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House Republicans want to bring back Elizabeth Warren for yet another round of lying abuse

Click here to view this media We all saw what happened the last time Elizabeth Warren testified before a Republican-led House committee : She was repeatedly called a liar by the committee’s chairman — a bank-financed wingnut, Rep. Patrick McHenry of North Carolina — that day, including on a CNBC appearance before the hearing. Now Republican Rep. Darrell Issa wants her to come back for a full day’s grilling : Issa’s letter said he wanted to question Warren again to give lawmakers more time to grill her. He cited her “unwillingness to provide direct and responsive answers to a number of important questions” at last week’s hearing, according to the letter. The California Republican asked her to clear an entire day in June for the hearing. The hearing would be Warren’s third appearance before a GOP-controlled House panel this year. “The American people have a right to know how you intend to organize and operate the CFPB,” Issa said in the letter. Warren, for her part, played it cool: Warren “looks forward to her next appearance before the committee,” said Jennifer Howard, spokeswoman for the consumer bureau. “As the former chair of the Congressional Oversight Panel, Professor Warren appreciates the importance of and value in checks and balances,” Howard said. Warren has Republicans so freaked out that they’re refusing to adjourn so that President Obama can’t make her a recess appointment. Mitch McConnell thinks she “could be a serious threat to our financial system”. And they know they already have the complicity of the Beltway media in hand — since the McHenry smear was treated by the press as just another political tiff, as CJR’s Ryan Chittum explains: So somebody’s got to be wrong, right? Who is it? We’re not told. So readers end up with McHenry says Warren lied, and Warren denies it. Thanks for nothing. The Wall Street Journal was no better, nor was Reuters, The Hill, or almost any of the other mainstream news stories I read. But for anyone half paying attention, much less a beat reporter, this is not a close call: McHenry is full of it. Moreover, Chittum notes, this is a clear case of the press simply repeating Republican lies and treating them as mere versions of the truth: There’s no way around it: By passing on McHenry’s already debunked claims without fact checking them, the press lent credence to falsehoods. In other words, it’s helping politicians lie and perpetuating a smear against Warren. There’s no excuse for that. Oh, we know their excuse: “Hey, everybody does it.” It’s just a profoundly lame one, that’s all.

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China brands Google ‘snotty-nosed’ as cyber feud intensifies

Military portrays China as victim rather than perpetrator of cyber-attack and vows to strengthen online defences China must bolster its online defences in the battle for public opinion, two military officers said on Friday as Beijing sought to portray itself as a victim rather than a perpetrator of cyberwarfare. Two days after the US-based search engine Google revealed China was the origin of a high-profile hacking attack , senior colonel Ye Zheng and his colleague Zhao Baoxian of the People’s Liberation Army emphasised the need for a robust internet strategy. “Just as nuclear warfare was the strategic war of the industrial era, cyberwarfare has become the strategic war of the information era, a form of battle that is massively destructive and concerns the life and death of nations,” the strategists from the Academy of Military Sciences wrote in the China Youth Daily. The article did not mention Google, but it comes amid a stream of angry rebuttals to the company’s accusation that the hacking originated in China. The Chinese foreign ministry said on Thursday that the claims revealed “ulterior motives”. An editorial in the nationalist Global Times newspaper went further, describing Google as “snotty-nosed” and resentful about its failure to secure a larger share of the market in China. Neither Google nor the US government has directly blamed Chinese authorities for the hacking incidents against several hundred senior US and South Korean officials, human rights activists and journalists. But the search engine traced the attacks to Jinan, the provincial capital of Shandong and home to a school that has previously been suspected of hosting hackers . US secretary of state Hillary Clinton described the allegations as “very serious”. Chinese officials acknowledged last week that their army – like that of several other nations – had established a cyberwarfare unit. Known as the “cyber blue team”, the group of 30 officers is reportedly organised under the Guangdong military command in the south of China and has a multi-million pound budget, the Global Times reported. “Cyber-attacks have become an international problem affecting both civilian and military areas,” China’s defence ministry spokesman, Geng Yansheng, was quoted as saying at a rare media briefing. “China is relatively weak in cyber security and has often been targeted. This temporary programme is aimed at improving our defences against such attacks.” The unit and others are said to have already been engaged in simulations of cyberwarfare. Rather than hacking attacks aimed at obtaining private or secret information, Ye and Zhao said China was threatened by psychological operations that used the internet to shift public opinion against governments. They cited the “domino effect” seen in the Middle East and north Africa created by Facebook, Twitter and other social media that are banned by China’s great firewall of censorship. “Cyberwarfare is an entirely new mode of battle that is invisible and silent, and it is active not only in wars and conflicts, but also flares in the everyday political, economic, military, cultural and scientific activities,” the article went on to say. China Google Censorship United States Jonathan Watts guardian.co.uk

