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US drone strike kills 21 suspected militants in Pakistan

Local Taliban and al-Qaida militants and foreigners among dead after house in border region North Waziristan hit by drone A US drone fired two missiles into Pakistan’s North Waziristan tribal region on the Afghan border on Wednesday, killing at least 21 suspected militants including foreigners, local officials said, in one of the biggest attacks in weeks. The drone targeted a house 3km (two miles) east of Miranshah, the main town of the region, known to be a hotbed for Taliban and al-Qaida militants. “The dead included local Taliban as well as some Arabs and Uzbek nationals,” one intelligence official in North Waziristan said, speaking on the condition of anonymity. It was not immediately known if any high-profile militants were among the dead. Militants often dispute official account of such strikes. Initial reports said five militants were killed in the attack, but officials said the toll had gone up to 21 after more bodies were found from the rubble of the house. Drone strikes have been a major source of friction between the United States and Pakistan, with ties at their worst since US Special Forces killed al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden in a secret raid in a Pakistani garrison town in May. While Pakistan publicly opposes the strikes, it has privately allowed them and has co-operated with the United States determining targets. But since the May commando raid, which Pakistan considers a grievous breach of sovereignty, the powerful head of the army, General Ashfaq Kayani, has called for a halt. Washington appears determined to press forward with drone attacks, which its sees as an effective tool to stem cross-border attacks by militants on foreign forces in Afghanistan. Pakistan US foreign policy Unmanned drones Taliban Afghanistan United States guardian.co.uk

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UK riots: day four aftermath live

