Posts Tagged ‘politics’

Report: US Preparing for an Israeli Strike on Iran (Updated, with Commentary)

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Updated January 18, 2012

 

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Latest News on the Iran Confrontation

Iran – News Update of January 18, 2012

Note by Paul Evans: I don’t know quite what’s gotten into the media late Tuesday and now into Wednesday. Doing Google searches and visiting most of my news sources, I find that, for some reason, a cruise ship disaster in which about a dozen died is somehow far more important and newsworthy than a conflict that may potentially turn into World War 3. News on the Iran crisis is for some reason hard to find on the web. This makes me want to report to you everything I can find on the web about the developing crisis. We’ll do the best we can.

Telegraph.co.uk: Europe set to announce a ban on Iranian oil

Europe will agree sanctions banning the purchase of oil from Iran by the end of the month, William Hague, the foreign secretary, said on Sunday as Saudi Arabia promised it could boost output to make up the shortfall.

Telegraph.co.uk: Oil prices rise on Iran’s threats
to cut off Strait of Hormuz
:

Oil prices climbed 70 cents to $111.14 a barrel on Monday, after Iran issued fresh threats to cut off up to 17m barrels per day of oil supply from world markets by shutting down the Strait of Hormuz.

CBS News: Why Iran sanctions are doomed to fail

(TomDispatch): Let’s start with red lines. Here it is, Washington’s ultimate red line, straight from the lion’s mouth. Only last week Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta said of the Iranians, “Are they trying to develop a nuclear weapon? No. But we know that they’re trying to develop a nuclear capability. And that’s what concerns us. And our red line to Iran is do not develop a nuclear weapon. That’s a red line for us.”

Reuters: India says not seeking Iran oil waiver from U.S.

Iran – News Update of January 17, 2012

UPDATE: The Myth of “Isolated” Iran
Huffington Post, January 17, 2012, by Pepe Escobar

Is There Evidence Iran Is Building A Nuclear Weapon?
(Why Did Def. Sec. Panetta Say Iran Not Building Nukes?)

Iran’s nuclear scientists are not
being assassinated. They are being murdered
: (Guardian.co.uk):

Killing our enemies abroad is just state-sponsored terror – whatever euphemism western leaders like to use.

On the morning of 11 January Mostafa Ahmadi Roshan, the deputy head of Iran’s uranium enrichment facility at Natanz, was in his car on his way to work when he was blown up by a magnetic bomb attached to his car door. He was 32 and married with a young son. He wasn’t armed, or anywhere near a battlefield.

Since 2010, three other Iranian nuclear scientists have been killed in similar circumstances, including Darioush Rezaeinejad, a 35-year-old electronics expert shot dead outside his daughter’s nursery in Tehran last July. But instead of outrage or condemnation, we have been treated to expressions of undisguised glee.

Santorum in favor of assassination
of Iranian Scientists:

“On occasion, scientists working on the nuclear programme in Iran turn up dead,” bragged the Republican nomination candidate Rick Santorum in October. “I think that’s a wonderful thing, candidly.”

Israel Divided Over Plan to Attack Iran, The Real News Network, November 30, 2011.

Iran nuclear: Ali Larijani accepts
Turkey talks offer
:

BBC News: Iran has said it has agreed to talks with six world powers on its controversial nuclear programme, days after the UN confirmed Tehran was producing 20% enriched uranium. (It takes 90 percent pure uranium to make a nuclear weapon ~ Paul Evans)

Tense Triangle: Iran, Israel and US

Missile defense activated in Turkey

Iran – News Update of January 16, 2012

Iran Face-Off Testing Obama the Candidate: (NY Times):

WASHINGTON — The escalating American confrontation with Iran poses a major new political threat to President Obama as he heads into his campaign for re-election, presenting him with choices that could harm either the economic recovery or his image as a firm leader.

Iran, the U.S. and Israel: Blind Man’s Buff :(  (Huffington Post):


In a perilous spiral of assassinations, threats and counter-threats, the leaders of Washington, Jerusalem and Tehran keep ratcheting the tension. What is most alarming about the situation, is that the principle players and their advisers are engaged in an incredibly dangerous three-way game of blind man’s buff.

None of them expresses a real understanding of the others: of their motives, their concerns, nor their likely reactions. That’s true even with Israel and the United States: though the U.S. risks being sucked into any conflict between Israel and Iran, the Obama administration is currently forced to guess what its supposed Israeli allies are planning.

What would America or Israel — or any country — do if five of its scientists were assassinated by an enemy power? How would they react if, at the same time, the mightiest country on the planet dispatched its forces towards their borders even as it tightened a blockade to garrote their economy?

William Hague: Iran Sanctions To Be Adopted By European Nations: (Huffington Post).

