Good Morning America's George Stephanopoulos on Monday described the country's “gas gripes ” over rising fuel costs, spinning, ” Soaring prices lead to new pain for the President as big oil gets ready to report record profits .” The former Democratic operative turned journalist tried to put the best face on Barack Obama's growing problems: “And, Jake, these gas prices are also knocking down President Obama's poll numbers, which is why he's out there nearly every day addressing this problem.” Reporter Jake Tapper, on the other hand, provided a more balanced look, pointing out, “When President Obama was sworn in, gas averaged $1.84 a gallon. Today, it's $3.86. And as prices have spiked since January, the President's approval ratings have sunk.” He even featured an angry motorist who complained, “Maybe President Obama could step down and let somebody else take over.” After noting that four in ten Americans say gas prices are causing an “extreme hardship” for them, Tapper informed, “And those Americans are much more apt to say they won't even consider voting for President Obama's reelection.” Tapper's segment is a change from Friday when the program didn't mention political problems as a result of rising fuel costs. A transcript of the April 25 segment, which aired at 7:08am EDT, follows: 7am tease GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: Gas gripes. Soaring prices lead to new pain for the President as big oil gets ready to report record profits.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media [Video from Denver's Channel 9 News ] John earlier reported on a bizarre case involving an attempted bombing of a mall in Littleton, Colorado, on the anniversary of the Columbine High School massacre in that town last Wednesday. It seems they’re catching up to the would-be bomber — or at least, they’ve identified him: Earl Albert Moore, 65, served a federal prison sentence for bank robbery and was released just seven days before authorities believe he left a poorly crafted bomb in a stairwell in Jefferson County’s Southwest Plaza Mall. Authorities found a small fire, two propane tanks and a crude pipe bomb on Wednesday, the anniversary of the Columbine High School massacre, which prompted mass evacuations and put a community on edge. Records from the Federal Bureau of Prisons show Moore was released from custody April 13 and remained on supervised parole at the time of the alleged bomb attempt. Court records show he robbed a West Virginia bank of $2,546, assaulted a bank employee and used a deadly weapon in the course of the 2005 robbery. It also appears that he has quite a background — including both a tax-resistance case and at least one very interesting tattoo: Moore’s criminal record in Colorado dates back to 1984 with a drug possession charge. He served six months in state prison on a felony burglary charge out of Arapahoe County in 2004. enlarge Credit: News9.com Earl Moore’s Viking tattoo At the time, he used the alias Earl Albert Buchannan. According to the Colorado Bureau of Investigations, Moore has also used variations of the names Donald Charles Morelli and Gary Steele. In 2010, the state filed a distraint warrant in Jefferson County in an attempt to collect $2,819 in taxes from Moore. Photos released by the FBI Denver Joint Terrorism Task Force and the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office show Moore with tattoos of a heart and dagger, a rose-like flower and a Viking face on a bicep and forearms. The Viking tattoo is particularly important, because it is a powerful indicator that Moore — most likely while in prison — was exposed to white-supremacist beliefs and likely identified with neo-Nazi or other white-power gangs in prison. That’s because “Odinist” and Norse mythology have become favorite religions for the white-power set for several decades now, and ornate Viking tattoos of this kind are particularly associated with these beliefs. Not all Viking tattoos belong to white supremacists — but they are so common among them that they are a strong indicator, at the very least. Given that we’re talking about someone with an extensive prison background, the chances that it is NOT a white supremacist become vanishingly small. It’s looking increasingly likely that, just as we saw in Spokane, this bombing attempt gone bad was carried out by a white-supremacist fanatic intent on an act of domestic terrorism. But of course, it will once again be handled by our mainstream press as just another “isolated” incident. In the meantime, it’s looking like our list has now grown to 25.
