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Five years later, George Allen apologizes for ‘macaca’ remark

Click here to view this media Former Sen. George Allen (R-VA) apologized Friday for a racist slur he used against a Democratic campaign worker almost five years ago. During his campaign for re-election in 2006, Allen attempted to bully S.R. Sidarth by calling him “macaca.” The term is used by French and Belgians to describe black North Africans. “During our last campaign, I never should have singled out that young man working for my opponent calling him a name,” Allen admitted at the Faith and Family Conference Friday, according to Talking Points Memo . “He was just doing his job.” “I was wrong to do that to him and it diverted our campaign away from the real issues that families care about,” he added. “I did not like losing. I’ve learned though that sometimes you can learn more from losing than you do from winning.” The former Virginia senator, who is running to regain the seat he lost, also said that he had paid a personal price for his remarks. “My family had to endure a lot of taunts and insults because of my mistake, and I never want to have them have to go through something like that again.”

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Gov. Rick Scott Only Cares About Babies Until They’re Born, Cuts Pregnancy Programs

Gov. Rick Scott only cares about fetuses, not actual babies. Florida’s Gov. Rick Scott is someone who should be shunned by decent people , but unfortunately we no longer have a culture that cares about things like decency. Instead, we give them reality TV shows and encourage them to run for president: Last week, Gov. Rick Scott signed the state’s budget, which proposed reductions to health services for women and children. He also vetoed millions more in health service projects set aside specifically for women and children. Programs that aim to lower infant mortality and increase women’s health in the state have seen a major setback since Scott took office. # Among the many vetoes from last week: a program that would add a test for Severe Combined Immunodeficiency Disease , or SCID, to the list of genetic diseases newborns are tested for in Florida. According to Tampa’s Channel 10 news, “lawmakers approved a $2 million start-up plan” to add the $5 test to the list. Scott, though, last week vetoed it, along with other health services for women and children: Dr. John Sleasman, a USF professor and an immunologist at All Children’s Hospital, also finds the veto hard to understand. “I was a little baffled,” he says. # Sleasman says the screening not only saves lives but, in the long run, it would also save the state money. He says if SCID is caught early, a bone marrow transplant can cure a baby. The survival rate is very high. But after three months of age, the risks and costs skyrocket. If an infant is on Medicaid, the state can pay a million dollars for treatment and still not save the infant’s life. Sleasman says Scott, with his red veto marker, marked some babies for death. “It bothers me. By delaying it for a year or two, more babies will die needlessly.” Some experts predict that, without early screening, eight to ten babies will die of SCID in Florida each year. Scott signed a budget drafted by the state Legislature that cut funding for Healthy Start coalitions in Florida about 15 percent across the board. Healthy Start also lost $700,000 for programs in Orange and Gadsden counties that would have provided at-home nurse assistance for at-risk first-time mothers. #

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Roman Abramovich upsets the Venetians as he blocks the view

Russian billionaire and girlfriend Dasha Zhukova are major players at Biennale, but locals call mega-yacht ‘idiotic’ Rock stars tethered their jet skis to the back of it during the film festival in Cannes, its clean lines have impressed quayside onlookers in Antibes, and England footballer Frank Lampard is reportedly set to propose to his television presenter girlfriend on board. There can be no doubt that Roman Abramovich’s enormous yacht Luna is enjoying the spotlight this summer as it tours the Mediterranean. But the citizens of Venice, a city more familiar than most with extravagant displays of wealth down the centuries, are not impressed. The Russian oligarch’s £115m, 377ft behemoth moored unannounced last week at one of the city’s most stunning lagoon locations, as Abramovich and his girlfriend, Dasha Zhukova, pitched up for the Venice Biennale. Local residents, accustomed to stunning views over St Mark’s Basin, found themselves staring straight at the twin helipads and bulletproof windows of the vessel, which dwarfs all rival yachts at what has become an annual reunion of some of the most expensive private vessels in the world. First to complain was Venice’s mayor, Giorgio Orsoni, who is threatening a new tax on vessels such as the Luna. “The boats are getting too big and blocking the view,” he said. “These yachts are showing up to see Venice for free, but St

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Wales oil refinery explosion victims named