• Serious disorder in Manchester and west Midlands • Murder inquiry launched in Birmingham after car hits three men • Calm night in London as police maintain control • Send us your footage of the riots • Upload photos to our Flickr group and see others’ pictures • Read our latest summary of events • Read our latest news story 8.21am: Our correspondent Paul Lewis and video journalist Mustafa Khalili have been in Gloucester overnight, and have just filed their report. It seems that the disorder has shocked Gloucester, a picturesque cathedral city near the Welsh border, and a place that you wouldn’t associate with this kind of trouble. Teenagers were still taking pictures of the smouldering debris on Gloucester’s Barton Road at 5am on Wednesday, wide-eyed in disbelief. None had thought that television pictures of riots in major cities such as London, Birmingham, Manchester and Liverpool would spread to their quaint home town near the Welsh border . Looking dazed, Nathan Phillips, 17, described the moment he realised Gloucester would be next. “We were stood outside our friends house. A person with a balaclava came out, and then he walked away. He came back with his friends, and they had hoods pulled tight over their heads. Then they chucked three bricks at the police car.” The officer inside, he said, was struck by one brick. “He just turned on the engine and sped off.” What followed, according to witnesses still around to relay events as dawn broke, was a series of running battles with the police along Gloucester’s narrow terraced streets. Riot police were drafted in alongside officers on horseback as they tried to quell the violence. The disorder in Gloucester, which began around 9.30pm on Tuesday, and continued into the early hours of the morning, was smaller in scale than the widespread looting and running battles elsewhere in England. Witnesses said the crowd of rioters consisted of around fifty youths, from young teenagers to men in their twenties. Unlike far larger cities such as Nottingham, which appears to have seen hundreds of shops targeted overnight, In Gloucester there were attempts to break into less than a dozen local stores and glass-fronted betting shops. There was an unconfirmed report that a petshop was targeted. But the reaction through the night to the news to a blazing fire and rioting in Gloucester suggested that while smaller than elsewhere, the disturbance heralded something symbolic: evidence that the spreading violence could take hold in a cathedral city with a population of less than 150,000. As one policewoman said guarding the burned out shell of a derelict building set on fire on Brunswick Road: “It’s madness. No-one can understand it.” 8.15am: Casey Rain, a songwriter from Birmingham, has been live blogging the situation overnight on Tumblr. He has collected some pictures of the trouble in the city, and he also has a name for one of the men who died in what appears to have been hit-and-run incident in the city in the early hours. Thanks agin to Rob Stickler for pointing me to this. 8.05am: One commenter, Rob Stickler asks about Wolverhampton and points to a report by local paper, the Express and Star, which says shops in the town were attacked. Here’s an extract from the Express and Star’s report : Shopkeepers in Wolverhampton have been left counting the cost after yobs hit Queen Street, Dudley Street, Wulfruna Street, Princess Street and Market Street. Thousands of pounds of damage has been caused by the rioting, which started after youths congregated in Queen Square shortly after 4.30pm. Up to 300 youths gathered there as riot police formed blockades in an attempt to cut off nearby Dudley Street. A thunder flash was let off causing dozens to scatter and a man who appeared to be hurt was led away by police. But within minutes windows had been smashed at stores across the city centre, including the Job Centre in Queen Street and Burton’s menswear. The shutter at No 1 Pizza, in Market Street, was also torn, leaving shopkeepers unable to close the building. Large groups of people played cat and mouse with riot police, who kept them on the move. 7.58am: If you have any reliable information, eyewitness reports, pictures or video, or you want to point me to anything in particular, please email me – matt.wells@guardian.co.uk 7.37am: My colleague Sam Jones has been totallig up the number of arrests overnight. He makes it 479: with 81 in London, 108 in greater Manchester, 109 in the west Midlands, 90 in Nottingham, 13 in Leicester, 19 in Bristol, 9 in Gloucester, 35 on Merseyside and 15 in the Thames Valley force area. 7.33am: More on the disturbances in Nottingham , in case you missed them. Canning Circus police station was firebombed by a group of 30 to 40 men at around 10pm, as the community office was closing for the evening. At least eight people were arrested in connection with the incident, which did not result in any injuries. Meadows Police station was also attacked by a gang of between 15-20 males and a police car was set alight outside. Elsewhere in the city, A fire broke out Clarendon College in Sherwood Rise following a fire bomb attack. Groups of youths using masks and hoods to hide their identities congregated around parts of the city setting light to cars and attacking businesses, pubs and community centres. Leicestershire police said officers had arrested 13 people following disturbances in Leicester city centre. 7.24am: There has been a second night of violence in Liverpool . The Press Association reports that around 200 youths gathered to the south of the city as they roamed from Toxteth to Wavertree causing disorder and damage Trouble also spread to Birkenhead with reports of up to 100 youths wrecking vehicles in the Park Road South area. Merseyside Police have now arrested 50 people since Monday night for incidents of disorder in Liverpool and the Wirral. A spokeswoman for Greater Manchester Police said the number of arrests for disorder in Manchester city centre and Salford had risen to 108. Police in Gloucester have arrested nine men. 7.19am: West Midlands ambulance service has been giving more details of the incident that led to the deaths of three men. Crews of paramedics found around 80 people at the scene of the incident, close to the Jet filling station on Dudley Road in Winson Green. Two of the men were pronounced dead soon after arriving at hospital, while a third died later. 7.11am: A third victim of the collision in Winson Green, Birmingham , has died in hospital. Two other men died at the scene when they were hit by a car. A spokesman for the ambulance service said the man had received treatment at City Hospital for several hours before dying from his “significant” injuries. 7.00am: Good morning and welcome to our coverage of the aftermath of another night of disorder around the UK. You can read our overnight coverage here . Here is a summary of events so far. • There has been serious disorder in a number of towns and cities across England, including Manchester, Birmingham, West Bromwich, Gloucester and Birmingham. A police station in Nottingham was as violence also hit Liverpool, Leicester, Bristol, Leeds and Gloucester. Garry Shewan, assistant chief constable of Greater Manchester police, said: “This has been senseless on a scale I have never witnessed before in my career.” •  West Midlands police have launched a murder inquiry after a car hit three men on Dudley Road in Birmingham, killing two of them. The men are believed to have been protecting their neighbourhood, although it remains unclear if the collision was related to the disturbances in other parts of the city. • London has been relatively calm overnight, with the 16,000 police officers deployed in the capital succeeding in maintaining order. There were a number of minor clashes as groups of vigilantes sought to maintain order. In Enflield, there was a racial undertone to the scenes as a large group of men roamed the area, chanting “England, England”. • Scotland Yard ssays 768 arrests have been made in connection with violence, disorder and looting in London in recent days. By midnight, police in Manchester had arrested 47 people. • The Independent Police Complaints Commission has announced there is no evidence that Mark Duggan, whose death in a police shoot-out led to the London riots, fired on police before he was killed. However, a loaded handgun was recovered from the scene. This is all consistent with the account of the officers on the scene, who never claimed Duggan fired first. The officer who fired the shot is believed to have acted because he feared for his life. Police Crime UK riots Manchester Birmingham Bristol Liverpool Matt Wells guardian.co.uk

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Jessica King and Jennifer Shilling have picked up two seats in the Wisconsin Senate in the recall election. We are still waiting on the Pasch (D) v. Darling (R) results in District 18. It could be a long night.

