Showing posts with label Needs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Needs. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Canada needs to #Stand4Medicare

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Canada needs to #Stand4Medicare

Thursday, March 27, 2014

With friends like Washington, Brussels needs no enemies

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With friends like Washington, Brussels needs no enemies

Friday, February 28, 2014

Grassroots Organizations Mobilize to Meet Community Water Needs Following WV Chemical Spill


Last month, an estimated 10,000 gallons of the coal-processing chemical MCHM, along with an unknown amount of a second substance called PPH, spilled into West Virginia’s Elk River—just upstream from a municipal water intake that serves nine counties. Freedom Industries, the company responsible for the spill, neglected to report it, despite some residents claiming to have smelled the chemicals as far back as December. After repeated complaints of a strong licorice-like smell, state inspectors literally followed their noses to the source. It wasn’t until many hours later that the water company and government agencies finally warned residents to avoid any contact with water—aside from flushing toilets and putting out fires.


A van filled with relief water for people affected by the chemical spill in West Virginia. Photo credit: Aurora Lights Facebook page

A van filled with relief water for people affected by the chemical spill in West Virginia. Photo credit: Aurora Lights Facebook page



In the seven weeks since the disaster that has left 300,000 people unsure about the safety of their water, confusion and anger have mounted, and an estimated 400 people have been sent to the hospital. While government and industry have been slow to respond to the needs of the people, some remarkable community organizing has taken place, drawing on West Virginia’s long, proud history of grassroots work for environmental and economic justice—including powerful work against the abuses of the chemical and coal industries responsible for the spill.


Only a few hours after news of the spill began trickling out, a grassroots group called WV Clean Water Hub had already begun organizing water deliveries through its Facebook page. That quickly turned into a massive community-organized effort supported by new volunteers, as well as long-established grassroots groups in West Virginia—including Aurora Lights, Coal River Mountain Watch, Keeper of the Mountains Foundation, Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition and RAMPS. By working to identify communities in need of clean water and supplies, as well as connecting affected communities with volunteers and donors, this wiki-style relief effort has filled the gap left by larger relief organizations.

“There is so much bureaucracy [at the larger relief organizations] that communities fall through the cracks,” said Nate May, a volunteer organizer with WV Clean Water Hub. “We’re hearing directly from the people who need the water. Someone will post on the Facebook page that they need water and we’ll make a meme out of it. Then someone else will post when they can deliver some.”


In many communities, the water was officially declared safe for all but pregnant women within a week of the spill, but residents are still experiencing adverse reactions to touching or smelling the water coming from their taps. Some government officials recommend against exposure, while others just say to be cautious.


“The stories that get me the most are the stories of mothers with children who are sick and asking why the state is not considering it an emergency,” said Jen Osha-Buysse, a volunteer organizer with Aurora Lights. “I have spoken with many families who haven’t been able to work in the weeks since the chemical spill. They can’t just not buy water, but they also can’t afford to buy food or pay heating bills in the freezing weather.”


Amy Adkins, First Grade Teacher at Fayetteville elementary school, whose students organized a water drive for impacted families. Photo credit: WV Clean Water Hub

Amy Adkins, First Grade Teacher at Fayetteville elementary school, whose students organized a water drive for impacted families. Photo credit: WV Clean Water Hub



The WV Clean Water Hub has been led largely by environmental groups, which can be a source of tension in communities that have been split by the “jobs vs. environment” myth perpetuated by thecoal industry. However, the crisis has inspired many to ignore politics. For instance, landscaping companies have donated the use of their trucks, while schools, Girls Scouts, local unions, doctors’ offices and others have collected donations of water and baby supplies.


“We don’t want to polarize or politicize it,” May explained. “The concern is if we make it about our issue, then it feels like missionary work or like we’re trying to buy people, but clean water is an unconditional right.”


While some volunteers have encountered a few sharp questions from self-identified “coal-huggers,” the reception has largely been warm.

“Giving out water has been a way to connect on a personal level and share that we both are fed up by the government and no longer trust the people in charge,” May said.


Beyond the massive effort to deliver clean water, there has been an unprecedented surge of interest in organizing for long-term solutions.


“Shortly after the spill, we started a weekly roundtable of progressive groups in Charleston,” said Cathy Kunkel, an independent policy consultant on West Virginia energy issues and the founder/co-editor of OurWaterWV.org. “At first our focus was just on sharing information because there was so much misinformation. Now we are looking at what a longer-standing coalition with long-term political goals might look like.”


One outcome of these new partnerships was a protest hosted by the NAACP and Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition, where hundreds of consumers reverse-billed the water company that serves the nine counties affected by the spill. While the West Virginia American Water Companymight be seen as an unwitting victim of the spill, the international for-profit company’s blundering response has included sending tankers full of the polluted water into communities instead of usable relief water and providing only a $ 10 credit to customers and businesses. The action to recoup the costs of having to drive miles to collect drinking water, do laundry and take showers is just one of many examples of groups from different, often isolated areas of work coming together on this issue.


