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(Above video is from a Cavuto appearance ) I’ve discussed Social Security with President Obama at the White House and he assured us that he wouldn’t hurt Social Security. I know many of us on the left have said this before, but I’ll say it again: Why appoint somebody like Alan Simpson to his Catfood Commission if he’s serious about saving and strengthening our social safety nets? Here’s Alan, the High Lord of Mean: Alan Simpson’s cold relationship with AARP is no secret, but the former Republican Senator from Wyoming took it to a new level Friday. At an event hosted by the Investment Company Institute, Simpson delighted the finance industry audience members by aiming a rude gesture at the leading lobby for senior citizens. Financial and investment interests have long been supportive of Simpson’s broad critique of Social Security, since privatizing the old-age and disability support program would be a tremendous boon for Wall Street’s financial managers. ICI represents mutual funds and other money managers who control more than $13 trillion in assets. Simpson’s forceful gesture came after an extended diatribe against Social Security, which he said is a “Ponzi” scheme, “not a retirement program.” Simpson argued that Social Security was originally intended more as a welfare program. “It was never intended as a retirement program. It was set up in ‘37 and ‘38 to take care of people who were in distress — ditch diggers, wage earners — it was to give them 43 percent of the replacement rate of their wages. The [life expectancy] was 63. That’s why they set retirement age at 65” for Social Security, he said. In 2010, President Obama appointed Simpson to a deficit commission that recommended cutting taxes and reducing entitlement spending. The commission’s outline is being used as a framework for reform in Congress. This is totally insane thinking and he’s welcome to his twisted logic, but what he said and did with his Bras d’honneur was completely inappropriate as well, since he accepted a position on Obama’s commission. Sir, if you could only see my hand now. If he hates Social Security and Medicare that’s fine. Start a PAC. But when you’re in a position of trying to help the most beloved social programs America has ever had, at least show some respect. Oh, and stop lying about it. By the way, this isn’t the first time he’s stated misinformation about Social Security, either. RJ Eskow wrote a post for C&L about a Simpson exchange with Alex Lawson that was sickening because of all his lies: Digby writes : Uhm no. This life expectancy misinformation is so widespread, I don’t know if we’ll ever be able to set it straight. But I might have expected that one of President Obama’s Deficit commission appointees — the co-chairman no less — would not be among those who believe it. (Normally I would suggest that he was just a liar, but from this account it’s pretty clear to me that he really doesn’t understand it.) This is a very important point and one that everyone needs to understand if they hope to beat back the social security assault: HuffPost suggested to Simpson during a telephone interview that his claim about life expectancy was misleading because his data include people who died in childhood of diseases that are now largely preventable. Incorporating such early deaths skews the average life expectancy number downward, making it appear as if people live dramatically longer today than they did half a century ago. According to the Social Security Administration’s actuaries, women who lived to 65 in 1940 had a life expectancy of 79.7 years and men were expected to live 77.7 years. “If that is the case — and I don’t think it is — then that means they put in peanuts,” said Simpson. Simpson speculated that the data presented to him by HuffPost had been furnished by “the Catfood Commission people” — a reference to progressive critics of the deficit commission who gave president’s panel that label. Told that the data came directly from the Social Security Administration, Simpson continued to insist it was inaccurate, while misstating the nature of a statistical average: “If you’re telling me that a guy who got to be 65 in 1940 — that all of them lived to be 77 — that is just not correct. Just because a guy gets to be 65, he’s gonna live to be 77? Hell, that’s my genre. That’s not true,” said Simpson, who will turn 80 in September. Why is Dick Durbin acting like a beard for these people? Simpson is an old hack, but Durbin should be ashamed of himself because he does know the truth and the figures that we’re talking about here. Back to Digby: Simpson surely knows about the Greenspan Commission. He’s just lying about that (or he’s senile.) But what’s Erskine Bowles’ excuse? Or Dick Durbin or Saxby Chambliss or all the other politicians who parrot this misinformation all the time? Are they all senile too? The people who designed the system understood very well that if “life expectancy” went up it would mean that there were also more younger workers who hadn’t died in childbirth paying into the system. And they understood the concept of productivity gains and knew that more people would be brought into the system — paying as well as receiving benefits — over time. They weren’t cave men. It was only 70 years ago. Simpson was a teen-ager at the time. What they may not have anticipated was just how badly the political system would be distorted by corporate propaganda that made people believe that black is white and up is down. It’s the real problem and solving social security’s minor shortfall in 2038 is a piece of cake compared to solving that one. I doubt they ever imagined that our political system in seventy years would have turned out members of Congress right out of a John Birch Society hoedown.