US did not kill Iranian nuclear scientist, claims Leon Panetta – video: (Guardian.co.uk).

Iran could face UK military action over nuclear programme, says Hague: (Guardian.co.uk).

Commentary by Paul Evans:

Opinion from January 15, 2012: I am posting this because in reality, this is very much potentially the biggest story of the last year and this one, at least. Insofar as I can reason, we don’t send our chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff over to Israel just to tell them we won’t support them if they attack Iran. We now have 15,000 troops in Kuwait, and there are not one but two of our aircraft carriers in position to intervene.

All this sounds a lot like a strong effort to coordinate our support of Israel, rather than to push them not to attack. The U.S. is describing the various moves it is making in the middle east as efforts to defend American interests there, not as moves to strengthen a coordinated attack with Israel. I believe personally that at the least, we will provide some logistical support for Israel’s attack. And the effort to support Israel logistically has been going on for some time, now. For example, over the last couple of years we have been providing Israel with a large number of Patriot antimissle missle batteries. And then, as mentioned above, two of our Aircraft carriers stand ready in the Persian Gulf. This is just some of the evidence that we will support Israel. There is also news to the effect that the United States is prepared to make strong efforts to bring about regime change in Iran and also Syria.

Frankly, if (or when) the attack takes place, the whole middle east is going to be in flames. This is potentially World War 3. Israel has to already have realized that at the least there will be a regional war they will have to defend themselves against, that is to say, war with Syria, Hezbollah and Hamas. What will happen in the vicinity of Iran is an even worse wild card.

A year ago, Iran had 1,500 intermediate range (conventional warhead) missiles. O.K., probably (I have read), Iran cannot keep the Straits of Hormuz closed for very long. However, keep in mind that Saudi Arabia has two (and only two) oil terminals. Iran’s missiles will also reach Israel, where there are only two cities of any size (Jerusalem and Tel Aviv), and they will provide targets for destruction, as well. Iran’s missiles are fairly evidently going to do a lot of damage and it will take a considerable time to get Saudi oil flowing again, depending on the situation in the Straits of Hormuz. All this may be somewhat to pretty extensively mitigated by abundant new weapons possessed by Israel which promise extensive jamming of Iran’s communications gear and perhaps a shutdown of the entire electrical grid there.

Experts are describing the effects on gasoline prices should the Straits of Hormuz remained closed for any considerable length of time as probably amounting to a doubling in price. Also, I do not have the feeling that we have any kind of real idea how long the Straits of Hormuz will remain closed. One sixth of the world’s oil flows through there, including the Saudi oil.

If anyone doesn’t know it by now, Israel has wargamed the attack on Iran at least twice, the second time accompanied by fighters equipped with special fuel tanks to let them go the whole distance to Iran and return. Israel possesses the fourth largest air force in the world currently. And it has been about a year since the Saudis gave Israel permission to use Saudi air space in any attack on Iran.

Also, about six months ago, we were fairly certain that Iran’s nuclear enrichment program had reached the level of 20 percent pure. That is a level consistent with medical and other peaceful uses of uranium. It takes 90 percent purity before an enrichment facility produces weapons grade uranium, and we have no evidence of any level of enrichment by Iran anywhere near that.

While I do not wish to continue to closely follow political news any longer, I would think that the potential start of World War 3 warrants my full efforts to report it as best I can. ~ Paul Evans

Report: US Preparing
for an Israeli Strike on Iran
(Updated, with Commentary)

Iran: We have proof US behind assassination

Report: US Preparing for an Israeli Strike on Iran, Common Dreams.org, January 14, 2012, by Common Dreams staff, large excerpt quoted verbatim, Updated, with Commentary):

Iran is looking at “punishing” those behind the assassination of one of its nuclear scientists, a senior military official said, pointing the finger at the United States, Israel and Britain

“We consider committing a terrorist act of killing a scientist to be a threat to the nation… We are looking at punishing those who were behind the scenes of the martyrdom (assassination) of Mostafa Ahmadi Roshan,” the deputy chief of Iran’s joint armed forces, Masoud Jazayeri, was quoted as saying by several media.

Iran’s response will be “tormenting” for those responsible, he said, adding: “The enemies of the Iranian nation, such as the United States, Britain and the Zionist regime, should be made accountable for their actions.”

The Wall Street Journal is reporting today:

photo of Israeli jets parked in a row

WASHINGTON—U.S. defense leaders are increasingly concerned that Israel is preparing to take military action against Iran, over U.S. objections, and have stepped up contingency planning to safeguard U.S. facilities in the region in case of a conflict.

President Barack Obama, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and other top officials have delivered a string of private messages to Israeli leaders warning about the dire consequences of a strike. The U.S. wants Israel to give more time for the effects of sanctions and other measures intended to force Iran to abandon its perceived efforts to build nuclear weapons.[...]

