Home » Archives by category » News (Page 990)
Syrian boy, 11, shot dead as protest breaks out on first day of term

Activists say Ibrahim Mohammed al-Farouj was killed by a bullet to the head At least one child has been shot dead and another arrested as Syrian pupils protested against the government on the first day of the new school year. Eleven-year-old Ibrahim Mohammed al-Farouj from Sanamein was killed by a bullet to the head, activists said, exactly six months after a group of schoolchildren in the southern city of Deraa sparked the first protests of the uprising against president Bashar al-Assad. Some schools remained closed because they had been used as holding centres for detained protesters or because teachers had been arrested, according to sources across the country. In other areas, troops used live ammunition to disperse students who had boycotted classes, chanting “No studying, no teaching until the president is toppled.” Sameh al-Hamwi, an activist in Hama, said: “The government postponed the opening of many schools to Tuesday.” He estimated that more than half the parents in the city were planning to keep their children at home amid fears for their safety. In the flashpoint city of Homs, locals said at least one child was arrested from a school in the wealthy Ghouta area. Amateur footage posted online showed children in another school in the city trampling on posters of Assad . At a third school, children tore up their citizenship textbooks. A former student of Ghasaniee, a school in Homs which had been used as a temporary detention facility, did not re-open, according a former student, who said a friend of his had found the playground full of discarded bullet casings and walls pockmarked with holes. For the past six months, young people have been on the frontline of anti-government protests which broke out after a dozen children – all aged under 15 – were arrested in Deraa for scrawling anti-regime graffiti on a wall. But children have also been victims of the regime’s violent response: 182 Syrians under the age of 18 have been killed and scores more tortured, according to Radwan Ziadeh, a US-based human rights activist from Syria and head of the Damascus Centre for Human Rights. In one notorious case, the mutilated body of Hamza al-Khateeb, 13, was returned to his parents in May after he had been arrested by security forces. His neck had been broken and his penis cut off. “Children have been living the deaths and arrests of their family members and even friends,” said Razan Zeitouneh, a human rights lawyer in Damascus. “It has stolen their innocence and childhood.” Nour Ali is the pseudonym for a journalist based in Damascus Syria Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Nour Ali guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

Silvio Berlusconi, who should probably be worried about rescuing Italy from financial ruin, has been caught boasting on tape of having sex with eight women in one night—and lamenting that he did not have the energy to get around to three more who were waiting for him, reports the…

Continue reading …
William Shatner on Star Trek vs Star Wars

William Shatner takes a look at Star Trek vs Star Wars. via William Shatner & BuzzFeed Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Laughing Squid Discovery Date : 16/09/2011 20:57 Number of articles : 2

