In the wake of the largest security breach in U.S. military history, the mainstream media have struggled to report all the facts about Bradley Manning, the Iraq war soldier in the middle of the Wikileaks scandal. In an effort to pursue political correctness over truthful journalism, ABC, CBS and NBC ignored uncomfortable facts about Manning's sexual orientation and history of “emotional fragility,” choosing instead to describe him as an “outcast who tried desperately to fit in.” CBS was the worst offender, offering the most stories about Manning (29) and completely disregarding the known fact that Bradley Manning is gay. ABC ran 14 stories between May 1, 2010, and May 1, 2011, about Manning, and every single story skipped what some consider a key fact in the case: that Manning is a homosexual. NBC was the only network to mention Manning's sexual orientation, but only in three out of 28 stories (10.7 percent). (Video below fold.)
Continue reading …Over the weekend I was re-reading the infamous Powell Memo , written by written in 1971 by former Supreme Court justice Lewis Powell, who at the time was working as a corporate attorney. The memo is in essence a letter to the Chamber of Commerce in which Powell urges the American business community to begin investing more money trying to capture the hearts and minds of Ma and Pa America. You see, back in the early ’70s a handsome young buck named Ralph Nader was making life miserable for the American business establishment, particularly the automobile industry . While Nader today is considered a crank by most of the country, at the time he was quite effective, a sort of anti-corporate Andrew Breitbart who loved to stir the pot, make trouble and collect scalps. At any rate, Powell’s memo basically encouraged the business community to take more of an active role in political life. And I don’t just mean donating to campaigns — I mean getting involved in academia and the media to begin influencing public opinion. While it’s true that this memo is not the Rosetta Stone of corporate influence that it’s made out to be, it is reflective of a general feeling among business elites that they were tired of being pushed around by liberals and leftists and that they were going to start hitting back. This passage is particularly amusing in light of how much corporate power dominates our political landscape today: [A]s every business executive knows, few elements of American society today have as little influence in government as the American businessman, the corporation, or even the millions of corporate stockholders. If one doubts this, let him undertake the role of “lobbyist” for the business point of view before Congressional committees. The same situation obtains in the legislative halls of most states and major cities. One does not exaggerate to say that, in terms of political influence with respect to the course of legislation and government action, the American business executive is truly the “forgotten man.” Powell is certainly exaggerating the plight of the poor beleaguered business man here, as the business lobby always had a seat at the table even during liberalism’s heyday in the 1960s. The difference was, unlike today, the business lobby didn’t own the damn table. One of my favorite scene’s in Oliver Stone’s “Nixon” film comes when a group of cigar-chomping right-wing businessmen give Tricky Dick and earful about “federal price controls on my oil” and about the fact that “your EPA environmental agency has got its thumb so far up my ass that it’s scratching my ear.” And while this is a work of fiction (and an Oliver Stone work of fiction at that), it’s still somewhat thrilling to see Nixon stick up for the EPA in the face of corporate pressure. Where have you gone, Tricky Dick, our nation turns its lonely eyes to you! The point here is that in the early 1970s, the public at large still thought the putting limits on how much pollution a private firm could emit was actually a good thing. That same decade was when Corporate America began investing more cash into think tanks like Heritage and Cato in order to scrub these inconvenient little ideas out of peoples’ heads and convince them that air pollution was just one of the free market’s many wonders, along with lead poisoning and E. coli. But back to the Powell Memo. Toward the end of the memo, Powell provides a list of several principles that Corporate America should be defending as part of its propaganda campaign. Some of what you would expect, but others are still surprising: We in America already have moved very far indeed toward some aspects of state socialism, as the needs and complexities of a vast urban society require types of regulation and control that were quite unnecessary in earlier times. In some areas, such regulation and control already have seriously impaired the freedom of both business and labor, and indeed of the public generally. But most of the essential freedoms remain: private ownership, private profit, labor unions, collective bargaining, consumer choice, and a market economy in which competition largely determines price, quality and variety of the goods and services provided the consumer. Labor unions??!! Collective bargaining?!!?!!?!!?! This dude would be considered a Communist by the Tea Party’s standards! Powell then closes with a flourish and recites the most insidious meme embedded within corporate propaganda — that your right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness is directly tied to the right of rich and powerful corporations to do whatever the hell they want: But whatever the causes of diminishing economic freedom may be, the truth is that freedom as a concept is indivisible. As the experience of the socialist and totalitarian states demonstrates, the contraction and denial of economic freedom is followed inevitably by governmental restrictions on other cherished rights. It is this message, above all others, that must be carried home to the American people. And tragically for our country, this campaign to influence hearts and minds has been stunningly successful. We no longer protect blue-collar jobs, union membership as a percentage of the workforce is the lowest it’s been in decades, and average wages have stalled even as corporate profits have soared. And still, our corporatist ideologues demand more. They want to voucherize Medicare in order to pay for tax cuts for corporations and wealthy individuals. They want to privatize Social Security and shift risk even more toward individuals. They want to end collective bargaining rights for public-sector workers all together. For our democracy to survive at all, we’re going to need a movement that challenges the role of corporate power. Russ Feingold’s campaign to overturn the truly horrible Citizens United decision is a good place to start.
