Home » Archives by category » News » Politics (Page 673)
Indonesian volcano erupts

Thousands of residents evacuated from slopes of Mount Lokon in Sulawesi province A volcano in central Indonesia has sent thousands of residents fleeing from their homes as it spit lava and ash high into the air. One woman died of a heart attack, but no other casualties were reported. Mount Lokon, located in northern Sulawesi province, unleashed its first powerful eruption at 10:46pm on Thursday, said Brian Rulrone, a disaster management agency official. That eruption was followed by a second just after midnight and a third at 1:10am on Friday. Lava cascaded from the mouth of the crater, triggering forest fires along its western slope, according to Ferry Rusmawan, an official at the nearest monitoring post, who said activity remained high and another eruption appeared imminent. The 1,750m (5,741ft) mountain continued to rumble late on Friday morning. Soldiers and police helped rescuers evacuate residents living along the mountain’s fertile slopes, said Jimmy Eman, the acting mayor in the nearby town of Tomohon. He said the only victim so far was the 56-year-old woman who died of a heart attack. More than 6,000 people were crammed into schools, churches and other temporary shelters. Authorities said 27,000 others living within two miles (3.5km) of the crater also would be moved. “This is the largest eruption I’ve ever experienced,” said Nelson Uada, who was among those evacuated overnight. “It was very scary. Glowing lava flowed like flames in the darkness and it sounded like we were in a war.” Flights to the nearest international airport in Manado, the provincial capital, were not disrupted, said Lucky Podaag, an airport spokesman. Indonesia’s vast archipelago of 240 million people is prone to earthquakes and volcanoes because it sits along the Pacific Ring of Fire, a horseshoe-shaped string of faults that lines the Pacific Ocean. Mount Lokon, which has been on high alert for nearly a week, is one of the country’s 129 active volcanos. Its last major eruption in 1991 killed a Swiss hiker and forced thousands of people to flee their homes. Indonesia Natural disasters and extreme weather guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Queen to visit Bletchley park codebreakers

Monarch will honour men and women codebreakers and their role in the second world war The Queen is paying a visit to Bletchley Park, Milton Keynes, Britain’s most historic site of secret code-breaking activities and the birthplace of the modern computer. The monarch will unveil a memorial to the men and women codebreakers, honouring the vital role they played in the second world war. She will be joined by the Duke of Edinburgh on her visit. During the second world war the site was home to the government’s Code and Cypher School, which obtained signals intelligence by breaking high-level encrypted enemy radio and teleprinter communications. The Queen and the Duke will first visit the Colossus hut, where they will view an ongoing restoration project. Colossus machines were the first programmable electronic computers, designed by engineer Tommy Flowers to help codebreakers read German messages. The royal couple will see an Enigma display during their visit and be shown how the machine, used for the encryption and decryption of secret messages, worked. They will also view the Turing Bombe Machine, an electromechanical device used by British cryptologists to help decipher Enigma-encrypted signals which was created by English mathematician, logician, cryptanalyst and computer scientist Alan Turing. Bletchley Park veterans will meet the royal couple before they move outside the main building to unveil a public memorial and view the roll of honour. The Queen Monarchy Second world war guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
BBC strike disrupts news programmes

