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Ai Weiwei spent his nearly three-month detention in a tiny cell, watched 24 hours a day by guards who were never more than 30 inches away whether he slept, showered, or used the toilet. “It is designed as a kind of mental torture, and it works well,” the Chinese artist…

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Light show! The Perseid meteor shower is back, and peak viewing will be overnight tonight and into the predawn hours of tomorrow, reports Space.com . Drawback: A full moon will probably dim this year’s show. Bonus to make up for that drawback: The International Space Station also should be visible…

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Forget Kim Kardashian’s butt: This year, it’s all about Pippa Middleton’s rear . “The latest craze here in the US and all over the world is to get the Pippa Butt Lift,” a Miami plastic surgeon tells the Telegraph , declaring Pippa the “new queen of booty.” The craze started, of course,…

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With 25 million users, Google+ is still far behind Facebook’s 750 million, but yesterday Google introduced a powerful new addition that could quickly make it a more formidable social networking threat: games. There’s no FarmVille or CityVille—two of the most popular games that are exclusive to Facebook—but Google+…

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A family birthday party took a bad turn last month when a 24-year-old woman allegedly beat up a 12-year-old girl … for looking at the woman’s 30-year-old boyfriend. Candace Kiley has now been arrested by Connecticut police, who had to apply for a warrant before they could bring her in because…

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US postal workers face massive job losses

Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe wants to cut 220,000 jobs in four years The US Postal Service has announced radical plans to cut one in five jobs, reduce services and water down staff retirement and healthcare deals as the government agency struggles to keep costs in line with plunging demand. Among proposed cutbacks to services, many of which will require legislative changes, is a plan to reduce mail delivery from six days a week to five. Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe wants to remove 220,000 posts in four years and believes about 120,000 of them will have to be layoffs – pitching him at loggerheads with unions. In an official statement, the US Postal Service (USPS) said: “Our most significant area of cost is in compensation and benefits, and one key driver of those costs is simply the sheer size of our workforce. “Based on current revenue and cost trends, and assuming a move to 5-day delivery, the Postal Service can only afford a total workforce by 2015 of 425,000, which includes approximately 30% lower cost, more flexible, non-career employees.” Donahoe is calling for emergency legislation to remove the USPS from layoff protection agreements it has entered into with unions. He said the postal service would be “insolvent next month” because of sharp declines in the usage of services. In the last four years the USPS said postal volumes had declined 20% while prices remained capped at the rate of inflation. Adding to cost pressures, Congress has insisted the USPS pre-fund its heathcare and retirement plans. Donahoe said the service made a net loss over the period of $20bn(£12.4bn) – a figure disputed by unions. In addition to cutting jobs, Donahoe also wants to withdraw from federal healthcare and retirement plans, replacing them with lower-cost provisions funded by the USPS directly. In response Fredric Rolando, president of the National Association of Letter Carriers, said: “The issues of lay-off protection and health benefits are specifically covered by our contract. Each of them has historically been covered in collective bargaining between NALC and USPS. The Congress of the United States does not engage in contract negotiations with unions and we do not believe they are about to do so.” Donahoe’s proposals were provocatively announced just days before executive and union leaders were due to formally open collective bargaining talks. Rolando accused USPS leaders of trying to use the current financial crisis “to strip postal employees of our bargaining rights”. Developments in the US are being watched by British counterparts, concerned that trends seen in America could be repeated in the UK. Billy Hayes, general secretary of the Communication Workers Union, argued that cutting the US Postal Service by 20% is an alarming move which will devastate services and bring job losses when America is already struggling with economic woes. “It’s a real concern because the USPS, like Royal Mail, has been a gold standard for postal services throughout history. Customers and staff will suffer as a result of severe cuts. “There’s a worrying trend of downgrading postal services worldwide which we hope the UK will not follow. Businesses, consumers and the general public all value the UK’s postal service and we want to see service standards maintained with six-days-a-week deliveries and universal pricing. These were commitments which were secured in the recent Postal Services Act, therefore there should be no question of such reductions in Britain.” US unemployment and employment data US economy United States Postal service Royal Mail Simon Bowers guardian.co.uk

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The liquidator of Josef Fritzl’s estate says the windowless cellar of the house where Fritzl imprisoned and repeatedly raped his daughter for 24 years will be filled up with concrete. The move is to ensure the space can never be entered again, and the work is set to begin early…

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For the first time in history, someone has died inside the US after being bitten by a vampire bat, according to a new CDC report. A 19-year-old Mexican man worked a single day at a Louisiana sugar cane plantation last year before fatigue, numbness, and pain in his shoulder sent…

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Police revolt against David Cameron’s reform agenda

