Dear readers, we have a question for you: Why don’t you live in Canada or Australia? Because apparently those are the world’s bestest places to live, according to an annual study from the Economist Intelligence Unit , which rates cities from around the world based on factors like political stability, health…
Continue reading …Take a gander at that X-ray. What you’re looking at is the skull of a man who’d just accidentally impaled himself with the dull end of a pair of gardening shears—and lived to tell the tale. Leroy Luetscher, 86, dropped his pruner point-down while doing yard work, the Arizona…
Continue reading …Exxon Mobil scored a major coup in the search for Arctic oil today, signing a deal with Russia to explore areas with state-owned Rosneft, reports Reuters . The deal gives Exxon access to spots controlled by Moscow in the Kara Sea, which has become a much sought-after region within the petroleum…
Continue reading …Banking sector using economic turmoil to argue against regulatory change, says business secretary Vince Cable has accused bankers of using the economic turmoil in Europe to try to derail reform of the financial sector. The business secretary said that “louder and louder voices” were being raised among some of the big British banks giving warning that regulatory change in Britain would put the recovery at risk. The Independent Commission on Banking is expected to recommend separating banks’ retail operations from their investment arms when it reports on 12 September. There have been attacks on the proposals from the director general of the CBI, John Cridland, and British Bankers’ Association’s chief executive, Angela Knight. Cridland has said taking action to reform the banks now would be “barking mad” , while Knight warned imposing the measures on lenders risked denting confidence and cutting the supply of credit. However, Cable said in an interview with the Times that the fact that there were still fears about the collapse of big financial institutions was “all the more reason for grappling with this issue”. “It is disingenuous in the extreme to use the current context to argue against reform. Banks are in a way trying to create a panic around something which they know has got to happen,” he said. Cable has long favoured the separation of retail and investment banking. He added: “The governor of the Bank of England and many other people have been arguing that we have to deal with the ‘too big to fail’ problem. We can’t have big global banks with balance sheets bigger than British GDP underwritten by the taxpayer; this can’t go on and it has got to be dealt with.” The business secretary also said that he did not expect another 2008-style meltdown in the banking sector, but acknowledged that difficulties could still lie ahead for the British economy. “To my mind, the greater worry is not a massive financial crisis again but it is a general slowing down of western economies, with all the problems that presents for employment and long-term dynamism,” said Cable. In comments reported in the Financial Times, Cridland had said: “Taking action at this moment – this moment of growth peril, which weakens the ability of banks in Britain to provide the finance that businesses need to grow – is just to me barking mad.” He added that a perceived political need for action after banks were bailed out in 2008 was driving the scale and pace of reform, and warned that “there’s an own goal here about to be scored if we get this wrong”. Vince Cable Banking Market turmoil Economics Global economy Ben Quinn guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Banking sector using economic turmoil to argue against regulatory change, says business secretary Vince Cable has accused bankers of using the economic turmoil in Europe to try to derail reform of the financial sector. The business secretary said that “louder and louder voices” were being raised among some of the big British banks giving warning that regulatory change in Britain would put the recovery at risk. The Independent Commission on Banking is expected to recommend separating banks’ retail operations from their investment arms when it reports on 12 September. There have been attacks on the proposals from the director general of the CBI, John Cridland, and British Bankers’ Association’s chief executive, Angela Knight. Cridland has said taking action to reform the banks now would be “barking mad” , while Knight warned imposing the measures on lenders risked denting confidence and cutting the supply of credit. However, Cable said in an interview with the Times that the fact that there were still fears about the collapse of big financial institutions was “all the more reason for grappling with this issue”. “It is disingenuous in the extreme to use the current context to argue against reform. Banks are in a way trying to create a panic around something which they know has got to happen,” he said. Cable has long favoured the separation of retail and investment banking. He added: “The governor of the Bank of England and many other people have been arguing that we have to deal with the ‘too big to fail’ problem. We can’t have big global banks with balance sheets bigger than British GDP underwritten by the taxpayer; this can’t go on and it has got to be dealt with.” The business secretary also said that he did not expect another 2008-style meltdown in the banking sector, but acknowledged that difficulties could still lie ahead for the British economy. “To my mind, the greater worry is not a massive financial crisis again but it is a general slowing down of western economies, with all the problems that presents for employment and long-term dynamism,” said Cable. In comments reported in the Financial Times, Cridland had said: “Taking action at this moment – this moment of growth peril, which weakens the ability of banks in Britain to provide the finance that businesses need to grow – is just to me barking mad.” He added that a perceived political need for action after banks were bailed out in 2008 was driving the scale and pace of reform, and warned that “there’s an own goal here about to be scored if we get this wrong”. Vince Cable Banking Market turmoil Economics Global economy Ben Quinn guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Did Bill O’Reilly sic internal affairs on his wife’s police officer boyfriend? That’s the soap opera-worthy tale Gawker is hawking today. A source close to Nassau internal affairs officer Richard Harasym says Harasym was asked to meet with a pair of private detectives working for O’Reilly, to investigate a fellow…
Continue reading …This past week has not been a good one for Christine O’Donnell: First she had a rather disappointing showing at a Florida book signing, then she was dropped from a Tea Party rally. The book signing, held Wednesday in “staunchly Republican” Naples, came during a time when few tourists were…
Continue reading …The ATF is getting a new chief today, the fallout from a botched scheme to catch gun smugglers supplying Mexico’s drug cartels. Kenneth Melson is returning to lesser duties with the Justice Department, and his role as overseer of Operation Fast and Furious wasn’t even mentioned in a glowing farewell…
Continue reading …A 15-year-old Syracuse boy got the book thrown at him yesterday over a robbery that netted him all of seven cents. Judge William Walsh refused a defense request to sentence young Anthony Stewart, a Syracuse native, as a “youthful offender,” instead sentencing him as an adult to two to six…
Continue reading …One of Hurricane Irene’s victims: an 82-year-old Brooklyn woman who survived the Holocaust. Rozalia Stern-Gluck, a Russian-born grandmother, was vacationing in the Catskills when her cottage at the Valkyrian Motel flooded and she was trapped inside Sunday. A nearby creek had overflowed, and police said more than six feet of…
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