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Firefly Independent Thursday December 9

  

by: mishima

Thu Dec 09, 2010 at 06:00:00 AM EST


firefly independent



Thursday's Headlines:


WikiLeaks vs The Machine


USA


US Energy Secretary Plays Climate Activist


US targets groups with ties to website


Europe


WikiLeaks cables: Shell's grip on Nigerian state revealed


'Ultra' football fans protest over shooting


Middle East


US says efforts to revive Middle East talks have failed


Iran is still talking, if nothing else


Asia


China crackdown on dissent ahead of Nobel ceremony


Varanasi blast breaks terror lull


Africa


Southern Sudan accuses North of fresh attacks


Rwandan archive on 1994 genocide opens tomorrow


Latin America


Adrift on Robinson Crusoe Island, the forgotten few

As jurors go online, U.S. trials go off track
Facebook, Twitter and smart phones cause mistrials, appeals and overturned verdicts
Reuters  
ATLANTA - The explosion of blogging, tweeting and other online diversions has reached into U.S. jury boxes, raising serious questions about juror impartiality and the ability of judges to control courtrooms.
A Reuters Legal analysis found that jurors' forays on the Internet have resulted in dozens of mistrials, appeals and overturned verdicts in the last two years.
For decades, courts have instructed jurors not to seek information about cases outside of evidence introduced at trial, and jurors are routinely warned not to communicate about a case with anyone before a verdict is reached. But jurors these days can, with a few clicks, look up definitions of legal terms on Wikipedia, view crime scenes via Google Earth, or update their blogs and Facebook pages with snide remarks about the proceedings.
mishima :: Firefly Independent Thursday December 9
WikiLeaks vs The Machine
US government tells firms to pull plug on whistleblowing website as hackers cause chaos with revenge attacks on Assange's 'enemies'
By Martin Hickman Thursday, 9 December 2010
The American corporations blamed for trying to silence WikiLeaks are under sustained attack from a loose global alliance of anonymous cyber hackers.

As the 39-year-old Australian editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks languished in Wandsworth Prison accused of sex offences, the financial and technological giants that withdrew support from the website in the face of pressure from the US government were hit by online hacking attacks, paralysing their net operations. MasterCard's website was downed.

USA

US Energy Secretary Plays Climate Activist
Chu in Cancun  
By Christian Schwägerl in Cancun, Mexico
After getting this much praise, most politicians would smile proudly and bask in the recognition. But Steven Chu, who had just flown in from Washington and was sitting in Building D at the conference center in Cancun, where the United Nations Climate Change Conference is currently being held, didn't move a muscle as his achievements were listed. He knows full well that he was recognized as a top researcher at Stanford and Berkeley, that he is a member of elite science academies in both the United States and China, and that he received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1997 -- and he isn't interested in the things he already knows.

US targets groups with ties to website

Ewen MacAskill in WASHINGTON and Josh Halliday
December 9, 2010

THE list of targets is expanding daily as Washington, smarting over the damage caused by the release of secret diplomatic cables, mounts a revenge operation against WikiLeaks, Julian Assange, and anyone associated with them.

MasterCard, the world's second-biggest payments network, is the latest business to cut access to WikiLeaks. Visa Europe had earlier announced it would do so.

Europe

WikiLeaks cables: Shell's grip on Nigerian state revealed
US embassy cables reveal top executive's claims that company 'knows everything' about key decisions in government ministries
David Smith in Lagos
The oil giant Shell claimed it had inserted staff into all the main ministries of the Nigerian government, giving it access to politicians' every move in the oil-rich Niger Delta, according to a leaked US diplomatic cable.

The company's top executive in Nigeria told US diplomats that Shell had seconded employees to every relevant department and so knew "everything that was being done in those ministries". She boasted that the Nigerian government had "forgotten" about the extent of Shell's infiltration and was unaware of how much the company knew about its deliberations.

'Ultra' football fans protest over shooting  

By Shaun Walker in Moscow  Thursday, 9 December 2010
Fans of SpartakMoscow football club have blocked one of the Russian capital's main thoroughfares and chanted nationalist slogans, demanding revenge, after one of the club's fans was killed by a migrant from the country's troubled North Caucasus.

Yegor Sviridov, a 28-year-old Spartak fan believed to be part of an "ultra" group, was with his friend, 25-year-old Dmitry Filatov on Sunday night, when the pair got into a fight with a group of men.

According to police reports, he was shot four times - including once in the head - and died, while Mr Filatov is currently in hospital with stomach injuries.

Middle East

US says efforts to revive Middle East talks have failed
The Irish Times - Thursday, December 9, 2010
MARK WEISS in Jerusalem
PALESTINIAN PRESIDENT Mahmoud Abbas is due to hold talks in Cairo today with Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak as the parties in the region weigh their responses to the US announcement that efforts to revive the direct peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians have failed.

Chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said a next step would be to ask the United States to recognise a Palestinian state.

