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A video posted on a social media website shows a presenter from the state-run al-Libiyah television channel waving a gun and saying the channel’s staff are prepared to die in defence of the station. Al Jazeera translation: With this weapon, I either kill or die today, you will not take al-Libiyah channel. You won’t take Jamahiriyah channel, Shababiyah channel, Tripoli or all of Libya, and even those without a weapon are willing to be a shield in order to protect their colleagues at this channel. We are willing to become martyrs.” This seems to be the same woman who railed against rape victim Eman al-Obeidi , calling her a slut and a whore and an enemy of the state. Looking more and more like the endgame for Muammar Gadhafi. Edit: According to some tweets and now CNN International, this woman (Hala Misrati) has now been captured by rebel forces, without a struggle, naturally. Al Jazeera also reporting the military squandron charged with protecting Gadhafi has surrendered. Libyan State TV has been taken off the air by the rebels.

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Counting the cost of the 9/11 wars

The global conflicts that have raged since 9/11 have seen no clear winners but many losers – at least 250,000 people have been killed If, just over a decade ago, you had looked north through binoculars from frontline Taliban positions 30 miles north of Kabul, you would have seen an old Soviet-built airbase, little more than a cluster of ruined buildings, rusting metal stakes, a single battered jeep and no serviceable aircraft at all on the scarred strip of concrete shimmering in the Afghan sun. The group of scruffy Taliban fighters in filthy clothes who manned the makeshift trenches on the heights above it would probably have served grapes and tea to you as they did to the rare reporters who visited them. If you had come back just a little later, say in the spring of 2002, you would have seen a startling difference. With the Taliban apparently defeated, the airstrip had become the fulcrum of a build-up of American and other international forces in the country that would continue inexorably over the next years. The feverish activity of the bulldozers, tents, jets and helicopters gave a sense that something extraordinary was happening. But its exact nature was still very unclear. Now, after a decade of conflict, a base the size of a small town has sprung up around the airstrip. No soldiers at the battle of Castillon in 1453 knew they were fighting in the last major engagement of the hundred years war. No one fighting at Waterloo could have known they were taking part in what turned out to be the ultimate confrontation of the Napoleonic wars. The first world war was the great war until the second world war came along. Perhaps inevitably, then, the ongoing, interlinked and overlapping conflicts that have raged across the globe during the 10 years since 9/11 are currently without a name. In decades or centuries to come historians will no doubt find one – or several, as is usually the case. In the interim, given the one event that, in the western public consciousness at least, saw hostilities commence, “the 9/11 wars” seems an apt working title. Al-Qaida has failed to achieve most of its key aims: there has been no global uprising of Muslim populations, no establishment of a new caliphate. Nor have changes in America’s policy in the Islamic world been those desired by men such as the late Osama bin Laden. Does this mean the west has won the 9/11 wars? It has certainly avoided defeat. The power of terrorism lies in its ability to create a sense of fear far in excess of the actual threat posed to an individual. Here, governments have largely protected their citizens, and few inhabitants of western democracies today pass their lives genuinely concerned about being harmed in a radical militant attack. In July 2010, President Obama even spoke of how the US could “absorb” another 9/11, a statement that would have been inconceivable a few years before. Despite significant damage to civil liberties in both Europe and America, institutional checks and balances appear to have worked on both sides of the Atlantic. In the face of a worrying militarisation and a commensurate growth in its offshoot, the “security” business, other forces have been strong enough to ensure that liberal democratic societies have kept their values more or less intact. The integration of minorities, always a delicate task, is generating significant tensions but is proceeding, albeit unevenly. Even though now facing serious problems of debt, America has nonetheless been able to pay for the grotesque strategic error of the war in Iraq, at a total cost of up to a trillion dollars depending on how it is calculated, and a 10-year conflict in Afghanistan, all while financing a huge security industry at home. In 2009, American military expenditure was $661bn (£400bn), considerably more than double the total of 10 years previously, but still not enough, as Bin Laden had hoped, to fundamentally weaken the world’s only true superpower. In Europe, supposedly creaking old democracies have reacted with a nimbleness and rapidity that few imagined they still possessed to counter domestic and international threats. In short, western societies and political systems appear likely to digest this latest wave of radical violence as they have digested its predecessors. In 1911, British police reported that leftist and anarchist groups had “grown in number and size” and were “hardier than ever, now that the terrifying weapons created by modern science are available to them”. The world was “threatened by forces