The Navy discovered cheating so widespread among one of its nuclear submarine crews that it fired the commander of the USS Memphis and 10% of its crew, according to a report obtained by the AP . Sailors were emailed the answers before qualification exams and openly asked their officers for answer…
Continue reading …Rick Perry has raised $102 million as Texas governor over the last 10 years, and $37 million of that comes from just 150 individuals and couples—nearly half of whom have enjoyed business contracts, appointments, or tax breaks under Perry. A Los Angeles Times analysis found dozens of examples, from…
Continue reading …Texas governor’s attempt to assert hawkish credentials draws criticism from moderate Republicans and White House The Texas governor, Rick Perry, has staked out his challenge for the Republican presidential nomination as a hawk on economic policy by characterising the strategy of the Federal Reserve chairman, Ben Bernanke, as “treasonous”. Perry swiftly emerged as a leading contender for the Republican nomination after announcing his intention to run for president on Saturday , in part because he is governor of a state that has ridden the economic downturn better than most and has seen more jobs created than any other. He has won favour with the Tea Party movement and among other fiscal conservatives with his strong opposition to Barack Obama’s stimulus strategy. Addressing a political rally in Iowa on Monday, the Texas governor attacked suggestions by Bernanke that with the economy again struggling the Federal Reserve may resort to another round of buying trillions of dollars of bonds, known as quantitative easing. Perry said that would amount to little more than an attempt to buy support at next year’s election, at a huge cost to the country. “If this guy prints more money between now and the election, I dunno what y’all would do to him in Iowa but we would treat him pretty ugly down in Texas. Printing more money to play politics at this particular time in American history is almost treasonous – or treasonous in my opinion,” said Perry. He went on to accuse Obama of an economic strategy that endangered America. “I think the greatest threat to our country right now is this president trying to spend his way out of this debt,” he said. The White House denounced the remarks, saying presidential candidates should not try to interfere with Federal Reserve policy. “When you are president or running for president, you have to think about your words,” spokesman Jay Carney said during an Iowa stop of Obama’s three-day jobs bus tour. “The Fed’s independence is important.” Perry’s remarks were also condemned by some moderate Republicansm, who noted that Bernanke was appointed by Obama’s predecessor, George Bush. But attacks on the president’s stimulus strategy play well with many on the right as the Texas governor seeks to mark out distinctions with the other leading Republican candidates: the more mainstream Mitt Romney and the Tea Party supporter Michele Bachmann. Perry is constructing his bid for the presidency around what he portrays as his successful economic strategy in Texas of minimising government and promoting business ,which helped the state weather the worst of the recession and has seen it create nearly 40% of all new jobs in the US over the past two years. Critics say Perry has merely been lucky because Texas was shielded from the worst of the depression by an oil-based economy, when petroleum prices were at an all time high. They also say that whatever strategy Perry has pursued in Texas is not new to the state and cannot be applied to the country as a whole. But that did not stop Perry from contrasting his record as governor with Romney, the former governor of Massachusetts. “Take a look at his record when he was governor. Take a look at my record,” Perry said as he visited the Iowa state fair. “Running a state is different than running a business.” At one point Perry appeared to suggest he did not take Romney seriously as a candidate by blowing kisses at a camera and saying: “Give him my love.” Romney has sought to fend off the challenge from Perry by noting that he has no experience in the private sector. The Texas governor has held an elected office continuously since 1984, which critics say makes a mockery of his claim to be an outsider standing up to the political system. Romney said: “You know, I can tell you that I think my jobs record spans not just four years as governor, but also the 25 years that I’ve lived in the private sector. I think understanding how the economy works by having worked in the real economy is finally essential in the White House, and I hope people recognise that.” Perry’s past is also coming under scrutiny over his support for Al Gore’s 1988 challenge for the presidency. Perry was a Democrat at the time and Gore’s campaign chairman in Texas. That support is raising questions