Showing posts with label airports. Show all posts
Showing posts with label airports. Show all posts

Friday, April 23, 2010

the big 5 stories:

#2 - J Street Balances Pro-Israel with Pro-Peace



For the past two years, the presence of a J Street on Capitol Hill has been shaking up the landscape many had written off as fixed. A political action group, named J Street, has been working to redress a balance in the nation's capital: the lack of a pro-peace and pro-Israel lobbying voice. Full Story

#3 - Is UK a Lap Dog No More?






The "special relationship" between the UK and the US is under the microscope as the Prime Minister campaign goes full swing. To many Britons, the idea of national pride and self-determinism should be at the heart of a trans-Atlantic relationship that has been lopsided since Bush-Blair forged an alliance. Full Story

#4 - Liberty is Not Being Nude for TSA



More than 30 privacy and civil liberties organisations have filed a formal petition with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), urging the federal agency to shut down the use of 'full body scanners' (FBS) at the nation's airports. Full Story

#5 - 2 Wars are Further Costing Vets



Wars and its effects on the bodies and minds of US veterans are starting to take a toll on the sacred Defense budget. Veterans may be asked to pay more out-of-pocket. And as high as medical costs are rising, those of the military are twice that. Full Story

also:
*Arizona signs harsh immigration bill into law, Cardinal decries its "Nazi" elements

*Bombings Hit Baghdad

*Silverstein Wanted To Demolish Building 7 On 9/11

*IMF demands "full compliance" of tax payments in Greece

*Massey denies workers time off for miners' funerals

*Chaos predicted as Los Angeles closes courtrooms

*Push begins to recall Los Angeles mayor

Monday, April 19, 2010

CoOlDiGgY news (late edition)

Secret Memo Urges War on Iran



President Obama's Defense Secretary, Robert Gates, has written a memo that urges war with Iran. This is a statement counter to the "full range of contingencies" message that the Administration has put out to the media. Are we closer to war with Iran than we know?


A secret memo by US Defense Secretary Robert Gates urges Washington to consider the use of military force against Iran if diplomacy fails to scrap the country's nuclear program.

In what seems to be a new twist in US efforts to tackle Iran's enrichment activities, The New York Times reveals that a three-page memorandum, which has been circulating in Washington since January, has advocated military action against Tehran.

The classified memorandum, according to unnamed government officials quoted by the Times, warns that Washington lacks an effective policy in dealing with Iran's nuclear program and should therefore come up with new options.

One senior official has said that the memo accuses Iran of weapons development and lays out a set of military alternatives to counter Iran's progress in nuclear science and technology.

Read more...

*Stimulus Money Going to Turn Free Roads into Toll Roads



earlier:
Poll: 4 out of 5 Americans don't trust Government



Mistrust of government extends beyond the so-called Tea Party movement

WASHINGTON – America's "Great Compromiser" Henry Clay called government "the great trust," but most Americans today have little faith in Washington's ability to deal with the nation's problems.

Public confidence in government is at one of the lowest points in a half century, according to a survey from the Pew Research Center. Nearly 8 in 10 Americans say they don't trust the federal government and have little faith it can solve America's ills, the survey found.

The survey illustrates the ominous situation President Barack Obama and the Democratic Party face as they struggle to maintain their comfortable congressional majorities in this fall's elections. Midterm prospects are typically tough for the party in power. Add a toxic environment like this and lots of incumbent Democrats could be out of work.

The survey found that just 22 percent of those questioned say they can trust Washington almost always or most of the time and just 19 percent say they are basically content with it. Nearly half say the government negatively effects their daily lives, a sentiment that's grown over the past dozen years.

Read more...

*Joint Chiefs chairman looks at military options in Iran

*Iran calls out US for being "world's only atomic criminal"


*The Fall Of Goldman Sachs?

*Ratigan Deconstructs Goldman, Connecticut AG Blumental Wants Criminal Charges Filed

*Casino Carnival Barker Jim Cramer Defends Goldman Sachs

*"Revolving door" a bar to mine safety?