Yasser Abed Rabbo, a top aide to Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas, said the Palestinians were assessing their options before responding to the American announcement.

Iran is still talking, if nothing else  

Paul McGeough
December 9, 2010  

It could hardly be called an agreement. But when talks between Iran and a European Union-led delegation broke up in Geneva on Tuesday, a faint promise of more powwow hung in the chill Swiss air.

The deal was that the two sides would reconvene in Istanbul next month. But the history of this brittle discourse has been that dates and venues can change in a thrice as one side or the other gets in a huff, mooted talks evaporate and what is thought to be an agreement falls apart.

The Tehran delegation was determined to lard the agenda for the Geneva meeting, but the US and its P5+1 team - representatives of the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council and Germany - were focused almost entirely on Iran's nuclear ambitions.

Asia

China crackdown on dissent ahead of Nobel ceremony

By Steven Jiang, CNN
December 9, 2010 -- Updated 0346 GMT

Zeng Jinyan knows all too well what it was like to be a prisoner in her own home.
"Living under police watch for a long time and with all connections to the outside world cut off -- it was very painful and hard to endure," said the 27-year-old charity worker.
Zeng was not charged with any crime but was put under house arrest for several months in 2008 after police arrested her husband Hu Jia, a pro-democracy activist. Hu was later sentenced to three and a half years' imprisonment for "inciting subversion of state power."

Varanasi blast breaks terror lull  
 
By Sudha Ramachandran  
BANGALORE - The relative lull in terror attacks in India has been broken by a blast at Varanasi in northern India on Tuesday.

A two-year-old child was killed and five others were injured in the explosion, while about 20 people, including several foreigners, were injured in the stampede that it triggered.

The blast, caused by an improvised explosive device (IED) placed in a milk container, took place on the paved steps of the Sitala Ghat, adjacent to the more famous Dashashwamedh Ghat and near Varanasi's famous Kashi-Vishwanath temple.

Africa

Southern Sudan accuses North of fresh attacks

THURSDAY, 09 DECEMBER 2010 00:00    
THE Southern Sudan's main party has accused the north of launching new bomb attacks on the region.

Pagan Amum, secretary-general of the former rebel Sudan People's Liberation Movement, said the air attacks occurred this week in the states of Western and Northern Bahr al-Ghazal.

There has been no independent confirmation of the alleged bombings.

Amum said the attacks are an attempt by Sudan's ruling National Congress Party to disrupt the south's referendum on independence, scheduled for January 9.
But a prominent member of Sudan's ruling National Congress Party (NCP) described as ridiculous accusations that his party was behind the latest bombing attack.

Rwandan archive on 1994 genocide opens tomorrow

THURSDAY, 09 DECEMBER 2010 00:00 BY FRANCIS OBINOR
AT the Kigali Genocide Memorial (KGM) in Rwanda tomorrow, on slopes above mass graves containing over 250,000 of those murdered, a documentation facility will be unveiled that is set to make the 1994 genocide one of the most comprehensively documented - and most easily researchable - genocides of all time.

In a statement made available to The Guardian yesterday, Dr. James Smith, Chief Executive of the Aegis Trust said "The Genocide Archive of Rwanda will provide unique and growing evidence for the present and future generations to enquire more about how genocide develops in order to better understand how it may be prevented."

Latin America

Adrift on Robinson Crusoe Island, the forgotten few  
When the wave struck, islanders were abandoned to their fate. Patrick Bodenham reports from the Juan Fernandez archipelago.
Thursday, 9 December 2010  
As Chile's President, Sebastian Piñera, basked in the plaudits that followed the successful rescue of 33 trapped miners, he toured European capitals handing out chunks of rock to national leaders retrieved from the bottom of the San Jose mine. David Cameron received his mounted piece of rock; in return he handed over a copy of Robinson Crusoe.

It may have seemed a curious diplomatic exchange, but it highlighted an earlier event that rocked Chile in 2010.

Ignoring Asia A Blog


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w00t! Dems reject tax plan! (15.50 / 2)
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/us_...
By CHARLES BABINGTON and STEPHEN OHLEMACHER, Associated Press Charles Babington And Stephen Ohlemacher, Associated Press - 8 mins ago

WASHINGTON - House Democrats voted Thursday to reject President Barack Obama's tax deal with Republicans in its current form, but it was unclear how significantly the package might need to be changed.

By voice vote in a closed caucus meeting, Democrats passed a resolution saying the tax package should not come to the House floor for consideration as written, even though no formal House bill has been drafted. Rep. Peter DeFazio, D-Ore., introduced the resolution.

Said Rep. Lloyd Doggett, D-Texas: "If it's take it or leave it, we'll leave it."

The vote will at least temporarily stall what had seemed to be a grudging Democratic movement toward the tax package.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said in a statement that House Democrats share Obama's "commitment to providing the middle class with a tax cut to grow the economy and create jobs." She noted that a House-passed bill, which Republicans blocked in the Senate, did not include "a bonus tax cut to millionaires and billionaires."

