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Petrol bomb attack on China bank

A bomb attack during a staff meeting at a bank in north-western China has caused ‘significant casualties’ A petrol bomb set off at a rural bank in northwestern China’s Gansu province has caused a “significant” number of deaths and injuries, with a witness saying people jumped from the damaged building, state news agency Xinhua said on Friday. “Someone ignited a gasoline bomb at 9am during an internal meeting at the bank in Tianzhu Tibetan Autonomous County in the city of Wuwei, a witness said on condition of anonymity,” Xinhua said in an English-language report. “The exact number of casualties were not immediately known, but the witness said he saw some people throwing themselves out of the window of the fourth-floor meeting room, while the injured people, with their bodies being charred, were carried out of the building on stretchers,” it added. Xinhua did not give details on the number of casualties, nor did it disclose the name of the bank. Officials in Tianzhu contacted by telephone declined to comment. Tianzhu is some 140km northwest of provincial capital Lanzhou, and is in a part of Gansu populated by ethnic Tibetans, though Xinhua did not say whether there was any Tibetan involvement. Bomb attacks are rare in China, although disgruntled residents have set off explosions in buses and buildings in the past to complain about local grievances. There have also been bomb attacks by militants in the far western region of Xinjiang, where members of the Muslim Uighur minority chafe at Chinese controls. China guardian.co.uk

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Pakistan paramilitary base bombings kill 68

No group immediately claimed responsibility, but militants have pledged to avenge Osama bin Laden’s killing, and many have been expecting reprisal strikes on Pakistani territory Two explosions struck a paramilitary training centre in northwestern Pakistan on Friday, killing at least 68 people nearly all recruits in the bloodiest attack in the country since a US raid killed al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden. A suicide bomber detonated at least one of the blasts in the Shabqadar area of Charsadda district, police said. Dozens of people also were wounded when the explosions went off at a main gate of the Frontier Constabulary training site, police official Nisar Khan said. Many recruits were boarding vehicles to go home for a short break at the end of a recent training session. No group immediately claimed responsibility. But militants have pledged to avenge bin Laden’s May 2 killing, and many have been expecting reprisal strikes on Pakistani territory. The September 11 mastermind and at least four others were killed by US Navy Seals who raided bin Laden’s compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, a garrison city. Bin Laden is believed to have lived in the large house for up to six years. Pakistani officials have denied knowing he was there but have criticised the American raid ordered by President Barack Obama as a violation of their country’s sovereignty. Pakistani leaders have also repeatedly pointed out that tens of thousands of their own citizens have died in suicide and other attacks since September 11, 2001, when Islamabad became an ally of the US in taking on Islamist extremists. Many of the attacks in Pakistan have targeted security forces, including young cadets or recruits. Pakistan Osama bin Laden guardian.co.uk

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Pakistan paramilitary base bombings kill 68

No group immediately claimed responsibility, but militants have pledged to avenge Osama bin Laden’s killing, and many have been expecting reprisal strikes on Pakistani territory Two explosions struck a paramilitary training centre in northwestern Pakistan on Friday, killing at least 68 people nearly all recruits in the bloodiest attack in the country since a US raid killed al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden. A suicide bomber detonated at least one of the blasts in the Shabqadar area of Charsadda district, police said. Dozens of people also were wounded when the explosions went off at a main gate of the Frontier Constabulary training site, police official Nisar Khan said. Many recruits were boarding vehicles to go home for a short break at the end of a recent training session. No group immediately claimed responsibility. But militants have pledged to avenge bin Laden’s May 2 killing, and many have been expecting reprisal strikes on Pakistani territory. The September 11 mastermind and at least four others were killed by US Navy Seals who raided bin Laden’s compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, a garrison city. Bin Laden is believed to have lived in the large house for up to six years. Pakistani officials have denied knowing he was there but have criticised the American raid ordered by President Barack Obama as a violation of their country’s sovereignty. Pakistani leaders have also repeatedly pointed out that tens of thousands of their own citizens have died in suicide and other attacks since September 11, 2001, when Islamabad became an ally of the US in taking on Islamist extremists. Many of the attacks in Pakistan have targeted security forces, including young cadets or recruits. Pakistan Osama bin Laden guardian.co.uk