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Bozell Column: Tea Party Blame and Fairy Tales

Just as with the last Republican takeover of the House in 1995, it was easy to predict the media elite were going to dig deep into the mud and throw every smear they had at the new conservative powers in town. Congress finally passed, and the president signed, a deeply deficient kick-the-can compromise into law in order to raise the debt ceiling. Tea Party conservatives correctly denounced the deal as woefully inadequate. When Standard & Poor’s downgraded the creditworthiness of the United States government, Sen. John Kerry shamelessly labeled it a “Tea Party downgrade,” and no one in the press questioned him.

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The Uptake talks to Wisconsin voters on the ground. An open thread for results and news from Wisconsin’s recall elections. 10:30 p.m.: Jessica King (D) takes tiny lead over Randy Hopper (R), giving Dems leads in three races. 10:26 p.m.: Alberta Darling : “We’re taking back the state.” She appears to have forgotten that they already run the state and the fact that they are losing two races at the moment. 10:25 p.m.: Other races all too close to call. 10:22 p.m.: Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel calls race for Harsdorf (R). 10:20 p.m.: With 72% in, Harsdorf (R) looks to be a winner, again, no surprise there. 10:16 p.m.: Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel calls race for Cowles (R). This was the most conservative district. 10:15 p.m.: Pasch has taken a small lead over Alberta Darling (R), this is the game-changer. It’s early, though, with only 18% in. 10:14 p.m.: With 80% in Cowles (R) is up big, almost certain to win. No surprise. 10:03 p.m.: The Ed Show is saying that most of the votes in so far are from rural areas and that many of the bigger cities had polls stay open for more than an hour after closing to complete the lines. Results as of 10 p.m. EST : State Senate – District 2 – General Wisconsin – 44 of 90 Precincts Reporting – 49% Cowles , Robert (i) GOP 10,777 57% Nusbaum , Nancy Dem 8,029 43% State Senate – District 8 – General Wisconsin – 7 of 82 Precincts Reporting – 9% Darling , Alberta (i) GOP 3,183 71% Pasch , Sandra Dem 1,320 29% State Senate – District 10 – General Wisconsin – 61 of 114 Precincts Reporting – 54% Harsdorf , Sheila (i) GOP 16,753 58% Moore , Shelly Dem 12,056 42% State Senate – District 14 – General Wisconsin – 46 of 126 Precincts Reporting – 37% Olsen , Luther (i) GOP 7,576 55% Clark , Fred Dem 6,208 45% State Senate – District 18 – General Wisconsin – 8 of 108 Precincts Reporting – 7% Hopper , Randy (i) GOP 3,025 54% King , Jessica Dem 2,576 46% State Senate – District 32 – General Wisconsin – 29 of 119 Precincts Reporting – 24% Shilling , Jennifer Dem 2,541 51% Kapanke , Dan (i) GOP 2,468 49%

