income realized in the United States has gone to 5 percent of the people; about half of all the capital gains have gone to the wealthiest 0.1 percent. The convenient chart above tells the tale. And as the Washington Post suggests elsewhere in its jaw-dropping series ” Breaking Away ,” plummeting tax rates overall and on capital gains in particular have been widening the chasm between the rich and everyone else in America: Nevertheless, the same Republicans digging in their heels against President Obama’s latest proposed middle tax relief in the form of a continued payroll tax holiday want to gut the capital gains tax or eliminate it altogether. In 2008, Republican presidential nominee John McCain called for halving the rate to 7.5 percent, a move which would have earned him and his beer heiress wife tens of thousands of dollars annually. This year’s crop of GOP White House hopefuls is little different. While Newt Gingrich long ago echoed Alan Greenspan’s demand that “the appropriate capital gains tax rate was zero,” Jon Huntsman reversed course to take the same position. (For his part, Mitt Romney wants to end capital gains taxes for that small group earning under $200,000 a year.) And as ThinkProgress reported, they have a lot of company from Michele Bachmann, Herman Cain and Ron Paul among Republican presidential candidates looking to drain $1 trillion from the Treasury over the next decade. Of course, given the massive giveaway of the past 10 years, yet another capital gains bonanza for the gilded-class will only serve to empty Uncle Sam’s coffers while doing little to benefit the economy overall. Back in May, John Boehner explained to CBS News who Republicans would be trying to protect during the debt ceiling negotiations with President Obama: “The top one percent of wage earners in the United States…pay forty percent of the income taxes…The people he’s talking about taxing are the very people that we expect to reinvest in our economy.” If so, those expectations were sadly unmet after the tax cuts of George W. Bush. After all, the last time the top tax rate was 39.6 percent during the Clinton administration , the United States enjoyed rising incomes, 23 million new jobs and budget surpluses. Under Bush? Not so much. On January 9, 2009, the Republican-friendly Wall Street Journal summed it up with an article titled simply, ” Bush on Jobs: the Worst Track Record on Record .” (The Journal’s interactive table quantifies his staggering failure relative to every post-World War II president.) The meager one million jobs created under President Bush didn’t merely pale in comparison to the 23 million produced during Bill Clinton’s tenure. In September 2009, the Congressional Joint Economic Committee charted Bush’s job creation disaster, the worst since Hoover: As David Leonhardt of the New York Times aptly concluded last year: Those tax cuts passed in 2001 amid big promises about what they would do for the economy. What followed? The decade with the slowest average annual growth since World War II. Amazingly, that statement is true even if you forget about the Great Recession and simply look at 2001-7. The data are clear: lower taxes for America’s so called job-creators don’t mean either faster economic growth or more jobs for Americans . But while Boehner’s job creators didn’t create any jobs after the top rate was trimmed to 35 percent and capital gains and dividends taxes were slashed, they did enjoy an unprecedented windfall courtesy of the United States Treasury. For Republicans, this predictable result of the Bush tax cuts was a feature, not a bug. As the Center for American Progress noted in 2004, “for the majority of Americans, the tax cuts meant very little,” adding, “By next year, for instance, 88 percent of all Americans will receive $100 or less from the Administration’s latest tax cuts.” But that’s just the beginning of the story. As the CAP also reported, the Bush tax cuts delivered a third of their total benefits to the wealthiest 1 percent of Americans . And to be sure, their payday was staggering. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities showed that millionaires on average pocketed almost $129,000 from the Bush tax cuts of 2001 and 2003. As a result, millionaires saw their after-tax incomes rise by 6.2 percent, while the gain for those earning between $40,000 and $50,000 was paltry 2.2 percent. And as the New York Times uncovered in 2006, the 2003 Bush dividend and capital gains tax cuts offered almost nothing to taxpayers earning below $100,000 a year. Instead, those windfalls reduced taxes “on incomes of more than $10 million by an average of about $500,000.” As the Times explained in a shocking chart: “The top 2 percent of taxpayers, those making more than $200,000, received more than 70% of the increased tax savings from those cuts in investment income.” It’s no wonder that between 2001 and 2007- a period during which poverty was rising and average household income had fallen – the 400 richest taxpayers saw their incomes double to an average of $345 million even as their effective tax rate was virtually halved. As the Washington Post noted, “The 400 richest taxpayers in 2008 counted 60 percent of their income in the form of capital gains and 8 percent from salary and wages. The rest of the country reported 5 percent in capital gains and 72 percent in salary.” As ThinkProgress demonstrated, historically lower tax rates for the richest Americans did not produce either more job creation or faster economic growth . (In fact, the Bush years produced what the Times’ Leonhardt rightly labeled as “The decade with the slowest average annual growth since World War II.”) But what the conservative cornucopia for the gilded-class does reliably produce is unprecedented income inequality . (It’s worth noting that the changing landscape of loopholes, deductions and credits, especially after the 1986 tax reform signed by President Reagan, makes apples-to-apples comparisons of effective tax rates over time very difficult. For more background, see the CBO data on effective tax rates by income quintile.) At the end of the day, cutting capital gains taxes like the estate tax ultimately produces just another payout for many who have already won life’s lottery. As Warren Buffett once suggested, it’s time for Washington to stop “giving incredible head starts to certain people who were very selective about the womb from which they emerged.”