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WaPo Highlights Liberal Catholic Professors Slamming Speaker Boehner

On Thursday, Washington Post religion reporter Michelle Boorstein publicized a letter from liberal Catholic professors insisting that House Speaker John Boehner was a poorly formed Catholic: Three days before House Speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) is scheduled to deliver the commencement address at Catholic University, dozens of faculty at Catholic colleges — including many from the university — have written to the Catholic speaker, criticizing him for having a record “among the worst in Congress” on protecting the poor. Here’s the kind of story The Washington Post doesn’t do – Catholic University having a booth at

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File this in the “why am I not surprised?” folder, please. Republican FCC Commissioner Meredith Attwell Baker is leaving her post at the FCC to become Comcast’s Senior VP of Government Affairs . Ars Technica : The news, reported this afternoon by the Wall Street Journal , The Hill , and Politico , comes after the hugely controversial merger of Comcast and NBC earlier this year. At the time, Baker objected to FCC attempts to impose conditions on the deal and argued that the “complex and significant transaction” could “bring exciting benefits to consumers that outweigh potential harms.” Four months after approving the massive transaction, Attwell Baker will take a top DC lobbying job for the new Comcast-NBC entity, according to reports. The response of groups like Free Press was expected in its anger, but not without merit. “No wonder the public is so nauseated by business as usual in Washington—where the complete capture of government by industry barely raises any eyebrows,” said Free Press’ Craig Aaron. “The continuously revolving door at the FCC continues to erode any prospects for good public policy. We hope—but won’t hold our breath—that her replacement will be someone who is not just greasing the way for their next industry job.” Baker has spoken against net neutrality regulations in the past. I imagine Comcast will be very happy to have her on the team. Sigh. In case you’re not familiar with Baker’s connections, here’s her pedigree : Baker, an ebullient Houston native, needs little introduction within Washington. She is daughter-in-law of former secretary of state James A. Baker III . Husband James A. Baker IV is a senior partner at law firm Baker Botts. Her introduction to Washington was in high school, when she was an exchange student. Coincidentally, she stayed with the family of FCC chief of staff Edward Lazarus and attended a semester at Sidwell Friends School. After working at the State Department, she fell into technology policy by accident. Baker followed Steven Barry, a former boss from State to wireless trade group CTIA. Baker then joined the National Telecommunications and Information Administration to work on spectrum management before taking over for John M. R. Kneuer in November 2008. Yippee.

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Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus leaves microfinance bank