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The Uptake talks to Wisconsin voters on the ground. An open thread for results and news from Wisconsin’s recall elections. 10:30 p.m.: Jessica King (D) takes tiny lead over Randy Hopper (R), giving Dems leads in three races. 10:26 p.m.: Alberta Darling : “We’re taking back the state.” She appears to have forgotten that they already run the state and the fact that they are losing two races at the moment. 10:25 p.m.: Other races all too close to call. 10:22 p.m.: Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel calls race for Harsdorf (R). 10:20 p.m.: With 72% in, Harsdorf (R) looks to be a winner, again, no surprise there. 10:16 p.m.: Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel calls race for Cowles (R). This was the most conservative district. 10:15 p.m.: Pasch has taken a small lead over Alberta Darling (R), this is the game-changer. It’s early, though, with only 18% in. 10:14 p.m.: With 80% in Cowles (R) is up big, almost certain to win. No surprise. 10:03 p.m.: The Ed Show is saying that most of the votes in so far are from rural areas and that many of the bigger cities had polls stay open for more than an hour after closing to complete the lines. Results as of 10 p.m. EST : State Senate – District 2 – General Wisconsin – 44 of 90 Precincts Reporting – 49% Cowles , Robert (i) GOP 10,777 57% Nusbaum , Nancy Dem 8,029 43% State Senate – District 8 – General Wisconsin – 7 of 82 Precincts Reporting – 9% Darling , Alberta (i) GOP 3,183 71% Pasch , Sandra Dem 1,320 29% State Senate – District 10 – General Wisconsin – 61 of 114 Precincts Reporting – 54% Harsdorf , Sheila (i) GOP 16,753 58% Moore , Shelly Dem 12,056 42% State Senate – District 14 – General Wisconsin – 46 of 126 Precincts Reporting – 37% Olsen , Luther (i) GOP 7,576 55% Clark , Fred Dem 6,208 45% State Senate – District 18 – General Wisconsin – 8 of 108 Precincts Reporting – 7% Hopper , Randy (i) GOP 3,025 54% King , Jessica Dem 2,576 46% State Senate – District 32 – General Wisconsin – 29 of 119 Precincts Reporting – 24% Shilling , Jennifer Dem 2,541 51% Kapanke , Dan (i) GOP 2,468 49%

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BillO: Only Far Left Zealots Will Blame Tea Party For Economic Chaos

Click here to view this media Bill O’Reilly is smoking some strong stuff today. His whole Talking Points Memo segment was full of magic. Black, ugly magic. Here are the highlights of his seven minute economic acid trip with some reality checkpoints along the way: Standard & Poor’s downgrade basically says there is no confidence in the federal government’s management of the economy. While that’s true, they were a little more specific than that. This morning’s pre-dawn (west coast time) conference call with them had a few more details. I was listening. Evidently BillO wasn’t. Key (and major) point: S&P does not believe Bush Tax Cuts will expire . Clearly that is not the fault of the “federal government.” It is the fault of the Republicans. The Democratic Party will not admit that its big spending agenda has driven the country to the brink of bankruptcy. Again, see point number one. This is not a spending problem. It’s a revenue problem. Period. Only far-left zealots are going to buy that the tea party is the cause of the economic chaos. Wow. That’s some strong stuff there. Let’s first correct the record. The tea party IS the Republican Party. There is no difference. They are one and the same. Now that I’ve gotten that out of the way, let’s move on to point number two. Polls and people. As our own Jon Perr clearly demonstrates , it is entirely the Republican Party aka the tea party’s doing. Entirely. But just in case there is still doubt, let’s have a look at Michele Bachmann, presidential candidate and chairwoman of the Congressional “tea party” caucus, saying that she would not, under any circumstances raise the debt ceiling and would welcome a default, a talking point echoed by every Fox talker on the planet, including Neil Cavuto . Of course, now that we have not defaulted but Republican intransigence has caused a credit downgrade, it’s all President Obama’s fault. But you know, numbers don’t lie. And unless Republicans have suddenly morphed into a bunch of far-left zealots, BillO is just wrong, because a majority of Republicans also believe revenues must be part of deficit reduction, and without those revenues, there’s chaos. So there you go. There’s TeaPublicans and left-wing zealots with nothing in between. We don’t have any money for massive government spending projects. I once again refer readers to the first bullet point. There isn’t money because there isn’t revenues. Raising revenues fixes that. Americans are largely furious, because we have no control over our own economic futures due to Washington failing us. I will speak for me and those around me on this one. I am largely furious, because Republicans do not care if I live, die, have a roof over my head, have a job, or if my children get an education. So yeah. I’m pretty furious but it has nothing to do with “Washington failing us.” It has everything to do with a group of oligarchs deciding they do not care to share their wealth and their chosen handmaidens carrying out those wishes. Talking Points did not believe that U.S. credit would be downgraded and two big institutions have held the AAA rating. And this matters, why? Who gives a rip what BillO thinks? Well, other than Fox viewers, of course. What does that blowhard’s opinion have to do with anything? What I find most disturbing about Bill O’Reilly’s magical acid trip is not that he lies. He always lies. No, what’s most disturbing is that he is simply summarizing Fox News’ meme o’ the day , which is that Republicans are not the problem. Washington is. As if there is some weird gradient of separation between the whackjobs who say things on their network and the ones in Congress casting votes.

