Thursday, November 24, 2011

Colin Delany: As Obama's Online-Enabled Grassroots Operation Takes Shape, Do Republicans Have Anything to Match It?

This week's news that Obama's 2012 campaign has already assembled a powerful army of small online donors -- more than a million people have given him money so far, only half of whom did so in 2008 -- provided just one of many recent glimpses into the growth of what's shaping up to be a reelection juggernaut.

Other evidence? One million talks between current Obama volunteers and staff and people who volunteered for the candidate in 2008, which campaign manager Jim Messina characterized as actual conversations rather than just short fundraising calls. The goal: to persuade people who devoted time and money four years ago to put their training to work again, despite grumbling among some in the "professional Left" that their 2008 investment has yet to pay off substantively. Millions of people made real sacrifices to help Obama get elected the first time around, and his team is doing its best to make sure that the same thing happens over the next twelve months.

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Dan Walters: California government reformers occupy two camps (Sacramento Bee)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/165066705?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Bahrain charges 20 with abuse of protesters (AP)

MANAMA, Bahrain ? Authorities in Bahrain say prosecutors have charged 20 members of the security forces for alleged abuse of protesters during a Shiite-led uprising against the Gulf kingdom's Sunni rulers.

Bahrain's Information Affairs Authority says a government probe has shown that there have been "instances of excessive force and mistreatment of detainees" during months of protests and crackdowns.

A statement by the IAA Monday said that 20 prosecutions had been filed.

At least 35 people have died since February when Bahrain's Shiite majority started campaigning for greater rights in the island nation, the home of U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/mideast/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111121/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_bahrain

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HBT: Braun edges Kemp for NL MVP

HBT: Milwaukee's Ryan Braun has won the NL Most Valuable Player Award after helping lead the Brewers to their first division title in nearly 30 years. Braun earned the MVP on Tuesday, receiving 20 of 32 first-place votes and 388 points in voting announced by the Baseball Writers' Association of America. Los Angeles center fielder Matt Kemp, who came close to winning the Triple Crown, received 10 first-place votes and finished with 332 points. Braun's teammate Prince Fielder finished third with 229 points, and Arizona's Justin Upton finished fourth with 214 points.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3036697/vp/45394676#45394676

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Indonesia police arrest 2 in orangutan killings (AP)

JAKARTA, Indonesia ? Two Indonesian plantation workers have been arrested for allegedly killing at least 20 endangered orangutans and proboscis monkeys as a means of "pest control," police said Wednesday.

Col. Antonius Wisnu Sutirta, a police spokesman, said the suspects admitted to chasing down the primates with dogs, then shooting, stabbing or hacking them to death with machetes.

The men allegedly told authorities the owners of several palm oil plantations on Borneo island, eager to protect lucrative crops from being raided, offered $100 for every orangutan killed and $20 for every long-nosed proboscis monkey.

If found guilty of violating the Law on National Resources Conservation, they face up to five years in jail, Sutirta said.

Indonesia ? home to 90 percent of the orangutans left in the wild ? has lost half of its rain forests in the last half century in its rush to supply the world with timber, pulp, paper and, more recently, palm oil.

The remaining 50,000 to 60,000 apes live in scattered, degraded forests, putting them in frequent, and often deadly, conflict with humans.

A study published this month in the journal PLoSOne said villagers in Kalimantan, the Indonesian portion of Borneo, admitted to slaughtering at least 750 orangutans over a yearlong period ? a figure much higher than previously thought.

Some were killed to protect crops, others because villagers thought the animals were dangerous. A much smaller number were hunted for their meat, the survey showed.

"The simple conclusion is that orangutans will be hunted to extinction unless someone stops the killings," said Erik Meijaard, main author of the study.

"It's a blatant infringement of Indonesia's conservation laws," he said. "I really hope that both the perpetrators and the plantation managers who ordered the killings will be punished accordingly."

The two men were arrested Sunday at their homes in Muara Kaman, a village in east Kalimantan, after the bones of several orangutans and proboscis monkeys were recovered.

Yaya Rayadin, a researcher from Mulawarman University in the Kalimantan town of Samarinda, said the bones were scattered in 15 different places and that tests in his lab indicated the deaths were violent.

Most had hack marks on their skulls, jaws and ribs, he said.

Rayadin said he believes many more people were involved in the killings.