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Live Q&A: the life of a literary agent

This Friday between 1 and 2pm, Karolina Sutton from Curtis Brown will be here to cast light on what goes into literary agenting. Please start posting your queries now Since the relaunch of guardian.co.uk/books, we’ve been asking you to tell us what you’d like to see on the site. One interesting request came from Degrus , UnpublishedWriter , and RolandKempston who suggested that we corral members of the publishing industry and get them to come online and explain what, precisely, they do. To that end, we’ve set up a series of five webchats with books professionals, which should hopefully cast light on the production process all the way from manuscript to bookshop. We begin this Friday with the agent – a mysterious figure whose most obvious role is to get the best price possible for books, but who can also act as friend, first reader, counsellor and shoulder to cry on. Online to explain her role will be Karolina Sutton , from one of the UK’s premier literary agencies, Curtis Brown . She represents a range of fiction and non-fiction authors, from award-winning debut novelists to bestselling crime fiction writers. Her clients include Andrea Ashworth, Patricia Cornwell, Alan Garner, Siri Hustvedt, Haruki Murakami and Tobias Wolf. She’ll be here to answer your questions from 1pm to 2pm this Friday, 13 May . Feel free to start posting questions now, so she’ll have plenty to get to grips with, and come back on Friday to read her replies. Next week we talk to an editor: Francis Bickmore, of Granta. Publishing guardian.co.uk

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Live Q&A: the life of a literary agent

This Friday between 1 and 2pm, Karolina Sutton from Curtis Brown will be here to cast light on what goes into literary agenting. Please start posting your queries now Since the relaunch of guardian.co.uk/books, we’ve been asking you to tell us what you’d like to see on the site. One interesting request came from Degrus , UnpublishedWriter , and RolandKempston who suggested that we corral members of the publishing industry and get them to come online and explain what, precisely, they do. To that end, we’ve set up a series of five webchats with books professionals, which should hopefully cast light on the production process all the way from manuscript to bookshop. We begin this Friday with the agent – a mysterious figure whose most obvious role is to get the best price possible for books, but who can also act as friend, first reader, counsellor and shoulder to cry on. Online to explain her role will be Karolina Sutton , from one of the UK’s premier literary agencies, Curtis Brown . She represents a range of fiction and non-fiction authors, from award-winning debut novelists to bestselling crime fiction writers. Her clients include Andrea Ashworth, Patricia Cornwell, Alan Garner, Siri Hustvedt, Haruki Murakami and Tobias Wolf. She’ll be here to answer your questions from 1pm to 2pm this Friday, 13 May . Feel free to start posting questions now, so she’ll have plenty to get to grips with, and come back on Friday to read her replies. Next week we talk to an editor: Francis Bickmore, of Granta. Publishing guardian.co.uk

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Fresh gunfire heard in Damascus