Citizens have brought water donations from surrounding counties. Photo credit: WV Clean Water Hub

Citizens have brought water donations from surrounding counties. Photo credit: WV Clean Water Hub



In addition to the coordination of long-standing groups, there has also been an overwhelming amount of spontaneous community organizing, including the formation of a rainwater catchment organization, a moms for clean water group, various organizations of concerned small businesses, and even a fashion show to raise money for water deliveries. These diverse responses reflect the diversity of the communities that have been impacted. While the coal and chemical industry have caused toxic water in isolated rural areas for decades, this time, reporters covering the story, public health experts, and even Public Service Commission employees in charge of water regulation are all personally dealing with blue-tinted water that smells distinctly like licorice.


“Unless you work for a coal industry attorney, this spill has hurt your business and your lifestyle,” Kunkel said. “We’re trying to maintain a calendar at OurWaterWV.org, and it’s been a challenge. The day of the water company protest, there was another protest at the school board because several schools were opened just to be closed again after students and employees got sick from the water. It’s powerful to see so much organizing.”



According to Kunkel and others organizing in the area, the work has begun to focus on long-term goals over the last seven weeks, even as many organizers are exhausted with the toll of working at an emergency pace for weeks on end. Groups have outlined clear steps for politicians to take towards enforcement of the chemical and coal industry as well as beginning a campaign to engage the Public Service Commission, which regulates West Virginia American Water, to ensure that residents’ health is put before water company profits.


“The relationships we developed through distributing water are an entry into working for longer term organizing in the communities,” May said.“We’re not saying, ‘I told you so.’ We’re asking, ‘What are the problems you’re facing besides the water? What happens when we draw lines between these problems?’”


Both experienced and new activists realize this is an important moment for West Virginia, and they are working to create long lasting momentum for change at the structural level.


“I’ve been thinking about pronoia—the opposite of paranoia—the belief that the world is in a conspiracy for your well being,” May explained. “We assume that when we turn on the tap, someone is making sure the water is clean. Maybe this magical naive thinking is kind of necessary for a civil society, but we can’t assume that the world is out to help us when that is not in the self interest of the people in charge.”


Source: EcoWatch






David Howard


A father and husband dedicated to his family and to developing a stronger relationship with God.
1 Timothy 5:8







WHAT REALLY HAPPENED



Grassroots Organizations Mobilize to Meet Community Water Needs Following WV Chemical Spill

Thursday, February 20, 2014

Republican Party Needs to Master the Message


Senator Ted Cruz is a hero in some Republican circles — and the opposite among many of his Senate Republican colleagues.


At this crucial juncture in the history of America, internal battles within the only party that can turn things around are the last thing Americans need. Moreover, each side in this political civil war has all too many valid criticisms of the other.


The Republican establishment’s criticisms of Senator Cruz are criticisms of his rule-or-ruin strategy, which can destroy whatever chance Republicans have of taking back the Senate in 2014 and taking back the White House in 2016. And, without political power, there is no real hope of changing things in Washington.


Senator Cruz’s filibuster last year got the Republicans blamed for shutting down the government — and his threatened filibuster this year forced several Republican Senators to jeopardize their own reelection prospects by voting to impose cloture, to prevent Cruz from repeating his self-serving grandstand play of last year. The Republicans need every vote they can get in the Senate — plus additional votes by defeating some Democrats who are running for the Senate this fall. It can be a very close call. Jeopardizing the reelection of current Republican Senators is an act of utter irresponsibility, a high risk with zero benefits to anyone except Ted Cruz — and the Democrats.


However unjustified Senator Cruz’s actions, the very fact that a freshman Senator can so quickly gain so many supporters, with so much enthusiasm, ought to be a loud warning to the Republican establishment that they have long been a huge disappointment to a wide range of Republican voters and supporters.


One of their most maddening qualities has for decades been their can’t-be-bothered attitude when it comes to explaining their positions to the American people in language people can understand. A classic example was Speaker of the House John Boehner’s performance when he emerged from a meeting at the White House a while back. There, with masses of television news cameras pointed at him, and a bank of microphones crowded together, he simply expressed his disgust at the Obama administration, turned and walked on away.


Here was a golden opportunity to cut through the Obama administration rhetoric and set the record straight on the issues at hand. But apparently Speaker Boehner couldn’t be bothered to have a prepared, and previously thought out, statement to present, conveying something more than his disgust.


Unfortunately, Speaker Boehner is just the latest in a long line of Republican “leaders” with the same disregard of the need to explain their position in plain English.


That takes work. But it is work that any number of conservative commentators on radio and television do every day of the week. And they are very successful in getting across arguments that Republican politicians do not bother to try to get across.


Democrats are constantly articulating their talking points. Less than 24 hours elapsed after the Congressional Budget Office reported that ObamaCare was likely to cause many workers to have their hours cut back, before Democrats were all talking about the “freedom” this would give workers to pursue other interests, rather than being “locked-in” to long hours on a full-time job.


