10
September , 2010
Friday
A local TV station that reported on Chicagoans NOT wanting the Olympics has been told ...
By Kevin Rennie No wonder Senator Christopher Dodd (D-Conn) went wobbly last week when asked about ...
Operational Update, Nov. 12: Afghan-International Joint Security Forces Detain Taliban Commander, Haqqani Facilitator, Militants in ...
Cuban revolutionary leader Fidel Castro took his warning of impending nuclear war to Cuba's Foreign ...
Chavez: U.S. Spy Plane Violated Venezuela's Airspace December 20, 2009 FoxNews.com CARACAS, Venezuela — President Hugo Chavez on ...
I Feel Global Warming When I Fly! Posted by Henry Payne (The Detroit News) on Tue, ...
Kudos to Bill Roggio from LWJ Qais and Laith Qazali. The US has released the leader ...
I bet the parents would have sued if the school told their child that he couldn't ...
Double-dip feared as US economic growth loses pace By James Quinn, US Business Editor July 30, 2010 www.telegraph.uk.co Double-dip ...
Sotomayor quits women's club after GOP criticism    Jun 19 07:48 PM US/Eastern By MARK SHERMAN Associated Press ...
The President has a duty to stand up to the lies of our enemies. There are ...
April 12, 2010 Details Emerge In Al Qaeda Plot On NYC Subway System FOXNews.com Subway tunnel connecting ...
What Ted Kennedy Wants He's trying to change election rules—again. Senator Ted Kennedy, who is gravely ill ...
Mika Brezinski Misses Founding Father By Four Score and Seven Years or So By Dan Gainor FOXNews.com ...
Another one bites the dust… This is the man he was supporting…Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, commander of Hezb-i-Islami. (Jihadwatch.org) (WorcesterTelegram&Gazette.com)
Hey! These are great people! They saw a need...people in need. They ...
Police in Australia are investigating the poisoning of seven million vegetable seedlings, including tomatoes, aubergines ...
Media, boaters could face criminal penalties by entering oil cleanup 'safety zone' The Coast Guard ...
Business groups plan to go on offense against vulnerable Senate Democrats in their backyards to ...
Pakistani soldiers have raided a hospital in South Waziristan, killing at least four suspected militants ...

Archive for the ‘Latest News’ Category

DEVELOPING: Obama Has Pressured Church To Call Off Koran Burning

Posted by Maggie On September - 9 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — The pastor planning to burn Qurans on Sept. 11 said Thursday that he had called off the event after receiving assurances that a proposed Islamic center would be moved away from the World Trade Center site.

But sources close to the imam behind the project denied a deal had been struck.

And Sharif Al-Gamal, owner of the building where the mosque and cultural center would be housed, told NBC News that there had been no discussions with Jones.

The Rev. Terry Jones insisted, however, that he had the imam’s “word that he will move the mosque to a different location.”

It wasn’t clear if he was referring to Imam Muhammad Musri of the Islamic Society of Central Florida, who appeared at the press conference with him, or Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, leader of the New York cultural center project.

Jones also said he would travel to New York on Saturday to meet with officials of the mosque project.

Jones said Musri told him that officials would guarantee that the mosque would be moved.

“I asked him three times, and I have witnesses,” Jones said. “If it’s not moved, then I think Islam is a very poor example of religion. I think that would be very pitiful. I do not expect that.”

Musri thanked Jones and his church members “for making the decision today to defuse the situation and bring to a positive end what has become the world over a spectacle that no one would benefit from except extremists and terrorists” who would use it to recruit future radicals.

“We are, of course, now against any other group burning Qurans,” Jones said during a news conference. We would right now ask no one to burn Qurans. We are absolutely strong on that. It is not the time to do it.”

President Barack Obama earlier implored Jones to call off his Quran-burning “stunt,” saying it would jeopardize U.S. troops abroad.

Obama told ABC’s “Good Morning America” in an interview aired Thursday that he hopes the Jones listens to “those better angels.”

“If he’s listening, I hope he understands that what he’s proposing to do is completely contrary to our values as Americans,” the president said. “That this country has been built on the notion of freedom and religious tolerance.”

“And as a very practical matter, I just want him to understand that this stunt that he is talking about pulling could greatly endanger our young men and women who are in uniform,” Obama said.

Jones, leader of a small church with about 30 members in Gainesville, had been planning to burn copies of the Islamic holy book on Saturday, the ninth anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks.

“Look, this is a recruitment bonanza for al-Qaida,” Obama said of the planned burning. “You could have serious violence in places like Pakistan and Afghanistan.” The president also said Jones’ plan, if carried out, could serve as an incentive for terrorist-minded individuals “to blow themselves up” to kill others.

Jones had said that a call from the Pentagon, State Department or White House might make him reconsider his plan.

On Thursday, Jones said Pentagon chief Robert Gates had called him to urge he back off. A Pentagon spokesman said he had no information about such a call.

Obama has gotten caught up in the burgeoning controversy surrounding the practice of Islam in America, saying at one point that he believed that Muslims had a right to build a mosque near the site of the Sept. 11 terror attacks in New York City.

Earlier, several members of his administration, including Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, had denounced the Quran-burning plan.

Also, Army Gen. David Petraeus, the ground commander in Afghanistan, has said the act of burning the Quran could endanger troops fighting there.

The State Department is cautioning Americans worldwide that there is a “high potential” for violent anti-American demonstrations if the church goes through with its plans. Officials noted that demonstrations have already been reported in Afghanistan and Indonesia and they urged Americans abroad to avoid areas where protesters might gather. – MSNBC

  • Print
  • email
  • PDF
  • RSS
  • BlinkList
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter

DEVELOPING: The Donald Offers To Buy The Ground Zero Mosque Property

Posted by Maggie On September - 9 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

NEW YORK — Donald Trump is offering to buy out one of the major investors in the real estate partnership that controls the site near ground zero where a Muslim group wants to build a 13-story Islamic center and mosque.

In a letter released Thursday by Trump’s publicist, the real estate investor told Hisham Elzanaty that he would buy his stake in the lower Manhattan building for 25 percent more than whatever he paid.

“I am making this offer as a resident of New York and citizen of the United States, not because I think the location is a spectacular one (because it is not), but because it will end a very serious, inflammatory, and highly divisive situation that is destined, in my opinion, to only get worse,” the letter said.

Trump also attached a condition to his offer: He said that as part of the deal, the backers of the mosque project would need to promise that any new mosque they constructed would be at least five blocks farther away from the World Trade Center site.

The current planned location is just two blocks north of the site. Opponents argue it’s insensitive to families and memories of Sept. 11 victims to build a mosque so close to where Islamic extremists flew planes into the World Trade Center and killed nearly 2,800 people, while proponents support the project as a reflection of religious freedom and diversity.

It’s unclear how much control Elzanaty has over the property, which is owned by an eight-member investment group led by Soho Properties.

A spokesman for Soho Properties general manager Sharif El-Gamal and his nonprofit group, Park51, did not immediately respond to a request for comment Thursday. Earlier in the day, the organization sent a statement to The Associated Press affirming that Soho Properties controlled the real estate and that Elzanaty was one of several investors.

El-Gamal and other people associated with the Islamic center have refused to detail the ownership structure of the real estate partnership that holds the site.

Elzanaty’s lawyer did not immediately return a phone message Thursday. But in a pair of interviews with the AP this week, Elzanaty said he had invested in the site with an intention of making a profit and was willing to sell some of it for private development. He also said he supported building a mosque on at least part of the property.

  • Print
  • email
  • PDF
  • RSS
  • BlinkList
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter

(AP) Says It Won’t Publish Pics of Koran Burning Unlike Publishing Pics of Dying Marine Lance Cpl. Joshua M. Bernard in A-stan

Posted by Maggie On September - 9 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

In recent days, the national media has exhaustively covered a fringe Florida pastor’s decision to burn Qurans on Sept. 11. The frenzy has raised questions about news organizations’ responsibilities to cover the news while possibly giving unwarranted publicity to an anti-Islamic stunt.