Peace prize recipient leaves pioneering Grameen Bank following legal dispute with Bangladeshi government The Nobel laureate who founded a pioneering microfinance institution, the Grameen Bank, has quit as its head after a long dispute with Bangladesh’s government. The announcement by Muhammad Yunus that he is standing down as managing director is a watershed in the 28-year history of the bank, which is credited with lifting millions of the world’s poorest people out of poverty. It also ends a protracted legal wrangle with the Bangladeshi government over control of the bank. Yunus wanted to “ensure my colleagues and our 8 million members, and owners of the bank, are not subjected to any difficulty in discharging their responsibilities”. He took the step “without prejudice” to outstanding legal issues. His deputy, Nurjahan Begum, has been appointed as interim managing director. Yunus was awarded the Nobel peace prize in 2006 jointly with the bank. Literally meaning “village bank”, the institution offers tiny loans to would-be entrepreneurs who would otherwise be refused conventional loans, and his microcredit scheme has been replicated across the world, and has been hailed as being the most effective way of defeating poverty. The bank has nearly 9 million borrowers in Bangladesh; 97% of them are women. Control of the bank would be a considerable political asset, and a significant help in the battle for power in Bangladesh.However, its reputation came under attack in December by a Norwegian TV documentary which raised allegations of irregularities over the transfer of £40m million from the bank to another company. Although Yunus was subsequently cleared of any wrongdoing in an investigation by the Norwegian government, his already fractious relationship with the Bangladeshi government reached breaking point, with claims that he had tarnished his country’s reputation. Earlier this year,the Bangladeshi Central Bank made a legal challenge against the 70-year-old, claiming he had violated retirement laws by failing to relinquish control at 60. Despite a series of legal battles that reached the supreme court, Yunus failed to overturn the judges’ decision to oust him as managing director. His supporters, such as the former Irish president Mary Robinson, and former president of the World Bank James Wolfensohn, claimed that the respected economist had been the target of a political vendetta. An outspoken government critic, Yunus has had an acrimonious relationship with the prime minister, Sheikh Hasina, who is reportedly angry over his attempt to form a political party in 2007. In December, a war of words broke out as she accused Yunus of “sucking blood from the poor borrowers” through the bank’s allegedly exorbitant interest rates, calling for the government to launch an inquiry into claims of misappropriation. He was subsequently cleared. However, microcredit as an economic model has increasingly suffered from a lack of faith, with critics pointing to impossibly high interest rates. In India, politicians have accused bankers of profiting from the poor, and in some cases have banned further lending or recovery of debts. In the southern state of Andhra Pradesh, aggressive selling and recovery of outstanding interest payments by scores of unregulated microfinance firms have pushed huge numbers of already desperately poor farmers deeply into debt. Muhammad Yunus Bangladesh Microfinance Nobel peace prize Fariha Karim guardian.co.uk

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Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus leaves microfinance bank

Peace prize recipient leaves pioneering Grameen Bank following legal dispute with Bangladeshi government The Nobel laureate who founded a pioneering microfinance institution, the Grameen Bank, has quit as its head after a long dispute with Bangladesh’s government. The announcement by Muhammad Yunus that he is standing down as managing director is a watershed in the 28-year history of the bank, which is credited with lifting millions of the world’s poorest people out of poverty. It also ends a protracted legal wrangle with the Bangladeshi government over control of the bank. Yunus wanted to “ensure my colleagues and our 8 million members, and owners of the bank, are not subjected to any difficulty in discharging their responsibilities”. He took the step “without prejudice” to outstanding legal issues. His deputy, Nurjahan Begum, has been appointed as interim managing director. Yunus was awarded the Nobel peace prize in 2006 jointly with the bank. Literally meaning “village bank”, the institution offers tiny loans to would-be entrepreneurs who would otherwise be refused conventional loans, and his microcredit scheme has been replicated across the world, and has been hailed as being the most effective way of defeating poverty. The bank has nearly 9 million borrowers in Bangladesh; 97% of them are women. Control of the bank would be a considerable political asset, and a significant help in the battle for power in Bangladesh.However, its reputation came under attack in December by a Norwegian TV documentary which raised allegations of irregularities over the transfer of £40m million from the bank to another company. Although Yunus was subsequently cleared of any wrongdoing in an investigation by the Norwegian government, his already fractious relationship with the Bangladeshi government reached breaking point, with claims that he had tarnished his country’s reputation. Earlier this year,the Bangladeshi Central Bank made a legal challenge against the 70-year-old, claiming he had violated retirement laws by failing to relinquish control at 60. Despite a series of legal battles that reached the supreme court, Yunus failed to overturn the judges’ decision to oust him as managing director. His supporters, such as the former Irish president Mary Robinson, and former president of the World Bank James Wolfensohn, claimed that the respected economist had been the target of a political vendetta. An outspoken government critic, Yunus has had an acrimonious relationship with the prime minister, Sheikh Hasina, who is reportedly angry over his attempt to form a political party in 2007. In December, a war of words broke out as she accused Yunus of “sucking blood from the poor borrowers” through the bank’s allegedly exorbitant interest rates, calling for the government to launch an inquiry into claims of misappropriation. He was subsequently cleared. However, microcredit as an economic model has increasingly suffered from a lack of faith, with critics pointing to impossibly high interest rates. In India, politicians have accused bankers of profiting from the poor, and in some cases have banned further lending or recovery of debts. In the southern state of Andhra Pradesh, aggressive selling and recovery of outstanding interest payments by scores of unregulated microfinance firms have pushed huge numbers of already desperately poor farmers deeply into debt. Muhammad Yunus Bangladesh Microfinance Nobel peace prize Fariha Karim guardian.co.uk

