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If you want to feel old, just take a look at the annual Beloit College Mindset List , meant to get inside the heads of each year’s incoming college freshmen. For example, this year’s list points out that the class of 2015, born in 1993, has never not had access to…

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The toucan is native to Mesoamerica, which is why the Maya Archaeology Initiative , a group that defends Mayan culture, chose to use the bird as its logo. Of course, the toucan is also native to boxes of Kellogg Co.’s Froot Loops cereal—and now the company wants the initiative…

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Rep. Maxine Waters thinks the Tea Party can “go straight to hell,” and, of course, the Tea Party is not happy about it. “We’ve had Democrats calling American citizens ‘terrorists’ and ‘hostage takers,’ and now an elected Democratic representative says that we can ‘go straight to hell,’” responded…

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Anna Hazare’s anti-corruption protest sees Delhi signal compromise

Indian PM calls summit, although hunger striker accused of ignoring more urgent issues and backing xenophobic politicians Moves to resolve the political crisis in India triggered by a 74-year-old anti-corruption campaigner’s hunger strike have gathered pace. After a weekend of mass street protests, the government has appointed a representative to hammer out a deal to the week-long standoff, reports said. Anna Hazare, who has fasted for a week, wants the government to create an anti-corruption ombudsman with sweeping powers. His hunger strike has focused widespread anger over corruption – which is endemic in India – as well as broader grievances amid the growing middle classes. “It is not just about corruption, not just about one issue. People are very emotional about this,” Bhaskara Rao, a political analyst in Delhi, said. “However … there may be a deal relatively soon.” Following protests earlier this year, India’s prime minister, Manmohan Singh, proposed a small package of reforms.

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Cameron’s blind spot over Andy Coulson shows he has no eye for detail | Chris Bryant

Whatever the outcome of the Coulson saga, Cameron’s serial gullibility raises the question, is he fit to lead Britain? So now we hear that Andy Coulson was paid hundreds of thousands of pounds by News International for several months when he was working for David Cameron’s Conservative party. This despite the fact that he let the Commons culture committee believe that he’d had no secondary income. It seems everyone in the Tory party is now running for cover. Nobody knew of anything untoward. Everyone is categorical in their denial. But what they surely cannot deny is that they never really did due diligence. This was a man who had resigned from the News of the World under a cloud. One of his employees had gone to prison for hacking phones, along with a commissioned freelancer. Did anybody ask whether Coulson was still being paid by News International when he arrived at Conservative Central Office? If not, that would be culpable negligence on the side of the accounting officers at the Conservative party in my book. After all, it is claimed that a senior member of staff at the Tory party in effect received a hefty subsidy of hundreds of thousands of pounds. If so, Coulson could be considered during his time to have been on a News International secondment, which should have been declared to the Electoral Commission as a donation to the Conservative party. And if that’s the case, for all its denials, the whole party would be as liable for the compromising position in which Coulson put himself as News International is for the conduct of its staff. Ignorance is simply no defence if you haven’t even been curious enough to ask the blindingly obvious questions. Some have said this also poses questions about Cameron’s own judgment. I think that misses the point. The real problem is not Cameron’s judgment but his personality. What the Coulson story shows is a Tory leader far too childishly eager to please his soignée News International neighbours to bother with details; a man too naive to suspect that a friend of his couldn’t possibly have committed a crime that really mattered. In short, a man too easily fooled, guilty of serial culpable gullibility. Cameron is fast becoming the blind-eye prime minister. We already know he gets irritated by detail, but when it comes to appointing ministers or dealing with international leaders like Vladimir Putin, whom he is meant to be visiting in a few weeks, the last thing Britain needs is a gullible leader. There are other specific questions that need to be answered. How much was Coulson paid? Were there any further payments when he went to work at Downing Street? Did he ever provide information the News of the World had garnered illegally to help the Conservative party? Coulson told the Commons culture committee when asked about his pay-off from the News of the World that it was a private matter that he was happy to explain privately to the chairman, Tory MP John Whittingdale. Did that conversation ever take place? If not, why not? If so, what did Coulson tell Whittingdale and why has it not been made public? Which brings me to another point. Parliament is going to have to tackle the specific matter of whether action should be taken against those who may have lied to it. Thanks to the way parliamentary privilege works, neither the courts nor the Leveson inquiry can question proceedings in parliament. But if the Commons is to do its job bringing the powers of the land to book, it has to be confident in its own ability to gather evidence and take action where necessary. In the US evidence is taken on oath and lying to a senate or house committee can constitute perjury. Surely it is time parliament brought in similar rules? Someone suggested the other day that there will have to be a film about the phone-hacking scandal. I fear we are still only in act three of a five-act play. It’s far too early yet even to draw up the full dramatis personae. One thing I am sure of, though, is that Cameron’s Conservative party deliberately set out to woo Rupert Murdoch and failed to blanch when problems arose. The former was a mistake that others have made, the latter may yet prove to be something far worse. David Cameron Andy Coulson Phone hacking News of the World Rupert Murdoch News International Conservatives Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers Chris Bryant guardian.co.uk

