Showing posts with label Pressure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pressure. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Boston Bomb Squad Blows Up Empty Pressure Cooker


Unattended pressure cooker spurs bomb squad paranoia


Infowars.com
March 11, 2014


The Boston Police Department is on edge in the run-up to the 2014 Boston Marathon, and their sights are set on nefarious-looking kitchen appliances.


This morning, the Boston bomb squad jumped when someone phoned in a tip concerning a “pressure cooker left unattended” in an East Boston neighborhood.


“A member of the bomb squad set up a disruption device near the pressure cooker and a few minutes later it was blown up,” CBS Boston reports, adding that “No one was hurt.”


The kicker, of course, is that the cooker was empty, but that didn’t stop a nearby school from going into “safe mode,” nor did it stop police from commenting that abandoned pressure cookers pose a huge public safety hazard.


“People are sensitive to this,” Boston Police Capt. Kelley McCormick stated. “We’ve had a lot of people go through a serious crisis this year with pressure cookers. It’s no joke. We don’t take it as a joke. We’ll never take it as a joke.”


Pressure cookers have come to be regarded with an extra degree of scrutiny after police say two of them were used as explosives during last year’s marathon. Picture or video illustrating this, however, has not been made public.


So far, this is the only picture the FBI and the media have publicized, a black bag in tatters.


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Yet this is the justification used to instill a fear of small home appliances.


Video showing the two brothers suspected of bombing the marathon actually placing the bombs has also failed to materialize, although Mass. Gov. Deval Patrick, who also admitted he hadn’t seen the video, is confident it shows “clear involvement.”


Members of the Massachusetts National Guard were also recently told they would not be allowed to wear backpacks during this year’s Boston Marathon, something members have been doing for the past decade, again illustrating how supposed terror attacks are used as pretexts to curtail freedoms.


Police fortunately spared residents of the East Boston neighborhood a Constitution-busting door-to-door search.


Despite the heightened paranoia over electric cooking devices, the run is still scheduled to take place on April 21.


This article was posted: Tuesday, March 11, 2014 at 2:20 pm










Infowars



Boston Bomb Squad Blows Up Empty Pressure Cooker

Monday, March 3, 2014

PRESSURE MOUNTS ON OBAMA OVER UKRAINE, RUSSIA DIGS IN – Kerry to Kiev – Snow cancels House, Senate votes – Obama budget coming Tues. – Netanyahu on the Hill


UKRAINE: PRESSURE MOUNTS ON OBAMA AS RUSSIA DIGS IN – Peter Baker writes on A1 of the New York Times: “As Russia dispatched more forces and tightened its grip on the Crimean Peninsula on Sunday, President Obama embarked on a strategy intended to isolate Moscow and prevent it from seizing more Ukrainian territory even as he was pressured at home to respond more forcefully. Working the telephone from the Oval Office, Mr. Obama rallied allies, agreed to send Secretary of State John Kerry to Kiev and approved a series of diplomatic and economic moves intended to ‘make it hurt,’ as one administration official put it. But the president found himself besieged by advice to take more assertive action.


– “‘Create a democratic noose around Putin’s Russia,’ urged Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina. ‘Revisit the missile defense shield,’ suggested Senator Marco Rubio, Republican of Florida. ‘Cancel Sochi,’ argued Representative Mike Rogers, the Michigan Republican who leads the Intelligence Committee, referring to the Group of 8 summit meeting to be hosted by President Vladimir V. Putin. Kick ‘him out of the G-8’ altogether, said Senator Richard J. Durbin of Illinois, the Democratic whip.” http://nyti.ms/1i62atN


– But no one in Washington is calling for armed U.S. intervention, notes POLITICO’s Alex Burns: “For Democrats and Republicans who spent much of the last century competing to be Moscow’s most credible antagonist, and much of the past decade fighting over which party killed terrorists more ruthlessly, there was no rush to the battle domestic stations over the weekend.”  http://politi.co/1luo6iH


– SECRETARY OF STATE JOHN KERRY will travel to Kiev on Tuesday “to show support for the new leadership there in the face of the Russian military intervention,” writes the Washington Post’s Anne Gearan. “Kerry on Sunday called the rapid movement of Russian troops across the border into Ukraine’s Crimea region unwarranted and outside international law and said Russia would suffer economic and political consequences. ‘He’s going to lose on the international stage,’ Kerry said on NBC’s ‘Meet the Press,’ referring to Putin. ‘Russia is going to lose, the Russian people are going to lose, and he’s going to lose all of the glow that came out of the Olympics, his $ 60 billion extravaganza.’” http://wapo.st/1hFeVbe


– Russian markets tumbled over jitters about the Ukraine incursion, Reuters reports: http://reut.rs/1hFnC5m


THE FRONT PAGE – Wall Street Journal, 4-col lead: “U.S., Europe Threaten to Punish Putin: Russia’s Crimea Incursion Sparks Demand for Withdrawal, Talk of Sanctions; ‘They are Settling In.’” Washington Post, 2-col lead: “Putin’s intent unclear amid armed face off: UKRAINE MOBILIZES RESERVISTS: Russian troops a ‘declaration of war,’ Kiev says.” NYT, second headline: “Putin Engages in test of Will Over Ukraine: Strategy of Subterfuge and Military Threat.USA Today: “Ukraine standoff deepens: Kiev pleads for help; U.S., allies ready ‘to isolate Russia.’” L.A. Times, 1-col lead: “RUSSIA’S POWER PLAY GAINS STEAM: Officials in Crimea demand Ukrainian Troops Surrender, and the navy chief defects. Kerry is to visit Kiev.”


D.C. GETS ANOTHER SNOW DAY – “Both the House and Senate have canceled votes scheduled for Monday evening due to the impending snowstorm that [was] poised to hit the Washington-area starting Sunday night. The Office of Personnel Management also announced Sunday that the federal government will be shuttered Monday,” POLITICO’s Seung Min Kim writes. “… The office of House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) said Sunday that those votes will be moved to Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. … In the Senate, a cloture vote on the nomination of Debo Adegbile for assistant attorney general that had been scheduled for 5:30 p.m. Monday will now be held Tuesday at noon, according to the office of Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.).” http://politi.co/1hEhOJq OPM: http://1.usa.gov/1bw9GbZ


***CONGRESS ADOPTS FISCALLY RESPONSIBLE MEDICARE SOLUTION! Only if they pass legislation to finally fix Medicare’s broken funding formula. SGR is the problem; H.R. 4015 and S. 2000 are the solution. Let’s act now! FixMedicareNow.org


OBAMA SENDS BUDGET TO HILL TUESDAY – Kristina Peterson reports for the WSJ: “President Barack Obama’s budget for fiscal year 2015 will be delivered this week to a Congress defused of much of the partisan tension over spending that has left the Capitol in a state of nearly constant fiscal crisis. Lawmakers in both chambers already have agreed on their overarching spending figure for the next fiscal year under the bipartisan budget agreement reached last December by House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R., Wis.) and his Senate counterpart, Patty Murray (D., Wash.). The result is that the budget push-and-pull between Mr. Obama and Congress skips ahead to the nitty-gritty spending decisions lawmakers make while drafting the traditional 12 spending bills known as the appropriations process. …


– “The White House blueprint is expected to include changes to the tax code to limit what it views as tax evasion among some U.S. companies with overseas operations, a boost for infrastructure funding and an expansion of the Earned Income Tax Credit for workers without children, among other provisions. The budget also is expected to point to an overhaul of the immigration system, currently stalled in Congress, an action administration officials say could help reduce the deficit.” http://on.wsj.com/1ojsJJw