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Ratko Mladic, truculent and smirking, faces his accusers at The Hague

After 16-year wait, Srebrenica’s women come face to face with commander accused of slaughtering their men and boys Munira Subasic last saw Ratko Mladic at Srebrenica in 1995, when she begged him to leave her ill son alone. On Friday, 16 years on and with her son still missing, presumed dead, in a massacre that claimed more than 7,000 lives, Subasic came face to face again with the Bosnian Serb commander accused of the atrocity. “He lied to me and took my son to his death,” she said outside the international criminal tribunal for the former Yugoslavia at The Hague, where Mladic

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Israel government ‘reckless and irresponsible’ says ex-Mossad chief

Meir Dagan attacks Binyamin Netanyahu for aggression towards Iran, and for failing to make any progress with the Palestinians The former head of Israel’s spy service has launched an unprecedented attack on the country’s current government, describing it as “irresponsible and reckless”, and has praised Arab attempts to reach an Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement. Meir Dagan stepped down as the head of Mossad six months ago but has gone on the offensive in a series of briefings with journalists and public appearances because he feels that Israel’s security is being mismanaged by Binyamin Netanyahu, the prime minister, and Ehud Barak, the defence minister. One newspaper quotes him as saying that he, as head of Mossad, Yuval Diskin, the head of Sin Bet – the internal security agency, and Gabi Ashkenazi, the head of the army, could prevent Netanyahu and Barak from making mistakes but all three have left their positions and have been replaced by men chosen by the current government. “I decided to speak because when I was in office, Diskin, Ashkenazi and I could block any dangerous adventure. Now I am afraid that there is no one to stop Bibi [Netanyahu] and Barak,” said Dagan. Upon leaving his post, Dagan publicly warned against Israel attacking Iran to stop it from acquiring nuclear weapons. In his latest comments, he said that if Israel attacks Iran, it will find itself at the centre of a regional war that would endanger the state’s existence. Dagan’s intervention is dangerous for Netanyahu because it comes from the right wing of Israeli opinion rather than the left, where the prime minister would expect criticism. Dagan has been in charge of aggressive Israeli actions abroad in recent years, that have included assassinations in Lebanon, Syria and Dubai and an air attack on a suspected nuclear reactor in Syria. He also criticised Israel’s failure to offer any initiative to resolve the conflict with the Palestinians . The absence of any workable plan, he said, will leave Israel in a dangerous and weak situation if the Palestinians push for UN recognition of a state later this year. Dagan also endorsed Saudi Arabia’s peace plan which offered Israel normal relations with all Arab countries if it reaches a peace agreement with the Palestinians. Leading columnist Ari Shavit summarised Dagan’s point of view in the Ha’aretz newspaper: “Dagan is extremely concerned about September 2011. He is not afraid that tens of thousands of demonstrators may overrun the settlements. He is afraid that Israel’s subsequent isolation will push its leaders to the wall and cause them to take reckless action against Iran.” Ben Caspit of the Maariv newspaper wrote: “He is one of the most rightwing militant people ever born here … who ate Arabs for breakfast, lunch and dinner. “When this man says that the leadership has no vision and is irresponsible, we should stop sleeping soundly at night.” Dagan was quoted in the newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth describing Netanyahu and Barak as “irresponsible and reckless individuals”. Dagan’s criticism of Netanyahu comes when the prime minister is enjoying popular support following his trip to Washington and his speech to Congress. Opinion polls suggest that Netanyahu has a nine-point lead over his nearest challenger and his Likud party is the most popular in the country. However, Dagan’s intervention suggests that while Netanyahu is seen as an able performer in public, he believes that behind the scenes he is less astute. A spokesman for the prime minister said that he would not discuss Dagan’s comments. However members of the cabinet told the Israeli media: “Dagan was out of line on the Iranian issue. This damages deterrence, because the military option must be on the table as a credible option after sanctions. “If you come and say, ‘we can’t attack Iran, it’s impossible,’ you project weakness to the Iranians and make it look like you don’t have the courage to do it, and that they can do whatever they want. “More seriously, it sends a message to the world that they can take their foot off the gas pedal of sanctions.” Israel The Mossad Palestinian territories Middle East Conal Urquhart guardian.co.uk

