Showing posts with label short. Show all posts
Showing posts with label short. Show all posts

Sunday, March 30, 2014

Top NATO commander cuts short U.S. visit, eyes on Russian troops




WASHINGTON Sun Mar 30, 2014 1:37pm EDT



U.S. Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel speaks during a retirement ceremony at the National Security Agency in Fort Meade, Maryland March 28, 2014. REUTERS/Brendan Smialowski/Pool

U.S. Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel speaks during a retirement ceremony at the National Security Agency in Fort Meade, Maryland March 28, 2014.


Credit: Reuters/Brendan Smialowski/Pool




WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel has sent America’s top general in Europe back early from a trip to Washington in what a spokesman on Sunday called a prudent step given Russia’s “lack of transparency” about troop movements across the border with Ukraine.


General Philip Breedlove, who is both NATO’s Supreme Allied Commander Europe and the head of the U.S. military’s European Command, had been due to testify before Congress this week. Instead, he arrived in Europe Saturday evening and will be consulting with allies.


“(Hagel) considered Breedlove’s early return the prudent thing to do, given the lack of transparency and intent from Russian leadership about their military movements across the border,” Rear Admiral John Kirby, a Pentagon spokesman, told Reuters, which was first to report the decision.


“More broadly, he felt it was important for Gen. Breedlove to continue our efforts to consult with NATO allies, and to discuss specific ways to provide additional reassurance for our NATO allies in Eastern Europe.”


U.S. officials, speaking last week on condition of anonymity, expressed deep concern about the massing of what they estimate are up to 40,000 Russian troops on Ukraine’s border. That is stoking concerns in Washington and elsewhere that Russia is preparing a wider incursion into Ukraine after its annexation of Crimea.


The United States and EU have meted out two rounds of sanctions on Russia, including visa bans and asset freezes for some of Putin’s inner circle, to punish Moscow, and they have threatened further actions.


The U.S. military has also taken steps to reassure NATO allies, increasing the number of U.S. aircraft in regular NATO air patrols over the Baltics and beefing up a previously planned training exercise with the Polish air force. More steps are being considered.


Breedlove will meet with NATO foreign ministers at their April 1-2 conference in Brussels.


“The general’s return will allow him more time to confer closely with his staff and our allies and partners, and to better advise senior leaders,” Kirby said.


Hagel made the decision to send Breedlove back to Europe on Friday night, he said.


Breedlove arrived in Stuttgart on Saturday evening. He had been scheduled to testify before the Senate Armed Services Committee April 1 and the House Armed Services Committee on April 2.


“Congressional leaders were notified of Hagel’s decision,” Kirby said.


(Reporting by Phil Stewart; Editing by Jim Loney)






Reuters: Politics



Top NATO commander cuts short U.S. visit, eyes on Russian troops

Thursday, March 13, 2014

"Elektable" Ron Paul Short Film ©richterstudios [by matlarson10] GREAT!

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"Elektable" Ron Paul Short Film ©richterstudios [by matlarson10] GREAT!

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Freak Show Interviews -- Short E. Dangerously

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Freak Show Interviews -- Short E. Dangerously

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Here"s a shocker: North Korea is going to be short on grain in 2014





SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea is likely to face a shortage of 340,000 tons of grain this year, a report showed Sunday, which would mean another year to its chronic food scarcity.


The report contributed to the Korea Development Institute said Pyongyang is estimated to need some 5.37 million tons of grain this year.


The estimate was based on assumptions that the population of the communist country is 24.8 million and that each person consumed an annual average of 175 kilograms of grain in 2013.


The UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the World Food Program, who had visited the North for about two weeks in late September to survey food production, forecast the communist country’s grain production at 5.03 million tons this year.


“While North Korea can cover a shortage of 300,000 tons with imports, it will have to rely on international aid for the remaining 40,000 tons,” the report written by the Korea Rural Economic Institute said.


The report noted that the country’s grain production in the last few years falls far short of 6 million tons during the 1980s.


It said while North Korea is making efforts to cultivate food from all arable lands, the country is suffering losses in productivity due to soil erosion and floods.


North Korea suffers from chronic food shortages with the average amount of rice and corn consumed by the people said to be only half of the daily consumption recommended by the United Nations.


Yonhap News Agency contributed to this report.


http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/asia-pacific/north-korea/140201/grain-shortage-2014




GlobalPost – Home



Here"s a shocker: North Korea is going to be short on grain in 2014

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

IBM revenue falls short of expectations, shares fall


Visitors walk past the IBM booth at the 9th China International Software Product & Information Service Expo in Nanjing, Jiangsu province September 6, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/China Daily




Reuters: Top News



IBM revenue falls short of expectations, shares fall

Sunday, January 19, 2014

COBURN TO CUT SENATE TERM SHORT – Obama to call for NSA phone collection overhaul – CONGRESS OKs $1T OMNIBUS -- Weinstein, Streep to take aim at NRA in "Senator"s Wife"


By Scott Wong (swong@politico.com or @scottwongDC)


COBURN TO CUT SENATE TERM SHORT – Alexander Burns and Burgess Everett report for the hometown paper: “Oklahoma Sen. Tom Coburn confirmed Thursday night that he will not serve out his full Senate term and intends to step down after 2014 because of deepening health problems. In a statement, Coburn acknowledged that he is battling a serious recurrence of cancer and said he would continue to fight for his priorities during the remainder of his time in office. ‘Carolyn and I have been touched by the encouragement we’ve received from people across the state regarding my latest battle against cancer. But this decision isn’t about my health, my prognosis or even my hopes and desires,’ Coburn said. ‘As a citizen, I am now convinced that I can best serve my own children and grandchildren by shifting my focus elsewhere.’ …


– “The 65-year-old physician’s decision to resign marks a shift in his plans: In an interview earlier this month, he said he believed he was ‘plenty healthy enough to serve out my term,’ but acknowledged that circumstances could change. … Coburn’s departure from the Senate will cut short a nine-year career in the chamber and a longer tenure in Congress that dates back to the 1994 Republican revolution. An obstetrician by training, Coburn served six years in the House — often clashing with his GOP colleagues as well as Democrats and participating in attempt to depose then-House Speaker Newt Gingrich — before standing by a pledge to step down after three terms. …