Continue reading …
Obama’s millionaire tax is class war, say Republicans

Forthcoming ‘Buffett tax’ provokes fresh conflict between US president and rightwingers US Republican leaders have accused president Barack Obama of “class warfare” as he prepares to unveil plans to increase taxes for millionaires. Obama is set to reveal details of the so-called “Buffett tax” – named after billionaire investor Warren Buffett, who has repeatedly called for the rich to pay higher taxes – on Monday. Obama looks set to propose a tax hike for those earning more than $1m a year as part of a wider plan to tackle the US’s massive deficit. The proposals, which have little chance of becoming law without Republican support, look set to become the latest battle ground for Republicans and Democrats gearing up for next year’s election and an increasingly contentious fight over how to support the US’s struggling economic recovery. Paul Ryan, chairman of the House of Representatives budget committee, said: “Class warfare may make for good politics, but it makes for rotten economics.” Speaking on Fox News Sunday, Ryan said the plan “adds further instability to our system, more uncertainty, and it punishes job creation and those people who create jobs.” Ryan said higher taxes would hurt job creation. “If you tax something more, you get less of it,” said Ryan. Mitch McConnell, the Senate Republican leader, said the proposal would further damage the US’s fragile economy. “We have thrown a big wet blanket over the private sector economy. We’ve borrowed too much, we’ve spent too much and we’ve dramatically over-regulated every aspect of the private sector in our country and now we are threatening to raise taxes on top of it. That’s not going to get the economy moving,” McConnell said on NBC’s Meet the Press. The fight comes as clashes between Republicans and Democrats over the economy intensify in the runup to next year’s election. The would-be Republican presidential candidates will hold their next debate on Thursday and Obama’s proposals are bound to be a central issue. Former president Bill Clinton defended the plan. “The least harmful tax increases are the ones that senator McConnell and the people who agree with him hate the most, and that is restoring the tax levels that existed when I was president for those of us in high-income groups. That’s the one that does the least harm.” Obama’s proposal comes a month after Buffett began reviving his longstanding objection that he and his “megarich friends” pay significantly less tax than most people thanks to tax breaks that favour investors . “My friends and I have been coddled long enough by a billionaire-friendly Congress,” he wrote in the New York Times. ” It’s time for our government to get serious about shared sacrifice. ” Obama’s poll ratings hit a new low last week, thanks to the continuing economic malaise in the US. According to the latest CBS/New York Times poll, Obama’s approval rating is now 43%, down from 57% in May. Those surveyed said the economy and jobs were the two biggest issues the US faces. Some 86% said the state of the US economy is either very bad or fairly bad. Nearly half – 48% – believe the nation is moving toward another recession. Obama’s millionaire tax hike will be a central component of the president’s proposals to a special joint Congressional “super committee” that is working to reach a bipartisan budget deal by late November. With unemployment now at 9.1% and income inequality at record levels, the president is hoping to put pressure on Republicans who have staunchly rejected any tax increases and have called for deep cuts in government spending on the US’s Medicare, Medicaid and social security programmes. Last week Republican speaker John Boehner said Obama should tackle tax reform to get rid of many tax breaks. “Tax increases, however, are not a viable option for the joint committee,” Boehner said. The tax fight comes in another tough week for Obama. The United Nations is set to vote on recognising Palestinian statehood this week after the US fought unsuccessfully to stop the vote taking place . Last week the Democrats lost a key congressional district in New York where some of the area’s heavily Jewish voters said they were protesting against the administration’s record on Israel . He is also expected to meet European leaders amid fears that Europe’s economic crisis will prove a further drag on the US’s fragile recovery. US Treasury secretary Tim Geithner travelled to Poland last week to meet Europe’s finance ministers and asked them to step up efforts to tackle the crisis. Geithner was rebuffed by Austria’s finance minister, Maria Fekter. “I found it peculiar that even though the Americans have significantly worse fundamental data than the eurozone, they tell us what we should do and when we make a suggestion … that they say no straight away,” said Fekter. • Last week the US census revealed that 46 million Americans – one in six – now live in poverty, the highest number ever. • In 2010, the top 20% of Americans earned 49.4% of the nation’s income. The top 1% account for 24% of all income. • About 47% of US people pay no federal income taxes, either because their incomes are too low, or because they qualify for enough tax breaks to eliminate their liability. • People who make money from investments pay far lower taxes than those who earn it from their wages. • Last year Warren Buffett, who has a $50bn personal fortune, paid $6.9m in federal taxes – 17.4% of his taxable income. The other 20 people in his office paid between 33% and 41%. • “While the poor and middle-class fight for us in Afghanistan and while most Americans struggle to make ends meet, we mega-rich continue to get our extraordinary tax breaks,” Buffett wrote in the New York Times last month. US domestic policy Barack Obama Obama administration US economy Republicans Global recession Global economy US politics United States Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
UBS raises trading losses to $2.3bn

UBS has set up a committee led by David Sidwell, independent director on the board to investigate the unauthorised trading The boss of UBS was under fresh pressure last night after the Swiss bank upped the cost of the alleged rogue trading by Kweku Adoboli – to $2.3bn (£1.45bn) from $2bn – and claimed his activities had been hidden by “fictitious” trades. Oswald Grübel, a veteran banker who was lured out retirement to try to rescue UBS two years ago, told the Swiss weekly Der Sonntag that he had no intention of resigning despite calls to take responsibility for the alleged rogue trading incident. In attempt to explain the events that led up Adoboli being charged with fraud and false accounting on Friday less than 48 hours after being arrested by City of London Police, the Swiss bank said on Sunday said the losses had been incurred in the past three months through “unauthorised speculative trading” in futures contracts on stock market indices on the S&P 500 on Wall Street, Germay’s Dax index and the Euro Stoxx index, which is based on basket of eurozone stocks. The bank said Adoboli, who is in custody awaiting a bail hearing on Thursday, had hidden the extent of his trading activities because of “fictitious” trades, using complex financial instruments known as exchange traded funds. EFTs are designed to mimic market movements without holding the actual stocks. “The positions taken were within the normal business flow of a large global equity trading house as part of a properly hedged portfolio. However, the true magnitude of the risk exposure was distorted because the positions had been offset in our systems with fictitious, forward-settling, cash ETF positions, allegedly executed by the trader. These fictitious trades concealed the fact that the index futures trades violated UBS’s risk limits,” the bank said. Adoboli, British educated of Ghanian descent, was arrested at 3.30am on Thursday morning after UBS called in the police at 1.30am after becoming suspicious about the 31 year old’s activities. The bank, which has set up a special committee to investigate the trading activities and the “control environment”, said: “Following inquiries directed to him by UBS control functions that were reviewing his positions, the trader revealed his unauthorised activity on 14 September”. The committee is staffed by UBS non-executives. It will be chaired by former banker David Sidwell, who is the senior independent director, as well as Joseph Yam, former chief executive of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, and Ann Godbehere, who used to be at Northern Rock. UBS has now closed out all the positions it believes were held by Adoboli after setting up “Project Bronze” led by of its top trader Jason Barron. One of the three charges faced by Adoboli dates back to 2008 piling more pressure on the bank’s management and adding fuel to calls from Swiss politicians to break up the bank into its high street and investment banking businesses. Thousands of jobs in the City, where it employs 6,000, are at risk from any restructuring of the business which could be announced at an update slated for 17 November. Grübel has faced calls from Switzerland’s Social Democrats to resign but he was defiant on Sunday. “That is purely political. I am not thinking about stepping down,” he told Der Sonntag. While he admitted responsibility, he said: “But if you ask me whether I feel guilty, I say no. Two charges claim that Adoboli falsified records of ETFs between October 2008 and December 2009 and then January 2010 and September 2011. A third charge alleges that he committed fraud between January 2011 and September 2011 while senior trader in global synthetic equities. His lawyers at Kingsley Napley – the law firm that advised Nick Leeson, the rogue trader who broke Barings – are yet to issue a statement or enter pleas to the charges. On Friday, his father, John, told Reuters from Ghana: “I want the world to have an open mind. He should not be sentenced before the trial begins.” The former UN worker is hoping to fly to the UK this week. Accountants Deloitte are expected to run an investigation into what went wrong at UBS for the Financial Services Authority. UBS will be pay Deloitte’s fees. UBS Banking European banks Banking reform Financial sector Financial Services Authority (FSA) Regulators Jill Treanor guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Chris Hayes Gives Viewers a Reason to Tune Into MSNBC on the Weekends

