Showing posts with label Blamed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blamed. Show all posts

Monday, March 31, 2014

Methane-spewing microbe blamed for Earth’s worst mass extinction


By Reuters
Monday, March 31, 2014 16:20 EDT


Pachylocrinus aequalis arms [Wikipedia Commons] http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Pachylocrinus_aequalis_Japan_05.jpg







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  • By Will Dunham


    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Sometimes bad things come in small packages.


    A microbe that spewed humongous amounts of methane into Earth’s atmosphere triggered a global catastrophe 252 million years ago that wiped out upwards of 90 percent of marine species and 70 percent of land vertebrates.


    That’s the hypothesis offered on Monday by researchers aiming to solve one of science’s enduring mysteries: what happened at the end of the Permian period to cause the worst of the five mass extinctions in Earth’s history.


    The scale of this calamity made the one that doomed the dinosaurs 65 million years ago – a six-mile wide asteroid smacking the planet – seem like a picnic by comparison.


    The implicated microbe, Methanosarcina, is a member of a kingdom of single-celled organisms distinct from bacteria called archaea that lack a nucleus and other usual cell structures.


    “I would say that the end-Permian extinction is the closest animal life has ever come to being totally wiped out, and it may have come pretty close,” said Massachusetts Institute of Technology biologist Greg Fournier, one of the researchers.


    “Many, if not most, of the surviving groups of organisms barely hung on, with only a few species making it through, many probably by chance,” Fournier added.


    Previous ideas proposed for the Permian extinction include an asteroid and large-scale volcanism. But these researchers suggest a microscope would be needed to find the actual culprit.


    Methanosarcina grew in a frenzy in the seas, disgorging huge quantities of methane into Earth’s atmosphere, they said.


    This dramatically heated up the climate and fundamentally altered the chemistry of the oceans by driving up acid levels, causing unlivable conditions for many species, they added.


    The horseshoe crab-like trilobites and the sea scorpions – denizens of the seas for hundreds of millions of years – simply vanished. Other marine groups barely avoided oblivion including common creatures called ammonites with tentacles and a shell.


    On land, most of the dominant mammal-like reptiles died, with the exception of a handful of lineages including the ones that were the ancestors of modern mammals including people.


    ‘RADICALLY CHANGED’


    “Land vertebrates took as long as 30 million years to reach the same levels of biodiversity as before the extinction, and afterwards life in the oceans and on land was radically changed, dominated by very different groups of animals,” Fournier said.


    The first dinosaurs appeared 20 million years after the Permian mass extinction.


    “One important point is that the natural environment is sensitive to the evolution of microbial life,” said Daniel Rothman, an MIT geophysics professor who led the study published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.


    The best example of that, Rothman said, was the advent about 2.5 billion years ago of bacteria engaging in photosynthesis, which paved the way for the later appearance of animals by belching fantastic amounts of oxygen into Earth’s atmosphere.


    Methanosarcina is still found today in places like oil wells, trash dumps and the guts of animals like cows.


    It already existed before the Permian crisis. But genetic evidence indicates it acquired a unique new quality at that time through a process known as “gene transfer” from another microbe, the researchers said.


    It suddenly became a major producer of methane through the consumption of accumulated organic carbon in ocean sediments.


    The microbe would have been unable to proliferate so wildly without proper mineral nutrients. The researchers found that cataclysmic volcanic eruptions that occurred at that time in Siberia drove up ocean concentrations of nickel, a metallic element that just happens to facilitate this microbe’s growth.


    Fournier called volcanism a catalyst instead of a cause of mass extinction — “the detonator rather than the bomb itself.”


    “As small as an individual microorganism is, their sheer abundance and ubiquity make for a huge cumulative impact. On a geochemical level, they really do run the planet,” he said.


    The Permian mass extinction unfolded during tens of thousands of years and was not the sudden die-off that an asteroid impact might cause, the researchers said.


    The most famous of Earth’s mass extinctions occurred 65 million years ago when an asteroid impact wiped out the dinosaurs that ruled the land and many marine species. There also were huge die-offs 440 million years ago, 365 million years ago and 200 million years ago.