– “Coburn has fought cancer on and off for years: In addition to the recurrence of prostate cancer that he announced in November, Coburn has also grappled with melanoma and colon cancer. He had brain surgery about six years ago as a result of a benign brain tumor. As of last week, he was facing the prospect of serious surgery that would require doctors to enter through the rib cage – a procedure serious enough that Coburn had already begun to discuss the possible ramifications for his Senate career with close family and friends.” http://politi.co/1j5GJ8P


The Oklahoman, A1 1-col lead: “COBURN PLANS TO RESIGN EARLY,” By Chris Casteel: “…Coburn’s decision could set off a major scramble among Republicans hoping to replace him. U.S. Reps. Tom Cole, R-Moore; James Lankford, R-Oklahoma City; and Jim Bridenstine, R-Tulsa; will likely consider the race, along with Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt. Coburn timed his resignation so his replacement could be elected during the regular ballot process this year. It will be a very compressed time frame for a statewide race, particularly for those who don’t have statewide name recognition.” http://bit.ly/1dBhGLi PDF front page: http://bit.ly/1i57o84


– REPUBLICAN LEADER MITCH McCONNELL issued this statement: “Tom Coburn is without question one of the most intelligent, principled, and decent men in modern Senate history and a lasting credit to his beloved Oklahoma. … With his nearly 20 years of service in the House and later in the Senate, Tom has set a moral example for lawmakers at every level of government through his integrity, grit, and fearlessness in taking on problems others find either too difficult or too unglamorous.”


– PRESIDENT OBAMA, writing last year for TIME’s 100 most influential people: “The people of Oklahoma are lucky to have someone like Tom representing them in Washington — someone who speaks his mind, sticks to his principles and is committed to the people he was elected to serve.” The two developed an unlikely friendship when Obama was serving in the Senate:  http://ti.me/1b7Tzhs


PROGRAMMING NOTE – Huddle will be off on Monday in honor of Martin Luther King Jr. Day. Have a great long weekend. We’ll see you back here on Tuesday.


LAWMAKERS PITCH BILL TO REVIVE VOTING RIGHTS ACT – Mike Lillis writes for The Hill: “A bipartisan group of lawmakers introduced legislation Thursday that would restore the voting protections shot down by the Supreme Court last year. Sponsored by Sen. Pat Leahy (D-Vt.), Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner (R-Wis.) and Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.), the proposal attempts to ensure voters’ rights by requiring certain regions with a recent history of racial discrimination to secure federal approval before changing their election rules. The bill would reduce the number of states requiring federal pre-clearance from nine to four, leaving Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana and Georgia still covered under that provision of the old law.” http://bit.ly/1gUK89j


OBAMA TO CALL FOR OVERHAUL OF NSA’S PHONE-DATA COLLECTION PROGRAM – Mark Landler reports for the New York Times: “President Obama will lay out plans on Friday morning to pull back the government’s wide net of surveillance at home and abroad, in a speech that administration officials say will stake out a middle ground between the far-reaching proposals of his own advisers and the concerns of the nation’s intelligence agencies. Mr. Obama is expected to outline plans to put more limits on the bulk collection of telephone calls; tighten privacy safeguards for foreigners, particularly heads of state; and propose a new public advocate to represent privacy concerns at a secret intelligence court. …  But he will stop short of turning over the storage of phone data to a consortium of telecommunications companies, according to officials …” http://nyti.ms/1dBjpAm


– OBAMA delivers his remarks at 11 a.m. at the Justice Department.


THE ROGERS REPORT: CONGRESS OKs $ 1.1T SPENDING BILL – “A landmark $ 1.1 trillion spending bill cleared Congress Thursday evening after conservative resistance collapsed in the Senate and tea party favorite Ted Cruz dropped his insistence on a vote on funding for President Barack Obama’s health care plan,” David Rogers reports. “On back-to-back 72-26 roll calls, senators voted to cut off debate and then quickly adopted the bill, which keeps the government funded through September. Seventeen Republicans backed passage, but as with the December budget accord, a majority did not. The divisions show again how much the Senate –even more than the House—has become a partisan battleground. Once again Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) opted to be a “nay” despite the overwhelming support of House Republicans for the measure.


– “The giant package, which Obama has pledged to sign, is very much a product of that same budget agreement last month. But if December set the limits on spending, this bill now spells out where the dollars will go. And as such, it sets a new template for appropriations for the remainder of the president’s second term.” http://politi.co/1dqCvq7


– A WOMAN, Barbara Mikulski, once again was at the center of this major legislative deal. On A1 of the Washington Post, Ed O’Keefe takes another look at women’s growing influence on Capitol Hill: http://wapo.st/1ac8NaF


WEINSTEIN, STREEP TO TARGET NRA IN ‘THE SENATOR’S WIFE’ – Greg Gilman reports for TheWrap: “Harvey Weinstein promised that an upcoming film he’s making, starring Meryl Streep, will make the National Rifle Association ‘wish they weren’t alive’ during an interview with Howard Stern earlier this week, and now it has a title. A Weinstein Co. spokeswoman told TheWrap on Thursday that the film will be called ‘The Senator’s Wife.’ ‘I think the NRA is a disaster area. I shouldn’t say this, but I’ll tell it to you, Howard. I’m going to make a movie with Meryl Streep, and we’re going to take this head-on,’ Weinstein told Stern on Wednesday. ‘And they’re going to wish they weren’t alive after I’m done with them.’ Weinstein described the film as a ‘big movie like a ‘Mr. Smith Goes to Washington,’’ which he hopes will make audiences think: ‘Gun stocks — I don’t want to be involved in that stuff. It’s going to be like crash and burn.’” http://bit.ly/1dB5vwk


– SEN. TED CRUZ (R-TEXAS) fired back at Weinstein, calling the studio head a hypocrite for using violence in his own films. “Citing Quentin Tarantino’s 2003 film ‘Kill Bill’ — which Weinstein produced — the Texas senator said the sword fight at the end of the movie is ‘one of the most epically violent scenes.’” POLITICO’s Lucy McCalmont: http://politi.co/1j7Lper


GOOD FRIDAY MORNING, JAN. 17, 2014, and welcome to The Huddle, your-play-play preview of all the action on Capitol Hill. 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 @BreitbartNews and @repcorygardner.