Continue reading …A clearly offended Rachel Maddow took Congressional Republicans to task on her Monday show for their conduct surrounding President Obama’s jobs speech. The speech was preceded by a day of wrangling over when it would actually happen. Speaker John Boehner, in a move widely seen as unprecedented, refused to allow Obama to speak when he wanted to, forcing him to reschedule the speech for the next day. Boehner said that there were votes that couldn’t be missed, and a security sweep that would take too long. Maddow noted the important business that the House attended to the night Obama wanted to speak: a vote authorizing a “charity jogging event,” and a salute to a North Carolina softball team. “One vote and some non-binding speechifying,” she said incredulously. But Maddow seemed far more peeved that some Republicans refused to even turn up for the speech. She noted that at least four Republicans from the South announced before the speech that they would not be attending. “There is apparently something about this president that erases the need for whatever deference Congressional Republicans might otherwise feel toward the office that President Obama holds,” Maddow said, very, very pointedly. “I would love to hear them explain exactly what that is.” WATCH: Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy
Continue reading …I was recently speaking with a teen aged girl who said: “I adore my father but I would never date anyone like him. He treats me like a princess, but I don’t like the way he treats women.” I was blown away by her ability to so succinctly articulate the complexity of her emotions about the two sides of her father; the man who loves her and the man who seemingly treats women as disposable, interchangeable, companions for the purposes of physical and social convenience. It’s not that he’s blatantly disrespectful on any level and as a single man, his behavior is far from inappropriate, yet she has learned well, and recognizes the contrast between how he has taught her to be loved and how he treats women in general. Her father lavishes her with affection and attention, so she feels cherished. Before she even understood what it meant, he told her she was beautiful, smart and worthy. This makes her relatively immune to the compliments of boys who try to impress her with words that would make a girl deprived of such reinforcement swoon or flee. Ambition, intelligence and good communication are her basic requirements. The young men courting her understand the bar has been set high and vie for her respect and friendship. Our exchange prompted me to think about the fathers in my life: my father, my friend’s fathers, my brothers, colleagues etc. and what their daughters could possibly be learning from them about their self image and how they should be treated as women. Everything from what love looks and feels like, to the value of intelligence and definition of physical beauty are transmitted from father to daughter in verbal and non-verbal cues. When I was about five years old, my father looked at me and offered a stern warning, “You have fat potential!” At the time, I had no idea what he meant, but I could tell from his tone, and the way he looked at me, it was not good. I eventually learned what it meant and became obsessed with my weight. I was terrified of gaining weight. It took me many years, a handful of therapists and even more self-help books to get myself firmly on the path to reversing the damage inflicted upon my self image by my father’s well received words. A colleague of mine recently bragged “I’ve been married 18 years and never once cheated!” I laughed and asked if he was impotent. Of course he wasn’t, but he did boast that his wife could wear his fourteen year old daughter’s bathing suit. This was his reason for fidelity; having a wife in her 40′s, with three children, that does God only knows what, to fit herself into clothing belonging to her child, barely two years into puberty. I could only hope that she was modeling healthy choices to her children in her efforts to keep herself this size. I congratulated him and wondered if he would take responsibility if he were to discover his daughter throwing up her meals to meet his weight requirements. Could he even see how with all the pressure surrounding young girls to look like airbrushed, anorexic models, that his comments might have a detrimental effect on his daughter? Another father, married 20 years with two teenaged daughters, has a beautiful family, whom he professes to love deeply and value greatly. Yet, he has been having an affair for almost 10 years. I asked him if he really believed his daughters and wife were clueless about his clandestine activities. He looked at me earnestly and nodded yes. I told him I disagreed and shared with him my understanding of the uncanny ability of children to know all things that parents try to hide. He admitted that he watched his own father’s infidelity throughout his parent’s marriage. Then he mentioned a cousin of his who serially cheats on her husband; she attributes this to watching her father cheat on her mother and she realized in therapy how this experience left her with trust issues. Subconsciously, her cheating is her way of avoiding the heartache and humiliation she watched her mother endure. He became introspective when he realized how many of our friends are dealing with the fallout of their father’s affairs playing out in their relationships. With so much emphasis on fathers to take care of their sons, and I emphatically agree that this is crucial, I would ask all fathers to recognize that your daughters need your care too. They are watching you and learning about their value based on the actions and words you offer them. Your treatment of their mother and the other women you befriend, love and interact with, speak volumes about a woman’s worth. Your power lies in your understanding of the significant impact your behavior has on your daughter’s self image and how it will influence the quality of relationships she chooses. This is the currency she will carry as she travels into the world of adulthood.
