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Bachmann: Obama should put his birth certificate ‘on the table’

Click here to view this media Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN) indirectly questioned President Barack Obama’s citizenship Monday night. “As far as I’m concerned, I think, if I decide to throw the hat in the ring, anybody could look at my birth certificate, I could care less,” she told Fox News’ Sean Hannity. “This is the easiest problem to solve. The president just has to give proof and verification, and there it goes. Either it’s real or it’s not.” “Everybody should put their birth certificates on the table and not worry about it. It doesn’t have to be a toxic issue. Put your birth certificate in, end of story.” FactCheck.org reported in 2008 that they had “seen, touched, examined and photographed the original birth certificate.”

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Naomi Wolf: ‘I Want My Al Jazeera’

“[F]or America's sake, I hope that Al Jazeera penetrates the US media market. Unless Americans see the images and narratives that shape how others see us, the US will not be able to overcome its reputation as the world's half-blind bully.” So stated Naomi Wolf's ” I Want My Al Jazeera ” published at the Huffington Post Tuesday evening (image courtesy Mike Licht ): [T]o this day, Al Jazeera, which, together with BBC News, has become one of the premier global outlets for serious television news, is virtually impossible to find on televisions in the US. The country's major cable and satellite companies refuse to carry it — leaving it with US viewers only in Washington, DC and parts of Ohio and Vermont — despite huge public demand. By being denied the right to watch Al Jazeera, Americans are being kept in a bubble, sealed off from the images and narratives that inform the rest of the world. Consider the recent scandal surrounding atrocity photos taken by US soldiers in Afghanistan, which are now available on news outlets, including Al Jazeera, around the globe. In America, there have been brief summaries of the fact that Der Spiegel has run the story. But the images themselves — even redacted to shield the identities of the victims — have not penetrated the US media stream. And the images are so extraordinarily shocking that failing to show them — along with graphic images of the bombardment of children in Gaza, say, or exit interviews with survivors of Guantanamo — keeps Americans from understanding events that may be as traumatic to others as the trauma of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. For example, the leading US media outlets, including the New York Times, have not seen fit to mention that one of the photos shows a US soldier holding the head of a dead Afghan civilian as though it were a hunting trophy. Not surprisingly, Wolf ignored the real reason why America's Obama-loving press chose not to show “Kill Team” images: it would make the current White House resident look bad. By contrast, the Bush-hating media had difficulties finding enough air and print space to report what was going on in Abu Ghraib during the Iraq war. But Wolf couldn't bring herself to make such an obvious conclusion and instead offered this truly preposterous one: Egyptians are in some ways now better informed than Americans…[Al Jazeera reporter Ayman Mohyeldin's] analysis of the Egyptian revolution, and others in the region, is that the kind of globalized media to which Americans do not have full access created the conditions in which people could rise up to claim democracy. He points out that, “People are aware of their rights from the internet, from satellite TV — people are watching movies and reading bloggers. This was a revolution of awareness, based on access to fast-traveling information. The farmers, the peasants in Tahrir Square, were aware of their rights.” I guess in Wolf's view, though she wrote her piece for a web-based American news organization, she thinks Americans don't have internet or satellite TV and don't watch movies or read blogs. But there's a far more delicious irony she badly missed as have most of the media in this country as they've marveled about the impact of the internet and social websites on uprisings in the Middle East: the same thing's happening right here in the United States. It's called the Tea Party, and its roots are equally tied to non-conventional sources of information broadly defined as new media. From there, regular Americans across the fruited plain became aware of their rights, and that an entire political Party was engaged in a systematic process to strip such rights and liberties from them. Despite the efforts by the Left and its old media minions to demonize and kill this uprising, it remade the Republican Party scoring an historic victory at the polls last November, and to this day is reshaping legislatures around the country particularly in Washington, D.C. Unlike Wolf, these folks don't want their Al Jazeera. They believe their country is filled with enough news organizations spreading anti-American propaganda. If that's what Wolf wants, she knows where to find it.