TODAY IN CONGRESS – Both the House and Senate have adjourned through next week for the January recess. They return the week of Jan. 27.


AROUND THE HILL – Rep. Frank Wolf speaks on the Omnibus Appropriations bill at 1 p.m. in HVC Studio A.


FEINSTEIN DEFENDS HILLARY ON BENGHAZI – Ginger Gibson writes for POLITICO: “Sen. Dianne Feinstein is strongly defending former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton from criticism in the wake of a Senate report that condemned the State Department for not averting a preventable attack on a U.S. Consulate in Benghazi. ‘I want the record to be clear: I condemn any effort to use this report for political purposes,’ said Feinstein (D-Calif.), the chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee. She was referring to remarks from Sens. John McCain (R-Ariz.), Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and Kelly Ayotte (R-N.H.) on the Senate floor on Thursday that were critical of the role Clinton, a potential 2016 presidential candidate, for not doing enough to prevent the attack.” http://politi.co/1eWFxSy


GATES, REID SQUABBLE OVER NEW BOOK – POLITICO’s Philip Ewing has the story: “Former Defense Secretary Robert Gates fired back at Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid on Thursday night, quipping that ‘it’s common practice on the Hill to vote on bills you haven’t read, and it’s perfectly clear Sen. Reid has not read the book.’ Reid faulted Gates’s book in an interview with The Associated Press earlier in the day, charging Gates had denigrated him, Vice President Joe Biden and others ‘just to make a buck.’ But Gates said he plans to donate most of what he makes to charities that work with wounded troops, and encouraged Reid and others to actually read his new memoir.” http://politi.co/1av7huA


FRIST’S MISERABLE FLIGHT – Michael Cass writes for The Tennessean: “Apparently being a multimillionaire former Senate majority leader doesn’t guarantee smooth access to the sky. Bill Frist, the former U.S. senator from Tennessee, went on a Twitter rant against United Airlines this afternoon, complaining that he was bumped from a first-class seat and then seated next to a very noisy bathroom.


Bill Frist, M.D. @bfrist: United Air @United miserable service again. SanFran sold me and confirmed a seat then took it away: Flt 1486 today


@bfrist: I can confirm that the toilets on this @united flight work! My seat vibrates with each passenger’s visit!


@bfrist: I also appreciate what @united is doing to keep the plane’s weight down. Bathroom walls this thin have got to be fuel-saving!


@bfrist: Thanks @united. Connection made; all is well. But do you refund passengers for selling seats that don’t exist? http://tnne.ws/1czTx1H


PELOSI PLACES WAGER ON NINERS GAME – Either way, someone will be eating well after Sunday’s San Francisco 49ers and Seattle Seahawks matchup. Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi and Democrats in Washington state’s Congressional Delegation have made a friendly wager over the much-anticipated NFC championship game. From the leader’s office; “If the Seahawks win, Pelosi will provide the Washington delegation with San Francisco sourdough bread from Boudin’s Bakery and chocolate from Ghirardelli and TCHO.  If the 49ers win, Pelosi will receive Theo’s chocolate from Congressman Jim McDermott, Brown & Haley Almond Roca toffees from Congressman Adam Smith, Fischer fair scones from Congressman Denny Heck, craft gin from Everett’s Bluewater Distilling in Congressman Rick Larsen’s district, Woodinville wine and smoked salmon from Congresswoman Suzan DelBene, and apples from Amy’s Decadent Chocolates courtesy of Congressman Derek Kilmer. … ‘Seattle may try to keep our fans out of their stadium, but they will not keep the 49ers out of their end zone,’ Pelosi said.”


THURSDAY’S TRIVIA WINNER – We’ll give credit to two winners: Shelby Boxenbaum correctly answered that Bruce King served as New Mexico governor during the 1970s, 80s and 90s, while our own White House editor Dan Berman answered that Bill Clinton served as Arkansas governor during those same three decades.  Other correct answers were Bill Janklow of South Dakota, Edwin Edwards of Louisiana, Michael Dukakis of Massachusetts and Jim Hunt of North Carolina.


TODAY’S TRIVIA – Bruce Tannahill has a follow-up question: Who served as governor of the same state in the 1980s, 1990s, 2000s and 2010s? The first person to correctly answer gets a mention in the next day’s Huddle. Email me atswong@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/




POLITICO – Top 10 – Huddle



COBURN TO CUT SENATE TERM SHORT – Obama to call for NSA phone collection overhaul – CONGRESS OKs $1T OMNIBUS -- Weinstein, Streep to take aim at NRA in "Senator"s Wife"

Saturday, December 14, 2013

In Dreams: Short Film




The man with the dreams about walls covered in eyes recalls Charles Freck’s suicide trip and the creature beyond dimensions .


In Dreams from Samuel Blain on Vimeo.


In Dreams is an experimental documentary that visualises the dreams of ordinary individuals. I asked 4 people to discuss their most vivid, memorable dream. The film is my final year graduation film from Northumbria University.





disinformation



In Dreams: Short Film

Monday, December 2, 2013

HIV AIDS AWARENESS [Short Film] By MAAH The Group for HIV/AIDS Awareness

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HIV AIDS AWARENESS [Short Film] By MAAH The Group for HIV/AIDS Awareness

Monday, November 25, 2013

Anonymous Million Mask March: The Nasty Side (Short Documentary) [2013]

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Anonymous Million Mask March: The Nasty Side (Short Documentary) [2013]

Monday, November 18, 2013

Foreigners avoid short U.S. assets in Sept, buy longer ones

Foreigners avoid short U.S. assets in Sept, buy longer ones
http://currenteconomictrendsandnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/3364e__p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif





NEW YORK Mon Nov 18, 2013 10:40am EST



NEW YORK (Reuters) – Foreigners fled from short-term U.S. assets in September as a budget battle in Washington raised fears the government could default on some obligations, though demand for longer-term securities rose, U.S. Treasury data showed on Monday.