It was a slick and dishonest argument, but the point here is that Democrats immediately saw the need for articulation — and for all of them to use the same words and phrases, so as to establish their argument by sheer repetition.


Nor was this the first time that Democrats coordinated their words and phrases. A few years ago, Senator Chuck Schumer was secretly recorded giving fellow Democrats the word to use whenever describing Republicans — namely, “extreme.”


When George W. Bush first ran for president in 2000, the word among Democrats was that he lacked “gravitas.” People who had never used that word in years were suddenly saying “gravitas” 24/7.


The Republican establishment has more than a tactical deficiency, however. They seem to have no principle that they offer or follow with any consistency. Their lack of articulation may be just a reflection of that lack of principle. It is hard to get to the point when you have no point to get to.


Ted Cruz filled a void. But the Republican establishment created the void. 




RealClearPolitics – Articles



Republican Party Needs to Master the Message

Sunday, January 19, 2014

CORRECTED-HP mulls legal action on Autonomy fraud claims, needs more time

CORRECTED-HP mulls legal action on Autonomy fraud claims, needs more time
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Thomson Reuters is the world’s largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.


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Reuters: Financial Services and Real Estate




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Iraq needs Kurdish oil income to avert budget collapse -lawmaker

Iraq needs Kurdish oil income to avert budget collapse -lawmaker
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BAGHDAD Sun Jan 19, 2014 9:50am EST



BAGHDAD Jan 19 (Reuters) – Iraq cannot finance its projected 2014 budget deficit unless the northern Kurdistan region pays its oil export revenue into the national treasury – or loses its share of state spending, a senior lawmaker said on Sunday.


Haider al-Abadi, head of parliament’s treasury committee, told Reuters the budget, swollen by extra expenditure, would “collapse” if the state kept paying the autonomous region its 17 percent share even as the Kurds withhold oil export proceeds.


Baghdad’s chronic quarrel with Kurdistan over how to manage and share Iraq’s energy resources intensified this month when the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) said oil had begun flowing to Turkey for export via a pipeline outside federal control.


Last week Iraq’s oil minister threatened legal action and drastic trade reprisals against Turkey and any foreign companies involved in what he called the “smuggling” of Iraqi oil.


Kurdistan’s Prime Minister Nechirvan Barzani arrived in the Iraqi capital on Sunday to pursue talks on an issue that has bedevilled relations between Iraq’s Arabs and minority Kurds.


“We go to Baghdad with the intention of closing gaps,” KRG spokesman Safeen Dizayee said before the talks, which he said would focus on increasing Kurdistan’s oil output and a mechanism for marketing its exports.


Abadi said the draft budget projected a deficit of about 21 trillion Iraqi dinars ($ 18 billion), assuming the Kurds paid the treasury the revenue from budgeted oil exports of 400,000 barrels per day – a target industry sources say far exceeds Kurdistan’s current export capacity of around 255,000 bpd.


To Baghdad’s fury, the Kurds handed over no oil export revenue last year because of an unresolved dispute over the payment of oil companies operating in the northern region.


For much of 2013 the Kurds were trucking what industry sources estimated was up to 60,000 bpd of crude and condensates to Turkey, while the independent pipeline was being completed.


In 2012, the Kurds exported 61,000 bpd of crude via the Baghdad-controlled pipeline to Turkey, so the revenue went automatically to the central government.


Baghdad complained at the time that the Kurds should have exported more than double this amount, however.


BUDGET CRUNCH


Abadi said state spending had risen sharply in the draft budget due to increases in pensions and the minimum public sector wage, child benefits and student allowances.


Echoing remarks made in the past week by Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and Oil Minister Abdul Kareem Luaibi, Abadi said the central government would have to cut the Kurds’ budget share.


“They are not contributing, so why should they get something out of it?” he asked in an interview. “At the moment we have a deficit of 21 trillion. If you add 15 to 16 trillion to it, the budget will collapse,” he said, estimating the additional shortfall if no Kurdish oil revenue is handed over.


Abadi, who is also a senior member of Maliki’s Shi’ite Islamist Dawa party, said time was running out for the budget to be passed before parliament is dissolved ahead of an election on April 30. He said it would be hard to muster a quorum of 163 of the assembly’s 325 members during an electoral campaign.


Kurdish and Sunni Muslim opposition lawmakers would stay away, as would MPs busy campaigning or those without a motive to turn up because they were not running for re-election, he said.


Abadi accused the Kurds of seeking to prolong oil talks until after the poll to entrench a fait accompli whereby they pocket their own revenue from oil “officially” piped to Turkey and still receive their 17 percent share of the federal budget.


Kurdish officials say that in practice Kurdistan receives closer to 10 percent of the national budget.