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Joe Biden was mere hours away from wrapping up a gaffe-free four-day visit to China when he said he fully understood China’s one-child policy. The vice president, discussing the US debt during a Q&A session at a university in Chengdu, said: “You have no safety net. Your policy has been…

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The British phone-hacking scandal just became even more damaging to British Prime Minister David Cameron. Former News of the World editor Andy Coulson remained on the News International payroll for six months after being hired as Cameron’s communication director, receiving hundreds of thousands of dollars from the Rupert Murdoch firm…

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David Cameron’s globe trotting

The prime minister’s holidays and foreign travel have been cut short a number of times by calls for him to return home to deal with a crisis Paddy Allen Paul Owen Allegra Stratton

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Dominique Strauss-Kahn sex assault charges dropped

New York court thrown into confusion after judge throws legal lifeline to maid’s lawyer New York prosecutors have dropped sexual assault charges against Dominique Strauss-Kahn for allegedly attacking a hotel maid – but he is not yet a completely free man after the judge said an appeal court must decide on the maid’s lawyer’s attempts to have a special prosecutor take over the case. It had been widely anticipated that the case would be thrown out today, but the decision to go to the appeals court caused confusion in the New York courtroom. The judge, Michael Obus, told the packed court he would comply with a request from the prosecution to dismiss the case. “The indictment is dismissed,” he said. Most legal observers think the attempt by lawyers for Nafissatou Diallo will be unsuccessful, and a decision could come as early as later on Tuesday. A largest group of protestors had gathered outside, many of them waving placards and chanting slogans such as “DSK! Shame on you!” as Strauss-Kahn left the courtoom. Michael Greys, co-founder of the group 100 Blacks in Law Enforcement, was furious at the dismissal of the case. “American justice is not blind,” he said. “Race and class still play a part. This was a case of a millionaire against a poor black woman with no education.” Strauss-Kahn, 62, was arrested in May after Nafissatou Diallo, 32, said the then boss of the International Monetary Fund forced her to perform oral sex when she arrived to clean his suite at the Sofitel hotel in Manhattan. The French presidential contender was later arrested on a plane to Europe, where he was planning to hold a series of meetings about the continent’s looming debt crisis. Through his lawyers, he has never contested the fact that a sexual encounter took place but has denied allegations that any act was forced. The millionaire financier is now likely to return to France but faces legal problems in his home country too. French authorities are investigating claims Strauss-Kahn attempted to rape French journalist Tristane Banon in 2003. But the long saga of the criminal case in New York is now almost at an end, following a legal rollercoaster ride that has dominated front pages across the globe. Manhattan district attorney Cyrus Vance Jr’s office had initially called Diallo’s statement “compelling” and stressed she had provided “very powerful details”. Her story was buttressed by medical evidence; his semen was found on her uniform and her lawyer said doctors had taken photographs of her bruised vagina. But the case started collapsing after prosecutors said that Diallo had lied to them and other US officials about her past, including giving a misleading account of having been gang-raped in her native Guinea. Diallo told interviewers she used the false story to get herself and her daughter a chance at a better life in the US. There were also discrepancies in what happened after the alleged attack. She told a grand jury that she stayed in the hallway outside Strauss-Kahn’s room after the attack, when evidence showed she had actually returned to his and another room before consulting her boss. It then emerged that she had discussed Strauss-Kahn’s wealth in a recorded phone conversation after the supposed attack. In her defence Diallo’s lawyers said prosecutors were misinterpreting the conversation, conducted in Fulani, her native language, and that her account of the assault during the phone call