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BillO: Only Far Left Zealots Will Blame Tea Party For Economic Chaos

Click here to view this media Bill O’Reilly is smoking some strong stuff today. His whole Talking Points Memo segment was full of magic. Black, ugly magic. Here are the highlights of his seven minute economic acid trip with some reality checkpoints along the way: Standard & Poor’s downgrade basically says there is no confidence in the federal government’s management of the economy. While that’s true, they were a little more specific than that. This morning’s pre-dawn (west coast time) conference call with them had a few more details. I was listening. Evidently BillO wasn’t. Key (and major) point: S&P does not believe Bush Tax Cuts will expire . Clearly that is not the fault of the “federal government.” It is the fault of the Republicans. The Democratic Party will not admit that its big spending agenda has driven the country to the brink of bankruptcy. Again, see point number one. This is not a spending problem. It’s a revenue problem. Period. Only far-left zealots are going to buy that the tea party is the cause of the economic chaos. Wow. That’s some strong stuff there. Let’s first correct the record. The tea party IS the Republican Party. There is no difference. They are one and the same. Now that I’ve gotten that out of the way, let’s move on to point number two. Polls and people. As our own Jon Perr clearly demonstrates , it is entirely the Republican Party aka the tea party’s doing. Entirely. But just in case there is still doubt, let’s have a look at Michele Bachmann, presidential candidate and chairwoman of the Congressional “tea party” caucus, saying that she would not, under any circumstances raise the debt ceiling and would welcome a default, a talking point echoed by every Fox talker on the planet, including Neil Cavuto . Of course, now that we have not defaulted but Republican intransigence has caused a credit downgrade, it’s all President Obama’s fault. But you know, numbers don’t lie. And unless Republicans have suddenly morphed into a bunch of far-left zealots, BillO is just wrong, because a majority of Republicans also believe revenues must be part of deficit reduction, and without those revenues, there’s chaos. So there you go. There’s TeaPublicans and left-wing zealots with nothing in between. We don’t have any money for massive government spending projects. I once again refer readers to the first bullet point. There isn’t money because there isn’t revenues. Raising revenues fixes that. Americans are largely furious, because we have no control over our own economic futures due to Washington failing us. I will speak for me and those around me on this one. I am largely furious, because Republicans do not care if I live, die, have a roof over my head, have a job, or if my children get an education. So yeah. I’m pretty furious but it has nothing to do with “Washington failing us.” It has everything to do with a group of oligarchs deciding they do not care to share their wealth and their chosen handmaidens carrying out those wishes. Talking Points did not believe that U.S. credit would be downgraded and two big institutions have held the AAA rating. And this matters, why? Who gives a rip what BillO thinks? Well, other than Fox viewers, of course. What does that blowhard’s opinion have to do with anything? What I find most disturbing about Bill O’Reilly’s magical acid trip is not that he lies. He always lies. No, what’s most disturbing is that he is simply summarizing Fox News’ meme o’ the day , which is that Republicans are not the problem. Washington is. As if there is some weird gradient of separation between the whackjobs who say things on their network and the ones in Congress casting votes.

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UK riots: disorder spreads to Manchester and West Midlands

