Friday, December 16, 2011

Republican Debate: Romney and Gingrich Defend Positions

BBC: Republican presidential front-runners Newt Gingrich and Mitt Romney were forced to defend their records, in the final TV debate before primary season.

Mr Gingrich was challenged over his work with federal housing firm Freddie Mac, while Mr Romney had to explain his stances on gay marriage and abortion.

The two rivals played it safe, but their conservative credentials were assailed by lower-tier candidates.

The eventual nominee faces Democratic President Barack Obama next November.

Thursday night's two-hour forum, hosted by Fox News in Sioux City, Iowa, also featured Texas Republican Ron Paul, Minnesota Congresswoman Michele Bachmann, Texas Governor Rick Perry, former Utah Governor Jon Huntsman and former Pennsylvania Senator Rick Santorum.

'Scam'

In his opening remarks, Mr Gingrich challenged the president to series of lengthy policy debates: "I believe I can debate Barack Obama and I think in seven three-hour debates, Barack Obama will not have a leg to stand on in trying to defend a record that is terrible and an ideology that is radical."

Mr Romney lambasted President Obama for trying to "appease or accommodate the tyrants of the world", criticising his approach to retrieving a drone which recently went down in Iran.

"Foreign policy based on pretty please? You have to be kidding," Mr Romney said. » | Steve Kingstone, BBC News, Washington | Friday, December 16, 2011
Wikileaks: Bradley Manning Military Hearing Begins

BBC: Defence lawyers representing the US Army analyst accused of leaking government secrets have asked the investigating officer to step aside.

The request came as Private Bradley Manning, 23, appeared at a military court for the first time.

He faces 22 charges of obtaining and distributing government secrets - which he allegedly leaked to anti-secrecy site Wikileaks.

The Article 32 hearing will determine whether Pte Manning is to stand trial.

The hearing offers the first opportunity for his defence team to present their case since he was arrested in Iraq in May 2010 and placed in military custody.

It is taking place under tight security at an army base at Fort Meade, Maryland.

As the hearing opened, Pte Manning's defence team asked for the investigating officer - equivalent to a judge in a civilian court - to withdraw from the case, the BBC's North America editor Mark Mardell reports from the base.

Pte Manning was reported to be sitting in the courtroom dressed in military khaki and wearing black-rimmed glasses.

During the Article 32 hearing, which is similar to a pre-trial hearing, both prosecuting and defence lawyers will make their initial cases and are permitted to cross-examine witnesses.

Proceedings are expected to last around five days, after which recommendations will be made to a military general, who will decide whether to proceed to a full trial, according to his lawyer, David Coombs.

The BBC's Paul Adams says the soldier's defence team is likely to argue that little harm came of the leaks, and that their release was in the greater public interest. » | Mark Mardell, BBC North America editor | Friday, December 16, 2011

THE GUARDIAN: Bradley Manning hearing: defence lawyer turns fire on military accusers: On first day of preliminary hearing, investigating officer rejects defence's demand that he recuse himself » | Ed Pilkington and Matt Williams in Fort Meade | Friday, December 16, 2011
Proofs of God in a Photon

THE INDEPENDENT: SCIENCE Since quantum physics, the idea of a purposeful universe has become scientifically admissible. Scientists themselves, however, remain firmly divided. Martin Redfern reports on the challenge to dualist thought

FOR THE first time in 400 years, sensible people are saying some very dangerous things. Theologians are discussing the origins of the physical universe, the beauty of the fundamental laws of physics and the wonder of the complexity of nature. Scientists, too, are discussing what they suggest may be a sense of purpose behind the universe and questioning why those laws of nature should be exactly the way they are and why they give rise to those wondrous complexities. This year, a flurry of new books has been published, written by eminent scientists and with the word ``God'' in the title. It may be that this is in part due to pressure from publishers - ``God'' sells well - but it also represents a profound change of attitude since, until recently, few scientists who value their reputations would have risked the G-word even in private. That scientific books invoking God should sell well is also a reflection on the rest of us. Society seems to be searching for something which neither religion nor conventional science on its own has been able to deliver.

Science and religion began to go their separate ways in the Renaissance. The process continued when Galileo and Descartes started to ponder on the nature of the universe. To do so, they had to stray into the territory traditionally the exclusive domain of the church and, in Europe in the first half of the 17th century, the church was powerful indeed. Those who offended it too loudly or too fundamentally could burn in a hell that was very much on earth. So it was out of an instinct of self-preservation that Galileo divided the world into two. He said that there are primary qualities that are external and objective, such as temperature, wavelength, hardness and so on, and secondary qualities that are subjective, such as the sensations of heat, colour and pain. Thus he gave the primary qualities to science in comparative safety and left the secondary qualities to the church: on these he said, I am silent. » | Martin Redfern | Sunday, December 24, 1995
Christopher Hitchens Dies Aged 62

THE GUARDIAN: Celebrated journalist, writer and unshakeable secularist has died from complications of oesophageal cancer

The writer, journalist and contrarian Christopher Hitchens has died at the age of 62 after crossing the border into the "land of malady" on being diagnosed with an oesophageal cancer in June 2010. Vanity Fair, for which he had written since 1992 and was made contributing editor, marked his death in a memorial article posted late on Thursday night.

The reactions to Hitchens's illness from his intellectual opponents – which ranged from undisguised glee to offers of prayers – testified to his stature as one of the leading voices of secularism since the publication in 2007 of his anti-religious polemic God is Not Great. The reaction from the author himself, who after a lifetime of "burning the candle of both ends" described his illness as "something so predictable and banal that it bores even me", testified to the sharpness of his wit and the clarity of his thinking under fire, as he dissected the discourse of "struggle" that surrounds cancer, paid tribute to the medical staff who looked after him and resolved to "resist bodily as best I can, even if only passively, and to seek the most advanced advice".

Born in 1949, Hitchens was sent to boarding school at the age of eight, his mother deciding: "If there is going to be an upper class in this country, then Christopher is going to be in it." This resolution pursued him to his time at Oxford, where he confessed to leading a "double life" as both an "ally of the working class" and as a guest at cocktail parties where he could meet "near-legendary members of the establishment's firmament on nearly equal terms".