The budget standoff that was building in September forced a partial government shutdown that lasted for the first 16 days of October. That dented the safe-haven status of U.S. Treasury bills and pushed yields up sharply on bills maturing toward the end of that month.


Including short-dated assets such as bills, foreigners sold $ 106.8 billion in September, the biggest decline since February, 2009. August’s outflow was also revised higher to $ 13.8 billion from an initially reported $ 2.9 billion.


Congress raised the debt ceiling a day before the Treasury said it would have run out of money to pay some obligations.


“You probably had a lot of people avoiding the short end of the U.S. yield curve at that point, which likely drove the big drop there,” said Gennadiy Goldberg, U.S. strategist at TD Securities in New York.


But investors increased holdings of long-term securities in September by $ 25.5 billion as buying of Treasury notes and bonds as well as stocks and agency debt rose. That came after long-dated holdings fell by a revised $ 9.8 billion in August.


Goldberg credited the turnaround to the Fed’s surprise decision not to start slowing its bond purchases in September, leaving most market participants expecting the central bank will not start winding down quantitative easing until early 2014.


“The non-taper decision probably led to the sizable reversal on long-term assets,” he said. “We saw strong buying in pretty much everything across the board in the U.S.”


Longer-dated Treasury holdings rose by $ 27.8 billion, more than reversing August’s $ 10.8 billion decline. China, the largest U.S. foreign creditor, saw its holdings rise by $ 25.7 billion to $ 1.294 trillion, a four-month high.


Overall, though, it was private foreign investors who bought Treasuries. So-called “official” investors, which includes central banks, were net sellers in September, according to the Treasury data.


Foreign demand for debt backed by the biggest U.S. federal housing agencies rose by $ 14.7 billion during September, just below August’s $ 16.8 billion inflow.


Overseas holdings of U.S. equities also rose by $ 12.5 billion, nearly reversing August’s $ 16.9 billion decline.


(Reporting by Steven C. Johnson; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)






Reuters: Economic News




Read more about Foreigners avoid short U.S. assets in Sept, buy longer ones and other interesting subjects concerning Economy at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Friday, November 15, 2013

House OKs coverage plans short of Obamacare rules





House Majority Leader Eric Cantor of Va., center, leaves the office of House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Friday, Nov. 15, 2013, before a vote on a measure to let insurers keep offering health coverage that falls short of the law’s standards. A day earlier, the president changed course in the face of a public uproar over the flawed debut of the Affordable Care Act and said he would take administrative action — which doesn’t need congressional approval — to let companies continue selling such plans for at least another year. Unlike the House GOP bill, he would permit such sales to insurers’ existing customers only, not to new ones.(AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)





House Majority Leader Eric Cantor of Va., center, leaves the office of House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Friday, Nov. 15, 2013, before a vote on a measure to let insurers keep offering health coverage that falls short of the law’s standards. A day earlier, the president changed course in the face of a public uproar over the flawed debut of the Affordable Care Act and said he would take administrative action — which doesn’t need congressional approval — to let companies continue selling such plans for at least another year. Unlike the House GOP bill, he would permit such sales to insurers’ existing customers only, not to new ones.(AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)





Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius speaks at the Community Health and Social Services Center in Detroit Friday, Nov. 15, 2013. Sebelius says she’s confident a troubled federal website will work much better by month’s end so people can sign up for health insurance under the Affordable Care Act. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)





Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius speaks about the Health Insurance Marketplace at the Community Health and Social Services Center in Detroit Friday, Nov. 15, 2013. Sebelius says she’s confident a troubled federal website will work much better by month’s end so people can sign up for health insurance under the Affordable Care Act. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)





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House OKs coverage plans short of Obamacare rules

Thursday, October 10, 2013

CBS" Jan Crawford: Obamacare Rollout "Nothing Short of Disastrous"


CRAWFORD: In the past week, the president’s signature achievement has become the butt of late night jokes. […] No one knows how many people have managed to enroll. The administration refuses to release those numbers. But the website’s launch has been nothing short of disastrous. Media outlets have struggled to find anyone who’s actually been successful. The Washington Post even illustrated that sought after person as a unicorn. USA Today called the launch “an inexcusable mess” and “a nightmare.” White House officials initially blamed the problem on unexpectedly high volume with more than 8 million hits in the first week. But after the website went offline over the weekend for repairs, officials now are acknowledging other problems.


KATHLEEN SEBELIUS, SECRETARY OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES: We’ve identified the glitches. We’ve added hardware. We’re recoding software, and I can tell you today is better than yesterday, and we’re hoping in the very near future to have a seamless process. That’s what we’re aiming for.


CRAWFORD: But computer experts say the website has major flaws.


LUKE CHUNG, OWNER OF DATABASE PROGRAMMING COMPANY: It wasn’t designed well. It wasn’t implemented well. And it looks like nobody tested it.


CRAWFORD: Luke Chung’s company builds online database programs. He supports the new healthcare law and says it’s not demand that’s crashing Healthcare.gov. The entire website needs a complete overhaul.


CHUNG: It’s not even close. It’s not even ready for beta testing from my book. I would be ashamed and embarrassed if my organization delivered something like that.


CRAWFORD: Now there are new reports that people who are actually able to register but then were blocked from going through the enrollment process now are being asked to reset their passwords and their usernames. We talked to Luke Chung about that last night and he said that is a sign this whole system is going through major changes to its software foundation. He said, you know, this is not looking like a Band-Aid solution. That’s more like a heart transplant. And that he said is a good thing.




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CBS" Jan Crawford: Obamacare Rollout "Nothing Short of Disastrous"

AP sources: Boehner to ask for short debt increase


(AP) — GOP aides say House Speaker John Boehner will ask House Republicans to approve a short-term extension of the government’s ability to borrow to meet its bills.