Prime minister forced to retreat after calling riot tactics timid as ICM poll shows public side with police Senior police officers were in open revolt over the government’s police reform agenda on Friday, reacting furiously to criticism of the way they handled the riots, and turning their fire on the home secretary, Theresa May, after she suggested she had instructed the police to take a tougher line. Faced with an onslaught from all levels of the police, David Cameron tried to beat a retreat, lavishly praising the police after he and May had on Thursday in the Commons described police tactics as timid and highlighted police admissions that their initial plans to counter looting had been misguided. May said on Wednesday she had insisted that special constables be mobilised and all police leave should be cancelled, remarks that were seen to threaten the cornerstone of police operational independence. Sir Hugh Orde, president of the Association of Chief Police Officers, described the role of the politicians as “an irrelevance”, pointing out that by Monday the police had decided to mobilise huge numbers of officers into London. He said he briefed Cameron about the decision after the prime minister returned from holiday on Tuesday morning. Derek Barnett, president of the Police Chief Superintendents’ Association, also said the return of the politicians did not make any difference. “The decisions to deploy police officers in large numbers was made well in advance of politicians becoming involved,” he said, adding that the point of politicians returning from holiday was only to give “a sense there is now someone back in charge of the country and offering political leadership”. Asked about claims by Cameron that policing had been too timid, Tim Godwin, the acting Metropolitan police commissioner, said: “I think, after any event like this, people will always make comments who weren’t there.” He insisted that the changes in tactics and police numbers were due to commanders, not politicians. “I think the issue around the numbers, the issue around the tactics – they are all police decisions and they are all made by my police commanders and myself.” Political sources described Orde as incandescent with Tory attempts to take credit for toughening the police line, adding it underlined his fear that government plans for elected police commissioners will politicise the police. The sources added Orde was still interested in becoming the new Metropolitan police commissioner, but only on his own terms. The row came as an ICM poll for the Guardian showed the public sided with the police and not the politicians over the handling of the riots. The poll conducted this week shows less than a third of voters think the prime minister or the London mayor, Boris Johnson, have performed well. Only 30% say Cameron has done a good job, against 44% who say the opposite. For Johnson, the figures are 28% good job and 38% bad. By contrast, 45% think Godwin has done well, against 27% who say the opposite. The ICM poll also showed most are concerned that the police facing 20 % cuts in budgets already do not have enough resources. Following a meeting of the government’s Cobra committee, Orde told politicians: “Let us be clear about one thing – the distinction between policing and politics remains. The police service will make the tactical decisions and quite rightly we must and should be held to account.” Earlier this week he had ridiculed a suggestion by Cameron that water cannon should be put on standby, saying they would be entirely useless. Orde also praised the British model of policing, arguing the small number of injuries showed police tactics of minimum force had worked. He also revealed he had urged May to hold a conference on comparative international policing styles, adding pointedly: “I sense if we do that the British model will come out well on top.” Bill Bratton, the US policeman admired by Cameron and credited with cleaning up New York, said he was interested in looking at the position of Metropolitan police commissioner. Orde set himself against Cameron’s plans to allow outsiders join the force at high ranks, saying the “leadership of this service understands policing. We all started where our brave officers were the other day. We start at the bottom, we move up and we learn and we move on.” He also contradicted Cameron’s claims that 20% cuts to police budgets over the next four years would have no impact on police visibility. He said: “Chief constables have minimised the impact on the front line. We will have to have some very honest, straightforward conversations with government in years three and four. We have to understand what sort of service we want and we want it to do, and not do.” Peter Hain, the former Northern Ireland secretary who worked with Orde in Northern Ireland, offered his strong support, saying: “He is a reformer that stands up for his officers and tells it like it is in a non-party political way. The Conservatives would be mad not to appoint him Metropolitan commissioner if he wants the job, but he will do it only on his terms.” Sir Norman Bettison, chief constable of West Yorkshire, opened another front against government plans to introduce elected police commissioners to oversee chief constables, with elections due next May at a cost of £100m. He said the mutual aid programme which saw 16,000 put onto the streets of London would not work with elected commissioners. “Mutual aid relies upon the unfettered ability and operational discretion to do things for the greater good rather than for local popularity. The surge the prime minister talks about can only be achieved by coordinating assets across 43 forces. If there are elected police and crime commissioners this will not happen. Each will have been elected on different political platforms and there will be all sorts of parochial decision making about their priorities.” Despite the scale of the rioting, and accusations the police mishandled the initial disorder in Tottenham, public trust in the police seems uniformly strong. Overall, 61% of those polled say they are confident that the police enforce the law fairly, uniformly and without prejudice. By contrast, 36% say they are either not at all (10%) or not very (26%) confident. There is some evidence that younger or poorer people are less likely to trust the police than older or better off ones but in all categories, a majority are satisfied. However the public are far less confident about the police’s ability to keep order. A majority say they think the police lack sufficient resources. The finding could add to opposition to cuts in police numbers and funding. In the Commons on Thursday Cameron came under fire from the Labour leader Ed Miliband and some backbenchers over plans for cuts. While 41% say they are either very (6%) or quite (35%) confident the police have been given adequate resources, 56% say the opposite. People on lower incomes are the most likely to think the police are under-resourced. UK riots Metropolitan police Police London David Cameron Opinion polls Crime Cobra (Civil Contingencies Committee) Patrick Wintour Sandra Laville guardian.co.uk

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Good news for those of you who enjoy watching Renee Zellweger cavort around on-screen with a British accent: A third Bridget Jones movie is officially in the works, Entertainment Weekly confirms. But wait, you say, there are only two Bridget Jones books! Never fear: EW notes that author Helen Fielding…

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