After he graduated in 1970 with a third-class degree, the doors of Fleet Street opened wide for Hitchens, who followed his friend James Fenton into a job at the New Statesman. He began a lifelong friendship with Martin Amis and quickly gained a reputation as a pugnacious leftwing commentator, excoriating targets such as the Roman Catholic church, the Vietnam war and Henry Kissinger in dazzling essays, news reports and book reviews. » | Richard Lea | Friday, December 16, 2011

THE GUARDIAN: Christopher Hitchens obituary: Maverick, polemical journalist whose career was a rollercoaster of love and loathing ¶ For most of his career, Christopher Hitchens, who has died of oesophageal cancer aged 62, was the left's biggest journalistic star, writing and broadcasting with wit, style and originality in a period when such qualities were in short supply among those of similar political persuasion. Nobody else spoke with such confidence and passion for what Americans called "liberalism" and Hitchens (regarding "liberal" as too "evasive") called "socialism". » | Peter Wilby | Friday, December 16, 2011

The Immortal Rejoinders of Christopher Hitchens

In our video homage, the late, great journalist and cultural critic, a longtime contributing editor to Vanity Fair, says that “one wouldn’t be doing one’s job if one didn’t itch to prick.” View a mere sampling of his brilliant ripostes.


THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Christopher Hitchens: tributes – Contemporaries, friends and admirers of Christopher Hitchens, who has died aged 62, have paid tribute to the contrarian. » | Friday, December 16, 2011

THE INDEPENDENT: Author Christopher Hitchens dies: English-American author and journalist Christopher Hitchens has died after losing his battle with cancer. ¶ The outspoken atheist had been undergoing chemotherapy after being diagnosed with oesophageal cancer last year, but died aged 62 at the MD Anderson Cancer Centre in Houston, Texas, last night. ¶ Graydon Carter, editor of Vanity Fair, where Mr Hitchens was a contributing editor, paid tribute on the magazine's website. ¶ "Christopher Hitchens was a wit, a charmer and a troublemaker, and to those who knew him well, he was a gift from, dare I say, God," he wrote. » | Ellen Branagh | Friday, December 16, 2011

MAIL ONLINE: Writer Christopher Hitchens dies, aged 62, after battle with cancer: • 'Christopher Hitchens was a wit, a charmer and a troublemaker, and to those who knew him well, he was a gift from, dare I say, God' • 'I'm a member of a cancer elite. I rather look down on people with lesser cancers,' he said in an interview with CBS on March 6, 2011 • Smacked in the rear by Margaret Thatcher and beaten up in Beirut, he once submitted to waterboarding to prove it was indeed torture » | David Richards | Friday, December 16, 2011

Munk Debate on Religion - Christopher Hitchens Opening Remarks


TELEGRAPH BLOGS – TOBY YOUNG: RIP Christopher Hitchens, the Cicero of the saloon bar: I've known for a couple of days that Christopher Hitchens was about to die and yesterday asked his brother to deliver a farewell note, via email. I was fond of him as an occasional drinking companion, but also admired him as journalist and I said that in the note. I've no idea whether he got it or not, but I hope so. » | Toby Young | Friday, December 16, 2011


Christopher Hitchens: a noble contrarian » | Nicholas Shakespeare | Friday, December 16, 2011
What Sex S[c]andal? Herman Cain Releases Cringe-worthy Christmas Video Hand-in-hand with Wife Gloria as He Reads the Bible by an Open Fire


MAIL ONLINE: What sex sandal? Herman Cain releases cringe-worthy Christmas video hand-in-hand with wife Gloria as he reads the Bible by an open fire

Scandal-hit pizza tycoon Herman Cain may be out of the presidential race but he's wasted no time returning to the spotlight to resuscitate his image - with a warm and cozy Christmas video featuring his wife, Gloria.

The former Republican candidate dropped his bid for the White House after several sexual misconduct accusations and claims of a 13-year extra-marital affair surfaced.

But the married couple have put on a united display for the holiday clip, sitting in front of a roaring fire as Cain reads an excerpt of the Christmas story from the Bible.

The four-minute video, entitled 'It's Christmas in America!' opens with a pair of glowing candles flickering by a fireplace, and the word 'Peace' appears on the mantle.

The camera pans and in soft focus reveals the Cains sitting behind a lit Christmas tree, as the former Godfather Pizza CEO begins to read the story of Jesus’ birth.

The couple smile and hold hands, exchanging glances between the scripture.

A message posted below the online video reads: 'As we experience the joys of Christmas this year, let us not forget the birth of Christ and what it means to mankind.' » | Jennifer Madison | Friday, December 16, 2011
Jacques Chirac ne fera pas appel de sa condamnation

LE MONDE: Jacques Chirac, condamné jeudi 15 décembre à 2 ans de prison avec sursis pour détournement de fonds publics, a annoncé dans un communiqué qu'il ne "ferait pas appel" bien que, "sur le fond, [il] conteste catégoriquement ce jugement".

L'ancien président de la République "affirme avec honneur" qu'"aucune faute ne saurait [lui] être reprochée", avant de justifier sa décision de ne pas faire appel par le fait qu'il n'a "plus, hélas, toutes les forces nécessaires pour mener par [lui-même], face à de nouveaux juges, le combat pour la vérité". » | LEMONDE.FR avec AFP | jeudi 15 décembre 2011


Related »
Police Rescue Students from 'Torture Dungeon' in Karachi

Police in the Pakistani city of Karachi have freed 54 students from the basement of an Islamic school, where they said they were kept in chains by clerics, beaten and malnourished.


Read short article here | Tuesday, December 13, 2011
French Leaders Declare a War of Words on Britain

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: French leaders have launched outspoken public attacks on Britain, calling for the UK to lose its AAA credit rating and comparing its economy with that of Greece.

Christian Noyer, the governor of the Bank of France, said that Britain faced larger national debts, higher inflation and slower growth than France.

François Baroin, the finance minister, said Britain was “marginalised” and faced “a very difficult economic situation” because of Coalition policies.

The blunt remarks are the latest sign of Anglo-French tension following David Cameron’s refusal last week to back a new European treaty drawn up in response to the eurozone crisis.

George Osborne, the Chancellor, also provoked anger in France recently by suggesting it could be the next eurozone economy to experience a debt crisis. France and Germany want a new treaty to create a “fiscal union” of eurozone members, to control their deficits and reassure the markets.

Mr Baroin told the French parliament that the pact had been backed by every country in Europe, “with the singular, now solitary, exception of Great Britain, which history will remember as marginalised”.

He added: “Great Britain is in a very difficult economic situation, a deficit close to the level of Greece, debt equivalent to our own, much higher inflation prospects and growth forecasts well under the eurozone average. It’s an audacious choice the British government has made,” he said.

French policymakers were angered last week when Standard and Poor’s, a ratings agency, threatened to downgrade eurozone nations — including France — if leaders did not act urgently to address the single currency crisis.