Continue reading …Good Morning America's reporters on Tuesday hyperbolically attacked John McCain for creating a “firestorm” and a “political calamity” by suggesting that illegal immigrants have been responsible for fires in the southwest.
Continue reading …High inflation and weak wage growth means family spending power fell by £14 a week in May, according to Asda Households are about £60 a month worse off than they were a year ago as rising inflation puts the squeeze on household budgets, latest figures show. Family spending power fell by £14 a week in May, according to the Asda income tracker, a record low since the supermarket started publishing the data in January 2007. The figures show that the average family had just £165 a week to spend in May, 8% lower than this time last year due to higher food bills and soaring transport costs. Staple foods have risen in price by 40% over the past 12 months, while the cost of getting around by car and public transport is 8% higher than a year ago. The report indicates that while the UK economy continues to gradually recover, consumers remain under significant financial pressure as wage growth fails to keep pace with the rising cost of living. Consumer price inflation was at 4.5% in May, unchanged from the 32-month high seen in April and more than double the current average earnings growth. Whilst the latest labour market data shows a slight fall in unemployment, it also highlights earnings growth remaining at 2%. Asda calculates family spending power as the amount remaining after the average UK household has been taxed and has paid for necessities such as mortgage or rent, gas and electricity, food, drink and transport. Transport costs were again a big contributor to the headline rate of inflation in May. The cost of getting around is now 8% higher than a year ago – driven mainly by fuel and oil rising 13.7% over the year, and air fares increasing by 13.8%. Recent AA data showed that unleaded petrol prices are 12.7% higher in May 2011 than in the same month a year ago. Drinkers and smokers have also been penalised as alcohol and tobacco prices went up by 9.8% over the year to May 2011 – the highest inflation rate of all product categories and the fastest year-on-year increase since March 1992. The analysis has been produced for Asda by the Centre for Economics and Business Research , an independent economics and business research consultancy. Managing economist Charles Davis said: “Pressure continued to mount on household finances in May as the rapidly increasing price of transport and food pushed the cost of living even higher, and the price of alcohol and tobacco rose at the fastest rate since 1992. “The Asda income tracker shows discretionary income is under further pressure as annual earnings growth remains historically weak – under half the rate of inflation. The current picture of low wage increases and rapid inflation is likely to persist for the rest of the year, pointing to an extended squeeze on real disposable income.” Family finances Consumer affairs Rebecca Smithers guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Printing errors in GCSE maths papers force apology from AQA while further mistakes are under investigation by exams watchdog One of England’s biggest exam boards has been forced to apologise after GCSE students were set a paper containing questions from an old exam, the latest in a series of mistakes to affect pupils this summer. Due to a printing error the maths paper, set by the AQA exam board, included questions originally answered by pupils taking the same exam in March. Over 31,000 pupils at 567 schools and colleges took the paper on Tuesday morning. Two other new errors in exam papers have also been discovered, in a GCSE Latin paper and a physics A-level exam, both set by the OCR exam board. The Latin GCSE paper, taken by up to 8,000 students at 540 schools and colleges, contained incorrect names of writers and characters. The physics A-level paper contained a measurement given in both centimetres and metres, when it should have been in metres only. Almost 8,000 students at 661 schools and colleges sat the exam. An OCR spokesman said: “We deeply regret these errors. We are extremely angry, because this is not fair on students, parents and teachers.” He added: “It is not acceptable, and if we find that someone has not done their job, they will lose their job.” AQA, which sets 49% of GCSE exams, said some schools received the correct maths paper, while others received the “problem” paper, which had new questions at the beginning and end, but old ones in the middle. Some schools were sent a combination of correct and flawed exam papers. The exams regulator, Ofqual, has confirmed it is already investigating six errors – five in AS-level papers and one in a GCSE. AQA said it was very sorry that its maths paper “caused some students distress” . “We have told schools that students should attempt the paper as it is and we will consider the most appropriate action to protect students’ interests, when we have a full understanding of the extent of the problem,” an AQA spokeswoman said. “The batches of papers that we checked as part of our quality assurance process are all fine and we are in the process of investigating with our printers how this problem has arisen.” In one of the previous exam board blunders, all the answers to a multiple-choice question in a biology AS-level paper set by Edexcel were wrong. The question was worth one mark out of a possible 425. The board has promised that markers will adjust scores to ensure no candidate is disadvantaged. A business studies AS-level paper set by AQA left out crucial information, meaning one question, worth three marks, could not be answered. It asked students to calculate the profits a fictional chocolate company was making, but failed to include all the information required. The OCR board included an “impossible” question in a maths AS exam. Students were asked to solve an equation but were not given the information needed to do so. In a statement issued last week, Ofqual’s chief executive, Glenys Stacey, said exam boards had carried out additional checks on their papers. She said: “Students who have sat one of the question papers that included a mistake can be assured that the awarding organisations have procedures in place to make sure that so far as possible, no candidate is disadvantaged. “The measures taken will depend on the exact circumstances. Ofqual has asked the awarding organisations for detailed information on the actions they have taken already and will be taking during the awarding process.” Ofqual warns against comparisons with previous years, as it says changes in reporting arrangements may mean mistakes made in the past were not recorded by the regulator. But there appears to be a spike in exam-related problems this year. No incidents of errors in setting exams were reported last year, or in the 2009 season. In 2008 there were three incidents – two in GCSE papers and one in A-levels – according to figures kept by Ofqual. One flawed A-level paper was reported in 2007 and one GCSE paper with a mistake in 2006. The NUS has called for an inquiry into this year’s exam season and said affected students should be given the option of resits. There are around 5,000 exam papers scheduled this summer for GCSE, AS and A-level candidates in England. GCSEs AS-levels A-levels Schools Mathematics Physics Jeevan Vasagar guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Chancellor’s taciturnity follows comments by Danny Alexander that intervention would reach ‘hundreds of millions’ of pounds George Osborne has refused to be drawn on the cost of the Libyan intervention, following comments at the weekend by Danny Alexander that it would reach “hundreds of millions” of pounds. The chancellor and his chief secretary to the Treasury, both present in the Commons, were pressed to confirm the figure by the shadow chancellor, Ed Balls, during Treasury questions. Balls said that in March the government had said the operation would cost “tens of millions not hundreds of millions”. Instead it was announced there will be a Ministry of Defence statement next week. On Sunday Alexander told Sky News: “The campaign is costing tens of millions, potentially into the hundreds of millions as it goes on, but that money is coming from the reserve that we have set aside, precisely for contingencies such as this.” When the military campaign started, the chancellor said the cost would be “in the order of tens of millions of pounds, not hundreds of millions”. Since then, defence economists have warned that it could reach £1bn if the campaign stretches on into the autumn. The news came as a minister in Libya’s opposition force, the National Transition Council (NTC), wrote an open letter challenging the decision by the UK attorney general, Dominic Grieve, not to release funds to the rebels. Dr Ali Tarhuni, minister for finance and oil in the NTC, said the body would run out of funds in less than a week, according to journalists in Benghazi. Grieve has said Britain can not release the 1.4bn dinars (approximately £700m) printed by De La Rue – Britain’s banknote printer – which have been impounded in the UK as the revolution has unfolded. De La Rue printed Libya’s currency during Gaddafi’s rule, and in an attempt to cripple his regime, the UK impounded the near $1.5bn-worth of dinars. Now Libya’s opposition forces believe they should be allowed the money impounded in the UK or risk being unable to fund continuing operations. Last month the Grieve said he was not legally able to release the funds. Tarhuni wrote: “Here in Benghazi we cannot sufficiently express our gratitude for the support the UK has extended to Libyans during our struggle against the tyrannical regime of Muammar Gaddafi. Together with her international partners, the UK has played a leading role in this defining battle for a free Libya. No one will ever forget this act of generosity and support for a democratic state. “[But] at present we face a liquidity crisis which threatens the stability of liberated Libya. With every day that passes we approach financial collapse. Funding pledges from international donors have yet to materialise. Our monthly salary bill, meanwhile, is in the region of 340m dinars. At present our money supply is almost finished. “The neatest short-term solution to this crisis is for the UK government to release the 1.4bn dinars printed by De La Rue and currently sitting in Britain. “We are deeply grateful that London has impounded this money, which was originally intended for the Tripoli regime. We would now ask the UK to exert every effort to take the next step and transfer this physical cash to the NTC to enable us to keep our economy afloat and pay our people. “Although there are inevitably serious legal issues that must be dealt with relating to the release of the De La Rue dinars, we sincerely hope the UK can give this burning issue the urgent attention it deserves. The future of a stable Libya after Gaddafi is too important to let this issue fester.” George Osborne Libya Middle East Africa Danny Alexander Allegra Stratton guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Jon Huntsman, Obama’s former ambassador to China, declares Republican 2012 candidacy with deliberate nods to Reagan era President Barack Obama’s former ambassador to China, Jon Huntsman, has entered the Republican party’s 2012 presidential race, pledging to make the “hard decisions” he says are required to deal with America’s debt. “I’m a candidate for the office of president of the United States of America,” Huntsman told supporters at Liberty State Park in New Jersey, with the Statue of Liberty in the background. President Ronald Reagan launched his bid for the White House at the site in 