had not differed. But a court document filed on Monday by prosecutors contained a devastating and detailed account of how Diallo had misled investigators into the case. “In virtually every substantive interview with prosecutors, despite entreaties to simply be truthful, she has not been truthful on matters great and small,” the document said. The document said that the cumulative effect of Diallo’s misleading statements would be “devastating” at a jury trial on the case. It added: “If we do not believe her beyond a reasonable doubt, we cannot ask a jury to do so.” But the battle between Diallo and Strauss-Kahn was not fought entirely in the courts and still has likely done lasting damage to his career. As Vance’s team appeared to turn against her, Diallo went public. She gave up her anonymity to air her side of the story in Newsweek and on ABC. Diallo repeated the details of the attack and said that while she had made some mistakes, they shouldn’t dissuade prosecutors from fighting her case. She then sued Strauss-Kahn on 8 August in civil court, a move legal experts said made Vance’s position even more difficult. The Frenchman’s lawyers claimed the suit proved she was out for money. But the civil case is also still ongoing and provides an arena for the two sides to keep fighting. It is legally unaffected by the dropping of criminal charges and has a lesser burden of proof. In order to recover monetary damages from Strauss-Kahn, Diallo’s lawyers will just have to prove it was “more likely than not” that the French politician committed an assault. Ron Kuby, criminal defence and civil right lawyer, said the criminal case had been badly mishandled by both Vance and Diallo. “From the beginning Cyrus Vance did everything wrong that it was possible to do wrong and for the worst possible reasons,” he said. “It was a tragedy of error and hubris,” said Kuby. He said Vance should not have pushed for the judge to deny Strauss-Kahn bail, a decision he said forced the district attorney to make statements for which he did not have the evidence. “It appears that Vance’s own people were telling him to go slow,” he said, referring to reports that veteran sex case investigator Lisa Friel had raised doubts about the case. Friel has announced she is leaving the DA’s office and is looking for a job in the private sector. “There was a rush to judgment, a rush to indict and a rush to detain,” said Kuby. “The only thing left now is who will the DA’s office blame for this debacle, it won’t be themselves. ” However, the embattled DA has got the support of his respected predecessor, Robert Morgenthau, who has defended his actions and decisions in the case. “The most important attribute I looked for in hiring junior prosecutors was a strong ethical sense. The recent actions from the district attorney’s office show me that these attributes are alive and well,” he said. Kuby added that Diallo had proved to be a terrible witness: “Witnesses frequently come with baggage, Sammy ‘The Bull’ Gravano [crime boss of the Gambino family turned FBI informant] committed 19 murders but he was a fine witness. He was candid. The American justice system loves repentant sinners. What you can’t do is consistently lie about what you did and did not do.” Stuart Slotnick of Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney, a white-collar crime expert and a former federal prosecutor, said Vance had made the right decision to drop the case. “This is a case about justice,” he said. “The prosecution is the first layer and must decide if this case should move forward.” Slotnick said that as a prosecutor he had defended victims of crimes who had longer police records than those they accused, but Diallo’s tale had simply become indefensible in court to prosecutors because of her unreliability. “Prosecutors are used to people who have lied in the past but when they don’t believe the story they are being told, the right thing to do is drop the case.” Dominique Strauss-Kahn United States France Europe New York Dominic Rushe Paul Harris guardian.co.uk

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Sometimes when you’re exhausted fighting a revolution, nothing quite satisfies like a jewel-encrusted pistol—especially when it’s been “liberated” from Moammar Gadhafi’s properties. One band of Libyan rebels doggedly battling regime loyalists in the streets of Tripoli yesterday managed to boost their morale with a truckload of such treasures—”enough…

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