But in an interview with Le Télégramme, a French regional newspaper, Mr Noyer said the downgrade did not appear “justified in regard to the economic fundamentals”.

“Otherwise, they should start by downgrading Britain which has more deficits, as much debt, more inflation, less growth than us and whose credit is collapsing,” he added. » | James Kirkup, Deputy Political Editor | Thursday, December 15, 2011

THE GUARDIAN: France stokes eurozone row with call for UK credit downgrade: Britain's credit status should be cut before France is downgraded, says its central bank governor, Christian Noyer » | Press Association | Thursday, December 15, 2011

MAIL ONLINE: France lose its credit rating? It should be the UK! blasts head of central bank amid rising tensions between London and Paris: Relations between Britain and France plunged to a new low yesterday when the head of the French central bank called for the UK’s gold-plated credit rating to be downgraded. ¶ The inflammatory attack on the British economy by Christian Noyer was quickly branded evidence of a cross channel ‘Entente Discordiale’ over the future of the euro. » | David Richards | Friday, December 16, 2011

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Syrie : la Russie propose une résolution surprise à l'ONU

LE FIGARO: Pressée par la communauté internationale de mettre la pression sur son allié syrien, la Russie a présenté contre toute attente un projet de résolution condamnant les violences perpétrées dans le pays «par toutes les parties».

La Russie vient de faire un grand pas diplomatique en envisageant pourla première fois de mettre la pression sur son allié historique syrien. Le pays, qui s'était jusque là opposé avec force à toute action de l'ONU, a surpris toute la communauté internationale en dévoilant un projet de résolution au Conseil de sécurité, dont il occupe ce mois-ci la présidence tournante, condamnant la répression en Syrie. Même si le texte mentionne de façon plus générale les violences commises «par toutes les parties», incluant donc l'opposition, il fait aussi explicitement référence «à l'usage disproportionné de la force par les autorités syriennes». Une première.

«Ce mouvement de la Russie est bienvenu», s'est félicité le prote-parole du Quai d'Orsay Bernard Valéro. «Cinq mille morts victimes de la répression depuis 10 mois, c'est un bilan accablant et inacceptable.» L'ambassadeur français à l'ONU, Gérard Araud, a lui aussi salué dans un communiqué «un événement extraordinaire puisque la Russie a enfin décidé de sortir de son inaction et de nous présenter une résolution sur la Syrie». «Le texte qui nous est présenté est un texte qui mérite évidemment beaucoup d'amendements car il est déséquilibré. Mais c'est un texte sur la base duquel nous allons négocier», a-t-il ajouté. » | Par Tristan Vey | jeudi 15 décembre 2011
Deutschland: Wetterdienst warnt vor Tief “Joachim”

So bedauerte Wulff sein Verhalten

Demonstrationen gegen Herrscherfamilie

Die besten Weine zum Weihnachtsfest

All In Against Newt

TALKING POINTS MEMO – EDITOR’S BLOG: This morning we’ve officially reached the end of the Newt Surge and — whether the data support the thesis or not — moved on to the Establishment Counterattack. After a week or so of stunned silence, the Republican establishment, under the very uneasy leadership of Mitt Romney, has roused to the unavoidable truth (now backed up by hard data) that nominating Newt Gingrich means all but giving up any chance of taking the presidency in 2012. » | Josh Marshall | Thursday, December 15, 2011
Vladimir Putin Lashes Out at America for Killing Gaddafi and Backing Protests

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Vladimir Putin has accused his political opponents at home of trying to destabilise Russia on the West's orders and alleged that the United States killed Libyan dictator Col Muammar Gaddafi.

In a ferocious verbal tirade broadcast on state TV that lasted more than four and a half hours, the Russian prime minister made it clear he was determined to return to the Russian presidency next year, scornfully dismissing recent demonstrations against him.

"I know that students were paid some money - well, that's good if they could earn something," he said, referring to the biggest protest of its kind since the 1991 fall of the Soviet Union last Saturday.

Facing down the biggest challenge of his almost twelve years in power, the Russian strong man insisted that the disputed parliamentary election which triggered the protests was not flawed, rejecting calls for a re-run outright.

"It properly reflected the real balance of power in the country," he said during a live televised question and answer session that has become an annual tradition. "As for the fairness or unfairness: the opposition will always say the elections were not fair. Always. This happens everywhere, in all countries." Repeatedly accusing his domestic critics and opponents of taking money from the West to do him down, he claimed there was a plot to destabilise Russia by effecting a velvet revolution there.

"There is a well-tested scheme to destabilise society," he said.

Scornfully recalling Ukraine's pro-Western Orange revolution in 2004, he said that anti-Kremlin opposition figures had advised Ukraine's orange movement at the time and had now brought the same technology to Russia. "Some of my critics are sincere, they must be heard and respected. The rest are pawns in the hands of foreign agents. There are people with Russian passports but who work in the interests of foreign states." Unruffled and outwardly supremely confident, he even quipped that the street protests were only possible because he tolerated freedom of expression. » | Andrew Osborn, in Moscow | Thursday, December 15, 2011
Wie la Crème de la Crème den Islam in Deutschland verbieten will!

Die Gardinenprediger

DER TAGESSPIEGEL: Demokratie halten sie für etwas Atheistisches. Sie träumen von einem Land ohne Bier und Bikinis und fürchten sich vor dem Höllenfeuer. Mit ihren Parolen bekommen die radikal-islamischen Salafisten in Ägypten immer mehr Zulauf. Beim ersten von drei Wahlgängen wurden sie zweitstärkste Partei.

Ob es der Wind ist, der so heftig vom Mittelmeer weht, dass der Müll durch die Straßen Alexandrias fliegt? Oder sind es am Ende halt doch mal wieder die Frauen? Irgendjemand muss ja Schuld haben, dass der Scheich, der oben auf dem Podium sitzt, seit 20 Minuten warten muss, bis er endlich reden darf. Er sieht den Männern unten zu, die große Mühe haben, ein schweres, drei Meter hohes Tuch mit islamischen Mustern an vier Dattelpalmen anzubinden. Es soll eine Art improvisierter Blickschutz werden für die zwölf Personen, die auf Stühlen sitzen und aussehen, als hätte ihnen jemand einen langen, schwarzen Sack über den Körper gestülpt; es sind mutmaßlich Frauen.


