enlarge What’s that word they use for a society where the group of those with money and power are above the law? Oh, that’s right: Oligarchy! While this regulatory capture continued, how many of us filled up our homes with these toxic products? Via Think Progress: Large manufacturers and chemical producers have lobbied ferociously to stop the National Institutes of Health from classifying formaldehyde as a carcinogen. A wide body of research has linked the chemical to cancer, but industrial polluters have stymied regulators from action. Last year, the New Yorker’s Jane Mayer reported that billionaire David Koch, whose company Georgia Pacific (a subsidiary of Koch Industries) is one of the country’s top producers of formaldehyde, was appointed to the NIH cancer board at a time when the NIH delayed action on the chemical. The news was met with protests from environmental groups. Faced with mounting pressure from Greenpeace and the scientific community, Koch offered an early resignation from the board in October. Yesterday, the NIH finally handed down a report officially classifying formaldehyde as a carcinogen: Government scientists listed formaldehyde as a carcinogen, and said it is found in worrisome quantities in plywood, particle board, mortuaries and hair salons. They also said that styrene, which is used in boats, bathtubs and in disposable foam plastic cups and plates, may cause cancer but is generally found in such low levels in consumer products that risks are low . Frequent and intense exposures in manufacturing plants are far more worrisome than the intermittent contact that most consumers have, but government scientists said that consumers should still avoid contact with formaldehyde and styrene along with six other chemicals that were added Friday to the government’s official Report on Carcinogens. Its release was delayed for years because of intense lobbying from the chemical industry , which disputed its findings. An investigation by ProPublica found that Sens. David Vitter (R-LA) and James Inhofe (R-OK) had used their power to add years of delay to the report. The piece linked Vitter to lobbying from Koch’s Georgia Pacific company, which has plywood plants in Louisiana . I guess now we know why Republicans weren’t pushing David Vitter to resign.
Continue reading …Paper says sorry to former deputy prime minister after it wrongly quoted him as criticising Labour leader Ed Miliband The former deputy prime minister John Prescott has received an apology from the Sunday Times after it wrongly quoting him as criticising the Labour leader, Ed Miliband. In the article, entitled “Labour big beasts maul Ed Miliband”, Prescott was quoted as telling “friends” that “it is only early days, but it has not been a great start” by the party’s leader. Prescott said on Twitter that the Sunday Times political editor, Isabel Oakeshott, called his family home in Hull on an ex-directory number. He said she had no opportunity to even ask a question because he simply asked her how she had got the number, told her never to call it again and put the phone down. The Sunday Times tweeted its apology, saying: “Due to a prod error a quote was wrongly attributed to @johnprescott. We apologise for the confusion & are happy to set the record straight.” Prescott replied: “Typical of Murdoch newspaper to blame a production worker not the journalist. My name was used to justify big beast headline.” He added: “I refuse to accept this mealy-mouthed apology. I want a front page retraction – due prominence – in next week’s Sunday Times.” Prescott, a potential victim of phone hacking by an investigator working for the News of the World, another Rupert Murdoch paper, has been one of the most vociferous critics of the handling of the hacking scandal by News International and the Metropolitan police. Sunday Times Newspapers & magazines News International National newspapers Newspapers John Prescott Ed Miliband Labour guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Hoda Saber’s wife says she received reports that prison officials delayed transferring him to hospital for six hours A leading Iranian journalist and opposition figure has died of a heart attack after spending 10 days on hunger strike in Tehran’s notorious Evin prison. Hoda Saber, a 52-year-old political activist from the opposition Nationalist-Religious movement, was taken to the Modarres hospital in the city after a cardiac complication, which his wife told the Guardianwas brought on by his hunger strike. The news of his death coincides with the second anniversary of Iran’s disputed presidential election, which gave the president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, a second term in the office. Speaking from Tehran, Saber’s wife, Farideh Jamshidi, said: “My husband died two days ago, but we were unaware of his death until today when someone in the hospital informed one of our friends.” According to Jamshidi, Saber stopped eating food and later stopped drinking water in protest at the death of his fellow dissident Haleh Sahabi, who died of a heart attack during scuffles with security forces at the funeral of her father, Ezatollah Sahabi – also a leading political activist – on 1 June. The Sahabis were also members of the Nationalist-Religious movement, an alliance of politicians whose activities have come under scrutiny in recent years, especially since the 2009 election. Ezatollah Sahabi was the leader of the alliance. Jamshidi accused prison officials of negligence toward her husband, saying she received reports that they delayed transferring him to hospital for six hours. “Doctors told us later that they could have saved his life by taking him to the hospital earlier. We were supposed to visit him in the prison tomorrow, and now