"We will continue discussions with the president and our Democratic and Republican colleagues in the days ahead to improve the proposal before it comes to the House floor for a vote," the California Democrat said.

The voice vote in the caucus was quite lopsided. Rep. Shelley Berkley of Nevada told reporters afterward that "one person voted against it. That would be me."

Asked what happens next, Rep. James Clyburn of South Carolina, the No. 3 person in the Democratic leadership, said, "I don't know."

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs brushed off the setback, predicting the package "will get passed" before year's end. He said House members and senators are not going to go back home without taking action, knowing that their constituents would face a tax hike on Jan. 1 if so.

Speaking earlier Thursday at a White House event promoting American exports, Obama said the vote will determine whether the economy "moves forward or backward." The president again pressed Congress to pass the agreement, saying it has the potential to create millions of jobs. He said if it fails, Americans would see smaller paychecks and fewer jobs.

But Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., said "the jury is still out" on the measure's enactment because many Democrats are furious over an estate tax provision.

Obama agreed to exempt the first $5 million of a deceased person's estate, and to tax the rest at 35 percent. Congressional Democrats had expected a 45 percent tax rate on anything above $3.5 million. Without congressional action, the estate tax will revert to an even higher rate: 55 percent on estates valued above $1 million. That should have strengthened Obama's hand when negotiating with Republicans, Van Hollen said.

Some Democrats have reluctantly embraced the tax package, which would let rich and poor Americans keep Bush-era tax cuts that were scheduled to expire this month. Even so, 54 House Democrats wrote a letter to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi saying they're opposing the deal.

Led by Rep. Peter Welch of Vermont, they said they were against "acceding to Republican demands to extend the Bush tax cuts to millionaires and billionaires."

"We're paying a king's ransom," Welch said in an interview. "We didn't need to and couldn't afford to."

The 54 Democrats, by themselves, would not be enough to block the package in the House, depending on how much support it gets from Republicans.

After Obama publicly defended the plan for a third day Wednesday, and Vice President Joe Biden met with Democratic lawmakers in the Capitol for a second day, several Democrats predicted the measure will pass, mainly because of extensive Republican support.

Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., predicted the tax cut compromise "will be passed by virtually all the Republicans and a minority of Democrats." He said he would vote against it.

Obama said more congressional Democrats would climb aboard as they studied details of the year-end measure.

The package is expected to cost about $900 billion over two years, all added to the federal deficit.

Gibbs said the final cost isn't known yet, but he offered the first estimate from the White House: a total bill of roughly $750 billion to the upper $800 billion-range over two years.

As the White House lobbies for votes, it is also trying to rally Republican support in the Senate for another priority, the ratification of a nuclear arms treaty with Russia. Gibbs flatly rejected the idea that there was any horsetrading of votes involving those two measures.

Raising the direst alarm yet, his administration warned fellow Democrats on Wednesday that if they defeat the tax plan, they could jolt the nation back into recession.

Larry Summers, Obama's chief economic adviser, told reporters that if the measure isn't passed soon, it will "materially increase the risk the economy would stall out and we would have a double-dip" recession. That put the White House in the unusual position of warning its own party's lawmakers they could be to blame for calamitous consequences if they go against the president.

With many House and Senate Republicans signaling their approval of the tax cut plan, the White House's comments were aimed mainly at House Democrats who feel Obama went too far in yielding to Republicans' demands for continued income tax cuts and lower estate taxes for the wealthy.

Obama says the compromise was necessary because Republicans were prepared to let everyone's taxes rise and to block the extension of unemployment benefits for jobless Americans if they didn't get much of what they wanted.

Economists say the recent recession officially ended in June 2009. But with unemployment at 9.8 percent, millions remain out of work or fearful of losing ground economically, and the notion of the nation falling back into a recession would strike many as chilling. It also could rattle markets and investors.

The deal Obama crafted with Senate Republican leaders would prevent the scheduled Dec. 31 expiration of all the Bush administration's tax cuts enacted in 2001 and 2003, even though Obama had often promised to end the cuts for the highest earners.

House Democrats, who will lose their majority in January, still hold a 255-179 edge in the current Congress. To pass a big bill with mostly Republican votes would mark a dramatic departure from recent battles, such as the health care overhaul, which was enacted with virtually no GOP support in either chamber.

Passage of Obama's plan seems more assured in the Senate, where numerous Democrats have agreed that the president had little choice in making the compromises with Republicans. Still, Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said he and colleagues are considering possible changes, and action could come within days.

___

AP White House Correspondent Ben Feller contributed to this report.

good on 'em! this is the. first. thing. they've done that i agree with in a long loooong time.

"Indeed, if a poor man will spend a year in prison for stealing out of hunger,
how high would the gallows need to be to hang the rich man?"
~The Patrician in 'Snuff' by Terry Pratchett




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