• UN demands end to violence in Syria and access to Deraa • EU imposes sanctions against 13 Syrian officials • Syria intensifies its chokehold on protesters • Nato targets Tripoli in heavy bombardment 4.08pm: At least 48 people have been killed in Syria by the security forces in the last four days , according to research by Amnesty International. They include 28 people who were apparently shot dead by security forces on Friday including nine in Homs, six in Hama, four in Latakia, four in Dayr al-Zor, three in Dera’a, one in Idleb and one in Damascus. Among those killed since then four were women who were calling for the releases of hundreds of people detained by the security forces. They were named as Leila Taha, Ahlam Hwaysqeh, Marwa ‘Abbas and Leila Sahiouni. 3.40pm: British jets have destroyed part of a building being used by Gaddafi regime forces on the outskirts of the port city of Misrata in what the Ministry of Defence says is the first attack of its kind in the Libyan conflict, writes Richard Norton-Taylor. The crew of two RAF Tornados were ordered to destroy only the top two floors of the building with Paveway IV bombs. The building was being used by pro-regime forces to target Misrata with rocket, artillery and heavy machine gun fire, the MoD said. The pilot of the lead aircraft explained: “We were tasked to go to an area. When we arrived, we established communications with another aircraft in the area. It directed us to a building.” The aircraft was directed to attack immediately and destroy the top two floors of the building using two bombs to target each wing of the structure, leaving the rest of the building standing. The strikes were among a number of attacks by the RAF on Sunday, when targets included two armoured personnel carriers near Brega, a battle tank west of Brega and two multiple rocket launchers involved in the attacks on Misrata, and three other buildings it said were being used by Gaddafi’s forces near Misratah, Yafran and Maradah. Yesterday, the RAF damaged or destroyed two mobile radar systems, two multiple rocket launchers, and a main battle tank near Misrata, the MoD said. 3.29pm: Mona Yacoubian, Middle East senior programme officer, at the US Institute of Peace, argues that the regime of Bashar al-Assad will survive. In an interview with the Council on Foreign Relations she said: I don’t think that the Assad regime is in any near-term danger of falling. Indeed, the brutal repression that we’ve witnessed over the weekend suggests that they may well quell the uprising. It is going to come at a tremendous cost in terms of Syria’s growing isolation from the West and perhaps even more broadly. She also revealed US fears of what would happen if Assad did fall. Syria has been under the stranglehold of a fairly repressive regime, and so the opposition of Syria has been fairly weak and somewhat divided. The Muslim Brotherhood is often identified as perhaps the most powerful of the opposition groups. Membership of the Muslim Brotherhood in Syria, however, is defined as punishable by death. So, the Brotherhood’s ability to organize inside Syria has been fairly restricted. The real concern and the real fear is that should the Assad regime fall, it is very uncertain what will come after. There are deep fears, given the heterogeneous makeup of Syria, that what would be more likely is an Iraq-style chaos and sectarian civil war. There is no clear understanding of what would come after the regime of Bashar al-Assad. 2.54pm: Libyan officials have claimed hospitals were targeted in the latest raid on Tripoli. Whatever the truth of the claim, footage from the ground is in stark contrast to the sterile presentation given by Nato. _ 2.45pm: Nato has been showing footage and stills from its bombers to claim that its airstrikes in Libya are accurate. “All Nato targets are military in nature, and have been clearly linked to the Gaddafi’s regime’s systematic attacks on the Libyan population. Every strike conducted by Nato is necessary, legal, moral and executed in a manner in which civilian casualties are minimised to the fullest possible extent,” claimed Nato’s commander of air operation brigadier general Claudio Gabellini. _ 1.45pm: We’ve had this interesting tip off from a source in Syria about the possible release of activist, as news emerged that two prominent detainees were freed last night. I heard from a good source three high-profile detained people being released today: Fayez Sara, a prominent writer and dissident arrested on 11 April; Kamal Cheikho, prominent Kurdish activist and blogger held since June; and George Sabra, a political figure from Syrian People’s Democratic party who was arrested in Deraa on 2 April. Two veteran opposition figures arrested last month were released last night, according to Reuters. Ammar Qurabi, head of National Organisation for Human Rights in Syria, said that authorities released Hassan Abdel Azim, 81, and Hazem al-Nahar. 1.02pm: Heavy gunfire has been heard again today in the south-westen Damascus suburb of Mouadhamiya (alternative spellings include Maadamiyeh and Madamya) The area has seen intensifying demonstrations against President Bashar al-Assad’s rule, a witness told Reuters. “I tried to get in through Mouadhamiya’s main entrance but there were scores of soldiers with rifles turning cars back,” said the witness, who was in the area at 1pm (11am BST). 12.46pm: The al-Jazeera journalist Dorothy Parvez, who was detained by Syrian authorities last month, left the country on 1 May, according to the pro-regime newspaper al-Watan . It said she was refused entry into Syria because her visa didn’t state she was a journalist. Al-Jazeera has been campaigning for the release of Parvez . 12.20pm: Gaddafi’s regime appears rattled by this morning’s Nato airstrikes on Tripoli, Martin Chulov reports from the Libyan capital. We heard about six very large explosions between midnight and 2.30 in morning. The first target appeared to be a research centre that had been hit before… the building was by-and-large destroyed. A couple of hours later there were four or five very loud explosions. A military intelligence headquarters was hit, the Gaddafi compound was hit and two other buildings. It does appear to be an intensifying of the Nato campaign.” We can see smoke billowing from the area that we know is Gaddafi’s compound. It is a large walled fortress area, as big as a small suburb. We don’t know what was hit inside it, but certainly a plume was emerging for that at around 2.30am. The regime does appear to be more unsettled today than it has been in the last week or so. The explosions did rattle them, they are talking about compromise. The morning after the night before things are a little different. People are a bit more apprehensive and there is a bit more trepidation in the air. On Gaddafi’s whereabouts Martin said: There is mounting speculation about that. Gaddafi gave a live address on television hours before his son Saif al-Arab was killed in an airstrike in same compound area. He hasn’t been heard from since. They [the regime] say he is in a period of mourning… The [Libyan] street does seem to think it is unusual for the leader not to pop up his head up at this time. _ 11.59am: Is Asma Assad, wife of the Syrian president, in London? asks the Telegraph. A source told the paper that Asma (“considered to be one of the most glamorous first ladies in the world”) fled to her native home at the start of the unrest in Syria. “Her evacuation was carried out under conditions of immense secrecy but she is now safely there [in London] with her three young children and surrounded by security guards,” the source said. But there was no sign of her, or anyone else, at the family’s London home, the Telegraph said. There was a similar media search for Hosni Mubarak’s son Gamal at the height of the unrest in Egypt . Rumours that he had fled to his London property proved unfounded. 