about Perry’s professed rejection of climate change theories, the issue Gore has embraced since leaving office but which is viewed by many on the right as a hoax. In a radio interview on Monday, Perry said that he backed Gore before he “got to be Mr Global Warming”. However, Politico reports that global warming was already an important issue for Gore at the time Perry was backing him. Gore made climate change a theme of his presidential run as early as April 1987. Rick Perry Republican presidential nomination 2012 Republicans US elections 2012 Mitt Romney Quantitative easing US politics United States Economics US economy Chris McGreal guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy are under pressure to come up with a structural answer to the euro’s problems rather than a stopgap solution First Britain, then the United States and now the eurozone. The message from the recent data is unambiguous: the big economies of the west slowed down to little more than stall speed in the spring of 2011. Tuesday’s data for the bloc of 17 countries that are part of monetary union was worrying for a number of reasons. Some slowdown in activity had been on the cards given the strength of output growth in the first quarter of the year, but the nugatory 0.2% increase in gross domestic product was far weaker than expected . More troubling perhaps was the evidence that the slowdown on the fringes of the single currency has now burrowed its way to the core of the eurozone. France had already announced that its economy was flat in the second quarter ; on Tuesday, Germany and the Netherlands said they had each registered expansion of just 0.1%. This matters for Greece, Ireland, Portugal, Spain and Italy because the only way they can hope to make up the growth shortfall from domestic austerity is by exporting to the rich countries at the heart of monetary union. If that proves impossible, as Tuesday’s figures suggest it might, that will put additional strain on the countries on the periphery, making further expensive bailouts more likely and increasing the chances of a break-up of the single currency. It is not hard to find explanations for the slowdown in the eurozone. As in Britain and America, consumers are being squeezed hard by rising energy and food prices; there have been supply problems for industry caused by the Japanese tsunami; and there has clearly been a loss of both consumer and business confidence caused by the inability of Europe’s leaders to get on top of the sovereign debt crisis. In the light of this, the European Central Bank’s decision to raise interest rates twice during the second quarter looks premature, if not downright stupid. With the eurozone’s economy barely growing and the single currency fighting for its very existence, any further increases in borrowing costs now look extremely remote. Politically, Tuesday’s data will no doubt add a bit of spice to the summit meeting between Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy. The German and French leaders are now under increasing pressure to come up with a structural answer to the euro’s problems rather than – as has been the case all too often in the past – a stopgap solution. George Osborne repeated his call for greater fiscal integration in the eurozone in his exchange of letters with Sir Mervyn King about UK inflation , but the chancellor’s advice is unlikely to be heeded unless the debt crisis gets a lot worse. On the basis of this data, there is a good chance that it will. European debt crisis Europe Germany Europe Larry Elliott guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Along with Michele Bachmann, Ron Paul dominated the Ames straw poll—so why is he never mentioned by members of the media whenever they talk about the “top tier” of the race? Heck, even Rick Santorum and Jon Huntsman get mentioned before Ron Paul—and in the straw poll, lest…
Continue reading …Today’s financial word of the day: Germany. All eyes are on Angela Merkel’s 10am ET talks with Nicolas Sarkozy, as the pair meets to weigh additional moves that could bolster investor confidence in the euro zone. That task will no doubt be a bit tougher following today’s report that German…
Continue reading …As she looked at the sky Saturday night, Sugarland tour manager Hellen Rollens decided to go with her intuition and hold the band backstage. One minute later, wind gusts sent the Indiana State Fair stage crashing down into the audience , killing five and injuring dozens. “As a tour manager, it’s…
