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Assuming no last-minute hiccups, Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit will be back home on Tuesday after five years in Hamas captivity, reports AFP . On that day, Israel will release 450 Palestinian prisoners—another 550 will be released later—in exchange for Shalit’s freedom. An additional 27 female prisoners will also be…

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Starbucks Changed My Life: An Open Letter to Howard Schultz

Dear Mr. Schultz, I was homeless last winter and my gold Starbucks card kept me warm, safe and dry. It also helped me utilize social media to, in very small ways, help the lives other homeless people. I am @From_Nothing on Twitter, and I now have several thousand followers. Being able to access the Internet and tweet with my smart phone, which was paid for by a wonderful friend, while enjoying a warm cup of coffee at Starbucks, was crucial for my survival and eventually helped me end my homelessness. I imagine that the homeless are a very daunting and sad situation for Starbucks employees and patrons to have to deal with, but in many ways having a safe place to stay helped change my life and the lives of others. I am hoping my story might help you and your team to find positive ways to help the homeless and reduce the negative impact of having homeless people in your stores. I know from my own experience that the difference between persevering and being lost is sometimes an infinitesimal distinction. Most people don’t think their life situation is going to fall apart, and neither did I. But it did. I wound up on the street and utilizing the local shelter system where I live in Oak Park, IL. It is a temporary set up meant to house the homeless at night. In the mornings we are all forced out in the January cold promptly at 7AM. Fortunately, my first few weeks being homeless I had money remaining on my Starbucks Gold card, so I was able to stay out of the bitter freezing cold. My fellow homeless brethren were not so lucky, and had to wait two hours until the local library opened. Because I had my Gold card, I was able to stay connected to the mainstream. This proved to be an asset to me, and others in the homeless community. At first, I was just getting by and Tweeting with others who expressed concern and care for me, but ultimately these connections gave me an idea. As the money was starting to run out on my card, I began to grow very concerned as to how I would stay warm and safe in the mornings. I did not want to continue to come to Starbucks without money to spend. This is my community. I did not want to be removed from the store because I was not a paying customer. It didn’t feel right and this was “my” third place long before I was homeless. I did not want my friends and neighbors to know I had no place to go. When I became homeless I tweeted about all the things that were not available to the homeless that prior to homelessness I assumed must surely be available. As funds were dwindling, I asked my followers for any ideas as to where I could go to stay warm, safe and dry before the library opened. After several days and many tweets, no one ever came up with a single idea where I could go, but eventually one of my followers asked if they could send me a Starbucks card with some money on it. I was hesitant at first, pride and all, but I quickly realized I had no other option. From that moment forward one of my followers has always sent me a card, or refilled my card for me. I never had to spend a moment in the cold while homeless. By having a place to stay warm I was able to start helping others using the power of Twitter to get things they needed: gift cards, winter boots, eyeglasses and other essential needs, when I asked for my followers to help. I realized that “small things can do great things.” The blog post “Steve and His Glasses” and “A Place to Call Their Own” really explain how I was able to use social media to help others in small ways that would greatly change their lives. I now work — thanks to Starbucks and Twitter — to show the world how important it is to have a safe place to be and the power that social media has to help create change. Starbucks changed my life and helps me still change the lives of others by allowing me an Internet connection and a place to have a meeting with someone in need, or who wants to help those in need. I would love to see this goodwill work for others, and would like to propose that Starbucks work with leaders in the homeless community to find more solutions that can make a difference. I know work is already being done, such as donating old pastries to local shelters. I think we can do more, especially if we harness the power of technology. I really can imagine you and your team could come up with many far more interesting, impactful and mutually beneficial ideas than I possibly could. I’m just writing so you’ll know the important role you’ve played in my life, and let you know that there is a growing community of other customers who are willing and able to keep the momentum going. In fact, I’ve started a Change.org petition so that people who want to help can take action too. I know together we can help keep the homeless off the street and direct them to better resources, and people like me, to help them get out of their plight. Peace, Revolution MacInnes Oak Park, IL

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Cash Landing: Woman Sues Airlines Over Turbulent Trip

We’ve all been there before: the nightmare flight. Having been delayed for four hours, you finally take your seat to find the large lady next to you really should have booked two. Meanwhile, the ‘adorable’ kid behind decides to kick your chair for however long it takes for you to require spinal surgery. Usually the

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Jon Huntsman is skipping next week’s debate in Las Vegas to protest Nevada’s decision to move up its caucuses to January, reports the Hill . Instead, Huntsman will host a town-hall meeting in New Hampshire. The Huntsman camp accuses Mitt Romney of encouraging the state to shift its caucus date to…