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Britons unmoved by pro-cycling campaigns

Most regard bicycles not as legitimate form of transport but as children’s toys or preserve of hobbyists, research finds Years of government efforts to promote cycling have had almost no impact on a sceptical population who largely view bikes as either children’s toys or the preserve of Lycra-clad hobbyists, a university study has found. The coalition has pledged more than £500m over five years on pro-cycling efforts. But the research indicates these reach only the small proportion of people already interested in cycling, leaving others unmoved. The study, which investigates in depth why people in four towns or cities around England cycle – or, in the main, don’t cycle – is still being completed. The academics behind them will gather in Leicester this weekend to present their preliminary findings, which make depressing reading for anyone hopeful the UK could one day have a Dutch-style mass cycling culture. “Many people barely recognise the bicycle as a legitimate mode of transport; it is either a toy for children or a vehicle fit only for the poor and/or strange,” Dave Horton, of Lancaster University, wrote in an interim assessment of the Understanding Walking and Cycling study . “For them, cycling is a bit embarrassing, they fail to see its purpose, and have no interest in integrating it into their lives, certainly on a regular basis.” The three-year project, which also involved Oxford Brookes and Leeds universities, used questionnaires sent to a large numbers of households as well as more in-depth studies about the everyday transport decisions made by dozens of families, during which researchers spent three months each in Lancaster, Leeds, Leicester and Worcester. A key finding was that the small numbers of people who do try cycling tend to be intimidated by overwhelmingly car-oriented urban layouts. Even to experienced riders these often resemble “a dangerous obstacle course”, Horton said. “The minority of people who cycle in English cities tend to do so despite, not because of, existing conditions. Some people try cycling, but are quickly put off.” Many see cycling as, at best, something reserved for country weekends rather than everyday travel. The few who do ride in cities tend to be keen enthusiasts, thus reinforcing the niche image.”Regrettably, we did not find this mass of people on the threshold of change, who only needed a little push to start cycling as a daily means of getting around,,” said Griet Scheldeman, also of Lancaster University. “The hardy, Lycra-clad cyclists confirm that cycling is a very skilled practice, from which most people immediately distance themselves. So far, cycling promotion still reaches mainly that smallish part of the population that does not really need that much convincing.” Another cycling study will report its interim findings this weekend. Cycling Cultures , involving academics at the University of East London (UEL), took the parallel approach of investigating what happens in four areas with relatively high levels of cycling: Bristol, Cambridge, Hull and Hackney in east London. While it identified positive initiatives such as office bike pools it also found many concerns, for example cyclists’ complaints of harassment by drivers. While some towns and cities, notably London, have seen increases in cyclist numbers over recent years the overall figure for the national percentage of journeys made by bike has remained at about 2%. The equivalent for the Netherlands is more than 25%. The Lancaster study concludes that even training the young to ride safely achieves little while road conditions remain so unfriendly. The only way to bring in mass cycling, the researchers argue, would be a series of ambitious, hugely costly – and seemingly unlikely – measures to reshape towns and cities. Chief among these would be to build well-made, continuous, segregated cycle routes on all major urban roads and encourage people out of cars by restricting traffic speeds and parking. Another reform would be a European-style “strict liability” law in which the automatic assumption of responsibility would rest with the less vulnerable road user. It was vital, Horton said, that cycling advocates got behind the idea of segregated lanes: “The cycling world has in the past been divided over the best way of growing cycling. But if we want to achieve high levels of cycling across our cities, this has to change. “Perhaps above all, and probably most controversially, our research has made it very clear to us that in order to create a mass cycling culture in English cities we need to segregate cycling from motorised traffic along main roads. Combined with a range of other measures, very high quality segregated cycle routes could push English city cycling from its currently marginal status towards a mass phenomenon.” The cycle campaign group CTC said it agreed that many roads were “thoroughly off-putting” for cyclists but that a mass programme of high-quality bike lanes – which some estimates put at £800,000 per kilometre – remained unlikely given the cycling lobby’s lack of political clout. “This new research certainly opens up some really interesting debates about how to redesign our roads and streets to get more people cycling,” said Roger Geffen, CTC’s campaigns manager. “But the even bigger question is how to mobilise the political will to make this cycle-friendly future a reality.” The transport minister, Norman Baker, said the government was committed to encouraging more people to cycle though Bikeability and the £560m sustainable transport fund. “Like another Norman before me I am keen to see more people get on their bikes,” he said. The Guardian’s bike blog book, Cyclebabble: Bloggers on Biking , is out now Cycling Transport policy Transport Fitness Peter Walker guardian.co.uk

