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  • Politics in the Pub Education - the way forward

    Green Left Online - Monday 20th May, 2013

    The Rod Brooks Memorial Forum. Hosted by the Blue Mountains Unions Council. Speakers: Kenneth Davidson - Senior economic columnist, Melbourne Age Jude Pearce - Sydney university student Genevieve Kelly - NSW secretary, National Tertiary Education Union 2.30-4.30pm Saturday June 1 Blackburn's Family Hotel, 15 Parke St, ...

  • Editorial Obama’s weak record on freedom of the press

    The Seattle Times - Monday 20th May, 2013

    The Obama administration’s galling record on press freedom requires a reset of the balance between journalists and national security ...

  • Editorial Bellevue Council needs clarity on ethics rules

    The Seattle Times - Monday 20th May, 2013

    The Bellevue City Council has spent two years in search of a code of ethics policy. Public trust hinges on how soon the council acts on a proposed ethics ...

  • Editorial Return of anti-gay crime is disturbing

    am New York - Monday 20th May, 2013

    Photo credit: Makeshift memorial where Marc Carson was killed in an alleged hate crime Saturday/Sheila Anne Feeney In the heart of Greenwich Village, just a few blocks from the Stonewall Inn, where the gay rights revolution began, a gay man was killed in a disturbing bias crime last weekend -- one that's sending deep shudders through a community that has recently made tremendous strides ...

  • Editorial Gay marriage is a large liberal step

    The Independent - Monday 20th May, 2013

    For all our liberality, Britain still has a way to go. Last weekend - ironically, just one day after the International Day Against Homophobia - two gay men were attacked in a south London park. Then, yesterday, more than a handful of MPs lined up to resist government plans to allow same-sex couples to marry. The two are, of course, not linked; it would be fatuous - not to say, unfair - to ...

  • In praise of … the Tim takeoff | Editorial

    The Guardian - Monday 20th May, 2013

    never graced a Labour MP . But as the first astronaut who will spacewalk with bona fide British credentials, he can surely achieve a Tim take-off. Not every namesake will scale the same giddying popularity peaks, but for all a page will be turned - opening, what ...

  • Syria no place for back-seat drivers | Editorial

    The Guardian - Monday 20th May, 2013

    Iran and Hezbollah to relinquish their support for Bashar Assad, in favour of a transitional regime that would offer guarantees to the minority Alawite community, that has now been answered.Whatever happens in the town of Qusair, both Hezbollah and Iran are now signalling that Assad's fate has become a matter of existential survival for them, too. The regime's victory, or defeat, will ...

  • Conservative party a spiral of irrelevance | Editorial

    The Guardian - Monday 20th May, 2013

    What, and for whom, does today's - and tomorrow's - Conservative party stand? In various periods in the past, it has been possible to answer that question with some clarity. Before 1832, the party stood for the landed interest. After 1867, it added the flag, the union and the shopkeeper too. In the first half of the 20th century, the Tories were for empire and against socialism. After ...

  • Syria’s River of Death

    Human Rights Watch - Monday 20th May, 2013

    clashing along the frontline. Mohammed’s problem was that the frontline ran between the two places where he was buying and selling the clothes for his shop. So one morning in early March, Mohammed set out toward government-controlled territory, through checkpoints and the no-man’s land separating the two fighting forces, to buy merchandise. Many people cross the frontlines this way ...

  • More must be done to aid the victims of Indias violence

    Human Rights Watch - Monday 20th May, 2013

    It took two decades for justice to prevail after bomb attacks in Mumbai in March 1993, which injured hundreds and killed 257. Last month, India's Supreme Court ruled on the final appeals in a long trial process. But in another episode of brutality in Mumbai, the wait for justice will be much longer. The 1993 bombings were in retaliation for anti-Muslim riots in Mumbai a few months ...

  • Losing arguments on the Internet

    Star Tribune - Monday 20th May, 2013

    In Scottsdale, Ariz., there is a restaurant so far gone that even Gordon Ramsay’s shouting cannot save it. In fact, the owners of Amy’s Baking Company so terrified the man behind "Kitchen Nightmares" that he decided to quit working with them rather than endure them any longer. If you haven’t visited the nooks of the Internet where discussion of this has been bouncing ...