BBC1′s Breakfast off air, Today on Radio 4 runs documentary and regular 5 Live Breakfast hosts replaced Viewers and listeners tuning in to BBC News programmes on Friday morning found disruption to the breakfast shows on BBC1 and Radio 5 Live and Radio 4′s Today due to a 24-hour strike by journalists. BBC1′s Breakfast was off air, replaced by a BBC News channel simulcast, while the regular 5 Live Breakfast hosts Nicky Campbell and Rachel Burden were replaced by Ian Payne and Julia Bradbury. Listeners to Today were treated to a repeated documentary about the Russian Communist revolution in the runup to 7am. However, from 7am the BBC’s flagship radio news programme ran pretty much as normal with regular presenters Sarah Montague and Justin Webb, who is in Japan reporting on the aftermath of the tsunami that struck earlier this year. Picket lines were mounted from midnight on Friday outside BBC premises across the country, with the National Union of Journalists predicting a “solid response” to the walkout. The BBC admitted it expected widespread disruption to services and said it was disappointed by the industrial action and apologised to viewers and listeners. Negotiations with the NUJ over compulsory redundancies at BBC World Service and BBC Monitoring continued until the eve of the strike, but no agreement was reached. The NUJ general secretary, Michelle Stanistreet, accused the BBC of “provoking” a strike over a handful of job losses, but the corporation said there were 100 posts for which compulsory redundancy was “regrettably unavoidable”. Stanistreet said the union offered a number of solutions to the dispute, adding that an offer from the conciliation service Acas for peace talks had not been taken up by BBC management. “There are so many people who want to leave the BBC that this could be resolved through negotiations. The NUJ has a long-standing policy of no compulsory redundancies, and it is clear that our members at the BBC are fully prepared to stand up for their colleagues under threat,” she said. “Jobs are being saved and created at management level, but journalists are losing theirs. It is hard to avoid the conclusion that BBC management wants thousands of its journalists to go on strike rather than settle the dispute. A BBC spokesman said: “We are disappointed that the NUJ is intending to strike and apologise to our audience for any disruption to services this may cause. “We have had to reduce the number of posts in World Service and BBC Monitoring by 387, following significant cuts to the central government grants that support these services. In a significant majority of cases we have been able to reach this through voluntary redundancy or redeployment. “However, there are in excess of 100 BBC posts for which compulsory redundancy is regrettably unavoidable, and this is our focus, regardless of whether staff are members of unions.” A further 24-hour strike is due to take place on 29 July. • To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 3353 2000. If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly “for publication”. • To get the latest media news to your desktop or mobile, follow MediaGuardian on Twitter and Facebook . BBC BBC1 Television industry Radio 4 Radio industry National Union of Journalists Media unions Jason Deans guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Continue reading …
Rupertgate Thursday – The Games Begin.

enlarge Could be interesting – could be inflammatory – can’t be boring. Click here to view this media As it was reported less than an hour ago (at 9:00 am PDT), both James and Rupert Murdoch will be appearing before the Home Affairs Select Committee regarding the scandal, the fallout and the firestorm. While momentum has been building and speculation increasing over what possible or probable repercussions are to be had here in the U.S. still remain to be seen, news and events surrounding this scandal are not going away in the UK anytime soon. If anything, the Hearings, starting with Rebekah Brooks next Tuesday, should be interesting. Whether they will shed any light on what has been a long-running method of operation and a style of doing business is still a big question mark. Here is the latest news as reported on the BBC 4 program PM, including an extended interview with Vince Cable , another figure who entanglements with Newscorp/News International cost him considerably. The day ain’t over and anything can still happen. And true to form, it just may. Stay tuned.

Continue reading …
Obama’s False Family Drama: Ann Dunham Was Not Denied Health Insurance Coverage During Life-Ending Illness