– BUDGET CHAIRWOMAN PATTY MURRAY (D-WASH.) said there was no need for Senate Democrats to write a budget resolution this year, prompting howls from Republicans. POLITICO’s Burgess Everett: http://politi.co/1hr68u0


LOIS LERNER won’t testify before Congress after all, even though House Oversight Chairman Darrell Issa asserted Sunday that she would. POLITICO’s Reid Epstein: http://politi.co/1g4khta


AFTER BRUISING IMMIGRATION FIGHT, RUBIO EYES COMEBACK – Manu Raju writes for the hometown paper: “Marco Rubio probably wouldn’t have been the biggest draw in Alabama last year, but last week he had big donors dropping big checks. The Florida Republican, who championed the Senate immigration bill last year, swung by a state that has taken a tough stand against illegal immigrants and has repeatedly elected the chief opponent of the Senate plan. But last Thursday evening, deep-pocketed Birmingham donors paid up to $ 32,000 apiece to schmooze with Rubio, raising more than $ 300,000 for the Senate GOP campaign committee. Rubio’s foray into the Deep South shows how quickly he has tried to put the bitter immigration fight behind him as he positions himself for what close allies say is an increasingly likely presidential bid in 2016.” http://politi.co/1fBTJia


TRANSITIONS – BRYAN THOMAS is heading down to Atlanta to join the Jason Carter for Governor campaign. It also happens to be where his fiancée works at the CDC. Thomas had served as communications director for Rep. Rick Larsen (D-Wash.). He’ll be replaced in Larsen’s office by Ingrid Stegemoeller, effective March 10.


GOOD MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 3, 2014, and welcome to The Huddle, where we’ve been watching the snow steadily falling on Capitol Hill the past couple hours. Send tips, suggestions, comments, complaints and corrections to swong@politico.com. If you don’t already, please follow me on Twitter @scottwongDC.


My new followers include @ClareFlann and @wyattlarkin.


TODAY IN CONGRESS – It’s a snow day for the House and Senate, which have both cancelled their sessions today. They’re expected to be back on Tuesday.


AROUND THE HILL – Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Republican Leader Mitch McConnell are expected to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at 3:45 p.m. in S-216. Netanyahu meets with Speaker John Boehner and Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi at 4:45 p.m. in H-207. Those meetings could be cancelled due to snow. At 11 a.m. Tuesday, House Ways and Means Chairman Dave Camp keynotes a tax reform forum in Rayburn 2325. At 8:30 a.m. Wednesday, Camp headlines a Christian Science Monitor breakfast at the St. Regis Hotel.


BLACK CAUCUS: BASTION OF SENIORITY – POLITICO’s John Bresnahan crunches the numbers:  “If the 84-year-old [John] Conyers wins reelection in November to a 26th term — as expected — he will become the dean of the House, the most senior member by length of service, replacing his onetime boss and Democratic icon, retiring Rep. John Dingell of Michigan. Conyers and other African-American lawmakers, in fact, belong to one of the few remaining bastions of incumbency — the Congressional Black Caucus.


– “Under current projections, the 114th Congress will include roughly 70 members who have been in the House for 20 years or more. One-fifth of those veteran lawmakers — 14 — will be black Democrats, including the two longest-serving members of the House, Conyers and Rep. Charles Rangel of New York. Rangel was first elected in 1970. Thanks to that seniority, CBC members could end up as top Democrat on at least seven major committees next year, including Education and the Workforce; Financial Services; Homeland Security; Judiciary; Oversight and Government Reform; Science, Space and Technology; and Veterans’ Affairs.” http://politi.co/1i5IciH


“Shifting Senate Landscape Draws New Faces,: GOP Used Polls to Woo Rep. Gardner to Challenge Sen. Udall in Colorado,” By the Wall Street Journal’s Janet Hook and Patrick O’Connor: “Rep. Cory Gardner of Colorado is in an enviable position, with a safe House seat and bright prospects for joining his party’s leadership. So when GOP officials last year asked him to give it all up to run for the Senate, he declined. Last week, amid more appeals from party leaders and weak poll numbers for Democrats, Mr. Gardner reversed course—a significant boost to GOP hopes not only for unseating Democratic Sen. Mark Udall but also for claiming a Senate majority. The story of Mr. Gardner’s change of mind shows how the political environment has deteriorated for congressional Democrats ahead of the midterm elections, which historically are difficult for the president’s party. It also is a reminder that campaigns are made or broken not just by money or message, but by who decides to run.” http://on.wsj.com/1bZqN8O


– And former Mississippi Rep. Travis Childers jumped into the race Friday against incumbent GOP Sen. Thad Cochran, sensing an opening for Democrats given what’s becoming a nasty Republican primary. http://politi.co/1eLgXXz


THE MESSY RACE FOR STEVE STOCKMAN’S SEAT – Katie Glueck reports for POLITICO: “A dozen Republicans are vying to replace the firebrand conservative congressman, who isn’t seeking reelection amid a quixotic bid for the Senate. And in the Lone Star State’s 36th Congressional District, which stretches from the Houston suburbs out to East Texas, activists are struggling to wade through all the options, while the large, right-leaning cast of candidates is competing to curry favor with the region’s highly conservative voters. At a recent debate, for instance, some of the biggest points of contention centered on whether to use drones on the border and whether to impeach President Barack Obama.” http://politi.co/1fBVn36


CRITICS HIT CONGRESS OVER NSA OVERSIGHT – Darren Samuelsohn reports for POLITICO; “Splashing America’s surveillance secrets on the front pages of newspapers for nearly nine months has created an array of scapegoats, from Edward Snowden to the NSA and President Barack Obama. Now the blame is also spreading to Congress. Cries of lax Capitol Hill oversight are piling up as Snowden-inspired stories continue to explode in the media, casting doubt on whether the legislative watchdogs can be trusted to oversee national security agencies that they’ve long defended. Intelligence Committee leaders from the House and Senate insist they’ve done their due diligence but acknowledge that lawmakers can glean only as much information as the president and his team will share. And even then, anything of such a highly classified nature can’t be legally disclosed anyway.” http://politi.co/1cnoEnV


IMMIGRATION HITS HOME FOR GOODLATTE – WaPo’s Pamela Constable in Roanoke, Va.: “As chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, a panel at the center of the national immigration debate, Rep. Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.) has taken a tough stance on illegal immigration that reflects the views of many House Republicans: better border security and law enforcement before other reforms, and “zero tolerance” for illegal immigrants in the future. But as the representative of the sprawling 6th Congressional District in southwest Virginia, the former immigration lawyer faces the sort of changing demographics that have transformed this conservative, rural region into a multinational mosaic — and that have put immigration reform at the top of the national agenda. Roanoke, Goodlatte’s home in the Blue Ridge Valley, has seen its Hispanic population soar by 280 percent since 2000, to 6 percent of 100,000 residents — the biggest leap of any jurisdiction in the state except the Washington suburbs. In Harrisonburg, a college town 100 miles north, Hispanics have reached 16 percent of 49,000 residents.” http://wapo.st/1hEmb7x


THE OSCARS: ‘12 YEARS A SLAVE’ TAKES BEST PICTURE – The AP’s Jake Coyle: “Perhaps atoning for past sins, Hollywood named the brutal, unshrinking historical drama ‘‘12 Years a Slave’’ best picture at the 86th annual Academy Awards. Steve McQueen’s slavery odyssey, based on Solomon Northup’s 1853 memoir, has been hailed as a landmark corrective to the movie industry’s virtual blindness to slavery, instead creating whiter tales like 1940 best-picture winner ‘’Gone With the Wind.’ ‘12 Years a Slave’ is the first best-picture winner directed by a black filmmaker. …


– “The starved stars of the Texas AIDS drama ‘’Dallas Buyers Club’ were feted: Matthew McConaughey for best actor and Jared Leto for best supporting actor. … Cate Blanchett took best actress for her fallen socialite in Woody Allen’s ‘Blue Jasmine,’ her second Oscar.” http://bo.st/NMxVKA


FRIDAY’S TRIVIA WINNER – Drew Thies was first to correctly answer that Pedro Pierluisi, resident commissioner of Puerto Rico, is the member of Congress who serves a four-year term. Many of you also answered that the vice president, as president of the Senate, also serves a four-year term, which technically is also correct.


