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‘Occupy Wall Street’: New York City Police Arrest 700 Protesters at Brooklyn Bridge Shut Down

[caption id="attachment_149902" align="aligncenter" width="641" caption="AP"] [/caption] NEW YORK (AP) — New York City police say about 700 protesters have been arrested after they swarmed the Brooklyn Bridge and shut down a lane of traffic for several hours. Police say some demonstrators spilled onto the roadway Saturday night after being told to stay on the pedestrian pathway. They face charges… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Blaze Discovery Date : 02/10/2011 06:34 Number of articles : 3

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‘Occupy Wall Street’: New York City Police Arrest 700 Protesters at Brooklyn Bridge Shut Down

[caption id="attachment_149902" align="aligncenter" width="641" caption="AP"] [/caption] NEW YORK (AP) — New York City police say about 700 protesters have been arrested after they swarmed the Brooklyn Bridge and shut down a lane of traffic for several hours. Police say some demonstrators spilled onto the roadway Saturday night after being told to stay on the pedestrian pathway. They face charges… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Blaze Discovery Date : 02/10/2011 06:34 Number of articles : 3

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Body blow for butter-loving Danes as fat tax kicks in

Campaigners urge Britain to follow Denmark’s lead in fighting obesity by taxing unhealthy food products In a sunny park in Copenhagen, Mathias Buch Jensen was unimpressed. All around him, people were tucking into beer and chips. There were few signs that the latest offensive in the worldwide war on obesity was having much effect. But then Denmark might not be the best place to experiment with a “fat tax” on lardy products. “You know, Danes are big fans of butter,” Buch Jensen mused. “We love fat.” He added: “Knowing the Danes, it could have the opposite effect. Like naughty children, when they are told not to do something, they do it even more.” In a country known for butter and bacon, Denmark’s new tax is a body blow. Danes who go shopping today will pay an extra 25p on a pack of butter and 8p on a packet of crisps, as the new tax on foods which contain more than 2.3% saturated fat comes into effect. Everything from milk to oils, meats and pre-cooked foods such as pizzas will be targeted. The additional revenue raised will fund obesity-fighting measures. The move has parallels elsewhere in Europe. Hungary has recently imposed a tax on all foods with unhealthy levels of sugar, salt and carbohydrates, as well as goods with high levels of caffeine. Denmark, Switzerland and Austria have already banned trans fats, while Finland and Romania are considering fat taxes. But it is Britain which has the biggest obesity problem in Europe, and campaigners have urged the government to follow Denmark’s lead. Tam Fry, spokesman for the National Obesity Forum, said: “It is not a question of whether we should follow the Danes’ lead – we have to. If we don’t do anything about it, by 2050, 70% of the British population will be obese or overweight and that would result not only in the downfall of the NHS but also of our national workforce.” A recent study found that poor health and obesity costs the UK economy at least £21.5bn a year . Some experts argue that fat is the wrong target and that salt, sugar and refined carbohydrates should be tackled instead, but Dr Colin Waine, former chairman of the National Obesity Forum, welcomed the move. “All these things need to be looked at, but saturated fats have a higher calorie content than carbohydrates. I don’t think you can do everything all at once.” Fewer than 10% of Danes are obese, below the 15% European average , according to the OECD. Britain’s rate is 24.5%. Buch Jensen, for one, is not planning to change his eating habits. Asked if he would be giving up butter, he offered a compromise: “I would fry cabbage in butter, and add a little more butter at the end. That way at least I’m getting my vegetables.” Denmark Obesity Europe Food & drink Health Alexandra Topping guardian.co.uk

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Body blow for butter-loving Danes as fat tax kicks in