11.34am: A website called the Committee of Martyrs of the Syrian Revolution names 757 people killed in the violence in Syria in last seven weeks . The list includes four people it says were killed yesterday. It also includes the names of more than 100 soldiers, members of the police or security forces. They are also listed as martyrs. Opposition claims that soldiers have been shot for refusing to fire against protesters. The Syrian regime denies this. It is also trying to lay claim to the term ‘martyr’. The state news agency Sana has regular updates on the funerals of “martyrs from the army”. It’s latest report says: “The martyrs’ bodies were carried up on hands, while the military band played the music of the ‘Martyr’ and the ‘Farewell’.” The Arab news site On Islam lists the names of 880 people killed in the violence . The most recent killings on its list were recorded last Friday. 10.52am: Muammar Gaddafi’s compound was targeted in latest Nato airstrikes on Tripoli, according to a witness. “The direction of at least one blast suggests Gaddafi’s compound has been targeted,” the witness told Reuters. The agency added: Libyan officials said four children were wounded, two of them seriously, by flying glass caused by blasts from Nato strikes in the Tripoli area overnight. Officials showed foreign journalists a hospital in the Libyan capital where some windows had been shattered, apparently due to the blast waves from a Nato strike that toppled a nearby telecommunications tower. The journalists were also taken to a government building housing the high commission for children that had been completely destroyed. The old colonial building had been damaged before in what officials said was a Nato bombing on April 30. 10.29am: The UN refugee agency has appealed to European countries to step up efforts to rescue people fleeing Libya in overloaded and unseaworthy boats. Yesterday the Council of Europe called for an inquiry into the deaths of 61 migrants from Libya, as details emerge about the sinking of another boat on Friday. Up to 600 were on board the overcrowded vessel as it fled the Libyan capital, Tripoli, according to the UNHCR. Today Melissa Fleming, spokeswoman for the UNHCR, said: “Any boat that is leaving Libya should be considered, at first glance, as a boat in need of assistance.” 10.20am: Nato has confirmed that its planes hit three “command and control facilities” in the Libyan capital, Tripoli, overnight . It lists the following targets as hit: In the vicinity of Tripoli: 3 Command & Control Facilities. In the vicinity of Mizdah: 15 Ammunition Storages. In the vicinity of Misurata: 1 Tank, 1 Command & Control Node. In the vicinity of Sirte: 2 Ammunition Storages. 10.11am: Another former minister of Mubarak’s regime in Egypt has been jailed, according to a tweet Reuters. Egypt former tourism minister Zoheir Garranah jailed for 5 years – judicial source Last Thursday’s Egypt’s former interior minister Habib al-Adly was sentenced to 12 years for money laundering and profiteering . 9.37am: The Syrian state news agency Sana has highlighted reports in the Guardian as an example of “tendentious” international media campaign against the Syria. Curiously it turned to nuns from a monastery north of Damascus to question western media accounts, and claim that violence was started by protesters. It quotes “Michline Albret Tawil Tramp” with this: ”Gatherings occur upon leaving mosques, and among them there are groups who want to aggravate the situation…in the right moment infiltrators start smashing shops, burning cars and assailing passers-by and security forces. ”Meanwhile, snipers on rooftops or armed members within the gathering start shooting at security forces and protesters alike, and videos are shot to show security forces as shooting peaceful gatherings.” Sana added: Michline lashed out at certain claims, namely that of The Guardian, which reported that Syrian soldiers were shot dead for refusing to open fire at peaceful gatherings. 9.16am: Leading Syrian dissident Ammar Abdulhamid denies that the regime has the upper hand over the protest movement . Responding to that interview the regime’s Bouthaini Shaaban gave to the New York Times , he writes: The demonstrable truth is that the Assad’s control doesn’t extend far beyond the shadows of their tanks and security officers. True, they took control of Deraa City, but they still don’t feel confident enough to allow UN humanitarian mission to pay a visit to the beleaguered place. Meanwhile, all other towns and villages in the Horan province (the Deraa Governorate) remain in a defiant mood with people holding daily protests calling for toppling the regime, and refuting official lies about armed gangs and infiltrators… Perhaps the Assads are not that far gone, and have not completely surrender themselves to that parallel reality yet, perhaps they do realize that the situation is still very much beyond their control and that the crackdown has not yet delivered the desired fruits, perhaps their statements are meant to stall and to fool whoever is willing to be fooled in the international community, perhaps that’s why they sent their troops to lay siege to another rebellious town in Horan yesterday: Jassem, and by default the nearby Ankhel as well. Whatever the case maybe, if these kinds of statements are meant in any way to dampen the spirit of protesters, they are bound to fail, just like the crackdown itself is failing. 9.00am: Welcome to more live coverage of the unrest in the Middle East. Once again Syria looks set to be the focus today. Here’s a round down of the latest news: • EU sanctions against 13 Syria officials come into force today, but they exempt President Bashar al-Assad personally for overseeing the rising tide of repression and violence against his opposition. Meanwhile, the UN has demanded an end to the violence in Syria and humanitarian access to the southern city of Deraa. • Hundreds more people have been arrested in Syria as the regime imposes a chokehold against the protest movement. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least 400 people had been rounded up in the coastal town of Banias since Saturday, adding to an estimated 7,000 already in detention across the country. • More video has emerged of the crackdown in Syria. One of the latest shows the apparent arrest and beating of protesters who took part in what activist say was a peaceful demonstration in the capital Damascus. _ • Exiled opposition members from Syria are planning to gather for a conference in Cairo later this month, the Wall Street Journal reports. Organisers said the conference will gather people from across the political spectrum, including activists affiliated with the country’s banned Muslim Brotherhood. • The Syrian government has gained the upper hand against the uprising, a senior official told the New York Times. Bouthaina Shaaban, an adviser to President Assad, said: “I hope we are witnessing the end of the story… I think now we’ve passed the most dangerous moment. I hope so, I think so.” • Nato warplanes struck Tripoli earlier today in the heaviest bombing of the Libyan capital in weeks. Overnight, Nato warplanes struck at least four sites in Tripoli, setting off crackling explosions that thundered through the Libyan capital, AP reports. See how previous days unfolded by visiting our new Middle East Live page. Syria Bashar Al-Assad Libya Muammar Gaddafi Protest Egypt Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest Matthew Weaver guardian.co.uk