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Richard Trevithick powers doodle

The British engineer Richard Trevithick, born 240 years ago today, invented the world’s first full-scale, working steam locomotive but died a pauper Train enthusiasts may know his name, but to others today’s Google doodle may be something of a mystery. The steam locomotive proudly puffing away on the homepage is in fact celebrating the 240th anniversary of the birth of Richard Trevithick . Born in Cornwall in 1771, Trevithick was enthralled by the possibilities of steam power. After following his father to work in the mines, he eventually produced a high-pressure steam engine at the rather quaintly named Ding Dong Mine at Land’s End. This was in the age of James Watt and Matthew Boulton’s low-pressure steam engines , which had vastly improved the efficiency of the existing atmospheric engine , developed by Thomas Newcomen in 1712. Newcomen’s engine worked on the principle of a single cylinder with a pumping piston inside. The piston was attached to an external beam, and after each stroke steam and water were injected into the cylinder below. The water condensed the steam to create a vacuum, which pulled the piston down and raised the end of the beam. The problem was that the water was constantly cooling the main cylinder, so Watt added a second, smaller one next to it. This was close enough for condensation to occur, but avoided the inefficient cooling effect of the water being sent into the main cylinder. Trevithick, and many others working in mining during the late 1790s, were tired of paying royalties to James Watt and Matthew Boulton for the use of their Newcomen steam engine design. His attempts to find ways to avoid using these condensers led him to explore the possibility of using high-pressure steam directly from boilers. This line of research was brought to an abrupt end when Watt successfully served him with an injunction to stop his modifications in 1796. He only had to wait four years to begin his work once more, however, and in 1801 his patience won out. On Christmas Eve he sent his first full-sized road locomotive up Camborne Hill. In fact, if you’re from Cornwall you may have heard the folk song of the same name, which was inspired by this event. Trevithick’s finest moment came three years later at a mine in Merthyr Tydfil, Wales. Here the very first full-scale working steam locomotive travelling at a whopping 8 kilometres an hour (5 miles per hour) pulled 10 tonnes of coal and 70 men 15 kilometres along the cast-iron tracks. Unfortunately the tracks were built for horses to pull loads on, and weren’t ready for the extra weight of the 7-tonne engine. They cracked. This was a recurring and, for Trevithick, unsolved problem and his engines met with little commercial success. He then travelled to South America to work at a Peruvian silver mine . On his return to England more than a decade later, he was refused a government pension in 1828, despite other inventors fighting his corner. This engineering genius of the railways eventually died in poverty at the Bull Inn in Dartford and was carried to a pauper’s grave by a group of local factory workers. People in science Physics Engineering Google doodle Google guardian.co.uk

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Why are key green policies overdue?

