There are inspiring love stories that break down societal barriers, and then there’s the marriage between 51-year-old Lost actor Doug Hutchison and 16-year-old aspiring singer/actress Courtney Stodden. A new E! interview raises the creepiness factor, notes Gawker : The newlyweds giggle about their sex life, and when she calls him “a…
Continue reading …The bad headlines just keep coming for John Edwards: The Federal Election Commission says his 2008 presidential campaign should repay the US Treasury $2.3 million, mostly because it got federal matching funds it was not entitled to receive. Federal auditors said the campaign understated its cash on hand and…
Continue reading …An “angry mob” of gay-rights supporters are slamming the anti-gay Marcus Bachmann, suggesting he’s a hypocrite who’s not as “straight an arrow as he purports to be.” Though Bachmann’s views on homosexuality are indefensible, the activists themselves may be the real hypocrites, writes Meghan Daum in the Los Angeles Times…
Continue reading …Stuart Smalley was nowhere in sight yesterday as Al Franken shredded a Defense of Marriage Act supporter. Seems the gentleman from Minnesota took offense with Focus on the Family’s Thomas Minnery and his citation of a federal study that found children in opposite-sex married families fared way better than kids…
Continue reading …Say “hi” to ALEC—as in the American Legislative Exchange Council, a conservative think-tank that allows businesses to play a role in writing laws on energy, the environment, telecommunications, taxes, public safety, and more, reports Bloomberg . Corporations pay up to $25,000 to join ALEC and thousands more to join…
Continue reading …Call him a rebel, but Farhad Manjoo wants Twitter to double the number of characters allowed in a tweet. To many users, that’s sacrilege. But on Twitter’s fifth anniversary, “the 140-character limit feels less like a feature than a big, obvious bug,” Manjoo writes on Slate . “Forcing people to shrink…
Continue reading …Police say they have broken up a prostitution ring whose Wall Street clients paid some $10,000 a night. Cops arrested 17 of those running “High Class NY,” based out of an office in Brooklyn, on drug, prostitution, corruption, and money-laundering charges. They face up to 25 years in prison….
Continue reading …A woman suing Casey Anthony for defamation wants to get a sense of how much Anthony might be worth. Lawyers for Zenaida Fernandez-Gonzalez want Anthony to reveal all the TV, book, and other money-making offers she has received, reports the Orlando Sentinel . They also want Anthony to turn over the…
Continue reading …Bailout fund turned into much more ambitious instrument in deal hatched following months of dithering European leaders have sealed a new €109bn bailout for Greece and erected defences against the debt crisis spreading to Italy and Spain by turning the eurozone’s 15-month-old bailout fund into a much more ambitious instrument resembling an infant European monetary fund. The deal, hatched at an emergency summit in Brussels of eurozone leaders, following months of dithering and division, also entailed large losses for Athens’ private creditors, making it almost certain that Greece would become the first eurozone country to be deemed to be in some form of default on its sovereign debt. A 16-point blueprint provided for a vast expansion in the role and powers of the €440bn bailout fund established in May last year. The package agreed after weeks of bad-tempered, intense haggling and only resolved at the last minute, was the biggest response from the eurozone since it created the bailout fund. Currently the fund can only be used as a “last resort” to rescue a eurozone country whose plight jeopardises the stability of the euro as a whole. Under the radical action, the fund will be able to intervene on the secondary markets to buy up the bonds of struggling debtor countries, to take preemptive or “precautionary” action to nip a debt crisis in the bud by, for example, agreeing lines of credit, and to supply loans to struggling eurozone countries who would use the money to shore up and recapitalise their banks. Such aid would apply, unlike at present, to countries not already in bailout programmes. “By the end of the summer, Angela Merkel and I will be making joint proposals on economic government in the eurozone. Our ambition is to seize the Greek crisis to make a quantum leap in eurozone government,” pledged French president Nicolas Sarkozy. “The very words were once taboo. We will give a clearer vision of the way we see the eurozone evolving. We have done something historic. There is no European Monetary Fund yet – but nearly.” While Sarkozy talked up the new powers for the bailout fund, Merkel emphasised that the key aims were to provide relief for Greece’s crippling debt burden and to ensure that private lenders to Greece took losses on their investments to that end. “I am satisfied with the result. We showed we’re up to the challenge,” she said. Greece’s private creditors will take losses of around 20% by agreeing to take part in buybacks of Greek bonds, rolling over Greek debt, or swapping maturing bonds. “We agree to support a new programme for Greece and to fully cover the financing gap,” the eurozone leaders said. “The total official financing will amount to an estimated €109bn.” In addition to that total, the private sector would contribute €37bn, it appeared, although there was some confusion over the precise makeup. The deal, a trade-off between Germany, which insisted on investor losses, and France, which relishes the greater powers of intervention for the bailout fund, left Jean-Claude Trichet, the head of the European Central Bank, the main loser. He had vehemently opposed Merkel. The transformation of the bailout fund was directed not so much at Greece as at containing the threat of contagion to other vulnerable eurozone countries, an attempt to curb market uncertainty over the fate of the euro. The terms of the new bailout, following last year’s failed €110bn rescue package, mean that EU leaders are resigned to living with a form of default, however temporarily and however “selectively”. Trichet said that the expected “selective default” would not trigger a credit event, meaning that the debt insurance markets would not face big claims for payouts. Trichet also stressed that the leaders had offered pledges that Greece was a one-off and that investors would not face losses anywhere else in the eurozone as part of bailout packages. “As far as private sector involvement in the euro area is concerned, we would like to make clear that Greece requires an exceptional and unique solution,” the leaders declared. Senior German and French bankers briefed the leaders yesterday on various models for private sector involvement. German government sources indicated creditors were writing off 20% of their investments. Senior eurozone sources said the expected default would last no longer than two months. The Dutch government said that objections to accepting selective default, mainly from the ECB, had been overcome. Trichet had warned that the bank will no longer keep Greek banks afloat by supplying liquidity for defaulted bond collateral. That role would probably shift, at least temporarily, to the eurozone bailout fund. “We will provide adequate resources to recapitalise Greek banks if needed,” the summit announced. German government sources said they had received assurances from the international ratings agencies that they would not rush to judgment in declaring a Greek default but would take their time in studying the deal. The eurozone loans would be provided at interest rates of 3.5%, two points lower than currently, while the maturity of loans to Greece would be more than doubled to at least 15 years and possibly to 30. There was also good news for Ireland and Portugal, whose borrowing costs for their eurozone bailouts would also fall to 3.5%. European debt crisis Greece Euro European banks Europe Currencies Euro European Union Economics European monetary union Europe Ian Traynor guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The Democrats, the party that Ronald Reagan ditched in 1962, says that even the Gipper would be on their side in today’s debt ceiling debate. Dems are telling Republicans they should follow Reagan’s lead in fiscal responsibility, circulating a 1987 radio address in which Reagan slammed brinksmanship and stressed that…
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