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  • 17:12 - 30.07.2010 News >> Latest

     Hamas Probe Leads to American FirmsAmerican investigators, cooperating in a probe of the assassination of a Palestinian leader in Dubai, have identified a handful of U.S.-based companies believed to have been used to transfer money to suspects in the case.Read Article    

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  • 16:55 - 30.07.2010 News >> Latest

     Al Gore will not be prosecuted over masseuse allegations Al Gore, the former Vice President, will not be prosecuted over allegations by a masseuse that he groped and assaulted her in his Oregon hotel room in 2006, the county prosecutor has confirmed. Read Article    

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  • 16:48 - 30.07.2010 News >> Latest

     Facebook rage of Wikileaks suspect Bradley Manning Exclusive: Prime suspect in Afghan war leaks rages against US Army.  Read Article     

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  • 11:04 - 29.07.2010 News >> Latest

     Arizona immigration law blocked by judge in temporary victory for Obama Ruling marks success for Obama administration to maintain federal control of immigration policy  Read Article    

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  • 10:52 - 29.07.2010 News >> Latest

     Britain to be the biggest country in Europe by 2050 Official forecast predicts that Britain's population will swell from 62.2 million to 77 million - an increase of 24 per cent - overtaking both France and Germany. Read Article    

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  • 04:46 - 29.07.2010 News >> Latest

     Drug Use, Poor Discipline Afflict Afghan ArmyThe U.S. strategy for leaving Afghanistan is heavily dependent on building capable Afghan military and police forces that can take over, but U.S. soldiers complain of a trigger-happy attitude, general carelessness and the use of drugs within those forces. Read Article    

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  • 04:28 - 29.07.2010 News >> Latest

      Taxes: A Defining IssueBarack Obama knows taxes define worldview. The GOP should offer voters an alternative.Read Opinion 

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  • 03:51 - 29.07.2010 News >> Latest

     Ruling Against Arizona Is a Warning for Other StatesBy JULIA PRESTON A federal judge in Arizona on Wednesday broadly vindicated the Obama administration’s high-stakes move to challenge that state’s tough immigration law and to assert the primary authority of the federal government over state lawmakers in immigration matters. The ruling by Judge Susan R. Bolton, in a lawsuit against Arizona brought on July 6 by the Justice Department, blocked central provisions of the law from taking effect while she finishes hearing the case. But in taking the forceful step of holding up a statute even before it was put into practice, Judge Bolton previewed her opinions on the case, indicating that the federal government was likely to win in the end on the main points. The decision by Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. to throw the federal government’s weight against Arizona, on an issue that has aroused passions among state residents, has irritated many state governors, and nine states filed papers supporting Arizona in the court case. But Judge Bolton found that the law was on the side of the Justice Department in its argument that many provisions of the Arizona statute would interfere with federal law and policy. Gov. Jan Brewer said the state would appeal the decision. Although Judge Bolton’s ruling is not final, it seems likely to halt, at least temporarily, an expanding movement by states to combat illegal immigration by making it a state crime to be an immigrant without legal documents and by imposing new requirements on state and local police officers to enforce immigration law. “This is a warning to any other jurisdiction” considering a…

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  • 20:05 - 28.07.2010 News >> Latest

     Al Gore questioned over sexual assault allegations Police question former vice-president over claims by masseuse. Read Article   

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  • 19:36 - 28.07.2010 News >> Latest

     Clooney's girlfriend named in sex and drugs scandal Elisabetta Canalis named in scandal involving high-class prostitutes Read Article    

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Glenn Beck and violence Print E-mail

 

Glenn Beck and violence

Milbank: Trouble can happen when the wrong words get into the wrong hands.

 
Hamas Probe Leads to American Firms Print E-mail

 

[dubhamassklar]

Hamas Probe Leads to American Firms

American investigators, cooperating in a probe of the assassination of a Palestinian leader in Dubai, have identified a handful of U.S.-based companies believed to have been used to transfer money to suspects in the case.

Read Article

 

 

 

 

 
AlGore Beats It. Print E-mail

 

Al Gore will not be prosecuted over masseuse allegations

Al Gore accused of 'sexually harassing' massage therapist

Al Gore, the former Vice President, will not be prosecuted over allegations by a masseuse that he groped and assaulted her in his Oregon hotel room in 2006, the county prosecutor has confirmed.

Read Article 

 

 

 

 
What does he think War is about? Print E-mail

 

Facebook rage of Wikileaks suspect Bradley Manning

Afghan war logs: Facebook rage of Wikileaks suspect Bradley Manning

Exclusive: Prime suspect in Afghan war leaks rages against US Army.