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I Am Not Moving

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I Am Not Moving

Hillary Clinton & Barack Obama talk about the right to protest…in *other* countries… www.youtube.com/watch?v=zjfhOPCPJnE Recent Posts: i have seen the enemy and she is like me: a reason to hate white harlemites Alan Grayson explains #OWS to P.J. O’Rourke (in 2 mins) bookmark to: Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : get angry WITH me! Discovery Date : 10/10/2011 23:25 Number of articles : 3

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In the chaos of Sirte, anti-Gaddafi fighters are killing each other

Fight for last uncaptured ground made more deadly by Libyan government forces’ rivalries and inexperience Death and injury arrive suddenly and randomly on the Libyan city of Sirte’s frontline. Sometimes, however, they come with a gruesome symmetry. On Friday, an rocket-propelled grenade (RPG) fired by pro-Gaddafi forces, defending their last pocket of resistance in the city, caused some of the casualties. But it was a mortar fired by the government’s own fighters that caused the most. Both incidents occurred within a few seconds. The fighters were bunched near the frontline on Dubai Street on the southern front occupied mainly by fighters from Misrata when the two rounds came in. “It was a mistake,” said a passing fighter a few minutes later in the chaos as the injured were treated. “The RPG came from Muammar Gaddafi’s forces. But I was close to where the mortar was fired. They fired it straight into the air. It came down on our men. We are shooting our own people.” There were too many casualties at first for the medics at their open-air field station to cope with. So the Guardian’s driver and translator, both medical students who worked during the siege of Misrata in the intensive care unit, helped treat the wounded, more than 20 of them. One was a young fighter brought in limp and pale from shock, hit by shrapnel in the shoulder that had penetrated his neck. Another older man arrived hanging to the back of a jeep, his lacerated scalp bleeding heavily over his clothes, blood bubbling from his mouth. In the small space that the last uncaptured ground in Sirte provides for assaults, such incidents are escalating. Without proper communications and a dangerous rivalry between the forces from Misrata on the pocket’s southern and western fronts, and fighters from Benghazi and the towns to the east, those fighting Gaddafi’s soldiers are killing each other in increasing numbers. Eastern soldiers said three men they lost on Thursday in an attempt to assault the pocket were killed by Misratan fire. Shells and mortars misfired or falling short have killed others while crossfire is commonplace. Two days ago, a shell fired from behind Sirte exploded close to the Guardian’s car near a column of government fighters. Blame has fallen on “weekend fighters”, who are unwilling to go forward and fire from behind their colleagues towards their backs, or inexperienced government troops, who lack the ability to accurately aim their mortar batteries or are ignorant of their targets. The randomness of the government fighter’s fire was underlined on Friday at a battery made up of odds and ends of improvised rocket systems, a recoilless rifle, anti-aircraft guns and an armoured carrier parked on a rise a few hundred metres from the pocket’s southern edge. The Guardian watched rockets from a homemade system on a pickup truck fly in wildly different directions and distances. “I’ve had too many friends die in this fucking city,” said Mhjurb Ibrahim, a lawyer from Misrata. “Twenty-two of them have died. Five in the first day of the fighting.” It is these problems of co-ordination as much as the fierce resistance of the remaining Gaddafi fighters occupying high buildings in Sirte’s District 2 that have slowed up the advance and forced government fighters to bring up tanks and other heavy weapons to pound the buildings occupied by their foes. Shells flew into the tight packed collection of buildings on Friday at a rate of almost one a minute at times, sending up clouds of concrete and white smoke that drifted across the rooftops. “We cannot go into the pocket yet,” said one of the eastern forces’ commanders, Abdul Salam Rishi. “When we tried, there were still too many snipers. So we’ll bomb with artillery and tanks. Then we will attack.” The difficulties of the government in bringing a final end to the siege of Sirte came as a gun battle erupted between revolutionary forces and supporters of Gaddafi in the heart of the Libyan capital, Tripoli, for the first time since the longtime leader was ousted and forced into hiding. Shouting “God is Great”, anti-Gaddafi fighters converged on the Hay Nasr district of the Abu Salim neighbourhood in pickups mounted with weapons, setting up checkpoints and sealing off the area as heavy gunfire echoed through the streets. Fighters at the scene said the shooting began after a group of armed men tried to raise the green flag that symbolises Gaddafi’s regime. Assem al-Bashir, a fighter with Tripoli’s Eagle Brigade, said revolutionary forces suspected there were snipers in the surrounding high rises after spotting a man trying to raise the green flag. Ahmad al-Warsly, from the Zintan brigade, said several Gaddafi supporters apparently planned a protest but drew fire because they were armed. They fled and were pursued by revolutionary forces, prompting fierce street battles. “It seems like it was organised,” he said. “They were planning to have a big demonstration, then the fight started.” The violence in the capital, which has been relatively calm since it was taken in late August, underscores the difficulty Libya’s new rulers face in restoring order as Gaddafi remains on the run. Libya Middle East Africa Muammar Gaddafi Peter Beaumont guardian.co.uk