Even if the Kurds paid over notional oil revenues of 17 or 18 trillion dinars from exports of 400,000 bpd, Abadi said, Baghdad would only just be able to bridge its 2014 budget gap.


He said the withholding of Kurdistan’s earnings also violated a U.N. Security Council resolution under which all Iraqi oil export proceeds must be paid into a U.N.-approved account in New York from which five percent must be deducted to pay war reparations to Kuwait for Iraq’s 1990 invasion.






Reuters: Bonds News




Read more about Iraq needs Kurdish oil income to avert budget collapse -lawmaker and other interesting subjects concerning Bonds at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Sunday, December 29, 2013

Target’s Close Relationship to Government Needs to Be Watched




Target’s Forsenic Services is who the FBI, Secret Service, BATF and others have turned to for help for two decades. Now they’ve been pwned in the third largest credit card heist in history. Will this event be used to further a biometric agenda?


David Knight


“Unbeknownst to most, Target has a top-rated forensic services laboratory that provides forensic examinations, and assists outside law enforcement with help on special cases.” — Target’s Bullseye View



Just like Sherlock Holmes was the consulting detective who was sought out by Scotland Yard’s Inspector Lestrade for his forensic expertise, Target has played Sherlock for the FBI, BATF, Secret Service, local law enforcement and even international agencies like the World Customs Organization. When they’re flumoxed, they head to Target — for the Forensic Lab Services.


Target’s forensic expertise has its roots in loss prevention. But unlike other corporations, Target pursued it to such a degree that they surpassed the capabilities of government crime labs. In a Washington Post article eight years ago, Nathan K. Garvis, Target’s vice president of government affairs at the time said “In many ways, Target is actually a high-tech company masquerading as a retailer.” Target has been actively involved with law enforcement since the mid-90′s but “intensified” after 9/11.


And Target’s high tech masquerading isn’t just about crime solving. Target is watching its customers very, very closely. Target was able to tell that a teenage girl was pregnant before her father even knew by profiling her purchases. Their data mining was so detailed and intensive that they noticed that pregnant women began buying certain vitamin supplements and things like unscented lotion. When they sent coupons obviously targeted to pregnant women, the father was incensed and complained to a Target manager that he felt they were trying to encourage his daughter to get pregnant. On a subsequent contact, the father told the Target manager that his daughter had already been pregnant at the time and he wasn’t aware of it. That’s the power of “metadata” that the government keeps telling us is not so important while they build massive storage capabilities to capture and analyze it.


Target is by no means the only retailer profiling and data mining customers. Any and all data that companies get on you is sold to other corporations and given freely to the government without a search warrant. The basis of the decision on Friday by District Court Judge Pauley that gave the green light to NSA spying was that any information a third party has on you can get obtained without a search warrant. The government can bribe, buy or blackmail corporations or individuals to get that data. We have become commodities in an informant society.


But Target’s cozy relationship with government raises ethical issues as well. Eight years ago, Professor of business ethics and public policy said of Target’s Forensics Services, “It is a tricky issue when firms get too close to government. There is no reason we need to say that anything bad is happening, but we do need to watch.”


We’ve just seen one of the most massive thefts of financial data ever. Over 40 million credit card numbers, with their PIN data has been stolen. And they were stolen from a company that has been the leader in forensic sophistication for 20 years. A company the government relies upon to investigate crime. If you were a criminal hacker, sophisticated enough to get away with a crime of that magnitude, wouldn’t you know about Target’s Forensic Services? Wouldn’t another company be an easier mark?


As the business ethics professor said 8 years ago, Target’s close relationship with the government needs to be watched. If we see “anything bad is happening”, like using this theft to push for a biometric identification agenda, we should all start asking a lot of questions.


With permission
Source:
Infowars


Distributed by RINF Alternative News





WHAT REALLY HAPPENED



Target’s Close Relationship to Government Needs to Be Watched

Monday, December 9, 2013

Caught on Video: Educator Admits Common Core Does Not Address Special Needs Students

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Caught on Video: Educator Admits Common Core Does Not Address Special Needs Students

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Slovenia needs up to 5 bln eur to clean up troubled banks - sources

Slovenia needs up to 5 bln eur to clean up troubled banks - sources
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BRUSSELS Wed Dec 4, 2013 1:40pm EST



BRUSSELS Dec 4 (Reuters) – Slovenia is expected to need as much as 5 billion euros ($ 6.8 billion) to recapitalise its banks, sources familiar with the matter told Reuters, a figure some officials say would not require an international bailout.


Slovenia’s government is determined not to seek international aid and one government official recently said that even were the bill for repair to reach 4.6 billion euros it would not trigger a request for help.


The banks are nursing some 8 billion euros in bad loans, equivalent to almost one quarter of economic output, raising speculation that Slovenia, with a population of just 2 million, might become the sixth euro zone economy to need outside help.


On Dec. 13, the government will receive the results of an external audit of the banks, which will say how much cash the government must inject to keep them afloat.