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John Edwards indicted over money used to hide affair

Federal grand jury indicts former US candidate over allegations he misused campaign funds The former US presidential hopeful John Edwards has been indicted by a federal grand jury for allegedly using $925,000 in illegal campaign contributions to keep his mistress in hiding during the peak of his 2008 campaign for the White House. The case of USA v Johnny Reid Edwards contains six counts, including conspiracy, four counts of illegal campaign contributions and one count of false statements. The indictment said the payments were a scheme to protect Edwards’ White House ambitions. “A centrepiece of Edwards’ candidacy was his public image as a devoted family man,” the indictment said. “Edwards knew that public revelation of the affair and the pregnancy would destroy his candidacy by, among other things, undermining Edwards’ presentation of himself as a family man and by forcing his campaign to divert personnel and resources away from other campaign activities to respond to criticism and media scrutiny regarding the affair and pregnancy.” The indictment and an arrest warrant were filed in Greensboro, North Carolina, where his campaign was headquartered. Negotiations between Edwards’ lawyers and federal prosecutors to settle on a charge to which Edwards was willing to plead guilty continued on Thursday, but proved fruitless, according to people with knowledge of the negotiations. Prosecutors had insisted on a plea to a felony, which would endanger Edwards’ ability to keep his licence to practice law. An Edwards spokeswoman said she was not aware of the filing and declined immediate comment. The indictment is the culmination of a federal investigation that lasted more than two years and scoured through virtually every corner of Edwards’ political career, including his political action committees and whether he did anything improper during his time in the US Senate, which ended seven years ago. The centrepiece of the investigation has long been the hundreds of thousands of dollars privately provided by two wealthy Edwards supporters his former campaign finance chairman, Fred Baron, and Rachel “Bunny” Mellon, the 100-year-old widow of the banking heir Paul Mellon. The indictment said that money went to keep Edwards’ mistress, Rielle Hunter, and her baby in hiding in 2007 and 2008, during the apex of the Democratic nomination campaign. The indictment refers to $725,000 in payments made by Mellon and another $200,000 made by Baron. It said the money was used to pay for Hunter’s living and medical expenses and for chartered airfare, luxury hotels and rental for a house in Santa Barbara, California, to keep her hidden from the public. It accused Edwards of lying when he told the media he did not know about any payments. A former campaign staffer, Andrew Young, who initially claimed paternity of Hunter’s child, has said Edwards was aware of the private financial support that helped keep the mistress secluded. Prosecutors believe the private gifts should have been considered campaign contributions because they aided his candidacy. The case opens a new front in how the federal government oversees the flow of money around political campaigns. A lawyer for Edwards said last week that the government’s case was “novel and untested” and argued that the government’s theory was wrong on both the facts and the law. Edwards and Hunter began their relationship in 2006, just as the 2004 Democratic vice-presidential nominee was plotting a second run for the White House. She was hired to shoot behind-the-scenes video footage of the prospective candidate. Edwards’ political action committee and a nonprofit affiliated with him both paid Hunter’s video-production firm about $100,000 for the work. Edwards initially denied having an affair with Hunter but admitted it in the summer of 2008. He then denied being the father of her child before confessing in 2010. His wife, Elizabeth, died of cancer in December. Young has said that Edwards agreed in 2007 to solicit money directly from Mellon. The long-time Edwards aide, now estranged from his former boss, said he received hundreds of thousands of dollars in cheuqes from Mellon, some hidden in boxes of chocolate. Mellon and Edwards are still friendly and had lunch together at her Virginia estate last week. Baron, who was a wealthy trial lawyer, said a few months before he died in 2008 that he helped Young and Hunter move across the country to protect them from media scrutiny. He said Edwards was not aware of the aid, but Young has claimed overa Edwards did know. John Edwards Democrats US politics US elections 2008 United States guardian.co.uk