Continue reading …Assad regime continues attack on city amid calls from Turkey and regional states for halt to shelling and withdrawal of forces The Syrian government siege of the port city of Latakia has continued for a fourth day, despite demands from regional states that Damascus stop shelling civilian areas and withdraw its forces from the country’s towns and cities. The violence has drawn condemnation from neighbouring Turkey, which on Monday gave the Syrian president, Bashar al-Assad, what amounted to an ultimatum to stand down his military from Latakia, or face an unspecified reaction. The Turkish government on Tuesday denied that it was imposing a buffer zone on its border with northern Syria. However, officials and military leaders have been drafting plans to deal with Syria’s crisis, which shows no signs of abating after more than five months. Ankara, which had been an ally of Assad’s regime until a fissure between the two states became clear in recent weeks, claimed it had said its “last words” on the Syrian response to the uprising. The hardening of Turkey’s position was followed on Tuesday by an intervention from the US secretary of state, Hilary Clinton, who said the White House was pushing for another round of sanctions against Assad and key regime figures. Clinton urged other regional critics of the Syrian regime to step up their rhetoric, claiming that the US did not have a lot at stake in Syria. Her comments were interpreted as an attempt to distance the US from its perceived leading role as an international critic, which Damascus has used to support its claim that the instability is the result of a western-led conspiracy. The Syrian government has again claimed that its military is fighting armed gangs that have infiltrated Latakia and are terrorising locals. The regime has not been specific about the provenance of such groups, but a Ba’ath party official close to the information ministry said jihadists who had fled Libya by sea several months ago were attempting to ignite sectarian chaos. Local people contacted in Latakia painted a different portrait of a city under siege by regime officials who want to crush dissent. A man from the al-Ramel neighbourhood said: “Today the shabiha (plainclothed armed regime supporters) and security came into the neighbourhood and went around houses. “They have stolen items when they go in. There are some people who can’t get out because of the checkpoints where they are arresting people; they have lists and no one can tell if they are on it or not. We think there are 40 dead people from the last few days. “There is provocation by the security forces and shabiha saying ‘Bashar is our God’ and ‘We will teach you about freedom’. It is horrible.” An activist who called himself Ahmad said: “My family fled to the mountains from Latakia today. Everyone is scared. Most of the citizens in the areas which had protests are out of the city, many of them were gathered by force in the sports city in order to film them and say those are pro-regime people. Early morning gunfire and tanks continued. Many people died but we couldn’t get names. “There are many snipers on the rooftops around the areas that are besieged. We can see them. Armoured vehicles are still here but they stopped shooting and there is less gunfire. The shabiha and security forces this morning were cleaning the streets, taking any dead bodies and removing bullets and everything. We think they will destroy the neighbourhood. What happened was a massacre, a massacre.” Nour Ali is a pseudonym for a journalist based in Damascus Syria Middle East Bashar Al-Assad Arab and Middle East unrest Turkey Martin Chulov Nour Ali guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Sentences handed out in Chester as lawyers and civil rights groups express alarm about ‘disproportionate’ punishments Two men who posted messages on Facebook inciting other people to riot in their home towns have both been sentenced to four years in prison by a judge at Chester crown court. Jordan Blackshaw, 20, set up an “event” called Smash Down in Northwich Town for the night of 8 August on the social networking site but no one apart from the police, who were monitoring the page, turned up at the pre-arranged meeting point outside a McDonalds restaurant. Blackshaw was promptly arrested. Perry Sutcliffe, 22, of Latchford, Warrington, used his Facebook account in the early hours of 9 August to design a web page entitled The Warrington Riots. The court was told it caused a wave of panic in the town. When he woke up the following morning with a hangover, he removed the page and apologised, saying it had been a joke. His message was distributed to 400 Facebook contacts, but no rioting broke out as a result. Sentencing Blackshaw to four years in a young offenders institution, Judge Elgan Edwards QC said he had committed an “evil act”. He said: “This happened at a time when collective insanity gripped the nation. Your conduct was quite disgraceful and the title of the message you posted on Facebook chills the blood. “You sought to take advantage of crime elsewhere and transpose it to the peaceful streets of Northwich. The idea revolted many right thinking members of society. No one actually turned up due to the prompt and efficient actions of police