    (Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by James Dalgleish)


    [Image: Pachylocrinus aequalis arms from Permian period, as seen in Kesennuma city, Miyagi prefecture, Japan. Via Wikipedia Commons.]



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    Methane-spewing microbe blamed for Earth’s worst mass extinction

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

GOP candidate who blamed tornadoes on same-sex marriage stymies party leaders

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GOP candidate who blamed tornadoes on same-sex marriage stymies party leaders

Friday, February 28, 2014

Christianity Blamed For Anti-Gay law In Uganda – World Bank Cuts Medical Funding

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Christianity Blamed For Anti-Gay law In Uganda – World Bank Cuts Medical Funding

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Anti-Christian Bigotry Blamed for Ending Song"s Oscar Bid

Anti-Christian bigotry may be to blame for the pulling of an Oscar nomination for Best Original Song, says Acadamy Award-winning producer Gerald Molen.

The song “Alone Yet Not Alone,” from the film of the same name, was removed from consideration last week after it was learned that its composer, Bruce Broughton, had lobbied fellow academy members to consider the song.


Lobbying for votes is not new to the Oscar process, but Broughton is a former governor of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, and currently is an executive committee member in the music branch.


Members said he was using his influence as an official to lobby for his own work.


But Molen, who won Oscars as producer of “Schindler’s List” and “Jurassic Park,” disagreed, sending a letter to academy President Cheryl Boone Isaacs. In it he warned, “Critics will pound and accuse us of being out of touch and needlessly offending middle America” by pulling the nomination, according to The Hollywood Reporter.


Appearing on Fox News Channel’s on Tuesday, Molen said it is common for people to lobby for films during December and January.


“Why was this one singled out?” he asked. “Maybe I’ve missed something.”


In the 86-year history of the Academy Awards, it is only the fourth time a nomination has been rescinded.


Broughton had said in his email that he was bringing attention to the song only because it was from a movie that the voters most likely had not seen, and he wanted it to have a chance.


The movie “Alone Yet Not Alone” earned only $ 134,000 in a 21-day run, and has a strong evangelical Christian theme. The song was sung by Joni Eareckson Tada, a celebrity in evangelical circles who became a quadriplegic after a diving accident.


“In my humble opinion, it seems to me that this has turned a Cinderella story that America loves into a story of the wicked stepmother who wants to keep her daughter from the ball, with we, the academy, cast as the villain,” Molen wrote.


Molen is also the producer of two documentary films by Dinesh D’Souza, “2016: Obama’s America” and the coming “America.”


Molen said recently that he suspects the investigation into D’Souza’s political activities is political payback for the anti-Obama film.


Molen told Fox News he would like to see the academy reconsider its decision on “Alone Yet Not Alone.”


“If that’s the final decision, then we’re all going to have to accept it,” he said. “We don’t have to like it, and we can certainly voice our opinion.”


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Anti-Christian Bigotry Blamed for Ending Song"s Oscar Bid

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Benghazi survivors blamed attack on terrorism


Infowars.com
January 14, 2014



This article was posted: Tuesday, January 14, 2014 at 1:52 pm









Infowars



Benghazi survivors blamed attack on terrorism

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Polar air blamed for 21 deaths nationwide



(AP) — Fountains froze over, a 200-foot Ferris wheel in Atlanta shut down, and Southerners had to dig out winter coats, hats and gloves they almost never have to use.


The brutal polar air that has made the Midwest shiver over the past few days spread to the East and the Deep South on Tuesday, shattering records that in some cases had stood for more than a century.


The mercury plunged into the single digits and teens from Boston and New York to Atlanta, Birmingham, Nashville and Little Rock — places where many people don’t know the first thing about extreme cold.


“I didn’t think the South got this cold,” said Marty Williams, a homeless man, originally from Chicago, who took shelter at a church in Atlanta, where it hit a record low of 6 degrees. “That was the main reason for me to come down from up North, from the cold, to get away from all that stuff.”


The morning weather map for the eastern half of the U.S. looked like an algebra worksheet: lots of small, negative numbers. In fact, the Midwest and the East were colder than much of Antarctica.