Dozens of shops ransacked and Miss Selfridge store set alight as masked gangs in Manchester wage battles with police Central Manchester and Salford saw serious looting and disorder as gangs waged running battles with police, ransacking dozens of shops. Similar, if less widespread, trouble flared in Birmingham and elsewhere in the West Midlands. The most serious disorder came in Manchester. Groups of young people consistently evaded police attempts to stop them from the late afternoon onwards, breaking into a series of upmarket shops and setting a branch of the Miss Selfridge clothing chain ablaze. As evening fell, up to 200 youths raided an off-licence and other shops in the main shopping precinct of Salford, a couple of miles to the west. The violence ebbed in Manchester city centre around midnight and police regained control. One of the few remaining signs of trouble was a gang of masked youths looting a branch of Jessops on the corner of Albert Square, beside Manchester town hall. The gang had posted a lookout and scattered as a police van swept past with blue lights flashing, then went back into the store a moment later. A woman who walked past shouted, “Disgraceful” at the gang. Assistant Chief Constable Garry Shewan of Greater Manchester police said Manchester and Salford had been badly damaged. “These are pure and simple criminals running wild tonight,” Shewan said. “They have nothing to protest against. There has been no spark. This has been senseless on a scale I have never witnessed before in my career.” By midnight police had made 47 arrests in Manchester and Salford. One suspected looter turned himself in after seeing his picture on Facebook, police said. Shewan said Manchester and Salford had been shamed by the criminals committing “wanton acts of violence and criminality”. Earlier in the day Greater Manchester police sent 100 officers – four public order units – to assist in London. While Sir Hugh Orde, president of the Association of Chief Police Officers, who organised the reinforcements, said such assistance had been planned to ensure other forces could cope with violence in their own areas, it was clear that the city could have used the extra officers. Masked gangs in central Manchester’s New Cathedral Street targeted a series of high-end outlets, among them Louis Vuitton, Selfridges, and Harvey Nichols. In nearby King Street, a branch of the clothes store Diesel had its windows smashed. Some looters were seen carrying away window dummies. Cheers went up as the crowd broke through the front window of a Bang & Olufsen store. Two looters carried away a widescreen TV. Another shop seen ransacked was Pretty Green, a fashion boutique set up last year by the former Oasis singer Liam Gallagher. Several hundred young people, many masked or wearing hoods, baited riot police before trying to storm the entrance of the huge Arndale shopping centre on Market Street. It was then that the branch of Miss Selfridge was set alight. As police brought in more riot squads and vans, later backed up by officers on horseback, the looting moved to the upmarket St Ann’s Square area, targeting a T-Mobile store, Links jewellery store, and a branch of Starbucks. The mood turned tense, with rioters threatening photographers and journalists. There was a melee as the crowd turned its attention to the Swarovski crystal shop on St Ann’s Square. Three cars carrying plainclothes police drove up and the officers waded in using batons. Youths were wrestled to the ground; one appeared to have an injured leg as he lay among the broken glass. The police were then forced to guard their prisoners – and themselves – from a screaming crowd of rioters. One young bystander said the violence was because young people felt they had no voice. “Things are really hard at the moment; there is a lot of frustration and tension. This is our way of making a point in as direct as way as possible. People don’t believe the government anymore since the Iraq war. Now, because of the internet, they are able to think for themselves. This is a response to their frustration.” As night fell the crowds moved on again, looting other stores including a branch of Sainsbury’s, with rioters openly carrying away bottles of alcohol and bags of groceries. Graham Stringer, the Labour MP for Blackley and Broughton, which includes parts of both Salford and Manchester, was heavily critical of police for not being better prepared. He said: “It was known that this was coming to Salford and Manchester, and now shops have been looted and set on fire. Businesses have been seriously damaged. There are a lot of questions that the chief constable needs to answer. The police need to get control of the streets, which they have failed to do. “This was predicted. The police knew it was coming. It was co-ordinated and organised by well-known criminals and gangsters. They were taking the opportunity because of the publicity. It wasn’t spontaneous, it was organised.” The trouble in Birmingham was sustained, if slightly less serious than that experienced in the city on Monday night, although West Midlands police said an officer believed he had heard a shot in Aston outside the city centre. It was not clear if it was linked to the rioting. A police firearms team was despatched to investigate. West Midlands police said they had arrested 80 people as a number of shops were looted and cars set alight. In central Birmingham a mob of up to 300 youths gathered, dispersed and regrouped, attacking shops. Chased by police, groups tried to get into the Mailbox shopping and office centre near the city’s rejuvenated canal basin, and the Pallisades shopping complex above New Street station before staff brought shutters down. Windows were damaged at a Marks & Spencer and a car was set on fire in Albert Street by a large gang. House of Fraser was attacked along with a nearby jewellery shop before a line of riot police with batons drove the crowd away. Riot police cornered 60 youths in part of Wolverhampton after five hours of sporadic violence that left the town centre empty of residents and visitors, with shops shuttered and pubs closing early. Two vehicles were set ablaze in West Bromwich as large crowds gathered in the town centre. West Midlands police said the force’s officers had been “managing” several groups of people causing trouble. A spokeswoman said: “Police have been dealing with disorder in Birmingham city centre, Wolverhampton city centre and West Bromwich town centre. The disorder has been on a smaller scale today than was seen on Monday evening in Birmingham, and police have been working throughout the afternoon and evening to calm the situation and target the offenders in all three areas.” UK riots Manchester Birmingham Crime Police Martin Wainwright Sandra Laville Peter Walker Jeevan Vasagar guardian.co.uk