The identities of four people killed in the blast at a Chevron facility in Pembroke Dock have been released by police Police have named the four people killed in a blast that ripped through an oil refinery in Wales. Dennis Riley, 52, Robert Broome, 48, and Andrew Jenkins, 33, all from Milford Haven, and Julie Jones from Pembroke, were killed in the Chevron explosion on Thursday. Dyfed Powys police said a fifth person is in a critical but stable condition in hospital, but did not release their name. A joint police and Health and Safety Executive investigation is being carried out into the blast after it tore through the refinery in Pembroke Dock, south Wales. Maintenance work had been carried out on a storage tank which exploded at about 6.20pm on Thursday, damaging an adjacent vessel. Detective Chief Inspector Martin Davies, the senior investigating officer, said: “The bodies of the deceased were removed from the scene Friday evening. We are now working with forensic experts to formally identify the bodies.” The identification process was hampered by the nature of the incident and it is thought it could take several weeks. “Our specially trained officers have been supporting the families and next of kin of those who tragically lost their lives,” Ch Det Insp Davies said. “A fifth casualty remains in a critical but stable condition in hospital. The family have asked police not to release the name or any other details at this stage, and the media are kindly asked to respect the privacy of all the families affected by this incident at this difficult time.” Ch Det Insp Davies said family liaison officers made contact with each family’s next of kin as soon as the dead were identified. He added Chevron was urged not to directly contact the victims’ families in the immediate aftermath of the incident. “Due to the processes the police need to follow in the early stages of such an investigation we asked Chevron not to contact the families directly, but to liaise with ourselves and we would pass on any messages,” he said. “This is standard practice in such an incident.” He said the request was to be withdrawn Saturday afternoon, and the company will be able to get in touch with the families. Wales Chevron Oil and gas companies Oil Commodities guardian.co.uk

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Yemen: Injured President Saleh heads to Saudi Arabia for medical treatment

Ali Abdullah Saleh’s departure follows rocket attack on compound and could complicate position if he tries to return Yemen’s President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who was wounded in a rocket attack on his compound on Friday, was expected to arrive in Saudi Arabia on Saturday night for medical treatment. Reports by the BBC and al-Arabiya television that Saleh had left the Yemeni capital Sana’a for Saudi Arabia were originally denied. But an unnamed Yemeni official later said that Saleh had accepted the offer. The speculation about Saleh’s whereabouts comes amid an escalating crisis in which nearly 200 people have been killed during two weeks of battles. Any departure by Saleh would make it extremely difficult for him to return to Yemen, where he is fighting a four-month uprising against his rule. Yemen’s state TV said six officials, including the prime minister and the speakers of both houses of parliament, had gone to Saudi Arabia for medical treatment. But one Yemeni official told Reuters: “Saleh is still in Sana’a.” He added: “He had suffered minor wounds to his head and, I believe, his face.” While the deputy information minister, Abdu al-Janadi, spoke of only “scratches to his face”, there were indications that Saleh’s injuries might have been more severe. Hisham Sharaf, minister of trade and industry, said he had met Saleh on Friday night at a hospital where he was treated for minor wounds before returning to the presidential palace. He said the president had seemed defiant in the face of the violence. “His morale was very high. The strike that doesn’t break you makes you stronger. The strike made him more adamant that he won’t hand over the country until he is sure it will be safe and clear of militias,” he said. Saleh, in his late 60s, was first taken to a military hospital while officials promised that he would soon appear in public. But by late Saturday morning state television had aired only an audio message from the president, illustrated by an old photograph. “If you are well, I am well,” Saleh said in the brief address to Yemenis. On Saturday intermittent blasts and sporadic fire fights punctuated the pre-dawn hours in Sana’a. As the sun rose, the roads were clogged with civilians attempting to flee the violence. “There are bullets everywhere and the explosions terrify us. It’s impossible to stay,” said Ali Ahmed, a resident. Saleh, a political survivor who has clung to power for nearly 33 years, said in his audio address that an “outlaw gang” linked to the Hashid tribe was behind the attack on him. The Yemeni official told Reuters: “It’s not easy for the president. He has lost people close to him and who were sitting next to him when it happened.” Defying world pressure, Saleh has reneged three times on a deal brokered by Gulf states for him to quit in return for immunity from prosecution, even as he loses support at home. What began as a pro-democracy protest has turned into a power struggle between two of Yemen’s most powerful families: Saleh’s, which dominates the security forces, and the al-Ahmar clan, which leads the strongest tribal confederation, known as the Hashid. The confederation is grouped around 10 tribes across the north. The attack on the president is likely to heighten an increasingly brutal fight between Saleh’s forces and heavily armed tribesmen loyal to al-Ahmar. The al-Ahmars were once uneasy allies of Saleh, and their Hashid confederation was key to his hold on power. But Sadeq al-Ahmar and his nine brothers have grown resentful of Saleh’s policy of promoting his relatives to dominant positions, particularly in the security forces. Yemen Middle East Saudi Arabia Arab and Middle East unrest Protest Peter Beaumont guardian.co.uk