which would be able to one day carry out its total destruction,” the police warned. In the event, of course, it was gas, machine guns and artillery followed by disease that killed millions, not terrorism. In the second decade of the 9/11 wars other gathering threats to the global commonwealth, such as climate change, will further oblige Islamic radical militants to cede much of the limelight, at least in the absence of a new, equally spectacular cycle of violence. But if there has been no defeat for the west then there has been no victory either. Over the past 10 years, the limits of the ability of the US and its western allies to impose their will on parts of the world have been very publicly revealed. Though it is going too far to say that the first decade of the 9/11 wars saw the moment where the long decline of first Europe and perhaps America was made clear, the conflict certainly reinforced the sense that the tectonic plates of geopolitics are shifting. After its military and diplomatic checks in Iraq and Afghanistan, a chastened Britain may well have to finally renounce its inflated self-image as a power that “punches above its weight”. The role of Nato in the 21st century is unclear. Above all, though the power, soft and hard, cultural and economic, military and political, of the US and Europe remains immense and often hugely underestimated, it is clear that this will not always be the case. For many decades, the conventional wisdom has been that economic development around the globe would render liberal democracy and free-market capitalism more popular. One of the lessons of the 9/11 wars is that this optimism was misplaced. A sense of national or religious chauvinism appears often to be a corollary of a society getting richer rather than its opposite, and the search for dignity and authenticity is often defined by opposition to what is seen, rightly or wrongly, as foreign. In some places, the errors of western policy-makers over recent years have provoked a reaction that will last a long time. The socially conservative, moderately Islamist and strongly nationalist narrative that is being consolidated in Muslim countries from Morocco to Malaysia will pose a growing challenge to the ability of the US and European nations to pursue their interests on the global stage for many years to come. This, alongside the increasingly strident voices of China and other emerging nations, means a long period of instability and competition is likely. American intelligence agencies reported in their four-yearly review in late 2008 that they judged that within a few decades the US would no longer be able to “call the shots”. Instead, they predicted, America is likely to face the challenges of a fragmented planet, where conflict over scarce resources is on the rise, poorly contained by “ramshackle” international institutions. The previous review, published in December 2004, when George Bush had just been re-elected and was preparing his triumphal second inauguration, had foreseen “continued dominance” for many years to come. The difference is stark. If the years from 2004 to 2008 brought victory, then America and the west cannot afford many more victories like it. If clear winners in the 9/11 wars are difficult to find, then the losers are not hard to identify. They are the huge numbers of men, women and children who have found themselves caught in multiple crossfires: the victims of the 9/11 strikes or of the 7/7 and Madrid bombings, of sectarian killings in Baghdad, badly aimed American drone strikes in Pakistan or attacks by teenage suicide bombers on crowds in Afghanistan. They are those executed by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the head of al-Qaida in Iraq until his death in 2006; those who died, sprayed with bullets by US Marines, at Haditha; those shot by private contractors careering in overpowered unmarked blacked-out four-wheel-drive vehicles through Baghdad. They are worshippers at Sufi shrines in the Punjab, local reporters trying to record what was happening to their home towns, policemen who happened to be on shift at the wrong time in the wrong place, unsuspecting tourists on summer holidays. They are the refugees who ran out of money and froze to death one by one in an Afghan winter, those many hundreds executed as “spies” by the Taliban, those gunned down as they waited for trains home at Mumbai’s main railway station one autumn evening, those who died in cells in Bagram or elsewhere at the hands of their jailers, the provocative film-maker stabbed on an Amsterdam street, all the victims of this chaotic matrix of confused but always lethal wars. The cumulative total of dead and wounded in this conflict so far is substantial, even if any estimates are necessarily very approximate. The military dead are the best documented. Though some may have shown genuine enthusiasm for war, or even evidence of sadism, many western soldiers did not enlist with the primary motive of fighting and killing others. A significant number came from poor towns in the midwest of America or council estates in the UK and had joined up for a job, for adventure, to pay their way through college, to learn a craft. By the end of November 2010, the total of American soldiers who had died in Operation Iraqi Freedom and its successor, Operation New Dawn, was 4,409 with 31,395 wounded. More than 300 servicemen from other nations had been killed too and many more maimed, disabled or psychologically injured for life. In Afghanistan, well over 2,000 soldiers from 48 different countries had been killed in the first nine years of the conflict. These included 1,300 Americans, 340 Britons, 153 Canadians, 43 Frenchmen and 