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House GOP: Cut Medicare Or The Economy Gets It

enlarge Democrats need to do an ad with nothing but this ransom note and the following quotes. Via Politico : “Of course, it’s dangerous,” a House Republican close to Boehner said of the politics of a government default. “ But it’s dangerous for everybody, especially the president. At the end of the day, [Obama] will have to give in. ” “Who has egg on their face if there is a sovereign debt crisis, House Republicans or the president?” asked another senior GOP lawmaker. As Matt Yglesias notes , history seems to point toward sitting Presidents taking the hit for recalcitrant Congresses, particularly when they’re Republican obstructors: That said, the evidence from political science does appear to suggest that if Republican intransigence destroys the American economy, that t he voters will respond to this by punishing the incumbent President and electing a Republican . [begin rant] I have had just about enough of this nonsense. Forcing a sovereign debt crisis for cynical political gain is not just unpatriotic. It’s treasonous. This is not a political football, it’s serious business and the Very Serious People inside the Beltway had better come to their damn senses and figure that out. You don’t hold hostages in this situation. I realize Republicans have gotten their way by stomping their tiny little hooves and bleating that they must, simply must, have concessions before they will do the right thing for this country, but the debt ceiling is not in that category. It’s a little like telling the Visa folks that you’ll refuse to pay your balance until they lower your interest rate. Good luck with that. Same thing here, and it’s time for these idiots and asshats in Congress to start acting like Americans first and Republicans second. [/end rant] Desert Beacon agrees, and offers her thoughts on the strategy: Another perspective might be that the national debt is the perfect opportunity for the Republicans to cash in on their Thirty Year Promise. The 1980 Republican Platform made the promise: “Rather, we must offer broad new incentives to labor and capital to stimulate a great outpouring of private goods and services and to create an abundance of jobs. F rom America’s grass roots to the White House we will stand united as a party behind a bold program of tax rate reductions, spending restraints, and regulatory reforms that will inject new life into the economic bloodstream of this country. ” Look carefully at the three elements of the bold program: (1) tax rate reductions; (2) spending restraints; and (3) regulatory reforms. And, the Republicans promised their actions would be BOLD. They certainly are. However, these weren’t promises made in the interests of Main Street America, they were promises made to Wall Street and Corporate America. The only way to turn the Republican treason away from a political loss for the President is for that ransom note to be circulated far and wide, to simplify the message and boil it down to this: Republicans are holding the US credit rating hostage until seniors’ health care is cut, and cut deeply. Forget throwing Grandma off the cliff; they want to throw the whole damn country down it.

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The game of political chicken kabuki needs to come to an end, and soon — because Moody’s just put the hammer down on all the children. NY Times: Moody’s Investors Service warned Thursday that it might downgrade the United States government’s sterling credit rating if Congress did not increase the nation’s debt limit “in coming weeks,” putting a spur to the sputtering talks between party leaders and the White House on a plan to restore fiscal stability. The warning, from one of the agencies whose assessments of creditworthiness help determine interest rates , amounted to a stern reminder from Wall Street to Washington that global financial markets are watching the budget battle closely and that a standoff or brinkmanship could have economic consequences. Both sides seized on Moody’s statement to reinforce their bargaining positions, with Republicans demanding that President Obama get more serious about deep spending cuts and Democrats saying that Republicans are risking a financial crisis in pursuit of an ideological agenda. Moody’s said a review of the credit rating was “likely” in July, given that “the risk of continuing stalemate has grown.” Its warning followed a similar one from another major ratings firm six weeks ago, and it came as the administration met Thursday with both House Republicans and Democrats in search of a deal. As John Boehner assures the press that “nobody out there believes the U.S. is going to default on its debt, ” he should tell his freshman Tea Party reps that the debt ceiling doesn’t work the same as a last-minute government budget deal. It needs to get done in a timely fashion. The debt ceiling has never been a point of political wrangling or as polarized as it is now, it was just done. The press knows this for sure, but since Bush was in office then, Republicans passed it with no cares about the federal deficit. What sick times we live in. And by the way, maybe Fox News will report this part of the federal deficit story: Independent analyses have shown that more than half of the $14.3 trillion debt is from policies enacted during the past decade when Republicans controlled both the White House and Congress, and much of the rest from lost revenues and stimulus spending and tax cuts since Mr. Obama took office at the height of the financial crisis and recession . And as we’re mired in a slow recovery , failing to raise the debt ceiling is the worst thing that could happen to our country at the moment. The full faith and credit of the United States is being questioned for the first time in its history. When that questioning turns to a lack of faith in this nation to pay its bills, pray. I pray that Biden’s group doesn’t succumb to the pressure from Republicans and come out with some ‘grand bargain’ compromise over this which cuts benefits to our safety-net programs. Seniors will be devastated and all the gains the Democratic party have made this year against a backdrop of fools and lunatic right-wing governors will be lost. As usual, the Villagers have their own talking points too. Last night David Gergen parroted the conventional wisdom that says while the economy may be getting worse the president simply must agree to build in long-term debt reduction with the entitlements right now. He didn’t say why. So that’s that.