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Message Synchronicity: Two Key Democrats Amplify Leader Pelosi – “Take Medicare Off The Table”

Click here to view this media House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi has been leading the Democratic charge for protecting Medicare . Earlier in the week in an interview with ABC she made it clear: benefit cuts “absolutely” off the table : Pelosi said that cuts to seniors’ benefits are “absolutely” off the table in the ongoing deficit reduction negotiations, but suggested that Congress could improve Medicare by working to eliminate fraud and also by giving the Secretary of Health and Human Services unilateral authority to negotiate for lower prices for the endangered entitlement program. “When you talk about Medicare, the first thing I would do if I ruled the world would be to allow the secretary of HHS to negotiate for lower prices. That would save tens of billions of dollars,” Pelosi said. “The last place we need to go—we don’t ever have to go there—is to what the Republicans are doing: Eliminate Medicare [and] make seniors pay more for less as you give tax breaks to big oil and say that’s how we have to reduce the deficit. We don’t subscribe to that.” On Friday, Leader Pelosi was joined by two key Democratic Senators from the other side of the Hill. Senators Tom Harkin and Jack Reed also fired at the Republicans with the same message: Take Medicare off the table! “Our message,” Harkin said, “is simply: Take Medicare off the table. Let’s solve the default crisis. And let’s talk about fixing the system so that our middle class has a little bit better shape.” “Medicare is such a complicated, complex topic,” Reed said. “To do it right, this is not the proper arena for that kind of debate.” Give Democrats a lot of credit here for being totally in sync with each other. This is happening at the same time when President Barack Obama is pledging to stay firm against extension of Bush tax cuts (hope he can hold the line this time). As everyone knows by now the job numbers came out today which should serve as a “wake-up call” for all elected officials in DC . These guys need to drop their obsession with austerity and get back to what really matters to all of us: creating jobs in our communities. Good to see at least number of prominent Democrats stepping up and not falling for the hostage taking shenanigans of Congressional Republicans . Let’s hope they stay firm. This is not the time to blink .

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England 2-2 Switzerland | Euro 2012 match report