44 Germans. Military casualties among western nations – predominantly American – in other theatres of Operation Enduring Freedom, from the Sudan to the Seychelles and from Tajikistan to Turkey, added another 100 or so. At least 1,500 private contractors died in Iraq alone. Then there were the casualties sustained by local security forces. Around 12,000 police were killed in Iraq between 2003 and 2010. In Afghanistan, the number of dead policemen since 2002 had exceeded 3,000 by the middle of 2010. Many might have been venal, brutal and corrupt, but almost every dead Afghan policeman left a widow and children in a land where bereavement leads often to destitution. In Pakistan, somewhere between 2,000 and 4,000 policemen have died in bombing or shooting attacks. As for local military personnel in the various theatres of conflict, there were up to 8,000 Iraqi combat deaths in the 2003 war, and another 3,000 Iraqi soldiers are thought to have died over the subsequent years. In Afghanistan, Afghan National Army casualties were running at 2,820 in August 2010, while in Pakistan, around 3,000 soldiers have been killed and at least twice as many wounded in the various campaigns internally since 2001. Across the Middle East and further afield in the other theatres that had become part of the 9/11 wars, local security forces paid a heavy price too. More than 150 Lebanese soldiers were killed fighting against radical “al-Qaida-ist” militants in the Nahr al-Bared refugee camp in Lebanon in 2007, for example. There were many others, in Saudi Arabia, in Algeria, in Indonesia. In all, adding these totals together, at least 40,000 or 50,000 soldiers and policemen have so far died. Casualties among their enemies – the insurgents or the extremists – are clearly harder to establish. Successive western commanders said that they did not “do body counts”, but most units kept a track of how many casualties they believed they had inflicted, and these totals were often high. At least 20,000 insurgents were probably killed in Iraq, roughly the same number in Pakistan, possibly more in Afghanistan. In all that makes at least 60,000, again many with wives and children. Then, of course, there are those, neither insurgent nor soldier, neither terrorist nor policeman, who were caught in a war in which civilians were not just features of the “battle space” but very often targets. In 2001, there were the 9/11 attacks themselves, of course, with their near 3,000 dead. In 2002 alone, at least 1,000 people died in attacks organised or inspired by al-Qaida in Tunisia, Indonesia, Turkey and elsewhere. The casualties from such strikes continued to mount through the middle years of the decade. One study estimates 3,013 dead in around 330 attacks between 2004 and 2008. By the end of the first 10 years of the 9/11 wars, the total of civilians killed in terrorist actions directly linked to the group, or to al-Qaida-affliated or inspired Islamic militants, was almost certainly in excess of 10,000, probably nearer 15,000, possibly up to 20,000. To this total must be added the cost to civilians of the central battles of the 9/11 wars. In Iraq generally, estimates vary, but a very conservative count puts violent civilian deaths (excluding police) from the eve of the invasion of 2003 to the end of 2010 at between 65,000 and 125,000. They included more than 400 assassinated Iraqi academics and almost 150 journalists killed on assignment. The true number may be many, many times greater. In Afghanistan, from 7 October 2001, the day the bombing started, to mid-October 2003, between 3,000 and 3,600 civilians were killed just by coalition air strikes. Many more have died in other “collateral damage” incidents or through the actions of insurgents. The toll has steadily risen. There were probably around 450 civilian casualties in 2005. From 2006 to 2010 between 7,000 and 9,000 civilian deaths were documented, depending on the source. In 2010 alone, more than 2,000 died. In all, between 11,000 and 14,000 civilians have been killed in Afghanistan, and at least three or four times that number wounded or permanently disabled. In Pakistan, which saw the first deaths outside America of these multiple conflicts when police shot into demonstrations in September 2001, the number of casualties is estimated at around 9,000 dead and between 10,000 and 15,000 injured. Add these admittedly rough figures together and you reach a total of well over 150,000 civilians killed. The approximate overall figure for civilian and military dead is probably near 250,000. If the injured are included – even at a conservative ratio of one to three – the total number of casualties reaches 750,000. This may be fewer than the losses inflicted on combatants and non-combatants during the murderous major conflicts of the 20th century but still constitutes a very large number of people. Add the bereaved and the displaced, let alone those who have been harmed through the indirect effects of the conflict, the infant mortality or malnutrition rates due to breakdown of basic services, and the scale of the violence that we have witnessed over the past 10 years is clear. Some day the 9/11 wars will be remembered by another name. Most of the dead will not be remembered at all. Extracted from The 9/11 Wars by Jason Burke, to be published by Allen Lane on 1 September at RRP £30. To order a copy for £19 with free UK p&p go to guardian.co.uk/bookshop or call 0330 333 6846 United States Global terrorism al-Qaida George Bush Obama administration US politics Tony Blair Osama bin Laden 7 July London attacks Afghanistan Iraq Middle East Indonesia Terrorism policy UK security and terrorism Jason Burke guardian.co.uk