*NSA stops collecting some data to resolve issue with court

*US indicts 5 Blackwater Ex-Officials

*No silver lining in air transportation nightmare






*Israeli PM Netanyahu urges 'crippling sanctions' against Iran

*Soros: Euro, EU Will Collapse if Germany Doesn't Make Concessions

*Tenth Anniversary of the Popular Uprising Against Bechtel and the Privatization of a City’s Water Supply



*Afghanistan: A Conspiracy of Silence - poll shows 77 per cent of Britons want forces home and presence makes UK less safe from terrorism

*UK Police: "let us sedate suspects


*I’m Not Shedding Any Tears for Daryl Gates

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

the big story (late edition)

Net Neutrality at Peril with Comcast Decision



PC World: A DC Circuit Court decision against the FCC today is the "shot heard 'round the world" in the battle over net neutrality. Comcast emerges victorious in challenging the authority of the FCC to impose sanctions for discriminating against peer-to-peer network traffic in an attempt to limit bandwidth consumption and manage its network

WASHINGTON (AP) -- A federal court threw the future of Internet regulations and U.S. broadband expansion plans into doubt Tuesday with a far-reaching decision that went against the Federal Communications Commission.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia ruled that the FCC lacks authority to require broadband providers to give equal treatment to all Internet traffic flowing over their networks. That was a big victory for Comcast Corp., the nation's largest cable company, which had challenged the FCC's authority to impose such "network neutrality" obligations on broadband providers.

The unanimous ruling by the three-judge panel marks a serious setback for the FCC, which is trying to adopt official net neutrality regulations. FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski, a Democrat, argues such rules are needed to prevent phone and cable companies from using their control over Internet access to favor some kinds of online content and services over others.

The case centers on Comcast's actions in 2007 when it interfered with an online file-sharing service called BitTorrent, which allows users to swap big files such as movies over the Internet. But public interest groups stressed that the ramifications of Tuesday's ruling are much broader. That's because it undercuts the FCC's ability to prevent broadband providers from becoming gatekeepers for many kinds of online services, potentially including Internet phone programs and software that runs in a Web browser.

"Today's appeals court decision means there are no protections in the law for consumers' broadband services," Gigi Sohn, co-founder of Public Knowledge, said in a statement. "Companies selling Internet access are free to play favorites with content on their networks, to throttle certain applications or simply to block others."

The decision also has serious implications for the massive national broadband plan released by the FCC last month. The FCC needs clear authority to regulate broadband in order to push ahead with some its key recommendations, including a proposal to expand broadband by tapping the federal fund that subsidizes telephone service in poor and rural communities.

Read more...

RELATED: Comcast Wins FCC Challenge, Your Move Congress


earlier:
Nude Body Scanners Would Not Have Stopped XMas Bomber



The nude body scanners now being installed by the nation's airports were long in planning. But the Christmas Day 'Underwear Bomber' created the justifications for X-ray machines. A new report from the Government Accountability Office says that these scanners, which subject passengers to radiation and nudity, would not have stopped the alleged bomber from boarding the airplane

The Transportation Safety Administration has started installing full-body scanners purchased with stimulus funds in airports around the country, but the Government Accountability Office says those scanners might not have detected the underwear bomb that made it onto a flight to Detroit on Christmas Day 2009.

“While officials said AITs (Advanced Imaging Technology devices) performed as well as physical pat down in operational tests, it remains unclear whether the AIT would have detected the weapon used in the December 2009 incident based on the preliminary information GAO has received,” theGAO said in a recent report.

That assessment from GAO’s March 17 report on the scanners seems to directly contradict one made by TSA Acting Administrator Gale Rossides last week. She suggested in comments made to CNN that the technology could thwart others like 23-year-old Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, who attempted to detonate a bomb sewn into his underpants on board Northwest Flight 253 in Detroit.

Read more...

Friday, April 2, 2010

CoOlDiGgY news (late edition)

Reserve Reveals Bear Stearns Assets it Swallowed



April 1 (Bloomberg) -- After months of litigation and political scrutiny, the Federal Reserve yesterday ended a policy of secrecy over its Bear Stearns Cos. bailout.

In a 4:30 p.m. announcement in a week of congressional recess and religious holidays, the central bank released details of securities bought to aid Bear Stearns’s takeover by JPMorgan Chase & Co. Bloomberg News sued the Fed for that information.

The Fed’s vehicle known as Maiden Lane LLC has securities backed by mortgages from lenders including Washington Mutual Inc. and Countrywide Financial Corp., loans that were made with limited borrower documentation. More than $1 billion of them are backed by “jumbo” mortgages written by Thornburg Mortgage Inc., which now carry the lowest investment-grade rating. Jumbo loans were larger than government-sponsored mortgage buyers such as Fannie Mae could finance -- $417,000 at the time.

“The Fed absorbed that risk on its balance sheet and is now seen to be holding problematic, legacy assets,” said Vincent Reinhart, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington who was the central bank’s monetary- affairs director from 2001 to 2007. “There is both an impairment to its balance sheet and its reputation.”