 Read Article

 

 

 

 

 

 
UK take on Judge's Immigration Ruling Print E-mail

 

Demonstrators protest against Arizona's SB 1070

Arizona immigration law blocked by judge in temporary victory for Obama

Ruling marks success for Obama administration to maintain federal control of immigration policy

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Britain to be the biggest country in Europe by 2050 Print E-mail

 

Britain to be the biggest country in Europe by 2050

Immigration has fuelled a fast population growth rate with UK expected to reach 70m in 20 years

Official forecast predicts that Britain's population will swell from 62.2 million to 77 million - an increase of 24 per cent - overtaking both France and Germany.

 Read Article

 

 

 

 

 
Drug Use, Poor Discipline Afflict Afghan Army Print E-mail

 

[ARFARMY]

Drug Use, Poor Discipline Afflict Afghan Army

The U.S. strategy for leaving Afghanistan is heavily dependent on building capable Afghan military and police forces that can take over, but U.S. soldiers complain of a trigger-happy attitude, general carelessness and the use of drugs within those forces.

 Read Article

 

 

 

 

 
" This is about something bigger than deficit reduction " Print E-mail
 
wl0729

Taxes: A Defining Issue

Barack Obama knows taxes define worldview. The GOP should offer voters an alternative.

Read Opinion

 

 
Obama Wins a Round on Immigration Print E-mail

 

Ruling Against Arizona Is a Warning for Other States

 

A federal judge in Arizona on Wednesday broadly vindicated the Obama administration’s high-stakes move to challenge that state’s tough immigration law and to assert the primary authority of the federal government over state lawmakers in immigration matters.

The ruling by Judge Susan R. Bolton, in a lawsuit against Arizona brought on July 6 by the Justice Department, blocked central provisions of the law from taking effect while she finishes hearing the case.

But in taking the forceful step of holding up a statute even before it was put into practice, Judge Bolton previewed her opinions on the case, indicating that the federal government was likely to win in the end on the main points.

The decision by Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. to throw the federal government’s weight against Arizona, on an issue that has aroused passions among state residents, has irritated many state governors, and nine states filed papers supporting Arizona in the court case.

But Judge Bolton found that the law was on the side of the Justice Department in its argument that many provisions of the Arizona statute would interfere with federal law and policy.

Gov. Jan Brewer said the state would appeal the decision.

Although Judge Bolton’s ruling is not final, it seems likely to halt, at least temporarily, an expanding movement by states to combat illegal immigration by making it a state crime to be an immigrant without legal documents and by imposing new requirements on state and local police officers to enforce immigration law.

“This is a warning to any other jurisdiction” considering a similar law, said Thomas A. Saenz, president of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund , which brought a separate suit against the law that is also before Judge Bolton.

The Arizona law stood out from hundreds of statutes adopted by states in recent years to discourage illegal immigrants. The statute makes it a state crime for immigrants to fail to carry documents proving their legal status, and it requires state police officers to determine the immigration status of anyone they detain for another reason, if there is a “reasonable suspicion” the person is an illegal immigrant.

The mere fact of being present without legal immigration status is a civil violation under federal law, but not a crime.

Arizona’s lawyers contended that the statute was written to complement federal laws. Judge Bolton rejected that argument, finding that four of its major provisions interfered or directly conflicted with federal laws.

The Arizona police, she wrote, would have to question every person they detained about immigration status, generating a flood of requests to the federal immigration authorities for confirmations. The number of requests “is likely to impermissibly burden federal resources and redirect federal agencies away from priorities they have established,” she wrote.

While opponents of the Arizona law had said it would lead to racial profiling, the Justice Department did not dwell on those issues in its court filings. But Judge Bolton brought them forward, finding significant risks for legal immigrants and perhaps American citizens. There is a “substantial likelihood that officers will wrongfully arrest legal resident aliens,” she wrote, warning that foreign tourists could also be wrongly detained.

The law, she found, would increase “the intrusion of police presence into the lives of legally present aliens (and even United States citizens), who will necessarily be swept up” by it. Judge Bolton was appointed by President Bill Clinton in 2000.

Hannah August, a spokeswoman for the Justice Department, said, “While we understand the frustration of Arizonans with the broken immigration system, a patchwork of state and local policies would seriously disrupt federal immigration enforcement.”

Some critics said Judge Bolton had decided too quickly. Peter Schuck, a professor of immigration law at Yale, said Judge Bolton should have allowed the law to go into effect, which it was scheduled to do on Thursday, before issuing an order that curbed the power of a state legislature.

“She rushed to judgment in a way I can only assume reflects a lot of pressure from the federal government to get this case resolved quickly,” he said.

Now Judge Bolton’s ruling has shifted the political pressure back onto President Obama to show that he can effectively enforce the border, and to move forward with an overhaul of the immigration laws, so that states will not seek to step in as Arizona did.

 

 

 

 

 
Al Gore questioned over sexual assault allegations Print E-mail

 

Al Gore questioned over sexual assault allegations

Al Gore questioned over sexual assault allegations

Police question former vice-president over claims by masseuse.

 Read Article

 

 

 

 
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