Some network spokespeople told The Upshot earlier that it’s too early to decide on which images would not be broadcast, given that the actual event is two days away. But the Associated Press has now decided to “not distribute images or audio that specifically show Qurans being burned, and will not provide detailed text descriptions of the burning.” (The memo was first posted on the media industry news site Romenesko).

Tom Kent, the AP’s deputy managing editor for standards and production, told staffers Thursday that although the AP will cover the event organized by Pastor Terry Jones in Gainesville, Fla., it’s important to place “the actions of this group of about 50 people in a clear and balanced context.”

For that reason, the AP is planning just one main story Saturday, which will fold in any comments from public figures — many of them the subjects individual articles and extensive cable coverage in recent days.

“AP policy is not to provide coverage of events that are gratuitously manufactured to provoke and offend,” Kent wrote. “In the past, AP has declined to provide images of cartoons mocking Islam and Jews.”

Kent continued: “AP has often declined to provide images, audio or detailed descriptions of particularly bloody or grisly scenes, such as the sounds and moments of beheadings and shootings, displays of severed heads on pikes and images of hostages who are displayed by hostage-holders in an effort to intimidate their adversaries and advance their cause. Decisions are made on a case-by-case basis.” – Yahoo

Mudville Gazette: Marine Lance Cpl. Joshua M. Bernard in A-stan – AP is ‘truly appalling

  • Print
  • email
  • PDF
  • RSS
  • BlinkList
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter

BREAKING: Iran Claims It Will Release One of The 3 American Hikers

Posted by Maggie On September - 9 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Iran announced Thursday that one of the three Americans jailed for more than a year will be released Saturday to mark the end of Islamic holy month of Ramadan.

Reporters were told by text message from the Culture Ministry to come to the same hotel where the Americans’ parents were allowed to meet them recently to witness the release.

“Offering congratulations on Eid al-Fitr,” the message said referring to the holiday marking the end of the fasting month. “The release of one of the detained Americans will be at Saturday, 9 a.m. at the Estaghlal hotel.”

It is common in the Islamic world to mark the Eid al-Fitr holiday by showing clemency and releasing prisoners.

Ali Reza Shiravi, the head of the foreign media office at the ministry confirmed that he had sent the message summoning reports to the hotel.

The high-rise Estaghlal hotel near Evin prison is where the three Americans’ mothers were allowed to visit them in May in a highly publicized trip.

The detained Americans — Sarah Shourd, 31; her boyfriend, Shane Bauer, 27; and their friend Josh Fattal, 27 — have been held in Iran since July 2009, when they were arrested along the Iraqi border.

Iran has accused them of espionage; their families say that the three were hiking in Iraq’s largely peaceful mountainous northern Kurdish region and that if they crossed the border, it was accidental.

Their detention has become entangled in the confrontation between the United States and Iran. Iranian leaders have repeatedly suggested a link between their jailing and that of a number of Iranians by the United States whose release Tehran demands.

Nora Shourd, the mother of Sarah Shourd, said Thursday morning that the U.S.-based families of the hikers had seen the news reports out of Iran but had no idea if they were true or not.

“We don’t know anything,” Shourd told the AP. “We’re trying like crazy to see what we can find out. I hope it’s true — that’s all I can say for sure. But I don’t know if it is.”

Nora Shourd had the last contact with any of the three jailed Americans, when Sarah called her on Aug. 2 and the two spoke for three or four minutes.

  • Print
  • email
  • PDF
  • RSS
  • BlinkList
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter

Imam Rauf: Build My GZ Mosque Or There Will Be Violence

Posted by Maggie On September - 9 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

(CNN) — The religious leader behind plans to erect an Islamic center and mosque a few blocks from New York’s ground zero said Wednesday night that America’s national security depends on how it handles the controversy.

“If we move from that location, the story will be the radicals have taken over the discourse,” Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf told CNN’s Soledad O’Brien on “Larry King Live.”

“The headlines in the Muslim world will be that Islam is under attack.”

The imam, who repeatedly said his mission was to promote peace and build a bridge among faiths, said he was also speaking about “radicals” on both sides of the debate on the Islamic center. “Our national security now hinges on how we negotiate this, how we speak about it.”

“The battlefront is between moderates of all sides… and the radicals on all sides,” he said.

Moving the project to another location would strengthen Islamist radicals’ ability to recruit followers and will likely increase violence against Americans, the imam said.

Rauf said that “nothing is off the table” when asked whether he would consider moving the site.

“We are consulting, talking to various people about how to do this so that we negotiate the best and safest option.”

The imam told O’Brien “had I known [the controversy] would happen we certainly would never have done this.” Asked if he meant he would not have picked the location, Rauf said, “we would not have done something that would create more divisiveness.”

Worry over what some observers have termed “Islamophobia” has been heightened by a Gainesville, Florida, church’s plan to burn copies of the Quran on Saturday, the ninth anniversary of the 2001 attacks on New York and Washington.

Rauf said he hopes the church reconsiders. “It is something that is not the right thing to do.”

“With freedom comes responsibility,” he said. “This is dangerous to our national security and is also the un-Christian thing to do. … Jesus said to love your enemy. We are not your enemy.”

Responding to a poll showing 71 percent of New Yorkers oppose the center’s location, Rauf he was going on television to explain his background and vision. “I want to show them my face. Show them my track record.”

The imam spoke of “a vision I’ve had for almost 15 years … to establish a space that embodies the fundamental

beliefs that we have as Jews, Christians and Muslims, which is to love our God and to love our neighbor — to build a space where we have a culture of worship.”

Rauf said he would continue speaking with families of those killed in the September 11, 2001, attacks. “You cannot heal a trauma by walking away from it,” he said.

Opposition goes against “the fundamental American principle of separation of church and state,” said Rauf, adding he has been surprised by the controversy.

The project, known as Park51, is slated to include a variety of facilities, including a prayer room, a performing arts center, gym, swimming pool and other public spaces. It is planned for a site two blocks from the World Trade Center.

A source familiar with Park51 told CNN’s Allan Chernoff last week that the structure is being planned as an 11-story building. It will cover 120,000 square feet — 10,000 feet of which would be designated for the Muslim prayer space. The developer is considering the possibility of an interfaith education/meditation/prayer space as well, the source said.

Opponents of the plan to build the center say it is too close to the site of the terror attacks and is an affront to the memory of those who died in the al Qaeda strike. Backers cite, among other things, First Amendment rights and the need to express religious tolerance.

Those who know Rauf describe him as a thoughtful man, a bridge builder who seeks to unite all faiths but who won’t parse words when he sees religion used for nefarious ends.

But he has landed in controversy before.

He has chided the U.S. for killing civilians in Baghdad. He said in 2005 that the U.S. had more Muslim blood on its hands than “al Qaeda has on its hands of innocent non-Muslims.” He has refused to accept Western governments’ designation of Hamas as a terrorist group. Shortly after the 9/11 attacks, he told CBS’ “60 Minutes” that “United States policies were an accessory to the crime.”

Earlier this week, Rauf wrote a commentary published online by the New York Times.

“I have been struck by how the controversy has riveted the attention of Americans, as well as nearly everyone I met in my travels,” Rauf wrote.

“We have all been awed by how inflamed and emotional the issue of the proposed community center has become,” wrote Rauf, who had just returned from a State Department-sponsored Middle East trip to promote U.S.-Muslim relations.

“The level of attention reflects the degree to which people care about the very American values under debate: recognition of the rights of others, tolerance and freedom of worship.”