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Japan looks to renewable future

The prime minister says Japan must ‘start from scratch’ on its plan to obtain half its energy from nuclear Japan will scrap a plan to obtain half of its electricity from nuclear power and will instead promote renewable energy as a result of its nuclear crisis, the prime minister said Tuesday. Naoto Kan said Japan needs to “start from scratch” on its long-term energy policy after the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant was heavily damaged by a 11 March earthquake and tsunami and began leaking radiation. Japan’s nuclear plants supplied about 30% of the country’s electricity, and the government had planned to raise that to 50%. Kan told a news conference that nuclear and fossil fuel used to be the pillars of Japanese energy policy but now it will add two more – renewable energy such as solar, wind and biomass, and an increased focus on conservation. “We will thoroughly ensure safety for nuclear power generation and make efforts to further promote renewable energy,” an area where Japan has lagged behind Europe and the US, he said. On Monday a landmark report by the UN’s climate science body, the IPCC, said that renewable energy could account for 80% of the world’s energy supply by 2050 – but only if governments pursue the right policies. Kan also said he would take a pay cut beginning in June until the Fukushima nuclear crisis is resolved to take responsibility as part of the government that has promoted nuclear energy. He didn’t specify how much of a pay cut he would take. The operator of the stricken power plant, Tokyo Electric Power Co, has been struggling for nearly two months to restore critical cooling systems that were knocked out by the disaster. Some 80,000 people living within a 12-mile radius of the plant were evacuated from their homes on 12 March, with many living in gymnasiums. On Tuesday, about 100 evacuees were allowed into that exclusion zone briefly to gather belongings from their homes. The excursion marked the first time the government has felt confident enough in the safety of the area to allow even short trips there. Residents have been pushing hard for weeks for permission to check up on their homes. The evacuees boarded chartered government buses for the two-hour visit. They were provided with protective suits, goggles and face masks to wear while in the zone, and were issued plastic bags to put their belongings in. They were also given dosimeters to monitor radiation levels and walkie-talkies. All were to be screened for radiation contamination after leaving the zone. More visits are planned, but residents fear they may never be able to return for good. Many had been secretly sneaking back into the zone during the day, but the government – concerned over safety and the possibility of theft – began enforcing stricter roadblocks and imposing fines on 22 April. The official visits were seen as a compromise that took both safety and the wishes of the residents into consideration. The government and TEPCO in April projected that bringing the plant to a cold shutdown could take six to nine months and residents might be able to return to resume their lives. But they admit that timing is a best-case scenario. On Monday, another utility, Chubu Electric Power Co, agreed to shutter three reactors at a coastal power plant while it builds a seawall and improves other tsunami defenses there. Kan requested the temporary shutdown at the Hamaoka plant amid predictions an earthquake of magnitude 8.0 or higher could strike the central Japanese region within 30 years. The government’s decision came after evaluating Japan’s 54 reactors for quake and tsunami vulnerability after the 11 March disasters. The Hamaoka facility sits above a major fault line and has long been considered Japan’s riskiest nuclear power plant. Kan said Japan will have to compile Japan’s new energy policy in a report for submission to the International Atomic Energy Agency in June. He didn’t give any numerical estimates for each source of energy in the new policy. Nuclear power Energy Renewable energy Japan guardian.co.uk

