Here’s the problem with sporadic adherence to the rule of a law and an opaque extra-judicial “legal” system: We just don’t know who or what to believe . (That, and the executions .) The timing on this Iran “terror” plot is a little too convenient , isn’t it? I guess we should be grateful the terrorists — excuse me, alleged terrorists – weren’t simply sent to Gitmo. And we’ll just pretend that Israel hasn’t been trying to push us into an attack on Iran . Amy Davidson in the New Yorker : It’s hard to know, at this stage, how solid the case against two men charged with trying to assassinate Saudi Arabia’s Ambassador to the United States is. But it does have one thing to recommend it: an indictment. One of the men charged, Manssor Arbabsiar, an American citizen, was arrested at J.F.K. on September 29th. (The other, Gholam Shakuri, an Iranian, is at large, but, according to Eric Holder, the Attorney General, is not believed to be in the United States.) Arbabsiar will be put on trial in a court in lower Manhattan, just as Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, the would-be “Christmas Bomber,” went on trial today in a court in Detroit. Neither was sent to Guantánamo, or put before a military tribunal, or preëmptively assassinated . That sounds like a simple thing, and it should be, and can be, even when, as in this new case, the alleged crime is complex. There is something discouraging about the relief one feels at a rudimentary adherence to the rule of law. At least six countries are part of the story: allegedly, an American who also had an Iranian passport travelled to Mexico to meet with a member of a drug cartel (who turned out to be a confidential D.E.A. informant) to recruit a hitman to kill a Saudi Arabian and maybe also attack the Israeli embassy in Argentina. (A map with pins in it would help here.) And its scale was also potentially great: according to a wiretap recording cited in the indictment, which said, “They want that guy [the Ambassador] done [killed], if the hundred go with him, f*ck ’em.” Still: that is nothing our justice system—our real one—can’t handle, when we let it. The evidence against Arbabsiar, according to the indictment, includes “a series of Mirandized interviews” in which he “confessed to his participation in the plot” and also gave information about the involvement of others.
Continue reading …The young woman’s corpse was found in a bag in the Helmand river. But the murder inquiry was hampered by a simple fact – no one recognised her face. She was just one of Afghanistan’s invisible females, imprisoned in their homes and hidden behind the burqa. Her birth was never recorded, she never owned an identity card and her death was equally anonymous. The toll of civilian casualties in the war in Afghanistan is well known. Yet 10 times the number of women killed by war set fire to themselves every year – 2400, according to the United Nations. It is a reflection of…
Continue reading …The Family Research Center conducted their own straw poll, which is made up of the James Dobson faction of the religious right – and lo and behold the winner was Ron Paul. That should be a significant victory for Paul, but Tony Perkins, their new leader and Value Voters organizer dismissed Paul’s victory as an outlier and in essence denounced his own voters and the legitimacy of his own poll. The “Values Voter” summit was held in Washington this past weekend. The event was sponsored by The Family Research Council, a social conservative group. The weekend got off to a rousing start Friday night when Robert Jeffress, a prominent Texas pastor, criticized Mitt Romney and his faith, calling Mormonism a “cult.” And in the Values Voter straw poll, Rep. Ron Paul came out on top with 37 percent of the vote. This morning on American Morning, CNN’s Carol Costello talks with Tony Perkins, the president of the Family Research Council, about Jeffress’ controversial remarks and why he believes Ron Paul’s straw poll win is insignificant. He was so ridiculous that the TeaNN host just laughed at his rationale for dissing Paul’s win. Costello: So Ron Paul probably means nothing and Herman Cain does. Perkins Well, this is…the majority of the people came there for a summit to hear all of the candidates. They didn’t come there to support a particular candidate. They came to listen to the candidate and express their preference. Ron Paul bused in over six hundred people on Saturday morning not to attend a conference, but to just to hear his speech and vote. There was early news made at this summit when Pastor Jeffress openly attacked Mitt Romney’s Mormon faith by calling it a “cult.” The results of the straw poll show a couple of other bad signs for Romney, the Republican Villagers choice for the nomination. First, the type of evangelical that is attracted to the FRC does indeed not trust Romney’s religion at all and secondly, he finishes behind everyone one of the remaining GOP candidates outside of Gingrich, who align themselves with religion. Well, they all pander there, but still. Not good, Mittens. Paul 37% Cain; 23% Santorum: 16% Perry: 8% Bachmann: 8% Romney: 4% Gingrich: 3% Cain’s strong showing is also indicative of the dissatisfaction the right-wing base has with its field and with Romney in general. Perry’s immigration stand has eroded his support entirely in the Christian community and put his bid in terrible jeopardy for the nomination. So, they are trying to show America that they aren’t racists this early in the process and are flocking to Cain, even though he has no chance of winning.