TODAY’S TRIVIA – Ben Pietrzyk offers an Oscars-themed question: What Oscar-winning actor was Ronald Reagan’s best man when he married Nancy Davis in 1952? The first person to correctly answer gets a mention in the next day’s Huddle. Email me at swong@politico.com.


GET HUDDLE emailed to your Blackberry, iPhone or other mobile device each morning. Just enter your email address where it says “Sign Up.” http://www.politico.com/huddle


** After years of saying “wait until next year,” Congress finally has bipartisan legislation to repeal Medicare’s broken funding formula. This is the news seniors have been waiting for. But we’re not over the finish line yet. Congress must act by March 31st to avoid another costly temporary patch. Let’s pass H.R. 4015/S. 2000, scrap the broken SGR formula and fix Medicare once and for all! FixMedicareNow.org




POLITICO – Top 10 – Huddle



PRESSURE MOUNTS ON OBAMA OVER UKRAINE, RUSSIA DIGS IN – Kerry to Kiev – Snow cancels House, Senate votes – Obama budget coming Tues. – Netanyahu on the Hill

PRESSURE MOUNTS ON OBAMA OVER UKRAINE, RUSSIA DIGS IN – Kerry to Kiev – Snow cancels House, Senate votes – Obama budget coming Tues. – Netanyahu on the Hill


UKRAINE: PRESSURE MOUNTS ON OBAMA AS RUSSIA DIGS IN – Peter Baker writes on A1 of the New York Times: “As Russia dispatched more forces and tightened its grip on the Crimean Peninsula on Sunday, President Obama embarked on a strategy intended to isolate Moscow and prevent it from seizing more Ukrainian territory even as he was pressured at home to respond more forcefully. Working the telephone from the Oval Office, Mr. Obama rallied allies, agreed to send Secretary of State John Kerry to Kiev and approved a series of diplomatic and economic moves intended to ‘make it hurt,’ as one administration official put it. But the president found himself besieged by advice to take more assertive action.


– “‘Create a democratic noose around Putin’s Russia,’ urged Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina. ‘Revisit the missile defense shield,’ suggested Senator Marco Rubio, Republican of Florida. ‘Cancel Sochi,’ argued Representative Mike Rogers, the Michigan Republican who leads the Intelligence Committee, referring to the Group of 8 summit meeting to be hosted by President Vladimir V. Putin. Kick ‘him out of the G-8’ altogether, said Senator Richard J. Durbin of Illinois, the Democratic whip.” http://nyti.ms/1i62atN


– But no one in Washington is calling for armed U.S. intervention, notes POLITICO’s Alex Burns: “For Democrats and Republicans who spent much of the last century competing to be Moscow’s most credible antagonist, and much of the past decade fighting over which party killed terrorists more ruthlessly, there was no rush to the battle domestic stations over the weekend.”  http://politi.co/1luo6iH


– SECRETARY OF STATE JOHN KERRY will travel to Kiev on Tuesday “to show support for the new leadership there in the face of the Russian military intervention,” writes the Washington Post’s Anne Gearan. “Kerry on Sunday called the rapid movement of Russian troops across the border into Ukraine’s Crimea region unwarranted and outside international law and said Russia would suffer economic and political consequences. ‘He’s going to lose on the international stage,’ Kerry said on NBC’s ‘Meet the Press,’ referring to Putin. ‘Russia is going to lose, the Russian people are going to lose, and he’s going to lose all of the glow that came out of the Olympics, his $ 60 billion extravaganza.’” http://wapo.st/1hFeVbe


– Russian markets tumbled over jitters about the Ukraine incursion, Reuters reports: http://reut.rs/1hFnC5m


THE FRONT PAGE – Wall Street Journal, 4-col lead: “U.S., Europe Threaten to Punish Putin: Russia’s Crimea Incursion Sparks Demand for Withdrawal, Talk of Sanctions; ‘They are Settling In.’” Washington Post, 2-col lead: “Putin’s intent unclear amid armed face off: UKRAINE MOBILIZES RESERVISTS: Russian troops a ‘declaration of war,’ Kiev says.” NYT, second headline: “Putin Engages in test of Will Over Ukraine: Strategy of Subterfuge and Military Threat.USA Today: “Ukraine standoff deepens: Kiev pleads for help; U.S., allies ready ‘to isolate Russia.’” L.A. Times, 1-col lead: “RUSSIA’S POWER PLAY GAINS STEAM: Officials in Crimea demand Ukrainian Troops Surrender, and the navy chief defects. Kerry is to visit Kiev.”


D.C. GETS ANOTHER SNOW DAY – “Both the House and Senate have canceled votes scheduled for Monday evening due to the impending snowstorm that [was] poised to hit the Washington-area starting Sunday night. The Office of Personnel Management also announced Sunday that the federal government will be shuttered Monday,” POLITICO’s Seung Min Kim writes. “… The office of House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) said Sunday that those votes will be moved to Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. … In the Senate, a cloture vote on the nomination of Debo Adegbile for assistant attorney general that had been scheduled for 5:30 p.m. Monday will now be held Tuesday at noon, according to the office of Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.).” http://politi.co/1hEhOJq OPM: http://1.usa.gov/1bw9GbZ


***CONGRESS ADOPTS FISCALLY RESPONSIBLE MEDICARE SOLUTION! Only if they pass legislation to finally fix Medicare’s broken funding formula. SGR is the problem; H.R. 4015 and S. 2000 are the solution. Let’s act now! FixMedicareNow.org


OBAMA SENDS BUDGET TO HILL TUESDAY – Kristina Peterson reports for the WSJ: “President Barack Obama’s budget for fiscal year 2015 will be delivered this week to a Congress defused of much of the partisan tension over spending that has left the Capitol in a state of nearly constant fiscal crisis. Lawmakers in both chambers already have agreed on their overarching spending figure for the next fiscal year under the bipartisan budget agreement reached last December by House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R., Wis.) and his Senate counterpart, Patty Murray (D., Wash.). The result is that the budget push-and-pull between Mr. Obama and Congress skips ahead to the nitty-gritty spending decisions lawmakers make while drafting the traditional 12 spending bills known as the appropriations process. …


– “The White House blueprint is expected to include changes to the tax code to limit what it views as tax evasion among some U.S. companies with overseas operations, a boost for infrastructure funding and an expansion of the Earned Income Tax Credit for workers without children, among other provisions. The budget also is expected to point to an overhaul of the immigration system, currently stalled in Congress, an action administration officials say could help reduce the deficit.” http://on.wsj.com/1ojsJJw


– BUDGET CHAIRWOMAN PATTY MURRAY (D-WASH.) said there was no need for Senate Democrats to write a budget resolution this year, prompting howls from Republicans. POLITICO’s Burgess Everett: http://politi.co/1hr68u0


LOIS LERNER won’t testify before Congress after all, even though House Oversight Chairman Darrell Issa asserted Sunday that she would. POLITICO’s Reid Epstein: http://politi.co/1g4khta


AFTER BRUISING IMMIGRATION FIGHT, RUBIO EYES COMEBACK – Manu Raju writes for the hometown paper: “Marco Rubio probably wouldn’t have been the biggest draw in Alabama last year, but last week he had big donors dropping big checks. The Florida Republican, who championed the Senate immigration bill last year, swung by a state that has taken a tough stand against illegal immigrants and has repeatedly elected the chief opponent of the Senate plan. But last Thursday evening, deep-pocketed Birmingham donors paid up to $ 32,000 apiece to schmooze with Rubio, raising more than $ 300,000 for the Senate GOP campaign committee. Rubio’s foray into the Deep South shows how quickly he has tried to put the bitter immigration fight behind him as he positions himself for what close allies say is an increasingly likely presidential bid in 2016.” http://politi.co/1fBTJia


TRANSITIONS – BRYAN THOMAS is heading down to Atlanta to join the Jason Carter for Governor campaign. It also happens to be where his fiancée works at the CDC. Thomas had served as communications director for Rep. Rick Larsen (D-Wash.). He’ll be replaced in Larsen’s office by Ingrid Stegemoeller, effective March 10.


