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Continue reading …Philadelphia might be the city of brotherly love, but its star TV newscasters don’t have any affection for the Kardashian sisters. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Styleite Discovery Date : 15/09/2011 05:22 Number of articles : 4
Continue reading …British PM and French president receive enthusiastic welcome in Tripoli less than a month after Gaddafi was toppled David Cameron and Nicolas Sarkozy flew into Libya on Thursday and warned Syria and other regimes across the Middle East and north Africa that “the Arab spring could become an Arab summer”. In a measure of how quickly order has been restored in Tripoli, the prime minister and the French president touched down in the capital less than a month after Muammar Gaddafi was toppled amid heavy fighting. The pair were given an enthusiastic welcome at a hospital – the kind of reception the two could only dream about in their own countries – and a calmer, but no less warm, greeting by Libya’s interim rulers. Although anxious to avoid perceptions of a victory lap given the ongoing fighting and the failure to capture Gaddafi, Cameron and Sarkozy cited the Libyan experience as a beacon for the region. “This does go beyond Libya,” Cameron told a press conference at the Corinthia hotel. “This is a moment when the Arab spring could become an Arab summer and we see democracy advance in other countries too. “I believe you have the opportunity to give an example to others about what taking back your country can mean.” Sarkozy used the moment to turn the spotlight on Syria, where an uprising has so far been brutally repressed and foreign support has been less forthcoming. “As I flew over Tripoli today, I thought about the hope that one day young Syrians will be given the opportunity that young Libyans have now been given,” he said. “Perhaps the best thing I can do is dedicate our visit to Tripoli to those who hope that Syria can one day also be a free country.” Apache helicopters flew over the Mediterranean and parts of Tripoli were in security lockdown for the surprise visit – the first by western leaders since the capital fell to rebel forces. Sarkozy, who said he was “deeply moved” by the welcome, was accompanied by dozens of French riot police. The leaders, along with the foreign secretary, William Hague, visited a hospital in the heart of Tripoli. There was chaos as security men had to force a way through and the politicians were mobbed by ecstatic Libyans eager to thank them and shake their hands, chanting: “Thank you, thank you,” and “Libya is free, Gaddafi go away.” On the orthopaedic ward, Cameron and Sarkozy spoke to rebel fighters and Libyans injured in the battle for Tripoli, as well as to patients recovering from torture in Gaddafi’s prison cells. The leaders were careful not to sound triumphalist over Nato’s controversial intervention, emphasising that the mission to protect civilians would go on so long as the fighting continued in the regime’s last strongholds. Cameron had a blunt message for Gaddafi and his supporters. “It is over. Give up. The mercenaries should go home. Those who still think Gaddafi has any part in any arm of government in any part of this country should forget it. He doesn’t,” he said. “It is time for him to give himself up. It is time for the Libyan people to get the justice they deserve by seeing him face justice, and we’ll go on helping the National Transitional Council [NTC] to make sure that happens, and this country can move on – it shows every sign of wanting to move on.” But he warned: “I would accept that the hardest work is still to come, of making sure that everyone has a future in this country, getting it back on its feet. These will be difficult times but, so far, what I think we have seen from the National Transitional Council , what we are seeing here in Tripoli, is a remarkable and impressive recovery from a very difficult situation.” Cameron said he did not know where Gaddafi and his family were, but added: “There are still parts of Libya under Gaddafi’s control, Gaddafi is still at large, and we must make sure this work is completed. “We must keep on with the Nato mission until civilians are all protected and this work is finished. We will help you to find Gaddafi and to bring him to justice, and we want to help you to take the dangerous weapons out of Libya.” Amid the metaphorical back-slapping, there have been questions over whether France and Britain will expect payback from Libya’s new leaders when they award lucrative contracts. Sarkozy insisted no promises had been given or sought. “This is a very important issue and I want things to be very clear to all the Arab world,” he said. “What we did was for humanitarian reasons. There was no hidden agenda.” But Mustafa Abdul Jalil, the chairman of the NTC, sharing the platform, was less clear cut. While agreeing there were no previous agreements with the NTC’s “allies and friends”, he added: “But as a faithful Muslim people, we will appreciate these efforts and they will have priority within a framework of transparency.” He also said existing contracts signed with the Gaddafi government would be reviewed. “The previous contracts, we have respected them … all legitimate contracts. “This means review of these contracts for whatever financial corruption may have tainted them. As a member of the previous government, I know well that these prices were above those used globally.” Cameron praised the NTC, saying it had been “consistently underrated and underestimated” as he expressed optimism for Libya’s future. He said: “This is your revolution, not our revolution.” Britain announced measures to help with mine clearance and the decommissioning of weapons as part of a post-conflict package of assistance. Cameron also set out a new scheme – funded by Tripoli – to treat some of the most badly injured Libyans in UK hospitals using expert surgery techniques. He said he hoped the first to benefit would be Abdul Ahmed, the Libyan