Continue reading …Roads packed as sunseekers flock to the coast, but cooler weather is predicted this week Beaches, parks, beauty spots and pavement cafes were packed over the Easter weekend as temperatures in parts of Britain approached 30C (86F) and the country remained on course for the hottest April since records began. The warmest spot was in Surrey, but other areas in southern England, south Wales and the Midlands enjoyed unseasonably warm weather. Of course, the downside of the balmy temperatures on Easter Monday was heavy traffic as sunseekers who had flocked to the coast in their hundreds of thousands turned homewards. Routes out of Cornwall, Devon, Dorset, north Wales and Kent were packed with hot and bothered families. However, cooler and wetter weather is predicted for the rest of the week and there is a risk that there could be a chilly wind and April showers for the royal wedding on Friday. There are also likely to be more traffic jams as holidaymakers once more head out of towns and cities to enjoy another long bank holiday weekend. The hottest place over the weekend was Wisley in Surrey where the Met Office recorded a high of 27.8C. Many other parts enjoyed temperatures in the low and mid 20s though it was cooler in the north of England, Scotland and Northern Ireland. Some areas saw torrential rain, thunderstorms and even hail. In general, the areas that enjoyed the best weather this weekend may endure the worst next, which could be bad news for the royal couple and for the crowds that will be in London for the wedding. Tom Morgan, a spokesman for the Met Office, said: “In the London area there will be fairly cloudy skies with occasional brighter spells, but also a risk of showery rain at times. A brisk northeasterly wind will make it feel much chillier than of late.” But he said western England, western Wales, the north of England, Scotland and Northern Ireland could look forward to a “bright” royal wedding day. If it rains, Prince William and Kate Middleton will leave Westminster Abbey in a glass coach, rather than an open-top 1902 state landau. Whatever the weather on the wedding day, this April is still likely to be the hottest on record, beating the warm spring of 2007. AA Roadwatch estimated that 10 million people went away for a weekend break by car over Easter and another eight million piled on to the roads on day trips. It expects there to be a total of 14m cars on the road over the royal wedding weekend as people once again take breaks or set off on day trips. According to AA research, 85% of people are planning to stay in the UK for the royal wedding weekend rather than jetting off for a holiday abroad. Weather Royal wedding Steven Morris guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …From Rachel Tabachnick at Talk To Action, a warning of the push against public schools taking place in Pennsylvania, funded by the usual right-wing suspects. It’s an exhausting and comprehensive look, and as she points out, if it’s not happening in your state, it will be there soon enough. Please, go read it all: The DeVos family crusade to eradicate public education has targeted Pennsylvania, and a voucher bill may come to a vote in the PA Senate as early as Tuesday. It’s being marketed as a solution to save public schools, but the big donors are tied to right-wing think tanks that openly advocate, and strategize, the end of public education. How can vouchers improve public schools if the people mobilizing the movement intend to eradicate public education? Regardless of your personal stance on “school choice,” it’s important to know who is behind the voucher movement and the agenda they don’t share with the public or advertise in their media campaigns. A new wave of school voucher bills is sweeping the nation, which would allow public education funds to be used in private or parochial schools. As with past waves of voucher initiatives, these new bills are largely promoted and funded by the billionaire DeVos family and a core group of wealthy pro-privatization supporters. They include Pennsylvania SB-1, soon coming to a vote in the PA Senate, and the “Vouchers-for-All” bill approved by the Florida Senate Education Committee on April 14. Betsy DeVos is at the helm of organizations that have set the stage for both bills, but you would never know it based on the propaganda being marketed to Pennsylvanians. Even if you are from another state, keep reading. Chances are a Betsy DeVos-led campaign is already at work in your state or will be there soon. The DeVos family is recognized as one of the top national contributors to the Republican Party, free market policy institutes, and Religious Right organizations. Many of their previous attempts at using voucher initiatives to privatize the nation’s public schools have been transparent. Recent campaigns have been more covert and are camouflaged behind local efforts described as grass roots and bipartisan. Pennsylvanians should not be deceived. Regardless of where one stands on the issue of school choice, behind the curtain of this effort is an interconnected network of right wing think tanks and billionaire donors, funded by foundations including those of the DeVos and Koch families and the Scaife, Allegheny, and Carthage Foundations of Pennsylvania’s own Richard Mellon Scaife. The leaders of many of these DeVos/Koch/Scaife-funded institutes openly voice their ideological objections to all forms of public education. Some even proudly display their support for a proclamation posted at the Alliance for Separation of School and State, which reads, “I proclaim publicly that I favor ending government involvement in education.” Years have been spent developing and promoting schemes to privatize public education. The report “Voucher Veneer: the Deeper Agenda to Privatize Public Education” by People For the American Way (PFAW), quotes Joseph Bast, President and CEO of the Koch/Scaife/Walton-funded Heartland Institute, “The complete privatization of schooling might be desirable, but this objective is politically impossible for the time being. Vouchers are a type of reform that is possible now, and would put us on the path to further privatization.” (Contributions from the DeVos, Scaife and Koch foundations are noted throughout this article, however, other family foundations including Olin, Bradley, Smith Richardson, and Walton – the Walmart heirs, also fund these same think tanks.) Pennsylvania could be a case study for nationwide anti-public education partnerships, formed by Religious Right activists joining forces with radical free market think tanks and libertarian-minded investment and hedge fund managers. The movement is billed as the salvation of inner city students; and Democratic politicians, often African American, are portrayed as the heroic champions of children who desperately need access to better education. The need is real, but the claim that this about improving public schools is false advertising. The big money donors who provide millions for orchestrated campaigns and glossy media, and what they expect from their investments, are kept behind the scenes. “Flooding the zone” is the phrase the Democrats for Educational Reform (DFER), partners in the voucher movement, have used to describe the intense media exposure before an important vote or election. In the case of Pennsylvania, the illusion created by “flooding the zone” may have impacted the 2010 gubernatorial election, and could impact the Senate vote expected to take place next week.