GOOD MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 3, 2014, and welcome to The Huddle, where we’ve been watching the snow steadily falling on Capitol Hill the past couple hours. Send tips, suggestions, comments, complaints and corrections to swong@politico.com. If you don’t already, please follow me on Twitter @scottwongDC.


My new followers include @ClareFlann and @wyattlarkin.


TODAY IN CONGRESS – It’s a snow day for the House and Senate, which have both cancelled their sessions today. They’re expected to be back on Tuesday.


AROUND THE HILL – Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Republican Leader Mitch McConnell are expected to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at 3:45 p.m. in S-216. Netanyahu meets with Speaker John Boehner and Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi at 4:45 p.m. in H-207. Those meetings could be cancelled due to snow. At 11 a.m. Tuesday, House Ways and Means Chairman Dave Camp keynotes a tax reform forum in Rayburn 2325. At 8:30 a.m. Wednesday, Camp headlines a Christian Science Monitor breakfast at the St. Regis Hotel.


BLACK CAUCUS: BASTION OF SENIORITY – POLITICO’s John Bresnahan crunches the numbers:  “If the 84-year-old [John] Conyers wins reelection in November to a 26th term — as expected — he will become the dean of the House, the most senior member by length of service, replacing his onetime boss and Democratic icon, retiring Rep. John Dingell of Michigan. Conyers and other African-American lawmakers, in fact, belong to one of the few remaining bastions of incumbency — the Congressional Black Caucus.


– “Under current projections, the 114th Congress will include roughly 70 members who have been in the House for 20 years or more. One-fifth of those veteran lawmakers — 14 — will be black Democrats, including the two longest-serving members of the House, Conyers and Rep. Charles Rangel of New York. Rangel was first elected in 1970. Thanks to that seniority, CBC members could end up as top Democrat on at least seven major committees next year, including Education and the Workforce; Financial Services; Homeland Security; Judiciary; Oversight and Government Reform; Science, Space and Technology; and Veterans’ Affairs.” http://politi.co/1i5IciH


“Shifting Senate Landscape Draws New Faces,: GOP Used Polls to Woo Rep. Gardner to Challenge Sen. Udall in Colorado,” By the Wall Street Journal’s Janet Hook and Patrick O’Connor: “Rep. Cory Gardner of Colorado is in an enviable position, with a safe House seat and bright prospects for joining his party’s leadership. So when GOP officials last year asked him to give it all up to run for the Senate, he declined. Last week, amid more appeals from party leaders and weak poll numbers for Democrats, Mr. Gardner reversed course—a significant boost to GOP hopes not only for unseating Democratic Sen. Mark Udall but also for claiming a Senate majority. The story of Mr. Gardner’s change of mind shows how the political environment has deteriorated for congressional Democrats ahead of the midterm elections, which historically are difficult for the president’s party. It also is a reminder that campaigns are made or broken not just by money or message, but by who decides to run.” http://on.wsj.com/1bZqN8O


– And former Mississippi Rep. Travis Childers jumped into the race Friday against incumbent GOP Sen. Thad Cochran, sensing an opening for Democrats given what’s becoming a nasty Republican primary. http://politi.co/1eLgXXz


THE MESSY RACE FOR STEVE STOCKMAN’S SEAT – Katie Glueck reports for POLITICO: “A dozen Republicans are vying to replace the firebrand conservative congressman, who isn’t seeking reelection amid a quixotic bid for the Senate. And in the Lone Star State’s 36th Congressional District, which stretches from the Houston suburbs out to East Texas, activists are struggling to wade through all the options, while the large, right-leaning cast of candidates is competing to curry favor with the region’s highly conservative voters. At a recent debate, for instance, some of the biggest points of contention centered on whether to use drones on the border and whether to impeach President Barack Obama.” http://politi.co/1fBVn36


CRITICS HIT CONGRESS OVER NSA OVERSIGHT – Darren Samuelsohn reports for POLITICO; “Splashing America’s surveillance secrets on the front pages of newspapers for nearly nine months has created an array of scapegoats, from Edward Snowden to the NSA and President Barack Obama. Now the blame is also spreading to Congress. Cries of lax Capitol Hill oversight are piling up as Snowden-inspired stories continue to explode in the media, casting doubt on whether the legislative watchdogs can be trusted to oversee national security agencies that they’ve long defended. Intelligence Committee leaders from the House and Senate insist they’ve done their due diligence but acknowledge that lawmakers can glean only as much information as the president and his team will share. And even then, anything of such a highly classified nature can’t be legally disclosed anyway.” http://politi.co/1cnoEnV


IMMIGRATION HITS HOME FOR GOODLATTE – WaPo’s Pamela Constable in Roanoke, Va.: “As chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, a panel at the center of the national immigration debate, Rep. Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.) has taken a tough stance on illegal immigration that reflects the views of many House Republicans: better border security and law enforcement before other reforms, and “zero tolerance” for illegal immigrants in the future. But as the representative of the sprawling 6th Congressional District in southwest Virginia, the former immigration lawyer faces the sort of changing demographics that have transformed this conservative, rural region into a multinational mosaic — and that have put immigration reform at the top of the national agenda. Roanoke, Goodlatte’s home in the Blue Ridge Valley, has seen its Hispanic population soar by 280 percent since 2000, to 6 percent of 100,000 residents — the biggest leap of any jurisdiction in the state except the Washington suburbs. In Harrisonburg, a college town 100 miles north, Hispanics have reached 16 percent of 49,000 residents.” http://wapo.st/1hEmb7x


THE OSCARS: ‘12 YEARS A SLAVE’ TAKES BEST PICTURE – The AP’s Jake Coyle: “Perhaps atoning for past sins, Hollywood named the brutal, unshrinking historical drama ‘‘12 Years a Slave’’ best picture at the 86th annual Academy Awards. Steve McQueen’s slavery odyssey, based on Solomon Northup’s 1853 memoir, has been hailed as a landmark corrective to the movie industry’s virtual blindness to slavery, instead creating whiter tales like 1940 best-picture winner ‘’Gone With the Wind.’ ‘12 Years a Slave’ is the first best-picture winner directed by a black filmmaker. …


– “The starved stars of the Texas AIDS drama ‘’Dallas Buyers Club’ were feted: Matthew McConaughey for best actor and Jared Leto for best supporting actor. … Cate Blanchett took best actress for her fallen socialite in Woody Allen’s ‘Blue Jasmine,’ her second Oscar.” http://bo.st/NMxVKA


FRIDAY’S TRIVIA WINNER – Drew Thies was first to correctly answer that Pedro Pierluisi, resident commissioner of Puerto Rico, is the member of Congress who serves a four-year term. Many of you also answered that the vice president, as president of the Senate, also serves a four-year term, which technically is also correct.