The cold turned deadly for some: Authorities reported at least 21 cold-related deaths across the country since Sunday, including seven in Illinois, and six in Indiana. At least five people died after collapsing while shoveling snow, while several victims were identified as homeless people who either refused shelter or didn’t make it to a warm haven soon enough to save themselves from the bitter temperatures.


In Missouri on Monday, a 1-year-old boy was killed when the car he was riding in struck a snow plow, and a 20-year-old woman was killed in a separate crash after her car slid on ice and into the path of a tractor-trailer.


In a phenomenon that forecasters said is actually not all that unusual, all 50 states saw freezing temperatures at some point Tuesday. That included Hawaii, where it was 18 degrees atop Mauna Kea, a dormant volcano.


The big chill started in the Midwest over the weekend, caused by a kink in the “polar vortex,” the strong winds that circulate around the North Pole. By Tuesday, the icy air covered about half the country, and records were shattered like icicles up and down the Eastern Seaboard.


It was 1 degree in Reading, Pa., and 2 in Trenton, N.J. New York City plummeted to 4 degrees; the old record for the date was 6, set in 1896.


“It’s brutal out here,” said Spunkiy Jon, who took a break from her sanitation job in New York to smoke a cigarette in the cab of a garbage truck. “Your fingers freeze off after three minutes, your cheeks feel as if you’re going to get windburn, and you work as quick as you can.”


Farther south, Birmingham, Ala., dipped to a low of 7, four degrees colder than the old mark, set in 1970. Huntsville, Ala., dropped to 5, Nashville, Tenn., got down to 2, and Little Rock, Ark., fell to 9. Charlotte, N.C., reached 6 degrees, breaking the 12-degree record that had stood since 1884.


The deep freeze dragged on in the Midwest as well, with the thermometer reaching minus 12 overnight in the Chicago area and 14 below in suburban St. Louis. More than 500 Amtrak passengers were stranded overnight on three Chicago-bound trains that were stopped by blowing and drifting snow in Illinois. Food ran low, but the heat stayed on.


The worst should be over in the next day or two, when the polar vortex is expected to straighten itself out. Warmer weather — that is, near or above freezing — is in the forecast for much of the stricken part of the country.


On Tuesday, many schools and day care centers across the eastern half of the U.S. were closed so that youngsters wouldn’t be exposed to the dangerous cold. Officials opened shelters for the homeless and anyone else who needed a warm place.


With the bitter cold slowing baggage handling and aircraft refueling, airlines canceled more than 2,000 flights in the U.S., bringing the four-day total to more than 11,000.


In New Orleans, which reported a low of 26 degrees, hardware stores ran out of pipe insulation. A pipe burst in an Atlanta suburb and a main road quickly froze over. In downtown Atlanta, a Ferris wheel near Centennial Olympic Park that opened over the summer to give riders a bird’s eye view of the city closed because it was too cold.


Farther south in Pensacola, Fla., a Gulf Coast city better known for its white sand beaches than frost, streets normally filled with joggers, bikers and people walking dogs were deserted early Tuesday. A sign on a bank flashed 19 degrees. Patches of ice sparkled in parking lots where puddles froze overnight.


Monica Anderson and Tommy Howard jumped up and down and blew on their hands while they waited for a bus. Anderson said she couldn’t recall it ever being so cold.


“I’m not used to it. It is best just to stay inside until it gets better,” said Anderson, who had to get out for a doctor’s appointment.


The Lower 48 states, when averaged out, reached a low of 13.8 degrees overnight Monday, according to calculations by Ryan Maue of Weather Bell Analytics. An estimated 190 million people in the U.S. were subjected to the polar vortex’s icy blast.


Farmers worried about their crops.


Diane Cordeau of Kai-Kai Farm in Indiantown, Fla., about 90 miles north of Miami, had to pick her squash and tomatoes Monday to beat the freeze but said her leafy vegetables, such as kale, will be sweeter and tastier because of the cold.


“I’m the queen of lettuce around here, so the colder the better,” said Cordeau, whose farm serves high-end restaurants that request specific produce or organic vegetables.


PJM Interconnection, which operates the power grid that serves more than 61 million people in the Mid-Atlantic, Midwest and South, asked users to conserve electricity because of the cold, especially in the morning and late afternoon.