He said he first told authorities in 2008 that palm oil plantations were offering rewards to locals who slaughtered orangutans or monkeys ? with pictures or video offered as proof ? but that until now no action had been taken.

"The fact police have arrested two people is a sign of remarkable progress," he said. "But the main thing now is to find a way to protect the orangutans that are still alive."

___

Associated Press writer Robin McDowell contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111123/ap_on_re_as/as_indonesia_killing_orangutans

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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Deficit deal failure would pose crummy choice (AP)

WASHINGTON ? If the deficit-cutting supercommittee fails, Congress will face a crummy choice. Lawmakers can allow payroll tax cuts and jobless aid for millions to expire or they extend them and increase the nation's $15 trillion debt by at least $160 billion.

President Barack Obama and Democrats on the deficit panel want to use the committee's product to carry their jobs agenda. That includes cutting in half the 6.2 percent Social Security payroll tax and extending jobless benefits for people who have been unemployed for more than six months.

Also caught up in what promises to be a chaotic legislative dash for the exits next month is the need to pass legislation to prevent an almost 30 percent cut in Medicare payments to doctors. Several popular business tax breaks and relief from the alternative minimum tax also expire at year's end.

A debt plan from the supercommittee, it was hoped, would have served as a sturdy, filibuster-proof vehicle to tow all of these expiring provisions into law. But if the panel fails, as appears likely with Wednesday's deadline nearing, a dysfunctional Congress will have to sort it all out.

There's no guarantee it all can get done, especially given impact on those measures on the spiraling debt.

Instead of cutting the deficit with a tough, bipartisan budget deal, Congress could pivot to spending enormous sums on expiring big-ticket policies.

If lawmakers rebel against the cost, as is possible, they would bear responsibility for allowing policies such as the payroll tax cut, enacted a year ago to help prop up the economy, to lapse.

Last year's extensions of jobless benefits and first-ever cut in the payroll tax were accomplished with borrowed money.

The 2 percent payroll tax cut expiring in December gave 121 million families a tax cut averaging $934 last year at a total cost of about $120 billion, according to the Tax Policy Center.

Obama wants to cut the payroll tax by another percentage point for workers at a total cost of $179 billion and reduce the employer share of the tax in half as well for most companies, which carries a $69 billion price tag.

"The notion of imposing a new payroll tax on people after Jan. 1 in the midst of this recession on working families is totally counterproductive," said Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, the No. 2 Democrat in the Senate.

Letting extended jobless assistance expire would mean that more than 6 million people would lose benefits averaging $296 a week next year, with 1.8 million cut off within a month.

Economist say those jobless benefits ? up to 99 weeks of them in high unemployment states ? are among the most effective way to stimulate the economy because unemployed people generally spend the money right away.

"We will have to address those issues," Durbin said.

Extending benefits to the long-term unemployed would cost almost $50 billion under Obama's plan. Preventing the Medicare payment cuts to doctors for an additional 18 months to two years would in all likelihood cost $26 billion to $32 billion more.

Lawmakers also had hoped to renew some tax breaks for business and prevent the alternative minimum tax from sticking more than 30 million taxpayers with higher tax bills. Those items could be addressed retroactively next year, but only increase the uncertainty among already nervous consumers and investors.

This time, Obama wants them to be paid for. But a move by Democrats to try to finance jobs measures with hundreds of billions of dollars in savings from drawing down troops in Iraq and Afghanistan has gotten a cold shoulder from top Republicans.

"I've made it pretty clear that those savings that are coming to us as a result of the wind-down of the war in Iraq and the war in Afghanistan should be banked, should not be used to offset other spending," said House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio. He did not address whether war savings could be used to extend expiring tax cuts.

Those savings are the natural result of national security strategies unrelated to the federal budget. Deficit hawks say tapping into them is simply an accounting gimmick.

"It's just the worst of all worlds if that were to happen," said Maya MacGuineas, president of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.

But without the war money at their disposal, lawmakers simply can't pay for the payroll tax cut and jobless benefits. Liberals such as Durbin are fine with employing deficit financing, especially if the alternative is playing Scrooge just before the holidays.

"Many people will hate to go home for Christmas saying to the American people, `Merry Christmas, your payroll taxes go up 2 percent Jan. 1 and unemployment benefits are cut off.'"