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On a conference call today launching the new “Contract for the American Dream,” Van Jones said that the American people have more wisdom about what’s going on in the country than those inside the beltway. More than 131,000 Americans submitted ideas for the platform, more than 1600 house meetings were held and more than 25,000 ideas were submitted. Of those ideas, the ten most popular were included in the contract. Compare that to the right-wing Contract From America, in which only 50,000 people submitted ideas and only 800 house meetings were held. This disparity was despite the fact that the Contract for the American Dream did not get a big push from Fox News (or any equivalent) and there wasn’t a big funding push from anyone like the Koch brothers. “This movement is real. It’s big. It’s growing,” Jones said. The movement is already active in every congressional district in the country. Jones said that what we need now is for the majority of Americans who agree with the contract need to stand up and speak out for the mainstream American values it represents. These values are what helped make the twentieth century “the American Century.” He points out that while both parties have responded to the tea party, that group only represents 10-15 percent of the country. The Rebuild the Dream movement represents 70 percent. Rep. Jan Schakowsky said that the two biggest problems we face right now are creating jobs and stopping the disappearance of the middle class, the fact that the American dream is slipping through people’s fingers. She said that further cuts to federal spending will kill more jobs and make the economy worse. The solution, Schakowsky argues, is to grow our way out of the economic troubles we have — to have a robust economy, we have to have a robust middle class. And the middle class needs jobs. She is introducing legislation that represents the contract, including the Emergency Jobs to Restore the American Dream Act, which would create 2.2 million jobs over two years that meet critical community needs, and the Fairness in Taxation Act that would create a new 45 percent tax bracket for those who make more than $1 million each year and a 49 percent tax bracket for those who make more than $1 billion each year. She said this bill would raise $800 billion over ten years and would require the richest Americans to pay their fair share. Economist Dean Baker said it amazes him that the very people that got us into the trouble we face now are in charge of solving the problems they created. He said that it is the economic collapse — not excessive spending — that led to huge deficits and that to fix the deficit, we have to get the economy going again. The contract does just that, in his opinion, and is consistent with our successful responses to economic downturns in American history. His real fear, if we don’t get things moving in the right direction again, is that there could be people in their 30s, 40s and 50s who may never work again in their lifetimes. MoveOn’s Justin Ruben says that his group’s supporters are on board with this agenda. He doesn’t think that the people in D.C. will take the plan seriously at first, although most economists would say that the plan makes sense. He’s calling on MoveOn supporters to do the legwork to change the minds of members of Congress by talking the contract up at town hall meetings and in visit to congressional offices. Also on board is the Center for Community Change, led by Jeff Parcher. He says that the economy doesn’t have to be the way it is today. “We have enough, we are the richest, most under-taxed country in the developed world,” he added. Certain members of our society are not contributing their fair share and the key is to change the conversation in Washington. The full text of the contract is below : We, the American people, promise to defend and advance a simple ideal: liberty and justice . . . for all. Americans who are willing to work hard and play by the rules should be able to find a decent job, get a good home in a strong community, retire with dignity, and give their kids a better life. Every one of us – rich, poor, or in-between, regardless of skin color or birthplace, no matter their sexual orientation or gender – has the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. That is our covenant, our compact, our contract with one another. It is a promise we can fulfill – but only by working together. Today, the American Dream is under threat. Our veterans are coming home to few jobs and little hope on the home front. Our young people are graduating off a cliff, burdened by heavy debt, into the worst job market in half a century. The big banks that American taxpayers bailed out won’t cut homeowners a break. Our firefighters, nurses, cops, and teachers – America’s everyday heroes – are being thrown out onto the street. We believe: AMERICA IS NOT BROKE: America is rich – still the wealthiest nation ever. But too many at the top are grabbing the gains. No person or corporation should be allowed