Full transcript of the interview

  • Print
  • email
  • PDF
  • RSS
  • BlinkList
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter

Florida “Free Speech”: As They Wet Themselves Over A Possible Koran-Burning, Fla. Says A “How To” Manual on Child Molestation Is OK

Posted by Maggie On September - 9 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

A 170-page manual explaining step by step how to molest children which police in Orange County, Fla., believe has been circulating there for months, is not illegal. Investigators have stated that they still want to know where it came from.

“I’ve never seen anything like it. It was pretty amazing when I first saw it just because how detailed it was,” Orange County Sheriff’s Office Det. Philip Graves told ABC News Orlando, Fla., affiliate WFTV.

The manual, which was apparently written by someone who calls himself “the mule,” is a how-to of child molestation, even explaining where and how to find potential victims, the station reported.

“I was more amazed that someone would be as bold as to create an actual 170-page document that would detail how to do it,” he said.

Among the many disturbing topics covered in the book is how to convince a victimized child not to tell his or her parents.

“People who are engaged in the exploitation of children are talking about these things, and how to avoid law enforcement,” Seminole County Sheriff’s Office Sgt. Dan Purcell told TV station WESH-TV in Orlando.

Deputies with the sheriff’s sexual offender surveillance squad have been aware of the manual for the past six months, Graves told WFTV.

The sheriff’s office received it through an e-mail listserve, he said.

“We personally haven’t worked a case on it, but it has been located within our region,” Graves said.

Graves told WFTV that it is not a crime in Orange County to send the manual by e-mail or to possess it, but local and federal investigators are trying to track down where the manual initially came from.

Deputies believe whoever is responsible may have committed crimes against children. – ABC News

  • Print
  • email
  • PDF
  • RSS
  • BlinkList
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter

Castro Has Major Brain Fart

Posted by Maggie On September - 9 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

[...]

But during the generally lighthearted conversation (we had just spent three hours talking about Iran and the Middle East), I asked him if he believed the Cuban model was still something worth exporting.

The Cuban model doesn’t even work for us anymore,” he said.

This struck me as the mother of all Emily Litella moments. Did the leader of the Revolution just say, in essence, “Never mind”?

I asked Julia to interpret this stunning statement for me. She said, “He wasn’t rejecting the ideas of the Revolution. I took it to be an acknowledgment that under ‘the Cuban model’ the state has much too big a role in the economic life of the country.”
Julia pointed out that one effect of such a sentiment might be to create space for his brother, Raul, who is now president, to enact the necessary reforms in the face of what will surely be push-back from orthodox communists within the Party and the bureaucracy. Raul Castro is already loosening the state’s hold on the economy. He recently announced, in fact, that small businesses can now operate and that foreign investors could now buy Cuban real estate. (The joke of this new
announcement, of course, is that Americans are not allowed to invest in Cuba, not because of Cuban policy, but because of American policy. In other words, Cuba is beginning to adopt the sort of economic ideas that America has long-demanded it adopt, but Americans are not allowed to participate in this free-market experiment because of our government’s hypocritical and stupidly self-defeating embargo policy. We’ll regret this, of course, when Cubans partner with Europeans and Brazilians to buy up all the best hotels).

[...] – The Atlantic

  • Print
  • email
  • PDF
  • RSS
  • BlinkList
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter

Obama Sinks Deeper Under The Approval Waters

Posted by Maggie On September - 9 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

The Rasmussen Reports daily Presidential Tracking Poll for Thursday shows that 23% of the nation’s voters Strongly Approve of the way that Barack Obama is performing his role as president. Forty-seven percent (47%) Strongly Disapprove, giving Obama a Presidential Approval Index rating of -24.

[...]

Overall, 41% of voters say they at least somewhat approve of the president’s performance. Fifty-eight percent (58%) disapprove.

Today’s Approval Index rating is the lowest yet recorded for this president. Overall Job Approval matches the lowest recorded number, and the number who Strongly Disapprove matches the highest yet recorded.

President Obama continues to earn Approval from 74% of Democrats. However, 88% of Republicans disapprove. So do 63% of those not affilated with either major political party. Platinum Members can see additional demographic breakdowns and additional measures of the president’s performance on the Rasmussen Reports By the Numbers page.

[...]

The number of Republicans in the nation grew by two percentage points over the past month while the number of Democrats slipped a bit. As a result, the GOP has closed the partisan gap to the smallest margin in five years. [...]

  • Print
  • email
  • PDF
  • RSS
  • BlinkList
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter

Iran Developing New Secret Nuclear Site

Posted by Maggie On September - 9 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

An Iranian resistance group claimed Thursday that it has compiled evidence showing Iran has been secretly developing a nuclear enrichment site for years outside Tehran, a development one official said proves Iran has a “hidden, secret nuclear weapons program.”

The Iran Policy Committee hosted a press conference in Washington, D.C., where research from the Iranian resistance, known as the Mujahedeen Khalq, was unveiled. The findings could not be independently confirmed.

The presenters cited evidence, including satellite imagery, they claimed was compiled after years of extensive research. They said that the Behjatabad-Abyek enrichment site is located near the city of Qazvin, about 75 miles outside of Tehran. The group claimed the regime has spent about $100 million to date on the underground project, which started in early 2005, and that construction is 85 percent complete.

Alireza Jafarzadeh, president of Strategic Policy Consulting, said the research shows the Iranian officials have been “lying through their teeth” in claiming to have disclosed all nuclear activity to international inspectors. He said it proves Iran is pursuing a nuclear weapons program, only more secretly than before.

Soona Samsami, an Iranian activist, called the project a “major” enrichment site more important than the facility at Qom confirmed by Western officials last year.

The opposition group was the first to reveal the existence of secret Iranian uranium enrichment facilities in Natanz and a heavy water facility in Arak back in 2002 — the sites were later confirmed by U.S. intelligence. Though officials typically have confirmed revelations made by the resistance group, they have at times had a mixed record and are listed on the State Department’s terror group list — a list representatives argue should not include them.

Iranian officials have defended their right to nuclear development but claim their research is for peaceful purposes only. – FOX News

  • Print
  • email
  • PDF
  • RSS
  • BlinkList
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter

Burning The Crap Out of The “Burn The Koran” Story

Posted by Maggie On September - 8 - 2010 1 COMMENT

Okay. I’m following on other blogs all those fools who have felt the need to step up to a microphone and condemn the planned Koran burning by a small church in Florida on 9-11. But I refuse to clutter the entire Chandler’s Watch page with every single one of these, so, here’s a post cluttered with the links … if you care enough to look.

Personally, I believe everyone should just have ignored this distasteful display of our right to free speech. But as if on cue, many have decided to weigh-in and look like sheeple to the threat of terrorism by an ideology that deserves to be deported to the Moon.

And just a last (sort of) note: On 9-11-01 nobody had burned a Koran anywhere in this country. But 4 planes, over three buildings, a field and thousands of human beings burned for days/weeks.

Fla. Minister Determined To Hold 9/11 Quran Burn

Pakistani says Beck should oppose Quran protest

Thoughts From Glenn on Church Plan to Burn Koran

Attorney General Eric Holder calls Rev. Terry Jones’ ‘International Burn-a-Koran Day’ ‘idiotic’

NYPD Top Cop: Planned Quran Burning Is “Dangerous”

Koran Burning Hotline: County rumor control hotline activated for Dove World concerns

Church threatened over Qur’an burning

Muslim cleric warns of Koran burning consequences

Those Who Deride or Show Bigotry Toward Muslims ‘Bring Dishonor to the Name Of Jesus Christ,’ Says Evangelical Leader

Vatican Says Burning Quran Is Outrageous Act

Clinton calls plan to burn Quran ‘disgraceful act’

Mayor Bloomberg says he’s not against pastor’s planned Koran burning

Clinton calls plan to burn Quran ‘disgraceful act’

Top NATO official condemns planned Quran burning on September 11th

General Petraeus: Burn a Quran Day Could ‘Endanger Troops’

  • Print
  • email
  • PDF
  • RSS
  • BlinkList
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter

Tonight on Chandler’s Watch

Posted by Howie On September - 8 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Tonight we are going to be talking about the hypocrisy that is being displayed by the MSM and the Obama Administration in the handling and mind set of the mosque at Ground Zero and the quaran burning planned in Gainsville Florida!