The Bear Stearns deal marked a turning point in the financial crisis for the Fed. By putting taxpayers at risk in financing the rescue, the central bank was engaging in fiscal policy, normally the domain of Congress and the U.S. Treasury, said Marvin Goodfriend, a former Richmond Fed policy adviser who is now an economist at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh.


Read more...


*Everything You Need To Know About The Latest Jobs Figures

*Sharp Increase in March in Personal Bankruptcies

*Hiring Hot Spots: These companies have been expanding their workforces aggressively

*VIDEO: Congressman says New Health Care Law Trumps Constitution



*California probe clears ACORN of criminal activity

*Cops & CPS Seize Child From Parents For Mistrusting Government

*“We Are in a Cabal... Five or Six Players ... Own the Regulatory Apparatus. Everybody Is Afraid to Regulate Them"

*VIDEO: Officers Accused Of Using Taser On 10-Year-Old



*Second Mexican helicopter sighted in US airspace

*Great-grandmother given an electronic tag and curfew for selling a goldfish to a 14 year-old

*100 million Americans question or find fault with the official 9/11 story

earlier:
Census Project Adds to the Job Picture



200,000 new jobs will be announced today, half of those are temporary Census positions. Critics say that's a drop in the bucket.

When March employment figures are released Friday by the Department of Labor, analysts are expecting to see the biggest U.S. job gains in more than two years.

But perhaps half the 200,000 or so positions expected to be added to payrolls may be the byproduct of a government effort that has turned into a fortuitous job generator: the U.S. census.

The constitutionally mandated nationwide head count arrives this year at a crucial time -- after the start of the country's economic recovery, but before private-sector employers have created many jobs. That's a stroke of luck for the Obama administration, which has been criticized for failing to revive the labor market. And it's a windfall for the 700,000 temporary employees the census expects to hire, although most of the jobs will last only two to six weeks.

This year's census isn't just about counting heads, it's helping create jobs in an economy that needs them badly.

Read more...

*Banks, Debt Collectors Find Ideal Debtors: Working Poor

*For Unemployed, Tax Deadline Brings New Worries...

*...Health Care's Job Creation: up to 100,000 New IRS Agents


*2 million eager for health care on parents' plans

*Five Reasons the Democrats Are Not Running Scared - Yet

*US to impose new airline security measures

*Army chief reverses course, to uphold policy on gays

*Rhode Island looks to slow recovery


*Mexico drug gangs turn weapons on army

*Obama and China's Hu discuss nuclear Iran in phone call

*Vanishing Beaches: Southern California beach erosion is worst in a decade

*Thirteen Israeli air strikes hit Gaza Strip

*US Sues KBR On Security Costs

*One of the Metro bombers could be teen 'Black Widow' – report




Thursday, March 25, 2010

CoOlDiGgY news (late edition)




For centuries, it was the cook and the heat of the fire that cajoled taste, texture, flavor and aroma from the pot. Today, that culinary voodoo is being crafted by white-coated scientists toiling in pristine labs, rearranging atoms into chemical particles never before seen.

At last year's Institute of Food Technologists international conference, nanotechnology was the topic that generated the most buzz among the 14,000 food-scientists, chefs and manufacturers crammed into an Anaheim, Calif., hall. Though it's a word that has probably never been printed on any menu, and probably never will, there was so much interest in the potential uses of nanotechnology for food that a separate daylong session focused just on that subject was packed to overflowing.

In one corner of the convention center, a chemist, a flavorist and two food-marketing specialists clustered around a large chart of the Periodic Table of Elements (think back to high school science class). The food chemist, from China, ran her hands over the chart, pausing at different chemicals just long enough to say how a nano-ized version of each would improve existing flavors or create new ones.

Read more...

*55% Favor Repeal of Health Care Bill

*NATO rejects Russian call for Afghan poppy spraying

*Soldiers Take Psychiatric Medications for Stress

*Swine Flu Virus Not So New, Study Finds

*Pentagon eases 'don't ask, don't tell' law

*US supports Pakistan economic zones

*Is US using Google proxy to attack China?



*Apartment rents cheaper than stays in homeless shelters

*Why Greenspan's Explanation for the Economic Collapse is Rubbish

*Nano car bursts into flames, raising safety fears

*Tea Party protester apologizes for cruelty to Parkinson's victim

*Philip J. Berg Reveals More About "Barry Soetoro"




earlier:



Former Vice President Al Gore on Tuesday backed Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa's "carbon surcharge" proposal for Department of Water and Power customers despite reports indicating that the plan could hike power fees as much as 28.4 percent.

"Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa of Los Angeles has introduced one of the most forward-thinking clean energy plans I have ever seen," Gore said in a statement. " ... This innovative proposal can be the catalyst the Department of Water and Power needs to power Los Angeles' use of green energy."

Villaraigosa's plan, which he said would cost the average customer about an extra $2.50 month (now he says it's up to $3.50 a month), is aimed at weening the city off coal power and onto 20 percent renewable energy by the end of the year. It will also create 16,000 jobs and retrofit homes and businesses with energy efficient gear.

But ... the Los Angeles Times reports that the hikes, the first of which has already been approved by the DWP board, would amount to 8.8 to 28.4 percent power-bill increases, and that some of the extra cash would go to initiatives already underway at the DWP.

Some on the City Council are challenging the initial rate hike and will debate whether to send the plan back to the DWP board for reconsideration Tuesday. Opponents are concerned that the hike comes at the worst time -- high unemployment plagues the city -- with a DWP that is the city's richest department. While the city faces a near-$700 million deficit in July and the possibility of 4,000 layoffs, many DWP workers are getting raises.

Still, Gore likes the plan

Read more...

*Poll: Americans Hate Wall Street

*Cops In N.J. Town Given Keys To Homes

*How to tell if you are Middle Class

*Panel to study what to do with U.S. nuclear waste

*UN body to look at meat and climate link



*Airport Worker Caught Ogling Image of Woman on Naked Body Scanner

*US authorities "deal" with Wikileaks

*UN head in Afghanistan meets with militant group

*Hungary, Latvia and Romania on verge of collapse Spain, Greece call for bailout fund

*Measure to legalize marijuana will be on California's November ballot

*Explain why you sold Britain's gold, Gordon Brown told

*Georgia accepts Gitmo inmates

*France ditches carbon tax as social protests mount

*"Childless on Principle" gains ground in Russia








*Why did Barry Soetoro change his name to Barack Hussein Obama?


Monday, March 22, 2010

CoOlDiGgY news (late edition)




Idaho has set the example for others states to follow in the continuing revolt against naked body scanners, by passing a law that limits the use of the x-ray scanning devices in airports and government buildings and also forces Homeland Security to disprove health concerns.

Athol Republican Rep. Phil Hart’s bill, which was passed 58-9 on Thursday by the Idaho state legislature, limits use of the scanners to people who have failed a prior security check, such as a metal detector.

The bill also enforces by law the option to take a manual pat-down as an alternative to the body scan, a choice that was never available in other countries that have introduced the scanners and one that the TSA has made clear it seeks to abolish, forcing everyone to use the scanners.

Read more...

*U.S. warns ships off Yemen of possible al Qaeda attack

*Underemployment At Record 20% According To Gallup

*Health Reform Bill Summary: The Top 18 Immediate Effects (editor's note: some points are up for debate)

*VIDEO: Profiting off Haiti's disaster?



*Health Care Mandate to Be Enforced by IRS ‘Bounty Hunters’

*New York Times Admits Right-Wing Duped Them on Now Defunct ACORN

*The Dodd Status Quo: Too big to fail is alive and well in the Senate's financial reform

*How the West poisoned Bangladesh

*The UK town printing its own currency

earlier:



WASHINGTON -- Thousands of protesters - many directing their anger squarely at President Barack Obama - marched through the nation's capital Saturday to urge immediate withdrawal of troops from Iraq and Afghanistan.

At least eight people, including activist Cindy Sheehan, were arrested by U.S. Park Police at the end of the march, after laying coffins at a fence outside the White House. Friday marked the seventh anniversary of the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq.

"Arrest that war criminal!" Sheehan shouted outside the White House before her arrest, referring to Obama.

At a rally before the march, Sheehan asked whether "the honeymoon was over with that war criminal in the White House" - an apparent reference to Obama

Read more...

*Census questions raise privacy, security fears

*Privately-owned Reserve wants to stay watchdog of small banks

*Obama Pays More Than Buffett as U.S. Risks AAA Rating

*Clinton Says U.S. Seeking Iran Sanctions That 'Bite'

*House approves huge changes to student loan program

*Cut off the cash and Israel might behave

*What Has MoveOn Moved On To?

*Chris Hedges: The Health Care Hindenburg Has Landed

*Do women have a place in the US army?



*34% more homeless people sleeping on New York City streets than last year

*Schwarzenegger Approval Rating Falls To Gray Davis Recall Level

*Socialist party crushes in French elections

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