From protecting the natural environment to badger culling to water bills, key policies are being postponed. Have cuts bitten too deep? Is the department in ‘special measures’? Cutting a 30% of an organisation’s budget before working out how that organisation will actually run on the reduced funds isn’t very clever. But that’s what appears to have happened under Caroline Spelman’s stewardship of the department of the environment, food and rural affairs. How else can we explain the long list of delays which span right across the work of the department, from water bills to badger culls? Not forgetting the humiliating U-turn on the forestry sell-off , the deep cuts to flood defences across the nation and a feeble sustainability vision , here’s a list: Natural environment white paper Due: April 2011 Expected: Officially, later this year – before the summer, I’m told This flagship policy will, Defra says, protect and enhance the natural environment that “underpins our economic prosperity, our health and our wellbeing” and will be the department’s first environment white paper for 20 years. It is eagerly anticipated by greens across the spectrum – but it will miss its April deadline, as set out in Defra’s business plan. Badger cull consultation : government’s response Due: Feb 2011 Expected: Possibly late May Bovine tuberculosis takes a terrible toll on cattle farmers, but effective culling of badgers in complex and costly and many animal lovers oppose any cull. The proposals – that farmers do the culling themselves – has many flaws, not least being dismissed as “among the worst options” by scientists and likely to cost more than doing nothing. In February, announcing a delay, agriculture minister Jim Paice said : “we need to make sure we get it right.” With emotions running high on both sides, it’s a tough one, but how many more months must we wait? Waste policy review Review announced: June 2010 Expected: May 2011 The government announced their review of waste policies in June 2010 to “ensure we are taking the right steps towards creating a ‘zero waste’ economy.” But, according to stakeholders, its results have been repeatedly delayed. In its absence, the government has said it will ban fines for misuse of dustbins , but is unable to say how refuse will be better dealt with than now, especially ending the UK’s addiction to landfill. Water white paper Due: June 2011 Expected: Autumn 2011 The white paper will “reform the water industry to ensure more efficient use of water and the protection of poorer households”. It follows the Cave review of competition in the water industry and Walker review of water charging, published in April 2009 and June 2009 respectively. Food policy Due: Unknown This is not strictly late as there’s no such policy being developed, despite criticism of the government’s plans for feeding a growing population sustainably and healthily being ‘insubstantial” . Banning wild animals from circuses consultation: government’s response Consultation ended: March 2010 Due: Unknown This issue raise huge passion among animal rights campaigners, but a year on, there’s still no response, though the first moves were made by Labour in 2006, who must share some of the blame for the delay. Dangerous dogs consultation: government’s response Consultation ended: June 2010 Expected: “Later in the year”, I’m told This consultation on increasing the protection of the public was launched by the last government after a campaign by post men and women. Parliamentary answers: Thanks to work by Thomas Docherty MP , we can see that Defra has failed to answer 42% of written questions from MPs on time, making them the third worst of the 13 departments Docherty challenged. By contrast, the department of energy and climate change answered 77% of questions on time. Defra refutes my suggestion that the deep budget cuts are taking their toll. “Defra is playing its part in reducing the deficit, but this has no impact on policy development,” said a spokesman. “It is important to address all likely practical issues and ensure the department has properly consulted stakeholders before final decisions are made – which will mean less red tape and more opportunities for business and communities.” Unsurprisingly, Mary Creagh, Labour’s shadow secretary of state for environment, has a different view: “This is a department in special measures. The government’s ideologically driven belief in the small state is sending environmental policy into reverse. Defra’s stop-go approach to policy is creating uncertainty for businesses and communities that want to invest in green jobs and improve the environment.” Perhaps the Defra delays stem from the forestry sell-off fiasco, meaning every policy now has to be examined over and over in order to avoid another disaster. I’d be interested to hear more about that. Whatever the reason for the delays, while we wait, biodiversity continues to decline, cattle continue to contract TB and rubbish continues to be dumped. Green politics Water Damian Carrington guardian.co.uk

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Mexican mass grave toll rises to 116

Police find 28 more bodies near Texas border in one of the worst mass killings in Mexico’s drug wars Mexican detectives investigating a mass grave near the US border have found 28 more bodies, bringing to 116 the total number of victims in one of the worst mass killings in the country’s drug wars. The number of bodies taken to the city of Matamoros, across the border from Brownsville, Texas, has overwhelmed local forensic services. Most of the dead are being held in a refrigerated meat truck in the morgue’s car park. Mexico’s attorney general, Marisela Morales, said 17 suspects with ties to the Zetas drug cartel had been arrested in connection with the murders. The Zetas, who are fighting their erstwhile allies in the Gulf cartel for control of Tamaulipas state, were also blamed for killing 72 Central and South American migrants in the same municipality in August last year. Survivors said that massacre followed an attempt to recruit the migrants as gunmen or drug mules . The first bodies in the latest mass grave were discovered last week , after reports armed groups were pulling young male passengers off buses passing through the municipality of San Fernando. Drug violence has killed more than 34,000 people since the president, Felipe Calderón, launched a military-led crackdown on the cartels in December 2006. The latest discovery challenges the government’s insistence that the majority of the killings are the result of inter-cartel conflict. It also underlines how ineffective the federal presence in Tamaulipas has been at stopping the carnage. The interior minister, Francisco Blake Mora, said more troops and federal police had been sent to patrol the roads in the state. “Organised crime, in its desperation, resorts to committing extraordinary atrocities that we cannot and should not tolerate as a government and as a society,” he said. “Those responsible for this massacre will be punished for it.” People from around Mexico looking for relatives who recently disappeared in the state have converged on Matamoros hoping and fearing that their search may be nearly over. Some expressed anger at the slow pace of the identification process and the inadequate support they feel they have received from the authorities, which so far has been limited to taking DNA samples. “There isn’t anybody to even offer us a glass of water,” a woman looking for her brother said in an interview broadcast on W Radio. “The people in this country should understand that life is not worth anything here.” Bus companies continued to offer services but said they were taking security measures such as only driving during the day and changing timetables. Last week the US government warned American citizens not to travel along roads in Tamaulipas. Mexico Drugs trade Jo Tuckman guardian.co.uk