we have to visit his dead body in the cemetery.” Iran’s semi-official Fars news agency denied the allegations and said Saber had received medical care before his death. The agency accused the opposition of politicising his death. After disappearing for two weeks in July 2010, Saber’s family were informed that he had been picked up by security officials and taken to Evin. When Haleh Sahabi died at her father’s funeral, Saber – who had served several jail terms in the past – and his fellow inmate Amirkhosro Dalirsani said in a joint statement that they would go on hunger strike in protest over her death and over the brutal crackdown against protesters by the regime. Several human rights organisations have issued statements for the anniversary of the election, and many have expressed concerns for those political prisoners arrested since 2009. The foreign secretary, William Hague, also issued a statement, saying: “Two years after people took to the streets to demand reform, I want it to be known that our attention has not been diverted and we will continue to call on Iran to implement its international human rights obligations.” Iran Middle East William Hague Saeed Kamali Dehghan guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …enlarge Credit: National Partnership for Women and Families Let’s work to make this happen nationwide. From Civil Rights.org In a victory for workers and labor advocates, the Connecticut legislature recently became the first in the nation to pass a statewide mandate for paid sick days. Eighty percent of low-wage workers in the United States do not have any paid sick days, according to the National Partnership for Women & Families . S.B. 913 will require employers with fifty or more employees to provide paid sick leave when workers are ill or need to care for their families. With the implementation of this bill, workers in Connecticut will no longer have to decide between feeding their families and staying home from work due to illness. The really good news about this is that it applies to PART-TIME employees, as well. Too many companies avoid paying benefits to their employees by insisting on a part-time work force. You should have heard the whining and moaning from Connecticut Republican legislators about how this bill was a…wait for it….”job killer.” You know what hurts a business? I stop shopping at stores when I see an obviously sick employee running a cash register. I can shop at home and not catch something. Shopping does not have to cost me days of being ill myself, let alone facing the misery of passing something on to my three kids. There is national legislation on this, called The Healthy Families Act, that would enable all workers in the United States to earn up to seven paid sick days a year. Just one more reason we need to kick out the Republicans in the House and remove Blue Dogs from the Senate.
Continue reading …enlarge New Jersey’s answer to Arnold Schwarzenegger is taking the first steps toward enriching his friends and benefactors by privatizing public schools: NEW YORK (Reuters) – New Jersey Governor Chris Christie announced a pilot program on Thursday that would allow private companies to run public schools in some of the state’s chronically underperforming school districts. The public-private partnership would authorize school management organizations to operate five schools, and would target some of the 100,000 New Jersey students now enrolled in 200 chronically failing schools, the governor’s office said. The state’s teachers union, which has clashed with the Republican governor over cuts to school aid and other issues, said the plan was part of Christie’s “ongoing effort to privatize public education in New Jersey.” Christie has appointed as his acting education commissioner Christopher Cerf, the former president of Edison Schools Inc., the country’s largest private-sector manager of public schools. The company is now called EdisonLearning. Oh yeah, Christopher Cerf! Look at the chart at the top of this post and see if you can follow with this post from Blue Jersey: Billionaire Rupert Murdoch owns Fox News, which promotes both a “corporate education reform” agenda and politicians like Governor Chris Christie to carry that agenda out. Murdoch recently hired Joel Klein, former NYC Schools Chancellor and toady to billionaire Mayor Michael Bloomberg, to run Wireless Generation, Murdoch’s venture into the education business. Klein is the former boss of Christopher Cerf, currently Acting Commissioner of Education under Chris Christie. Cerf’s last edu-business venture before accepting the position was as founder of Global Education Advisors, which “consulted” with the Newark schools on a plan to vastly increase the numbers of charter schools in the city. The $500,000 for the report came from the Broad Foundation, funded by billionaire Eli Broad . The foundation also funded Cerf’s training as an education administrator. Yes, for some odd reason , Cory Booker, Newark’s mayor, refused to disclose who funded the study. Cerf contributed to the campaign of Newark’s Mayor, Cory Booker, who has been intimately and illegally involved in the “reform” of Newark’s schools. Cerf was most recently seen at Booker’s State of the City address. Booker is also working closely with Chris Christie and their good buddy, billionaire Mark Zuckerberg, who freely admits he is “investing” in Booker. Charter schools in NJ are also being heavily promoted by Derrell “The Freman” Bradford. Bradford was recently appointed to an “Educator Effectiveness Task Force” by the Christie Administration, despite his embarrassing lack of education experience or credentials. That task force issued a report that flew directly in the face of all serious research on teacher evaluations.