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Dominique Strauss-Kahn: prosecutors ask judge to dismiss sex charges

Strauss-Kahn expected to be told he can leave US for first time since arrest on charges he attempted to rape a hotel worker US prosecutors have asked a judge to dismiss sexual assault charges against Dominique Strauss-Kahn, bringing a controversial end to one of the biggest sex scandals in decades. A recommendation for dismissal was filed at the court clerk’s office. Strauss-Kahn is expected in court on Tuesday, where he will be told he is a free man and will be allowed to leave the country for the first time since his arrest in May on charges that he attempted to rape hotel worker Nafissatou Diallo. The case has appeared close to collapse since late June, when prosecutors revealed that Diallo had lied about being gang raped for her US asylum application and other aspects of her past. Following the revelations, prosecutors agreed to release Strauss-Kahn from house arrest, though he remained barred from leaving the country. He faced up to 25 years in prison if convicted. Diallo and her lawyers met with Manhattan district attorney Cyrus Vance on Monday afternoon ahead of Tuesday’s court date. Vance’s office initially gave unqualified backing to Diallo, calling her statement “a compelling and unwavering story”. Her story appeared to be backed by forensic evidence; his semen was found on her uniform and the carpet of the room where the incident took place. But as credibility issues surfaced Diallo’s lawyers clashed with Vance’s office and fought their case in public. Diallo filed a civil lawsuit against the former IMF boss on 8 August, a move that legal experts said made Vance’s position even more difficult. Pierre Hourcade, a French attorney who is also admitted to practice law in New York, said: “Dismissal does not mean he is innocent, simply that the district attorney doesn’t believe the case can go to trial.” He said some people in France were surprised that the US authorities prosecuted the case so vigorously initially only to cool on the case equally as fast. “It’s not that he doesn’t believe her, it’s that he doesn’t belive her to be a good victim. That’s the way that the American system is built,” Hourcade said. He said that as an elected official the Manhattan district attorney was under political pressure to bring cases he could win. “In France there wouldn’t be the same political pressure and truth might be rated more highly than credibility,” he said. “Nobody’s perfect. It doesn’t mean she wasn’t raped,” said Hourcade. “It’s a little shocking from my point of view.” Stuart Slotnick, a white collar crime expert at Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney, and a former Federal prosecutor, defended Vance. “This is the same DA’s office that prosecutes people who rape prostitutes. Those are very difficult cases to bring,” he said. He said it was clear that she had lied to the prosecutors on numerous occasions and that they no longer felt they could trust her. “These are the people with the greatest access to evidence, to the complainant, and they don’t believe in the case,” he said. “A prosecutor should not prosecute a case they don’t believe in.” Kenneth Thompson, Diallo’s lawyer, predicted over the weekend that prosecutors would drop the case on Monday. He told France’s RTL radio on Sunday that Diallo, “feels abandoned by the Manhattan district attorney” and that she feels “that she’s being investigated more than Strauss-Kahn”. Strauss-Kahn, 62, was arrested in May after Diallo, 32, said the then boss of the International Monetary Fund forced her to perform oral sex when she arrived to clean his suite at the Sofitel hotel in Manhattan. Strauss-Kahn, a French presidential contender, was arrested on a plane to Europe. He had been planning to hold a series of meetings about Europe’s looming debt crisis. Through his lawyers he has never contested the fact that a sexual encounter took place but has denied allegations that any act was forced. Dominique Strauss-Kahn United States France New York Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk

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Riots: Metropolitan police planned to hold all suspects in custody