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enlarge Credit: MaidInSingapore My wonderful Kiwi partner, Schmoochie, was sent to Singapore for a job that was supposed to have lasted only ‘a few weeks’ but is now going on Month Two, with another five weeks to go. Needless to say, this didn’t make me too happy. But his company did fly me to Singapore so we can spend a fortnight together. Which sounds nice in theory, but in reality means that while he’s working incredibly long hours, I wander around the streets and shops until I can’t stand the crushing heat and humidity before fleeing back to the refuge of our air-conditioned hotel to nurse my sunburns. I arrived right smack in the middle of elections in Singapore, however, which makes being here a lot more interesting for a political junky such as myself. Singapore itself is mesmerizing, on so many levels. At night, it has an almost Blade Runner quality – the noise, the crowds, the noise, colossal video billboards and buildings pulsating with multi-colored lights, the gorgeous women in gorgeous clothing, the noise, the enormous variety of food on offer, and have I mentioned the sheer bloody noise? The city IS the country, five million people – 40 percent of whom are foreigners – all crammed into a tiny island where the only place to build is up, and up, and UP. The skyline bristles with skyscrapers and hundreds of cranes building more skyscrapers, with tiny pockets of surviving Buddhist temples and three storey art deco shophouses with their covered arcades dwarfed in a forest of reinforced concrete and glass. The majority of people are Chinese, Malay, Tamil, or Indian – or a marvelous interracial mixture of everything – and for the first time in my life I’m the distinct minority; my blonde hair and Schmoochie’s blue eyes stand out like beacons. Shopping is a national sport of Olympian proportion. Television, like television anywhere, is pretty crappy, but the advertisements are sheer genius – I could sit for hours just watching the ads. I suspect a lot of people do. Singapore is capitalism on amphetamines. But Singapore has a dark side that has had more than a bit of uncomfortable exposure lately with a highly contentious election. Tens of thousands of opposition supporters held rallies in the weeks leading up to the election, far more than the ruling People’s Action Party’s (PAP), and this was the most intensely fought election since Singapore gained independence from Malaysia in 1965. To an outsider, it all seemed on the surface a fairly pointless exercise in futility, as it wasn’t likely the PAP would lose their majority no matter how pissed off the public has become; the opposition was divided into six small parties all battling each other as well as the massively superior resources of the PAP, and in a first-past-the-post electoral system none of them had much of a chance. But the simmering anger against the government had become so palpable, and so alarming (the example of Egypt being mentioned more than once in conversations here), that four days before the election Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong felt compelled to issue an apology to voters for the government’s unpopular policies and political gaffes, the rising cost of living and very lopsided economy since the last election in 2006, and promised changes would be made if his government was given a new mandate. Even with a system pretty much rigged to support the ruling party, the PAP lost in a nearly six and a half percent swing, down to a majority of slightly over 60%, the lowest since Singapore’s independence. The opposition Worker’s Party managed to gain six seats in Parliament, taking two hotly contested seats, in an unprecedented gain while its rival opposition parties gained no seats at all despite their own higher share of the vote percentages. Singapore is on the brink of an emerging two-party political system, something that could eventually bring down the PAP in future elections. But why should Americans care what happens in Singapore? Other than because it’s fascinating, it mirrors concerns a lot of Americans have now – the economy. On the one hand, Singapore has benefits most Americans can only dream of – universal health care, government subsidized housing, a superb and affordable educational system, a fast, clean and efficient public transport system second to none. Singaporeans, despite their intensely urban environment, are eco-conscious. Recycling bins for plastic, glass and paper are practically on every street corner, littering is almost unheard of. Every food market offers reusable fabric carry bags with a logo of a tree and the blurb ‘Love Nature’. I bought a pair of lovely chopsticks, and when I turned down the offer of a plastic bag, the shop assistant – with absolutely no irony whatsoever – said, ‘thank you for helping to save our planet.’ Over the past few years, the Singaporean government has paid out $2 billion dollars to motorists who have scrapped their cars, offering either cash or tax credits on another vehicle. With the CEO (Certificate of Entitlement) at an all-time high, eight out of ten motorists have opted for taking the cash, and switched from cars to public transport. There’s a lot to like about Singapore. Yes, laws here can be draconian, particularly those dealing with drugs, and Singapore’s execution rate is the highest per capita in the world. The biggest form of civil disobedience seems to be jaywalking and teenaged skateboarders cursing each other in an amusingly vulgar form of ‘Singlish’ that makes old ladies tsk disapprovingly as they walk by. Compare that to the United States, where since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976, nearly 1200 people, including children and the mentally ill, have been executed , and in states where it is most frequently used, particularly in heavily Republican southern states, the murder rate outstrips those states where the death penalty is outlawed. One has nothing to do with the other. But by and large, Singapore is a safe and friendly place – not because its laws are so harsh, but because the culture is by necessity tolerant – with such a hugely diverse racial and religious population, it simply couldn’t survive with the sort of hatred and bigotry fostered by the American rightwing. People here are just… nice to each other. On the other hand, I had a glimpse of what America could so easily become this morning, as I looked down into the construction site of a high rise being built across the street from our hotel. I was genuinely shocked to see a half dozen or so men sleeping on mats spread out on the bare concrete, their washing drying on a staircase railing, yellow hardhats used as pillows. In the evening, many of them can be found sitting on the curbs of the street in whatever shade they can find, nursing bottles of Coke or lime juice, looking tired and defeated. These are the lucky ones – they have jobs. Despite claims that Singapore’s