Click here to view this media Chris Hayes has done a very good job of filling in during the week for some of the prime time hosts at MSNBC and he’s now got his own show on the weekends. I’ll just say I agree with Digby as to why his new show is a welcome change from, as she put it, “the usual cable news fare.” It’s definitely a welcome change from five hours or so of Alex Witt on the weekends and her cozying up to “her boys” Pat Buchanan and useless so-called “Democratic strategist” Peter Fenn and the general just gossipy and celebrity driven gist of her so-called “news” coverage, or the typical he said/she said nature of any of her “reporting” on politics from MSNBC on the weekends. Shows like Witt’s always seemed to me to be much more concerned over whether they’re just being polite to their guests who come on their show and lie, rather than ever calling them out for those lies, because heaven forbid if you did that, they might not come back on your show again to lie some more to the public. Thankfully, the MSNBC viewers will now be exposed to two less hours of that each day on the weekends. I wasn’t sure what to expect when I heard Chris was going to get his own show, but it looks like he just gave me a reason to reprogram the DVR for the weekends if this first show is any indication.

Continue reading …
Paul Ryan Accuses Obama of ‘Class Warfare’ Over Millionaire Tax

Click here to view this media A top House Republican said Sunday that President Barack Obama was engaging “class warfare” with a proposal to tax millionaires at a higher rate. The so-called “Buffet rule” would make sure millionaires pay about the same tax rate as the employees that work for them. It’s named after billionaire Warren Buffet, who has said that he is taxed at a rate of about 17.4 percent, while his secretary is taxed at a rate of about 36 percent. “If you tax something more, Chris, you get less of it,” Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) told Fox News’ Chris Wallace. “Class warfare, Chris, may make for really good politics, but it makes for rotten economics. We don’t need a system that seeks to divide people and prey on peoples’ fear, envy and anxiety. We need a system that creates jobs and innovation, and removes these barriers for entrepreneurs to go out a rehire people. I’m afraid these kinds of tax increases don’t work.” “This is being called the ‘Buffet rule” because it comes after Warren Buffet, the multi-billionaire owner of Berkshire Hathaway said, ‘I get so much of my money from capital gains, I end up paying a lower effective tax rate than my secretary who gets her money in salary,’” Wallace noted. “What about the question of fairness, sir?” “What he forgets to mention is that is a double tax,” Ryan insisted. “Capital gains and dividends are taxes on money that has already been taxed once before based on income… It looks like the president wants to move down the class warfare path. Class warfare will simply divide the country more, attack job creators, divide people and it doesn’t grow the economy.”

Continue reading …

For the first time since the government started tracking drug-related deaths in 1979, narcotics have topped traffic fatalities—37,485 for drugs vs. 36,284 for accidents in 2009 (the most recent year available), reports the LA Times . But the big culprit isn’t street drugs: it’s prescription pills like Xanax,…

Continue reading …
Scarlett Johansson Nude Photos: NMA Taiwanese Take (VIDEO)

It’s been a rough week for Scarlett Johansson. The actress was the subject of a alleged nude photo leak, with a number of pictures of what appears to be her topless chest getting posted on the internet after an email hacking. There’s been no confirmation as to whether the pictures are, indeed, of Johansson, but the subsequent lawyer-ordered FBI investigation into the matter won’t do her any favors if she decides to eventually deny their authenticity. It’s a bit dizzying story, the latest in Hollywood’s unending nude photo scandal. In the unlikely event that you’re unfamiliar with the story, don’t fret; the helpful people at Next Media Animation in Taiwan are here to help. Well, help you learn; not, necessarily, help ScarJo feel better about herself. WATCH:

Continue reading …

Santonio Holmes

No Comment
Santonio Holmes

Tone Time- pac Madden NFL 11 Epic Win “The Bobbling Ball” Holmes: Ready to Fire on All Cylinders Judy_Patton says: Jets add RB Joe McKnight, S Eric Smith and WR Santonio Holmes to injury report – The Star-Ledger http://t.co/DkRKpwcy

Continue reading …