Exclusive : leaked strategy amounts to a blanket policy of mass imprisonments and could lead to legal challenge, say lawyers Senior Metropolitan police officers devised a policy of holding all people arrested on riot-related offences in custody and recommending that the courts also refuse bail after they were charged, according to a leaked “prisoner processing strategy” that lawyers argue could pave the way for a mass legal challenge. The document, seen by the Guardian , was circulated to all investigating officers at the height of the violence two weeks ago by Operation Withern, the codename for Scotland Yard’s emergency response to the outbreak of violence in the capital. It suggested that no one arrested in or after the riots should be let off with a caution – regardless of the offence – and that everyone arrested should be held in custody, with a recommendation that bail should also be denied when the case first goes to court. Lawyers began proceedings on Monday for the first judicial review of the custody procedures, which resulted in 62% of those arrested for involvement in the riots remanded in custody compared with a normal rate of around 10% for more serious offences. They claimed the document amounted to a blanket policy of mass imprisonment of people. The police document argues that the policy was necessary to prevent further public disorder as violence spread through the capital. But it also acknowledges that the force was so stretched at the height of the riots that it was “impractical” to bail people while they conducted “protracted” investigations, suggesting that investigating officers use special rules to fast-track cases to the courts with less evidence than is normally required. The recommendation could expose the Metropolitan police to accusations that it adopted a policy of “conveyer belt” justice in order to deal with its unprecedented workload. The document, titled Operation Withern: prisoner processing strategy, includes a suggested statement for investigating officers to use in the prosecuting reports of individual cases, which are then passed to the Crown Prosecution Service. It says: “A strategic decision has been made by the MPS [Metropolitan Police Service] that in all cases an application will be made for remand in custody both at the police station, and later at court. This decision has been made in the interest of public safety and the prevention of further cases of disorder. The spontaneous nature of these offences and the significant burden it has placed on police resources has meant that not all inquiries have yet been completed. Some inquiries, such as gathering of CCTV, are not capable of being progressed at present due to the ongoing public disorder in and around London. “As a result this case requires the application of a ‘threshold test’ for a charging decision based on the evidence present and the expectation that further evidence may be forthcoming.” Elsewhere the document says: “The volume of prisoners being processed makes it impractical to bail for the purpose of protracted investigation. Where evidence of an offence exists charging authority should be sought, that is likely to mean that the threshold test is applied.” The threshold test allows prosecutors to lower the burden of proof needed to remand someone in custody where there is reasonable suspicion and prospect of a conviction, and where there is a substantial risk if they are released. The document sheds significant light on the Met’s processes and could explain why people accused of apparently minor offences such as theft of small items or receipt of stolen goods were not cautioned. They included a 23-year old student with no previous convictions who was refused bail and then sentenced to six months in prison for stealing a £3.50 bottle of water. The debate about sentencing of people accused of taking part in the riots has so far focused on the courts’ right to use “exemplary” sentencing – harsher sentences to deter people from rioting. But the document suggests that in deciding whether or not to grant bail the courts would have also been considering recommendations from the police to detain people in the vast majority of cases. The document came into the hands of the solicitors Hodge, Jones & Allen, who have written to the Metropolitan police informing them they are starting judicial review proceedings of the decision not to bail an unnamed client, who was arrested for possession of £2,500 of items looted in the riots in south London. The 25-year old care worker and mother of a two-year-old girl had no previous convictions and there was no evidence that she was involved in the looting. Edward Kirton, the solicitor acting in the case, said: “The right to bail is a long-standing and essential part of our criminal justice system. It should be carefully considered and each case should be looked at on its own merits. “In relation to the riots, it seems that the Metropolitan police took a strategic decision to apply a blanket ban and deny everyone bail, no matter what their circumstances. I consider this policy is unlawful as a result.” The lawyers’ letter to the Met describes the policy as amounting to “unlawful arbitrary detention” of people. The existence of the policy has a “chilling” effect on Article 5 under the European court of human rights which guarantees an individual’s liberty and security, it says. Adopting a pre-action protocol for judicial review, the letter demands an apology for the violation of the woman’s fundamental rights. The Met said: “Guidance was issued to officers to ensure a consistent approach to an investigation which was, and remains, unprecedented in its volume and complexity. “To ensure the interests of justice were served, prevent further disorder and protect the public it was made clear that a decision should be sought to charge where there was sufficient evidence. With courts sitting extended hours, the recommendation that those charged were remanded in custody was made to ensure cases were dealt with quickly and again to protect the public from potential further disorder. “Cases were, and continue to be, looked at on the basis of the evidence available. Where the threshold to charge was not met people have been bailed to return pending further inquiries, released with no further action or – in a small number of cases – dealt with by other police disposals.” UK riots Metropolitan police London Police UK criminal justice Polly Curtis guardian.co.uk