  • Print
  • email
  • PDF
  • RSS
  • BlinkList
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter

Long Island Man Arrested For Defending Home With AK-47 « CBS New York- News, Sports, Weather, Traffic and the Best of NY

Posted by Howie On September - 8 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

UNIONDALE, N.Y. CBS 2 — He was arrested for protecting his property and family.But it’s how the Long Island man did it that police say crossed the line.He got an AK-47 assault rifle, pulled the trigger and he ended up in jail, reports CBS 2’s Pablo Guzman.George Grier said he had to use his rifle on Sunday night to stop what he thought was going to be an invasion of his Uniondale home by a gang he thought might have been the vicious “MS-13.” He said the whole deal happened as he was about to drive his cousin home.“I went around and went into the house, ran upstairs and told my wife to call the police. I get the gun and I go outside and I come into the doorway and now, by this time, they are in the driveway, back here near the house. I tell them, you know, ‘Can you please leave?’ Grier said.Grier said the five men dared him to use the gun; and that their shouts brought another larger group of gang members in front of his house.“He starts threatening my family, my life. ‘Oh you’re dead. I’m gonna kill your family and your babies. You’re dead.’ So when he says that, 20 others guys come rushing around the corner. And so I fired four warning shots into the grass,” Grier said.Grier was later arrested. John Lewis is Grier’s attorney.“What he’s initially charged with – A D felony reckless endangerment — requires a depraved indifference to human life, creating a risk that someone’s going to die. Shooting into a lawn doesn’t create a risk of anybody dying,” Lewis said.Grier said he knew Nassau County Police employ the hi-tech “ShotSpotter” technology in his area and that the shooting would bring police in minutes. Cops told Guzman he was very cooperative.Grier also said he was afraid the gang outside his house was the dreaded MS-13. And Nassau County Police Lt. Andrew Mulraine, head of the gang unit, said MS-13 has 2,000 members in the county.“They’re probably the most organized. They almost have a military hierarchy within the gang, so they are the most organized gang we encounter on a daily basis,” Mulraine said.You may think a person has the right to defend their home. But the law says you can only use physical force to deter physical force. Grier said he never saw anyone pull out a gun, so a court would have to decide on firing the gun.Police determined Grier had the gun legally. He has no criminal record. And so he was not charged for the weapon.That ShotSpotter technology pinpoints where a gun has been fired within 35 feet. Police said it also detected two other shootings in nearby Roosevelt that night.

CBS New York

  • Print
  • email
  • PDF
  • RSS
  • BlinkList
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter

1934 Cartoonist More Clarvoyant Than Nostradamus

Posted by Howie On September - 8 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

  • Print
  • email
  • PDF
  • RSS
  • BlinkList
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter

Clown Posse: The AP and The DOJ Grasping At “Hate Crimes” Against Muslims Straws

Posted by Maggie On September - 8 - 2010 1 COMMENT

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department is investigating a handful of apparently anti-Muslim incidents in four states, including the stabbing of a Muslim cab driver in New York City.

FBI agents and civil rights division investigators also are looking into vandalism and other incidents at mosques or mosque construction sites in Arlington, Texas; Murfreesboro, Tenn.; Madera, Calif.; and Waterport, N.Y.

The open criminal investigations were confirmed by civil rights division spokeswoman Xochitl (SOH-chee) Hinojosa in response to a query from The Associated Press.

Attorney General Eric Holder met Tuesday with Muslim and other religious leaders to discuss the attacks and the uproar over a planned mosque near ground zero in New York.

“The attorney general reiterated the department’s strong commitment to prosecuting hate crimes, and noted several successes,” Justice spokesman Matthew Miller said afterward. “Over the past eighteen months, the department has prosecuted three men who burned a mosque in Tennessee, two others who burned an African-American church in Massachusetts and another who spray-painted threats on a synagogue in Alabama, among other cases. … Violence against individuals or institutions based on religious bias is intolerable and the department will bring anyone who commits such crimes to justice.”

The religious leaders had sought a forceful public statement from Holder condemning hate crimes and an order for his community relations service to try to defuse tensions over plans by a Gainesville, Fla., church to burn copies of the Quran on Saturday, the ninth anniversary of the 9/11 attacks.

The White House, Pentagon and State Department all have said the desecration of the Quran could endanger U.S. troops and civilians abroad. But the church’s pastor, Terry Jones, said he still intends to go ahead.

The incidents have followed sustained criticism of the planned mosque near the former site of the World Trade Center in lower Manhattan. Early plans for the project known as Park51 call for a 500-seat auditorium, a Sept. 11 memorial and prayer space.

Among the incidents under investigation as potential hate crimes, all dating from July and August:

_ A Muslim cab driver in New York City had his face and throat slashed in a suspected hate crime. Michael Enright of Brewster, N.Y., has been indicted on state hate-crime charges in the attack and could also face assault and attempted murder charges. (By a drunk idot liberal that supports the GZ mosque, BTW.)

_ Arson at the site of a future mosque in Murfreesboro, where leaders of the local Islamic Center won permission in the spring to build a new mosque after outgrowing their rented space. (A vacant lot? Really?)

_ A brick nearly smashed a window at the Madera Islamic Center in central California, where signs were left behind that read, “Wake up America, the enemy is here,” and “No temple for the god of terrorism.” (Nearly? Fools exercising their free speech? Really?)

_ A fire and graffiti at the Dar El-Eman Islamic Center in Arlington, Texas. (So, inner city related sights are NOT ‘hate crimes’? Really?)

_ Police arrested five teenagers after the son of one of the founders of a mosque in Waterport, N.Y., on Lake Ontario was sideswiped by a sport utility vehicle. One teen was charged with firing a shotgun in the air near the mosque a few days earlier. (A car accident? Really?) – (AP)

  • Print
  • email
  • PDF
  • RSS
  • BlinkList
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter

The Lights Go Out On More US Jobs Under Obama’s “Energy” Ideology

Posted by Maggie On September - 8 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

WINCHESTER, VA. – The last major GE factory making ordinary incandescent light bulbs in the United States is closing this month, marking a small, sad exit for a product and company that can trace their roots to Thomas Alva Edison’s innovations in the 1870s.

The remaining 200 workers at the plant here will lose their jobs.

“Now what’re we going to do?” said Toby Savolainen, 49, who like many others worked for decades at the factory, making bulbs now deemed wasteful.

During the recession, political and business leaders have held out the promise that American advances, particularly in green technology, might stem the decades-long decline in U.S. manufacturing jobs. But as the lighting industry shows, even when the government pushes companies toward environmental innovations and Americans come up with them, the manufacture of the next generation technology can still end up overseas.

What made the plant here vulnerable is, in part, a 2007 energy conservation measure passed by Congress that set standards essentially banning ordinary incandescents by 2014. The law will force millions of American households to switch to more efficient bulbs.

The resulting savings in energy and greenhouse-gas emissions are expected to be immense. But the move also had unintended consequences.

Rather than setting off a boom in the U.S. manufacture of replacement lights, the leading replacement lights are compact fluorescents, or CFLs, which are made almost entirely overseas, mostly in China.

Consisting of glass tubes twisted into a spiral, they require more hand labor, which is cheaper there. So though they were first developed by American engineers in the 1970s, none of the major brands make CFLs in the United States.