Across the South, the Tennessee Valley Authority said power demand in the morning reached the second-highest winter peak in the history of the Depression-era utility. Temperatures averaged 4 degrees across the utility’s seven-state region.


In South Carolina, a large utility used 15-minute rolling blackouts to handle demand, but there were no reports of widespread outages in the South.


Natural gas demand in the U.S. set a record Tuesday, eclipsing the mark set a day earlier, according to Jack Weixel, director of energy analysis at Bentek Energy.


In Chicago, it was too cold even for the polar bear at the Lincoln Park Zoo. While polar bears can handle below-zero cold in the wild, Anana was kept inside Monday because she doesn’t have the thick layer of fat that bears typically develop from feeding on seals and whale carcasses.


___


Associated Press writers Steve Karnowski and Amy Forliti in Minneapolis; David Dishneau in Hagerstown, Md.; Brett Zongker in Washington, D.C.; Brett Barrouquere in Louisville, Ky.; Melissa Nelson-Gabriel in Pensacola, Fla.; Suzette Laboy in Indiantown, Fla.; Verena Dobnik in New York; and Kelly P. Kissel in Little Rock, Ark., contributed to this report.


Associated Press



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Polar air blamed for 21 deaths nationwide

Polar air blamed for 21 deaths nationwide








Icicles hang from a fountain in a front yard Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2014, in Lafayette, La. Bitter cold settled in around Louisiana overnight and into Tuesday morning. (AP Photo/The Lafayette Daily Advertiser, Leslie Westbrook) NO SALES





Icicles hang from a fountain in a front yard Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2014, in Lafayette, La. Bitter cold settled in around Louisiana overnight and into Tuesday morning. (AP Photo/The Lafayette Daily Advertiser, Leslie Westbrook) NO SALES





Gilda Mosely digs her car out from the snow outside her home on Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2014, in Soulard, Mo. Tuesday was the worst cold snap in nearly two decades for Missouri. (AP Photo/St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Laurie Skrivan) EDWARDSVILLE INTELLIGENCER OUT; THE ALTON TELEGRAPH OUT





A car in Western Michigan University parking lot remains buried in snow. The temperature in Kalamazoo remained below zero Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2014. (AP Photo/Kalamazoo Gazette-MLive Media Group, Mark Bugnaski) ALL LOCAL TV OUT; LOCAL TV INTERNET OUT





With temperatures below zero, Brenda Williams, 53, of Charleston, braves the cold to get her haircut downtown Charleston, W.Va.. Her glasses had frosted over and she could barely see. (AP Photo/The Daily Mail, Craig Cunningham)





A pedestrian bundles up and crosses an icy patch on the sidewalk at Georgia State University as a cold Arctic blast brought temperatures down to 6 degrees above zero to shatter cold weather records, on Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2014, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/David Tulis)













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(AP) — Fountains froze over, a 200-foot Ferris wheel in Atlanta shut down, and Southerners had to dig out winter coats, hats and gloves they almost never have to use.


The brutal polar air that has made the Midwest shiver over the past few days spread to the East and the Deep South on Tuesday, shattering records that in some cases had stood for more than a century.


The mercury plunged into the single digits and teens from Boston and New York to Atlanta, Birmingham, Nashville and Little Rock — places where many people don’t know the first thing about extreme cold.


“I didn’t think the South got this cold,” said Marty Williams, a homeless man, originally from Chicago, who took shelter at a church in Atlanta, where it hit a record low of 6 degrees. “That was the main reason for me to come down from up North, from the cold, to get away from all that stuff.”


The morning weather map for the eastern half of the U.S. looked like an algebra worksheet: lots of small, negative numbers. In fact, the Midwest and the East were colder than much of Antarctica.


The cold turned deadly for some: Authorities reported at least 21 cold-related deaths across the country since Sunday, including seven in Illinois, and six in Indiana. At least five people died after collapsing while shoveling snow, while several victims were identified as homeless people who either refused shelter or didn’t make it to a warm haven soon enough to save themselves from the bitter temperatures.


In Missouri on Monday, a 1-year-old boy was killed when the car he was riding in struck a snow plow, and a 20-year-old woman was killed in a separate crash after her car slid on ice and into the path of a tractor-trailer.


