For a guy who loved being the center of a spectacle, Moammar Gadhafi is noticeably missing in action as his regime crumbles. The Libyan strongman hasn’t been in the public arena since June, notes Reuters, which outlines the two most likely options: One, that he’s fled Tripoli, either to his…
Continue reading …Jon Huntsman is stirring the GOP’s pot, telling Piers Morgan that he’d be open to running as Michele Bachmann’s vice presidential candidate—or pretty much any GOP candidate, save Mitt Romney. “If you love this country, you serve her,” he says in the interview set to air tonight. “If you’re…
Continue reading …Lloyd Blankfein has gone and hired himself a lawyer, reports Reuters . The Goldman Sachs CEO, whose firm is facing ongoing investigations into its role in the financial crisis, has retained high-powered DC defense attorney Reid Weingarten, whose past clients have included an Enron exec and a former secretary of agriculture….
Continue reading …An alleged cross-country crime spree that climaxed in a dramatic shootout with police took a more lawful turn today as prosecutors filed charges against three gun-toting siblings, The DenverChannel reports. Ryan Edward Dougherty and Dylan Dougherty Stanley received 24 and 23 counts, respectively—including attempted murder and first-degree assault—while…
Continue reading …If there is extraterrestrial life out there, and it’s watching us, it might just as soon blow us to kingdom come as look at us, LiveScience reports—and all because of global warming. If ETs notice our greenhouse gas emissions and conclude we’re expanding too rapidly, they may consider us…
Continue reading …So much for rumors that Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan will enter the GOP fray for the Oval Office. He nixed that today, the Wall Street Journal reports. “While humbled by the encouragement, I have not changed my mind,” he said. Ryan has slammed the current crop of Republican candidates, saying…
Continue reading …Saif al-Islam, Gaddafi’s son, makes a defiant appearance in Tripoli, after being reportedly arrested by rebels on Sunday Muammar Gaddafi’s once powerful son, Saif al-Islam, made a defiant appearance in Tripoli last night to disprove the revolutionaries’ claim to have arrested him and to proclaim ultimate victory. Saif al-Islam, 39, arrived in an armoured vehicle waving two fingers in a victory sign at a hotel where foreign journalists are staying in an area of the Libyan capital still under the regime’s control. “I am here to refute the lies [that he had been arrested],” he said. As the revolutionaries consolidated their control over most of Tripoli and continued their hunt for Libya’s dictator, the younger Gaddafi and one time heir apparent said that his father had not fled the city. The BBC described Saif al-Islam as “confident and full of adrenalin”. He said that the rebels had fallen into “a trap” and would be defeated. “You have seen how the Libyan people rose up together, men and women, to break the backbone of the rebels, rats and gangs yesterday and today,” he was reported to have said. He then took reporters on a drive in an armoured convoy through areas of the city still under the regime’s control including the Gaddafi family compound and military barracks where scores of men waited to receive guns to join the fighting. “We are going to hit the hottest spots in Tripoli,” he said. The revolutionaries claimed to have arrested three of Gaddafi’s sons as they seized control of Tripoli. Saif al-Islam’s detention was confirmed by the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, Luis Moreno-Ocampo, who is seeking to have him extradited to stand trial at The Hague for crimes against humanity over the violence unleashed by the regime against the uprising in which hundreds of unarmed people were shot. The ICC alleges that Saif al-Islam drew up and implemented the plan to violently put down the rebellion. Asked about the ICC indictment, he said: “Screw the criminal court.” During the tour of the regime-controlled parts of the city, he offered a rambling explanation for the rebels’ swift success in seizing much of Tripoli in part by accusing Nato and the west of an electronic assault. “They sent text messages to the Libyan people through the Libyana (mobile phone) network. They stopped our broadcast transmission. They perpetuated an electronic and media war in order to spread chaos and fear in Libya. Also they brought gangs from the sea and by car to Tripoli,” he told AP television. Al-Jazeera reported that another of Gaddafi’s sons, Mohammad, who was arrested by rebels on Sunday, was believed to have escaped from rebel custody. Libya Middle East Muammar Gaddafi Saif al-Arab Gaddafi Arab and Middle East unrest Chris McGreal guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …More mothers are turning to a healthy diet after giving birth, including fruit, veggies… and a nice plate of placenta. As in, their own. Before losing your appetite, consider that placentas contain high iron levels, vitamin B-12, and hormones, and while no study proves their effect, believers say they alleviate…
Continue reading …In the latest chapter of WikiLeaks’ apparent implosion, a former spokesman for the group says he has destroyed 3,500 of its unpublished files, der Spiegel reports. Daniel Domscheit-Berg says he took the files when he left WikiLeaks last year and “shredded” them “in order to ensure that the sources…
Continue reading …Amid press conferences and big speeches, President Obama spent his first two years in office as “his own messenger.” But expect that to change in the run-up to the next election, writes Michael Scherer in Time . In those first two years, Obama lacked a solid team of spokespeople; aides like…
Continue reading …