“Everybody’s jumping on the green bandwagon,” said Pat Doyle, 54, who has worked at the plant for 26 years. But “we’ve been sold out. First sold out by the government. Then sold out by GE. ”

Doyle was speaking after a shift last month surrounded by several co-workers around a picnic table near the punch clock. Many of the workers have been at the plant for decades, and most appeared to be in their 40s and 50s. Several worried aloud about finding another job.

“When you’re 50 years old, no one wants you,” Savolainen said. It was meant half in jest, but some of the men nod grimly.

If there is a green bandwagon, as Doyle says, much of the Obama administration is on board. As a means of creating U.S. jobs, the administration has been promoting the nation’s “green economy” – solar power, electric cars, wind turbines – with the idea that U.S. innovations in those fields may translate into U.S. factories. President Obama said last month that he expects the government’s commitment to clean energy to lead to more than 800,000 jobs by 2012, one step in a larger journey planned to restore U.S. manufacturing.

But officials are working against a daunting trend. Under the pressures of globalization, the number of manufacturing jobs in the United States has been shrinking for decades, from 19.5 million in 1979 to 11.6 million this year, a decline of 40 percent.

At textile mills in North Carolina, at auto parts plants in Ohio, at other assorted manufacturing plants around the country, the closures have pushed workers out, often leaving them to face an onslaught of personal defeats: lower wages, community college retraining and unemployment checks.

In Obama’s vision, the nation’s mastery of new technology will create American manufacturing jobs.

“See, when folks lift up the hoods on the cars of the future, I want them to see engines stamped “Made in America,” Obama said in an Aug. 16 speech at a Wisconsin plant. “When new batteries to store solar power come off the line, I want to see printed on the side, “Made in America.” When new technologies are developed and new industries are formed, I want them made right here in America. That’s what we’re fighting for.”

But a closer look at the lighting industry reveals that isn’t going to be easy.

At one time, the United States was ahead of the game in CFLs.

Following the 1973 energy crisis, a GE engineer named Ed Hammer and others at the company’s famed Nela Park research laboratories were tinkering with different methods of saving electricity with fluorescent lights.

In a standard incandescent bulb, in which the filament is electrified until it glows, only about 10 percent of the electricity is transformed into light; the rest generates heat as a side effect. A typical fluorescent uses about 75 percent less electricity than an incandescent to produce the same amount of light.

The trouble facing Hammer was that fluorescents are most efficient in long tubes. But long, linear tubes don’t fit into the same lamp fixtures that the standard incandescent bulbs do.

Working with a team of talented glass blowers, though, Hammer twisted the tubes into a spiral. The new lamps had length, but were also more compact.

“I knew it was a good lamp design,” he recalled recently. In retrospect, in fact, it was a key innovation. The Smithsonian houses Hammer’s original spiral CFL prototype.

At the time, however, the design had one big problem. Bending all that glass into the required shape was slow and required lots of manual labor.

“I used to say you would need 40,000 glass blowers to make the parts,” Hammer said. “Without automation, it was economically unfeasible. It was a lamp before its time.”

The company decided to make investments in other types of lighting then being developed.

Years passed. The next major innovator to try his hand at CFLs was Ellis Yan, a Chinese immigrant to the United States, who had started his own lighting business in China and then in the early ’90s turned his attention to the possibilities of CFLs.

To make CFLs, he had workers in China sit beside furnaces and bend the glass by hand. Even with the low-wages there, the first attempts were very expensive, clunky and flickered when turned on, he said. But he persisted.

“Everybody [in the industry] stayed back and was watching me,” he recalled. “No one else wanted to make the big investment for the next generation of technology.”

The business prospered and Yan’s factories in China employed as many as 14,000 – not so far off from the 40,000 glass blowers that Hammer had once imagined would be necessary. With new automation techniques, Yan is seeking to cut the number of his employees in China, where wages are rising, to 5,000 by year’s end.

Today, about a quarter of the lights sold in the United States are CFLs, according to NEMA, an industry association. Of those, Yan says, he manufactures more than half.

Someday soon, Yan says, he hopes to build a U.S. factory, though he so far has been unable to secure $12.5 million in government funding for the project.

Manufacturing in the United States would add 10 percent or more to the cost of building a standard CFL, he said, but retailers have indicated that there is a demand for products manufactured domestically.

“Retailers tell me people ask for ‘Made in the USA’ ” Yan said. “I tell them the product will cost 45 to 50 cents more. They say people will pay for it.”

Sales of the CFLs began slowly, but they spiked in 2006 and 2007, when federal and state government efforts promoted their use.

The Energy Department teamed with Disney to develop a public service announcement based on the Disney Pixar film “Ratatouille” to encourage the adoption of technologies such as CFLs. It was shown on CNN, HGTV and the Food Network.

Lawmakers in California and Nevada drafted legislation calling for higher efficiency standards for light bulbs. And in December 2007, Congress passed its new energy standards.

GE balked at the standards at first, knowing that they could impact their U.S. manufacturing. But the company also saw that with restrictions gaining momentum in more states and other countries, some kind of legislation was unavoidable. They decided to support the bill as long as it didn’t amount to a ban on traditional incandescents, but instead simply set energy standards.

“We obviously pointed out to legislators that the impact of an outright ban would be an elimination of some manufacturing operations,” said Earl Jones, senior counsel in government relations and regulatory compliance at the company. “But it was inevitable that some kind of legislation would be coming to the U.S.”

As expected, the new standards hurt the business in traditional incandescents.

The company developed a plan to see what it would take to retrofit a plant that makes traditional incandescents into one that makes CFLs. Even with a $40 million investment and automation, the disparity in wages and other factors made it uneconomical. The new plant’s CFLs would have cost about 50 percent more than those from China, GE officials said.

The company also makes halogen light bulbs, which are an innovative type of incandescent, and Sylvania is transforming its incandescent light bulb factory in St. Marys, Pa. to halogen as well.

But the era of traditional incandescents built in the United States was coming to an end.

In announcing the plant closure here, GE said in a news release that “a variety of energy regulations,” including those in the United States, “will soon make the familiar lighting products produced at the Winchester Plant obsolete.”

“For those who make incandescent bulbs the law was bad for business,” Yan said. “For people like us, it was very good.”

Temperatures at the traditional incandescent plant here can be sweltering because of the heat coming from the machines that melt the glass. It’s noisy, too, and workers wear ear plugs and safety glasses. And the pace of the work demands constant hustle, an atmosphere created by managers over the years who set up competitions among teams of workers striving to meet production goals. The winning line could post a black-and-white checkered flag on their machinery.

Jobs at the plant have been prized locally for years: They pay about $30 an hour.

One day after punching out recently, the workers gathered around the picnic tables by the employee entrance.

Some expressed grievances with the plant managers, who they note will get new jobs elsewhere, or with Congress for passing the energy legislation. Several took aim at the new new technology itself, noting that CFLs have mercury in them.

Some at the plant will be able to retire off their severance packages. Those with less time on the job, or those who are younger, have braced themselves for whatever comes next.

Some are taking classes at the Lord Fairfax Community College, hoping that familiarity with solar panels or HVAC might land them a job. Others scan the want-ads but don’t see how they will replace what they were making at the factory.

This small town has not been terribly hurt by the recession; local unemployment is running at 7.5 percent, well below the national average.

But good-paying jobs in manufacturing, they said, have become difficult to find.

Beverly Carter, 50, who feeds cardboard sleeves into a machine and makes sure it doesn’t jam, has worked at the plant for 32 years.

“It’s very hard to find a job like that around here,” she said.

Moreover, because many of the workers are in their 40s and 50s, some were nagged by worries that other employers would see them as washed up.

“We gave GE the best years of our lives,” Savolainen said.

Matt Madigan, 40, and his twin brothers, Wayne and Dwayne, also work at the plant.