Campaigners urge Britain to follow Denmark’s lead in fighting obesity by taxing unhealthy food products In a sunny park in Copenhagen, Mathias Buch Jensen was unimpressed. All around him, people were tucking into beer and chips. There were few signs that the latest offensive in the worldwide war on obesity was having much effect. But then Denmark might not be the best place to experiment with a “fat tax” on lardy products. “You know, Danes are big fans of butter,” Buch Jensen mused. “We love fat.” He added: “Knowing the Danes, it could have the opposite effect. Like naughty children, when they are told not to do something, they do it even more.” In a country known for butter and bacon, Denmark’s new tax is a body blow. Danes who go shopping today will pay an extra 25p on a pack of butter and 8p on a packet of crisps, as the new tax on foods which contain more than 2.3% saturated fat comes into effect. Everything from milk to oils, meats and pre-cooked foods such as pizzas will be targeted. The additional revenue raised will fund obesity-fighting measures. The move has parallels elsewhere in Europe. Hungary has recently imposed a tax on all foods with unhealthy levels of sugar, salt and carbohydrates, as well as goods with high levels of caffeine. Denmark, Switzerland and Austria have already banned trans fats, while Finland and Romania are considering fat taxes. But it is Britain which has the biggest obesity problem in Europe, and campaigners have urged the government to follow Denmark’s lead. Tam Fry, spokesman for the National Obesity Forum, said: “It is not a question of whether we should follow the Danes’ lead – we have to. If we don’t do anything about it, by 2050, 70% of the British population will be obese or overweight and that would result not only in the downfall of the NHS but also of our national workforce.” A recent study found that poor health and obesity costs the UK economy at least £21.5bn a year . Some experts argue that fat is the wrong target and that salt, sugar and refined carbohydrates should be tackled instead, but Dr Colin Waine, former chairman of the National Obesity Forum, welcomed the move. “All these things need to be looked at, but saturated fats have a higher calorie content than carbohydrates. I don’t think you can do everything all at once.” Fewer than 10% of Danes are obese, below the 15% European average , according to the OECD. Britain’s rate is 24.5%. Buch Jensen, for one, is not planning to change his eating habits. Asked if he would be giving up butter, he offered a compromise: “I would fry cabbage in butter, and add a little more butter at the end. That way at least I’m getting my vegetables.” Denmark Obesity Europe Food & drink Health Alexandra Topping guardian.co.uk

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How David Cameron swept aside sceptics over Libya campaign