As Clay Waters at the Media Research Center's Times Watch reported earlier today (“One of Obama's Emotional Arguments for Obama-Care Proven Wrong in NYT Staffer's New Book”), the New York Times's Kevin Sack ran a story yesterday which “reflects badly on Barack Obama and how he misled people in his campaign for Obama-care.” I'll say. As reported by Sack (bolds are mine throughout this post): Book Challenges Obama on Mother’s Deathbed Fight During his presidential campaign and subsequent battle over a health care law, Mr. Obama quieted crowds with the story of his mother’s fight with her insurer over whether her cancer was a pre-existing condition that disqualified her from coverage. In offering the story as an argument for ending pre-existing condition exclusions by health insurers, the president left the clear impression that his mother’s fight was over health benefits for medical expenses. But in “A Singular Woman: The Untold Story of Barack Obama’s Mother,” author Janny Scott quotes from correspondence from the president’s mother to assert that the 1995 dispute concerned a Cigna disability insurance policy and that her actual health insurer had apparently reimbursed most of her medical expenses without argument. Ms. Scott took a leave from her job as a reporter for The New York Times to write the book and has not returned to the staff. … “We have not reviewed the letters or other material on which the author bases her account,” said Nicholas Papas, the (White House) spokesman. “The president has told this story based on his recollection of events that took place more than 15 years ago.” … “As Ms. Scott’s account makes clear, the president’s mother incurred several hundred dollars in monthly uncovered medical expenses that she was relying on insurance to pay,” Mr. Papas said. “She first could not get a response from the insurance company, then was refused coverage. This personal history of the president’s speaks powerfully to the impact of pre-existing condition limits on insurance protection from health care costs.” Disability insurance, which primarily replaces wages lost to illness, was never at issue in the legislative debate over the Affordable Care Act. … According to Ms. Scott’s book, Ms. (Ann) Dunham’s problem with Cigna started after she left Jakarta, Indonesia, where she had recently taken a consulting job with an American firm, and returned to Honolulu for treatment of abdominal pain that had been diagnosed as appendicitis. After being told she had uterine and ovarian cancer, she underwent a hysterectomy in February 1995 and then six months of chemotherapy, according to the book. The Cigna disability policy, according to Ms. Scott, allowed the company to deny a claim if a patient had seen a doctor about the condition that caused the disability in the three months before employment. Seriously now, in the sixth excerpted paragraph Mr. Papas seems to be making a case that one should be able to qualify not just for health insurance coverage but also disability insurance coverage (which, by the way, is meant to cover lost income and living expenses while disabled, and is not specifically designed to cover medical expenses) even if at the time you apply for it you already have a disabling condition. Next up: Auto insurance people can buy after they're in a crash. The Times's Sack left an important additional contradiction in Barack Obama's narrative out of his coverage. While Sack notes that Ms. Dunham “had recently taken a consulting job with an American firm,” that is not how Barack Obama described her situation at the February 2010 Healthcare summit just one month before the final House vote in which Obamacare passed. Specifically, as Christopher Santarelli reported at the Blaze on Tuesday afternoon (video is at the link; bold is mine): Barack Obama at the February 2010 Healthcare summit (said): “My Mother, who was self-employed, didn’t have reliable healthcare, and she died of ovarian cancer. There probably is nothing modern medicine could have done about that, it was caught late and thats a hard cancer to diagnose. I do remember the last six months of her life, insurance companies threatening that they would not reimburse her for her costs. And her having to be on the phone in the hospital argueing with insurance companies when what she should have been doing is spending time with her family.” Scott’s investigation however shows that in 1994 Dunham took a job with an American company called Development Alternatives, which had a contract with the Indonesian State Ministry for the Role of Women. Dunham returned to Jakarta to work where Scott reports the job provided Dunham with health insurance, a housing allowance, and a car. Even though it punches a hole a mile wide in the President's personal narrative justifying the passage of Obamacare, I don't hold out much hope for seeing what Sack reported at the Times or Santarelli's addendum elsewhere beyond the usual burial grounds at ABC's Political Punch and the Politico , where stories the establishment press would rather not widely distribute seem to go and die. The Times itself carried Sack's story on Page A16 of Thursday's print edition. A search on “Dunham” at the Associated Press's main site just before 10 p.m. returned nothing relevant . If anyone sees this mentioned at the Big Three networks, let me know. This morning, Ann Althouse was a bit more blunt about all of this in her headline and brief commentary: Obama lied about a central fact about his own life which he used — powerfully — to push health care reform. … “Lied” is my paraphrasing. The NYT wrote “mischaracterized.” Meanwhile, I recall a (discredited) attempt to discredit President George W. Bush's Texas Air National Guard Service — which was never used by Bush to prop up a public policy initiative — getting wall-to-wall press coverage in September 2004. No double standard there (/sarcasm). Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .

Continue reading …

I’ve never understood why liberals seem so horrified by torture — but apparently only when it takes place in another country. The conditions in our jails continue to be a disgrace, and in many places, they’re getting worse because they’ve been outsourced to for-profit companies (and we all know what that means). Yet jail reform is far down on the list of liberal priorities. It’s easy to look away because, well, they’re the bad guys. I’m not suggesting that maximum security prisoners be “coddled”, as conservatives like to accuse. Yes, I realize inmates are not angels — but let’s get real: Neither are their guards, some of whom sell contraband drugs and other black market items, and trade sexual favors for special treatment. Insisting on human dignity and humane conditions is not some crazy liberal idea, it’s simple human decency. And of course, that’s not even considering the long-term mental-health damage done to these prisoners by extended isolation . There are other options, including the state freeing enough low-risk drug offenders at other facilities to free up space. I hope this story gets more traction, because it needs a wider audience: A hunger strike started by prisoners at Pelican Bay to protest appalling conditions has spread across California as inmates at 13 prisons joined in solidarity. The number of inmates refusing food hit a peak of 6,600, and is now estimated at 1,700. They are now in their 13th day of the hunger strike, and relatives are reporting that many are near death but still refusing medical attention. Pelican Bay is a maximum security facility where inmates are held in windowless isolation cells for more than 22 hours a day, shower once every three days, and can have little or no contact with other prisoners for years and even decades at a time: A core group of prisoners at Pelican Bay said they were willing to starve to death rather than continue to submit to prison conditions that they call a violation of basic civil and human rights. “No one wants to die,” James Crawford, a prisoner serving a life sentence for murder and robbery, said in a statement provided by a coalition of prisoners’ rights groups. “Yet under this current system of what amounts to intense torture, what choice do we have?” The hunger strike comes only weeks after the Supreme Court ordered California to dramatically lower its prisons population, because severe overcrowding was exposing inmates to high levels of violence and disease . Hunger strike leaders are demanding an end to long-term confinement and collective punishment, access to food and programs, and “an end to the practice of ‘debriefing,’ or requiring prisoners to divulge information about themselves and other prisoners around gang affiliation in order to be released back into general population.” They are supported by advocates and family members who are begging Gov. Jerry Brown (D) to swiftly improve prison conditions. The Supreme Court ruled in May that California’s prisons violated minimum constitutional requirements by failing to meet prisoners’ basic health needs. “A prison that deprives prisoners of basic sustenance, including adequate medical care, is incompatible with the concept of human dignity and has no place in civilized society,” Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote for the majority, noting that as many as 200 prisoners had lived in a gym and as many as 54 prisoners had shared a single toilet. Hundreds of hunger strikers are suffering from severe dehydration and official sources inside the prison say they are “progressing rapidly” toward organ damage and renal failure. The state corrections department continues to insist the situation is not a “crisis,” and say they will not meet the strikers’ requests.