in using modern policing.” Sutcliffe, the judge said, “caused a very real panic” and “put a very considerable strain on police resources in Warrington”. He praised Cheshire police for their “modern and clever policy” of infiltrating the website. The heavy sentences came as defence lawyers and civil rights groups have criticised the “disproportionate” sentences imposed on some convicted rioters as the latest official figures show nearly 1,300 suspects have been brought before the courts. The revelation that magistrates were advised by justices’ clerks to disregard normal sentencing guidelines when dealing with riot-related cases alarmed a number of lawyers who warn it will trigger a spate of appeals. Also on Tuesday, a looter was warned he could be jailed for helping himself to an ice-cream cone during disturbances. Anderson Fernandes, 22, appeared before magistrates in Manchester charged with burglary after he took two scoops of coffee ice-cream and a cone from Patisserie Valerie in the city centre. He gave the cone away because he didn’t like the flavour. Fernandes admitted burglary in relation to the ice-cream and an unconnected charge of handling stolen goods after a vacuum cleaner was recovered from his home. District judge Jonathan Taaffe said: “I have a public duty to deal swiftly and harshly with matters of this nature.” Fernandes will be sentenced next week. In sentencing four other convicted Manchester rioters, a crown court judge, Andrew Gilbert QC, made clear why he was disregarding sentencing guidelines when he said “the offences of the night of 9 August … takes them completely outside the usual context of criminality”. He added: “The principal purpose is that the courts should show that outbursts of criminal behaviour like this will be and must be met with sentences longer than they would be if the offences had been committed in isolation. For those reasons, I consider that the sentencing guidelines for specific offences are of much less weight in the context of the current case, and can properly be departed from.” The Ministry of Justice’s latest estimate, at midday on Tuesday, shows the courts have dealt with 1,277 alleged offenders of whom more than 700 have been remanded in custody. Two-thirds of the cases were in London. By midday on Monday, 115 people had been convicted; more than three-quarters of those were adults. About 21% of those appearing before the courts have been juveniles. The proportion of alleged youth offenders was higher in Nottingham, Birmingham and Manchester. “Everyone involved with the courts and prison service has put in a huge effort to make that possible and that work will continue.” But doubts are now being expressed about the fairness of some sentences. For example, one student has been jailed for six months for stealing a bottle of water from a supermarket. Sally Ireland, policy director of the law reform organisation Justice, said: “The circumstances of public disorder should be treated as an aggravating factor and one would expect that to push up sentences by a degree, but not by as far as some of the cases we have seen. “Some instances are completely out of all proportion. There will be a flurry of appeals although, by the time they have been heard, those sentences may already have been served. ” There’s a question about this advice [from justices' clerks] and whether it should have been issued at all. We would expect them to be giving advice [to magistrates] in individual cases rather than following a general directive.” Rakesh Bhasin, a solicitor partner at the law firm Steel & Shamash, which represents some of those charged following the riots, said some reported sentences seemed to be “disproportionate”. Paul Mendelle QC, a former chairman of the Criminal Bar Association, said: “The idea that the rulebook goes out the window strikes me as inherently unjust. It sets all manner of alarm bells ringing. Guidelines are not tramlines. There are guidelines and they take account of aggravating and mitigating circumstances. “There have been rulings following the Bradford riots and Israeli embassy demonstrations that said which sort of guidelines should be followed. I don’t see why [magistrates] should be told to disregard these.” The judiciary and the MoJ have denied that they were involved in circulating the advice to justices’ clerk last week. UK riots UK criminal justice Crime Prisons and probation Youth justice Young people Owen Bowcott Helen Carter guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …After four years of work involving 80 experts, the American Society of Addiction Medicine is redefining addiction—to alcohol, drugs, sex, gambling, and more—as a brain disorder, updating its former classification as a behavioral problem, reports Live Science . Addiction is also now considered a primary and chronic disorder, meaning…
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