Continue reading …When American Apparel recently introduced a new line of XL clothing, the company launched its “Next BIG Thing” contest to find “booty-ful” models. They probably didn’t expect someone like Nancy Upton to spoil their fun by mocking the contest — and then winning. Upton, 24, had a friend shoot a series of photos that included
Continue reading …Sounds like someone’s a sore loser: Miss France Laury Thilleman snarked about Miss Angola Leila Lopes after Lopes was crowned Miss Universe , complaining to a French magazine about Lopes’ fashion sense, among other things. The Washington Post offers a translation: “She was the only girl I didn’t know very well….
Continue reading …Earlier this year we saw Japanese trailers [1] for Takeshi Kitano’s latest film Outrage, which marks his return to gangster pictures. (He previously made one of the best Japanese gangster films, Sonatine, as well as other movies about the Yakuza.) Now we’ve got a US trailer via Magnet, and if you wanted a clearer look at the film than those Japanese clips provided, this should do the trick. Reviews… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : /Film Discovery Date : 15/09/2011 02:30 Number of articles : 3
Continue reading …Easy ride vaporises for bikers as crackdown looks set to take up to 5,000 imported Harley-Davidsons off the road A Harley-Davidson is the dream of many a middle-aged, leather-loving, motorbike enthusiast, and Spaniards, especially, are in love with the US machine. But now thousands of the bikes are being ordered off the road, or running the risk of being impounded by the police. Up to 5,000 Harleys could be brought to a halt following detection of a scam used by importers. Harleys bought in the US and shipped to Spain by some importers have reportedly then been sent to privately owned MOT centres that have been willing to turn a blind eye to the legal requirements for vehicles in Spain. The police crackdown has infuriated Harley owners who, having paid upwards of €16,000 (£14,000) for their machines, claim the company is trying to stop secondhand imports so as to sell more motorbikes through its official dealers. Harley-Davidson has vigorously denied any such involvement. “The police have detected that some MOT centres are giving imported secondhand Harleys a bill of health when they have not been adapted to Spanish norms,” said a company spokesman. “It has nothing to do with us.” Some importers stress they carefully follow the guidelines. “We change everything that has to be changed and then take the bike to the MOT to make it legal to ride,” said Alfonso Martínez, a Madrid importer. “I can imagine that one or two bikes get through without being properly adapted – but not this many.” A group of owners, unable now to ride their bikes, have formed an association and hired a lawyer. Now the association and Harley are arguing over whether the secondhand imported bikes are different to, or the same as, those brought in by the company. “We understand that some people like to get bikes from the US because they think of them as more authentic,” said the company spokesman. “There is no problem with imported secondhand bikes as a whole, only with illegal ones.” Spain is one of the top markets in Europe for Harleys, which have lost much of the biker gang image they first acquired after the Hollister riot which occurred during a motorbike rally in California in July 1947. Owners have also moved on from the days of the 1969 classic road movie Easy Rider, which starred Peter Fonda and Dennis Hopper, and are now mostly aged in their forties or older. “In the world of leisure our competition is motorboats and golf,” Rob Lindley, managing director of Harley-Davidson Europe, told El País newspaper in a recent interview. But younger Spaniards are also now showing an interest. Barcelona has become the European city where most new Harleys are sold. Spain United States Europe Road transport Motoring Giles Tremlett guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …An app that takes a harsh look at the smartphone industry has been removed from Apple’s App Store. Phone Story included four mini-games involving child labor in Africa, worker suicides in China, e-waste disposal in developing countries, and consumerism in the West. Apple says it banned the app for reasons…
Continue reading …