“The latest figure we have for Slovenia is 5 billion euros,” a senior euro zone official familiar with the situation told Reuters.


A second official said that 5 billion euros was likely to be the upper limit and that it could be as low as 4 billion euros. He said it was unlikely this range would require an international bailout for the ex-Yugoslav republic.


A source close to the government of Prime Minister Alenka Bratusek told Reuters last week that the country was able to cope with a gap of 4.6 billion euros.


Slovenia’s stock market suspended trade in its banks’ shares and junior bonds on Monday, until the publication of results of bank stress tests next week.


Credit-rating agency Fitch has said that under the worst-case scenario, Ljubljana will have to recapitalise its mostly state-owned banks with 4.6 billion euros – far more than the 1.2 billion euros it has set aside.


Despite the uncertainty, investors’ interest in Slovenia is increasing, with one single unnamed buyer snapping up a 1.5 billion euro bond issue in November.


But Slovenia could yet follow Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Cyprus in seeking a national bailout from the euro zone, European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund.


Slovenia’s economy was badly hit by the global financial crisis and relapsed into recession in 2012 due to a slide in exports, a credit crunch and a fall in consumer spending after budget cuts.


The government has embarked on a programme of reform including tax hikes, spending cuts and privatisations.


It is considering selling a number of state companies including Telekom. Germany’s Deutsche Telekom is a potential bidder.






Reuters: Financial Services and Real Estate




Read more about Slovenia needs up to 5 bln eur to clean up troubled banks - sources and other interesting subjects concerning Real Estate at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Sunday, December 1, 2013

Former NFL Star: League Needs to Help Injured Ex-Players

NFL Hall-of-Famer Joe DeLamielleure made an appearance Sunday on ABC’s “This Week” not only to laud the efforts of the league in making the game safer but also to plea with the commissioner to make amends to old players with brain injuries.

DeLamielleure, a 1973 first-round draft pick and offensive lineman for the Buffalo Bills, has chronic traumatic encephalopathy and is one of more than 4,500 players involved in the lawsuit settlement reached prior to the start of the season. The settlement totals $ 765 million, and none of the plaintiffs has received any money.


“We have no health insurance,” DeLamielleure said. “That’s a problem. There’s a lot of rule changes for the better of the game, so I think they’re doing the right thing, but for them to continue to do the right thing, they have to make it better for the guys who created this monstrosity of a league, and they just don’t do it.”


The lawsuit was filed in 2011 and alleged the NFL failed to properly advise players about the sport’s risk of concussions and that it did not give them proper treatment when they were injured.


“They’ve known for two decades this issue is there, and while the commissioner and the league are making moves forward … at the same time, when the commissioner is asked now, is there a link between football and brain damage, he says, ‘Well, we’re going to let the doctors decide this thing,’ ” said Mark Fainaru-Wada, author of the book League of Denial.


© 2013 Newsmax. All rights reserved.




Newsmax – America



Former NFL Star: League Needs to Help Injured Ex-Players

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Lieberman: "Israel Needs New Ally" (Not USA)





Shortly after returning* to his cherished chair as Israel’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Avigdor Lieberman said “The relations with the USA is the angular stone, without it we won’t be able to manipulate[!] the current world.” This is a bit brutish, but expected. Soon he learned that things had changed since the last time he sat in his favorite chair. On November 20, 2013, he dropped his first political bomb of the season.



USA Secretary of State and UAE Minister of Foreign Affairs

USA Secretary of State and UAE Minister of Foreign Affairs
United Arab Emirates (UAE): Federal Research Study



The USA-Israel love affair is cooling down. A few days ago, a leading politician close to Netanyahu said “Kerry Crossed a Red Line”, this was strengthened by an important lawyer who said “US Secretary of State is the enemy of the Jews”.





Hebrew Media Cartoon

Hebrew Media Cartoon
Iranian Rohani sends away Netanyahu wrapped in a carpet, Kerry and Obama carry Bibi
Political Cartoons and the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict




Lieberman’s bomb was dropped while French President Hollande was finishing a strategic visit to Israel, which was full of nuclear innuendos (French-Israeli Attack on Iran?). A fast student, Lieberman fixed his initial assessment. Israel does not need the USA anymore.


Afraid of the ricochets of his own words, Lieberman chose the Sapir College near Gaza as delivery point. Speaking at the Sderot Conference for Society, he knew that until he and his words reached the Jerusalemite political arena a new crisis would render them obsolete.


Lieberman’s Gems




Sapir College

Sapir (Hebrew rendering of sapphire) College near Gaza



“In times when the relations with the USA are diminishing, Israel needs to search for new allies with common interests.”


“Americans are struggling with many challenges, problems in North Korea, in Pakistan, in Afghanistan, in Iran, in Syria, in Egypt, in China, and they have also their own economic problems. Thus, I ask what our place in the international arena is?”