In a phenomenon that forecasters said is actually not all that unusual, all 50 states saw freezing temperatures at some point Tuesday. That included Hawaii, where it was 18 degrees atop Mauna Kea, a dormant volcano.


The big chill started in the Midwest over the weekend, caused by a kink in the “polar vortex,” the strong winds that circulate around the North Pole. By Tuesday, the icy air covered about half the country, and records were shattered like icicles up and down the Eastern Seaboard.


It was 1 degree in Reading, Pa., and 2 in Trenton, N.J. New York City plummeted to 4 degrees; the old record for the date was 6, set in 1896.


“It’s brutal out here,” said Spunkiy Jon, who took a break from her sanitation job in New York to smoke a cigarette in the cab of a garbage truck. “Your fingers freeze off after three minutes, your cheeks feel as if you’re going to get windburn, and you work as quick as you can.”


Farther south, Birmingham, Ala., dipped to a low of 7, four degrees colder than the old mark, set in 1970. Huntsville, Ala., dropped to 5, Nashville, Tenn., got down to 2, and Little Rock, Ark., fell to 9. Charlotte, N.C., reached 6 degrees, breaking the 12-degree record that had stood since 1884.


The deep freeze dragged on in the Midwest as well, with the thermometer reaching minus 12 overnight in the Chicago area and 14 below in suburban St. Louis. More than 500 Amtrak passengers were stranded overnight on three Chicago-bound trains that were stopped by blowing and drifting snow in Illinois. Food ran low, but the heat stayed on.


The worst should be over in the next day or two, when the polar vortex is expected to straighten itself out. Warmer weather — that is, near or above freezing — is in the forecast for much of the stricken part of the country.


On Tuesday, many schools and day care centers across the eastern half of the U.S. were closed so that youngsters wouldn’t be exposed to the dangerous cold. Officials opened shelters for the homeless and anyone else who needed a warm place.


With the bitter cold slowing baggage handling and aircraft refueling, airlines canceled more than 2,000 flights in the U.S., bringing the four-day total to more than 11,000.


In New Orleans, which reported a low of 26 degrees, hardware stores ran out of pipe insulation. A pipe burst in an Atlanta suburb and a main road quickly froze over. In downtown Atlanta, a Ferris wheel near Centennial Olympic Park that opened over the summer to give riders a bird’s eye view of the city closed because it was too cold.


Farther south in Pensacola, Fla., a Gulf Coast city better known for its white sand beaches than frost, streets normally filled with joggers, bikers and people walking dogs were deserted early Tuesday. A sign on a bank flashed 19 degrees. Patches of ice sparkled in parking lots where puddles froze overnight.


Monica Anderson and Tommy Howard jumped up and down and blew on their hands while they waited for a bus. Anderson said she couldn’t recall it ever being so cold.


“I’m not used to it. It is best just to stay inside until it gets better,” said Anderson, who had to get out for a doctor’s appointment.


The Lower 48 states, when averaged out, reached a low of 13.8 degrees overnight Monday, according to calculations by Ryan Maue of Weather Bell Analytics. An estimated 190 million people in the U.S. were subjected to the polar vortex’s icy blast.


Farmers worried about their crops.


Diane Cordeau of Kai-Kai Farm in Indiantown, Fla., about 90 miles north of Miami, had to pick her squash and tomatoes Monday to beat the freeze but said her leafy vegetables, such as kale, will be sweeter and tastier because of the cold.


“I’m the queen of lettuce around here, so the colder the better,” said Cordeau, whose farm serves high-end restaurants that request specific produce or organic vegetables.


PJM Interconnection, which operates the power grid that serves more than 61 million people in t Mid-Atlantic, Midwest and South, asked users to conserve electricity because of the cold, especially in the morning and late afternoon.


Across the South, the Tennessee Valley Authority said power demand in the morning reached the second-highest winter peak in the history of the Depression-era utility. Temperatures averaged 4 degrees across the utility’s seven-state region.


In South Carolina, a large utility used 15-minute rolling blackouts to handle demand, but there were no reports of widespread outages in the South.