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Rep. Renee Elmers (R-NC) on job creation (June 2011) That’s reassuring, isn’t it? We’ve been throwing tax breaks at companies to encourage them to create jobs in the U.S. — when we have no way of actually knowing if they’re creating jobs here: Some of the country’s best-known multinationals closely guard a number they don’t want anyone to know: the breakdown between their jobs here and abroad. So secretive are these companies that they hand the figure over to government statisticians on the condition that officials will release only an aggregate number. The latest data show that multinationals cut 2.9 million jobs in the United States and added 2.4 million overseas between 2000 and 2009. Some of the same companies that do not report their jobs breakdown, including Apple and Pfizer, are pushing lawmakers to cut their tax bills in the name of job creation in the United States. But experts say that without details on which companies are contributing to job growth and which are not, policymakers risk flying blind as they try to jump-start the hiring of American workers. “It’s an important piece of information that the American people should have,” said Ron Hira, an associate professor of public policy at the Rochester Institute of Technology. “Should you listen to the kind of advice these companies have about how to grow the economy when their record and their model indicates they’ve cut jobs? . . . Or should we talk to people who actually do create jobs in the United States?” As the country faces an unemployment crisis, President Obama, lawmakers and business lobbyists have all touted the country’s biggest companies as critical to creating jobs. The head of Obama’s jobs council, General Electric chief executive Jeff Immelt, said during a tour of a company plant in Greensboro, S.C., that firms should be ready to answer questions from the public. “If you want to be an admired company, you better know, you better have accountability, and you better think through where the jobs are,” he said. GE breaks out its employment numbers in company filings to the Securities and Exchange Commission. In 2010, about 46 percent of GE’s 287,000 employees worked in the United States, compared with 54 percent in 2000.

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“The FCC gave the coup de grace to the fairness doctrine Monday as the commission axed more than 80 media industry rules,” Politico's Brooks Boliek reported this afternoon : Earlier this summer FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski agreed to erase the post WWII-era rule, but the action Monday puts the last nail into the coffin for the regulation that sought to ensure discussion over the airwaves of controversial issues did not exclude any particular point of view. A broadcaster that violated the rule risked losing its license. While the commission voted in 1987 to do away with the rule — a legacy to a time when broadcasting was a much more dominant voice than it is today — the language implementing it was never removed. The move Monday, once published in the federal register, effectively erases the rule. So the Fairness Doctrine is dead. But the spirit of the same could well live on as a regulatory specter forever. Regulatory pushes for “localism” and “diversity” requirements could prove to be a back-door reinstitution of the Fairness Doctrine, a Republican FCC commissioner warned two weeks ago.

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It’s been the GOP’s dominant meme after the 2010 midterm elections: cut government spending dramatically and endlessly cut taxes for the rich and corporations. They preach day after day that that’s the only true job creation scheme in which America should consider. They mask it with hazy words that cover up their real intentions like their latest bogus con called the “Cut, Cap and Balance” constitutional amendment. Frank Luntz must be proud to see that one phrase repeated over and over again no matter what further destruction and harm will come to the 98% of working Americans. Now as Labor Day approaches, Republicans are making it plain that they will not support extending the payroll tax holiday that will be proposed again by President Obama. Never mind that they had earlier called for it and it is in and of itself a Republican idea. The AP got a headline right for a change: GOP may OK tax increase that Obama hopes to block News flash: Congressional Republicans want to raise your taxes. Impossible, right? GOP lawmakers are so virulently anti-tax, surely they will fight to prevent a payroll tax increase on virtually every wage-earner starting Jan. 1, right? Apparently not. Many of the same Republicans who fought hammer-and-tong to keep the George W. Bush-era income tax cuts from expiring on schedule are now saying a different “temporary” tax cut should end as planned. By their own definition, that amounts to a tax increase. The tax break extension they oppose is sought by President Barack Obama. Unlike proposed changes in the income tax, this policy helps the 46 percent of all Americans who owe no federal income taxes but who pay a “payroll tax” on practically every dime they earn. There are other differences as well, and Republicans say their stand is consistent with their goal of long-term tax policies that will spur employment and lend greater certainty to the economy. And what’s the new rationale for the opposition? “It’s always a net positive to let taxpayers keep more of what they earn,” says Rep. Jeb Hensarling, “but not all tax relief is created equal for the purposes of helping to get the economy moving again.” The Texas lawmaker is on the House GOP leadership team. Say, what? On Friday, I caught Haley Barbour counting Karl Rove and other conservatives as being part of the “liberal media” who attack Christian politicians like Rick Perry . If that’s not Bizarro-world enough, now we have a new definition of what tax cuts are out. It’s a brave new world out there in GOPuniverse. It used to be that journalists beat this behavior down, but not really any longer. They’ve thrown good journalistic techniques aside for the much easier BSDI brand of reporting. (Both sides do it.) I was encouraged that the AP got it right in this instance. Let’s see what happens as the speech approaches and passes. And let’s face it, the Republicans have been getting away with so much since the madness of the August town halls on HCR that they probably will get away with it with the Villagers’ help. After watching David Axlerod on ABC Sunday, are you fired up about moving forward? Digby writes: I’d laugh if I I didn’t think they will get away with it. After all, nobody’s making a coherent case for anything so why should they even try to make sense? Axelrod called them hypocrites, which I’m sure was very painful for them to hear. But in the end, we’re left with an argument between Democrats as to which tax cuts are preferable at the same time they are both saying the looming deficit is the greatest threat the world has ever known. And Democrats are complicating this even more by insisting that we also must “invest” for the future. I think they’ll have to forgive the average person for not understand what the hell they are all going on about. And as for the inevitable critics who say that I’m being cruel and unfeeling by saying that Republicans don’t care about the pain of the average person, get a load of this: Republicans are also pushing back on Obama’s plan to extend emergency unemployment benefits. Gov. Bob McDonnell (R-Va.) said on Sunday that, while he would “consider” supporting the payroll tax cuts, he is less enthusiastic about unemployment insurance. “I don’t think that creates jobs,” he said on CNN’s “State of the Union.” “It lessens the pain. The problem is we need to have things that create jobs, not just promote benefits for people that are not working.” The last thing you’d want to do is “lessen the pain” of the American people. Makes ‘em weak. Maybe we could institute a prospective tax for these lazy malcontents, in which we bill them later for taxes they should have been paying when they were unemployed. It’s the least they can do to repay the largesse bestowed upon them by the job producers who are being asked to pay taxes even though they feel oh-so-uncertain about the future. Steve Benen has a piece on this story and Kevin Drum adds a different flavor to the debate . John Cole writes : A Tax Cut They Don’t Like Charles Krauthammer is outraged when Obama tells Americans that Republicans are bad faith player . What they did on the debt ceiling cost this country a lot. I guess the truth does hurt Krauthammer after all.