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Pendleton, South Carolina (CNN) – Rick Perry’s wife Anita said Friday that she could sympathize with the plight of the unemployed because her son was forced to resign his job to take a more active role on his father’s presidential campaign. Anita Perry blamed the Obama administration for her son having to resign his position.

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Matt Taibbi on His Advice for Occupy Wall Street Protesters

Click here to view this media Matt Taibbi joined the set of Countdown with Keith Olbermann to discuss the Occupy Wall Street protests in New York. After weighing in on whether Mayor Michael Bloomberg might be playing right into the movement’s hands with the upcoming move to try to clear Zuccoti Park , Taibbi discussed his recent article at Rolling Stone where he had some advice for those out there protesting. My Advice to the Occupy Wall Street Protesters : No matter what, I’ll be supporting Occupy Wall Street. And I think the movement’s basic strategy – to build numbers and stay in the fight, rather than tying itself to any particular set of principles – makes a lot of sense early on. But the time is rapidly approaching when the movement is going to have to offer concrete solutions to the problems posed by Wall Street. To do that, it will need a short but powerful list of demands. There are thousands one could make, but I’d suggest focusing on five: 1. Break up the monopolies. The so-called “Too Big to Fail” financial companies – now sometimes called by the more accurate term “Systemically Dangerous Institutions” – are a direct threat to national security. They are above the law and above market consequence, making them more dangerous and unaccountable than a thousand mafias combined. There are about 20 such firms in America, and they need to be dismantled; a good start would be to repeal the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act and mandate the separation of insurance companies, investment banks and commercial banks. 2. Pay for your own bailouts. A tax of 0.1 percent on all trades of stocks and bonds and a 0.01 percent tax on all trades of derivatives would generate enough revenue to pay us back for the bailouts, and still have plenty left over to fight the deficits the banks claim to be so worried about. It would also deter the endless chase for instant profits through computerized insider-trading schemes like High Frequency Trading, and force Wall Street to go back to the job it’s supposed to be doing, i.e., making sober investments in job-creating businesses and watching them grow. 3. No public money for private lobbying. A company that receives a public bailout should not be allowed to use the taxpayer’s own money to lobby against him. You can either suck on the public teat or influence the next presidential race, but you can’t do both. Butt out for once and let the people choose the next president and Congress. 4. Tax hedge-fund gamblers. For starters, we need an immediate repeal of the preposterous and indefensible carried-interest tax break, which allows hedge-fund titans like Stevie Cohen and John Paulson to pay taxes of only 15 percent on their billions in gambling income, while ordinary Americans pay twice that for teaching kids and putting out fires. I defy any politician to stand up and defend that loophole during an election year. 5. Change the way bankers get paid. We need new laws preventing Wall Street executives from getting bonuses upfront for deals that might blow up in all of our faces later. It should be: You make a deal today, you get company stock you can redeem two or three years from now. That forces everyone to be invested in his own company’s long-term health – no more Joe Cassanos pocketing multimillion-dollar bonuses for destroying the AIGs of the world.

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Bill O’Reilly, David Letterman High Five Over Iraq War (VIDEO)

Bill O’Reilly went on David Letterman’s show Thursday and gave audiences the most tame Letterman-O’Reilly exchange to date. O’Reilly has been on Letterman’s show in the past and clashed, however Thursday marked a momentous occasion for the two television hosts: a visible display of camaraderie. O’Reilly’s previous appearances on ‘Late Night’ included Letterman calling him a “goon” in 2009 and telling him that “about 60 percent of what you say is crap” in 2006 . O’Reilly and Letterman discussed a range of topics on Thursday including Occupy Wall Street and the Tea Party. O’Reilly told Letterman he made an “excellent point” after his analysis of Occupy Wall Street. Letterman politely thanked him for paying him the compliment. Letterman then initiated a celebratory high five with O’Reilly after the latter said that the war in Iraq “should not have happened in hindsight.” Letterman and O’Reilly agreed that it turned out Iraq did not possess weapons of mass destruction which prompted Letterman to leap out of his chair with his hand raised high in the air. “Up high! Come on, up high….come on, Billy! Come on! Come on!” Letterman taunted O’Reilly, who remained in his chair shaking his head. After more pleading, Letterman warned, “I’ll give you one more chance, Bill.” “I’m not high-fiving you on a war!” O’Reilly said. “We’re feeling good, we’re happy to see each other!” Letterman responded. “We’re having a good conversation, sit down.” O’Reilly said. Letterman did not look so enthused with this and O’Reilly gave in. He stood up, towered over Letterman, and did the deed. WATCH:

