Posts Tagged ‘some’
Some 200,000 at risk of cholera in Haiti, U.N. says
In Uncategorized on November 13, 2010 at 9:23 amUS shuns some big public works projects
In Uncategorized on October 22, 2010 at 7:56 amNew Jersey’s governor wants to kill a $9 billion-plus train tunnel to New York City because of runaway costs. Six thousand miles away, Hawaii’s outgoing governor is having second thoughts about a proposed $5.5 billion rail line in Honolulu.
In many of the 48 states in between, infrastructure projects are languishing on the drawing board, awaiting the right mix of creative financing, political arm-twisting and timing to move forward. And a struggling economy and a surge of political candidates opposed to big spending could make it a long wait.
Has the nation that built the Hoover Dam, brought electricity to the rural South and engineered the interstate highway system lost its appetite for big public works projects? At a time when other countries are pouring money into steel and concrete, is the U.S. unwilling to think long-term?
“My sense is things have changed,” said Andrew Goetz, a University of Denver professor and an expert on transportation policy. “People now tend to see any project as a waste of money, and that’s just wrong.”
In this Oct. 19, 2010 photo, a large rusty metal wall is seen in North Bergen, N.J., covering construction at the ARC Tunnel. Work on the project has been stopped by New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie
“I call it the Bridge to Nowhere syndrome,” he added. “High-profile projects get publicized and they become a symbol for any infrastructure project that’s out there, and even the ones that are justified get tarnished by the same charge.”
The so-called Bridge to Nowhere would have cost hundreds of millions of dollars to connect one Alaskan town to an island of 50 residents. It figured in the 2008 presidential election when then-Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin was criticized for initially backing the plan, which was eventually scrapped.
The other cautionary tale of the past few years is Boston’s Big Dig, the highway and tunnel project that was originally envisioned at less than $3 billion and wound up costing nearly $15 billion.
The Big Dig has made it far easier for motorists to get to and from Boston’s airport, and it eliminated a noisy and unsightly elevated highway that cast a shadow over some of the city’s neighborhoods. But construction was plagued by years of delays, corruption and shoddy workmanship that resulted in the death of a motorist in a ceiling collapse.
A report this month by the Treasury Department and the Council of Economic Advisers paints a picture of a country dissatisfied with the state of America’s aging infrastructure and in favor of improvements, but not necessarily eager to commit the dollars to fix it.
Standing in New York’s Penn Station on Thursday in front of a sign touting the proposed tunnel, commuter Bill Mischell of Plainsboro, N.J., gave voice to those conclusions.
“You could make the argument that it will make New Jersey a better place to live, but you also have to weigh it impartially against the huge cost,” Mischell said. “The state’s in pretty significant financial trouble, and the money’s got to come from somewhere.”
Infrastructure spending in the U.S. stands at 2 percent of the country’s gross domestic product_ half what it was in 1960 — compared with approximately 9 percent in China and 5 percent for Europe, according to the government report.
“During recessions it is common for state and local governments to cut back on capital projects — such as building schools, roads and parks — in order to meet balanced budget requirements,” the report concluded. “However, the need for improved and expanded infrastructure is just as great during a downturn as it is during a boom.”
The American Society of Civil Engineers calculates that the U.S. would need to spend an additional $1.1 trillion over the next five years to restore roads, bridges, dams, levees and other infrastructure to good condition. In its latest report card, the engineering society gave the nation’s public works a “D” grade.
“Somehow we believe if we ignore it, it will go away,” said Blaine Leonard, the society’s president. “And it won’t. We have to stop hitting the snooze button on this problem.”
He said now is a good time to spend money on infrastructure because construction companies in this weak economy are hungry for work and the costs are relatively low as a result.
Major infrastructure projects of the past benefited from strong leadership, notably the interstate highway system pushed by President Dwight D. Eisenhower in the 1950s, he said. Today, though, “there isn’t any high-level leadership about infrastructure,” so there’s no agreement about priorities, Leonard said.