Wer mit dieser Absperrung vor wem geschützt werden soll und vor allem warum, das ist nicht ganz klar. Klar ist aber, dass die 400 Männer, die sich an diesem Freitagabend im November auf dem Midan el-Mitafi versammelt haben, damit ein Zeichen setzen wollen: Wir sind doch gar nicht so schlimm, wie alle denken! Wir haben Frauen unter uns! Oder, wie der Scheich auf dem Podium ins Mikrofon lärmt: „Männer und Frauen sind bereit für Gottes Auftrag!“

Im ägyptischen Wahlkampf ist es Mode geworden, öffentliche Konferenzen zu veranstalten. Mal geht es um die Wirtschaft, mal um die Zukunft, mal um irgendwie alles und nichts, so wie bei den Salafisten. Sie treffen sich in el-Seyuf, einer Ecke Alexandrias, die auch nach ägyptischen Maßstäben ziemlich arm und ziemlich kaputt ist. Hier wohnen viele Fans von Abd el-Moneim el-Schahat, dem Scheich auf dem Podium, studierter Ingenieur, Jahrgang 1970, dessen Bauch kaum durch eine Tür passt. Der Bart ist obligat, die Hochwasserhosen sind es auch, denn die soll der Prophet schließlich auch so getragen haben, als Zeichen gegen die Angeberei. Seiner Stimme sagt man nach, sie sei ein „Zilzaal“: ein Erdbeben.

Abd el-Moneim ist der Sprecher des Dachverbands der Fundamentalisten, der aAl-Da’wa al-Salafeya. Das erste Wort könnte man mit Aufruf übersetzen; das zweite heißt so viel wie: zurück zu den Wurzeln. Also ins siebte Jahrhundert, als Mohammed, der Prophet des Islams, die Menschen in Arabien begeisterte. Abd el-Moneim sieht sich dieser Tradition verpflichtet. Also forderte er, dass die Pyramiden mit Wachs überzogen werden müssten, „weil die pharaonische Kultur verderblich“ sei. Ein andermal ließ er die Statue einer Meerjungfrau verschleiern. Und neulich sagte er, Demokratie sei etwas für Atheisten, die Todfeinde des Islams. Weiter lessen und einen Kommentar hinzufügen » | Von Gerald Drißner | Donnerstag 15. Dezember 2011
Plus de cent pays reconnaisent l'État de Palestine

LA PRESSE (LE CANADA): Après l'annonce par l'Islande, jeudi, de la reconnaissance de «l'indépendance et de la souveraineté de la Palestine» et l'établissement de relations diplomatiques bilatérales, plus de cent pays ont reconnu la Palestine en tant qu'État.

En reconnaissant l'État palestinien, l'Islande est devenu l'un des premiers pays d'Europe occidentale et membre de l'OTAN à prendre cette décision.

«Voici le jour où je vous présente la déclaration de l'indépendance de la Palestine en accord avec la volonté du Parlement islandais», a déclaré le ministre des Affaires étrangères Össur Skarphedinsson s'adressant à son homologue palestinien Riad Malki.

Les deux ministres, qui étaient réunis lors d'une cérémonie à la Maison de la culture de Reykjavik, ont également convenu de l'établissement de relations diplomatiques entre les deux pays qui seront représentés par des ambassadeurs non-résidents.

Cette annonce a été aussitôt saluée par le ministre palestinien pour qui elle «revêt une grande portée» car elle peut créer en Europe «une atmosphère très positive que d'autres pourront suivre».

Cette décision intervient après l'adoption par le parlement islandais (Althingi) le 29 novembre dernier d'une résolution autorisant le gouvernement «à reconnaître la Palestine en tant qu'État indépendant et souverain dans le cadre des frontières antérieures à la Guerre des Six Jours de 1967».

Le chef de la diplomatie islandaise a déclaré que cette reconnaissance par un pays d'Europe occidentale également membre de l'OTAN intervient au bon moment. » | Haukur Holm, Agence France-Presse | Reykjavik | Islande | jeudi 15 décembre 2011
Desperate British Students ‘Turning to Prostitution,’ Sex Workers' Group Says

THE GLOBE AND MAIL: Desperate British students, faced with rising costs on the back of government austerity measures, are turning to prostitution, gambling and other dangerous pursuits to fund their studies, support workers and student leaders said on Wednesday.

The English Collective of Prostitutes (ECP), a welfare body for sex workers, said it estimated the number of people approaching it for help had doubled in the last year as students struggled to make ends meet.

“(The government) know the cuts and the austerity programs and the removing of grants, they know when they remove those resources they know it drives women further into poverty,” Sarah Walker from the ECP told Reuters.

“The way that women survive poverty is often through sex work. The government knows that and they don’t seem to care frankly.”

Young people have been the hardest hit by economic slowdown with youth unemployment now accounting for 1.03 million of the 2.64 unemployed, the highest level since 1992. » | Michael Holden | London | Reuters | Wednesday, December 14, 2011
Canada Declares ‘Voluntary Evacuation’ from Syria

THE GLOBE AND MAIL: The federal government has delivered a stark warning to roughly 5,000 Canadian citizens in Syria to get out now, hinting the embassy in Damascus won’t be there much longer to help them.

“The time to leave Syria is now,” Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird said Thursday.

Mr. Baird has warned Canadians in Syria to leave since October. But escalating violence in Syria, combined with sanctions that have reduced the number of flights out of the country, have sparked Ottawa to declare a “voluntary evacuation” from the country. Mr. Baird urged Canadians to get travel documents and book a flight.

Federal officials said they estimate there are roughly 5,000 Canadian citizens in Syria, though only 1,512 have registered with the embassy in Damascus.

Most are believed to be dual citizens who live in Syria, federal officials said. But the complication is that their families are not always all Canadian citizens, and they may require visas to come to Canada. » | Campbell Clark | Ottawa | Thursday, December 15, 2011
Aliaa's Nudity: A Different Form of Protest

ALMASRY ALYOUM (‘EGYPT TODAY’): How many Egyptians have appreciated the message behind Aliaa Magda Al Mahdy's naked photo? We only know that few have actually expressed admiration or support, and they did so by posting words of encouragement on her blog, her Facebook page and on Twitter, leaving the pages of printed media to reactions that ranged from the lack of sympathy to outrage. Her boyfriend Karim Amer — though he has nothing to do with the photo — was not spared.

The issue today seems to belong to the past, but we are reminded of Aliaa's action by scattered allusions in the press to the legal charges filed against her: spreading vice, encouraging lewdness and license, and contempt for religion. We are also reminded from material circulating on the net showing a girl resembling her being attacked in Tahrir or slaughtered — supposedly by Islamic fundamentalists.