The Ohio Republican is slated to urge his staunchly conservative GOP colleagues to act before the government runs out of borrowing authority next week.


Republicans have been insistent that budget cuts and other measures be added to the so-called debt ceiling legislation but the aides wouldn’t say whether he’ll seek to add other material to the measure.


The aides required anonymity to reveal the information before Boehner makes an announcement after a closed-door meeting with his GOP colleagues.


Associated Press




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AP sources: Boehner to ask for short debt increase

Thursday, September 12, 2013

A Short History of Bio-Chemical Weapons


Zoltan Grossman
counterpunch.org
September 12, 2013


The U.S. and its allies have long been complicit in the manufacturing and use of biological and chemical weapons, yet has targeted other countries for alleged possession and use of these same weapons. This partial chronology is intended as a starting point for critical research and analysis of bio-chemical weaponry and foreign policy.


A Canadian soldier with mustard gas burns, ca. 1917-1918. Credit: Library and Archives Canada

A Canadian soldier with mustard gas burns, ca. 1917-1918. Credit: Library and Archives Canada



400s B.C.: Spartan Greeks use sulfur fumes against enemy soldiers.


256 A.D.: Sasanian Persian Empire may have used toxic smoke against Roman soldiers in a tunnel in modern-day Syria.


1346: Tatars catapult plague-infected corpses into Italian trade settlement in Crimea.


1500s: Spanish conquistadors use biological warfare used against Indigenous peoples in the Americas.


1763: British Gen. Jeffrey Amherst advocates use of smallpox blankets against Native peoples during Pontiac’s Rebellion. Smallpox blankets given to Native delegates during talks at Fort Pitt.


1789: Smallpox ravages Australian Indigenous communities in New South Wales; debate persists whether the British deliberately introduced it.


1800s: Smallpox, measles, and other diseases ravage Native American and First Nation communities; U.S. and British/Canadian officials use quarantine techniques to isolate diseases in white communities, but not in Native villages.


1845: British attack Maori resisters with poison gas in Battle of Ohaeawai, Aotearoa/New Zealand.


1907: Hague Convention outlaws chemical weapons; U.S. does not participate.


1914-18: World War I begins; Germans introduce chlorine gas at Second Battle of Ypres. Poison gas such as mustard gas and chlorine gas produces 85,000 deaths, 1,200,000 injuries on both sides.


1919-21: Poison gas used in Russian civil war, against rebels by the Bolsheviks, and against Bolsheviks by the Royal Air Force.


1920s: Spanish and French forces use mustard gas against Berber rebels in Spanish Morocco. Britain proposes use of chemical weapons in Iraq “as an experiment” against Arab and Kurdish rebels seeking independence; Winston Churchill “strongly” backs the proposed “use of poisoned gas against uncivilised tribes,” which was apparently not carried out.


1928: The Geneva Protocol (first signed in 1925) by the League of Nations prohibits gas and bacteriological warfare; most countries that ratify it prohibit only the first use of such weapons.


1935: Italy begins conquest of Abyssinia (Ethiopia), using mustard gas.


1937: Japan invades China, widely uses chemical weapons in war to conquer China, and used biological weapons such as plague-carrying fleas.


1939: World War II begins; both sides decide not to use bio-chemical arms in large-scale attacks, due to fears of retaliation in kind.


1941: U.S. enters World War II; President Roosevelt pledges U.S. will not be first to use bio-chemical weapons.


1942: German forces may have used poison gas against Soviet resisters in tunnels during the Battle of Kerch in Crimea.


1943: U.S. ship damaged by German bombing raid on Bari, Italy, leaks mustard gas, killing 1,000.


1945: When concentration camps are liberated, inmates report that Germans have used Zyklon-B in the extermination of civilians. Japanese military discovered to have conducted biological warfare experiments on POWs, killing 3000. U.S. shields officers in charge from war crimes trials, in return for data. Soviets take over German nerve gas facility in Potsdam. The Nazis had stockpiles of nerve gas against which the Allies had no defenses, and had also been working on blood agents.


1947: U.S. possesses germ warfare weapons; President Truman withdraws Geneva Protocol from Senate consideration.


1949: U.S. dismisses Soviet trials of Japanese for germ warfare as “propaganda.” Army begins secret tests of biological agents in U.S. cities.


1950: Korean War begins; North Korea and China accuse U.S. of germ warfare–charges never proven. San Francisco disease outbreak matches Army bacteria used on city.


1951: African-Americans exposed to potentially fatal simulant in Virginia test of race-specific fungal weapons.


1952: German chemical weapons researcher Walter Schreiber, working in Texas, exposed as a perpetrator of concentration camp experiments, and flees to Argentina.


1954: Fort Detrick in Maryland initiates Operation Whitecoat to research the effects of biological agents on soliders and conscientious objector volunteers; program lasts until 1973.


1956: Army manual explicitly states that bio-chemical warfare is not banned. Rep. Gerald Ford wins policy change to give U.S. military “first strike” authority on chemical arms.


1959: House resolution against first use of bio-chemical weapons is defeated.


1961: Kennedy Administration begins hike of chemical weapons spending from $ 75 million to more than $ 330 million.


1962: Chemical weapons loaded on U.S. planes during Cuban missile crisis.


1963-66: US, UK and Israel accuse Egypt of using chemical weapons during its intervention in North Yemen’s civil war.


1966: Army germ warfare experiment in New York subway system.


1968: Pentagon asks for the chance to use some of its arsenal against protesters to demonstrate the “efficacy” of the chemicals. Maj. Gen. J.B. Medaris says, “By using gas in civil situations, we accomplish two purposes: controlling crowds and also educating people on gas. Now, everybody is being called savage if he just talks about it. But nerve gas is the only way I know of to sort out the guys in white hats from the ones in black hats without killing any of them.”