Natural gas demand in the U.S. set a record Tuesday, eclipsing the mark set a day earlier, according to Jack Weixel, director of energy analysis at Bentek Energy.


In Chicago, it was too cold even for the polar bear at the Lincoln Park Zoo. While polar bears can handle below-zero cold in the wild, Anana was kept inside Monday because she doesn’t have the thick layer of fat that bears typically develop from feeding on seals and whale carcasses.


___


Associated Press writers Steve Karnowski and Amy Forliti in Minneapolis; David Dishneau in Hagerstown, Md.; Brett Zongker in Washington, D.C.; Brett Barrouquere in Louisville, Ky.; Melissa Nelson-Gabriel in Pensacola, Fla.; Suzette Laboy in Indiantown, Fla.; Verena Donik in New York; and Kelly P. Kissel in Little Rock, Ark., contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Polar air blamed for 21 deaths nationwide

Sunday, October 20, 2013

Study shows TV networks blamed GOP for shutdown


From our “Why am I not surprised” file, the Media Research Center conducted a study of TV network news coverage during the shutdown and discovered that the coverage almost universally blamed Republicans.


Yahoo News:


“What those viewers heard,” according to the MRC analysis, “was a version of the shutdown story that could easily have emanated from Barack Obama’s own White House.”


“This current government shutdown traces its history back to a determined core of GOP House members who are vehemently against Obamacare and were willing to shut down the government because of it,” Brian Williams said on the Oct. 14 broadcast of “NBC Nightly News,” MRC’s Rich Noyes noted in a blog post announcing the study.


Of the 124 stories broadcast on the ABC, NBC and CBS nightly newscasts about the shutdown from Oct. 1 through Oct. 15, the study found 41 blamed Republicans or conservatives for the impasse, 17 blamed both sides and none specifically blamed Democrats.


In the two weeks leading up to the shutdown, the MRC said, the same networks ran 21 stories blaming Republicans, four blaming both sides and none blaming Democrats.


That’s 62 blaming Republicans and none blaming Democrats for those of you keeping score at home.


But those numbers mirror polls conducted before and during the shutdown, which found most Americans blamed the GOP for the shutdown. In one, 62 percent of respondents blamed Republicans for the shutdown, while less than half blamed Obama or the Democrats in Congress.


According to TruthRevolt.org, another conservative site, the slant against the GOP was equally evident in print. The Washington Post and New York Times, the site said, “covered victims of the government shutdown over victims of Obamacare by a margin of 100 to 1.”


Media Matters, the progressive research center that monitors conservative media, has yet to publish a similar study on the shutdown coverage.


The MRC study did not include cable news, which had mostly wall-to-wall coverage of the shutdown since it began on Oct. 1. CNN, for example, ran on-screen shutdown and debt ceiling deadline clocks for virtually the entire impasse and consistently featured interviews with moderate Republicans who disagreed with the tea party’s tactic.



Of course the polls would say it’s the GOP’s fault. Viewers had been told for weeks in advance that any shutdown would be the fault of Republicans. It’s no surprise, therefore, the viewers would hold the opinion they did.


I didn’t watch much cable coverage during the shutdown, largely because it’s so predictable. But what I saw was pretty rank. MSNBC was actually comical, taking the position that of course it was the GOP’s fault now how to we stifle these crazy peoplke?


Face it: THe GOP doesn’t do media strategy except to preach to the converted. The reason that the “moderates” were all over the news was because many conservatives refuse to even talk to CNN, MSNBC, or the networks. That’s a mistake. At the very least, a record must be established that counters the dominant narrrative. It may not sway a lot of people, but it never hurts to get your message out.




American Thinker Blog



Study shows TV networks blamed GOP for shutdown

Monday, September 30, 2013

Brit Hume: "Shutdown Is A Disaster For Republicans Because They Will Be Blamed"





BRIT HUME, FOX NEWS SENIOR POLITICAL ANALYST: Well, what you saw — you saw it in the interviews that you just did, is how the two sides view this. Senator Lee kept saying this is a bad law. And (inaudible) reasons why. Senator Kaine kept saying don’t shut down the government. In fact, it was only Senator Kaine who mentioned the shutdown, and that’s because the Democrats believe that shutdown is a disaster for the Republicans because they will be blamed. And if history is any guide, they will indeed be blamed. So that’s sort of where we are and neither side I think feels it has an incentive to move forward with a compromise. Now, it’s possible, Chris, with an 11th hour deal where you pass a continuing resolution that doesn’t have any of the contentious additions to it for a matter of several days to give us more time. But unless some compromise emerges that both sides seem likely to agree on, I don’t think that would do anything which would delay the inevitable. That’s where we are. Shutdown appears to be where we’re going.