unemployment rate has declined to 2.7 percent, the ‘lowest’ in three years, the Manpower Ministry has only one category it takes into account to formulate its statistics, that of a ‘resident workforce’ which includes both Singapore citizens and foreign workers lumped together – workers like Schmoochie who doesn’t actually live in Singapore, but has a temporary work permit while he’s here. In comparison, a survey conducted by the Global Competitiveness Report showed that out of 59 countries surveyed, Singapore ranked 56th, with only Russia, the Ukraine and Ecuador paying their workers less than Singapore. The gap between rich and poor here is very stark indeed. One of the big issues in this past election has been minimum wage. Mr Lee Kuan Yew, Singapore’s first and longest serving Prime Minister for three decades, has continuously maintained that a minimum wage would cut employment by undermining the competitiveness of the economy, that ‘market forces’ should determine the wages for workers – a view shared by his ideological counterparts in the US Congress. Like the vote for women, the first country in the world to establish a minimum wage for workers, I’m rather tickled to say, is little ol’ New Zealand, way back in 1896, followed by Australia in 1899 and the UK in 1909. Today, ninety percent of the world’s countries has a minimum wage law to protect their lowest earning workers. The US didn’t catch up with modern progress until 1938, and today Republicans are pushing for a repeal of the minimum wage. Chris Dudley (R) of Oregon has even stated he wants to abolish minimum wage because – get this – waitresses are making ‘too much money’ . At $7.25 an hour, before taxes, just how rich does Mr Dudley imagine these waitresses could possibly be getting? Meanwhile, other Asian countries already have or are taking the extraordinary step of establishing a minimum wage – Hong Kong, Bangladesh, Thailand, Cambodia, Indonesia, South Korea, the Philippines, Papua New Guinea and Vietnam, fercryinoutloud, even Communist China all have a minimum wage. But not Singapore. Yet. Curiously, this used to be something the Singapore government was openly quite proud of, spinning the lack of worker’s protection as a ‘flexible wage system’ where ‘all businesses are encouraged to reward employees and adjust wages according to how the business performs. This helps to motivate employees and at the same time gives businesses the flexibility to make quick adjustments to wages during a sudden downturn and avoid retrenchment.’ And the lack of a minimum wage, rather than exploiting these ‘motivated’ employees, left them ‘free to negotiate salaries and salary increases with your employer.’ Yeah, right. I tested out that theory. I interviewed someone whose identity I have to be careful to protect, one of the few workers in the so-called ‘service industry’ here who was brave enough to even speak to me. The Singapore Democrats have proposed a minimum wage of $6.80 per hour, based on a weekly salary of $300, the least amount necessary for an individual to subsist in Singapore, with a 44 hour work week, for the lowest of low-wage income earners. Currently, at ten hours a day, six days a week, her salary works out to around $3.00 an hour. She has worked in the same job for six years, and only ever had one cost of living raise, a few pennies – and if her employers caught her telling anyone how much they pay her, she would be immediately sacked. It’s even in her contract that she is not allowed to reveal which political party she voted for. She would love to find another job that would pay better, but there just aren’t many available for low-skilled workers in the service industry. So much for being ‘motivated’, or ‘free to negotiate’ a salary increase. Moreover, she was able to enlighten me about the circumstances of the men sleeping on a concrete building site – low-skilled and badly paid foreign workers are supposed to have subsidized housing at a reasonable rate available to them by their employers, but these workers are routinely brought into the country by corrupt ‘employment agencies’ who charge them extortionary fees, leaving them nearly penniless, much like Depression era migrant workers forced to shop at the company stores and ending up not only broke but in perpetual debt. These workers end up renting out their housing and sleeping rough in order to send what little money they save home to their families. But not all of these workers are migrants – many of them are Singaporean citizens struggling to survive, much like the woman I spoke to, who works long hours for low pay in the hopes that her children can excel in school, find a good job, and avoid their mother’s fate. But many young people here are looking at a very shaky global economy, and worried about their futures – fear all too many companies have exploited to keep wages down and workers cowed, with the blessing of the government. This sort of ‘motivation’ is dehumanizing and shameful. And a stark cautionary warning what America could look like – again – if we lose our most basic of workers’ protections to the Republican union busters and corporate whores that fill up far too many seats in Congress. But unlike America, voting in Singapore is mandatory, and this time around, a good number of those low-income voters were very, very angry. It will be some time before elections ever oust the entrenched politicians of the PAP, but the power structure here has had a thorough shake-up – as well as businesses whose fear that a minimum wage could drive down their profits is beginning to be outweighed by the observation that higher wages means workers are not only able to spend more, the productivity of the local work force increases when workers aren’t exhausted by long hours, or forced to take on second or third jobs. Paying workers a decent wage is actually good for business. Even Communist China has proven the argument against a minimum wage to be fallacious: Shanghai, Guangzhou and Suzhou all have minimum wage law, while investment continues to rise and the Chinese GDP is up by nearly 10%. Let’s hope more prosperous Singapore is watching their neighbors closely. Only a handful of countries have no laws or regulations on minimum wage – Bahrain, Qatar, UAE, Tonga, Brunei, Somalia… and Singapore. Not exactly the best company to be in, should the US chose to rescind our own minimum wage laws. But given the anger with the Singaporean government’s ineptitude, or worse, sheer heartlessness, in addressing the income divide in Singapore, where workers on the bottom of the economic ladder face crippling financial burdens, popular support for a minimum wage is growing. It will be very interesting to watch the new ‘old’ Singapore government to see how well they live up to their promises of redressing their mistakes, and listening to the people – ALL the people – of Singapore. I, for one, hope the people of Singapore succeed, for if they do, then so might we.