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It’s been the GOP’s dominant meme after the 2010 midterm elections: cut government spending dramatically and endlessly cut taxes for the rich and corporations. They preach day after day that that’s the only true job creation scheme in which America should consider. They mask it with hazy words that cover up their real intentions like their latest bogus con called the “Cut, Cap and Balance” constitutional amendment. Frank Luntz must be proud to see that one phrase repeated over and over again no matter what further destruction and harm will come to the 98% of working Americans. Now as Labor Day approaches, Republicans are making it plain that they will not support extending the payroll tax holiday that will be proposed again by President Obama. Never mind that they had earlier called for it and it is in and of itself a Republican idea. The AP got a headline right for a change: GOP may OK tax increase that Obama hopes to block News flash: Congressional Republicans want to raise your taxes. Impossible, right? GOP lawmakers are so virulently anti-tax, surely they will fight to prevent a payroll tax increase on virtually every wage-earner starting Jan. 1, right? Apparently not. Many of the same Republicans who fought hammer-and-tong to keep the George W. Bush-era income tax cuts from expiring on schedule are now saying a different “temporary” tax cut should end as planned. By their own definition, that amounts to a tax increase. The tax break extension they oppose is sought by President Barack Obama. Unlike proposed changes in the income tax, this policy helps the 46 percent of all Americans who owe no federal income taxes but who pay a “payroll tax” on practically every dime they earn. There are other differences as well, and Republicans say their stand is consistent with their goal of long-term tax policies that will spur employment and lend greater certainty to the economy. And what’s the new rationale for the opposition? “It’s always a net positive to let taxpayers keep more of what they earn,” says Rep. Jeb Hensarling, “but not all tax relief is created equal for the purposes of helping to get the economy moving again.” The Texas lawmaker is on the House GOP leadership team. Say, what? On Friday, I caught Haley Barbour counting Karl Rove and other conservatives as being part of the “liberal media” who attack Christian politicians like Rick Perry . If that’s not Bizarro-world enough, now we have a new definition of what tax cuts are out. It’s a brave new world out there in GOPuniverse. It used to be that journalists beat this behavior down, but not really any longer. They’ve thrown good journalistic techniques aside for the much easier BSDI brand of reporting. (Both sides do it.) I was encouraged that the AP got it right in this instance. Let’s see what happens as the speech approaches and passes. And let’s face it, the Republicans have been getting away with so much since the madness of the August town halls on HCR that they probably will get away with it with the Villagers’ help. After watching David Axlerod on ABC Sunday, are you fired up about moving forward? Digby writes: I’d laugh if I I didn’t think they will get away with it. After all, nobody’s making a coherent case for anything so why should they even try to make sense? Axelrod called them hypocrites, which I’m sure was very painful for them to hear. But in the end, we’re left with an argument between Democrats as to which tax cuts are preferable at the same time they are both saying the looming deficit is the greatest threat the world has ever known. And Democrats are complicating this even more by insisting that we also must “invest” for the future. I think they’ll have to forgive the average person for not understand what the hell they are all going on about. And as for the inevitable critics who say that I’m being cruel and unfeeling by saying that Republicans don’t care about the pain of the average person, get a load of this: Republicans are also pushing back on Obama’s plan to extend emergency unemployment benefits. Gov. Bob McDonnell (R-Va.) said on Sunday that, while he would “consider” supporting the payroll tax cuts, he is less enthusiastic about unemployment insurance. “I don’t think that creates jobs,” he said on CNN’s “State of the Union.” “It lessens the pain. The problem is we need to have things that create jobs, not just promote benefits for people that are not working.” The last thing you’d want to do is “lessen the pain” of the American people. Makes ‘em weak. Maybe we could institute a prospective tax for these lazy malcontents, in which we bill them later for taxes they should have been paying when they were unemployed. It’s the least they can do to repay the largesse bestowed upon them by the job producers who are being asked to pay taxes even though they feel oh-so-uncertain about the future. Steve Benen has a piece on this story and Kevin Drum adds a different flavor to the debate . John Cole writes : A Tax Cut They Don’t Like Charles Krauthammer is outraged when Obama tells Americans that Republicans are bad faith player . What they did on the debt ceiling cost this country a lot. I guess the truth does hurt Krauthammer after all.