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See which activists and dissidents have been detained, formally arrested or missing since February 2011 in the security drive apparently sparked by calls for a ‘jasmine revolution’

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Nurses pass vote of no confidence in Lansley

Conference delegates vote 99% in favour of motion as health secretary struggles to persuade public of merits of NHS reforms The Royal College of Nursing has overwhelmingly backed a motion of no confidence in Andrew Lansley’s handling of the NHS reforms. Delegates at the RCN conference in Liverpool voted 99% in favour of the motion as the beleaguered health secretary struggles to persuade the public of the merits of his health reforms. Nurses are angry that Lansley refused to deliver a keynote speech to the conference, opting instead to meet a group of around 60 nurses in Liverpool as part of the government’s “listening exercise” on the controversial reforms. However, the health secretary appeared unmoved by the almost unanimous dissent from a union traditionally seen as being more conservative in character than some. Responding to the vote, he insisted most NHS workers were “keen” on the reforms, despite the fact that unions including the British Medical Association have also condemned parts of the bill, as have patient groups, royal colleges and MPs from various parties. Pointing to the rare decision to “pause” the passage of the health and social care bill to listen to concerns about the plans and defy “myths” he claimed were being propagated, the health secretary said: “It’s not that the professions aren’t keen to do it. “What they are all keen to do, and particularly their representative bodies, is to make sure we get this legislation right. And I think we share that.” He said the government would amend the bill further to deal with “myths” and “misconceptions”, telling reporters: “Of course they’re substantive changes, because otherwise it would be trivial. We’re not here to do a trivial thing, we’re here to get it right. “This is a once in a generation opportunity to give patients greater control of the decisions being made about their care … greater opportunities for those in the frontline of the NHS not only to have resources get to the frontline but responsibility and freedom to use those resources better to improve care for patients. “That’s why actually the professions supported it, it’s why 90% of GPs’ surgeries across the country have stepped forward and said we want to be pathfinders, showing how we can do this. “We’ve already amended the bill and we will amend it further in order to make absolutely certain that some of the myths that are being propagated are dealt with, some of the misconceptions are dealt with.” NHS Health Nursing GPs Doctors Andrew Lansley Conservatives Liberal-Conservative coalition Health policy Hélène Mulholland guardian.co.uk

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US cinemas in video on demand row