1980. “For the first time in our history, we are passing down to the next generation a country that is less powerful, less compassionate, less competitive and less confident than the one we got,” Huntsman said. “This, ladies and gentlemen, is totally unacceptable and totally un-American.” Huntsman called for “broad and bold” changes to US tax laws and regulations and said America should seek energy independence and boost job creation, but gave no specifics on his plans. “We must make hard decisions that are necessary to avert disaster,” the former Utah governor said, painting a bleak picture of what it would mean for the country if it does not reduce its debt. Democrats have said they see Huntsman, who was a popular governor known for some moderate policies, as a potentially formidable candidate against Obama, although he currently lacks national name recognition and many polls put his support at less than 2%. Huntsman was Obama’s ambassador to China from 2009 until April, when he resigned to return to the United States and lay the groundwork for his presidential bid. Conservatives have attacked Huntsman for his work with Obama, which Huntsman has described as service to the country. Democrats have attacked Huntsman as changing his former moderate positions in order to appeal to the most conservative Republican base. Republican presidential nomination 2012 US elections 2012 Republicans US politics Obama administration Ronald Reagan United States guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Worker is second to be given death sentence this month as government cracks down on coal industry in Inner Mongolia A court in China’s vast northern region of Inner Mongolia has sentenced a coalminer to death for killing a resident who had complained about pollution, according to state media. The sentence was the second in a matter of weeks involving Inner Mongolia’s crucial coal sector, as the government tries to get tough with an industry that has ignited public anger with its pollution but fuels the economy. In the latest case, Sun Shuning was convicted of murdering Yan Wenlong after “a dispute over pollution caused by a coalmine” where Sun worked, the official Xinhua news agency said. Sun killed Wen with his forklift, the report added. “The act was utterly cruel, the crime very serious, and the consequences extremely bad,” it cited the court in Xilinhot as saying. Earlier this month, a court in the same part of Inner Mongolia ordered the execution of a man for murdering an ethnic Mongolian herder who had also protested against coalmine pollution. The death of the herder sparked demonstrations by ethnic minority Mongolians demanding better protection of their rights and traditions. Beijing, ever worried by threats to stability, is now trying to address some of the protesters’ concerns about the damage done by coalmining to traditional grazing lands. The authorities have since launched a month-long overhaul of the lucrative coalmining industry, vowing to clean up or close polluters. Inner Mongolia is China’s biggest coal producing region and the protests against the industry have come as severe power shortages loom ahead of the summer’s peak energy season. China Coal Pollution guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Republican presidential candidate Rep. Ron Paul told NBC’s Matt Lauer Monday that he has a mainstream candidacy. “You know, congressman, your name comes up an awful lot when I talk politics with friends and one of the things I hear about you over and over again is that people say ‘I like some of his ideas but I’m nervous about the total package,’” Lauer noted. “Because you’re a guy who’s called for legalizing all drugs including cocaine and heroin, legalizing prostitution. You want to eliminate about half of the federal agencies including Energy, Education, Health and Human services, the Department of Homeland Security. So how do you convince people that you are not just an interesting fringe candidate?” “To not portray it like you have just done,” Paul said. “I want to legalize freedom. What’s so bad about that? What’s wrong with legalizing choices about your life and your liberty and religious values? What’s wrong with legalizing the Constitution? I can defend everything I do by the Constitution. So why can you turn that around and say everything he’s doing is nuts and crazy?” “I think a growing number of people are starting to realize what I’m talking about is pretty sound,” Paul added. “It’s very American. It produces prosperity and peace and I’m always bewildered why anyone would reject it.”
Continue reading …Somehow when I think of “old-time back-room politics” I don't associate it with important debates about the definition of marriage and the safeguarding of religious liberties. But apparently AP's Michael Gormley does. Here's how he opened his June 21 story which the Washington Post ran on page A2 (emphasis mine): ALBANY, N.Y. — Old-time backroom politics faced down hundreds of chanting protesters from each side of the debate over same-sex marriage in New York on Monday as the issue stalled over whether religious groups could be protected from discrimination charges under legislation that would legalize such unions. And Albany’s notoriously entrenched politics won — for now. In fairness, Gormley was referring to New York state senators more so than the passionate pro-family activists waiting outside the caucus room. That being said, the AP reporter communicated his distaste with the legislative wrangling between the state senate's Republican majority and liberal Democratic Gov. Cuomo, griping that the impasse was a “disappointment” for same-sex marriage advocates (emphasis mine): After a three-hour conference behind closed doors, during which groups from each side waited in a stifling hot hallway, Senate Republicans emerged without comment.
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