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CBS Complains Obama ‘Saddled’ By ‘Stubbornly Sluggish Economy’

On Friday's Early Show, before the new 9.1% unemployment figure came out, CBS's Dean Reynolds bewailed how President Obama is being ” saddled ” by the ” stubbornly sluggish economy .” Reynolds played up how “GM, Ford, and Chrysler have all returned to profitability,” and tracked down a beneficiary of the auto industry bailout, who sang the praises of the Democrat. [ Audio clips from Reynolds's report available here ; video available below the jump ]

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‘Dr Death’ Jack Kevorkian dies at 83

Assisted-dying advocate and former pathologist who served prison sentence for murder helped 130 people to kill themselves Jack Kevorkian, a retired pathologist who helped dozens of ailing people to end their lives, has died in a Detroit hospital after a short illness. He was 83. Kevorkian, who claimed he had helped about 130 people to kill themselves between 1990 and 1999, died at William Beaumont hospital in Michigan, close friend Mayer Morganroth said. Nicknamed Dr Death, Kevorkian came to prominence in 1990 when he used his homemade “suicide machine” in his rusted Volkswagen van to inject lethal drugs into an Alzheimer’s disease patient who sought his help. He had been hospitalised since last month with pneumonia and kidney problems, Morganroth said. An official cause of death had not been determined, but Morganroth said it was likely to have been pulmonary thrombosis. “I had seen him earlier and he was conscious,” said Morganroth, who added that the two spoke about Kevorkian’s pending release from hospital and planned start of rehabilitation. “Then I left and he took a turn for the worse and I went back.” Nurses played music by Bach for Kevorkian before he died, Morganroth said. Kevorkian was freed in June 2007 after serving eight years of a 10 to 25-year sentence for second-degree murder. His lawyers had said he suffered from Hepatitis C, diabetes and other problems, and he had promised in affidavits that he would not assist in a death if he was released. In 2008, he ran for Congress as an independent, receiving just 2.7% of the vote in the suburban Detroit district. He said his experience showed the party system was “corrupt” and “has to be completely overhauled from the bottom up.” His life story became the subject of the 2010 HBO movie You Don’t Know Jack, which earned actor Al Pacino Emmy and Golden Globe awards for his portrayal of Kevorkian. Pacino paid tribute to Kevorkian during his Emmy acceptance speech, saying that he had enjoyed trying to “portray someone as brilliant and interesting and unique” as Kevorkian and that it was a “pleasure to know him”. Kevorkian said he liked the movie and enjoyed the attention it generated, but doubted it would inspire much action by a new generation of assisted-dying advocates. “You’ll hear people say, ‘Well, it’s in the news again, it’s time for discussing this further.’ No it isn’t. It’s been discussed to death,” he said. “There’s nothing new to say about it. It’s a legitimate ethical medical practice, as it was in ancient Rome and Greece.” Eleven years earlier he was sentenced in relation to the 1998 death of a amyotrophic lateral sclerosis – or Lou Gehrig’s disease – patient, a videotaped death shown to a national television audience as Kevorkian challenged prosecutors to charge him. “The issue’s got to be raised to the level where it is finally decided,” he said. For nearly a decade, he escaped authorities’ efforts to stop him. His first four trials, all on assisted-dying charges, resulted in three acquittals and one mistrial. Murder charges in earlier cases were thrown out because Michigan at that time had no law against assisted-dying. The legislature wrote one in response to Kevorkian. He was stripped of his medical licence. Assisted suicide United States guardian.co.uk

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