“We’ve always had a lot of industry here in the valley, I’ve never had a problem finding a job,” he said. “A person really wanted to work, you could go from one factory to another. Everything nowadays is tougher.” – WaPo

  • Print
  • email
  • PDF
  • RSS
  • BlinkList
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter

Scientists Invent A Tractor Beam That Can Move Objects By Light

Posted by Marc On September - 8 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Scientists Invent a Tractor Beam
by Mike Lucibella
FoxNews.com
Inside Science News Service
September 8, 2010

In “Stak Trek,” Federation starships relied upon tractor beams to hold and tow other vessels. Scientists may not be there yet, but they have managed to tow a small particle using light beams.

Tractor beams, energy rays that can move objects, are a science fiction mainstay. But now they are becoming a reality — at least for moving very tiny objects.

Researchers from the Australian National University have announced that they have built a device that can move small particles a meter and a half using only the power of light.

Physicists have been able to manipulate tiny particles over miniscule distances by using lasers for years. Optical tweezers that can move particles a few millimeters are common.

Andrei Rhode, a researcher involved with the project, said that existing optical tweezers are able to move particles the size of a bacterium a few millimeters in a liquid. Their new technique can move objects one hundred times that size over a distance of a meter or more.

The device works by shining a hollow laser beam around tiny glass particles. The air surrounding the particle heats up, while the dark center of the beam stays cool. When the particle starts to drift out of the middle and into the bright laser beam, the force of heated air molecules bouncing around and hitting the particle’s surface is enough to nudge it back to the center.

A small amount of light also seeps into the darker middle part of the beam, heating the air on one side of the particle and pushing it along the length of the laser beam. If another such laser is lined up on the opposite side of the beam, the speed and direction the particle moves can be easily manipulated by changing the brightness of the beams.

Rhode said that their technique could likely work over even longer distances than they tested.

“With the particles and the laser we use, I would guess up to 10 meters in air should not be a problem. The max distance we had was 1.5 meters, which was limited by the size of the optical table in the lab,” Rhode said.

Because this technique needs heated gas to push the particles around, it can’t work in the vacuum of outer space like the tractor beams in Star Trek. But on Earth there are many possible applications for the technology. The meter-long distances that the research team was able to move the particles could open up new avenues for laser tweezers in the transport of dangerous substances and microbes, and for sample taking and biomedical research.

“There is the possibility that one could use the hollow spheres as a means of chemical delivery agents, or microscopic containers of some kind, but some more work would need to be done here just to check what happens inside the spheres, in terms of sample heating,” said David McGloin, a physicist at the University of Dundee in the U.K not connected with the Australian team.

  • Print
  • email
  • PDF
  • RSS
  • BlinkList
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter

Captain Drone Has Been Busy; He Whacks At Least 10 Islamic Terrorist Douchebags In Six Attacks

Posted by Marc On September - 8 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Suspected US missiles hit 2 targets close to Afghan border, killing 10 alleged militants
September 7, 2010
FoxNews.com

You just have to love Captain Drone flying around all alone in that remote mountainous region looking for all those bad guys. Captain Drone has a great sense of smell as he can smell those douchebags many miles away and then when the douchebags least expect it; WHAM! right between the eyes. Bye Akbar!

Two suspected U.S. missile strikes hit militant targets in northwestern Pakistan on Wednesday, officials said, bringing to six the number of such attacks in the region in less than a week. At least 10 suspected members of a group attacking NATO forces in Afghanistan were killed.

The strikes happened within hours of each other in North Waziristan, a lawless region home to militants battling foreign troops just across the border in Afghanistan, al-Qaida leaders plotting attacks in the West and insurgents behind bombings in Pakistan.

The militants have stepped up their own attacks in Pakistan in recent days, just as the army focuses on helping millions of victims from the worst floods in the country’s history. Four big bombs have killed at least 135 people in less than a week.

The United States has fired hundreds of missiles into northwest Pakistan over the last 2½ years. American officials do not publicly acknowledge such strikes, but have said privately that they have killed several senior Taliban and al-Qaida militants and scores of foot soldiers.

Critics say innocents are also killed, fueling support for the insurgency.

The first attack was on a house in the village of Dande Darpa Khel near Miran Shah, the main town in North Waziristan, two Pakistani intelligence officials said on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.

The house was owned by Maulvi Azizullah, a member of the Haqqani network, a militant group based in North Waziristan that U.S. military officials have called the most dangerous threat to NATO troops in Afghanistan. Six militants were killed, they said.

The second missile hit a car traveling a few miles (kilometers) from the border, killing four people associated with the Haqqani network, officials said. Zameedullah Wazir, a resident of Ambar Shaga, said he and others tried to get close to the vehicle, but were told to leave by Taliban fighters who arrived soon after in three vehicles.

Pakistan’s army has launched several offensives in the northwest over the last two years, but has resisted moving into North Waziristan despite U.S. pressure. The Haqqani network has refrained from launching attacks inside Pakistan, and analysts believe the army views them as an important tool to secure its interests in Afghanistan once foreign troops withdraw.

Without a Pakistani military offensive, the U.S. has had to rely on drone strikes to battle the group.

The Pakistani government has publicly criticized the missiles strikes as violations of its sovereignty, but is believed to help the CIA carry out the attacks, especially when they target militants at war with Pakistan.

  • Print
  • email
  • PDF
  • RSS
  • BlinkList
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter

As A Piece Of The 9-11 Memorial Is Raised Imam Rauf Calls For Our Faith In His Taqiyya

Posted by Maggie On September - 7 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

NEW YORK (AP) – Officials hoisted a 70-foot piece of World Trade Center steel at ground zero Tuesday and vowed to open the Sept. 11 memorial by next year, although they acknowledged that the ongoing construction at the site would limit where and how the public could visit.
The memorial, with reflecting, waterfall-filled pools set above the footprints of the fallen towers, its wall of victims’ names, its trees and green spaces, is expected to open by the 10th anniversary of the 2001 attacks. Officials have said it would be open to the general public after that.

But the public will only be able to enter the memorial from the western edge of ground zero, while fenced boundaries that surround the site on three other sides of the 8-acre plaza will still be there, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Tuesday.

“Every once in a while they’re going to have to move a beam or something and they’ll close off a part of it,” the mayor said, but said visitors would be able to still walk through the cobblestoned plaza and pause by the memorial pools, which have been built up to street level.

“You’ll be able to come, walk the plaza, sit, contemplate, the fountains will be working, look at the names, you can reflect,” he said.

Thousands of visitors come to peer inside the fenced construction site or visit two adjoining museum sites a day. Once the official memorial is open, officials estimate 7.1 million people will visit it in the first year.

Bloomberg said a northeast section of the plaza would be closed at some point while a transit hub is being built underneath it, and said other parts of the plaza could close as needs warrant. Several of the 400 trees that are planned at the plaza—including 16 that were planted this summer—will still need to be installed after the 10th anniversary passes.

Bloomberg and other officials described progress at the memorial and at half a dozen other projects underway at the 16-acre site, including the signature, 1,776-foot skyscraper meant to replace the fallen trade center towers. It was followed by the hoisting of a salvaged 50-ton steel column that was once part of the north tower’s facade to mark what will be the entrance of the memorial museum.

“I think there had been doubts, there had been concerns but we are here today to truly acknowledge what has happened recently,” said Chris Ward, executive director of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which owns the site.

Thirty-six stories of 1 World Trade Center, formerly known as the Freedom Tower, are rising from the northwest corner of the site. It is scheduled to open in 2013, along with a second office tower.

The column put in place Tuesday was part of that. The 70-foot structure, with its three-pronged trident top, was salvaged from the rubble after the Sept. 11 attacks. A second column is expected to be raised Wednesday. The columns will be at the entrance of the museum, which will occupy space underneath the site and is scheduled to open in 2012.