More now than ever before, Egyptians from all walks of life are talking about liberty. The chants for freedom have united the revolting masses beyond — and regardless of — ideological affiliation. But why has the call for a freer society limited itself to the political sphere: liberties stated in the constitution, parliamentary elections, management of state institutions and — to a lesser extent — media freedoms? Can one espouse democracy as a political system without extending its logic to gender relations, sexuality and issues of personal privacy?

Most important, why have the self-proclaimed "liberals" forsaken Aliaa and exerted all their efforts to excommunicate her from their liberal ideal? Most of those who reiterate the slogans of freedom and democracy have politely denounced Aliaa's move, but not from the point of view of rejecting permissiveness and debauchery — for that would equate them with the same forces "of darkness" against which they have come to define their raison d'être.

Instead of discussing Aliaa’s fundamental right to undress as she pleases, post whatever she likes on her blog — in short to exercise freedom of thought and expression and do what she sees fit as long as she doesn't directly harm anyone — those who tend to view themselves as being opposed to all forms of oppression have nevertheless abstained from uncompromising support for Aliaa's freedom of expression. Instead, they slammed her from the point of view of aesthetics, depth, timing and "cultural sensitivity.

Instead of supporting her, they pitied her; they made statements about her "confused" state of mind, and the fact that she is one year below the age of legal adulthood. The sympathy they expressed is that which one feels for a human being who is "messing up her life" (as some noted worriedly), and who is naïve and unaware of the consequences of her act, that she is not aware of the risks (i.e. getting killed by the forces of evil: the Salafis). Underneath this patronizing tone, there’s a reluctance to either support Aliaa's courageous venture or attack it as immoral. » | Rime Naguib | Sunday, December 11, 2011

Related »
Printemps arabe, hiver islamiste? les leçons des premières élections libres en Tunisie, au Maroc et en Egypte

FRANCE SOIR: Selon une idée en vogue, le “printemps arabe” aurait consacré la “démocratie musulmane” et devrait balayer à la fois les tyrans corrompus et les terroristes islamistes, dont la violence ne serait qu’une “réaction” aux dictatures militaires. Or cette vision qui présente les "révolutions arabes" comme un bloc unique et idyllique est selon nous fausse. Car ce “printemps arabe”, initié par des jeunes libéraux épris de liberté, de dignité et de laïcité, a vite débouché sur un “hiver islamiste”. » | lundi 12 décembre 2011
Obama to Approve Indefinite Detention and Torture of Americans

RUSSIA TODAY: Less than a month after he threatened to veto terrifying legislation that would cease constitutional rights as we know it, Obama has revoked his warning and plans to authorize a bill allowing indefinite detention and torture of Americans.

After passing in the House of Representatives earlier this year, the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 went before the US Senate last week, where it was met with overwhelming approval. In the days before, the Obama administration issued a policy statement on November 17 saying explicitly that the president would veto the bill, as it would challenge “the president’s critical authorities to collect intelligence incapacitate dangerous terrorists and protect the nation.”

Opposition from the White House seemed all but rampant until RT revealed earlier this week that Senator Carl Levin told lawmakers that the legislation was altered because “the administration asked us to remove the language which says that US citizens and lawful residents would not be subject to this section.”

On Wednesday, White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said that those last minute changes yielded legislation that would “not challenge the president’s ability to collect intelligence, incapacitate dangerous terrorists and protect the American people,” and therefore “the president’s senior advisers will not recommend a veto.” » | Thursday, December 15, 2011


RUSSIA TODAY: Obama insists on indefinite detention of Americans » | Monday, December 12, 2011


RUSSIA TODAY: Indefinite detention: 'Architecture of fascist state': Terror suspects in America could be held in prison indefinitely – without charge or trial. The military will be able to take custody of alleged terrorists virtually without question. Critics say this would be a stark violation of human rights. » | Paul J. Richards / AFP | Thursday, December 15, 2011
Syrien schlittert in den Bürgerkrieg

Rebellen und Soldaten liefern sich erneut Gefechte

NZZ ONLINE: In Syrien ist es erneut zu einem Gemetzel zwischen Deserteuren und Regierungssoldaten gekommen. Dabei wurden acht Soldaten getötet. Zuvor hatten Asads Truppen fünf Zivilpersonen getötet.

In Syrien haben Rebellen am Mittwoch bei einem Angriff auf einen Konvoi von Regierungstruppen acht Soldaten getötet. Nur wenige Stunden zuvor hatten syrische Regierungssoldaten laut Menschenrechtsaktivisten auf ein Auto geschossen und dabei fünf Zivilpersonen getötet. » | ddp | Mittwoch 14. Dezember 2011
Whistleblower in Court: US Determined to Punish Bradley Manning

SPIEGEL ONLINE INTERNATIONAL: For some, Bradley Manning is a hero. Others feel that the US soldier, who is accused of providing secret documents to WikiLeaks, is a traitor and a threat to American security. The military proceedings against him, which begin Friday, are likely to end in a guilty verdict.

Daniel Ellsberg knows a few things about heroes. In fact, many Americans see him as a hero. When he was working for a key think tank associated with the United States military, Ellsberg photocopied the so-called Pentagon Papers, 7,000 pages of top secret analysis and documents that revealed that American politicians knew all too well how hopeless the situation in Vietnam was. When the New York Times published the secret documents in 1971, it opened the eyes of Ellsberg's fellow Americans once and for all to the details of a disastrous war.

But when Ellsberg, now 80 and white-haired but still energetic, talks about heroes, he is no longer thinking about the past. Today he says that Bradley Manning, the presumed source of the classified documents about American military officials and diplomats published by WikiLeaks last year, is "unreservedly a hero." There are so many things Manning's actions uncovered, says Ellsberg, as he begins to rattle them off. Could the Arab Spring have materialized without the WikiLeaks reports on the corruption of Arab potentates? And would anyone have been talking about war crimes committed by American soldiers in Iraq without the documents on detainee abuse?

Ellsberg is convinced that like him, Private Manning, who was only 22 at the time, wrote history and, just as in Ellsberg's case, the powerful are now intent on punishing Manning for what he did. Former US President Richard Nixon once threatened to throw Ellsberg into prison. But to the country's highest courts, the truth was more important than government secrecy, and Ellsberg and the Times emerged unscathed. The man who had exposed the government's secrets about Vietnam became the prototype of the whistleblower. Facing Life in Prison » | Marcel Rosenbach and Gregor Peter Schmitz | Thursday, December 15, 2011
Israel: Jüdische Extremisten setzen Moschee in Brand

SPIEGEL ONLINE: Die Gewalt rechtsgerichteter Israelis eskaliert: In Jerusalem legten sie Feuer in einer Moschee und sprühten islamfeindliche Slogans auf die Wände. Einer davon lautet: "Mohammed ist ein Schwein."

