Suicide bombers have hit the British council offices in Kabul in the early hours of Afghan Independence day Two suicide bombers attacked a British compound in the Afghan capital on Friday, killing at least three people and wounding two, police and eyewitnesses said. An official from the British Embassy confirmed that there had been an attack against the British Council building on the west side of Kabul. He said the British Embassy was in contact with Afghan authorities at the scene. A spokesman for the Taliban, Zabiullah Mujahid, claimed responsibility for the attack. The two blasts occurred in the early hours of Afghan Independence Day, marking Afghanistan’s full independence from Britain in 1919. It was unclear whether the attack was related to the anniversary. Kabul police official Farooq Asas said a suicide bomber detonated a car laden with explosives outside the compound. At least one insurgent attacked the compound on foot, Asas said. Two Afghan policemen and a municipal worker were killed, he said. The explosions shattered glass in buildings a third of a mile from the site. There were reports of gunfire at the scene and smoke rising from the area. Afghan police said at least one other attacker got inside the compound and was exchanging gunfire with Afghan troops two hours after the initial blast. Afghan and British troops were dispatched to the scene early Friday morning and made preparations to assault the compound. The British Council focuses on education and building civil society internationally. While violence continues to rage in many parts of Afghanistan, attacks in the capital are relatively uncommon. In June, 21 people were killed at a Kabul hotel, including nine insurgents, with militants fighting Nato and Afghan troops for five hours with rocket-propelled grenades and suicide bombs. In western Afghanistan on Thursday, a roadside bomb killed at least 21 passengers travelling on a minibus. Meanwhile, in the country’s east, a suicide car bomber attacked a coalition base on Thursday, killing two Afghan security guards, officials said. The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack. A recent report by the United Nations said the number of Afghan civilians killed in war-related violence rose 15% in the first half of this year. The UN said 1,462 Afghan civilians lost their lives in the first six months of the year compared with 1,271 in the same period of 2010. Afghanistan guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Title: Judy In Disguise Artist: John Fred & His Playboys It’s almost Friday and this classic tune has me dancing. What’s on your playlist tonight?
Continue reading …Title: Judy In Disguise Artist: John Fred & His Playboys It’s almost Friday and this classic tune has me dancing. What’s on your playlist tonight?
Continue reading …I recently wrote a piece about the jerks on a late night Fox News show called Red Eye that called children who appeared in a Progressive video, little bastards. One of those kids made a video to respond to being called names. Good for her.
Continue reading …I recently wrote a piece about the jerks on a late night Fox News show called Red Eye that called children who appeared in a Progressive video, little bastards. One of those kids made a video to respond to being called names. Good for her.
Continue reading …Left-wing media outlets are really eating out of former Christian evangelist Frank Schaeffer's hands as he paints Michele Bachmann as the outer fringe of the fringe, and “anti-American.” On the radical-left yet taxpayer-subsidized Pacifica Radio show Democracy Now on Wednesday, host Amy Goodman encouraged Schaeffer to unfurl charges that Bachmann was somehow comparable to Ayatollah Khomeini and Kim Jong Il — two-thirds of Bush's Axis of Evil countries — and somehow, an outdated believer in Bronze Age mythology. Pacifica touted his latest article on the lefty site Alternet, titled “Are Michele Bachmann’s Views about 'Christian Submission' Even More Extreme than She’s Letting On?” Schaeffer began by saying Bachmann “doesn't just come from the far right of evangelical politics. She comes from a fringe even of the fringe, which is the Reconstructionist, Dominionist movement, that honestly, in the best of all worlds, as far as they're concerned, would replace American democracy with a theocracy on a Christian level that would mirror something like modern-day Iran after it fell to the Ayatollah Khomeini.” Goodman played a clip of Bachmann as a state senator warning in 2004 about gay-activist Minnesotans getting married in Massachusetts and then trying to get it recognized in Minnesota, as if that warning was beyond daffy. Schaeffer was better at illustrating daffiness: SCHAEFFER: Well, look, you know, I spend the whole of my book Sex, Mom, and God
Continue reading …Watch the full episode . See more PBS NewsHour. Making Sen$e correspondent Paul Solman reports on the extreme inequality in the U.S. It’s now on par with African dictatorships. In a telling moment after interviewing a recent immigrant from Haiti, where she says the American Dream isn’t something she feels she’ll ever have, Solman says, “The U.S. looks unequal to a Haitian?” He then looks into a recent study about wealth in the U.S. “The first constant finding,” Solman says. “Most Americans don’t realize how unequal our country really is.” Yay for non-profit media.