Officials cited an agreement reached with developer Larry Silverstein in recent months that they said would speed up the financing and construction timetables of up to three towers the private developer hopes to build. The Port Authority agreed to put up to $1.6 billion in public financing towards two of Silverstein’s towers, including one where it plans to rent office space.

The Port Authority is also building a transit hub expected to be close to the size of Grand Central Terminal for commuter rail lines to New Jersey and connections to a dozen subway lines. The hub is expected to be finished in 2014.

Plans for two other towers are uncertain and dependent on market conditions. A performing arts center is also planned for the site, but its design, financing and construction schedule are not complete.

But once the towers, memorial and hub open, Silverstein said, the area known as ground zero would transform into something else.

“It will be an extraordinary dimension to this neighborhood in terms of what it will have created,” he said.

Building on Faith

AS my flight approached America last weekend, my mind circled back to the furor that has broken out over plans to build Cordoba House, a community center in Lower Manhattan.I have been away from home for two months, speaking abroad about cooperation among people from different religions. Every day, including the past two weeks spent representing my country on a State Department tour in the Middle East, I have been struck by how the controversy has riveted the attention of Americans, as well as nearly everyone I met in my travels.

We have all been awed by how inflamed and emotional the issue of the proposed community center has become. The level of attention reflects the degree to which people care about the very American values under debate: recognition of the rights of others, tolerance and freedom of worship.

Many people wondered why I did not speak out more, and sooner, about this project. I felt that it would not be right to comment from abroad. It would be better if I addressed these issues once I returned home to America, and after I could confer with leaders of other faiths who have been deliberating with us over this project. My life’s work has been focused on building bridges between religious groups and never has that been as important as it is now.

We are proceeding with the community center, Cordoba House. More important, we are doing so with the support of the downtown community, government at all levels and leaders from across the religious spectrum, who will be our partners. I am convinced that it is the right thing to do for many reasons.

Above all, the project will amplify the multifaith approach that the Cordoba Initiative has deployed in concrete ways for years. Our name, Cordoba, was inspired by the city in Spain where Muslims, Christians and Jews co-existed in the Middle Ages during a period of great cultural enrichment created by Muslims. Our initiative is intended to cultivate understanding among all religions and cultures.

Our broader mission — to strengthen relations between the Western and Muslim worlds and to help counter radical ideology — lies not in skirting the margins of issues that have polarized relations within the Muslim world and between non-Muslims and Muslims. It lies in confronting them as a joint multifaith, multinational effort.

From the political conflicts between Israelis and Palestinians to the building of a community center in Lower Manhattan, Muslims and members of all faiths must work together if we are ever going to succeed in fostering understanding and peace.

At Cordoba House, we envision shared space for community activities, like a swimming pool, classrooms and a play space for children. There will be separate prayer spaces for Muslims, Christians, Jews and men and women of other faiths. The center will also include a multifaith memorial dedicated to victims of the Sept. 11 attacks.

I am very sensitive to the feelings of the families of victims of 9/11, as are my fellow leaders of many faiths. We will accordingly seek the support of those families, and the support of our vibrant neighborhood, as we consider the ultimate plans for the community center. Our objective has always been to make this a center for unification and healing.

Cordoba House will be built on the two fundamental commandments common to Judaism, Christianity and Islam: to love the Lord our creator with all of our hearts, minds, souls and strength; and to love our neighbors as we love ourselves. We want to foster a culture of worship authentic to each religious tradition, and also a culture of forging personal bonds across religious traditions.

I do not underestimate the challenges that will be involved in bringing our work to completion. (Construction has not even begun yet.) I know there will be interest in our financing, and so we will clearly identify all of our financial backers.

Lost amid the commotion is the good that has come out of the recent discussion. I want to draw attention, specifically, to the open, law-based and tolerant actions that have taken place, and that are particularly striking for Muslims.

President Obama and Mayor Michael Bloomberg both spoke out in support of our project. As I traveled overseas, I saw firsthand how their words and actions made a tremendous impact on the Muslim street and on Muslim leaders. It was striking: a Christian president and a Jewish mayor of New York supporting the rights of Muslims. Their statements sent a powerful message about what America stands for, and will be remembered as a milestone in improving American-Muslim relations.

The wonderful outpouring of support for our right to build this community center from across the social, religious and political spectrum seriously undermines the ability of anti-American radicals to recruit young, impressionable Muslims by falsely claiming that America persecutes Muslims for their faith. These efforts by radicals at distortion endanger our national security and the personal security of Americans worldwide. This is why Americans must not back away from completion of this project. If we do, we cede the discourse and, essentially, our future to radicals on both sides. The paradigm of a clash between the West and the Muslim world will continue, as it has in recent decades at terrible cost. It is a paradigm we must shift.

From those who recognize our rights, from grassroots organizers to heads of state, I sense a global desire to build on this positive momentum and to be part of a global movement to heal relations and bring peace. This is an opportunity we must grasp.

I therefore call upon all Americans to rise to this challenge. Let us commemorate the anniversary of 9/11 by pausing to reflect and meditate and tone down the vitriol and rhetoric that serves only to strengthen the radicals and weaken our friends’ belief in our values.

The very word “islam” comes from a word cognate to shalom, which means peace in Hebrew. The Koran declares in its 36th chapter, regarded by the Prophet Muhammad as the heart of the Koran, in a verse deemed the heart of this chapter, “Peace is a word spoken from a merciful Lord.”

How better to commemorate 9/11 than to urge our fellow Muslims, fellow Christians and fellow Jews to follow the fundamental common impulse of our great faith traditions? – Feisal Abdul Rauf @ New York Times

  • Print
  • email
  • PDF
  • RSS
  • BlinkList
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter

Obama’s Former Number Cruncher and Book-Cooker Says The Tax Cuts Need To Stay In Place

Posted by Maggie On September - 7 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

One Nation, Two Deficits

The nation faces a nasty dual deficit problem: a painful jobs deficit in the near term and an unsustainable budget deficit over the medium and long term. This month, the Senate will be debating an issue with significant implications for both — what to do about the Bush-era tax cuts scheduled to expire at the end of the year.

In the face of the dueling deficits, the best approach is a compromise: extend the tax cuts for two years and then end them altogether. Ideally only the middle-class tax cuts would be continued for now. Getting a deal in Congress, though, may require keeping the high-income tax cuts, too. And that would still be worth it.

Why does this combination make sense? The answer is that over the medium term, the tax cuts are simply not affordable. Yet no one wants to make an already stagnating jobs market worse over the next year or two, which is exactly what would happen if the cuts expire as planned.

Higher taxes now would crimp consumer spending, further depressing the already inadequate demand for what firms are capable of producing at full tilt. And since financial markets don’t seem at the moment to view the budget deficit as a problem — take a look at the remarkably low 10-year Treasury bond yield — there is little reason not to extend the tax cuts temporarily.

A benign bond market, however, is a luxury we won’t enjoy forever if we fail to tackle our long-term fiscal problem. What’s more, losing the confidence of the bond market could prove painful, since it is widely known that our fiscal trajectory is unsustainable and market sentiment may therefore shift quickly and unpredictably. In any case, as the economy recovers, the dominant problem will move from depressed demand to excessive budget deficits.

Despite a dire fiscal outlook, many progressives want to make the tax cuts permanent for all but the very highest earners. Many conservatives are even worse: they’d make the tax cuts permanent for the likes of Warren Buffett, even though he’d prefer they didn’t. Making all the tax cuts permanent would expand the deficit by more than $3 trillion over the next decade.

Both approaches lock us into a budget scenario out of which there are few politically plausible routes of escape. Although hardly anyone wants to admit it, we’re not going to solve our budget problem over the next decade unless revenue is part of the equation.