Despite the close relationship between the U.S. and Israel, U.S. officials have consistently puzzled over Israeli intentions. “It’s hard to know what’s bluster and what’s not with the Israelis,” said a former U.S. official.

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Inside the Israeli security establishment, a sort of good cop, bad cop routine, in which Israeli officials rattle sabers amid a U.S. scramble to restrain them, has assumed its own name: “Hold Me Back.”

Some American intelligence officials complain that Israel represents a blind spot in U.S. intelligence, which devotes little resources to Israel. Some officials have long argued that, given the potential for Israel to drag the U.S. into potentially explosive situations, the U.S. should devote more resources to divining Israel’s true intentions.

Two US Aircraft Carriers Opposite Iran, 15,000 Troops in Kuwait

DEBKAfile, the Jerusalem-based English language Israeli military intelligence website, is reporting:

US President Barack Obama is busy aligning Middle East allies with the next US steps on Iran. Contributing to the mounting sense in Washington of an approaching US-Iranian confrontation, the Pentagon is substantially building up its combat power around Iran, stationing nearly 15,000 troops in Kuwait – two Army infantry brigades and a helicopter unit – and keeping two aircraft carriers the region. The USS Carl Vinson, the USS John Stennis which was to have returned to home base and their strike groups will stay in the Arabian Sea. ….

Read the full article here.

See U.S. army chief heads to Israel as fears over attack on Iran mount, Haaretz, January 15, 2012, by Barak Ravid:

Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, is scheduled to arrive in Israel on Thursday for talks with Defense Minister Ehud Barak, Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz, and other senior defense and intelligence officials.

Recommended: The Apocalyptics, Truth-Out, January 10, 2012, by John Feffer, Foreign Policy in Focus.K

See Dennis Ross: Obama will strike Iran if necessary, JTA, January 11, 2012:

WASHINGTON (JTA) — Dennis Ross, President Obama’s former top Iran adviser, said the president would strike Iran to keep the Islamic Republic from acquiring a nuclear weapon.

“The Iranians should never think that there’s a reluctance to use the force,” Ross, who has returned to the Washington Institute for Near East Policy think tank, told Bloomberg News in an interview published Tuesday.

Obama administration officials in recent weeks have edged closer to warning Iran that a strike is in the cards if it does not make transparent a suspected nuclear weapons program.

“They need to know that if they take that step, they’re going to get stopped,” Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said over the weekend.

The United States has increased its military presence in the Persian Gulf and in the coming weeks will launch its largest-ever joint anti-missile defense exercise with Israel. The Obama administration also has ratcheted up sanctions, targeting Iran’s Central Bank.

On Tuesday, the administration condemned Iran’s declared intention to launch uranium enrichment at a site it had kept secret until recently.

Also See Former Mossad chief: Israeli attack on Iran must be stopped to avert catastrophe, Infowars, December 2, 2011, by Amos Harel:

Former Mossad chief Meir Dagan warned Thursday against an Israeli attack on Iran, saying such a move would likely lead to a regional war involving Hezbollah, Hamas, and Syria.

Israel’s Secret Iran Attack Plan: Electronic Warfare, The Daily Beast, November 16, 2011, by Eli Lake:

For much of the last decade, as Iran methodically built its nuclear program, Israel has been assembling a multibillion-dollar array of high-tech weapons that would allow it to jam, blind, and deafen Tehran’s defenses in the case of a pre-emptive aerial strike.

A U.S. intelligence assessment this summer, described to The Daily Beast by current and former U.S. intelligence officials, concluded that any Israeli attack on hardened nuclear sites in Iran would go far beyond airstrikes from F-15 and F-16 fighter planes and likely include electronic warfare against Iran’s electric grid, Internet, cellphone network, and emergency frequencies for firemen and police officers.

Also See News About Iran, Logos57: A Caring Community, ongoing. This was an attempt at continuous coverage of what was happening in Iran. There is quite a lot of news here that was not generally reported, certainly not in the mainstream media.

UPDATE: See Raising new concerns, Iran warns Gulf Arab producers to not ramp up production, Associated Press on The Washington Post, January 14(?), by AP.

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Our Top Three Headlines for January 14, 2012

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January 14, 2012

 

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Our Top Three Headlines for January 14, 2012


Cruise disaster: three confirmed dead
and 69 passengers still missing

Telegraph.co.uk, January 14, 2012, by Roya Nikkhah.