CG/LA Infrastructure LLC, a Washington consulting firm, recently put together a list of the worthiest 100 large infrastructure projects in North America, totaling about $400 billion. Among the suggestions: a next-generation air traffic control system; high-speed rail linking Minneapolis, Milwaukee and Chicago; a pair of highway projects in Texas; and the tunnel that New Jersey’s governor has threatened to scuttle.
To be sure, there are large-scale projects under way, notably in California, where a combination of federal dollars and voter-approved bonds and local tax increases are funding improvements, from highway widening to the $6.2 billion renovation of the Bay Bridge between San Francisco and Oakland. And this week, Arizona and Nevada hailed the opening of a $240 million bridge that bypasses Hoover Dam.
However, many projects recently completed or in the pipeline secured funding before the economy went into a slide. Some of them might not be approved today.
In New Jersey, construction on a rail tunnel connecting New Jersey and New York City — the largest transportation project under way in the U.S. — began in 2009 under then-Gov. Jon Corzine, a Democrat. It is projected to double train capacity at peak times as well as provide 6,000 construction jobs immediately and up to 40,000 jobs after its completion in 2018. About $6 billion of the cost is being covered by the federal government and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.
Earlier this month, Republican Gov. Chris Christie announced he was pulling the plug because the cost had escalated from $5 billion in 2005 to more than $9 billion by the federal government’s estimate, and as much as $14 billion by Christie’s reckoning.
“I simply cannot put the taxpayers of the state of New Jersey on what would be a never-ending hook,” he said.
Christie later agreed to reconsider. The two-week review period expires Friday.
In Hawaii, Republican Gov. Linda Lingle announced recently that she wouldn’t sign off on a federally subsidized rail line until an updated economic study is conducted. And that may not be completed before she leaves office in less than two months. That means the project’s fate could be in her successor’s hands.
In Seattle, new Mayor Mike McGinn is threatening to hold up construction of a massive highway tunnel to replace the waterfront’s dilapidated, earthquake-damaged Alaskan Way Viaduct because he fears city taxpayers will be on the hook if costs spiral beyond the $4.2 billion price tag.
“The issue of the overall cost of the tunnel has been a concern to voters since before the recession, and I think the severity of the state’s and the city’s fiscal situation is causing people to take a harder look at … an expensive and risky project,” McGinn said.
In Wisconsin, Ohio and California, Republican candidates for governor have vowed they won’t endorse high-speed rail projects, despite the promise of billions of dollars from Washington.
Other countries are spending heavily on job-creating infrastructure. Projects include Algeria’s $11.2 billion east-west highway; a planned $10 billion bridge linking the Indonesian islands of Java and Sumatra; and China’s $60 billion Yangtze River diversion project.
Australia plans to spend $38 billion to relieve traffic congestion in Melbourne, while Britain is preparing for a $45 billion high-speed rail link between London and the West Midlands. Japan is building a $70 billion highway from Tokyo to Osaka, scheduled for completion in 2020.
In the U.S., it often takes a catastrophe to give infrastructure improvements more urgency. The Minneapolis bridge collapse in 2007 that killed 13 people prompted reviews of aging bridges around the country.
“Unfortunately, our attention span is short,” Leonard said. “You would think the Minneapolis bridge collapse would have sent repercussions throughout the system that would have resulted in a transportation funding bill, but it didn’t. Even bridge funding bills didn’t get through Congress.”
Consultant Norman Anderson of CG/LA Infrastructure said the federal government’s recent emphasis on smaller, “shovel-ready” projects to stimulate the economy is misguided and shows a lack of vision.
“You don’t do ‘shovel-ready.’ That is idiotic and extremely uninformed,” he said in an e-mail. “You do projects now because they produce value for an economy 20 to 30 years into the future, as well as producing immediate jobs.”
Source: SGGP
Some private security firms to stay in Afghanistan
In Uncategorized on October 18, 2010 at 6:24 amKABUL, Oct 18 (AFP) – The Afghan government rolled back its plan to disband all private security firms, declaring that those protecting embassies and military bases could maintain those operations in the country.