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Chris Matthews: ‘Shameless,’ ‘Nasty’ Newt Gingrich Robs ‘Joy and Humanity’ Like Freddy Krueger

A furious, frothing Chris Matthews left no hyperbolic term unused on Thursday as he excoriated the “nasty,” “shameless” Newt Gingrich for robbing “the political arena of joy and humanity.” The Hardball host even compared the 2012 Republican presidential candidate to a famous horror movie villain: ” I cannot believe there are young Republicans idealists out there, young people with hope who want our country to be good and have good politics to want to resurrect this element of Freddy Krueger, Nightmare on Elm Street politics.” [See video below. MP3 audio here .] Matthews isn't entirely original here. On June 08, 2009 , the anchor said this of Dick Cheney: “Freddy Krueger comes back in every movie and this guy is back every day.” (Interestingly, on December 18, 2007 , it was Matthews who wore a Freddy-style sweater on Hardball. See picture at right.) The cable host devoted his entire closing “Let Me Finish” commentary to Gingrich, associating the politician with nearly everything that's wrong in the world: “Newt is the guy that brought nastiness to the U.S. Congress in the 1980s. Newt is a downward influence on American politics.” Earlier in the show, Matthews accused Gingrich of racism in the way he talks about Barack Obama. He theorized, “It's street corner and Newt Gingrich has sort of picked up on it, because it conveys the notion of ghetto hustler. I mean, I know what he's doing here and you know what he's doing.” A partial transcript of the two segments can be found below: 5:06 CHRIS MATTHEWS: Let's bring in Steve McMahon. Steve, he uses, to me he's another version without the sort of the New York charm of Donald Trump. Here he is he's doing things like he accuses the President of the United States, who has come up through the Ivy League, done incredibly academically all his life, done very well. He calls him a con artist, basically, a street corner hustler, basically. He's played a con on us. Same exact term. Con, that Donald Trump uses. It's New York. It's street corner and Newt Gingrich has sort of picked up on it, because it conveys the notion of ghetto hustler. I mean, I know what he's doing here and you know what he's doing. STEVE MCMAHON: That's exactly what I was just going to suggest, Chris, that there's a racial code that's being expressed when he uses these kinds of words, just as there was for Donald Trump. And I actually think that he might have accelerated his announcement because Donald Trump was getting so much attention by doing the very kind of things that Newt Gingrich has been doing effectively for such a long time. It's the verbal equivalent of shock and awe. He says these things because he knows that people cannot believe what he's saying, he knows it's edgy enough that it's going to get a lot of coverage and it's going to get a lot of people excited. 5:59