Let’s look at the facts. The projected deficit for 2015 is 4 percent to 5 percent of G.D.P., depending on whose assumptions you use. A sustainable level is more like 3 percent or lower. So we need deficit reduction of 1 percent to 2 percent of G.D.P., or about $200 billion to $400 billion a year by 2015. These figures are uncertain, but they’re the best we have (and they may well turn out to be too optimistic).

How much savings is plausible on the spending side? Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security will account for almost half of spending by 2015. Even if we reform Social Security, which we should, any plausible plan would phase in benefit changes to avoid harming current beneficiaries — and so would generate little savings over the next five years. The health reform act included substantial savings in Medicare and Medicaid, so there aren’t further big reductions available there in our time frame.

The other half of the budget is mostly net interest (which is not negotiable unless we renege on our debt) and discretionary spending. Discretionary spending is split roughly equally between defense and non-defense spending. The defense component already assumes a phase-down in both Iraq and Afghanistan; saving an additional 5 percent of the Pentagon’s base budget would be a substantial accomplishment and would yield about 0.2 percent of G.D.P. Cutting 5 percent out of non-defense discretionary spending, a stretch politically, would save about as much.

It would be tough, then, to squeeze more than a half percent of G.D.P. from spending by 2015. Additional revenue — in the range of 0.5 to 1.5 percent of the economy — will therefore be necessary to reduce the deficit to sustainable levels.

How would we do this?

One possibility would be to establish a new source of revenue, perhaps through revenue-increasing tax reform, and possibly including a modest value-added tax (that is, a V.A.T. of 5 percent to 6 percent). This approach has many potential benefits, including the opportunity to improve our tax code by cutting back on loopholes and shifting toward a consumption-based tax system. It is also politically impossible, at least in the era of the 60-vote Senate. Those who fear a V.A.T. have little reason to worry — the votes aren’t there.

The beauty of extending the tax cuts for only two years is that canceling them doesn’t require an affirmative vote. It happens by default, so Congressional deadlock works in its favor. And it would essentially solve our medium-term deficit problem, reducing the deficit by $200 billion to $350 billion a year from 2015 to 2020.

Like all plans, this one isn’t perfect. Some may complain that higher marginal tax rates, even if deferred until 2013, will cripple small businesses and economic activity. It’s hard to believe, however, that effectively returning the tax code to its 1990s form would lead to economic catastrophe, especially when many leading Republican economists — including Alan Greenspan and Martin Feldstein — agree that we can’t afford to continue the tax cuts forever. More troubling, middle-class and lower-class families would be saddled with higher taxes. That’s a legitimate concern, but also a largely unavoidable one if we are to tackle the medium-term fiscal problem.

Finally, a key part of this deal is actually ending the tax cuts in 2013 — and that will surely require a presidential veto on any bills to extend them after that. (Failing to follow through would be particularly problematic if the high-income tax cuts are made permanent — at a 10-year cost of more than $700 billion.) Minimizing this risk requires as much upfront clarity and commitment as possible, including a strong and unambiguous veto threat from the president.

Senate Democrats and Republicans almost never come together anymore. This month, they should fight the dual deficits rather than each other. Let’s continue the tax cuts for two years but end them for good in 2013. – Peter Orszag @ NYTimes

  • Print
  • email
  • PDF
  • RSS
  • BlinkList
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter

Demorats Running Scared From Obamao; The Rotting Ship Is Sinking And Sinking Fast

Posted by Marc On September - 7 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Some Dems Campaign Against ObamaCare While Others Stay Mum
September 7, 2010
FoxNews.com

While President Obama touts the new health care law everywhere he goes, some members of his party are saying just the opposite in re-election ads, making sure their constituents know they voted against the unpopular overhaul. Other Democratic lawmakers are choosing a silence-is-golden approach on the campaign trail.

But off Capitol Hill, a Democrat-led advocacy group called the Health Information Center is launching a $2 million national ad campaign to promote the law’s early insurance changes.

The center began rolling out the ads last week highlighting how, starting Sept. 23, the new law will prevent insurers from denying coverage to children under 19 who have pre-existing conditions.

Some political observers believe Democrats should stake their political fortunes to the health care law.

“I think a lot of the battle lines in this election are going to be over which party can do the best to help a struggling middle class. And I think it would be smart for Democrats to sell the health care plan they’ve already implemented better than they have,” said Simon Rosenberg, president of the progressive think tank NDN and a former campaign adviser for President Clinton.

If what the Democrats have promised happens, that 10 of millions of more people will be covered, the deficit will be reduced and people’s health care will be better, then the Democrats will be fine,” he said “If those things don’t happen, then the current discontent around the legislation will continue.”

But some Democrats, gripped by fears that their party’s support for the unpopular overhaul will cost them their jobs in the midterm elections just 56 days away, are making clear their opposition to it.

One Democratic lawmaker says she’s thinking about her family as well as her constituents.

“It’s why I voted against all the bailouts – and the trillion-dollar health care plan,” said Rep. Stephanie Herseth Sandlin, D-S.D. “It wasn’t right for South Dakota, Zachary or any kids’ future.”

Other Democrats are running not only against the health care law but also against the president, as well as Democratic leaders.

Ads for Reps. Jason Altmire of Pennsylvania, Glenn Nye of Virginia, and Bobby Bright of Alabama features voters or narrators praising the lawmakers for their independent streak.

Other lawmakers appear to be running as fast as they can from the overhaul, as if the law never happened.

Ryan Rudominer, spokesman for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, disputed the notion that Democrats are running away from health care.

“The top issues in these races are going to be the economy and jobs,” he told FoxNews.com. “Health care is nowhere near the top of the list relative to jobs and the economy. So our members are not proactively talking about health care. They’re not running away from it either. It’s going to come up in debates and they’ll be questioned about it.”

Rudominer said the Democrats who are campaigning on their opposition to health care “shouldn’t come as a surprise.”

“Our members are independent voices,” he said, adding that they will vote in ways they reflect their district. “It’s not going to be a referendum on health care this election.”

Rudominer added that when the debates happen, Democrats will have “a very strong counterpunch” to make against Republicans who favor repealing the law.

Many Democrats who opposed the health care law obviously think that their opposition will endear them to voters, and for good reason. The latest Rasmussen Reports national survey released Monday found 56 percent of likely U.S. voters favor repeal of law, including 45 percent who strongly favor repeal. Thirty eight percent oppose repeal, including 30 percent strongly opposed.

“We polled every week since it became law and every single week a majority of voters have said, ‘yes we want it repealed,’” Scott Rasmussen said.

Another Democrat, Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon, wants the states to be able to go their own way – to get a waiver from the federal law in order to fashion their own health care reforms.

Wyden inserted the waiver provision in the new law. It permits any state to craft its own plan as long as it covers just as many people, provided at least the same level of care and is just as affordable as the federal plan would be. And that is popular across the political spectrum.

“Early on in the process, we did a lot of polling about should states have the option to opt out of this,” Rasmussen said. “And overwhelmingly, the answer was yes.”

The state waiver provision doesn’t take effect until 2017, but Wyden has legislation to move it forward to 2014. He thinks some states might want to establish a single-payer system. Others, like Oregon, might want a public option. In any case, states with waivers would be writing their own version of health reforms, in place of the new federal ones.

  • Print
  • email
  • PDF
  • RSS
  • BlinkList
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter

NYT John Burns Warns About Making Haste In Iraq Withdrawal

  • Print
  • email
  • PDF
  • RSS
  • BlinkList
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter



 

  • Print
  • email
  • PDF
  • RSS
  • BlinkList
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter

Recent Comments

Chandlers Watch, The Radio Show, was born in 2007 by two Marines that wanted to fulfill their oath to defend this country against all enemies, both foreign and domestic and to preserve our Constitution. Today, we promote the Corps values and leadership principles, that the Marine Corps instilled in us, to the American people in an entertaining way.

Recent Comments