President Hamid Karzai’s office said firms “providing security for embassies, transport of diplomats, diplomatic residences, international forces’ bases and depots can continue operation within these limits”.
AFP file – Private security officers protect Afghan President Hamid Karzai (2nd L) during a visit to in Bagram Airfield in May 2010.
Karzai in August ordered that all private security contractors operating in the country, both Afghan and international, must cease operations by January 1, 2011, despite a continuing Taliban and Al-Qaeda insurgency.
The decree led to widespread concern that the deadline was too tight to find alternatives amid a deteriorating security situation, and fears that some diplomats and private companies would be forced to leave Afghanistan.
While the measure received widespread support in principle, diplomats, military officials and private security contractors have said Karzai’s government has been under intense pressure to reconsider the blanket ban.
In a brief statement Sunday, Karzai’s office said that “concerns expressed by NATO commanders and foreign embassies about the dissolution of private security companies” had been considered.
Firms not involved in military or diplomatic security would be dissolved as planned, it said.
“Other private security companies pose a serious threat to internal security and national sovereignty, and the dissolution process will continue with no exception,” the statement said.
Afghan officials have said that more than 50 private security firms, about half of them Afghan, employ tens of thousands of armed personnel across the country.
Following the collapse of the Taliban regime in a US-led invasion in 2001 private security firms rushed in to fill a vacuum created by a lack of adequately trained police and army forces.
In 2006 the Afghan authorities began registering, regulating and licensing the firms but there have been questions about the activities of some.
The companies provide security to the international forces, the Pentagon, the UN mission, aid and non-governmental organisations, embassies and Western media companies in Afghanistan.
The Afghan government earlier this month formally banned eight foreign private security firms, including Xe, the controversial company formerly called Blackwater.
Executives with private security firms have refused to speak publicly about the ban, but have said that visas for some employees have been cancelled as part of the dissolution process.
Some have also said that clients had expressed concerns about the ban, as the insurgency spreads across the country and foreign construction and aid contractors are targeted by the Taliban.
But Karzai has accused the security companies of running an “economic mafia” based around “corruption contracts” favoured by the international community.
He has said the firms duplicate the work of the Afghan security forces and divert much-needed resources, while Afghans criticise the private guards as overbearing and abusive, particularly on the country’s roads.
Critics have said the tight deadline would not allow enough time to negotiate an alternative to private contractors in a country were security is a priority and police are generally not trusted.
Karzai’s spokesman Waheed Omer said earlier this month that the ban would not immediately affect companies dealing with the training of national security forces or guards operating inside buildings to provide protection.
“The focus is on those security companies which are protecting the highways, protecting transport caravans — those areas other than the training of Afghan security forces or protecting the internal premises of international organisations or embassies, or others,” he said.
Omer said security had improved along some highways since the ban on private guards operating as escorts for supply convoys in those areas.
Xe, formerly Blackwater, gained notoriety in Iraq after guards protecting a convoy opened fire in a busy Baghdad square in September 2007, killing as many as 17 civilians.
Last month two former Blackwater security guards went on trial in the United States, accused of the murder of two Afghan citizens in a 2009 shooting.
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Source: SGGP
In U-turn, some survivors accept KRouge sentence
In Uncategorized on August 12, 2010 at 11:22 amPHNOM PENH, Aug 12, 2010 (AFP) – A group of rare survivors of the Khmer Rouge’s main prison said Thursday they accepted the sentence handed to their former jailer Duch, having initially criticised it as too lenient.
Duch, whose real name is Kaing Guek Eav, was sentenced to 30 years in jail by a UN-backed court last month for crimes against humanity over the mass murder of 15,000 men, women and children at Tuol Sleng prison.
Many survivors and relatives of victims were dismayed by the sentence, which also took into account the years Duch has served since his arrest in 1999, meaning that he could walk free in about 19 years.
But three prominent survivors, who had demanded Duch be sentenced to life in jail, changed their minds on Thursday after receiving copies of the court ruling during a ceremony at the former prison.
They raised the verdict books into the air and told the souls of those killed there: “This is justice that we have been waiting for.”