boy who was wounded by a grenade left in his school and whose plight has been featured on British television. Britain and France would also press for a fresh UN security council resolution on Friday to unfreeze all Libyan assets, the prime minister said. He used the visit to announce the planned delivery of the latest tranche of around £610m of assets that were frozen in the UK. Libya Middle East Africa Syria Nicolas Sarkozy Muammar Gaddafi David Cameron Foreign policy Arab and Middle East unrest David Smith guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …American high school students turned out the worst SAT reading scores on record last school year, while math and writing scores also dropped slightly compared to the previous year. The class of 2011′s combined average score was 1500, six points below last year’s. But both the College Board and Education Secretary Arne Duncan are taking
Continue reading …Louie Gohmert and President Obama plans to get Americans back to work have the same name—the American Jobs Act of 2011—but that’s where the similarities end. Rep. Gohmert, a Republican from Texas, introduced legislation to the House yesterday that would reduce the corporate tax rate from 35% to…
Continue reading …This story says it all: conservatives really don’t care about anyone who isn’t rich. Even the people working for them. When Ron Paul was asked by Wolf Blitzer if a person should simply be left to die in his world view, the audience cheered and Paul gave a sickening response. Gawker enlightens us with information about the man who helped Ron Paul make the plunge into presidential politics. A man Paul should owe a lot to and a man who lost his life in almost the same way that Blitzer described. Ron Paul’s Campaign Manager Died of Pneumonia, Penniless and Uninsured Should the state pay his bills? Paul responded, “That’s what freedom is all about: taking your own risks. This whole idea that you have to take care of everybody—” He never quite finished that point, letting the audience’s loud applause finish it for him. So Blitzer pressed on, asking if he meant that “society should just let him die,” which earned a chilling round of approving hoots from the crowd. Paul would not concede that much outright, instead responding with a personal anecdote, the upshot being that in such a case, it was up to churches to care for the dying young man. So basically, yeah. He’d let him die. As it turns out, Paul was not speaking purely in hypotheticals. Back in 2008, Kent Snyder — Paul’s former campaign chairman — died of complications from pneumonia. Like the man in Blitzer’s example, the 49-year-old Snyder (pictured) was relatively young and seemingly healthy* when the illness struck. He was also uninsured. When he died on June 26, 2008, two weeks after Paul withdrew his first bid for the presidency, his hospital costs amounted to $400,000. The bill was handed to Snyder’s surviving mother (pictured, left), who was incapable of paying. Friends launched a website to solicit donations. According to the Wall Street Journal ‘s 2008 story on his death , Snyder was more than just a strategic ally: He was the only reason Paul thought he ever had a shot at the presidency in the first place. “It was Kent more than anyone else who encouraged and pushed Ron to run for president,” said Jesse Benton, a spokesman for Mr. Paul. “Ron would not have run for the presidency if it had not been for Kent. Ron was really hesitant, but Kent drove him forward.” And so, what started in February 2007 with one laptop in Snyder’s Arlington, Va., apartment, quickly grew into a $35 million campaign employing 250 people. In the fourth quarter of that year, Snyder raised a stunning $19.5 million for Paul — more than any other Republican candidate had raised at the time. After Snyder’s death, Paul posted a message to the website for his Campaign for Liberty — a pre-Tea Party organization which served Paul as both presidential marketing tool and platform to promote his non-interventionist, free market ideals. He wrote: “Like so many in our movement, Kent sacrificed much for the cause of liberty. Kent poured every ounce of his being into our fight for freedom. He will always hold a place in my heart and in the hearts of my family.” And that, friends, is what freedom is really all about. *The Kansas City Star quoted his sister at the time as saying that a “a pre-existing condition made the premiums too expensive.” [The Political Carnival, photo via Ron Paul's Flickr] Think Progress adds : On June 26, 2008, exactly two weeks after Paul ended his bid for the presidency, Synder passed away due to complications from his pneumonia. Snyder experienced Paul’s world of free market health care, a peculiar system that distinguishes the United States as the only Western country that does not provide basic care to its citizens. A look back at the charity effort launched to save Snyder’s life reveals a grim failure. Despite Paul’s insistence that charity is the appropriate response to America’s uninsured crisis, Snyder’s friends raised $34,870.53 , far short of the $400,000 necessary to pay his bills. Politically correct news outlets covering health policy issues refuse to note that the far right and corporate lobbying effort to repeal health reform would restore America’s system where 45,000 Americans die every year because of lack of health coverage. Although CNN scorned politicians in previous years for suggesting that health reform saves lives, Blitzer’s question to Paul has actually forced a discussion of how politics affects every day lives, interrupting an otherwise vapid discussion of horse race presidential reporting. Snyder played a leading hand in developing the “Tea Party” and “money bomb” fundraising efforts for the Paul campaign, a strategy that helped the candidate break small donor fundraising records. “It was Kent more than anyone else who encouraged and pushed Ron to run for president,” said Jesse Benton, a Paul spokesman in a Wall Street Journal piece about Snyder’s life.
