Buzzflash Daily Headlines
Buzzflash Daily Headlines
Thursday 11 November 2010
Bill Quigley | Bush Pens True Crime Book
Bill
Quigley, Truthout: "In his memoir (which some wise people
have already moved in bookstores to the CRIME section)
George W. Bush admitted that he authorized that detainees be
waterboarded, tortured, a crime under US and international
law. Bush's crime confession coincides with reports that no
one will face criminal charges from the US Department of
Justice for the destruction of 92 CIA videotapes which
contained interrogations using waterboarding."
Read the Article
Camillo "Mac"
Bica | No Cause for Parades
Camillo "Mac" Bica,
Truthout: "We have just begun the tenth year of occupation
in Afghanistan. Despite the declared 'end' to combat
operations, American soldiers are still dying in Iraq as
encounters with insurgents increase. Meanwhile, covert and
drone operations are escalating in Pakistan and Yemen. As we
mark Armistice/Veterans Day 2010 with parades and sales at
the mall to 'honor and recognize' the sacrifices and service
of veterans and of our troops, perhaps we might consider
postponing these celebrations and marketing strategies until
a more appropriate occasion and shifting our focus from
mythologizing war to understanding its realities and
consequences as it impacts our soldiers and veterans and our
economy. So let us lower the flags and the volume of the
inspiring hymns and anthems and pay some attention, for a
change, to the facts of war."
Read the Article
Bernie Sanders
Wants NBC-Comcast Merger Stopped Following Olbermann
Suspension
Nadia Prupis, Truthout: "After MSNBC
suspended Keith Olbermann from 'Countdown' for making
contributions to political campaigns, activists and pundits
on both sides of the aisle used the occasion to speak out on
journalistic integrity and freedom of the press. On November
5, Politico reported that Olbermann had given $2,400 to
Arizona Reps. Gabrielle Giffors and Raul Grijalva and
Kentucky Senate candidate Jack Conway; later that day, MSNBC
President Phil Griffins announced that he would be
suspending Olbermann indefinitely to be 'mindful of NBC News
policy and standards.'"
Read the Article
Dean Baker |
Deficit Commission Co-Chairs Ignore Economic
Reality
Dean Baker, The Center for Economic and
Policy Research: "Senator Alan Simpson and Erskine Bowles
appeared to have largely ignored economic reality in
developing the proposals they presented to the public today.
The country is suffering from 9.6 percent unemployment with
more than 25 million people unemployed, underemployed or who
have given up looking for work altogether. Tens of millions
of people are underwater in their mortgage and millions face
the prospect of losing their home to foreclosure."
Read the Article
Paul Krugman |
For Lenders, the Name of the Game Is Extend and
Pretend
Paul Krugman, Krugman & Co.: "I'm finding it
difficult to write about the recent foreclosure mess in the
United States. Amid the revelations in October that so many
mortgage lenders might have been sloppy when processing
foreclosure paperwork, attorneys general in all 50 states
have now announced they are investigating lenders'
foreclosure practices. It's clear that there has been
massive malfeasance on the part of the banks (again), but
it's less easy to decide what should be done about it."
Read the Article
Obama in Asia:
Meeting American Decline Face to Face
Juan Cole,
TomDispatch: "Blocked from major new domestic initiatives by
a Republican victory in the midterm elections, President
Barack Obama promptly lit out for Asia, a far more promising
arena. That continent, after all, is rising, and Obama is
eager to grasp the golden ring of Asian success. Beyond
being a goodwill ambassador for ten days, Obama is seeking
sales of American-made durable and consumer goods, weapons
deals, an expansion of trade, green energy cooperation, and
the maintenance of a geopolitical balance in the region
favorable to the United States. Just as the decline of the
American economy hobbled him at home, however, the weakness
of the United States on the world stage in the aftermath of
Bush-era excesses has made real breakthroughs abroad
unlikely."
Read the Article
Top of Agenda at
Clinton-Netanyahu Meeting: New Rift Over
Settlements
Howard LaFranchi, The Christian Science
Monitor: "The Obama administration is once again at odds
with the government of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu, and once again the issue is construction of
Jewish settlements on Arab lands. Secretary of State Hillary
Rodham Clinton is to meet Thursday in New York with Mr.
Netanyahu to try to smooth over a new rift that emerged
between the United States and Israel after Israeli
authorities recently announced the construction of 1,300
more housing units in Arab East Jerusalem."
Read the Article
News in Brief:
Pentagon Study Shows Repealing "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" Is
Not Dangerous, and More ...
A new Pentagon study will
show that allowing openly gay people to serve in the
military has limited risks; Veterans Affairs reports that
the number of female war veterans who have become homeless
has doubled to 6,500 over the past decade; rioting erupted
in London yesterday as 50,000 students protested proposed
education spending cuts, and today, the British government
announced proposed welfare cuts, stirring fears that more
violence could fill the streets; the EPA has issued a
subpoena to Halliburton requiring the company release
information on its hydraulic fracturing procedures; new
Republican leaders in the House of Representatives have poor
voting records on environmental issues compared to the
Democrats they are replacing.