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Creating Matt’s Legacy

October is very hard for me. It’s not that the early autumn in Wyoming isn’t beautiful. If you haven’t experienced the crisp air as the nights come earlier each day, or the last few cricket chirps of the season that follow the brilliant orange sunsets, you can’t really know the peaceful, quiet contemplation this time of year brings those few of us fortunate to make our homes here. But it’s those cues, these turns of the calendar pages, that remind me of the tragedy that autumn brought us 13 years ago, and start us reflecting on what our family, and our society, have learned from it. Thirteen years ago this week his father, brother and I were at Poudre Valley Hospital in Fort Collins, Colo., with our firstborn son, Matthew Shepard. He was 21, and dying. Just days before, he had been just like millions of American college students whose names are not known to the world — getting the hang of his new classes, adapting to a new campus, making friends. His father and I thought his biggest challenges were keeping money in his checking account and getting his homework in on time. But here he was in intensive care, the victim of a terrible, senseless attack at the hands of two other young men who, at some point in their lives, learned it was OK to hate others for being different, to victimize them, to disregard their humanity. Matt passed away quietly in the early morning hours of Oct. 12, 1998, with his family at his bedside. He died because of violence fueled by anti-gay hatred. For a lot of reasons, some of which we will probably never quite understand, the world had been watching, praying for him, and voicing their outrage. October cannot go by anymore, and never will again, without us wondering what might have been, for us and for so many other families, if hatred of gay, and lesbian, and bisexual, and transgendered people, and all those whom others simply think might be, had been rooted out long ago. In the painful months that followed Matt’s death, we came to understand a lot of things we never knew before: about hate crimes, and how shockingly many there were every year; how they are characterized by obvious signs, like excessive violence, and the denial that surrounds them; and how hard they were to prove, and prosecute, and appropriately punish, with sensitivity to the victim’s loved ones and the wider community. We learned about the LGBT community and its long struggle for acceptance and equality. We learned how easily LGBT people could be fired from their jobs just for being themselves, how they couldn’t serve their country openly, couldn’t marry, couldn’t adopt kids in some states. And most of all, we learned about the fear so many otherwise good people had in their hearts about their gay neighbors, coworkers and family members. We set about creating a legacy for Matt. He had always been interested in politics, human rights and LGBT equality — he had in fact been at a Coming Out Week meeting at the University of Wyoming on his last night. With the support and sympathy of the thousands who wrote us and the millions who were touched by his death, we decided to try to make a difference in his name. Thirteen years later, the Matthew Shepard Foundation stands up for the LGBT community and its straight allies, in Matt’s memory. We are a modest organization, but we do our part and persuade others to do theirs, as well. We pushed — for a long, long time — for federal hate crime legislation that includes LGBT people. That finally happened in another chilly October two years ago — one more step forward. We go to schools and companies and community groups to implore everyone there to embrace diversity. We try to give young people hope, despite their parents’ or peers’ rejection of them, that they have a bright future. We keep Matt’s story alive and look to turn bystanders into activists. It’s been such a long, sometimes tiring journey, but a rewarding one, as well. The coming out stories that young people tell me, slowly, almost imperceptibly, got better. More and more, the story ends not with a young person being turned out of the house, but affirmed, and accepted, lovingly. Every time I speak at a college somewhere in America, I am hoping I will hear another one like that. Marriage equality is coming slowly, state by state, and military service has finally been opened to all, regardless of sexual orientation. This is progress. But we have a lot of work left to do, in employment discrimination, in family law and, most of all, in people’s individual lives. We all have a role to play. We all have our story to tell. When we all finally stand up and demand equality, the scourge of hatred will wither and disappear. And maybe we can all have our Octobers back to enjoy for what they’re meant to be — a season to see, celebrate, change. To see a timeline of events, click here.

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