Continue reading …There are some cameras that we would be willing to use in a bind, some that we wouldn’t hesitate to shoot with, and a very select few that would motivate a cross-country journey, just for the chance to spend a few days behind the lens. Sony’s Alpha NEX-7 falls within that incredibly unique final category — in fact, we’ve done just that, flying from New York to San Diego to go hands-on with one of only a half-dozen pre-production samples to have landed on American soil. After seeing a very early NEX-7 prototype a few months ago, it didn’t take much convincing to get us on a plane. Sony’s 24.3 megapixel APS-C masterpiece represents a giant leap forward for the interchangeable lens market, theoretically capable of capturing images identical in quality to its much larger Alpha A77 counterpart, but in a body only slightly larger than the NEX-C3. Pair that image quality with an XGA OLED electronic viewfinder, a revamped tri-navi interface, standard hot-shoe, 1080 / 60p AVCHD video, microphone input, and a built-in flash, and you have one very worthy compact DSLR replacement. That said, the NEX-7 kit’s $1,350 price tag is far more than many are willing to spend on a camera. But is that premium pricing justified? Jump past the break to find out. Gallery: Sony Alpha NEX-7 Hands-On Preview Continue reading Sony Alpha NEX-7 hands-on preview (video) Sony Alpha NEX-7 hands-on preview (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 15 Sep 2011 12:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Windows 8, which was fully unveiled at the Windows Build Conference in Anaheim, California, is here, and it looks much, much different from Windows 7. Sure, it has the start-bar-and-icon “Desktop” look that Windows users are familiar with, but it also has a new, touchscreen-optimized interface called ‘Metro,’ which looks more like the Windows Phone operating system and which looks like the future of Microsoft Windows from here on out. The touch-optimized interface was all Stephen Sinofsky, President of Windows, and Julie Larson-Green, Corporate Vice President of Windows, were talking about when they showed off Windows 8 to developers at the conference. (They did not, however, mention when the new OS would be available to users.) Here are some screenshots of the new Windows 8 from Sinofsky and Larson-Green’s presentation, along with explanations of the newest features and interfaces that users can expect on their new tablets and PCs. Which of these features are you most excited for? Share your thoughts about Windows 8 in the comments, then take a look at our slideshow of the features we’re most excited about.
Continue reading …Glenn Beck launched the next phase of his career on Monday with the premiere of his new network and his two-hour Web TV show. Beck is banking on the Web to help him maintain his status as one of the country’s influential (and controversial) media figures. His new show looked and felt nearly identical to his Fox News show, from the set to Beck’s emotional, freewheeling monologues. The difference, of course, is that he has complete control over the program. As he put it, “if it doesn’t work, I’m flat broke. But I don’t owe anyone a dime.” He told his audience that he would never pander to them because he did not consider them “morons,” and that he would always tell them the truth. Beck spent much of his first hour on the 9/11 anniversary. Unsurprisingly, he zigged where others have zagged. Beck said that he found it to be a “complete and total disgrace” that the first responders who came to the site of the attacks were not invited to the 10th anniversary memorial. The city said there was not enough room to accommodate them because of the number of family members and security at the site. Beck felt that this was a shoddy excuse. He also called the lack of clergy at the memorial “a slap in God’s face.” “I think they’ve tainted this ceremony, tainted this space,” he said. He also criticized the government and the developers of the new World Trade Center for a variety of other sins, including not leaving the lights of the tower on all night to honor the attacks and building the tower so slowly. “The memory of 9/11 has been bastardized,” he said. Later, Beck got choked up at several points recounting 9/11, and he brought on some of the first responders who had apparently not been at the anniversary memorial on Sunday. Beck also weighed in on the controversy surrounding Paul Krugman’s recent blog post on the attacks, which many conservatives have condemned for saying that 9/11 has become “poisoned” by political exploitation. “I notice that the points he made are nearly identical to the points made on a blog on AlJazeera.com,” he said. “Al Jazeera and the New York Times are one and the same, finally. Welcome to GBTV, where we can finally say that we are very, very different from Al Jazeera.” RELATED VIDEO:
Continue reading …Joe McGinniss has been writing about presidential politics since 1968, but his new book on Sarah Palin, The Rogue , is “dated, petty and easily available to anyone with Internet access,” writes Janet Maslin in the New York Times . With allegations of cocaine use and sex with basketball stars , The Rogue…
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