The President’s Weekly Address
Helping American Businesses Succeed (YouTube)

DRINKING 3 BEERS WITH NO HANDS
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Rethinking the Abortion Debate from a Liberal Christian Perspective (Updated)

Logos57: A Caring Community
January 8, 2012

 

Rethinking the Abortion Debate
from a Liberal Christian Perspective (Updated)

By Placing Obsessive Emphasis on a Fetus’ Life
Many Christians Demean Women and Potentially Weaken Our Society

Logos57: A Caring Community, Rewritten and edited, January 8, 2012, originally published May 13, 2011, by Paul Evans:

I have been searching my soul and re-examining the whole debate on abortion for the last couple of years, and thought it was time to let my readers have my thoughts on this divisive issue.

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In the past, Evans Liberal Politics has generally but conditionally come out on the side of life, as Christian opponents of abortion generally understand the term. Let me go back to an article we featured on May 28, 2010, TN GOP proves that “pro-life” ends at birth, which was from Daily Kos, by benintn. At that time, I was basically holding a liberal sort of conception of an anti-abortion stance, and I said:

This article gets at the heart of the reason I have a problem being anti-abortion (as I have been), even though a developing fetus has a measurably human brainwave at eight days after conception. If we eliminate first trimester abortions, this will dump about 300,000 unwanted infants annually, into the social services pool. Caring for that many children is a huge burden on the system. However even though I remain basically anti-abortion insofar as my own personal ideas, I believe that something so personal as abortion should be a matter between a woman, her counselor of choice, and God. In other words, upon reflection, I would let Roe v. Wade stand.

I generally cannot STAND these righteous Republican moralizers who rant against abortion, or incite or threaten violence over the issue. These are the last people on earth who would be willing to cut out one of their vacations each year in order to pay for the costs of caring for the infants who would be born if there were no abortion. They rave on against abortion, but they are not willing to pay the social costs for not having it. It’s truly root hog or die with these hypocrites. That is NOT to say that many Republicans aren’t willing to pay these costs, but the Grand Old Party is kneejerk and lockstep in opposition to programs to care for our people. (So far as I can see, Republican’s major push, as it has been for several years, is to slash entitlements, and then put the money saved into tax cuts for the rich and very rich.)

Far from wanting to alleviate suffering in the worst economic turn-down since the Great Depression (voting almost in lockstep against extending unemployment benefits any further), Republicans are now preparing an onslaught against tried and tested safety net programs such as Social Security and Medicare. Watch for this one folks: right wingers are now saying we can’t afford to pay for these programs and it will be a big campaign issue in 2012.

So if I were to speak my own conclusive summary on abortion, I might say: “If you want to do the crime, ya got to do the time (and pay for the social, costs).”

I have been doing a lot of soul searching, as a person who is both very liberal and also committed to Christianity, and I also did a lot of reading on the subject around the net. We are in the midst of a big time austerity push where Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid as currently constituted are under determined attack by the wealthy in this nation, and their agents, the GOP, as well as some conservative Democrats.

I can’t see America ever putting out the kind of resources it would take to care for 300,000 unwanted infants in any kind of coordinated, funded program that would establish federal rules for these infants to be cared for by society. Nor will the individual states deal with abortion fairly or at all uniformly. If society doesn’t care for the newborn infants, who will? Are we going to sell them? To whom? It is simply a fact that there are not that many people willing to adopt and care for that many unwanted infants each year. To think otherwise is wishful, delusional thinking.

I have always put the mother’s life first. Forcing a mother that is the victim of rape or incest to carry an unborn fetus to term is highly morally repugnant to me. I also think that forcing a 15 year old to carry an developing fetus to term is not something that should be legally required. It should be up to the parents, in consultation with their doctor and any spiritual advisers they wish to consult. And for God’s sake, let’s have realistic sex education as early as junior high school, realizing that these kids have bodies which are in many or most aspects adult and will engage in adult sexual behavior. While we’re at it, let’s give high school kids condoms through the agency of the school counselors or else the kids’ parents. All this to me has always been moral, realistic as well as Christian in its direction.

The real hang-up I have had is over more “standard” first-trimester abortions, and in the past, I have been generally against them after eight days after conception, because at that time a fetus develops a recognizably human brainwave, as scientifically measured. Yet the fact remains, looking at the matter stone cold realistically, society is not going to expand the social safety net to care for the additional 300,000 infants a year that would result if first trimester abortions were outlawed.

I guess it’s that simple to me. I look at it in terms of a sort of “overall misery index” and at this point, very reluctantly, I would let Roe v. Wade stand and continue with first trimester abortions staying legal. By the way, I would make free “morning after pills” available all over the place and have the government pay for them.

There are those fundamentalist Christians who go so far as to say that birth control itself should be illegal since it might deny a potential life that would come to be if birth control were not available. And there are those pharmacists who will not fill prescriptions for the morning after pill or even birth control, citing religious grounds. Moreover, some state laws have supported a pharmacist’s right to refuse this to people. Thank God, this is not prevalent and we do not live in a theocracy yet. And I DO mean “thank God.”