Cinema owners prepared not to screen blockbusters made by studios involved in premium VoD plan US cinema chains are threatening to banish some films from their screens in response to a contentious video-on-demand plan by several Hollywood studios to allow new releases into living rooms within weeks of their big screen debuts. Four of the six major film studios – Universal, Sony, Warner Bros and Fox – plan to make new releases available to rent online just two months after their cinema debut. New releases will be available to rent for $30 (£18) under the premium VoD proposals, set to be introduced in the US later this month. Cinema owners have reacted angrily to the plans, which could significantly reduce the box office potential of new releases . The National Association of Theatre Owners (Nato), which represents the largest cinema chains in the US including Regal Entertainment Group and AMC Theatres, said it will fight the move. John Fithian, chief executive of Nato, told the Financial Times on Tuesday that cinemas were prepared not to screen blockbusters made by studios involved in the premium VoD plan, such as Warner’s Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2. “Let’s say you’re Regal Cinemas and it’s a busy weekend with a couple of big pictures opening,” Fithian said. “If it’s 50-50 between this picture and that picture and you have a partner that respects your [business] model and another one that doesn’t, you’re going to give the screen to the partner that respects your model.” Fithian added that Regal and Cinemark, which own more than 7,000 cinemas in the US, had already begun to scale back promotion of films made by studios involved in the premium VoD venture. Sony’s Just Go With It, a comedy featuring Adam Sandler, will make history as one of the first films to be offered on the new on-demand service, according to the US entertainment trade magazine Variety. Film studios have long wanted to reduce the four-month period of exclusivity enjoyed by cinemas. It is seen as a way to offset a decline in physical DVD sales, while also helping to combat internet piracy and initiate a radical change in film buffs’ viewing habits. However, not all of the big six studios are on board. Fithian confirmed that Paramount Pictures has privately expressed opposition to the shorter window. It was previously reported that the studio behind Shutter Island and Jackass 3D had concerns over internet piracy. Paramount’s opposition could give it the upper hand when it goes head to head with rival studios this summer, with big-name releases like Transformers 3 and Super 8 set to go up against the final Harry Potter and Fox’s X-Men: First Class. Disney, the other Hollywood major, has yet to reveal its hand over the premium VoD plan. • To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 3353 2000. If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly “for publication”. • To get the latest media news to your desktop or mobile, follow MediaGuardian on Twitter and Facebook . Video on demand Film industry Media business United States Digital video Josh Halliday guardian.co.uk

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Top 10 books of the American South