While his rural audience was busy with more immediate issues, he continued “There is one Jewish country and 57 Muslim countries. From the start, we are in an inferior position.” Note that he assumes that peace is not possible and that all Muslim countries behave as one. “All countries search for investments or external help,” he added oddly.


Unable to coherently analyze reality, he moved to personal anecdotes. He told about his meeting with a current European Prime Minister while the latter was in the opposition. He didn’t identify him by name, but the reference to British PM Cameron is quite clear. “Back then he spoke about Israel and the Middle East as if he were a member of Yisrael Beiteinu’s [Lieberman"s extreme-right party] rightwing. Now, I see that he has adopted anti-Israeli positions.”





Iranian Jews on Nuclear Program

Iranian Jews on Nuclear Program
Tehran, November 19, 2013





“I asked a common friend ‘How did this happen?’ He answered ‘What do you expect from him? He has unemployment, he has problems, and he needs investments and donors. These come from the countries in the Persian Gulf, Saudi Arabia and Turkey. So, what can we expect from him?’


“We don’t have such economic leverage. The relations USA-Israel is cooling down… Israel needs to search for new allies with common interests.


“We must search for those countries that do not run after the money, that do not need the Muslim World. These are countries in need of technological and agricultural knowledge. That is what we can offer.”


Lieberman is infamous for untimely and, to be frank, hallucinated declarations. In the past, he said “Palestinian Authority doesn’t exist,” while the government he was a member in was officially dealing with it.


He chose a remote place to deliver his bombshell, but his timing was less calculated. In two days, on Friday, USA Secretary of State will arrive at Jerusalem. Netanyahu, arriving from Russia, to where he travelled after French President left Jerusalem, will greet him.


Lieberman, you have a sapphire opportunity here to meet your American peer and tell him what you said in Sderot. Prove that you are a serious man. “Thank you for your cooperation all these years, here is a golden watch as thanks. Good bye!” Will you?






Lieberman in Hebrew: “Israel Needs New Ally” (Not USA)
“Friendship is unnecessary, like philosophy, like art, It has no survival value;
rather it is one of those things that give value to survival.”—C. S. Lewis




———



Special Notice – Persecuted by Israel, Maimed by Bolivia





Under the leadership of Mr. Evo Morales, recipient of the 2006 Al-Gaddafi International Prize for Human Rights, I have been declared a Political Prisoner of Bolivia. My situation is acute, Western Human Rights organizations care not about those speaking against Israel, they do not care about those suffering under the violent hands of one of the main suppliers of “special sugar” to the West.
I attach here the bulk of a recent letter I sent to my lawyers, Despite their good will and astounding experience they failed to save my life. I am being punished illegitimately by beasts. I will keep publishing for as much as I can, but I am unlikely to survive here. Here is the text:


Tortured by Bolivia


I apologize for this obviously incomplete email, the reason for my withholding much of what is relevant will become obvious.
I have been violated in several occasions by the Bolivian Government. The technique was constant. I was gassed unconscious in my room (both in the church and the guesthouses) and they entered the room and committed crimes.
It has stopped since I have solved the gassing attempts, and started to secure my room upon entrance. Next time they try it will mean my death. They know that.
One of the violations consisted in the introduction of magnetic-operated electrodes in my mouth. Breaking gums, nerves and filling with my bare fingers I had pulled them out. I can’t stand the pain anymore. Visiting dentists here is impossible; in no way can I secure the event.
Other tortures include low-voltage electrocution through my bed and shoes. I have solved this.
I have no access to safe water and food.
These are not Bolivian technologies. The last item invented by the people inhabiting the area was dehydrated potatoes. They never developed writing. They just copy from others.
Other tortures and constant pressure form my days here. Yet, I have published every day, unless facing urging administrative issues with the site, mainly fixing attacks on it.
I can’t withstand it any more. My mouth is an open wound. My throat has not healed from the Bolivian Government attack on 2009. My nose and hears are being torn apart. I can’t be more detailed over the web.
A few months from now, my American ATM card will expire. Afterwards, I will be on the streets and probably dead within a few hours.



* On November 6, 2013, a Jerusalemite court unanimously acquitted Avigdor Lieberman of all charges placed by a civil servant who disliked Lieberman’s policies. See McCarthyism Loses Israeli Battle: Lieberman Acquitted


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Tortured by Bolivia


WHAT REALLY HAPPENED



Lieberman: "Israel Needs New Ally" (Not USA)

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

After first eSports tournament, "Hearthstone" needs to go public

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After first eSports tournament, "Hearthstone" needs to go public

Monday, October 21, 2013

National Security Needs Bigger Role in Energy Development

An ‘all-of-the-above” approach is needed for U.S. energy production in order to secure America’s national security, according to retired military officials gathered at the Securing America’s Future Energy Conference last week.

In panels and discussions at the Washington, D.C., gathering, speakers made the point that while there should be pursuit of oil through new production venues, such as the proposed Keystone XL Pipeline, it also is important to pursue policies focused on diversifying fuels used in the transportation sector, including electric and natural gas vehicles.