“I am very pleased after receiving copies of the verdict book from the court,” said Bou Meng, one of a handful of inmates who survived Tuol Sleng.
“The verdict is not 100 percent perfect, but it is acceptable,” he said.
Fellow survivor Chum Mey told reporters that he had changed his mind after taking into account the court’s independence and its efforts to seek justice for the victims.
Cambodian chief of the public affairs section of the Extraordinary Chamber in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC), Reach Sambath (R), survivors of the infamous Tuol Sleng prison, Vann Nath (2R) Chum Mey (2 L) and Bou Meng (L) hold books about the verdict on former Khmer Rouge prison chief Duch at Tuol Sleng on August 12, 2010. AFP
“This is a historic verdict for the young generation,” said Chum Mey, who suffered 12 days of beatings at Tuol Sleng until he falsely confessed to spying on the regime.
The court has printed thousands of copies of the 450-page verdict to be distributed to the Cambodian people, according to a spokesman for the tribunal.
Duch, 67, was the first Khmer Rouge cadre to face an international tribunal.
He was initially handed 35 years but the court reduced the jail sentence on the grounds that he had been detained illegally for years before the UN-backed tribunal was established. His lawyer has said he plans to appeal.
Led by “Brother Number One” Pol Pot, the Khmer Rouge was responsible for one of the worst horrors of the 20th century, wiping out nearly a quarter of Cambodia’s population through starvation, overwork and execution.
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Source: SGGP
Tests blame some Toyota accidents on drivers
In Uncategorized on July 15, 2010 at 1:01 pmWASHINGTON (AFP) – US Transportation Department tests of “dozens” of data recorders from Toyota vehicles involved in accidents blamed on sudden acceleration found many drivers mistakenly hit the gas pedal instead of the brake, The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday.
A Lexus SUV is seen traveling on a highway in Sunrise, Florida. (AFP file)
“The early results suggest that some drivers who said their Toyotas and Lexuses surged out of control were mistakenly flooring the accelerator when they intended to jam on the brakes,” the report said.
Yet the findings, part of a broad investigation into Toyota’s recalls, “don’t exonerate the car maker from two known issues blamed for sudden acceleration in its vehicles: ‘sticky’ accelerator pedals that don’t return to idle and floor mats that can trap accelerators to the floor,'” the report added.
The data from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration included a sampling of “reports in which a driver of a Toyota vehicle said the brakes were depressed but failed to stop the car from accelerating and ultimately crashing,” the newspaper noted.
The Transportation Department however, “found that throttles were wide open and brakes not engaged on Toyotas involved in accidents blamed on sudden acceleration,” the report said, citing unnamed sources.
Toyota has pulled around 10 million vehicles worldwide since late last year, mostly due to acceleration problems.
The company is looking to improve its recall process following heavy criticism of the way it handled safety issues in the United States blamed for more than 80 deaths.
Toyota president Akio Toyoda in June apologized to shareholders for the recall crisis.
In Japan, Toyota spokesman Paul Nolasco said Wednesday: “We haven’t received any official information from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration yet, so I cannot comment.”
He added: “We are still giving them information about our own evaluations. We are still working for solutions on issues such as sticking accelerator pedals and pedals trapped in the mat. In no case have we found electronic throttles control to be the cause of unexpected acceleration.”
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Source: SGGP
US oil spill clean-up resumes in some areas
In Uncategorized on July 4, 2010 at 4:09 pmClean-up work gathered speed in some areas of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill Sunday, but heavy swells kept many boats docked, halting efforts to fight the ecological disaster.
A Taiwanese mega-skimmer dubbed the “A Whale” was in position near the site of the leak and set to undergo 48 hours of “proof of concept” testing, Coast Guard spokeswoman Ayla Kelley told AFP.
The 300-yard (275-meter) long tanker can vacuum up 21 million gallons of oily water a day, separating oil from water and spitting the seawater back out.
Small skimming boats that have been patrolling the Gulf for the past 10 weeks have only collected 28.2 million gallons of oily water to date, and rough weather made seas off Louisiana too choppy for them to even go out Saturday.