TODAY’S TRIVIA – Ben Pietrzyk offers an Oscars-themed question: What Oscar-winning actor was Ronald Reagan’s best man when he married Nancy Davis in 1952? The first person to correctly answer gets a mention in the next day’s Huddle. Email me at swong@politico.com.


GET HUDDLE emailed to your Blackberry, iPhone or other mobile device each morning. Just enter your email address where it says “Sign Up.” http://www.politico.com/huddle


** After years of saying “wait until next year,” Congress finally has bipartisan legislation to repeal Medicare’s broken funding formula. This is the news seniors have been waiting for. But we’re not over the finish line yet. Congress must act by March 31st to avoid another costly temporary patch. Let’s pass H.R. 4015/S. 2000, scrap the broken SGR formula and fix Medicare once and for all! FixMedicareNow.org




POLITICO – Top 10 – Huddle



PRESSURE MOUNTS ON OBAMA OVER UKRAINE, RUSSIA DIGS IN – Kerry to Kiev – Snow cancels House, Senate votes – Obama budget coming Tues. – Netanyahu on the Hill

Saturday, February 22, 2014

The world at war: The mind, journalism, freedoms... Ukrainian Government Bows to Pressure from Washington, EU and Far-right Opposition


EUUS


Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych bowed to the demands of the fascistic Western-backed opposition yesterday, signing an agreement curtailing his own powers, allowing the opposition into government, and calling early elections.


This came a day after the bloodiest day of protests in Kiev, the Ukrainian capital. At least 77 protesters and riot police were killed and hundreds injured amid street clashes and gun battles between the far-right protesters and the security forces. Fighting has escalated since the Ukrainian parliament voted down an opposition bill to curtail the president’s powers earlier this week.


After Thursday’s fighting, Yanukovych backed down and gave in to the opposition’s key demands. Within 10 days, he will form a national unity government, including opposition representatives. The 2004 constitution passed after the US-backed Orange Revolution is to go back into effect in September, depriving Yanukovych of control over the chiefs of the security services. That power will be held by the prime minister. By December, early presidential and parliamentary elections are to be held; the presidential election was originally scheduled for March of 2015.


Adrian Karatnycky, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council think tank, told the PBS news program in the US that he expected Yanukovych to lose power in a matter of weeks or even days. Yanukovych left Kiev late last night and flew to Kharkov, a city near the border with Russia, the main backer of Yanukovych’s regime.


The Ukrainian parliament moved to free jailed billionaire oligarch Yulya Tymoshenko, the rival of Yanukovych who became prime minister in the Orange Revolution. She was convicted in 2011 of embezzlement in connection with natural gas deals with Russia. The parliament decriminalized the article of the criminal code under which Tymoshenko was prosecuted.


Yanukovych signed the agreement after negotiations lasting throughout Thursday night and into Friday, as bloody battles raged on the streets of Kiev. The foreign ministers of Germany, France and Poland, having arrived in Kiev on Thursday, worked closely with the opposition leaders—Vitali Klitschko of the Udar Party, Arseniy Yatsenyuk of Tymoshenko’s Fatherland Party, and Oleh Tyahnybok of the fascistic Svoboda party.


Signers of the agreement, besides Yanukovych and the three opposition leaders, included Foreign Ministers Frank-Walter Steinmeier of Germany, Laurent Fabius of France, and Radoslaw Sikorski of Poland. However, Russian negotiator Vladimir Lukin, who was originally supposed to sign, declined to do so.


Before the agreement was signed, the German and Polish foreign ministers travelled to the Maidan (Independence Square)—the centre of opposition protests, where tens of thousands of mostly middle-class protesters had gathered—in order to obtain the protesters’ consent. They met in a hotel with 30 members of the Maidan Council, which represent the protesters.


It appears that even the right-wing opposition leaders were straining to control the far-right thugs unleashed by the imperialist powers in Ukraine. When Klitschko tried to speak to promote the deal with Yanukovych, he was shouted down by the protesters, who called out, “Shame!”


Oleh Tyahnybok, whose Svoboda party openly espouses anti-Semitic and racist views, was received at the German Embassy and presented along with Foreign Minister Steinmeier for a photo opportunity.


Yanukovych’s surrender has encouraged the fascistic forces leading the opposition to act even more aggressively. The leader of the neo-Nazi “Right Sector,” Dmitry Yarosh, said on the Vkontakte social network that his movement regarded Yanukovich’s statement as a “deception” and would continue the fight. “The national revolution continues,” he wrote, adding that it would end only when the regime was overthrown.


Washington, while not formally a party to the negotiations, applauded the outcome in Kiev. The White House issued a statement declaring that the Obama administration “welcomes” the agreement, calling it “consistent with what we have advocated.”


These statements underscore the utterly reactionary and reckless policy of the imperialist powers, which have worked with fascist groups to drive Ukraine and the entire region to the brink of war. In November last year, Yanukovych cancelled the signing of an association agreement with the European Union (EU) at the last minute and instead moved closer to Russia. Since then, Germany and the United States have systematically sought to destabilize and divide Ukraine.


The US and European press are covering up the fascist politics of the forces they have imposed in government upon the Ukrainian people. The New York Times euphemistically refers to the Right Sector as a “hardline nationalist” group. In fact, it is a pro-Nazi group that criticizes Svoboda—itself a fascist party that celebrates Ukrainians who joined Nazi SS units that carried out mass killings of Jews in the western Ukrainian region of Galicia during World War II—as too “moderate.”


Separatist tendencies are raising their heads throughout Ukraine. The western city of Lviv, the centre of Ukrainian nationalism, has declared itself autonomous.


In the southeast, the parliamentary speaker of the Crimean peninsula, which was tacked onto the then-Ukrainian Soviet Republic in 1954 and is inhabited mainly by Russians, has threatened secession from Ukraine. Speaker Volodymyr Konstantinov said secession “is possible, if the country breaks apart.” He added, “And everything is moving towards that.”


This also raises the possibility of Russian military intervention in Ukraine. The Financial Times of London cited a senior Russian official who said, “If Ukraine breaks apart, it will trigger a war. They will lose Crimea, we will go in and protect it, just as we did in Georgia”—referring to Russia’s 2008 war in Georgia after the US-backed Georgian regime attacked Russian peacekeepers in the separatist region of South Ossetia.


Another Russian official told the Financial Times, “We will not allow Europe and the US to take Ukraine from us. The states of the former Soviet Union, we are one family. They think Russia is still as weak as in the early 1990s, but we are not.”


Germany, the US and the EU share imperialist and geo-political goals in Ukraine, as a commentary that appeared on Spiegel Online two days ago openly noted. “It is no longer just the association agreement with the European Union that is at stake,” Uwe Klußmann wrote. “Nor is the future of President Viktor Yanukovych, a man surrounded by rumours of corruption, the focus any more. Rather, geo-politics has taken centre stage and the question as to which power centres in Europe and the Eurasia region will be dominant in the future has become paramount.”




Global Research



The world at war: The mind, journalism, freedoms...

Ukrainian Government Bows to Pressure from Washington, EU and Far-right Opposition

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Obama threatens new pressure on Assad regime


AFP Feb 15, 2014, 05.24PM IST







(The US leader said both he…)




RANCHO MIRAGE (UNITED STATES): As Syrian peace talks in Geneva appeared to flounder, US President Barack Obama vowed to step up pressure on the regime of President Bashar al-Assad.