to take from America while giving little or nothing back. The super-rich who got tax breaks and bailouts should now pay full taxes – and help create jobs here, not overseas. Those who do well in America should do well by America. AMERICANS NEED JOBS, NOT CUTS: Many of our best workers are sitting idle while the work of rebuilding America goes undone. Together, we must rebuild our country, reinvest in our people and jump-start the industries of the future. Millions of jobless Americans would love the opportunity to become working, tax-paying members of their communities again. We have a jobs crisis, not a deficit crisis. To produce this Contract for the American Dream, 131,203 Americans came together online and in their communities. We wrote and rated 25,904 ideas. Together, we identified the 10 most critical steps to get our economy back on track and restore the American Dream: 10 CRITICAL STEPS TO GET OUR ECONOMY BACK ON TRACK I. Invest in America’s Infrastructure: Rebuild our crumbling bridges, dams, levees, ports, water and sewer lines, railways, roads, and public transit. We must invest in high-speed Internet and a modern, energy-saving electric grid. These investments will create good jobs and rebuild America. To help finance these projects, we need national and state infrastructure banks. II. Create 21st Century Energy Jobs: We should invest in American businesses that can power our country with innovative technologies like wind turbines, solar panels, geothermal systems, hybrid and electric cars, and next-generation batteries. And we should put Americans to work making our homes and buildings energy efficient. We can create good, green jobs in America, address the climate crisis, and build the clean energy economy. III. Invest in Public Education: We should provide universal access to early childhood education, make school funding equitable, invest in high-quality teachers, and build safe, well-equipped school buildings for our students. A high-quality education system, from universal preschool to vocational training and affordable higher education, is critical for our future and can create badly needed jobs now. IV. Offer Medicare for All: We should expand Medicare so it’s available to all Americans, and reform it to provide even more cost-effective, quality care. The Affordable Care Act is a good start and we must implement it — but it’s not enough. We can save trillions of dollars by joining every other industrialized country — paying much less for health care while getting the same or better results. V. Make Work Pay: Americans have a right to fair minimum and living wages, to organize and collectively bargain, to enjoy equal opportunity, and to earn equal pay for equal work. Corporate assaults on these rights bring down wages and benefits for all of us. They must be outlawed. VI. Secure Social Security: Keep Social Security sound, and strengthen the retirement, disability, and survivors’ protections Americans earn through their hard work. Pay for it by removing the cap on the Social Security tax, so that upper-income people pay into Social Security on all they make, just like the rest of us. VII. Return to Fairer Tax Rates: End, once and for all, the Bush-era tax giveaways for the rich, which the rest of us — or our kids — must pay eventually. Also, we must outlaw corporate tax havens and tax breaks for shipping jobs overseas. Lastly, with millionaires and billionaires taking a growing share of our country’s wealth, we should add new tax brackets for those making more than $1 million each year. VIII. End the Wars and Invest at Home: Our troops have done everything that’s been asked of them, and it’s time to bring them home to good jobs here. We’re sending $3 billion each week overseas that we should be investing to rebuild America. IX. Tax Wall Street Speculation: A tiny fee of a twentieth of 1% on each Wall Street trade could raise tens of billions of dollars annually with little impact on actual investment. This would reduce speculation, “flash trading,” and outrageous bankers’ bonuses — and we’d have a lot more money to spend on Main Street job creation. X. Strengthen Democracy: We need clean, fair elections — where no one’s right to vote can be taken away, and where money doesn’t buy you your own member of Congress. We must ban anonymous political influence, slam shut the lobbyists’ revolving door in D.C., and publicly finance elections. Immigrants who want to join in our democracy deserve a clear path to citizenship. We must stop giving corporations the rights of people when it comes to our elections. And we must ensure our judiciary’s respect for the Constitution. Together, we will reclaim our democracy to get our country back on track. Not to be outdone, and never one to avoid recycling an old idea if possible, Newt Gingrich is trying to create a new crowdsourced Contract With America via Facebook. It’s called Team 10, as in the Tenth Amendment, the Holy Grail for right-wingers who hate shared responsibility and shared sacrifice.

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