1969: Utah chemical weapons accident kills thousands of sheep; President Nixon declares U.S. moratorium on chemical weapons production and biological weapons possession. U.N. General Assembly bans use of herbicides (plant killers) and tear gasses in warfare; U.S. one of three opposing votes. U.S. forces cause tear gas fatalities in Vietnamese guerrilla tunnels, and widely use napalm (jellied gasoline that stick to skin).


1971: U.S. ends direct use of herbicides such as Agent Orange; had spread over Indochinese forests, and destroyed at least six percent of South Vietnamese cropland, enough to feed 600,000 people for a year. Diseases and birth defects affected Vietnamese civilians and U.S. veterans. White phosphorus grenades also used against South Vietnamese rebels. U.S. intelligence gives swine-flu virus to anti-Castro Cuban paramilitary group, which lands it on Cuba’s southern coast (according to 1977 newspaper reports).


1972: Biological and Toxic Weapons Convention. Cuba accuses CIA of instilling swine fever virus that leads to death of 500,000 hogs.


1974: U.S. finally ratifies 1928 Geneva Protocol.


1975: Indonesia annexes East Timor; planes spread herbicides on croplands.


1978: Bulgarian secret service uses ricin in umbrella tip to assassinate Bulgarian dissident in London.


1979: Anthrax leak from Soviet biological weapons lab kills 60 near in the Ural Mountains of Russia, near Sverdlovsk. Washington Post reports on U.S. program against Cuban agriculture since 1962, including CIA biological warfare component. White government of Rhodesia contaminates Africans with anthrax in the last stages of the Zimbabwe independence war, resulting in 10,000 cases, 182 of them fatal.


1980: U.S. intelligence officials allege Soviet chemical use in Afghanistan, while admitting “no confirmation.” Congress approves nerve gas facility in Pine Bluff, Arkansas. Iraq begins eight-year war with U.S. arch-enemy Iran; both sides use chemical weapons in the war.


1981: U.S. accuses Vietnam and allies of using mycotoxins (fungal poisons) in Laos and Cambodia. Some refugees report casualties in Laos; one analysis reveals “yellow rain” as bee feces, but questions remained.


1984: U.N. confirms Iraq using mustard and nerve gasses against Iranian “human wave” attacks in border war, killing up to 100,000 Iranians; State Department issues mild condemnation, yet restores diplomatic relations with Iraq, and opposes U.N. action against Iraq. Bhopal fertilizer plant accident in India kills 2,000; shows risks of chemical plants being damaged in warfare. President Reagan orders over a half-million M55 rockets retooled so they contain high-yield explosives as well as VX gas. (The Army later claimed that many of these rockets were “unstable” and leaking nerve gas.)


1985: U.S. resumes open-air testing of biological agents. U.S. firms begin supplying Iraq with numerous biological agents for a four-year period (according to a 1994 Senate report).


1986: U.S. resumes open-air testing of biological agents.


1987: Senate ties in three votes on resuming production of chemical weapons; Vice President Bush breaks all three ties in favor of resumption.


1988: Iraq uses chemical weapons against Kurdish minority rebels and civilians in Halabjah, killing at least 5,000. U.S. continues to maintain agricultural credits with Iraq; President Reagan blocks congressional sanctions against Iraq.


1989: Paris conference of 149 nations condemns chemical weapons, urges quick ban to emerge from Geneva treaty negotiations; U.S. revealed to plan poison gas production even after treaty signed.


1990: U.S., Soviets pledge to reduce chemical weapons stockpiles to 20 percent of current U.S. supply by 2002, and to eliminate poison gas weapons when all nations have signed future Geneva treaty. Israel admits possession of chemical weapons; Iraq threatens to use chemical weapons on Israel if it is attacked.


1991: U.S. and Coalition forces invade Kuwait and Iraq in the Gulf War; Iraq possesses chemical weapons but does not use them. At least 28 alleged bio-chemical production or storage sites are bombed in Iraq during the Gulf War, including fertilizer and other civilian plants. CNN reports “green flames” from one chemical plant, and the deaths of 50 Iraqi troops from anthrax after air strike on another site. New York Times quotes Soviet chemical weapons commander that air strikes on Iraqi chemical weapons would have “little effect beyond neighboring villages,” but that strikes on biological weapons could spread disease “to adjoining countries.” Czechoslovak chemical warfare unit detects sarin nerve gas after air strikes on Iraqi chemical weapons facilities. Egyptian doctor reports outbreak of “strange disease” inside Iraq. After the war, U.S. troops use explosives in Khamisiya to destroy Iraqi chemical weapons storage bunkers.


1992: Reports intensify of U.S. and Coalition veterans of Gulf War developing health problems, involving a variety of symptoms, collectively called Gulf War Syndrome. U.N. sanctions intensify civilian health crisis inside Iraq, making identification of similar symptoms potentially difficult. Two members of anti-government Minnesota Patriots’ Council arrested for plan to use ricin chemical against law enforcement officer.


1993: President Clinton continues intermittent bombing and missile raids against Iraqi facilities; U.N. inspectors step up program to dismantle Iraqi weapons. U.S. signs U.N. Chemical Weapons Convention, though approval later blocked in Senate.


1994: Russian forces extensively use white phosphorus shells as incendiary weapons in Chechnya.


1994-95: Japanese cult Aum Shinrikyo launches deadly sarin nerve gas attacks on the Matsumoto community and on the Tokyo subway system.


1996: Congressional hearings on Gulf War Syndrome focuses on Iraqi storage bunker destruction, rather than other possible causes, and does not call for international investigation of symptoms among Iraqis. CIA investigation asserts that U.S. bombing of chemical weapons sites did not contaminate population.


1997: Cuba accuses U.S. of spraying crops with biological agents. Iraq expels U.S. citizens in U.N. inspection teams, which are allowed to continue work without Americans, but choose to evacuate all inspectors. U.S. mobilizes for military action. Senate act implements Chemical Weapons Convention, with a provision that “the President may deny a request to inspect any facility” on national security grounds.