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Tamron Ticked Bush Aide Insufficently Laudatory Of Obama On Libya

Want to watch an MSM version of Stand By Your Man?

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Letter on planning from Prince Charles’s office being kept secret

Admission the GLA is withholding correspondence comes after it emerged several of his charities had been lobbying ministers A letter from the office of the Prince of Wales to Boris Johnson, the mayor of London about planning issues in the capital is being kept secret because disclosure could undermine the prince’s “political neutrality”. The admission is likely to increase calls for greater transparency over the lobbying of ministers by Prince Charles, and his aides and charities. It comes amid continued concern that the prince’s involvement in political matters could cause a constitutional crisis if and when he becomes king. On Monday it emerged that several of the prince’s charities have been lobbying government ministers to change policy on issues ranging from VAT to regional development policy . The Guardian had asked City Hall to release correspondence between the prince and his aides, and elected representatives and officials at the Greater London Authority (GLA) about planning matters in the capital since Johnson became mayor, and specifically letters relating to the plans for the rebuilding of Chelsea Barracks and tall buildings in the capital, both topics the prince has spoken out on. City Hall replied that Sir Michael Peat, Prince Charles’s private secretary, had written to Johnson but the prince had not consented to disclosure of the letter and, although the request came under environmental information regulations, it would not be released. “Disclosure of this information would adversely affect the Prince of Wales because, as heir to the throne, the sensitivity of his communications with public authorities are unlikely to diminish with time due to the fact that once he is the sovereign he will remain in office for life,” City Hall said. “Disclosure therefore could appear to undermine his political neutrality. Furthermore, release of this information would impinge upon the Prince of Wales’s privacy.” James Grey, a spokesman for Republic, the campaign for an elected head of state, said: “This seems to be a clear admission that the Prince of Wales is himself compromising his supposed neutrality by what he is saying in private correspondence with politicians.. “The heir to the throne is required to be impartial in fact, and not just in appearance. The concept of the prince’s political neutrality is worthless unless public bodies can be open about what he is saying to them.” A handwritten letter from deputy mayor Kit Malthouse to the prince was also withheld “as it constitutes Kit Malthouse’s personal data”. “It sets out his opinions on the various matters discussed in the letter and is clearly a personal, rather than an official, note,” City Hall officials said. The GLA agreed it was in the public interest to release the data to help the understanding of “the level of influence (if any) exerted by the Prince of Wales on matters of public policy, such as the future of the Chelsea Barracks site”. But this was negated by arguments in favour of non-disclosure, the officials added, and it wasalso in the public interest that the heir to the throne is not perceived to be “politically biased”. The maintenance of “the convention that provides a confidential space in which the heir to the throne can communicate with government, and the principles of political neutrality which underpin it” outweighed the public interest in favour of disclosure. Prince Charles Boris Johnson Monarchy Planning policy London London politics Robert Booth guardian.co.uk

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