Obama’s remarks came as he hosted Jordan’s King Abdullah II at the Sunnylands retreat in Palm Springs, California, to address issues including the flood of Syrian refugees into Jordan.





The US leader said both he and the Jordanian king “recognize that we can’t just treat the symptoms” of the Syrian crisis.


“We’re also going to have to solve the underlying problem – a regime led by Bashar al-Assad that has shown very little regard for the well-being of his people.


“We are going to need a political transition in that region.” “We don’t expect to solve this any time in the short term so there are going to be some immediate steps that we have to take to help the humanitarian situation there,” Obama said.


“There will be some intermediate steps that we can take to apply more pressure to the Assad regime, and we’re going to be continuing to work with all the parties concerned to try to move forward on a diplomatic solution,” he said, without specifying what those steps may be.


At the meeting Obama pledged $ 1 billion in loan guarantees to Jordan, as well as a renewal of a five-year memorandum of understanding.


The current five-year package, worth $ 660 million a year, expires in September.


The funds are aimed in part at helping Washington’s Middle East ally cope with the flood of Syrian refugees and its loss of natural gas from Egypt, White House officials said.


King Abdullah said the Syrian crisis and the rise of extremism are his country’s primary concerns.


Jordan has borne the brunt of much of the humanitarian overflow, with nearly 600,000 Syrian refugees on its soil, straining its infrastructure and finances.


The United States is the largest aid donor to Syrian refugees, so far donating $ 1.7 billion to the cause, according to the US Agency for International Development.


A senior administration official said that the $ 1 billion guarantee will make it easier for Jordan to access capital markets and borrow money.


“It’s a signal to the markets of the strong confidence of the United States in Jordan, of our partnership, and of our intention to be there as a partner for Jordan in the long term,” said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity.




Concerning Syria, Washington has been trying “to work with and press the Russians to understand that the status quo is not serving their interests either,” the official said. “They are much closer to the parts of Syria than we are that are becoming increasingly ungoverned and dangerous.”


The official blasted the Russians for having “a pretty sorry record having twice double vetoed with the Chinese quite anodyne” UN resolutions.


But he said Washington and its allies “could conceivably reach agreement on a humanitarian resolution” with them.


Such a resolution could be “strong in terms of the obligations and expectations that it would impose on the regime to improve humanitarian access,” but not necessarily include more sanctions or a threat of force.


The Russians “can’t have it both ways,” the official said. “They can’t say they’re in favor of negotiations in Geneva and a transitional government guided by full executive authority and humanitarian access, and have a happy Olympics, and then be part and parcel of supporting this regime as it kills people in the most brutal way.”


The meeting with the king of Jordan – whose nation began a two year term in the UN Security Council in January – is the first of a trio of meetings between Obama and key Middle East leaders in the coming weeks.


On March 3, the US president will sit down at the White House for his latest encounter with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has made no secret of his skepticism over an interim deal that Washington and other world powers reached with Iran on its nuclear program.


Then at the end of March, he will travel to Saudi Arabia to meet King Abdullah, who shares Netanyahu’s doubts about Obama’s Iran strategy.




WHAT REALLY HAPPENED



Obama threatens new pressure on Assad regime

Saturday, February 15, 2014

Obama considers new steps against Syria ‘to pressure’ Assad


US President Barack Obama (R) listens while King Abdullah II of Jordan makes a statement for the press before a meeting at The Annenberg Retreat at Sunnylands February 14, 2014 in Rancho Mirage, California. (AFP Photo / Brendan Smialowski)
US President Barack Obama (R) listens while King Abdullah II of Jordan makes a statement for the press before a meeting at The Annenberg Retreat at Sunnylands February 14, 2014 in Rancho Mirage, California. (AFP Photo / Brendan Smialowski)


US President Barack Obama said he is mulling steps to put pressure on Syrian President Bashar Assad to kickstart the stalled Geneva peace conference. But Russia’s FM Sergey Lavrov says every attempt is being made to derail the peace process.


Obama’s comments were delivered while meeting with Jordan’s King Abdullah in California on Friday to discuss a range of issues, including the current Syrian stalemate.


The US president said he does not expect the conflict to be resolved in the immediate future, though “immediate steps” will be taken to “help the humanitarian assistance there.”


“There will be some intermediate steps that we can take applying more pressure to the Assad regime and we are going to be continuing to work with all the parties concerned to try to move forward on a diplomatic solution,” Reuters cited Obama as saying.


Obama did not specify what steps he would consider, but US Secretary of State John Kerry told reporters on Friday that Obama had asked “all of us to think about various options that may or may not exist.”


Having pledged $ 1 billion in loans to help stabilize Jordan’s economy, the US believes that the country, which already currently has more than 600,000 Syrian war refugees, has a part to play in resolving the Syrian conflict.


“We have been ramping up our support to the moderate opposition and Jordan has its own strong role to play in relationship to the moderate opposition,” a senior Obama administration official told the agency following two hours of talks at the Sunnylands retreat.


Frustrated by what he views as Assad’s intransigence regarding a transition of power in the country, Obama has made it a clear a more assertive policy could be in the works.


Senior administration officials who briefed reporters about Obama’s talks with King Abdullah reiterated previous claims that all options remain on the table, short of putting boots on the ground.


One option is arming the Syrian rebels, something that Washington’s Gulf allies have been actively doing, though one official said such a move would only be enacted to help push the process toward a political solution.


AFP Photo / Mahmud Al-Halabi
AFP Photo / Mahmud Al-Halabi


According to one report last month, the US Congress has already authorized sending small arms, an assorted variety of rockets, and financial backing to moderate rebel forces.


American and European security officials told Reuters that the US will provide anti-tank rockets, but nothing as deadly as shoulder-launched surface-to-air missiles (known as MANPADs), which can be used to bring down military or civilian aircraft.


The US has long opposed arming rebels with anti-aircraft missiles, fearing they could fall into the hands of extremists who would then use them against the West or commercial airlines. A senior Obama administration official told the Wall Street Journal on Friday that the US objection remains the same. “There hasn’t been a change internally on our view,” the official said.


Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia on Friday decided to start providing the opposition with Chinese Manpads and antitank guided missiles from Russia, WSJ reports, citing Western and Arab diplomats and opposition figures.


Although significant military hardware remains off the table for now, the US for its part has increased its financial support to the opposition, handing over millions of dollars to help pay rebel fighters, said rebel commanders who received some of the money. Washington would not comment on the payments.


On Friday, FM Lavrov said it was his impression that “systematic attempts” were being made to find any excuse to derail a political settlement in Syria.


“First, a political settlement was almost derailed over speculation regarding chemical weapons. Now that that problem is solved, I hope that everything will be done, just as the Syrian leadership has pledged,” Lavrov told a press conference following talks with his German counterpart, Frank-Walter Steinmeier.


‘When the chemical [weapons] issue is not being speculated over, then attempts are made to politicize the issue of the humanitarian crisis,” he said.


Lavrov said that when Russia and the US took the initiative to push ahead with the Geneva 2 peace conference, it was perfectly clear that there should be complete implementation of the June 2012 Geneva Communique, which, among other points, calls for a transitional governing body that could include members of the current government and the opposition.


But in pushing the Syrian opposition to participate in the Geneva 2 conference, there is now the impression that Western powers only did so for the sake of initiating regime change, he said.


“Certainly, we grow alarmed whenever the presidents of the United States and France once again say at a joint press conferences that the affair may go beyond negotiations,” Lavrov said.