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I’m going to let my arguments and thoughts end at this point, providing some of the articles I have read which helped bring me to my current viewpoint. To summarize the reasons for my position, it is driven by 1.) the compassion I feel for all living beings, in this case putting the life of the pregnant woman ahead of that of the unborn fetus, 2.) a general conclusion based on what is possible politically to care for potential unwanted infants and thus 3.) an overall feeling of compassion and regard for the misery versus the health of women and unborn fetuses as well as society. For those of you who might question my credentials as a true Christian, I suggest you read my article, My Christian Religious Views.

I also have one last thing to say: abortion is a very difficult issue. I KNOW the seriousness of aborting a fetus and I have thought about this a lot. I can honestly say, I don’t know what’s right, yet these are my thoughts on the matter. It really bothers me that a fetus has a scientifically measured, recognizably human brainwave at eight days after conception, but I am not really convinced that this means that aborting such a fetus is killing a human being. It is alive, it has a human brainwave, but is it a human being? I guess such fetuses… well we need to think long and hard about this as individuals before we would decide to have an abortion. I might make some kind of law requiring counseling, but then the question is, who does the counseling, for that would determine what gets done, wouldn’t it? And finally, it has to be a woman’s right to choose an outcome. Although I have written this article from logical and compassionate analysis from one man, it is women who must make such difficult decisions, and so for the first trimester, I would leave it up to them.

I pray to God that my thinking here has some kind of decent validity and moral correctness. But I don’t really claim to know for sure. We certainly shouldn’t kill each other over this, nor threaten violence. Here are some of the articles which have contributed to my viewpoint on abortion:

I have been thinking about this for a long time. See The Rise of the Religious Left — Why Christianity Isn’t Just for Conservatives, AlterNet on Evans Liberal Politics, October 17, 2009, by Anna Hartnell.

See The Human Sacrifice Encouragement Act of 2011 (Updated), Daily Kos on Evans Liberal Politics, February 5, 2011, by dengre: In this bill, Republicans wanted to turn pregnant raped women who are about to die during pregnancy away from hospitals and out in the streets rather than allow abortion of any kind, ever. I’m not quite sure what ever happened to this legislation.

See John Stewart on Sen. Kyl’s ‘political strategy known as lying’, The Raw Story on Evans Liberal Politics, April 12, 2011, by Kase Wickman:

one of the last sticking points in reaching a budget deal to avoid government shutdown was whether Planned Parenthood would receive federal funding or not. Sen. Jon Kyl (R-AZ) argued that abortion is “well over 90 percent of what Planned Parenthood does,” when abortions actually account for only 3 percent of PPFA’s services. When confronted, his office said that it was “not intended to be a factual statement.”

One of the best religious articles I read on the subject of abortion was Liberal Christians and Abortion, Anitra.net, no date:

One thing to understand about Liberal Christianity is that it tries to adhere to the spirit of scripture and not necessarily to the letter. There are often no specific scriptural texts on a particular subject. Or the specific texts may say the opposite, taken literally, than what a Liberal Christian would understand to be the spirit of scripture as a whole.

If you ever go back to look at the 19th century debates about abolishing slavery, you will see what I mean. Not a single text in the bible says that slavery ought to be abolished. On the contrary there are specific instructions to slaves to be diligent and obedient to their masters. So the supporters of slavery had lots of scriptural backing for their position, and the abolitionists had very little. But the abolitionists based their case on what the bible teaches overall about the nature of human beings, and God’s love for each and every one, and drew the conclusion, in spite of what a surface reading of scripture seems to say, that slavery was morally wrong and ought to be abolished.

When it comes to abortion, I cannot speak for all Liberal Christians, but this is my take on it.

1. Every conception creates a human life and God loves and honors that human life and wants it to develop to its full potential. Every abortion is tragic insofar as it ends a human life.

2. Every woman’s life is dear to God as well. God loves the mother as much as the child and wants childbearing to be a joy for her. God never values the child above the mother (as most anti-choice advocates do) nor the mother above the child.

3. In some circumstances, bearing a child would bring great hardship to the mother and to others in her family. In such a case, one may have to weigh whether the cost of bringing a new life into the world is justified when the impacts on other lives are considered. This is a never a judgment to be made lightly, nor is there a simple rule one can follow, as the circumstances vary so much from one situation to another. All things considered, in some circumstances it is better not to continue the pregnancy. (Just as, in some circumstances it is better not to continue a marriage.)

Also see Sex and the Liberal Christian, National Sexuality Resource Center, July 10, 2006, by Timothy F. Simpson.

Also see Abortion Access: Current beliefs by various religious and secular groups, Religous Tolerance.org, no date, which has a pretty complete listing of mainline and liberal Christian denominations which support a woman’s right to choose.