Guardian investigation reveals PM pressed for military action and Gaddafi secretly sought figurehead role A Guardian investigation into David Cameron’s six-month Libyan campaign has revealed how the prime minister overrode scepticism from his cabinet and MI6 to press for military action, and how Colonel Gaddafi secretly wanted to become a figurehead of the country “like the Queen of England”. In interviews with senior Whitehall figures and five ministers the Guardian has established that the National Transitional Council assured Britain that sleeper cells were ready to rise up in Tripoli once rebel troops entered the capital. Defence sources say Britain provided logistical support to the rebels in the capital, as well as in the Nafusa mountains, including a bombing campaign that cleared the way for the rebels to come down from mountains towards Tripoli. Britain also took the lead in pressing, in the early summer, for the military campaign to be used to put pressure on Gaddafi from the west of Libya. The French, who had led the way in pressing for a no-fly zone in February after Gaddafi besieged the rebel stronghold of Benghazi, believed that Gaddafi could be overthrown from the east. Liam Fox, the defence secretary, describes the shift, supported by the chief of the defence staff, Sir David Richards, as “a tilt to the west”. Gaddafi told Britain in secret messages sent to the Foreign Office that he was willing to start a political process that would end with the Libyan leader becoming a head of state like the Queen. In a sign of his erratic and desperate negotiating strategy, which persuaded ministers that Gaddafi would eventually be overthrown, the Libyan leader indicated not just that he had been in power as long as the Queen , but that he was prepared to become a figurehead in the same way as her. “It would be like the Queen of England, is how they thought of it,” one minister said. “He would be a non-powerful president, not even in power. They would go as far as he would be a figurehead. But this was not on for the rebels, of course.” The Guardian investigation has also established that: • David Cameron overrode scepticism in his cabinet when he took one of the biggest gambles of his premiership in March to press for a UN security council resolution to authorise military force to protect civilians. Kenneth Clarke, the justice secretary who was described by one cabinet minister as the “biggest dove”, thought that partition was the “logical thing”. • MI6 was privately sceptical of military action, arguing “it is better to stick with the devil you know”. • The world was “48 hours from watching a humanitarian disaster unfold” in Benghazi before to the US, French and UK air strikes, according to Fox. Cameron did not want to allow another Srebrenica – the massacre of 8,000 Muslims in Bosnia in 1995 – on his “watch”. Friends say he feared he would be remembered as the “pull up the drawbridge” generation” if he did not act to defend the Arab spring. • The US, which had initially been sceptical about a no-fly zone, ended up pressing for a tougher UN security council resolution. This led to UN resolution 1973 in March which authorised “all necessary measures” to protect civilians in Libya. Fox said: “The Nato operation would have been impossible without the contribution of the Americans.” The offer from Gaddafi to serve as a figurehead, plus intelligence from within Tripoli, was one reason the foreign secretary, William Hague, remained convinced that what he described as his “Anaconda strategy” would squeeze Gaddafi from power. Hague believes Gaddafi overplayed his hand, insisting he would agree only to a political process in the course of which he would retire to the role of state figurehead. The foreign secretary, who has described the Arab spring as the most important event of the 21st century, warned that there would have been grave consequences if Britain and France had not succeeded in persuading the UN to sanction military action. “If Benghazi had fallen it would have been a huge setback for the Arab spring in countries like Egypt and Tunisia. It would have shown that a dictatorial ruler can successfully fight back and entrench himself again. That would have carried a strong message. [Syrian president] Bashar al-Assad now would be feeling in a stronger position and probably getting active assistance from a well-entrenched Gaddafi regime.” Hague added that he was stunned by the success of the high-precision GPS-guided Brimstone missiles after Fox ruled that the collateral damage target – the risks to civilians – should be set at zero. “I saw in Tripoli one of the buildings where they managed to hit the top floor to stop the sniping from the roof without damaging at all the floors underneath. This is the amazing precision of the targeting. Things have really moved on even since the Iraq war. The criterion for targeting was zero civilian casualties and that was rigorously stuck to.” Some senior Whitehall officials interviewed by the Guardian confirm that the French and the UK might have taken military action, even if they failed to secure a UN resolution, on the basis of averting a humanitarian disaster. “We would have had to look at the humanitarian necessity option. We would have had to ask the attorney general whether the situation was so grave that we could act.” Andrew Mitchell, the international development secretary, who was briefed by officials on Whitehall’s lessons from Iraq as soon as he was asked by Cameron to draw up a stabilisation plan, outlined a five-point plan on how to avoid mistakes from Iraq. It now forms the basis of the National Transitional Council’s plans. Mitchell praised Cameron for ignoring critics who said the military campaign would never work. “David was brave and proved right in the beginning, because he said we cannot allow a massacre to take place in Benghazi. All the soi-disant experts said, you can’t do it from the air, the Americans said it was naive – but he stuck to his guns.” David Cameron Muammar Gaddafi Libya Middle East Africa Arab and Middle East unrest Patrick Wintour Nicholas Watt guardian.co.uk

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How David Cameron swept aside sceptics over Libya campaign