Continue reading …Co-ordination committees documenting anti-government protests report besieged town attacked from south and east Syrian army tanks rolled into the besieged town of Jisr al-Shughour from two sides on Sunday, accompanied by machine gun fire and loud explosions. Local co-ordination committees, which have been documenting anti-government protests, reported that the town was attacked from the south and east by troops in about 200 vehicles, including tanks. Blasts could be heard as helicopters clattered overhead. The foreign secretary, William Hague, reacted to the attack by calling on the UN security council to proceed with a resolution condemning violence by Syrian troops against their own people. However, in a Sky News interview, he said the likelihood of securing a resolution were on a “knife-edge” because of opposition from neighbouring Lebanon. Hague also ruled out military action, saying there was “no prospect” of the UN authorising air raids. The advance on Jisr al-Shughour was announced just over a week ago as vengeance for what the Syrian government claimed was the killing of 120 members of the military by “armed men”. Activists said the victims were members of the security forces who were shot by regime loyalists after they refused to fire on protesters. The town has now been sealed off by around 15,000 troops. Syrian forces told an Associated Press reporter – who, despite a general ban on foreign journalists entering the country, was invited to travel with them as they entered Jisr al-Shughour – that troops were there to arrest “gunmen” in the largely evacuated town. Jisr al-Shughour, in the north-west of Syria, is normally home to about 40,000 people, but thousands of inhabitants have crossed into Turkey in recent days, taking sanctuary in refugee camps. Many of those who remained behind fled on Sunday if they were able to do so. One of the remaining residents – 39-year-old Hikmat, who was present when the Syrian army rolled in – reported seeing troops firing indiscriminately. He finally fled after being shot in the foot by government troops. The region, near Turkey’s border, has a history of hostility towards the Damascus regime and is posing the biggest challenge yet to President Bashar Assad’s struggle to crush the anti-government revolt. Reports emerged of government troops firing live rounds at large crowds who had gathered last Sunday in a large public garden in the centre of Jisr al-Shughour to mark the funeral of a man killed by security forces the previous day. Abu Tahar, a 29-year-old ambulance driver being treated for gunshot wounds to his back at a hospital in Antakya, Turkey, said he was shot after arriving at the garden to help the wounded, and reported that bullets “were raining from everywhere”. Members of his family, who he has contacted by telephone since being evacuated, have confirmed that large numbers of security forces who had abandoned their posts in the hours following the massacre in the garden were shot at by soldiers loyal to the regime. The Syria-based human rights activist Mustafa Osso said the army was conducting military operations in three areas in the Idlib province, including the towns of Maaret al-Numan, Jisr al-Shughour, and the nearby Jabal al-Zawiya, a mountain that includes several villages. He reported that advancing troops were using heavy weaponry against hundreds of army defectors from the area, and said this was “the biggest and most dangerous wave of defections” since an uprising against Assad’s regime began in mid-March. Syria Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest Bashar Al-Assad William Hague Foreign policy Turkey Martin Chulov guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Co-ordination committees documenting anti-government protests report besieged town attacked from south and east Syrian army tanks rolled into the besieged town of Jisr al-Shughour from two sides on Sunday, accompanied by machine gun fire and loud explosions. Local co-ordination committees, which have been documenting anti-government protests, reported that the town was attacked from the south and east by troops in about 200 vehicles, including tanks. Blasts could be heard as helicopters clattered overhead. The foreign secretary, William Hague, reacted to the attack by calling on the UN security council to proceed with a resolution condemning violence by Syrian troops against their own people. However, in a Sky News interview, he said the likelihood of securing a resolution were on a “knife-edge” because of opposition from neighbouring Lebanon. Hague also ruled out military action, saying there was “no prospect” of the UN authorising air raids. The advance on Jisr al-Shughour was announced just over a week ago as vengeance for what the Syrian government claimed was the killing of 120 members of the military by “armed men”. Activists said the victims were members of the security forces who were shot by regime loyalists after they refused to fire on protesters. The town has now been sealed off by around 15,000 troops. Syrian forces told an Associated Press reporter – who, despite a general ban on foreign journalists entering the country, was invited to travel with them as they entered Jisr al-Shughour – that troops were there to arrest “gunmen” in the largely evacuated town. Jisr al-Shughour, in the north-west of Syria, is normally home to about 40,000 people, but thousands of inhabitants have crossed into Turkey in recent days, taking sanctuary in refugee camps. Many of those who remained behind fled on Sunday if they were able to do so. One of the remaining residents – 39-year-old Hikmat, who was present when the Syrian army rolled in – reported seeing troops firing indiscriminately. He finally fled after being shot in the foot by government troops. The region, near Turkey’s border, has a history of hostility towards the Damascus regime and is posing the biggest challenge yet to President Bashar Assad’s struggle to crush the anti-government revolt. Reports emerged of government troops firing live