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Florida: "A Tea Party Train Wreck"

enlarge The end of the current Florida legislative session should leave most Floridians heaving a sigh of relief that they won’t be around to do more damage in the days to come. One Democratic legislator’s description of it as a ” tea party train wreck ” is more apt than he would have liked, given that 15 states and Amtrak are the happy recipients of $2 billion in federal funds that Florida could have had for high speed rail , had Governor Rick Scott not refused them. Instead, in the high tradition of the 2010 GOP, Republican supermajorities in Florida passed laws banning abortion coverage in private health insurance plans, baggy pants, bath salts, bestiality, and firearm regulation by local governments. They also tried to pass a measure requiring the Division of Recreation and Parks to hire Jack Nicklaus Design to build golf courses in every state park in Florida and create the Jack Nicklaus Golf Trail. Fortunately, that one failed, but the voter suppression bill passed, ensuring that working voters, students and those voters most likely to vote Democrat won’t have as much of an opportunity to do so. The Reid Report has the full list. Despite end-of-session wrangling over an Arizona-style illegal immigration measure (opposed by corporate interests), and internecine fighting over who owns the power base and how much should be done behind the scenes, Scott and his merry band of Republicans still did plenty of damage. They cut school funding by $542 per student, changed how teachers are compensated, and yet still managed to create a statewide boarding school to be run by a private non-profit for at-risk students. Oh, and how could I forget this bill to deregulate the interior design industry ? A House-backed bill (HB 5005) to deregulate several professions, including interior designers, was overwhelmingly rejected by the Senate late Friday night in a dramatic 6-32 vote, reports the News Service of Florida. Senators complained that the bill had not been properly vetted and harmed too many professions. Interior designers showed up in droves when the bill was considered by budget committees earlier in the session, with hours of tearful testimony about the harm deregulation would cause their industry. The infighting stopped Governor Scott’s efforts to expand the state Supreme Court so he could pack it, however. I’m sure it will come back in the next session, especially now that Florida allows for unlimited contributions to state lawmakers with absolutely no accountability or disclosure. Amid surveys of the carnage, one state Senator admits that after that flurry of activity, they not only didn’t create any jobs, they probably killed some, too. Of course, it was never, ever about jobs. This is Republican shangri-la. They despise government so they take as many steps as they possibly can to kill it, while abusing government power to discriminate against women, minorities, the poor, and children. With Rick Scott at the helm, Florida is managing to destroy itself, one teabag at a time. Progress Florida : “If making it harder to vote, gutting public schools, salary cuts for first responders and paving paradise were what Floridians wanted, Gov. Scott and this legislature deserve a standing ovation.”

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Florida: "A Tea Party Train Wreck"

enlarge The end of the current Florida legislative session should leave most Floridians heaving a sigh of relief that they won’t be around to do more damage in the days to come. One Democratic legislator’s description of it as a ” tea party train wreck ” is more apt than he would have liked, given that 15 states and Amtrak are the happy recipients of $2 billion in federal funds that Florida could have had for high speed rail , had Governor Rick Scott not refused them. Instead, in the high tradition of the 2010 GOP, Republican supermajorities in Florida passed laws banning abortion coverage in private health insurance plans, baggy pants, bath salts, bestiality, and firearm regulation by local governments. They also tried to pass a measure requiring the Division of Recreation and Parks to hire Jack Nicklaus Design to build golf courses in every state park in Florida and create the Jack Nicklaus Golf Trail. Fortunately, that one failed, but the voter suppression bill passed, ensuring that working voters, students and those voters most likely to vote Democrat won’t have as much of an opportunity to do so. The Reid Report has the full list. Despite end-of-session wrangling over an Arizona-style illegal immigration measure (opposed by corporate interests), and internecine fighting over who owns the power base and how much should be done behind the scenes, Scott and his merry band of Republicans still did plenty of damage. They cut school funding by $542 per student, changed how teachers are compensated, and yet still managed to create a statewide boarding school to be run by a private non-profit for at-risk students. Oh, and how could I forget this bill to deregulate the interior design industry ? A House-backed bill (HB 5005) to deregulate several professions, including interior designers, was overwhelmingly rejected by the Senate late Friday night in a dramatic 6-32 vote, reports the News Service of Florida. Senators complained that the bill had not been properly vetted and harmed too many professions. Interior designers showed up in droves when the bill was considered by budget committees earlier in the session, with hours of tearful testimony about the harm deregulation would cause their industry. The infighting stopped Governor Scott’s efforts to expand the state Supreme Court so he could pack it, however. I’m sure it will come back in the next session, especially now that Florida allows for unlimited contributions to state lawmakers with absolutely no accountability or disclosure. Amid surveys of the carnage, one state Senator admits that after that flurry of activity, they not only didn’t create any jobs, they probably killed some, too. Of course, it was never, ever about jobs. This is Republican shangri-la. They despise government so they take as many steps as they possibly can to kill it, while abusing government power to discriminate against women, minorities, the poor, and children. With Rick Scott at the helm, Florida is managing to destroy itself, one teabag at a time. Progress Florida : “If making it harder to vote, gutting public schools, salary cuts for first responders and paving paradise were what Floridians wanted, Gov. Scott and this legislature deserve a standing ovation.”