Guardian investigation reveals PM pressed for military action and Gaddafi secretly sought figurehead role A Guardian investigation into David Cameron’s six-month Libyan campaign has revealed how the prime minister overrode scepticism from his cabinet and MI6 to press for military action, and how Colonel Gaddafi secretly wanted to become a figurehead of the country “like the Queen of England”. In interviews with senior Whitehall figures and five ministers the Guardian has established that the National Transitional Council assured Britain that sleeper cells were ready to rise up in Tripoli once rebel troops entered the capital. Defence sources say Britain provided logistical support to the rebels in the capital, as well as in the Nafusa mountains, including a bombing campaign that cleared the way for the rebels to come down from mountains towards Tripoli. Britain also took the lead in pressing, in the early summer, for the military campaign to be used to put pressure on Gaddafi from the west of Libya. The French, who had led the way in pressing for a no-fly zone in February after Gaddafi besieged the rebel stronghold of Benghazi, believed that Gaddafi could be overthrown from the east. Liam Fox, the defence secretary, describes the shift, supported by the chief of the defence staff, Sir David Richards, as “a tilt to the west”. Gaddafi told Britain in secret messages sent to the Foreign Office that he was willing to start a political process that would end with the Libyan leader becoming a head of state like the Queen. In a sign of his erratic and desperate negotiating strategy, which persuaded ministers that Gaddafi would eventually be overthrown, the Libyan leader indicated not just that he had been in power as long as the Queen , but that he was prepared to become a figurehead in the same way as her. “It would be like the Queen of England, is how they thought of it,” one minister said. “He would be a non-powerful president, not even in power. They would go as far as he would be a figurehead. But this was not on for the rebels, of course.” The Guardian investigation has also established that: • David Cameron overrode scepticism in his cabinet when he took one of the biggest gambles of his premiership in March to press for a UN security council resolution to authorise military force to protect civilians. Kenneth Clarke, the justice secretary who was described by one cabinet minister as the “biggest dove”, thought that partition was the “logical thing”. • MI6 was privately sceptical of military action, arguing “it is better to stick with the devil you know”. • The world was “48 hours from watching a humanitarian disaster unfold” in Benghazi before to the US, French and UK air strikes, according to Fox. Cameron did not want to allow another Srebrenica – the massacre of 8,000 Muslims in Bosnia in 1995 – on his “watch”. Friends say he feared he would be remembered as the “pull up the drawbridge” generation” if he did not act to defend the Arab spring. • The US, which had initially been sceptical about a no-fly zone, ended up pressing for a tougher UN security council resolution. This led to UN resolution 1973 in March which authorised “all necessary measures” to protect civilians in Libya. Fox said: “The Nato operation would have been impossible without the contribution of the Americans.” The offer from Gaddafi to serve as a figurehead, plus intelligence from within Tripoli, was one reason the foreign secretary, William Hague, remained convinced that what he described as his “Anaconda strategy” would squeeze Gaddafi from power. Hague believes Gaddafi overplayed his hand, insisting he would agree only to a political process in the course of which he would retire to the role of state figurehead. The foreign secretary, who has described the Arab spring as the most important event of the 21st century, warned that there would have been grave consequences if Britain and France had not succeeded in persuading the UN to sanction military action. “If Benghazi had fallen it would have been a huge setback for the Arab spring in countries like Egypt and Tunisia. It would have shown that a dictatorial ruler can successfully fight back and entrench himself again. That would have carried a strong message. [Syrian president] Bashar al-Assad now would be feeling in a stronger position and probably getting active assistance from a well-entrenched Gaddafi regime.” Hague added that he was stunned by the success of the high-precision GPS-guided Brimstone missiles after Fox ruled that the collateral damage target – the risks to civilians – should be set at zero. “I saw in Tripoli one of the buildings where they managed to hit the top floor to stop the sniping from the roof without damaging at all the floors underneath. This is the amazing precision of the targeting. Things have really moved on even since the Iraq war. The criterion for targeting was zero civilian casualties and that was rigorously stuck to.” Some senior Whitehall officials interviewed by the Guardian confirm that the French and the UK might have taken military action, even if they failed to secure a UN resolution, on the basis of averting a humanitarian disaster. “We would have had to look at the humanitarian necessity option. We would have had to ask the attorney general whether the situation was so grave that we could act.” Andrew Mitchell, the international development secretary, who was briefed by officials on Whitehall’s lessons from Iraq as soon as he was asked by Cameron to draw up a stabilisation plan, outlined a five-point plan on how to avoid mistakes from Iraq. It now forms the basis of the National Transitional Council’s plans. Mitchell praised Cameron for ignoring critics who said the military campaign would never work. “David was brave and proved right in the beginning, because he said we cannot allow a massacre to take place in Benghazi. All the soi-disant experts said, you can’t do it from the air, the Americans said it was naive – but he stuck to his guns.” David Cameron Muammar Gaddafi Libya Middle East Africa Arab and Middle East unrest Patrick Wintour Nicholas Watt guardian.co.uk

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Eleanor Clift: President Sent ObamaCare to Supreme Court Because He’s Afraid He Won’t Get Reelected

Newsweek's Eleanor Clift made a rather shocking prediction on this weekend's “McLaughlin Group.” “Obama’s justice department took the, asked for healthcare ruling from the Supreme Court because they’re nervous that they’re not going to be in office a year and a half from now” (video follows with commentary): Makes you wonder what her thinking is here. Does the Obama-loving Clift think the Supreme Court would be less likely to overturn ObamaCare while its creator was still in office, or does she believe a ruling regardless of the decision would improve the President's reelection chances? Maybe Clift saw syndicated columnist Charles Krauthammer on Fox News's “Special Report” Friday saying that this is a win-win for Obama whichever way the Court rules: If it is upheld, then it will give something of a boost in public opinion because it will be seen as legitimate. It will help its legitimacy and slightly and at least marginally increase the popularity. If it's struck down, it removes an albatross around Obama's neck. It will be a moot issue. Is this Clift's thinking? As her last column was “Obama's Good News on Health Insurance,” maybe she'll explain her prediction in the next one. Stay tuned.