Continue reading …What keeps the Red Hot Chili Peppers from retiring to the beach to sit and eat burritos? Rob Fitzpatrick asks the LA rock aristocrats how they keep things chaotic after all this time Half of the Red Hot Chili Peppers are sitting opposite me on a pair of sumptuously plump sofas in a corner suite at the top of a beachfront hotel in Santa Monica, California. Outside the window to my left is the Pacific, while outside the one to my right are the fleshpots and fairgrounds of Venice Beach. It’s 2pm and the sun thumps down in thick, exhausting waves. Even the guy lying flat on his back by the pool, the one with his legs artfully spread so his inner thighs don’t miss out, yanks his towel up in submission and retreats to the tented shade by the bar. On the beach, huge bulldozers roll back and forth endlessly shifting sand, their reverse gear beeps punctuating our every sentence. Bass player Michael “Flea” Balzary – incredibly, this advert for perpetual adolescence is now 48 – is explaining something about how his love of surfing informs his love of songwriting, and I’m trying to keep up, but his outfit and demeanour aren’t helping me concentrate.
Continue reading …What keeps the Red Hot Chili Peppers from retiring to the beach to sit and eat burritos? Rob Fitzpatrick asks the LA rock aristocrats how they keep things chaotic after all this time Half of the Red Hot Chili Peppers are sitting opposite me on a pair of sumptuously plump sofas in a corner suite at the top of a beachfront hotel in Santa Monica, California. Outside the window to my left is the Pacific, while outside the one to my right are the fleshpots and fairgrounds of Venice Beach. It’s 2pm and the sun thumps down in thick, exhausting waves. Even the guy lying flat on his back by the pool, the one with his legs artfully spread so his inner thighs don’t miss out, yanks his towel up in submission and retreats to the tented shade by the bar. On the beach, huge bulldozers roll back and forth endlessly shifting sand, their reverse gear beeps punctuating our every sentence. Bass player Michael “Flea” Balzary – incredibly, this advert for perpetual adolescence is now 48 – is explaining something about how his love of surfing informs his love of songwriting, and I’m trying to keep up, but his outfit and demeanour aren’t helping me concentrate.
Continue reading …What keeps the Red Hot Chili Peppers from retiring to the beach to sit and eat burritos? Rob Fitzpatrick asks the LA rock aristocrats how they keep things chaotic after all this time Half of the Red Hot Chili Peppers are sitting opposite me on a pair of sumptuously plump sofas in a corner suite at the top of a beachfront hotel in Santa Monica, California. Outside the window to my left is the Pacific, while outside the one to my right are the fleshpots and fairgrounds of Venice Beach. It’s 2pm and the sun thumps down in thick, exhausting waves. Even the guy lying flat on his back by the pool, the one with his legs artfully spread so his inner thighs don’t miss out, yanks his towel up in submission and retreats to the tented shade by the bar. On the beach, huge bulldozers roll back and forth endlessly shifting sand, their reverse gear beeps punctuating our every sentence. Bass player Michael “Flea” Balzary – incredibly, this advert for perpetual adolescence is now 48 – is explaining something about how his love of surfing informs his love of songwriting, and I’m trying to keep up, but his outfit and demeanour aren’t helping me concentrate.
Continue reading …