Continue reading …GENEVA ‘ Syria will shortly present the United Nations with a list of more than 1,100 people it says have been killed by ‘terrorists’ in ongoing unrest in the country, its deputy foreign minister said on Friday. “Syria is grappling with…
Continue reading …Timothy Noah gets through this entire post , noting that even the tea partiers mostly agree with tax hikes, and is still wondering why Republican officials are so out of step with most Republican voters — without mentioning the famous pledge to Pope Grover. Nobody likes a primary challenge, Tim! This has been said before but it cannot be said enough. Republican presidential candidates and Republican members of Congress are out of touch with Republican voters on the necessity of raising taxes to reduce the budget deficit. A Washington Post -Bloomberg News poll conducted Oct. 6-9 found that 68 percent of all voters and 54 percent of Republican and Republican-leaning voters favored raising taxes on incomes above $250,000 (i.e., the Obama plan) to tackle the deficit. On the question of whether to reduce Social Security or Medicare benefits to reduce the deficit, 83 and 82 percent, respectively, of all voters opposed. For Republicans and Republican-leaners, these proportions were only slightly lower: 79 and 77 percent , respectively. Entitlement spending will have to be cut, of course, to reduce the deficit, because entitlement spending represents a majority of all federal spending. (Only one-fifth of federal spending resides in the “non-defense discretionary” category currently being whittled to the bone.) But that option is pretty unpopular with just about everyone and it is therefore politically unwise for Republican politicians to try to balance the budget through spending cuts alone. It’s also economically insane to contemplate hacking away at government spending at this particular moment, when unemployment is stuck above 9 percent and the median income is dropping like a stone . As my grade-school friend Daniel Alpert, managing partner of Westwood Capital, writes in a new report for the New America Foundation coauthored by Robert Hockett of Cornell Law School and New York University economist Nouriel Robini:”Under existing conditions of weak global demand, austerity would simply lead to a vicious circle of yet weaker demand, weaker investment, more unemployment, and still weaker demand, ad infinitum – the familiar “downward spiral” of all “great” depressions wrought by the “paradox of thrift.” This is especially true if austerity is pursued simultaneously in Europe and the United States, as now is in real danger of happening owing to European measures that are just as wrong-headed as now-voguish American ones. And if the emerging economies in Asia and elsewhere begin to experience slower growth rates, as is now being projected, U.S. austerity will do yet more damage.” Have a nice day!
Continue reading …Move by ratings agency Fitch ends three-day rally on Wall Street and raises fears about the health of Europe’s banks Moody’s downgrade threatens to increase Italy’s cost of borrowing and will add yet more pressure to European finance ministers. Photograph: Gregorio Borgia/AP The eurozone crisis intensified on Friday when Spain and Italy were downgraded by the ratings agency Fitch, heightening fears over the health of Europe’s banks….
Continue reading …WASHINGTON: The United States has signaled that it is ready to part ways with Islamabad if Pakistan’s military does not mend its ways of using terrorism as a policy tool. Various US interlocutors have now gone public with allegations long suppressed about Pakistan’s dalliance with terrorism, but president Obama himself led the charge at his White House press…
Continue reading …The forces of Libya’s transitional government have fought their way into the centre of Sirte, one of the last cities loyal to ex-leader Col Gaddafi. Columns of smoke rose above the city as government forces fought their way in, street by street, until they reached the Ouagadougou conference centre where pro-Gaddafi loyalists are holed up. At least 12 people were killed and more than 190 injured, doctors said. Thousands of civilians have left Sirte but many have remained behind. The two sides battered each other with mortar shells, rockets and tank fire in…
Continue reading …The forces of Libya’s transitional government have fought their way into the centre of Sirte, one of the last cities loyal to ex-leader Col Gaddafi. Columns of smoke rose above the city as government forces fought their way in, street by street, until they reached the Ouagadougou conference centre where pro-Gaddafi loyalists are holed up. At least 12 people were killed and more than 190 injured, doctors said. Thousands of civilians have left Sirte but many have remained behind. The two sides battered each other with mortar shells, rockets and tank fire in…
Continue reading …We live in an era in which the most important forces affecting every economy are global, not local. What happens “abroad” – in China, India, and elsewhere – powerfully affects even an economy as large as the United States.
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