Jerusalem - Mutmaßliche jüdische Extremisten haben in Jerusalem eine leerstehende Moschee in Brand gesetzt. Polizeisprecher Mickey Rosenfeld sagte am Mittwoch, in einem Raum sei in der Nacht Feuer gelegt worden. Die Täter hätten auch Slogans in hebräischer Sprache an die Wand geschmiert. Die Moschee im westlichen Teil der Stadt sei zuletzt nicht in Gebrauch gewesen. Die Polizei fahndet nun nach den Tätern.

Einer der Slogans an der Wand lautete "Preisschild". Rechtsextreme jüdische Aktivisten verwenden diesen Ausdruck, wenn sie sich für Einsätze der israelischen Regierung gegen nicht genehmigte Siedler-Außenposten im Westjordanland rächen. "Mohammed ist ein Schwein", lautete eine weitere Inschrift, daneben ein Davidstern. "Ein guter Araber ist ein toter Araber", hieß es zudem. » | hen/dpa | Mittwoch 14. Dezember 2011
Netanyahu Backs Law to Ban Loudspeakers at Mosques across Israel

THE INDEPENDENT: Cabinet split over Bill that would prevent Muslims from being called to prayer

A highly contentious Bill which threatens to inflame Arab religious and ethnic sensitivities in Israel by clamping down on mosques using loudspeakers for the call to prayer has split the Cabinet of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Mr Netanyahu expressed sympathy this week for the principle behind the Bill, promoted by Anastasia Michaeli, a Knesset member in the ultra-nationalist Yisrael Beiteinu party led by the Foreign Minister, Avigdor Lieberman.

Ms Michaeli's so-called muezzin Bill would actually ban the use of such loudspeakers in any place of worship, but is clearly directed at mosques used by Israel's mainly Muslim million-plus Arab minority. She has said the Bill comes from "a world view whereby freedom of religion should not be a factor in undermining quality of life".

The Bill is believed to be the first attempt to impose change on calls to worship from mosques since the formation of the state of Israel in 1948. This week, Mr Netanyahu postponed discussion of the measure in the key ministerial committee on legislation after it ran into stiff opposition from three prominent ministers in his own Likud Party: Dan Meridor, a Deputy Prime Minister, Michael Eitan, and Limor Livnat. All three argued that it would unnecessarily escalate tensions.

But Mr Netanyahu made it clear that he wanted the issue addressed, saying in reference to curbs in Belgium and France, where officials have imposed bans on street prayer, that "there is no need to be more liberal than Europe".

The Bill, or a version of it, may be put before the ministerial committee next week. » | Donald MacIntyre, Jerusalem | Tuesday, December 13, 2011
Rachida Dati Accuses French PM of Sexism and Elitism

THE GUARDIAN: In open letter to Le Monde former French minister launches scathing attack on political colleague François Fillon

She was Nicolas Sarkozy's pin-up for diversity, the first Muslim woman with north African parents to hold a major French government post. But Rachida Dati has now turned on her own party elite with such ferocity that some have suggested she should be expelled from the president's ruling party.

Dati launched a blistering attack on the prime minister, François Fillon, under whom she served as justice minister, accusing him of sexism, elitism, arrogance and hindering the political advancement of ethnic minorities.

The row started over who will run for parliament in a wealthy rightwing constituency on the left bank in Paris, a safe seat for Sarkozy's ruling UMP. Dati is already a local mayor in the neighbourhood, a job felt to have been handed to her on a plate when she was a Sarkozy favourite. She has since fallen from grace, and when she left government she took a European parliament seat, considered a consolation prize.

She now wants to be a Paris MP. But Fillon wants the same Paris seat when he steps down, after next year's election. Both have their eye on the main prize: running for Paris mayor in 2014.

For months, Dati warned she would refuse to stand aside. Now she has stunned the political class with an open letter to Fillon in Le Monde, a scathing character assassination accusing him of the "lone ambition" of a disillusioned political elite, of doing politics in a way that "never favoured women" and stopping ethnic-minority candidates from progressing at elections. She said he was committing "a sad mistake" in trying to run in Paris. » | Angelique Chrisafis in Paris | Wednesday, December 14, 2011
Aïcha Kadhafi veut une enquête internationale sur la mort de son père

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: La fille du leader libyen Mouammar Kadhafi a envoyé une lettre au procureur de la Cour pénale internationale (CPI) afin de l'inciter à ouvrir une enquête sur la mort de son père et de son frère Mouatassim.

Un avocat d'Aïcha Kadhafi, fille du défunt leader Mouammar Kadhafi, a indiqué mercredi avoir envoyé une lettre au procureur de la Cour pénale internationale (CPI), sa cliente souhaitant savoir s'il enquête sur la mort de son père et de son frère Mouatassim.

"Aïcha veut savoir si le procureur Luis Moreno-Ocampo enquête sur ces meurtres, et si ce n'est pas le cas, pourquoi il ne le fait pas", a déclaré Nick Kaufman, avocat de la fille de M. Kadhafi.

Mouammar Kadhafi, tout comme son fils Mouatassim, avait été tué le 20 octobre à Syrte par des rebelles libyens après avoir été capturés.

"D'après les informations à ma disposition, Mouammar Kadhafi et Mouatassim Kadhafi ont été capturés vivants à un moment où ils ne représentaient une menace pour personne", a soutenu l'avocat dans une lettre adressée au procureur.

"Ils ont donc été assassinés de la plus horrible des manières et leurs corps ont été montrés et abusés de manière grotesque", a-t-il poursuivi, parlant de "meurtres brutaux". » | AFP | jeudi 15 décembre 2011
Fashion Model Tells Court How Mega-rich Saudi Prince 'Raped Her on Yacht in Ibiza'

MAIL ONLINE: Fashion model tells court how mega-rich Saudi Prince 'raped her on yacht in Ibiza' • 23-year-old woman repeated claim she was drugged and attacked by prince three years ago • He insists he was in France at the time

A fashion model who claimed she was raped by a wealthy Saudi Prince has given a fresh testimony after prosecutors said some details needed to be clarified.

The 23-year-old woman, who arrived at court in Ibiza yesterday wearing a black hat and dark sunglasses, repeated her accusation against the prince, despite what her lawyer called 'tough questioning'.

Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, 56 - one of the world's richest men with an estimated fortune of £12.3billion - is accused of raping the model in Ibiza three years ago.