Continue reading …The Washington Examiner has a great editorial out today noting the cognitive dissonance that characterizes President Obama's foreign policy. On the one hand, it seeks to make the United States the protector of innocents and champion of freedom fighters, but on the other, it neglects, even undercuts, America's role as the world's dominant military force and leader in global affairs. Check out an excerpt from the editorial below the break. Teddy Roosevelt famously talked softly but carried a big stick. President Obama does the opposite: He talks big but carries a stick that is steadily getting softer. And sometimes he doesn't say or do anything at all, which is the worst possible situation. Consider Obama's declaration that Libya's Moammar Gadhafi “must go.” But after making a clear statement of aggressive intent, Obama refused to apply sufficient U.S. military power to make the dictator's departure a reality… But we cannot separate Obama's conduct in these two crises from the overall context of American military capabilities. Our forces are involved in an escalating conflict in Afghanistan and remain significantly committed in Iraq. Plus, Obama has already killed or sharply cut back development and deployment of critically needed new weapons such as the F-22 stealth fighter, and promises to reduce our military forces even more if he is elected to a second term. That's the fundamental incoherence at the heart of Obama's foreign policy: Only a superpower can declare that a dictator like Gadhafi must be ousted, then make it stick. To do that, however, the superpower must possess unchallenged military capabilities; otherwise, it invites scorn from U.S. allies and boldness from our enemies. Obama must decide which stick he will carry for America.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media C-SPAN hosted a panel segment from the New Orleans Literacy Festival – News, Pundits and Politics which included NPR’s Amy Dickinson, Fox’s Ellis Henican, CNN’s Mary Matalin, and Lousianna’s Errol Laborde. Here’s the description from C-SPAN’s site : A panel of journalists discussed the future of news and commentary. Among the issues they addressed were the presentation of news, selection of news stories for television broadcast, and political biases in the news. They also responded to questions from the audience. Now any panel which includes the likes of Lady McCheney Mary Matalin and Fox’s resident milquetoast excuse for a liberal Ellis Henican talking about bias in the media is laughable on its face, but what I didn’t expect was that the panelist from NPR would turn out to be a huge, flaming wingnut. That didn’t stop Mary Matalin from calling NPR a liberal network later on in the segment. Here’s some of Dickinson’s pearl clutching about being forced to watch MSNBC. DICKINSON: A lot of us as consumers, we just go the thing that’s going to feed us what we already believe. I really, really see this in my own little world where my mom, in the assisted living facility, they’re all watching in her town, MSNBC nonstop, so I in many, many very long visits with her, I started watching MSNBC and I was like how can you watch this, and not want to shoot yourself? Hey what do you know? Maybe I agree with her. Is she talking about Joe Scarborough and the Morning Joe crew? Chris Jansing? Andrea Mitchell? DICKINSON: It was actually… I tend to watch Fox more often because I’ve been on Fox and um… MSNBC just blew my mind, it was so awful. I just couldn’t, I was surprised honestly, because MSNBC has this, you know, NBC component that I considered to be, sort of one of the founding, you know, broadcast news sources in this country and I had no idea that MSNBC had become, so, so, so um… I don’t know… left leaning I guess you’d call it. It’s opinionated. Nope. She’s talking about their evening line up. She goes on to say that after she gets off the air on NPR, she listens to Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh every day and praises them for being ahead of the curve with reporting stories that are not covered elsewhere in the media. Talk about listening to something that would make you want to shoot yourself. Good grief. So much for NPR and their supposed liberal bias that seems to be the conventional wisdom from our politicians and talking heads in the press. Watching this panel segment on C-SPAN reminded me of watching Fox’s weekend show Fox News Watch where they discuss the same topic, bias in the media with a bunch of biased talking heads. And Ellis Henican gets to play the faux liberal in both.
Continue reading …Monday's Washington Post touted on the front page a story on “Pointed comedy: Laughing Liberally prepares to take its 'This Ain't No Tea Party' show national.”