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Israel Backs Mideast Talks Plan, With Concerns

Israel has welcomed a proposal by international mediators to resume long-stalled talks with the Palestinians but says it has some reservations abut the plan. (October 2)

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Raw Video: NYPD Warns Bridge Protesters

The NYPD has released vidoe of protesters from the group Occupy Wall Street as they attempted to march across Brooklyn Bridge on Saturday. More than 700 were arrested during a tense confrontation with police. (Oct. 2)

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Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz: Is He Positioning Himself For A 3rd Party Run?

Click here to view this media Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz seems to be the “Third Way Moderate of the Month” these days. He’s everywhere, promoting his new book in all the Starbucks stores, showing up with op-eds calling for boycotts on campaign contributions to presidential candidates, and just generally inserting himself into politics more than I can recall in the past. This week he pops up on This Week, with Christiane Amanpour, echoing the right wing memes with just a soft hint of moderation to make them go down like a venti mocha with extra chocolate. Check this piece of the discussion out, where he blames the ever-amorphous “Washington”. As much as I’d like to believe he’s trying to stick a hot poker in the backs of those companies sitting on their trillions without reinvesting in jobs or growth here in the states, it’s just very difficult for me to believe. SCHULTZ: Well, I think it’s — it’s important to kind of frame the issue. As a result of the debt crisis and the debacle that took place between Congress and the president, we have a crisis of confidence in the U.S. and abroad. And that crisis of confidence is as a result of the lack of leadership coming out of Washington. Now, what I’ve also been saying, in addition to the fact that I’ve asked like-minded CEOs to suspend contributions, is that business and business leaders should not be waiting for Washington, and we need to reaffirm our faith in the economy and do everything we can to be a catalyst for change and try and do everything we can to invest back in America so we — we can affect the jobs issue. But make no mistake: The issue at hand right now is the dysfunctionality in Washington and the lack of understanding that this is no longer a crisis. This is an emergency in America. And as a result of that, we need political courage and political will to solve our problems. TAPPER: I’m sorry. I love your lattes, but I just think this is a copout. There are absolutely people in this town who are willing to compromise. Absolutely there are members of the Republican Party, of the Democratic Party who are willing to compromise. To say, “We’re not going to give money to anybody, all 435 members of Congress, all 10 Republicans running for president, President Obama,” is not doing the work of trying to figure out who actually is trying to solve these problems. AMANPOUR: Mr. Schultz? SCHULTZ: Yeah, let me — let me — let me give you some information: $4 billion was spent in 2008 in the presidential cycle, an estimated $5.5 billion in 2012. I would — I would suspect that even you would think that we can use that money much better off, for our education system, to do anything possible to create jobs in America and not to continue to fund a broken system. But that’s not the issue. The issue right now is not to point blame. The issue is, we — we must address the issue of job creation in America. Last week, as an example, I was in Europe. I had a private meeting with President Sarkozy. And in that meeting, he shared with me not only about the euro zone and the problems in Europe with regard to Greece, but the fact is that the connective tissue as it relates to the problems we’re having in America and how that spilled off as a crisis of confidence in Europe. The issues that we have right now are not just singularly focused on America and Washington. And responsibility has to be for those who are in Washington who can make the decisions necessary to bring back confidence and hope back into the country. I’m truly confused by this whole mushy frame. It’s “Washington” that has created this crisis of confidence, and business has to step up and fix it? And really, is anyone else just a little creeped out that a CEO of an American company is having a private audience with Sarkozy to discuss the Eurozone problems, which are at a crisis point? A memo to Howard Schultz: There are thousands marching in the streets, protesting corporate control over our politics, our economy, and their lives. Is this really the time to duck corporate responsibility and blame it all on Washington? The combined actions of Schultz lately are those of someone considering a run at the Presidency: Publishing a book about his vision for this country and our economy, actively boycotting political donations to the amorphous “Washington”, appearing on Sunday talking head shows, and meeting with foreign heads of state. A third-party candidate based on Third Way principles? As I see it, that could really create some serious problems for everyone, but most of all those people out there exercising their rights of assembly and free speech while speaking against the corporations and Wall Street, who would be Schultz’ first constituents.

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