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Mexico’s drugs war escalates as eight headless bodies discovered in Durango

Durango government believes victims may be gang members as decapitated corpses found for second time in a week The naked bodies of eight decapitated men have been found dumped along roads in a Mexican city plagued by increasingly deadly conflict between rival drug gangs. Six of the corpses were found along a highway leading out of the capital of the northern state of Durango, with their heads lying nearby, said the state attorney general’s office. The two other bodies were found in another street in Durango city. One was identified as the remains of Gerardo Galindo Meza, the deputy director of a city prison who had been kidnapped on Monday. Galindo’s head was on a different street corner, accompanied by a threatening message signed by a drug gang, the attorney general’s office said in a statement. It was the second time this week that decapitated corpses have been found in Durango state. Eleven bodies were found on Monday, including six left opposite a school in the state capital. Meanwhile, soldiers digging at mass graves in five places around the city on Wednesday uncovered another eight bodies – seven men and one woman, bringing the total number of victims there to 196, said the Durango public safety department. Durango is one of Mexico’s most dangerous states. Its murder rate has more than doubled over the past two years. At least 1,025 killings were reported in 2010, compared to 930 in 2009 and 430 in 2008, according to government figures. Authorities suspect some of the most-wanted drug kingpins may be hiding in the mountainous state, which has been a battleground between the Sinaloa, Zetas and Beltran Leyva cartels. Families of people who have disappeared in Durango have come forward to ask whether their relatives may have been buried in the mass graves, according to Juan Rosales, the deputy state public safety secretary. But he said the identification process has overwhelmed the state government, prompting it to seek help from central government. Durango’s secretary for government, Hector Vela, said many of the victims are likely to be gang members killed by rivals. But some may be missing police officers, and others may be victims of kidnapping and extortion attempts. Only one body has so far been identified – a 31-year-old man who had been reported missing several months ago. His brother claimed the body. Drug violence has killed more than 34,000 people in Mexico since the president, Felipe Calderón, launched a military-led crackdown on the cartels in December 2006. Mexico Drugs trade David Batty guardian.co.uk

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