The best Southern writing that will ‘ride inside your blood vessels’ as selected by the acclaimed Virginia-born novelist Glenn Taylor was born and raised in Huntington, West Virginia. His first novel, The Ballad of Trenchmouth Taggart, was a 2009 National Book Critics Circle award finalist and acclaimed by Patrick McCabe in the Guardian as ” a galloping, defiant epic “. His second novel, The Marrowbone Marble Company, was published last month. Buy The Marrowbone Marble Company by Glenn Taylor from the Guardian bookshop “Last year, smack in the middle of the southern leg of my first real book tour, I was signing stock at Quail Ridge Books in Raleigh, North Carolina, which we can safely call the South. Quail Ridge is a wonderful little independent store with an impressive inventory. When I finished signing the stack of books, the store manager took them off to be shelved. I browsed. She called to me from two aisles over: ‘Do you want to be shelved in fiction or Southern fiction?’ I laughed. I thought of all the things I always think of when folks wonder about southern West Virginia’s regional designation. The civil war. Lincoln’s presidential decree. The creation of my home state in the year 1864. Violence. Blood. Cuisine, culture, storytelling. A slow ease to things. I answered her: ‘I’ll let you decide. I’m just happy to be here.’ “West Virginia is not the South. Yet, as soon as I write that, I have to question what South we’re speaking of. Are we talking about maps or music? Are we talking about parts of speech, burial custom, family gatherings, cornbread, religion? Coal or cotton? Hill or field? In the end, I get tired of thinking about it. I get tired of labels on literature, of categorising fiction by region or race, of trying to figure what Southern voices New York likes and doesn’t like. Yet, at times, I freely embrace such cataloguing. If Quail Ridge Books wants to stick my novel between those by Southern scribes, I’d be honoured. And so, I will participate. I will list my top 10 Southern books, but I’ll note that at least one may not be Southern, in some folks’ estimation. Each is a book that has, at one time in my life, sustained me as a reader and a writer. These books will ride inside your blood vessels. They’ll stick to your ribs.” 1. To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee It may strike you as too obvious a choice, or too innocent, or too commonplace. Maybe I’m overly biased by the fact that my dad read it to me aloud, twice, when I was a young boy. In the end, it just feels right. It can be read again and again. The prose never breaks down under scrutiny. It is evident that the words were composed with great toil, over a vast stretch of time. The book is not, contrary to popular opinion, meant for children. It is for everyone. Everyone should read it. If my wife and I were to have a fourth child, and if that child were to be another boy (we have three boys already), I would insist that his name be Atticus Finch Taylor. I have lived long enough to know that when it comes to how we treat one another, adults can learn a great deal from children. Harper Lee’s book reminds us of this, and perhaps Dill best exemplifies this notion when he says, “I’m little but I’m old.” 2. Ava’s Man by Rick Bragg One day, maybe the banks of the world will trade not in money, but in stories. Bragg knows that stories are our most valuable collective currency, that they will outlive everything else, and he mines deep to tell the tale of his grandfather, whom he never knew. It is some of the best writing on a particular people and their particular place that you will ever come across. Bragg writes: “A man like Charlie Bundrum doesn’t leave much else, not title or property, not even letters in the attic. There’s just stories, all told second- and thirdhand, as long as somebody remembers. The thing to do, if you can, is write them down on new paper.” 3. Red Hills and Cotton by Ben Robertson This was published in 1942, and Robertson was killed in a plane crash in 1943. This was just the beginning for a writer who possessed the gift of the true storyteller. His memory and his connection to the old ways were both beyond impressive. He wrote: “The world to us is filled with sin, and for our souls there is a struggle that never stops. In the South we had rather save our souls than make a lot of money.” 4. Salvation on Sand Mountain by Dennis Covington Snake-handling. Most of us barely have a picture in our minds of what this activity might involve. We wonder who might do such a thing as pick up a serpent in church. Maybe we’re hip to good Texas music, and we know the song by the Gourds which goes, “Jesus Christ with signs following/ Serpents up in the air/ Hell-bent on heaven-bound/ your earthly end is near.” Dennis Covington goes where most of us never will, and he does things for the sake of real writing that most of us could never do. This book may have begun as journalism when, as a writer for the New York Times, Covington covered the attempted murder trial of a snake-handler, but it evolves into something else altogether. It is the real deal. 5. A Childhood: The Biography of a Place by Harry Crews What is memory? What is identity? How do the events of our childhoods shape what we become? These may seem pedestrian or cliched questions, but read Harry Crews’s memoir and see if you don’t consider such questions more deeply. Crews is a wildly misunderstood writer. His novels have perhaps been less than consistent. He’s enjoyed the drink and the dogfight and the bloodsport more than most. He’s awoken to find a hinge tattooed in the crook of his elbow. You’ll understand it all a little better when you read of his childhood in Georgia, where he was born to sharecropping and hog-butchering and unexplainable heartbreak again and again. I have a CD on which Crews says, “Stories was everything, and everything was stories.” Ain’t that the truth. 6. Hell at the Breech by Tom Franklin This book was immeasurably important in my development as a writer. It showed me that a relatively young author can call forth the past in such a way as to make the reader forget who wrote the words. It is raw, wise and real. It puts you squarely upon the bloodied Alabama ground of the 1890s Mitcham Beat war. My wife tried to talk to me as I was finishing it, and I ignored every word she said. I did not want it to end. 7. The Battle of Blair Mountain by Robert Shogun This is Appalachia. And maybe it’s the South, too. It will probably be shelved beside academic books because it is an exhaustively researched historical perspective on the coal mine wars in West Virginia in the 1920s. And maybe I am biased, as much of it takes place in my father’s hometown of Matewan. But know this: you’ll read it and realise that maybe you never truly knew the meaning of words such as “the Union” or “redneck” or “outlaw train” or “working class”. 8. Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston “Ships at a distance have every man’s wish on board.” It’s the kind of first line every writer wishes for. It reads as if destined, channelled by some ancient teller. It reads biblical. Much like Faulkner’s, Hurston’s magnificent book can be tainted by wildly varying political opinions, critical approaches and the like. And, again, as in Faulkner’s work, dialect is an easy target. This book was oft misunderstood before, and it will be misunderstood again. But it is beautiful and powerful, and it must be read. 9. As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner I don’t care to speculate on which of his works is great and which isn’t. I don’t presume to know what’s highbrow and what’s low-brow when it comes to Faulkner. Present tense and multiple, alternating points of view – none of that talk interests me either. The fact is, he wrote this book while everybody else slept. He wrote it at the Ole Miss power plant, where he worked as a night watchman, and he finished typing on January 12 1930, which is precisely 45 years to the day before I was born. Just listen to the words on the page. 10. The Complete Stories by Flannery O’Connor A debt is owed to O’Connor by anyone who has tried their hand at the short story. She is so much more than A Good Man is Hard to Find, and this book proves it. The stories remind us of the grace and violence in our little lives. Their mysteries boldly refuse to be analysed in some cold, academic manner. As O’Connor said, “In most English classes the short story has become a kind of literary specimen to be dissected. Every time a story of mine appears in a freshman anthology, I have a vision of it, with its little organs laid open, like a frog in a bottle.” We don’t dissect these particular stories. We enjoy them. Fiction Harper Lee Literary fiction United States American civil war guardian.co.uk