Continue reading …

Lately, there would seem to be a whole lot more people who have a direct channel to the Big Guy Upstairs than one could have humanly thought possible. It is oft-said that “God works in mysterious ways”. But when Michele Bachmann hears voices telling her to run for president, am I the only who thinks the most likely explanation is a batch of bad clams or one-too-many nights role playing The Book of Eli with her equally demented husband Marcus? Perhaps, these are the very same voices that have shared with her the important role “Founding Father John Quincy Adams” played in ending slavery as he battled the oncoming scourge of puberty? I don’t know, just a stab in the dark. Regardless, whether it is gay marriage or spotting the Virgin Mary in your gordita, our re-embrace of culture-by-theology in the United States (not unlike much of the rest of the world) has led supposedly “serious people” to say things that not so long ago would have landed them a starring role in Girl, Interrupted. In our current age, in fact, possessing a direct cerebral channel to Deus (or at least claiming you do) would seem to be a requirement for receiving an invitation to a GOP presidential debate. It equally pervades the rest of right-wing political culture in the US, as twisted scripture both provides ready justification for those who hate everything about the this country post-1930, and renders more difficult the job of the media to effectively criticise any crackpot theory-lest they lose their “objectivity” for a moment and offend some True Believers. For example, in light of the recent law passed by the New York state legislature providing full marriage rights to gay and lesbian couples, dingy-old-Hammerhead-Bat Pat Robertson offered his expert testimony that “there’s never been a civilisation ever in history that has embraced homosexuality and turned away from traditional fidelity, traditional marriage, traditional child-rearing, and has survived.” He went on to compare the United States to Sodom and pleasantly predict we’d suffer the same fate – complete annihilation. In case you’re keeping score, Jesus is apparently cool with Rev Robertson’s having befriended the al-Qaeda-harboring, genocidal thug Charles Taylor, in order to fatten his wallet from a steady diet of Liberian blood diamonds. When it comes to loving couples of the same sex tying the knot, however, not so much. Thankfully, for the rest of us, Robertson’s many past predictions of our collective demise were so inane they might as well have been announced on an aircraft carrier with a “Mission Accomplished” banner in the background. So to pick up the slack, Missouri GOP Congressman and apparent Mary-Shelley-creation Todd Akin also jumped into the God interpretation game last week – likely as a strategy to forward his US Senate campaign. Akin, in an obvious moment of clarity, puked out that “at the heart of liberalism really is a hatred for God.” Because, as we all know, nothing is closer to the teachings of the Bible than Akin’s record of lying about his address for voting purposes and cutting taxes for 8-figure earning CEOs while gutting health care for impoverished children. Sadly, however, our God Culture isn’t limited to just the political game, but also allows some of those clever cats, professional athletes, to get in on the action. I must admit to finding it rather amusing – as in completely ridiculous – whenever an overpaid ballplayer hits a three-point shot or bashes a fastball over the center field wall, only to respond by pointing up to the Heavens as if it were Divinely ordained. Because we all know any Higher Power has nothing better to do – like ending conflict in the Sudan or curing cancer – than taking in some sport and using his/her powers to ensure Arsenal wins the FA Cup. Somewhere Jacob is trying to best that blood-sucker Edward and win the affections of Bella, and God is going to worry about the Stanley Cup? How arrogant. It is this hubris that must explain why one of the heroes of the 2007 Super-Bowl-winning New York Giants, David Tyree, thought it his place to tell us what His God would think of gay marriage in New York – much like Brother Robertson. As you can imagine, according to Tyree, it just up and freaked God out. I guess he missed the part where he’s the guy we trust to catch the ball on the field, not make public policy according to his translation of the will of his Deity off of it. For, in the end, it doesn’t matter if you’re a Believer or not. Most of us to the north of birdbrain can agree that no matter what Bachmann, Akin, Robertson or Tyree have to say on the matter, it is in fact societies ruled by faux-pious numbskulls that, to quote the elegant and articulate Robertson, have “never, ever survived.” Perhaps he and his Republican buddies can ponder–and share on Google+ with their circles of friends, family, and even acquaintances, for the rest of our sakes–the words of the founder of their party, Abraham Lincoln, who once counseled that it is “better to remain silent and be thought a fool, than to speak out and remove all doubt.” Follow Me On Twitter: @Cliffschecter A similar version of this column first appeared at Al Jazeera English

Continue reading …
Just Like High School: Tennessee Lawmaker Carves Initials Into State House Desk

Remember that time that you got really bored in class and carved your initials into the desk? Well, it turns out that’s not such a good idea if you are a member of the government. And if the desk is in the state House chamber. On Monday, Republican Rep. Julia Hurley, 29, of Tennessee confirmed to

Continue reading …

After hearing about Michele Bachmann’s husband Marcus and his “pray away the gay” “therapy” and having his gaydar go off the charts, Jon Stewart has Jerry Seinfeld join him on the set to help him “repress” his urge to make gay jokes about Marcus Bachmann.

Continue reading …