Workers toss bags full of sand contaminated with oil into a dumpster in Louisiana
Coast Guard Petty Officer Kelly Parker at a Houma, Louisiana information center said crews were resetting protective booms along fragile coastal areas, but skimming and controlled burns of spilled crude had been halted.
However, around the Chandeleur Islands, a chain of uninhabited barrier islands and wildlife refuge at Louisiana’s easternmost point, boom and skimming operations resumed Friday, said a representative of Admiral Thad Allen, the top official overseeing the spill response.
“These are the most environmentally sensitive areas. The good news is that we saw only light oil and there were hundreds of boats working in the area resetting boom and skimming,” rear admiral Paul Zunkunft told reporters after he flew over the islands.
“The areas are critical to defend because they are home to turtles, shrimp and other wildlife,” Zukunft said.
Despite containment efforts, he warned: “We are not out of the woods yet.”
On Louisiana’s Grand Isle, cleanup crews darted in and out of makeshift shelters to fan out along oil-soiled beaches between thunderstorms, in the wake of the first storm of the Atlantic hurricane season which sent oil faster and further inland, damaging the island’s fragile ecosystems.
“Usually it takes about two weeks for oil to reach the shoreline,” explained Anne Marie Gorden, Public Affairs Specialist with the Coast Guard. “But this is fresh oil,” she added, pointing to battered and oil-soaked rows of sandbags lining Fourchon Beach.
An estimated 35,000 to 60,000 barrels of oil per day has gushed from the ruptured well since the BP-leased Deepwater Horizon drilling rig sank on April 22, some 50 miles (80 kilometers) off the coast of Louisiana.
A containment system has captured about 557,000 barrels of oil, but rough seas delayed the deployment of a third vessel that could boost capacity from 25,000 barrels to 53,000 barrels a day.
That means an estimated 1.9 to 3.6 million barrels — or 79.5 to 153 million gallons — of oil has now gushed into the Gulf.
Using the high end of that estimate, the spill has now surpassed the 1979 Ixtoc blowout, which took nine months to cap and dumped an estimated 3.3 million barrels (140,000 million gallons) into the Gulf of Mexico.
It is topped only by the deliberate release of six to eight million barrels of crude by Iraqi troops who destroyed tankers and oil terminals and set wells ablaze in Kuwait during the 1991 Gulf War.
And it will likely be mid-August at the earliest before the Gulf well is permanently capped by injecting mud and cement with the aid of relief wells.
Skimmers had been collecting about 12,000 barrels of oil a day before they were sent back to port after Hurricane Alex whipped up waves earlier this week, while about 8,000 barrels of oil was being burned off the surface.
But the spill has so far oiled at least 450 miles (725 kilometers) of US shorelines, 74 days into the worst environmental disaster in US history.
Admiral Allen said he hoped to have the third containment vessel, the Helix Producer, in place by Wednesday.
Once the Producer is working, officials will also have a better sense of just how much crude is leaking, “just by the visual evidence of how much oil is actually coming out around that cap,” Allen said.
They will then have to decide if the existing system should stay in place, or if it would be best to undergo a risky procedure to replace the cap with another system capable of capturing up to 80,000 barrels of oil a day.
“The decision window associated with that would be sometime in the next, I would say, seven to 10 days,” Allen said in a conference call Friday.
In addition to boosting capacity, the new system would also greatly reduce the amount of time oil could gush freely into the sea if crews had to evacuate due to a bad storm.
Meanwhile, Environmental Protection Agency chief Lisa Jackson was headed to Pensacola, Florida to oversee coastal clean-up operations in the state, where tourist draws Miami and the Florida Keys face the likelihood of fouled beaches.
Source: SGGP
Yuan gains good for some, bad for others
In Uncategorized on June 23, 2010 at 12:35 pmChina’s central bank dropped its US dollar central parity rate to its lowest point in five years on June 22, making clear its commitment to flexible currency policies.