1998: Chief UN weapons inspector Richard Butler orders inspectors out of Iraq just prior to U.S. bombing. In Operation Desert Fox, Clinton again bombs alleged Iraqi bio-chemical weapons sites, after Iraq questions role of American U.N. inspector, and restricts inspector access to presidential properties and security. U.S. launches missile attack on pharmaceutical plant in Sudan that it alleges produces nerve gas agents–a claim disputed by most of the international community.


1998-99: Series of anthrax hoaxes against U.S. media and government targetss. Ex-Aryan Nations member Larry Wayne Harris carries out anthrax hoax to dramatize warning of alleged “Iraqi threat.” Three members of Republic of Texas militia group arrested for intention to use anthrax and other biological agents against public officials. Upsurge in anthrax hoaxes against abortion clinics.


1999: NATO bombs Yugoslavia in Kosovo Crisis, triggering massive Serbian expulsion of ethnic Albanians. NATO bombers hit a Serbian petrochemical plant in Pancevo, sending a toxic cloud with 2,000 tons of chemicals over the city, and chemicals were released in other bombings of industrial plants.


2000: “Topoff Exercise” involving federal and state authorities fails to cope with simulated chemical, biological and nuclear attacks in three widely separated metropolitan areas.


2001: U.S. withdraws from the first round of Biological and Toxic Weapons Convention (BTWC), crippling international efforts to establish global measures against biological weapons. In wake of September 11 attacks, anthrax spores sent by mail to multiple political and media targets around the U.S., resulting in anthrax exposures, infections, and at least 5 deaths. Real anthrax attacks accompanied by increase in anthrax hoaxes by “Army of God” and other groups and individuals.


2002: Russian police use chemical gas against Chechen rebels holding hostages in Moscow theater; 42 rebels and 120 hostages died from the gas raid. Bush Administration renews allegations that Iraq possesses biochemical weapons (drawing on allegations by Iraqi exiles), reluctantly acquiesces in return of United Nations weapons inspectors (after four years of absence) to prove or disprove the claim. Chief UN arms inspector Hans Blix reports no evidence of renewed chemical or biological weapons programs in Iraq.


2003: UN inspectors find evidence of Iraqi violations of ballistic missile range limits, and begin to destroy missiles. Bush Administration not satisfied with extent of UN inspection. Just prior to U.S.-U.K. invasion of Iraq, UN orders inspectors out of country. After invasion, U.S. contends it will hunt for Weapons of Mass Destruction on its own, and finds none. As a member state of the UN Security Council, Syria proposes a WMD-Free Zone in the Middle East, which the U.S. rejects.


2004: During the First Battle of Fallujah, U.S. forces use white phosphorus artillery shells (intended for aerial illumination) as an incendiary weapon against Iraqi insurgents, killing and injuring many civilians. Pentagon finally admits in 2013 its use of white phosphorus as a weapon in Fallujah. Environmental justice protests in Anniston, Alabama oppose incineration of chemical weapons in populated area.


2007: Al-Qaeda in Mesopotamia carries out chlorine gas tank bombings in Iraqi civil war. White phosphorus train derails in Ukraine, contaminating 90 sq km.


2008: Israel uses white phosphorus shells during its three-week war against Palestinians in the Gaza Strip. U.S. government employee suspected in 2001 anthrax attacks commits suicide.


2009: Taliban and U.S. forces accuse each other of using white phosphorus as weapons. Rebels in Yemen accuse Saudi warplanes of dropping white phosphorus.


2011: Some news sources report white phosphorus use by NATO forces in Libya. Four militia members arrested in Georgia for plotting to use ricin to attack politicians, media, and the IRS.


2012: U.S. has closed 7 of 9 chemical weapons depots and destroyed 90 percent of its stockpiles, to meet the provisions of the Chemical Weapons Convention it signed in 1993. Israel hits UNRWA compound in Gaza City with white phosphorus; announces the following year that it will stop using white phosphorus weapons.


2013: Actress allegedly mails ricin mailed to the President and other U.S. leaders. In January, UK issues licenses to export chemicals to Syria that could be used to make sarin; licenses revoked when sanctions begin against Syria in July. Syrian government and rebels trade accusations of using sarin in April and August. Doctors Without Borders documents 355 killed in August sarin attack in Ghouta area; Secretary of State John Kerry claims that Syrian government is responsible for killing 1,429 Syrians. UK declines to back military strikes on Syria; France, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and Israel back U.S. military action.


Dr. Zoltan Grossman is a Professor of Geography and Native Studies at The Evergreen State College in Olympia, Washington, and earned his Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin. His faculty website is http://academic.evergreen.edu/g/grossmaz and email is grossmaz@evergreen.edu


List compiled in 1998, 2003, and 2013 from articles in Z magazine by Stephen Shalom (“Bullets, Gas, and the Bomb,” Feb. 1991), Zoltan Grossman (“Ecocide in the Gulf?,” March 1991), Council for a Livable World, Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, National Geographic, William Blum’s Killing Hope: U.S. Military and CIA Interventions Since World War II, and from news reports and Wikipedia timelines. Thanks for Stephen Shalom for comments.


This article was posted: Thursday, September 12, 2013 at 9:04 am


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A Short History of Bio-Chemical Weapons

Friday, August 9, 2013

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Sunday, May 19, 2013

"Trek" does $70.6M but falls short of studio hopes







This undated publicity film image released by Paramount Pictures shows, Zachary Quinto, left, as Spock and Chris Pine as Kirk in a scene in the movie, “Star Trek Into Darkness,” from Paramount Pictures and Skydance Productions. Since premiering Wednesday, May 15, 2013 in huge-screen IMAX theaters and expanding Thursday to general cinemas, “Into Darkness” has pulled in $ 84.1 million, well below distributor Paramount’s initial forecast of $ 100 million. (AP Photo/Paramount Pictures, Zade Rosenthal)





This undated publicity film image released by Paramount Pictures shows, Zachary Quinto, left, as Spock and Chris Pine as Kirk in a scene in the movie, “Star Trek Into Darkness,” from Paramount Pictures and Skydance Productions. Since premiering Wednesday, May 15, 2013 in huge-screen IMAX theaters and expanding Thursday to general cinemas, “Into Darkness” has pulled in $ 84.1 million, well below distributor Paramount’s initial forecast of $ 100 million. (AP Photo/Paramount Pictures, Zade Rosenthal)













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(AP) — “Star Trek: Into Darkness” has warped its way to a $ 70.6 million domestic launch from Friday to Sunday, though it’s not setting any light-speed records with a debut that’s lower than the studio’s expectations.