Failure to take this approach, the conference concluded, could leave the U.S. at the continued mercy of foreign overlords of oil, such as the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.


In an international arena that is increasingly unsafe and uncertain, this is unwise, said retired U.S. Marine Corps Commandant James Conway, who, along with Fred Smith of FedEx, co-chairs SAFE’s Energy Security Leadership Council.


“The term ‘All of the above’ that supporters of a multi-faceted approach to American energy don’t usually consider is the issue of national security,” Conway told Newsmax. “It ignores the fact we have to do something to reduce our dependence on a single fuel source because there are unfriendly nation-states –from the Middle East to Venezuela – on the other side.”


Although U.S. oil imports have decreased thanks to enhanced domestic production, the nation continues to import around 35 percent of the oil it consumes. This is a tremendous improvement from the 60 percent the U.S. was importing in 2005, but it is almost identical to the percentage of our oil imports in 1973, when the nation faced the Arab oil embargo.


“That speaks volumes,” Conway said.


While Conway and other SAFE leaders endorse greater domestic production, they have concluded that this is not enough to achieve the goal of security. They pointed out that even as U.S. domestic oil production was growing at a record pace in 2012, U.S. households, businesses, and public agencies spent a record $ 900 billion on petroleum fuels.


“Let’s put it another way,” said another member of the SAFE team, Ken Blackwell, a former Ohio state treasurer. “The Bush tax cuts have been erased at the pump in 10 years.Where the individual family’s annual expenditure on gasoline was $ 1,235 in 2002, gasoline expenditures in 2012 for the average U.S. household reached $ 2,912, or just under 4 percent of income before taxes.”


According to estimates from the Energy Information Agency, this is the highest percentage in 30 years, with the exception of 2008.


Along with supporting increased oil exploration, SAFE also supports pursuit of such alternatives as electric and natural-gas vehicles.


Founded in 2005, by retired Marine Gen. P.X. Kelley and Smith — chairman, CEO and founder of FedEx Corp., a Marine officer in Vietnam — SAFE advocates pursuing energy security through increasing domestic production of oil and gas and diversifying what fuels America’s transportation sector. Along with Conway, retired admiral and former Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair serves on the group’s board.


“We’re not picking winners and losers,” Conway emphasized. “And we feel alternative-energy sources are additions and not replacements for oil. However, we also must accept that increased oil production is only part of the equation. When you are talking about national security, this is crucial to understand.”


John Gizzi is chief political columnist and White House correspondent for Newsmax.


© 2013 Newsmax. All rights reserved.




Newsmax – America



National Security Needs Bigger Role in Energy Development

Thursday, September 5, 2013

This year"s DSEI arms fair needs to be the last | Kaye Stearman


Why does the British government continue to support the selling of weapons to some of the world’s worst regimes?


Just last week, the House of Commons voted against military intervention in Syria, largely out of fear that the consequences of creating even worse carnage than already exists. How ironic that next week, the government hosts one of the world’s largest arms fairs, just a dozen miles downriver from parliament.



Defence & Security Equipment International (DSEI) likes to bill itself as a “trade show”, but it is in fact a shop window for the arms industry. The 1,300 exhibitors comprise a range of military and security companies, with notorious BAE systems taking pride of place.



Among the expected 30,000 visitors are the usual array of arms-makers, dealers and brokers, military, mercenaries and advisers. The most sought-after visitors include delegations from some of the world’s nastiest governments, keen to shop for dangerous weapons to threaten their neighbours and in some cases their own people, and to enhance their global prestige.



DSEI has been held every two years at the ExCel Centre in London’s Docklands. It is organised by Clarion Events, the previous owner, Reed Elsevier, having thrown in the towel in 2007 after sustained criticism of the incompatibility its combined role as academic and medical publisher and arms fair owner.



The crucial factor is that DSEI is supported politically, financially and logistically by the British government, primarily via UK Trade & Investment Defence & Security Organisation (UKTI DSO), the government’s arms sales unit. UKTI DSO employs 160 civil servants to promote sales of military and security equipment around the world. They help arrange arms trade missions to “priority markets”, like Saudi Arabia and Libya, and overseas exhibitions. They will even helpfully provides members of the UK armed forces to demonstrate equipment. All paid for by UK taxpayers.



UKTI DSO is responsible for inviting military delegations to DSEI. As yet we don’t know which countries have been invited, because this year the government is refusing to release the list until DSEI opens its doors on 10 September – supposedly so as not to offend delegations added late to the list.


Going by past years, invitees are likely to include such human rights luminaries as Bahrain, Iraq, Oman, Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates. Add to that list Colombia, Nigeria and Peru, together with India and Pakistan, who have been to war several times. And there are rumours that Libya and Burma might be on the invite list.