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David Laws broke MPs’ expenses rules

Former minister broke rules but watchdog says there is no evidence to suggest he did so out of desire to financially benefit himself or his partner David Laws, the former Liberal Democrat chief secretary to the Treasury, has been found guilty of breaching six House of Commons rules in a report by the parliament’s standards watchdog. But John Lyon, the parliamentary commissioner for standards, has concluded that there is no evidence to suggest that Laws broke the rules out of a desire to maximise profits. This finding will strengthen Laws’s argument that he claimed more than £40,000 in expenses for rent paid to his partner out of a desire to keep his sexuality private. Laws resigned from the cabinet on 29 May last year after admitting that he made a mistake after the rules of the House of Commons were changed in 2006 to bar such claims. The report by Lyon was considered on Tuesday by the cross-party standards and privileges committee. The committee is expected to publish the report on Thursday, possibly with a recommendation that Laws should apologise to MPs. It is understood that Lyon has concluded that Laws broke one over-arching rule: claiming for the £950 a month in rent he paid to his partner, Jamie Lundie. The five other breaches are understood to be related to subsidiary rules which were broken as a consequence of the major mistake over his expenses. Lyon is also understood to have concluded that he found no evidence to suggest that Laws had made the claims to benefit himself or his partner. Laws is likely to argue that the findings by Lyon endorse what he said when he resigned: that he broke the rules but that he did not do so out of a desire to maximise profits. Nick Clegg is keen to see Laws, one of the most influential Lib Dems, return to government. But the Lib Dems acknowledge that it will be difficult for Laws to return if the criticism in the report is harsh. MPs’ expenses House of Commons David Laws Nicholas Watt guardian.co.uk

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Milly ‘vanished in blink of an eye’

Levi Bellfield goes on trial at Old Bailey accused of 13-year-old Milly Dowler’s kidnap and murder nine years ago Schoolgirl Milly Dowler disappeared from a suburban street in broad daylight “in the blink of an eye” when she was snatched by a “predatory and violent” man who went on to murder two other young women and tried to kill a third, a court was told. Levi Bellfield, a 42-year-old former wheelclamper and bouncer, has gone on trial at the Old Bailey nine years after Milly’s abduction and murder resulted in a major missing persons inquiry and a nationwide police investigation. He is charged with the 13-year-old’s kidnap and murder and the attempted abduction of another schoolgirl, 11-year-old Rachel Cowles, the day before Milly “disappeared in a flash”. Describing “every parent’s nightmare”, Brian Altman QC said Milly disappeared as she walked home from school after sharing some chips with friends in the cafe at Walton-on-Thames railway station, in Surrey, on 21 March 2002. The “slim, pretty and intelligent” teenager was wearing her school uniform when she vanished. Six months later, her unclothed and decomposed body was found by mushroom pickers in Yateley Heath Wood, Hampshire, 25 miles away. Bellfield, formerly of West Drayton, west London, had been living in a flat yards from the road where Milly was last seen, Altman said. He told the jury that the day before Milly disappeared, Rachel Cowles was walking home from school when she was approached by a man in a red car in Shepperton, Surrey. The man tried but failed to trick her into getting into the car. The court heard that Milly, whose real name was Amanda, took a train from Weybridge, where her school was, and got off at Walton-on-Thames rather than her usual stop at Hersham to spend time with her friends before leaving to walk home. “Within moments of leaving the station to walk along the road, just a few minutes after 4pm, she vanished – gone in the blink of an eye,” Altman said. The “entirely innocent and quite ordinary diversion to a station cafe to buy some chips with some school friends was a decision that was to cost Milly her life, because it meant taking a fateful journey along Station Avenue where … her abductor and killer was soon to strike”, he said. “Milly had simply disappeared in a flash from a street in a suburban town in broad daylight.” Her parents suffered for six months the “excruciating agony” of not knowing her fate, until her body was found. Bellfield was living with his partner, Emma Mills, their two children and a Staffordshire bull terrier dog in a rented flat in Collingwood Place, yards from the spot where Milly was last seen alive. They were house-sitting for a friend in West Drayton at the time of Milly’s disappearance, but there was evidence Bellfield was in the vicinity of the flat on that day, the jury heard. A red Daewoo Nexia car he was using at the time was captured on CCTV leaving the access road to their rented flat 22 minutes after what the prosecution say was Milly’s abduction. The day before, at around the same time, there was an attempt to abduct Cowles in Shepperton, “a mere nine minutes drive and a 3.3-miles car journey north of Walton”, Altman said. She was approached by a small red car driven by a man resembling Bellfield. The driver told her he had just moved in next door and asked if she wanted a lift. “Sensibly, she did not accept,” Altman said, adding that the driver may have been spooked by a police car driving past. Years later, Rachel failed to pick out Bellfield at an identification parade, the jury heard. “The prosecution say there can be no doubt that Levi Bellfield, and no one else, was responsible for both [crimes],” Altman said. The jury heard that Bellfield was convicted in 2008 for the murders of Marsha McDonnell in 2003, and Amelie Delagrange in 2004, by striking them over the head with a blunt instrument, and the attempted murder of Kate Sheedy in 2004, by deliberately running her over in a car. The offences were “all committed by him within a period of just over two years” of those he is currently charged with. In the cases of Rachel and Milly, there were “such similiarities between the offences that the chances of them having been committed by two or more men working independently of each other can safely and sensibly be excluded”, Altman said. He said that although the offences for which Bellfield was convicted were committed after Milly’s murder and the attempted abduction of Rachel, it “makes it more likely that he is the man who committed those [earlier] offences too”. Bellfield denies the charges. The case continues. Milly Dowler Crime Caroline Davies guardian.co.uk