  • How Baghdad Fuels Iraqs Sectarian Fire

    Human Rights Watch - Monday 20th May, 2013

    The Iraqi government has hurled the country to the brink of a new civil war. In under a month, Baghdad launched a vicious assault on a Sunni protest camp, resulting in 44 deaths; executed 21 alleged Sunni terrorists in one day, and suspended the licenses of 10 satellite channels, 9 of them deemed pro-Sunni. Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki’s message to his country’s extremely ...

  • If all options are open why not prosecute Abu Qatada in the UK

    Human Rights Watch - Monday 20th May, 2013

    Listening to Theresa May’s statement to Parliament today, it seems the British government is leaving no stone unturned in its efforts to deport Abu Qatada to Jordan to face terrorism charges. A new treaty with Jordan aims to address the risk that Abu Qatada, who has already been convicted in his absence there, would be tried again using torture-tainted evidence. The main problem in Jordan, ...

  • Russia The Day the Inspectors Came

    Human Rights Watch - Monday 20th May, 2013

    This is how it is in today's Russia, one year since Vladimir Putin returned to the presidency. Over the last twelve months, the authorities have introduced a sweeping set of restrictive new laws. In addition to raids on nongovernmental groups, they are harassing, intimidating and imprisoning political activists. Government critics and even charities that can in no way be thought of as ...

  • The Dark Side of Irans Drug Policy

    Human Rights Watch - Monday 20th May, 2013

    How Iran Won the War on Drugs ," Amir Afkhami argues that the Iranian government has been successful in addressing the country’s drug problem by treating dependency and reducing the harm drugs cause, rather than by cracking down on supply. Afkhami further suggests that Iran is a model for the region, and that nearby countries such as Afghanistan have much to learn from its ...

  • Is American democracy in trouble

    Star Tribune - Monday 20th May, 2013

    We know American politics are dysfunctional. But after a week of scandal obsession during which the nation's capital and the media virtually ignored the problems most voters care about -- jobs, incomes, growth, opportunity, education -- it's worth asking if there is something especially flawed about our democracy. Our circumstances certainly have their own particular disabilities: a ...

  • Saving the White House from faux scandals

    Star Tribune - Monday 20th May, 2013

    Here’s the White House view of the current trilogy of so-called scandals: Republicans are trying to destroy President Barack Obama’s second term by magnifying bureaucratic miscues and distorting policy realities. This isn’t without some merit. On none of these issues - the deadly debacle at the U.S. diplomatic outpost in Libya, the Internal Revenue Service’s targeting of ...

  • The death of private education

    Deseret News - Monday 20th May, 2013

    Atalanic. Even if dying is a bit hyperbolic, ';At the very least, it's headed for dramatic shrinkage, save for a handful of places and circumstances, to be replaced by a very different set of institutional, governance, financing and education-delivery mechanisms.'; Finn breaks the truth about private schools with statisctics. ';Private K-12 enrollments are shrinking — ...

  • Top scandals and controversies of each US president

    Deseret News - Monday 20th May, 2013

    Three major scandals have surfaced over the past few weeks in Washington, escalating into a perfect storm that involves money, media and security. With the IRS targeting tea party tax-exempt groups, the Department of Justice seizing Associated Press records and the resurfacing of concerns about the handling of the attack on the American consulate in Benghazi, Libya, many are wondering what the ...

  • What can be called real progress

    Times of India - Monday 20th May, 2013

    All human progress is through the experience of these feelings. Wherever there is progress, one or more or all of the expressions of these feelings are present. In the realm of physical progress, we find only two of these experiences, and they are primarily physico-psychic. The experience of pleasure in the physical body means relaxation of nerves. Relaxed nerves emanate the peculiar mental ...

  • Mothers Day in Who knew being celebrated would be so much work

    Times of India - Monday 20th May, 2013

    God bless the soul who first realised the importance of mothers and went so far as dedicating an entire day to us moms. How would any mother like to spend Mother`s Day? Some may get taken in by those glittery ads and ask for that perfect bangle or necklace which, ...

  • Nawaz Sharif should not hold back on boosting India-Pakistan ties

    Times of India - Monday 20th May, 2013

    Ashfaq Parvez Kayani has urged the PM-designate to adopt a cautious approach towards ties with India. Sharif had buoyed expectations in both countries by pitching for strengthening the bilateral relationship, in the run-up to the elections. Having completed its first successful democratic transition from one civilian government to another, this is a watershed moment for Pakistan. However, ...

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