rounds at large crowds who had gathered last Sunday in a large public garden in the centre of Jisr al-Shughour to mark the funeral of a man killed by security forces the previous day. Abu Tahar, a 29-year-old ambulance driver being treated for gunshot wounds to his back at a hospital in Antakya, Turkey, said he was shot after arriving at the garden to help the wounded, and reported that bullets “were raining from everywhere”. Members of his family, who he has contacted by telephone since being evacuated, have confirmed that large numbers of security forces who had abandoned their posts in the hours following the massacre in the garden were shot at by soldiers loyal to the regime. The Syria-based human rights activist Mustafa Osso said the army was conducting military operations in three areas in the Idlib province, including the towns of Maaret al-Numan, Jisr al-Shughour, and the nearby Jabal al-Zawiya, a mountain that includes several villages. He reported that advancing troops were using heavy weaponry against hundreds of army defectors from the area, and said this was “the biggest and most dangerous wave of defections” since an uprising against Assad’s regime began in mid-March. Syria Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest Bashar Al-Assad William Hague Foreign policy Turkey Martin Chulov guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Arizona congresswoman suffered serious head injuries in January shooting in which six people died and 13 were injured The first photographs of US congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords since she was shot in the head in Tucson in January have been published. The imagesappeared on Gifford’s Facebook page on Sunday. The Republican congresswoman for Arizonahas spent nearly five months in a Houston rehabilitation centre, following the mass shooting on 8 January in which six people were killed and 13 were injured. The only previous time she had appeared in the public since the shooting was on 27 April, when she took a flight to Florida to see her husband, the astronaut Mark Kelly, launched into space. Grainy footage, taken from afar, showed Giffords slowly but purposefully walking up the aircraft’s stairs. Last month, as Kelly was orbiting Earth, doctors operated on Giffords’ skull, finally freeing her from wearing a cumbersome protective helmet that her staff members said she hated. Giffords has made remarkable progress, asking for her favourite foods, singing her favourite songs and learning again how to walk and talk, although she struggles to string sentences together. In an interview with The Arizona Republic, Giffords’ chief-of-staff Pia Carusone said Giffords’ limited speaking ability means she relies primarily on facial expressions and hand gestures to communicate. “She is borrowing upon other ways of communicating. Her words are back more and more now, but she’s still using facial expressions as a way to express. Pointing. Gesturing,” Carusone said. “Add it all together and she’s able to express the basics of what she wants or needs. But, when it comes to a bigger and more complex thought that requires words, that’s where she’s had the trouble.” Carusone also said that if Giffords’ recovery were to plateau now “it would not be nearly the quality of life she had before”. “All that we can hope for is that she won’t plateau today and that she’ll keep going and that when she does plateau, it will be at a place far away from here,” she said. Jared Lee Loughner, 22, has pleaded not guilty to charges stemming from the shooting and is being held in a Missouri jail. A judge declared him incompetent to stand trial, but prosecutors still hope he will eventually be declared fit to answer the charges against him. Gabrielle Giffords United States US politics Republicans Arizona Arizona shooting Gun crime guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …On Friday night’s All Things Considered, NPR’s “conservative” analyst David Brooks appeared with liberal E.J. Dionne and sounded all his typical notes. He repeated against after the mass staff exodus that Newt Gingrich “couldn’t run a 7-Eleven,” with this amendment: ” I think I said on the show a couple of weeks ago the guy couldn't manage a 7-Eleven. I don't think he could manage an ATM machine.” But he also trashed Rush Limbaugh. Brooks insisted Limbaugh and other conservative talk-radio hosts “do not deliver votes.” This being NPR, no one asked Brooks how many votes he delivers in GOP primaries, but the New York Times columnist insisted no one’s going to get elected in the GOP running with a
Continue reading …enlarge Credit: The Professional Left Time for your weekly podcast with The Professional Left, otherwise known as our own Driftglass and Bluegal and on a very sad note, Driftie’s stepfather passed away today; the decision to put him into hospice care being one of the topics in the podcast that they recorded a bit earlier this week. For anyone that did know this already, Driftglass and Fran are getting married a little later on this summer and they are still planning on attending Netroots Nation this year despite the very sad turn of events for them this week. If anyone would like to send them a note with their condolences, well wishes on their upcoming marriage, letting them know if you’re going to be attending Netroots Nation as well, or with comments about the podcast in general, the email for the podcast is proleftpodcast@gmail.com or of course you can just do that here as well or over at either of their personal blogs linked above. They may not have much time to return emails for a while though, so keep that in mind if you decide to send them a message. If you’re on Facebook they also have a page there at The Professional Left Podcast with Driftglass and Blue Gal . You can listen to the archives at http://professionalleft.blogspot.com/ and there is also a donate button there if you’d like to send them a few bucks so they can afford to keep doing their podcasts every week.
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