Read the Article
Few Big Fish Land
in Immigration Dragnet
William Fisher, Inter Press
Service: "Putting local police on the 'front lines' of
immigration enforcement is distracting federal agencies from
their objectives by turning over people with no criminal
history, or those who have committed minor or non-violent
crimes, and setting them on a course toward unnecessary
deportation. This is one of main findings in a study by the
Immigration Policy Center, the policy arm of the American
Immigration Council, presented in a new report, 'ICE's
Enforcement Priorities and the Factors that Undermine Them,'
by Dr. Michele Waslin, IPC senior policy analyst."
Read the Article
What Laila Sees:
A Kandahar Woman Tells Her Story
David Smith-Ferri,
Truthout: "'We live in constant fear of suicide attacks,'
said Laila, an Afghan woman who lives in Kandahar city and
who visited with us yesterday. 'When will the next one
strike and where?' 'Twelve days ago,' she continued, 'a good
friend was walking home from the mosque. A four-minute walk.
An IED was detonated, and my friend lost half his face.
Another man lost his leg, and his son lost his leg, too. We
live with that kind of uncertainty, when you don't know what
is going to happen from one moment to the next.'"
Read the Article
Stanley
Aronowitz: "An Immense Malaise Torments American
Society"
Interview excerpt from Bruno Odent of
L'Humanite's interview with Professor of Sociology Stanley
Aronowitz: "The underlying problem in all of this is that
citizens have discovered - thanks to the management of the
financial/economic crisis - that their powers are reduced,
that the oligarchy, that Wall Street, continues to
dispossess them ever more. That has been exacerbated by the
bailout of the financial system, of the big banks and
insurance companies. People feel they've been swindled.
Everything happens above their heads without their getting a
word in. They feel, without being able to articulate it more
precisely, that they don't have the democratic political
system they need. They can't express that because all the
parties are in on the swindle ... so, they follow those who
deliberately depart from the accepted script and play on
their emotions by throwing them the red meat of "too much
government,' the Washington establishment or more classical
scapegoats such as immigrants.'"
Read the Article
Olbermann's
Support for South Dakota Tribe Points Way to More Inclusive
Indian Country Coverage
Rose Aguilar, Truthout: "All
it took was a one-minute commentary. On February 9, 2010,
Keith Olbermann told his viewers about a humanitarian crisis
affecting 50,000 people. It was so bad, college basketball
fans were being asked to share their soles. 'Haiti?' he
asked. 'South Dakota. The shoe donations are being sought at
the University of South Dakota and they are for the
residents of the Cheyenne River Sioux Reservation.'"
Read the Article
Veterans Day
2010: Honor the Consciences of Our Veterans
(Video)
Rethink Afghanistan, Brave New Foundation:
"The war in Afghanistan is now in its tenth year, with no
end in sight. Al Qaida isn't in Afghanistan anymore, and the
war doesn't meet the criteria for just war. We need to end
this war, and honor the consciences of those troops who say,
'I can't fight this war. My conscience won't allow it.'"
Read the Article
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articles
BUZZFLASH DAILY
HEADLINES
Peggy Noonan, a speechwriter who
helped craft the Disneyesque aura for Ronald Reagan, wrote a
book, "What I Saw at the Revolution: A Political Life in the
Reagan Era." It lavished praise on the
"Gipper."
David Stockman, who was
Reagan's budget director, has gone in another direction.
He's renouncing deficit-building tax cuts, calling for their
rollback.
"We've had a 30-year spree of
really phony prosperity in this country," Stockman recently
told Leslie Stahl on "60
Minutes."
Stockman derided the
"anti-tax religion" of the GOP.
"Well
it's become in a sense an absolute. Something that can't be
questioned, something that's gospel, something that's sort
of embedded into the catechism and so scratch the average
Republican today and he'll say 'Tax cuts, tax cuts, tax
cuts,'" Stockman told Stahl. He added, "To stand before the
public and rub raw this anti-tax sentiment, the Republican
Party, as much as it pains me to say this, should be ashamed
of themselves."
In short, tax cuts
provide the illusion to the American public that Social
Security, Medicare, military spending and government funded
public expenditures - such as highways - can be had without
citizens paying a fair share.
As for
the wealthy, Stockman was loaded for bear in another
appearance, this one on ABC News: "Two years after the
crisis on Wall Street, it has been announced that bonuses
this year will be $144 billion, the highest in history.
That's who's going to get this tax cut on the top, you know,
2 percent of the population. They don't need a tax cut. They
don't deserve it."
When Stockman
declares, "We're now becoming the banana republic [of]
finance," wise men and women should
listen.
After all, he was the person
who put together the largest tax cuts in US history. He
knows of what he speaks.
Mark
Karlin
Editor, BuzzFlash at
Truthout
Report: White House Gives in
on Bush Tax Cuts
Read the Article at The Huffington
Post
Sen. Bernie Sanders Denounces Proposed Cuts on
Social Security and Medicare
Read the Article at BuzzFlash
The
State We're in: Estimated California State Budget Deficit
Reaches $25.4 Billion
Read the Article at The Los Angeles
Times
Many Deficit Commission Staffers Paid by
Outside Groups
Read the Article at The Washington
Post
Massachusetts: The State That Forgot to Turn
Red
Read the Article at
Stateline
Hillary Clinton: US "Disappointed" With
Israel's Settlement Decision
Read the Article at CNN
More
Graphic Warnings and Picture to Appear on Packs of
Cigarettes
Read the Article at AP
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