Also see Abortion Issue Again Dividing Catholic Votes, September 16, 2008, by David D. Kirkpatrick, which discusses how the abortion issue contributed to splitting the Catholic vote in the Presidential election of 2008.

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For many Americans, jobs crisis to last many years

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January 7, 2012

 

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For many Americans,
jobs crisis to last many years

For many Americans, jobs crisis to last many years, Reuters on The Raw Story, January 7, 2012, by Reuters: Logos57: A Caring Community is pleased to partner with The Raw Story to bring you cutting edge news:

ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) – – Despite an upswing in hiring during 2011, the jobs crisis could last many more years as millions of Americans struggle to find work.

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In Orlando, Florida, Brenda Solomon lost her retail job last May at a department store and was unable to find even temporary work during the holiday season.

“I’ve tried and tried and tried,” Solomon, 58, said on Friday while visiting a job center.

Earlier, the U.S. Labor department said employers added 200,000 jobs during December, many more than expected by Wall Street. In 2011 as a whole, 1.64 million jobs were created, well above the 940,000 in 2010 and the best showing since 2006.

But the amount of jobs in the economy is still about 6.1 million lower than before the brutal 2007-2009 recession. At December’s pace of gains, it would take about 2 1/2 years just to get back to pre-recession levels of employment.

That means many people will be in for an agonizing wait.

In December, 5.6 million of the nation’s unemployed had been out of work for at least six months, the Labor Department data showed, only slightly lower than the previous month.

Laquanda Carmichael has been without work for just over a year and has seen no improvement in the labor market.

“It’s been the same to me. I have a lot of discouraging days,” the 39 year-old former science teacher and hospital worker said.

“I’m looking for anything right now. Warehouse processing, hospitality, anything.”

While jobs creation certainly picked up in the United States during the end of the year, economists point out that even a gain of 200,000 underwhelms considering constant growth in the population and the still-high 8.5 percent unemployment rate.

Princeton University economist Paul Krugman said that at December’s pace it could take a decade for the labor market to recover from the recession.

In a back-of-the-envelope calculation, Krugman was considering that the country’s growing population adds at least 100,000 people to the workforce every month.

“We need much faster job growth,” he wrote on his blog. “It says something about how beaten down we are that this (jobs report for December) is considered good news.”

The unemployment numbers reflect a persistent difference between those with a higher education and those without – especially in certain sectors like engineering.

Nearly 90 percent of 2011 graduates from Worcester Polytechnic Institute in Massachusetts got jobs or attended graduate school – almost the same level as before 2008.

Jeanette Doyle, director of the school’s Career Development Center, said there was a 7 percent uptick in late 2011 in the number of companies at the school’s fall recruiting event, and 17 companies were on a wait list to get in.

For lower-paid Americans, the picture is very different.

Construction worker Richard White, also at the job center in Orlando, has not had steady work in the last three years, and gets by on occasional stints doing electrical work or carpentry.

In December, the construction industry added 17,000 jobs. But that sector, devastated by a burst housing bubble that helped trigger the last recession, has even farther to go than the rest of the economy before it can recover.

There were still almost a third fewer construction jobs in December than at the industry’s pre-recession peak in August 2006.

As for the December’s advance, White said: “I’m not seeing it.”

(Additional reporting by Jilian Mincer in New York; writing by Jason Lange in Washington; Editing by Diane Craft)

Comment by Paul Evans:

In my town of Wooster, Ohio, which is only 25,000, but is the marketing hub for 130,000 people, I am seeing a little bit of a thaw, as some jobs are opening up. Still, this is the most lopsided so-called recovery I have seen or read of. It seems that, given the greed of the rich and the ability of technical computer programs, I actually truly believe that this recovery is only of, by and for the rich, and that it was engineered that way very deliberately. If you are poor but informed, you already know this. This recovery is for the multinational corporations, investment banks and the very rich. By no means for the ordinary person trying to get by.

The best measure of this I have found backing up my claim is that, as of last February, the unemployment rate for those making $100,000 or more was 3.2 percent, while the unemployment rate for those making $20,000 a year or less was 31 percent.

Try to understand: for the very rich, your welfare or the lack of it is irrelevant. YOU are irrelevant to these people. The only way we can take back America is to get the right candidates nominated and then build up enough of a cooperative network of organizations to get them elected, on a mass scale. Yes, we progressives have been and are very discouraged: the very rich control our government, and they aren’t about to let go of that control without a bitter fight that I personally do not see happening.

Voters seem to not be aware of what is in their own interest. Right now, the lowest 80 percent of us in wealth control only 17 percent of the wealth of America. This is not a pretty picture. ~ Paul Evans

Obscenity of the day: The best paid hedge fund manager makes more money in a year than the entire group of 80,000 New York City school teachers do in three years, according to Paul Krugman. Something is incredibly immoral about that.