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Ex-Nepal minister dies on Everest

Shailendra Kumar Upadhyay, 82, dies on Mount Everest while attempting to become oldest person to climb mountain An 82-year-old former Nepalese foreign minister has died on the slopes of Mount Everest while attempting to become the oldest person to climb the world’s highest mountain. Shailendra Kumar Upadhyay was descending from a camp on the lower slopes of the8,850m (29,035ft) peak when he collapsed on Monday evening. The death – the first of this year’s climbing season – is likely fuel charges that there is insufficient regulation of candidates attempting the ascent of the world’s highest mountain. Uphadyay was climbing with a non-profit-making expedition organised by a local campaign group for the rights of the elderly, but in recent years many top climbers have claimed that expeditions are accepting unsuitable members, particularly if they are high-profile, sufficiently wealthy or both. Upadhyay was trying to break the record set by a Nepalese climber who scaled Everest at the age of 76. The former diplomat’s climbing companions gave him water and oxygen but were unable to save him. It is believed that he died of acute altitude sickness, which is difficult to treat and is a common cause of death among mountain climbers. Upadhyay was not an experienced mountaineer, according to reports in Kathmandu. A 6,050m peak that he had climbed in preparation for his attempt to scale the highest mountain in the world is considered an easy “trekking” summit which is not technically demanding nor particularly high relative to the major mountains of the region. Upadhyay was also reported to have completed several multi-day high altitude treks. According to Wangchu Sherpa, an official from the Nepal Mountaineering Association in Kathmandu, Upadhyay had arrived at the Everest base camp in mid-April and had been waiting for good weather to start acclimatising for his ascent. “A doctor provided by a local trekking agencies did a thorough health check-up,” said Wangchu. “He was declared fit and fine.” The exact circumstances of Uphadhyay’s death are unclear but it is understood the climber had developed breathing problems after climbing through the broken and crevassed glacier above base camp to reach “camp 1″ at the height of 5,700m. Climbers on the most-used route via the South Col usually stop at least four camps on their way up the mountain. “Upadhyay was returning to the base camp when he suddenly fell ill and passed away,” Tilak Pandey, a government liaison officer at base camp, told the Guardian by satellite phone. Though some drugs can ease symptoms, descent to lower altitudes is the only sure treatment for altitude sickness. May is considered the best time to climb Everest and, this year 26 expeditions consisting of 251 climbers are scheduled to attempt its ascent. Summit attempts are usually launched towards the end of the month. Currently, mountaineers are making repeated ascents of the lower slopes of the mountain to acclimatise themselves. Uphadhyay was a member of a team organised by a local private non-profit making association. He lived in Kathmandu. According to Pandey, the liaison officer, Upadhyay’s body was brought into base camp on firm ground below the vast Khumbu glacier on Monday morning to be flown to Kathmandu. “Now weather is good here,” Pandey told the Guardian by satellite telephone. Upadhyay served as Nepal’s foreign minister from 1986-90 and was the country’s representative to the UN from 1972-78. “I am proud of being a part of such a noble event to turn it in to a grand success,” Uphadhya had said before embarking on Everest. More than 3,000 climbers have scaled Everest since it was first climbed by Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Sherpa in 1953. According to Nepal’s ministry of tourism and civil aviation, 704 climbing permits have been issued to 83 expeditions for dozens of different peaks in the Himalayas in the 2011 climbing season. The largest number of applications to climb Everest is from the US followed by India, the UK, Japan and Australia. The permits will bring in more than £2.25m in mountaineering royalties for the poverty-hit nation. The fee for climbing the world’s highest peak ranges from £17,000 to £48,000 per expedition, depending on the number of members and the route. So far this year, the Nepalese government has collected fees totalling £1.5m for Everest. There are also long-standing concerns about the environmental damage caused by large numbers of climbers, their support teams and the waste they leave. Mount Everest Nepal Mountaineering Jason Burke guardian.co.uk

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