Source: RT





End the Lie – Independent News



Obama considers new steps against Syria ‘to pressure’ Assad

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

U.S. retailers face pressure to raise cybersecurity spending

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Target Corp’s decision to speed up a $ 100 million program to adopt the use of chip-enabled smart cards is just a drop in the bucket when it comes to what retailers need to do to defend themselves against future cyber attacks, according to security experts and IT service providers.






Reuters: Top News



U.S. retailers face pressure to raise cybersecurity spending

Friday, January 31, 2014

Keystone report raises pressure on Obama to approve pipeline




WASHINGTON Fri Jan 31, 2014 7:30pm EST



Protesters rally about the Keystone XL oil pipeline along U.S. President Barack Obama

Protesters rally about the Keystone XL oil pipeline along U.S. President Barack Obama’s motorcade as he arrives at the Jefferson Hotel in Washington July 11, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Yuri Gripas




WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Pressure for President Barack Obama to approve the Keystone XL pipeline increased on Friday after a State Department report played down the impact it would have on climate change, irking environmentalists and delighting the project’s proponents.


The agency made no recommendation on whether Obama should grant or deny an application by TransCanada Corp to build the $ 5.4 billion line, which would transport crude from Alberta’s oil sands to refineries on the U.S. Gulf Coast.


But the State Department said blocking Keystone XL – or any pipeline – would do little to slow the expansion of Canada’s vast oil sands, maintaining the central finding of a preliminary study issued last year.


The 11-volume report’s publication opened a new and potentially final stage of an approval process that has dragged for more than five years, taking on enormous political significance.


“President Obama is out of excuses,” said John Boehner, the Republican Speaker of the House of Representatives and a big Keystone proponent.


“If President Obama wants to make this a ‘year of action’ he will stand up to the extreme Left in his own party, stand with the overwhelming majority of American people, and approve this critical project.”


With another three-month review process ahead and no firm deadline for a decision on the 1,179-mile line, the issue threatens to drag into the 2014 congressional elections in November.


Obama is under pressure from several vulnerable Democratic senators who favor the pipeline and face re-election at a time when Democrats are scrambling to hang on to control of the U.S. Senate. The project looms over the president’s economic and environmental legacy.


Canada’s oil sands are the world’s third largest crude oil reserve, behind Venezuela and Saudi Arabia, and the largest open to private investment. The oil sands contain more than 170 billion barrels of bitumen, a tar-like form of crude that requires more energy to extract than conventional oil.


The report offered some solace to climate activists who want to stem the rise of oil sands output. It reaffirmed that Canada’s heavy crude reserves require more energy to produce and process – and therefore result in higher greenhouse gas emissions – than conventional oil fields.


But after extensive economic modeling, it found that the line itself would not slow or accelerate the development of the oil sands. That finding is largely in line with what oil industry executives have long argued.


“This final review puts to rest any credible concerns about the pipeline’s potential negative impact on the environment,” said Jack Gerard, head of the oil industry’s top lobby group, the American Petroleum Institute.


NOT OVER


Obama signaled in a major climate speech in June that he was closely watching the review and said he believed the pipeline should go ahead “only if this project does not significantly exacerbate the problem of carbon pollution.”


Keystone XL opponents and the State Department itself warned that the process was not over.


“This environmental impact study … is by no means the final word on the Keystone XL pipeline,” said Neera Tanden, president of the Center for American Progress, a liberal-leaning group with strong ties to the White House. “I hope that President Obama will hold firm on the commitment he made in his climate speech and reject the pipeline.”


TransCanada Corp shares finished up more than 1 percent on the Toronto Stock Exchange on Friday, reflecting optimism that the report was positive for the eventual construction of the pipeline.


The company’s chief executive officer, Russ Girling, said the case for the Keystone pipeline “is as strong as ever.”


Canadian Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver said he hoped Obama would make a decision in the first half of 2014.


“This has been a lengthy and thorough review process. The benefits to the United States and Canada are clear. We await a timely decision on this project,” Oliver said.


He described the environmental review “as a positive step on the route to approval.”


U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry will consult with eight government agencies over the next three months about the broader national security, economic and environmental impacts of the project before deciding whether he thinks it should go ahead. There is no deadline, and the report does not seek to address some of the larger strategic questions involved.


The public will have 30 days to comment, beginning next week. A previous comment period in March yielded more than 1.5 million comments.


The open-ended review made some pipeline supporters nervous.


“The administration’s strategy is to defeat the project with continuing delays,” said Republican Senator John Hoeven of North Dakota, where the oil boom has boosted truck and rail traffic.


Some North Dakota oil would move on the pipeline, designed to take as much as 830,000 barrels of crude per day from Hardisty, Alberta, to Steele City, Nebraska, where it would meet the project’s already complete southern leg to take the crude to the refining hub on the Texas Gulf coast.


PREMATURE VICTORY?


The State Department’s study found that oil from the Canadian oil sands is about 17 percent more “greenhouse gas intensive” than average oil used in the United States because of the energy required to extract and process it. It is 2 to 10 percent more greenhouse gas intensive than the heavy grades of oil it replaces.


The Sierra Club, an environmental advocacy group, said the report shows the pipeline would create as much pollution each year as the exhaust from almost 6 million cars – evidence that it said will be hard for Obama to ignore.


“Reports of an industry victory on the Keystone XL pipeline are vastly over-stated,” said Michael Brune, the group’s executive director.


The study found oil sands development could be curbed if pipelines were not expanded, oil prices were low, and rail shipping costs soared.


The study examines data from a 2010 pipeline spill in Michigan, where more than 20,000 barrels gushed into the Kalamazoo River system. Pipeline operator Enbridge Energy Partners was ordered last summer to do more to dredge up oil from the bottom of the river.


(Additional reporting by Thomas Ferarro and Timothy Gardner; Editing by Peter Henderson, Jonathan Leff, Grant McCool and Mohammad Zargham)





Reuters: Business News



Keystone report raises pressure on Obama to approve pipeline

Monday, December 30, 2013

Most of the UK Media Concertedly Ignore Snowden Revelations, Under Government Pressure






December 30, 2013 by POPEYE  
Filed under Media Fail




(FEDERALJACK)   Journalist Glenn Greenwald, who’s been channeling revelations from NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, lashed out at the mainstream media for turning a blind eye to the governments’ violations. He made a key-note speech at a hackers conference in Germany.





Federal Jack



Most of the UK Media Concertedly Ignore Snowden Revelations, Under Government Pressure

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Kerry: Putting More Pressure on Iran Won"t Work


 U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said on Thursday he understands Israel’s “deep concerns” over Iran’s nuclear program and that the two allies share the same goal in curbing the perceived threat, although they differ in tactics.


Kerry told MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” program that he had just spoken with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu by phone before appearing on the television network and that the two had spoken several times this week about negotiations with Iran.


“We’re having a very friendly and civil conversation about this,” Kerry said. “I respect completely his deep concerns – as a prime minister of Israel should have – about the existential nature of this threat to Israel. We understand that.”


His comments came after Netanyahu on Wednesday warned the U.S. and other Western nations that a “bad deal” with Iran on its nuclear program could lead to war. Netanyahu’s aides also challenged the U.S. assertion that offers to provide Tehran relief from sanctions were “modest.”


The United States and five other major powers are set to resume negotiations with Iran on Nov. 20, and one potential proposal could allow Iran to sell oil and gold and import some food and medicine in exchange for curbs on its nuclear program. Israel says the relief is too generous and would do little to stop Iran’s nuclear ambitions.


Kerry told MSNBC such relief is necessary and that the United States simply disagrees with Israel’s approach to tighten sanctions, adding that he is “still hopeful” about next week’s talks.