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111119/ap_on_go_co/us_debt_supercommittee_what_next

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Fears of violence cast cloud on Congo election (AP)

KINSHASA, Congo ? One leading opposition candidate already has proclaimed himself president. Police have fired live bullets into the air at protests. And rebels in the country's violence-wracked east have been burning voter cards to keep people from going to the polls.

The outcome of Congo's Nov. 28 presidential election is almost certain to keep President Joseph Kabila in power, but so too is the likelihood it will bring more chaos to sub-Saharan Africa's largest nation.

How the elections unfold will be a likely indicator of whether Congo is consolidating its fledgling democracy or returning to a state of widespread instability after decades of dictatorship and civil war, according to the International Crisis Group.

Western nations have spent billions of dollars trying to stabilize this vast mineral-rich nation, where China also has massively invested in recent years.

But already human rights groups are expressing fears about an atmosphere of spiraling violence and hate speech ahead of the vote. New York-based Human Rights Watch said it has documented dozens of cases, including one targeting supporters from leading opposition candidate Etienne Tshisekedi's province.

"There are too many mosquitoes in the living room. Now is the time to apply insecticide," Gabriel Kyungu, a Kabila ally, was quoted as saying. Kyungu, who is president of the Katanga provincial assembly, has denied the accusation.

Next week's vote also comes as large-scale impunity continues to plague the Central African country. Among those running for legislative office is Ntabo Ntaberi Sheka, an eastern militia commander accused of ordering the rapes of hundreds of women last year.

"Congolese authorities should be arresting Sheka for mass rape whether he is running for office or not," Human Rights Watch said. "The failure to arrest someone who is out publicly campaigning for votes sends a message that even the most egregious crimes will go unpunished."

An estimated 5 million people died in back-to-back wars in Congo that began as a spillover from Rwanda's 1994 genocide. The fighting continued until 2003, and drew in the armies of a half dozen nations in what became a scramble for Congo's vast mineral resources.

Kabila became president after his father's 2001 assassination and won a landmark 2006 vote that was largely run by the United Nations, which still has some 19,000 peacekeepers here nearly a decade after civil war ended.

Since then, Kabila has pushed electoral reforms though parliament that include only one round of voting for the presidential ballot, instead of two. Opposition parties acknowledge that their only chance of beating the incumbent in this scenario is to field one common candidate, but egos and political ambitions have prevented them from agreement.

Eleven candidates are running for president, and opposition politicians charge the electoral commission is biased toward Kabila. Tshisekedi, the leading opponent, has resorted to inciting his supporters to stage jailbreaks to free detained supporters.

The elections are already taking place amid significant unrest in the country's east, where dozens of militia groups and rebels continue to terrorize people. Government soldiers and rebels have brutally raped women, men and children, and burned down villages. Hundreds of thousands of people have been forced to flee their homes because of violence.

The fighting is fueled by the competition to control mines, many operated by soldiers, rebels and militiamen who use the minerals to fund their armed groups.

Kabila swept the vote in the east during the last elections, but his inability to bring peace to the region has cost him support as did his invitation for much-hated Rwandan troops to return there during 2009 in a failed attempt to stamp out Rwandan rebels wreaking havoc inside Congo.

On the development front, Kabila has negotiated a massive, $6-billion barter deal with China, trading some of Congo's minerals for infrastructure including roads, railways, hospitals and bridges in the country where most transport is by river or air. Congo sprawls across an area the size of Western Europe in the heart of Africa and neighbors nine other countries.

But Kabila has done little to fulfill promises to bring transparency and end the endemic corruption that riddles business in Congo. His is the only well-funded electoral campaign and some are pointing to a murky deal in which the state copper and cobalt miner Gecamines is said to have sold assets at billions less than they were worth. No one will say how much the mines' assets have been sold for, nor what has happened to the money.

A U.N. report on election violence blames most on a crackdown imposed by politically manipulated police, intelligence agents and justice officials. Information Minister Lambert Mende said the report was trying to make martyrs of the opposition.

"A trend seems to be emerging wherein parties are targeted more often in regions where they have significant numbers of followers and are predicted to be the biggest threat against the ruling majority and the president," the U.N. report said.

It warned that continued repression and rights abuses "may increase the likelihood of individuals and political parties resorting to violent means, endanger the democratic process and lead to post-electoral violence."

___

Faul reported from Johannesburg.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111121/ap_on_re_af/af_congo_election

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