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Hague: Gaddafi has no future in Libya

Foreign secretary says Doha conference may ramp up sanctions and that intervention will end with Gaddafi’s departure Further sanctions could be imposed on Libya at the Doha conference, the foreign secretary, William Hague, has signalled, insisting that Colonel Gaddafi and his regime have become “pariahs in the world” and have no future in governing the country. With no immediate prospect that the Libyan leader is preparing to surrender, Hague suggested sanctions could be ramped up to force Gaddafi out as he prepared to co-host the conference on Libya in the Qatari capital. The UN, Arab League and EU will all be represented – as will France, Italy, Germany, Turkey and others – at a gathering billed as a follow-up by the “contact group” formed after the London conference on Libya last month. Wednesday’s conference is expected to be dominated by the rejection by the Libyan opposition of the African Union plan for a ceasefire and talks on a transition period with Gaddafi and his family staying in place – a position unacceptable to the opposition in Benghazi. British officials said Hague will reiterate demands for Gaddafi to step down and allow the Libyan people to determine their own future in line with UN security council resolutions. Hague told BBC Radio 4′s Today programme that while it was impossible to say “which week” the conflict in Libya would come to an end because of the “very fast moving and unpredictable situation”, it was “very clear” that the Gaddafi regime had to come to an end. Insisting that it was important not to underestimate what had been achieved as a result of military action, Hague said: “I think it is also clear that the Gaddafi regime has no future. The sanctions imposed at the United Nations, which we will discuss strengthening today, are among the toughest ever seen in the history of the United Nations. Large parts of their country are not under their control. They are pariahs in the world so there is no future for that regime. The question is when and how it unravels.” He cited the fall of the apartheid regime in South Africa as proof of how influential sanctions could be, though these took decades to help bring about change. On Libya, Hague said: “I think we can look to how it will end, it’s more difficult to say when it will end. It will end at some stage with the departure of Gaddafi, with a political process in Libya that is a more inclusive process.” Hague defended the military operation of the past few weeks, which he said had saved “thousands of lives”, but he said that Britain and France are now carrying “a lot of the burden” of the military operation, pointing to the scope for European and Arab nations to move aircraft from a defensive to a ground strike role against regime forces. Hague also defended the decision to allow Libya’s most high profile defector, foreign minister Moussa Koussa, to fly out of the UK on Tuesday to take part in the critical peace conference. Amid anger from Lockerbie campaigners and accusations of “betrayal” levelled at the British government, Hague refuted claims made by a Conservative colleague that Britain had become a “transit lounge for war criminals”, saying Koussa was free to move around while not under arrest. “It is right if somebody wants to leave such a murderous regime, and talk to other people who want to bring that regime to an end, it is ethically right that they are able to do so. It’s legally right to say you have no immunity at all.” Hague, who said he had only spoken to his former counterpart on the telephone since he arrived in the UK, said it was for the police and prosecutors to act if they believed they had cause to arrest him and prevent him from travelling. “We behave according to the law. The matter of arrests is for prosecuting authorities and police; that is not for ministers to decide,” he said. “He is not detained, he came here of his own volition. If he was under arrest, he wouldn’t be allowed to leave.” Agenda items at the international conference include plans for humanitarian aid and stabilisation assistance, with the UN’s Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs and the International Red Cross being tasked to deploy assessment missions in eastern Libya and rebel-controlled enclaves in the west such as Misrata, which is under siege by regime forces. Libya Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest William Hague Hélène Mulholland Ian Black guardian.co.uk

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