The alleged victim claims she was lured on to the 384ft yacht Turama after her drink was spiked in a nightclub on the island. » | Emma Reynolds | Thursday, December 15, 2011
Bye, Bye England? SNP Plans Closer Scandinavian Ties after Independence

THE INDEPENDENT: Document reveals government wants to turn away from London if it wins referendum

An independent Scotland would shift much of its attention away from the UK to become a member of the Scandinavian circle of countries, with its own army, navy and air force modelled on its Nordic neighbours, according to detailed plans being drawn up by the SNP.

Senior SNP strategists are compiling a "prospectus for independence" which they hope to use to sell the idea of separation to Scots ahead of the referendum in 2014 or 2015.

The document is not due to be published in full for another year but SNP insiders have disclosed key extracts.

They reveal that SNP leaders want an independent Scotland to look north and east in Europe for partnerships, trade and key defence relationships, rather than continuing to focus on western Europe and the Commonwealth, as the UK does now.

Senior Nationalists, including Alex Salmond, have made several trips to Scandinavia over the last couple of years, meeting ministers and officials in an attempt to pave the way for greater co-operation if Scotland becomes independent, particularly on energy. Indeed, initial plans have already been drawn up for an electricity super-grid between Scotland and Norway.

SNP strategists insist that Scotland would continue to be extremely close to the rest of the UK, which would remain its biggest trading partner, but they also believe that Scotland has more in common with its Scandinavian neighbours than the UK does and they are keen to take this relationship to a new level. » | Hamish MacDonnell | Monday, December 05, 2011
EU 26 Fight to Stop Pact Unravelling

THE INDEPENDENT: Several non-eurozone nations having doubts about 'fiscal compact', while Sarkozy inflames divisions with attack on 'kid' Cameron

Hopes of an early end to the eurozone's troubles were fading yesterday as Nicolas Sarkozy launched a personal attack on David Cameron amid growing signs that last week's agreement struck by the other 26 European Union countries without Britain is fraying at the edges.


Blaming the Prime Minister for the collapse of the Brussels summit, the French President told his MPs: "Cameron behaved like a stubborn kid, with only one objective: protecting the City [of London], which wants to carry on behaving like an off-shore tax haven. No other country supported him, which is what you call a clear political defeat." » | Andrew Grice, John Lichfield, Ben Chu | Thursday, December 15, 2011
Death Penalty Declines in US as Disapproval Grows

THE GUARDIAN: Opposition to capital punishment reaches record levels as numbers of executions and new death sentences continue to fall

Mounting opposition to the death penalty in America is starting to take effect, with the number of executions as well as newly imposed death sentences falling to record low levels in 2011.

As the year draws to a close, the annual review by the authoritative Death Penalty Information Centre points to an ongoing withering of the practice of judicial killings in the US [pdf]. The reduction in executions is matched by the rise in public disapproval of the sentence.

There were 43 executions this year, down from 46 last year and 85 in 2000. Some 78 prisoners were added to the population of death rows – the first time since the death penalty was reintroduced in 1976 that new sentences have dropped below the 100 mark. Last year 112 people were sentenced to death, and 224 in 2000.

"The multitude of problems associated with the death penalty is gradually convincing Americans that it can no longer be sustained," concludes Richard Dieter, the director of the information centre.

While the application of the death penalty fell, America's tolerance of it also declined. The highlight of the year was the execution of Troy Davis in Georgia in September that saw an outpouring of disgust and outrage at an intensity rarely seen within the country. » Ed Pilkington, New York | Thursday, December 15, 2011
Bashar al-Assad: 'There Was No Command to Kill'

Barbara Walters discusses brutal crackdown of protests with Syria's president.

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Jacques Chirac Found Guilty of Corruption

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: A French court has found former President Jacques Chirac guilty of embezzling public funds and other charges in a trial over illegal financing of the conservative party he long led.

The first former French head of state to face prosecution since the World War II era has now been found responsible for crimes.He was given a 2-year suspended prison sentence in corruption trial[.]

But Mr Chirac, who is 79 years old, did not take part in the trial after doctors determined that he suffers severe memory lapses.

The court said Thursday it had found Mr Chirac guilty in two related cases involving fake jobs created at the party he led during his 1977-1995 tenure as Paris mayor. Mr Chirac has repeatedly denied wrongdoing.

It said the former president diverted city money to benefit his political party and reward supporters, the court ruled today.

In theory, Mr Chirac could have been sent to jail for 10 years, the maximum sentence for the charges against him. » | Telegraph’s Foreign Staff | Thursday, December 15, 2011

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: Chirac, un lion qui ne rugit plus : PORTRAIT | Sur la scène politique française depuis plus de 40 ans et à la tête du pays pendant 12 ans, Jacques Chirac est une bête politique incontournable, mais actuellement sur le déclin, en raison d'une maladie neurologique. » | AFP | jeudi 15 décembre 2011

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Three Swiss Men Charged in Libya Nuclear Weapons Case

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Three Swiss men face up to 10 years in prison for involvement in illegal sales of nuclear weapons systems to Col Muammar Gaddafi's Libyan regime.

Swiss prosecutors said Friedrich Tinner and his sons Marco and Urs had pleaded guilty of supplying nuclear equipment through the network of AQ Khan, the Pakistani scientist who sold uranium enrichment to Muslim states. » | Damien McElroy, Foreign Affairs Correspondent | Tuesday, December 13, 2011
Photo Gallery: The Advance of the Salafists

SPIEGEL ONLINE INTERNATIONAL: Democracy is coming to Egypt. But the results may not be to the West's liking. In addition to the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood, the Salafist party al-Nour also has significant support. They would like to see a return to the world of the Prophet Muhammad.


To the gallery » | Wednesday, December 14, 2011

SPIEGEL ONLINE INTERNATIONAL: Egypt Faces a Hardline Islamic Future: The Islamist Muslim Brotherhood led the way in the first round of parliamentary voting in Egypt. Second place went to the even more hardline Salafist party al-Nour. The group would like to see the introduction of an ultra-conservative brand of Sharia -- and a ban on bikinis. » | Daniel Steinvorth | Wednesday, December 14, 2011
Romney: Gingrich an "Unreliable" Conservative


CBS NEWS: Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney is escalating his attacks against Newt Gingrich's conservative credentials, attempting to sow doubt among GOP voters about the current frontrunner.

Romney's campaign released a web video on Wednesday called "Newt and Nancy," which focuses on the 2008 ad that Gingrich made with Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi to promote former Vice President Al Gore's climate change initiative. There are few liberal leaders or issues that conservatives like less than Pelosi or the fight against global warming.