Continue reading …After the iPhone and Android tracking revelations of last week, a researcher finds out how to query Google’s database of home and business router locations Google really does have a very big location map – and that may include where your router is. The results of its giant Street View exercise in which it took pictures of houses and shops but also gathered locations of Wi-Fi networks and – oops! – collected data from open Wi-Fi networks has all been collated. And what’s more, you can query it yourself. Got a Wi-Fi router? Got admin access to its interface? Then you can get its MAC address and plug it into the “android map” interface offered by Samy Kamkar, a hacker and researcher who last week showed that Android phones transmit their location data (as uncovered by another researcher , Magnus Eriksson) The page where you can plug in the details is at http://samy.pl/androidmap/ , and comes with an example MAC address in there, which if you click it shows the details that are held – log/lat, country, country code, region, county, city, street, house number, postal code, and “accuracy” – an interesting idea, though it’s not immediately obvious whether that’s accuracy in metres or some other metric. As Kamkar explains, android map exposes the data that Google has been collecting from virtually all Android devices and street view cars, using them essentially as global wardriving machines. When the phone detects any wireless network, encrypted or otherwise, it sends the BSSID (MAC address) of the router along with signal strength, and most importantly, GPS coordinates up to the mothership. This page allows you to ping that database and find exactly where any wi-fi router in the world is located. Personally, I tried it for the two Wi-Fi routers in my home, and it turned up nothing. It could be that the data for Britain has been wiped, or that my routers weren’t turned on the day Google drove by (it certainly did, because it’s got a pic of the front of the house) or that it somehow didn’t reach the car. Scary? Encouraging? If all this data is somehow open sourced, is that useful or not? Google Data protection Charles Arthur guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …After the iPhone and Android tracking revelations of last week, a researcher finds out how to query Google’s database of home and business router locations Google really does have a very big location map – and that may include where your router is. The results of its giant Street View exercise in which it took pictures of houses and shops but also gathered locations of Wi-Fi networks and – oops! – collected data from open Wi-Fi networks has all been collated. And what’s more, you can query it yourself. Got a Wi-Fi router? Got admin access to its interface? Then you can get its MAC address and plug it into the “android map” interface offered by Samy Kamkar, a hacker and researcher who last week showed that Android phones transmit their location data (as uncovered by another researcher , Magnus Eriksson) The page where you can plug in the details is at http://samy.pl/androidmap/ , and comes with an example MAC address in there, which if you click it shows the details that are held – log/lat, country, country code, region, county, city, street, house number, postal code, and “accuracy” – an interesting idea, though it’s not immediately obvious whether that’s accuracy in metres or some other metric. As Kamkar explains, android map exposes the data that Google has been collecting from virtually all Android devices and street view cars, using them essentially as global wardriving machines. When the phone detects any wireless network, encrypted or otherwise, it sends the BSSID (MAC address) of the router along with signal strength, and most importantly, GPS coordinates up to the mothership. This page allows you to ping that database and find exactly where any wi-fi router in the world is located. Personally, I tried it for the two Wi-Fi routers in my home, and it turned up nothing. It could be that the data for Britain has been wiped, or that my routers weren’t turned on the day Google drove by (it certainly did, because it’s got a pic of the front of the house) or that it somehow didn’t reach the car. Scary? Encouraging? If all this data is somehow open sourced, is that useful or not? Google Data protection Charles Arthur guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Italian couple were found dead in their home in Wolverhampton Detectives have arrested three men on suspicion of murdering an elderly Italian couple who were found dead in their home. Guiseppe Massaro, 80, and his wife Caterina, 77, were discovered dead – reportedly in their bedroom – by a family member on Friday. The couple’s car was missing from the address in Wolverhampton. It was later recovered from nearby Wednesfield. A spokesman for West Midlands police said that three men have been arrested in connection with the incident. He said: “Two men from Wolverhampton, aged 32 and 21, and a 30-year-old from Birmingham were arrested overnight on suspicion of murder and are being questioned at separate police stations in the West Midlands.” Postmortem examinations on the couple were being carried out, the spokesman said. The Massaro family have spoken of their devastation at the double murder, saying they could not “begin to grasp the evil” that has taken place. In a statement on Sunday they said: “Words cannot describe the devastation that has struck our family after discovering our beloved grandparents hurt by the hands of someone else. “We cannot even begin to grasp the evil that took place in their home and how frightened they would have been. “An entire generation was taken away from us that day and we cannot comprehend how something could go this far.” The couple’s granddaughter, Lindsey Booth, 22, who discovered the bodies, told the Sunday Mercury it was clear they had been burgled. She said she found both in their bedroom, her grandmother’s body covered by a duvet. “They were both still in their day clothes and I didn’t see any blood or signs that there had been a struggle,” she told the paper. Police have continued to appeal for information regarding sightings of the couple’s black Peugeot 307, registration number PK56 VRW. Crime guardian.co.uk
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