A teller counts yuan banknotes at a China Merchants Bank branch in Ganzhou, Jiangxi Province, June 21, 2010 (Photo: Reuters)
The move to 6.7980 yuan per dollar from 6.8275 yuan the previous day, a change of 0.43 percent, is likely to benefit some sectors, while acting as a detriment to others.
Economists said that a strong yuan will affect global economies with imports into China becoming cheaper and higher import demand expected in the country.
Chinese domestic consumption would be the biggest beneficiary of the move, said strategists at Deutsche Bank.
Chinese airlines including Air China and China Eastern Airlines will benefit from a stronger yuan since a large portion of their debt accrued buying airplanes and importing fuel is denominated in US dollars.
According to the bank’s estimation, every one percent rise in the yuan will boost Air China’s 2010 net profit by around 10 percent and China Eastern’s by 15 percent.
In addition to airlines, other winners from a yuan appreciation are car makers such as Volkswagen and BMW, luxury goods, consumer goods and technology traders.
Vietnam trade imbalance with China might fall
Dr. Ho Dieu, deputy principal of Ho Chi Minh City University of Economics, said the yuan gain will affect bilateral trade of the two countries, but Vietnam’s US dollar central parity rate will remain unchanged.
Like other countries, Vietnam’s trade with China will benefit from the move as Vietnam’s exports to China will increase while trade gap will reduce.
But Dr. Tran Hoang Ngan, member of the National Advisory Council for Financial and Monetary Policies, said that while imports of Chinese consumer goods into Vietnam will drop, that doesn’t mean that the trade gap will fall.
Dr. Ngan explained that the value of imports from China might rise if the imports are essential goods whose prices will rise.
Heads of some commercial banks said that yuan appreciation against the US dollar will prompt more pressure on Vietnam to adjustment the dong-US dollar rate.
In addition, they said Chinese goods will become more expensive so the country will face export difficulties, and in result, the volume of Chinese goods exported illegally into Vietnam will rise.
A Vietnamese economist said the Chinese central bank’s announcement that it would allow its currency to gradually move against the U.S. dollar will raise demands for gold by investors.
According to the World Gold Council, central banks have continuously increased gold reserves in recently, doubling reserves over the first quarter.
The world gold price dropped to USD12,237 per ounce at 14:30 on June 22, a decrease of US$29 over the last session.
On the same day, the buying price of domestic gold went down to VND28.29 million per tael, a fall of VND400,000 per tael compared to a day ago.
Vietnam’s stock indexes fell too, with the VN-Index closing at 512.63, down 2.12 points, and HNX-Index falling by 2.09 points to 161.92.
US dollar-yuan exchange rates:
– July 2005: US$1 = 8.1080 yuan
– July 2006: US$1 = 7.9732 yuan
– July 2007: US$1 = 7.5737 yuan
– July 2008: US$1 = 9.8388 yuan
– July 2009: US$1 = 6.8323 yuan
– June 2010: US$1 = 6.7980 yuan
Source: SGGP
Some Palin Facebook fans unhappy with endorsement
In Uncategorized on May 8, 2010 at 8:39 amEx-Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin has outraged some of her fans with an endorsement of former Hewlett-Packard executive Carly Fiorina in the GOP’s U.S. Senate primary in California.
The former Republican vice presidential candidate made the endorsement on her Facebook page, saying Fiorina’s experience running a major corporation is sorely lacking in Washington.
In this April 14, 2010 file photo, Sarah Palin flashes a thumbs up towards her husband Todd as she begins to address a crowd during a stop of the Tea Party Express on Boston Common in Boston.
In the Thursday posting, Palin called Fiorina a “Commonsense Conservative” who has the potential to beat “liberal” Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer in November.
Fiorina — an adviser on the McCain-Palin ticket in 2008 — got the endorsement over former congressman Tom Campbell, who is leading in most polls, and Chuck DeVore, a favorite of tea party supporters. But it’s essentially a two-person race in a close match between Campbell and Fiorina, with DeVore far behind in the polls.
More than 7,400 Palin fans clicked the “like” button on the Facebook endorsement, but the snub of DeVore prompted the Facebook outcry.