England dropped two Group G points at home to unfancied Switzerland, though after starting the game with the wrong team and a much too cautious approach, rescuing a draw felt like a minor victory after going two goals down in the first half. Had Darren Bent finished more reliably in the absence of the suspended Wayne Rooney England could easily have had all three points, such was the extent of their recovery once Ashley Young and Stewart Downing were added to the attack. Barring any more nasty surprises like the manner of both Swiss goals and how close Admir Mehmedi came to snatching a winner right at the end, the key fixture in deciding who qualifies automatically from the group is still likely to be England’s visit to Montenegro in October. This disappointing result, and performance, just puts that bit more pressure on England ahead of their next competitive match, in Bulgaria a month earlier. Considering Switzerland are supposed to have problems in the goalscoring department they managed to give Joe Hart’s goal a peppering in the first half-hour. They did not manage a goal from open play, so perhaps that is the problem, yet Hart was required to make stops from Eren Derdiyok, Gökhan Inler and Xherdan Shaqiri in the opening 20 minutes, the middle one a particularly important save as the Swiss captain’s shot had taken a significant late deflection off Rio Ferdinand. Diego Benaglio in the visitors’ goal did have to make the first save of the game, when a Frank Lampard corner found Glen Johnson at the far post in the second minute, yet after that he was mostly a spectator as Hart did all the diving around. The trouble from England’s point of view seemed to be that Fabio Capello’s surprise choice of James Milner and Theo Walcott ahead of Young and Downing was not really working from either an attacking or defensive point of view. The amount of time both spent tracking back into their own half suggested they had been told to help out the back four, yet Switzerland were still doing most of the pressing. The England attack was ineffective because Bent was effectively playing up front on his own. Not only that, but a couple of poor touches and one wasted opportunity from a Scott Parker interception suggested he might not be having one of his better days. Things looked up for England when Ferdinand headed narrowly over from Lampard’s cross on the half-hour, yet withing a couple of minutes the Swiss took the lead. It was the sort of silly goal that should never be conceded at international level, yet all too often is by England. Tranquillo Barnetta swung in a free-kick, Ferdinand and Johan Djourou jumped for the ball and missed, and Hart realised too late that it was going to be up to him to cover the bottom corner. Never let it be said that England are a team who do things by halves, however. Almost unbelievably, they let the same thing happen again three minutes later. The aghast expression had hardly left Capello’s face from the first time when Parker brought down Reto Ziegler and Barnetta stepped up again to make Hart look even more foolish at his near post. The goalkeeper did not get much protection from a wall (Milner and Walcott) that obligingly parted to let the shot through, yet even so he was caught unprepared by the accuracy of Barnetta’s shot. Capello now looked as if he was going to explode in his seat, though at least England pulled back a goal before the interval, Lampard scoring confidently from the spot after Djourou had brought down Wilshere in the area. The Italian sent on Young for the second half, not for Walcott or Milner, but for Lampard. Young stationed himself ahead of Parker and Wilshere in a more central and more advanced position than Lampard had occupied, and though Capello would probably deny it, England were now set up 4-4-2. The coach deserves credit for correcting his earlier mistake and making the switch, whatever the formational theory, because Young scored an excellent equaliser after five minutes on the pitch, sweeping a crisp, low shot past Benaglio after Leighton Baines had laid back Milner’s cross in what looked suspiciously like England’s first decent move of the afternoon. A superb, threaded pass from Wilshere put Bent one on one with the Swiss goalkeeper midway through the second half, but though the striker made exactly the right run Benaglio was alert to the situation and came to the edge of his area to snuff out the chance. At least England were doing most of the attacking now and when Walcott made a darting run into the area Young scooped a shot over the bar a little wastefully from the edge of the box. That was nothing, however, compared with the sitter Bent missed a few moments later, after Benaglio spilled Young’s shot in his direction to leave the striker a clear sight of an open goal. It was the moment for Bent to seize his fourth England goal, repay Capello’s faith in him and finally establish a reputation for clinical rather than erratic finishing, and Wembley groaned as one when he lofted the ball over the bar with his left foot. Young could not convert a more difficult chance off Milner before the end, but Bent’s miss will be remembered for costing England two points, especially if things go wrong from here. Let’s hope Rooney’s rug rethink is more convincing than his striking replacement, though if blame is ultimately to be apportioned, the unnecessary yellow card in Wales that allowed Rooney to book a hair appointment instead of helping ensure Euro 2012 qualification might be the best place to start. Euro 2012 England Switzerland Paul Wilson guardian.co.uk

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Watch NRA heads explode: Al Qaeda spokesman urges terrorists to buy lots of guns at gun shows
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Lawrence Eagleburger, former US secretary of state, dies aged 80