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Brit Hume: "Shutdown Is A Disaster For Republicans Because They Will Be Blamed"

Brit Hume: "Shutdown Is A Disaster For Republicans Because They Will Be Blamed"





BRIT HUME, FOX NEWS SENIOR POLITICAL ANALYST: Well, what you saw — you saw it in the interviews that you just did, is how the two sides view this. Senator Lee kept saying this is a bad law. And (inaudible) reasons why. Senator Kaine kept saying don’t shut down the government. In fact, it was only Senator Kaine who mentioned the shutdown, and that’s because the Democrats believe that shutdown is a disaster for the Republicans because they will be blamed. And if history is any guide, they will indeed be blamed. So that’s sort of where we are and neither side I think feels it has an incentive to move forward with a compromise. Now, it’s possible, Chris, with an 11th hour deal where you pass a continuing resolution that doesn’t have any of the contentious additions to it for a matter of several days to give us more time. But unless some compromise emerges that both sides seem likely to agree on, I don’t think that would do anything which would delay the inevitable. That’s where we are. Shutdown appears to be where we’re going.




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Brit Hume: "Shutdown Is A Disaster For Republicans Because They Will Be Blamed"

Sunday, July 28, 2013

Syrian Government Blamed for Ballistic Missile Attack


BEIRUT, Lebanon — A ballistic missile attack by government forces on the city of Aleppo in northern Syria killed at least 18 people, Syrian monitors said Saturday.






Malek Alshemali/Reuters

People searched for survivors amid building debris in Aleppo, Syria, after an air attack on Saturday in which at least 18 died.





According to the monitors at the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, the attack struck the Bab al-Neirab neighborhood in the city’s southwest, home to the headquarters of a number of rebel brigades, including the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, which is linked to Al Qaeda. It was unclear how many of the dead were civilians, but the Syrian Observatory, which monitors the conflict from Britain through a network of contacts on the ground, said at least two of the dead were women and three were children.


The forces of President Bashar al-Assad have stepped up the use of such missiles, which often reduce city blocks to rubble, a strategy that analysts say suggests that the military lacks sufficient infantry to accomplish its goals.


Also on Saturday, Syrian state news media reported that talks between government officials and a delegation from the United Nations over allowing access for investigators to the sites of suspected chemical weapons attacks during the war had resulted in “an agreement on the ways to move forward.” The report gave no further details.


Reports of small-scale chemical weapons attacks have surfaced a number of times in the past year, and the war’s continued escalation has raised fears that Mr. Assad’s forces could deploy chemical weapons on a wide scale or that those weapons could fall into the hands of extremists.


Syria has yet to let the full team of United Nations investigators enter the country, and the delegation’s visit last week sought to negotiate access. The government has wanted to limit the places the investigators can visit.


One site the investigators hoped to visit was Khan al-Assal, a town west of Aleppo where both the government and the rebels reported a deadly chemical-weapons attack in March, with each side accusing the other.


Visiting the site could prove difficult because rebel fighters took it over on Friday, reportedly killing about 150 soldiers. The Syrian Observatory, which sympathizes with the opposition, said about one-third of them were executed by an extremist rebel brigade after surrendering.




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Syrian Government Blamed for Ballistic Missile Attack

Monday, July 15, 2013

Osama Bin Laden Tim Osman Blamed for 9/11 In One Second


Osama Bin Laden Tim Osman Blamed for 9/11 In One Second

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Rita Cosby Osama Bin Laden blamed in Seconds for 9-11

Rita Cosby Osama Bin Laden blamed in Seconds for 9-11.
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Osama Bin Laden Tim Osman Blamed for 9/11 In One Second