The latest voyage of the starship Enterprise fell short of its predecessor, 2009′s “Star Trek,” which opened with $ 75.2 million.


Since premiering Wednesday in huge-screen IMAX theaters and expanding Thursday to general cinemas, “Into Darkness” has pulled in $ 84.1 million, well below distributor Paramount’s initial forecast of $ 100 million. The film added $ 40 million overseas, pushing its total to $ 80.5 million since it began rolling out internationally a week earlier.


The “Star Trek” sequel bumped “Iron Man 3″ down to second place after two weekends on top. Robert Downey Jr.’s superhero saga took in $ 35.2 million domestically to lift its receipts to $ 337.1 million. Overseas, “Iron Man 3″ added $ 40.2 million, raising its international total to $ 736.2 million and its worldwide tally to nearly $ 1.1 billion.


While “Iron Man 3″ and “Into Darkness” did well overseas, they were outmatched by the debut of Baz Luhrmann’s “The Great Gatsby,” which followed its domestic debut a week earlier with a wide rollout internationally. “Gatsby” pulled in $ 42.1 million overseas, coming in a bit ahead of both “Iron Man 3″ and “Into Darkness.”


Domestically, “Gatsby” held up well at No. 3 with $ 23.4 million, lifting its total to $ 90.2 million.


In today’s Hollywood of bigger, better sequels, follow-up films often outdo the box office of their predecessors, as each “Iron Man” sequel has done. While “Into Darkness” earned good reviews and is getting strong word-of-mouth from fans, the film did not quite measure up to the opening weekend of director J.J. Abrams’ “Star Trek” reboot from four years ago, at least domestically.


“‘Star Trek’ remains a fan-boy movie. It doesn’t seem to have the same kind of cross-over appeal as say an ‘Iron Man’ or some of these others,” said Paul Dergarabedian, an analyst for box-office tracker Hollywood.com. “It’s a very specific brand, but I think the general public would love this movie, because it’s such an action movie. But to get a hundred-million-plus opening weekend, unless you’re ‘Twilight,’ you really have to cross over to all audiences.”


Paramount points out that overseas business is up in many markets, though, so worldwide, the sequel is off to a better start.


“Because of the nature of the franchise, because of how many movies have been made and the various forms of the TV shows, I’m not sure that ‘Star Trek’ goes by the rules of normal sequels. I think each movie stands on its own, because it’s a unique franchise,” said Don Harris, Paramount’s head of distribution. “My goal was always that we grow the franchise. We’re clearly seeing by today’s numbers that the movie is being embraced on a worldwide basis in a way we’ve never seen before.”


Harris said that domestically, “Into Darkness” finished its first weekend 6 percent ahead of revenues for 2009′s “Star Trek,” which got a head-start with $ 4 million in Thursday night previews to give it a $ 79.2 million haul through the first Sunday.


But “Into Darkness” had a full day of screenings Thursday plus its Wednesday IMAX business. Unlike the first movie, which played only in 2-D, the sequel also had the benefit of 3-D screenings that cost a few dollars more. Yet even with the 3-D upcharge and the earlier debut, it came away with just $ 4.9 million more than its predecessor through Sunday.


Still, it’s a solid starting place for the movie to live long and prosper at theaters, with Paramount hoping “Into Darkness” can surpass the $ 385 million worldwide total of “Star Trek.”


“I think we’re well along on that road,” Harris said.


Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Hollywood.com. Where available, latest international numbers are also included. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.


1. “Star Trek: Into Darkness,” $ 70.6 million ($ 40 million international).


2. “Iron Man 3,” $ 35.2 million ($ 40.2 million international).


3. “The Great Gatsby,” $ 23.4 million ($ 42.1 million international)


4. “Pain & Gain,” $ 3.1 million.


5. “The Croods,” $ 2.75 million.


6. “42,” $ 2.73 million.


7. “Oblivion,” $ 2.2 million.


8. “Mud,” $ 2.16 million.


9. “Peeples,” $ 2.15 million.


10. “The Big Wedding,” $ 1.1 million.


__


Estimated weekend ticket sales at international theaters (excluding the U.S. and Canada) for films distributed overseas by Hollywood studios, according to Rentrak:


1. “The Great Gatsby,” $ 42.1 million.


2. “Iron Man 3,” $ 40.2 million.


3. “Star Trek: Into Darkness,” $ 40 million.


4. “Epic,” $ 14.5 million.


5. “Fast & Furious 6,” $ 13.8 million.


6. “The Croods,” $ 10.6 million.


7. “Evil Dead,” $ 5.6 million.


8. “Oblivion,” $ 4.7 million.


9. “Montage,” $ 4.1 million.


10. “Mama,” $ 1.7 million.


__


Online:


http://www.hollywood.com


http://www.rentrak.com


___


Universal and Focus are owned by NBC Universal, a unit of Comcast Corp.; Sony, Columbia, Sony Screen Gems and Sony Pictures Classics are units of Sony Corp.; Paramount is owned by Viacom Inc.; Disney, Pixar and Marvel are owned by The Walt Disney Co.; Miramax is owned by Filmyard Holdings LLC; 20th Century Fox and Fox Searchlight are owned by News Corp.; Warner Bros. and New Line are units of Time Warner Inc.; MGM is owned by a group of former creditors including Highland Capital, Anchorage Advisors and Carl Icahn; Lionsgate is owned by Lions Gate Entertainment Corp.; IFC is owned by AMC Networks Inc.; Rogue is owned by Relativity Media LLC.


Associated Press




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"Trek" does $70.6M but falls short of studio hopes