Headed the state department from August 1992 to January 1993, capping a diplomatic career that spanned eight presidents Former US secretary of state Lawrence Eagleburger, who served under George Bush Sr in the early 1990s, died on Saturday at the age of 80, a spokeswoman for his family said. He died in Charlottesville, Virginia, after a short illness, the spokeswoman said. Eagleburger headed the state department from August 1992 to January 1993, capping a diplomatic career that spanned eight presidents, both Democrats and Republicans. Barack Obama said Eagleburger had “helped our nation navigate the pivotal days during the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Cold War”. Eagleburger entered the foreign service in 1957, but his career took off when he became an assistant to Richard Nixon’s national security adviser, Henry Kissinger, in 1969. Self-described as a moderate Republican, Eagleburger was widely regarded as a tough pragmatist in foreign affairs. After Republicans lost the White House to Jimmy Carter in 1976, Eagleburger was asked to stay on and served as ambassador to Yugoslavia in the Democratic administration. He also served in the state department during the Reagan administration, leaving in 1984 to become president of Kissinger Associates, a consulting firm founded by Kissinger. Bush brought him back to government in 1989 as deputy secretary of state, even though he had not been a member of Bush’s inner circle of advisers. Eagleburger became acting secretary when Baker left to run Bush’s re-election campaign in August 1992 and was sworn in officially on 8 December 1992 for the last month-and-a-half of Bush’s presidential term. In 2006 Eagleburger was a late addition to the Iraq Study Group, that gave a report on the Iraq war to George W Bush. An avuncular, cane-carrying figure who suffered from chronic asthma and a muscle disorder, Eagleburger was a heavy smoker, and known as crusty, charming and wisecracking. He named each of his three sons Lawrence – but all with different middle names. Asked to explain that move he reportedly said: “First of all, it was ego. And secondly, I wanted to screw up the social security system.” US politics United States Republicans guardian.co.uk

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Yemeni officials deny president is being treated for injuries in Saudi Arabia

Authorities insist Ali Abdullah Saleh is still in Sana’a with minor head wounds from an attack on his compound Yemeni officials have denied reports that President Ali Abdullah Saleh has travelled to Saudi Arabia to receive treatment for a wound sustained in an attack on his compound . Al Arabiya reported that the president was taken to a Saudi hospital with six other Yemeni politicians who were injured in the strike. But Yemen’s state TV said though the prime minister and the speakers of both houses of parliament had travelled, the president had not. “Saleh is still in Sana’a,” a Yemeni official told Reuters. “He had suffered minor wounds to his head and, I believe, his face.” Any departure by Saleh could make it extremely difficult to him to return to Yemen, where he is fighting a four-month uprising that has brought the country to the brink of civil war. Hisham Sharaf, minister of trade and industry, said he met Saleh on Friday night and that the president remained defiant in the face of escalating violence. “He was in very high morale,” said Sharaf. “The strike that doesn’t break you makes you stronger. The strike made him more adamant that he won’t hand over the country until he is sure it will be safe and clear of militias.” He said he spoke with Saleh at a military hospital on Friday night where he was treated for minor wounds before returning to the presidential palace. But a senior official in the president’s office said Saleh remains in the military hospital. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to the press. Presidential spokesman Ahmed al-Sufi declined to comment. He accused the United States of orchestrating the attack on Saleh, saying all signs pointed to American involvement “because of the precision and the timing”. Tribal and medical officials said, meanwhile, that 10 tribesmen were killed and 35 injured in overnight fighting in the Hassaba neighborhood, headquarters of opposition Sheik Sadeq al-Ahmar. A tribal leader said street fighting had lasted until dawn. Many of the compound’s buildings and surrounding houses have already been heavily damaged by days of bombardment. Government and rebel forces exchanged rocket fire, damaging a contested police station. The rockets rained down on streets housing government buildings that had been taken over by tribesmen. Since violence erupted in the city on 23 May, residents have been hiding in basements as the two sides fight for control of government ministries and hammer one another in artillery duels and gun battles, rattling neighborhoods and sending palls of smoke over the city. Seven guards were killed in the rebel strike on the mosque in the presidential palace compound where Saleh and the other officials were at prayer. The news agency said the prime minister, a deputy prime minister, the president’s top security adviser, and the two heads of parliament were sent to Saudi Arabia by air in the early hours of Saturday. The security officer was reportedly in serious condition. Inspired by uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia, protesters have been trying unsuccessfully since February to oust Saleh with a wave of peaceful protests that have brought out hundreds of thousands daily in Sana’a and other cities. Now the crisis has transformed into a power struggle between two of Yemen’s most powerful families: Saleh’s, which dominates the security forces, and the al-Ahmar clan, which leads Yemen’s strongest tribal confederation, known as the Hashid. The confederation is grouped around 10 tribes across the north. Yemen Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Saudi Arabia guardian.co.uk

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