“What we disagree on is not the goal,” he said. “We disagree on a tactic. We believe that you need to take this first step.”


“Netanyahu believes that you can increase the sanctions, put the pressure on even further, and that somehow that’s going to force them (Iran) to do what they haven’t been willing to do at any time previously,” Kerry said.


Despite the disagreement, he reiterated that the United States stands firmly with Israel.


“There’s no distance between us about the danger of this program and the endgame for us is exactly the same: Iran cannot have a peaceful nuclear program that is in fact a deceptive program,” Kerry said.


© 2013 Thomson/Reuters. All rights reserved.




WHAT REALLY HAPPENED



Kerry: Putting More Pressure on Iran Won"t Work

REFILE-WRAPUP 1-Obama, under political pressure, offers fix to healthcare policy

REFILE-WRAPUP 1-Obama, under political pressure, offers fix to healthcare policy
http://currenteconomictrendsandnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/41e15__p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif




Thu Nov 14, 2013 12:35pm EST



(Refiles to insert dropped word ‘and’ in first paragraph)


By Steve Holland and Susan Cornwell


WASHINGTON Nov 14 (Reuters) – President Barack Obama bowed to political pressure from his fellow Democrats on Thursday and announced a plan to let insurers renew for one year the health plans for Americans whose policies would be otherwise canceled due to Obamacare.


The administrative fix offered by Obama would allow insurers to offer certain health plans in 2014 that do not meet the minimum requirements of the health reform law, but require the companies to spell out how the policies are substandard and what alternatives are available.


“This fix won’t solve every problem for every person, but it’s going to help a lot of people,” Obama told reporters at the White House. “We’re going to do everything we can to help Americans who received these cancellation notices.”


The shift was designed to end a growing revolt by Democrats worried that the canceled policies, as well as the botched rollout of the government website for enrollment in the exchanges, would threaten their re-election bids in 2014.


Before the law went into effect, Obama had repeatedly promised that Americans who liked their health insurance plans could keep them under the Affordable Care Act, commonly known as Obamacare.


The law included a grandfathering provision that allowed insurers to maintain policies that did not meet new minimum coverage levels required by Obamacare, as long as the policies were created before the law was enacted in 2010.


But insurers did not maintain many of these plans or created new ones that would not meet the new requirements, and several million people have since been notified their current plans will be canceled.


It was unclear how much relief Obama’s fix would provide. Senior White House officials said it will be up to state insurance commissioners to allow the Obamacare fix to go ahead, and it will be up to insurance companies whether to renew plans that have already been canceled.


Republicans have opposed the healthcare law as an unwarranted expansion of the federal government, and on Thursday, U.S. House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner said: “The only way to fully protect the American people is to scrap this law once and for all.”


Some Democrats had threatened to support legislative bills that would have re-opened the healthcare law to halt the growing wave of policy cancellations.


The House of Representatives will vote on Friday on a bill by Republican Fred Upton of Michigan to allow insurers to offer canceled plans, but Democrats objected to some provisions that they said would undermine the Obamacare market and drive premiums up. Democrats said they will offer their own alternative approach.


Obama’s shift raised new questions, however, about the possible impact on insurance pools because it would potentially reduce the number of young and healthy people purchasing policies through Obamacare insurance exchanges.


Enrollment figures released by the administration on Wednesday indicated that only 106,000 people have enrolled for health plans through the exchanges, a tiny fraction of the hoped-for millions.


The low figure, while expected because of technical glitches on the government website, showed how far the administration has to go to build an individual market of millions of consumers in 2014 to keep the healthcare program financially viable. (Writing by John Whitesides; Editing by Ross Colvin and Grant McCool)






Reuters: Financial Services and Real Estate




Read more about REFILE-WRAPUP 1-Obama, under political pressure, offers fix to healthcare policy and other interesting subjects concerning Real Estate at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Germany, under pressure, speeds investigation of Nazi-looted art




BERLIN Sun Nov 10, 2013 10:57am EST





File photo of a print of the painting


1 of 8. File photo of a print of the painting ‘Lion-Tamer’ by artist Max Beckmann is displayed in a book about the German expressionist at Lempertz auction house in Cologne November 4, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Wolfgang Rattay/Files




BERLIN (Reuters) – Germany, under pressure to hasten inquiries into Nazi-looted art works stashed in a recluse’s flat, has sent legal experts to help local authorities in Munich resolve myriad ownership issues, Focus magazine reported on Sunday.


The federal government’s intervention follows criticism that authorities stayed silent too long about 1,406 art works by European masters they stumbled upon last year.


Focus, based in Munich, said the government sent “several staffers” to the Bavaria justice ministry on Friday.


“The federal government is working hard to ensure that information about the confiscated works of art is made available as there are now indications that Nazi persecution could be involved,” Chancellor Angela Merkel’s spokesman Steffen Seibert said the same day.


Focus, which broke the Nazi art story a week ago, also said on Sunday customs experts believe some of the art cannot be legally returned to its original owners because it came from state museums – and restitution claims would likely fail.


Customs officials seized the paintings, sketches and sculptures from Cornelius Gurlitt in February 2012. They were hoarded by his father Hildebrand, a war-era art dealer put in charge of selling “degenerate” art by Adolf Hitler.


“A large portion of Hildebrand Gurlitt’s treasure confiscated from his son can probably not be returned to the rightful owners,” Focus magazine said, quoting from an internal customs office analysis made for the Finance Ministry that refers to 315 pieces of the “degenerate” art work found.


The legal status of the art remains murky and disputed nearly 70 years after World War Two. Some legal experts say Gurlitt may even get to keep it but others say Germany could nullify his ownership under the 1998 Washington Declaration, a set of principles for dealing with looted art.


The secrecy and the delay in publishing an inventory of the works, estimated to be worth up to 1 billion euros ($ 1.34 billion), has been criticized by those who say that publicizing such finds is vital to finding their rightful owners.


The Nazis plundered hundreds of thousands of art works from museums and individuals across Europe. Many are still missing.


The Munich trove been hailed as one of the most significant discoveries of looted art, fuelling speculation about its provenance and claims from heirs of Jewish collectors who were robbed, dispossessed or murdered by the Nazis.


The 79-year-old recluse at the centre of the mystery, Cornelius Gurlitt, has vanished. He has not been charged but has been under investigation for tax evasion and concealment.


On Sunday Bild am Sonntag newspaper said Gurlitt had been seen near his Munich apartment last Monday. Der Spiegel news magazine said it had received a confused-sounding letter signed by Gurlitt dated November 4 asking that it not use his name.


“The good news is about that is that Cornelius Gurlitt alive,” Der Spiegel wrote.


Separately, German authorities confiscated 22 paintings on Saturday from the house of Gurlitt’s brother-in-law Nikolaus Fraessle near Stuttgart, Bild am Sonntag said, after Fraessle called police himself to hand the art works over.


The federal government, which ordinarily leaves such cases to state justice officials, stepped up its involvement after the United States asked it to publish a list of the art works.


Focus quoted German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle as saying he was taking a personal interest in the case and that behind many of the paintings found “are quite likely dramatic stories of people pressured and persecuted” by the Nazis.


The apparent official reluctance to publish an inventory infuriated families whose ancestors were robbed by the Nazis.


Charlotte Knobloch, a leader of the German Jewish community in Munich, said it was bad enough that the looted art had not been returned sooner, but it would be a scandal if it turned out officials had wasted 18 months since its discovery.


“It can’t be possible that the injustices of the past are compounded now,” she said, appealing to Merkel to take charge.


(Editing by Alistair Lyon)





Reuters: Lifestyle



Germany, under pressure, speeds investigation of Nazi-looted art