See For Working People, Evans Liberal Politics, May 29, 2011, by Paul Evans.

See Editorial: Waiting For Recovery, NY Times, January 7, 2012.

See Income Inequality: Too Big to Ignore, The New York Times, October 16, 2010, by Robert H. Frank.

See Obama to Businesses: Bring Jobs Home, The Raw Story, January 7, 2012, by Reuters.

InformIT (Pearson Education)

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http://evans-politics.com/for-many-americans-jobs-crisis-to-last-many-years.html

Iran plans more war games in strait as sanctions bite

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Iran plans more war games
in strait as sanctions bite

Iran plans more war games in strait as sanctions bite, Reuters, January 6, 2012, by Robin Pomeroy, excerpts quoted verbatim:

(Reuters) – Iran announced plans on Friday for new military exercises in the world’s most important oil shipping lane, the latest in weeks of bellicose gestures towards the West as new sanctions threaten Tehran’s oil exports.

Real Admiral Ali Fadavi, naval commander of the Revolutionary Guards Corps, said exercises next month would focus directly on the Strait of Hormuz, which leads out of the Gulf and provides the outlet for most Mid-East oil.

Iran held a 10-day drill which ended on Monday in neighboring seas.

Iranian officials have threatened in recent weeks to block the strait if new sanctions harm Tehran’s oil exports, and this week said they would take action if the United States sails an aircraft carrier through it.

The United States, which has a massive naval fleet in the area that is overwhelmingly more powerful than Iran’s sea forces, says it will ensure the international waters of the strait stay open. Britain said on Thursday that any attempt to close it would be illegal and unsuccessful. ….

Read the full article here.

Also See Analysis: Iran could close Hormuz — but not for long.

Also See Will Iran provide pretext for war?, Gulf News, January 6, 2012, by Ayman Mustafa.

Also See News About Iran, Evans Liberal Politics, ongoing time frame, by Paul Evans.

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Study: Men, women more psychologically different than thought

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January 5, 2012

 

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Study: Men, women more psychologically
different than thought

Study: Men, women more psychologically different than thought, Agence France-Presse on The Raw Story, January 4, 2012, by AFP: Logos57: A Caring Community is pleased to partner with The Raw Story to bring you cutting edge news:

Note by Paul Evans: With the changeover from Evans Liberal Christian Politics to Logos57: A Caring Community, I promised my readers that we would no longer be only about news and politics. This article, below, is just what I was talking about. In other words, if an article is oriented towards caring or leading a caring life, or is simply interesting in ways which may be of use to the reader, it’s now fair game for us. I hope you enjoy the article, below:

WASHINGTON — Mars and Venus are much further apart than previously thought — and we’re not talking about planets.

humorous little joke poster about submission to the woman being a universal symbol of marriage

In research by three European psychologists, using a new model for analyzing personality differences between men and women, claimed the gap between the genders has been sorely underestimated in previous studies.

“The idea that there are only minor differences between the personality profiles of males and females should be rejected as based on inadequate methodology,” they wrote in the online journal PLoS ONE (www.plosone.org).

Led by Marco Del Giudice of Italy’s University of Turin, the researchers took a 1993 survey of 10,000 men and women in the United States and re-crunched the numbers.

That survey, famous among psychologists as the Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire, quizzed its participants on such traits as warmth, dominance, sensitivity, vigilance, self-reliance, perfectionism and tension.

Comparing the overall profiles of men and women, and taking multiple traits into account, they discovered very large differences between the sexes — differences which had seemed to be smaller when each trait was looked at individually, without correction for measurement error.

“These are extremely large differences by psychological standards,” wrote Del Giudice and colleagues Tom Booth and Paul Irwing of the University of Manchester in England.

By way of conclusion, they called for further research in order to build “a solid foundation for the scientific study of psychological sex differences and their biological and cultural origins.”

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Robert Reich: The GOP Ticket in 2012: Romney-Rubio

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January 4, 2011

 

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Robert Reich: The GOP Ticket
in 2012: Romney-Rubio

The GOP Ticket in 2012: Romney-Rubio, RobertReich.org, January 2, 2012, by Robert Reich, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

Since my New Year’s prediction that Obama would select Hillary Clinton for his running mate in 2012 (and Joe Biden would become Secretary of State), I’ve been swamped by requests for my GOP prediction. Here goes.

Microsoft Store

You can forget the caucuses and early primaries. Mitt Romney will be the nominee. Republicans may be stupid but the GOP isn’t about to commit suicide. The other candidates are all weighed down by enough baggage to keep a 747 on the tarmac indefinitely.

For his running mate, Romney will choose Marco Rubio, the junior senator from Florida. Why do I say this?