DSEI is not open to the general public. However, MPs are admitted. When Green party MP Caroline Lucas visited in 2011 she found material on the display stands of Pakistani exhibitors describing how they could supply cluster bombs, banned by the UK and other countries, and supposedly also by DSEI organisers. The stands were hurriedly closed and DSEI issued a mea culpa – it didn’t know such material was there. The same exhibitors are back this year.



However, the real shocker is not the occasional illegal item but the wide range of perfectly legal yet highly destructive weaponry so proudly exhibited and so easily available for purchase by any country with deep enough pockets. Of course, the government may bluster on about its “rigorous export controls” but a quick look at some at recent arms export licences, for example, to Egypt, Oman and Saudi Arabia, shows that when it comes to major deals, arms controls are irrelevant.



On Thursday, 12 September, on the third day of the arms fair, there will be a Westminister Hall debate on the role of UKTI. Campaign Against Arms Trade urges MPs, especially those following foreign, trade and military affairs to participate.



MPs should argue for the abolition of UKTI DSO and its role in arms sales promotion. They should question government support for the highly cosseted arms industry, estimated at £700m a year. They must demand an end to UK participation in arms fairs, and that DSEI 2013 should be the last of its kind.





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This year"s DSEI arms fair needs to be the last | Kaye Stearman

Monday, September 2, 2013

Robert Gibbs: Obama Needs To Address Public, Make Case For Syria





ROBERT GIBBS: It’s really incumbent on the president to go speak directly to the American people about what’s at stake for this country and how we face down dictators that use chemical weapons against their own people. It’s an important message to be heard not just in Damascus, but in Iran and by Hezbollah


###


GIBBS: I think he will get the votes. I think the Senate will be much easier. I think it will be very, very difficult in the House, I think folks will spend a lot of time on the phones.




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Robert Gibbs: Obama Needs To Address Public, Make Case For Syria

Sunday, June 16, 2013

Menendez: GOP needs immigration reform to win


Sen. Robert Menendez says Republicans need to accept a pathway to citizenship in immigration reform, or they’ll never take back the White House.


Discussing the debate over border security measures in the bill, the New Jersey Democrat who chairs the Senate Foreign Relations Committee decried efforts to create unreachable triggers on legalization.


“What I cannot support, and what I believe the community cannot support at the end of the day is that we’re going to have triggers that can never be achieved in terms of border security as an impediment to the pathway to legalization and citizenship,” Menendez said on CNN’s “State of the Union.”


Citing a demographic shift in the last election and polls that show public support for immigration reform, Menendez said Republicans need to get on board.


“I would tell my Republican colleagues, both in the House and the Senate, that the road to the White House comes through a road with a pathway to legalization. Without it, there will never be a road to the White House for the Republican Party,” Menendez said.


Menendez, a member of the Senate’s Gang of Eight, also predicted the bill would get 60 votes in the Senate, and that would be enough to prompt action in the House.


“When we hit 60 votes, which we will, I have no doubt that other people will want to be on the right side of history, and that will send a very strong message to the House,” he said.


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POLITICO – TOP Stories



Menendez: GOP needs immigration reform to win

Menendez: GOP needs immigration reform to win


Sen. Robert Menendez says Republicans need to accept a pathway to citizenship in immigration reform, or they’ll never take back the White House.


Discussing the debate over border security measures in the bill, the New Jersey Democrat who chairs the Senate Foreign Relations Committee decried efforts to create unreachable triggers on legalization.


“What I cannot support, and what I believe the community cannot support at the end of the day is that we’re going to have triggers that can never be achieved in terms of border security as an impediment to the pathway to legalization and citizenship,” Menendez said on CNN’s “State of the Union.”


Citing a demographic shift in the last election and polls that show public support for immigration reform, Menendez said Republicans need to get on board.


“I would tell my Republican colleagues, both in the House and the Senate, that the road to the White House comes through a road with a pathway to legalization. Without it, there will never be a road to the White House for the Republican Party,” Menendez said.


Menendez, a member of the Senate’s Gang of Eight, also predicted the bill would get 60 votes in the Senate, and that would be enough to prompt action in the House.


“When we hit 60 votes, which we will, I have no doubt that other people will want to be on the right side of history, and that will send a very strong message to the House,” he said.


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POLITICO – TOP Stories



Menendez: GOP needs immigration reform to win

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

President Obama Needs Smoking Gun Control to Deal With His Scandals



Congressman Harris went on “The C4 Show” to share his thoughts about the ongoing scandal at the IRS where they have been targeting conservative tea party gro…
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President Obama Needs Smoking Gun Control to Deal With His Scandals

Saturday, May 4, 2013

Audi needs clarity on laws before decision on Brazil plant: CEO



Audi Chief Executive Officer Rupert Stadler delivers a speech during the opening ceremony of the carmaker’s new plant in the town of San Jose Chiapa, in the state of Puebla, Central Mexico May 4, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Imelda Medina




Reuters: Business News




Audi needs clarity on laws before decision on Brazil plant: CEO