There is no “dislike” button on Facebook. But scores of the nearly 1,800 comments from Palin’s 1.5 million-plus Facebook supporters — many among the tea party faithful — took the time to plead in Facebook comments for Palin to change her endorsement.
Some called Palin just another typical politician who was losing supporters, while others said they backed her choice and still admired her. Both sentiments also were posted on Palin’s Facebook Wall.
Palin later posted an addendum, noting that “some reaction right out of the chute calls for more information.”
She listed reasons for her support, including the endorsement of Fiorina by National Right to Life and the California Pro-Life Council.
“She is pro-life, pro-traditional marriage, pro-military and pro-strict border security and against amnesty,” Palin wrote. “Carly is also a strong supporter of the Second Amendment. Like me, she is a member of the (National Rifle Association), has a 100 percent NRA rating, and she and her husband are gun owners.”
In a debate taped Thursday to be broadcast Sunday, Campbell was the only one of the three GOP candidates to say the ability to buy a gun should be suspended if a citizen’s name is placed on the airline “no-fly” list.
Fiorina and DeVore said the list is not dependable for making assessments about Second Amendment rights.
Jason Recher, a spokesman for Palin, said Friday that Palin respects the differing opinions but is sticking by her choice.
“The governor is never one to go with the flow,” Recher said. “She is a very independent person, and she shakes things up in establishments — including grassroots establishments — all the time.”
Dawn Wildman, whose San Diego-based Southern California Tax Revolt Coalition has about 2,000 members, said she has been fielding calls and emails from tea partiers who feel betrayed by Palin’s endorsement.
“My first thought when I heard about the endorsement was, wow, I guess she doesn’t plan to run in 2012,” Wildman said.
Wildman said there was consensus among her fellow activists when it came to supporting DeVore.
“I think most of us see Palin as a company girl now, meaning the GOP,” Wildman said. “For her to endorse Fiorina wasn’t terribly shocking. I think what’s more interesting is that Palin tries to suggest she aligns herself with the tea party movement but is clearly out of touch with what the tea party movement is saying in California.”
In Fairbanks, Alaska, tea partier Rita Heidkamp said she has no personal position on the California endorsement. But it’s Palin’s choice to make, and no one else’s, said Heidkamp, whose group — the Fairbanks 912 Project — organized a local tea party tax day rally.
“She should endorse whoever she thinks is the best candidate,” Heidkamp said. “That’s her right and her responsibility.”
Source: SGGP
Russia’s losses in WWII estimated at some 27 million people – paper
In Uncategorized on May 6, 2010 at 4:36 pmSome 27 million Russians died during the Second World War, a Russian daily said on Thursday, citing estimates by a Russian interdepartmental commission.
According to Vremya Novostey newspaper, the total fatalities of the Soviet Union, both soldiers and civilians, were 26.6 million people, of those an estimated 8,668,400 soldiers died.
Contrary to conventional claims that Russia simply sacrificed its soldiers, the ratio of combat losses of the Red Army to the Wehrmacht was 1.3:1. However, if non-combat losses are taken into account, the ratio changes radically. German losses have been estimated at around 6 million people and its allies (Italy, Austria, Japan, etc.) lost some 806,000.
The commission implemented a new method to estimate fatalities based on archives of troop deployment to military offices and arrivals at the front.
As expected, the current statistics do not differ much from the data from the Armed Forces General Staff provided in 1980s-1990s.
The interdepartmental commission was created on October 23, 2009, by order of the Russian defense minister. The commission includes representatives of the Russian Defense Ministry, the Federal Security Service, the Russian Interior Ministry, the Federal State Statistics Service, and the Russian Archives.
Russia will mark the 65th anniversary of victory over Nazi Germany on May 9 with its biggest ever post-Soviet demonstration of military hardware. This year is the first time that troops from other countries will take part in the parade.
The deadliest war ever claimed over 60 million lives in total.
The verified data of Russia’s total losses during the Second World War is expected to be approved by relevant regulations and formally reported to Russian President Dmitry Medvedev on May 9, 2010.
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Source: SGGP