First, Romney will need a right-winger to calm and woo the Republican right. Tea Partiers are attracted to Rubio – an evangelical Christian committed to reducing taxes and shrinking government. Rubio’s meteoric rise in the Florida House before coming to Congress was based on a string of conservative stances on state issues.

Rubio is also a proven campaigner, handily winning four Florida House elections starting in 2002, and then beating popular incumbent Republican governor Charlie Crist in 2010 — with the help of Tea Partiers.

Moreover, he’s only 40, thereby giving the GOP ticket some youthful vigor.

And he’s Hispanic – a Cuban-American – at a time when the GOP needs to court the Hispanic vote.

Rubio’s only baggage is the “son of exiles” controversy – his suggestion that his parents were refugees forced out of Cuba by Castro when in fact they moved to the United States before the Cuban revolution.

But this isn’t the sort of slip that would keep him off the ticket. In fact, Romney has defended Rubio, saying “I think the world of Marco Rubio, support him entirely and think that the effort to try to smear him was unfortunate and bogus.”

Finally, and most critically, Florida is a crucial swing state. Rubio would help deliver it.

So it will be Obama-Clinton versus Romney-Rubio.

And what’s my prediction for Election Day? Obama-Clinton hands down.

I warn you, though. Political predictions, economic forecasts, and astrology differ in only one respect. Astrology has a fairly good record of being correct.

Robert Reich was the nation’s 22nd Secretary of Labor under Bill Clinton and is Chancellor’s Professor of Public Policy at the Goldman School of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley. He has served in three national administrations. In 2008, Time Magazine named him one of the Ten Most Successful Cabinet Members of the century. He has written eleven books, including “The Work of Nations,” which has been translated into 22 languages. His recent book is “Supercapitalism.” For Professor Reich’s book page for Supercaptialism at Amazon, go here. Reich’s newest book, Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future has been released September 21, and is available for ordering at this link (Amazon.com). The above article is from Reich’s new blog, and can be viewed here.

Robert Reich’s commentaries are available for listening to at Publicradio.com. Watch the video Aftershock: The next economy and America’s future (about his new book). Thanks to Professor Reich for permission to publish his articles on an ongoing basis.

Romney narrowly beats Santorum in Iowa caucuses

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January 4, 2012

 

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Romney narrowly beats Santorum in Iowa caucuses

Logos57: A Caring Community, January 4, 2012, by Paul Evans:

Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney narrowly beat out surging Rick Santorum by just eight votes, 30,015 to 30,007, or about 25 percent of the vote each. Ron Paul finished in a fairly close third place, with about 21 percent of the votes cast.


That Romney had such close competition underscores his vulnerability with the conservative, religious Republican base, who have never really accepted Romney as a leader or candidate in the party. Santorum, who exclaimed “Game On” after the vote was announced, had the backing of conservative Christian groups, which can be decisive for the evangelical and fundamentalist voters in the upper Midwest.

Newt Gingrich, somewhat savaged by strong attacks put out by Romney’s superPAC, fell into fourth place after actually leading in Iowa polls about ten days ago. Christian dominionist Rick Perry, who finished in a distant fifth place, said he was headed back to Texas to reassess his candidacy. Michelle Bachman garnered only 5 percent of the vote.

Joe Scarorough, conservative MSNBC host and former Florida congressman, who often makes controversial analyses in political matters, said that there will be blood if Romney wins out in Iowa and New Hampshire.

In recent months, Republican contenders for the nomination have attempted to attack Romney as too “moderate.” The split in the Republican Party between fiscal conservatives who are often social moderates, and a very strongly Christian and conservative base, will be likely to continue to trouble the party.

After a hard loss in his attempt to secure the GOP nomination in 2008, Romney appears to have regained momentum towards the nomination. Meanwhile, while the several Republican candidates attempt to thrash out a road to the nomination, Obama has been quietly building a strong, robust organization for the 2012 election.

For More on Road to the Republican nomination, see the following sources:

See Iowa’s razor-thin result indicates a fierce battle for conservatives is ahead, Yahoo News — The Ticket, Yahoo News, January 4, 2012, by David Chalian.

Recommended: Iowa Caucus Winners and Losers, ABC News The Note, January 4, 2012, by Amy Walter.

See Romney squeaks out victory in Iowa, Reuters on Yahoo News, January 4, 2012, by Jane Sutton and Eric Johnson.

Also See Scarborough Says ‘There Will Be Blood’ If Romney Wins Iowa and New Hampshire, The Blaze on Yahoo News, January 2, 2012.

Also See GOP: Romney beats Santorum by 8 votes, AP on Yahoo News, January 4, 2012, by Associated Press.

Watch a slide show with 31 photos, Romney ekes out 8-vote win over Santorum, by Reuters on Yahoo News.

Also See Live blog: Romney beats Santorum in Iowa caucuses, USA Today, January 4, 2012, by Catalina Camia.

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