"With friends like Newt, who needs The Left?" the video asks.

Romney also attacked Gingrich for making the ad interview with the Washington Post.

"Let's look at the record," he said. "When Republicans were fighting for cap and trade and needed a leader to stand up against cap and trade, he did an ad with Nancy Pelosi about global warming." » | Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Saudi Arabia Executes Woman Convicted of 'Sorcery'

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Saudi authorities have executed a woman convicted of practicing magic and sorcery.

The Saudi Interior Ministry says in a statement the execution took place on Monday, but gave no details on the woman's crime.

The London-based al-Hayat daily, however, quoted Abdullah al-Mohsen, chief of the religious police who arrested the woman, as saying she had tricked people into thinking she could treat illnesses, charging them $800 per session.

The paper said a female investigator followed up, and the woman was arrested in April, 2009, and later convicted in a Saudi court.

It did not give the woman's name, but said she was in her 60s.

The beheading took to 73 the number of executions in Saudi Arabia this year. » | Monday, December 12, 2011

Monday, December 12, 2011

Coalition at Odds as Nick Clegg Snubs David Cameron

Nick Clegg has laid bare the Coalition’s rift over Europe by refusing to even attend Parliament as David Cameron briefed MPs about his decision to reject the new European treaty.


Read article here | James Kirkup, Deputy Political Editor | Monday, December 12, 2011

Sunday, December 11, 2011

The Political and Personal Failings of David Cameron

THE OBSERVER – EDITORIAL: The prime minister's catastrophic performance has left Britain isolated and impotent

Show some bulldog spirit in Brussels, urged one Eurosceptic Tory MP at prime minister's questions last Wednesday. "I will," replied David Cameron. He knew already from his diplomats that nobody at last week's historic summit was likely to offer him the opt-out for financial services regulation that he needed in order to be able to steer new EU legislation aimed at easing the eurozone crisis through the Commons. Without some figleaf that allowed him to claim triumph over the "technocrats", he felt he had no option but to exercise the veto. The alternative would have been a referendum on our relationship with Europe, which in turn would have spelled the collapse of the coalition, and an election before the key constituency boundary changes had been made – and against a background of rising unemployment and painful spending cuts.

The party interest was clear. Faced with a choice between doing the right thing for Britain and Europe – supporting the best designed policy possible within the best possible framework to save the euro – and the right thing for his party, the prime minister unhesitatingly plumped for the soft option. He could expect the first round of newspaper headlines to echo the inane call to show bulldog spirit and they duly delivered. Britain stands alone, they proclaimed. In an increasingly globalised, connected and mobile world, being alone, on an island, is suddenly a good place to be. "No man is an island," John Donne wrote. Try telling that to the rump of Conservative MPs who steered Cameron towards this lonely place.

But what was Britain standing alone against. Why [What] did it show its bulldog spirit for? The list of demands to protect Britain's financial services industry from the Brussels "diktat" was phony. A financial transactions tax can only be levied by unanimity, so there was no threat to British interests. There was no EU proposal to limit the amount of bank capital requirements, as has been claimed in justification for the veto, which might have prevented the implantation of the Vickers proposals, which, in any case, Downing Street has been dragging its feet over.

The rest of the British demands – trying to limit second order regulatory proposals in financial services at some time in the future – were trivial. Our financial services industry employs around a million people; probably 10,000 to 20,000 of them might have been affected by possible EU regulatory proposals over the next 10 years – and those largely confined to hedge funds and trading desks of investment banks. This is a tiny interest to be heralded as a major national priority, one for which our relations with Europe are now jeopardised.

Cameron used the nuclear weapon of a treaty veto to combat a non[-]existent threat. The bulldog bared its teeth and Europe turned its back in disdain. They shrugged and got to work. A toothless bulldog has roared off into the wilderness – powerless, isolated, pointless. This must be one of the most reckless positions any British government has adopted in an international forum in recent history. » | Editorial | Sunday, December 11, 2011
'As an Act of Crass Stupidity, This Has Rarely Been Equalled'

THE OBSERVER: David Cameron has made a crucial misjudgment, simply to appease the City and his own jingoistic rightwingers

The Tories are one of the world's most enduring political parties. But this long life is built on its cultural attractiveness to parts of the English middle class, especially in the home counties, rather than on its political judgments, which have, over the centuries, been almost continuously wrong, especially in foreign policy.

It was wrong to resist revolutions in France and the US; wrong to go slow over abolishing the slave trade; wrong to champion the Corn Laws; wrong to embrace appeasement in the 1930s; wrong to contest the decolonisation of India. The British right's instincts – jingoistic, imperialistic, anti-progressive and isolationist – have consistently led this country into calamities. Today, once again, the Conservative right, indulging its atavistic instincts and egged on by a no less atavistic right-of-centre press, is landing the country in the soup. » | Will Hutton | Sunday, December 11, 2011
There's Little Point in Britain Staying in the EU Now – Bill Cash Has Won

THE GUARDIAN: All key European decisions are now out of our hands. The Tory Eurosceptics have won their once-lonely battle

The massive slump in imports into the UK announced on Friday is in many ways more important than Bill Cash's victory in Brussels. The voice we are hearing is that of David Cameron, but the script has been written by Bill Cash. His long (and initially lonely) campaign to reduce Britain's place and influence in Europe is now gathering speed. There is now little point in Britain being in the EU as all the key decisions will be taken by the 17 eurozone nations, plus the six which want to join the euro. Denmark keeps its currency but the Danish opt-out is purely nominal as the Danish crown follows the ECB policy in all regards and Danish exports are based on quality of goods, not a devalued currency.

Economic analysts are urging caution on the better trade figures announced today. The main news is the massive slump in imports as British demand shrinks thanks to the drop in consumption brought about by government policies. Britain is not spending and banks are not lending, so it is little wonder that fewer goods are coming into the UK. In that sense Britain is part of the generalised crisis of the EU economic zone. Tories and the rightwing press have sought to paint the EU as the source of the UK's economic troubles. It would be more accurate to report that weak, near-recession UK economic policy is doing serial damage to the rest of Europe, which no longer find buyers for their goods and services in Britain.

Bloomberg Business News has noted that manufacturing shrank "at the fastest pace in two and a half years in November". So much for rebalancing. And David Cameron, whose family wealth comes from the City, showed that in Brussels he would prefer to leave Britain isolated rather than negotiate a deal with the rest of Europe for a new treaty that began to move Europe away from the era of unchallenged, unregulated finance capitalism that brought about the crash of 2008, and provoked the subsequent recession. » | Denis MacShane | Saturday, December 10, 2011