Tag Archives: north

Fantasia in Court: I Aborted Antwaun Cook’s Baby

Fantasia Barrino may possess an incredible voice, but she’s known more for her scandal-filled personal life than anything else these days. The latest bombshell to drop from this former American Idol champion arrives courtesy of her recent court testimony, as Fantastia was a witness in boyfriend Antwaun Cook’s divorce proceedings against ex-wife Paula yesterday. Under oath, Barrino reportedly stated she got pregnant by Cook and had an abortion. In August, Cook admitted he had been sleeping with the singer, but said Fantasia was unaware he was still married. That was the focus of a line of questioning in front of a Mecklenburg County Court judge yesterday, as Paula Cook’s attorney pressed Barrino on whether or not she knew her boyfriend was still living with his wife during their relationship. Because reporters were barred from the courtroom, it’s unknown exactly what exchange led to Fantasia’s admission, but multiple sources told Radar Online she confirmed the abortion and said it took place around the time of her summer suicide attempt . Antwaun and Paula are in court because they were unable to settle on terms of a divorce through private mediation. Meanwhile, it’s still conceivable that Paula could sue Fantasia over the unusual Alienation of Affection law, which North Carolina still has on the books and which states that an abandoned spouse can file lawsuit against the party responsible for the dissolution of a marriage.

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Fantasia in Court: I Aborted Antwaun Cook’s Baby

Ron Paul introduces legislation that would open TSA agents up to being prosecuted

Some outraged members of Congress aren’t settling for merely criticizing TSA’s new airport security measures. Yesterday, Texas Rep. Ron Paul introduced The American Traveler Dignity Act. Only one paragraph in length, the bill would remove TSA employees’ immunity from prosecution for implementing the new screening procedures, which offer passengers a choice between either a full-body X-ray scan or an invasive pat down. Paul explained the bill’s need in a speech on the House floor yesterday, saying, “If you can’t grope another person, if you can’t X-ray people and endanger them… if you cant take nude photos of individuals, why do we allow the government to do it?” Jeff Deist, chief of staff for the Texas congressman, told The Daily Caller that “we will start seeking cosponsors in earnest next week.” So far, just North Carolina Republican Rep. Walter Jones and Tennessee Republican Rep. John Duncan have joined Paul as co-sponsors. Duncan delivered a speech on the floor of the House about the new screening measures, stating, “a nationwide revolt is developing over the body scanners at the airports and it should.” A common focus of congressional criticism of the security measures is the role played by Michael Chertoff, Secretary of Homeland Security during the last Bush administration. Paul and Duncan, as well as others, have accused Chertoff of abusing his influence to secure sales for one of his clients. “This is much more about money than it is about security. The former Secretary of Homeland Security, Michael Chertoff, represents Rapid Scan, the company which is selling these scanners to his former department,” said Duncan Wednesday. Paul was equally critical, stating, “Here is a guy who was the head of the TSA selling the equipment, and the equipment is questionable, we don’t even know if it works and it may well be dangerous to our health.” http://news.yahoo.com/s/dailycaller/20101118/pl_dailycaller/fewcongressmenhaveso… added by: JohnA

My Chemical Romance’s Danger Days: A Cheat Sheet

Band went through a lot of changes while making the just-released album. By James Montgomery My Chemical Romance’s Gerard Way Photo: Warner Bros. My Chemical Romance’s Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys is, on the surface, yet another concept album from a band that seemingly makes nothing but concept albums. It’s a daring, DayGlo-addled story about a band of outlaws — that would be, of course, the titular Killjoys — battling an oppressive corporation in a postapocalyptic future world (or something like that). But if you dig a little deeper, past the costumes and car chases and down to the nuts and bolts of how it came to be, you quickly learn that Danger Days is a lot more than just a work of fiction. Its creation was, in all honesty, much stranger than anything frontman Gerard Way ever could have written. Because, in the near two years they spent making the album, MCR were pushed to the brink. They lost their drummer, very nearly imploded and contemplated walking away entirely. They recorded an entire album’s worth of material, the overwhelming amount of which they absolutely hated. Times were grim. Lesser bands would have quit. But My Chem refused to break. Instead, they reteamed with an old friend, powered through and somehow emerged a better, badder band. With Danger Days, My Chemical Romance defied the odds — and so, with the album finally hitting stores Monday (November 22), we’ve decided to take a look back at the (very) long and tenuous road that led to this point. Sometimes, truth really is stranger than fiction, and this album is the proof. In October 2008, MCR bassist Mikey Way tells MTV News that the band is taking “a long break” and that, aside from the version of Bob Dylan’s “Desolation Row” they recorded for Zack Snyder’s “Watchmen,” there were no plans to begin work on a new album. At the end of 2008, Gerard Way hints that recording sessions had begun in earnest and that the new My Chem album probably wouldn’t be a conceptual thing: “I think I had to get it out of my system, as far as writing concept records,” he says. In January, the video for “Desolation Row” premieres, showing a lean, mean, decidedly non-conceptual version of the band. In February, Gerard Way tells MTV News that the new album would more than likely be a bare-bones, proto-punk affair, promising “there’s a purity to it. There’s less happening.” After nearly six months out of the spotlight, MCR premiere a trio of new songs , including “Death Before Disco” at the Roxy in Hollywood. Way re-emerges at Comic-Con 2009, touting the skills of producer Brendan O’Brien and saying that the new album is shaping up to be “love letter to rock and roll.” At the end of the year, the band previews a handful of songs for SPIN magazine, and Way says the album “has these feelings of being like a 15-year-old kid at the Jersey Shore, trying to win a M

Watch Out: The World Bank Is Quietly Funding a Massive Corporate Water Grab

Even though water privatization has been a massive failure around the world, the World Bank just quietly gave $139 million to its latest corporate buddy. Billions have been spent allowing corporations to profit from public water sources even though water privatization has been an epic failure in Latin America, Southeast Asia, North America, Africa and everywhere else it's been tried. But don't tell that to controversial loan-sharks at the World Bank. Last month, its private-sector funding arm International Finance Corporation (IFC) quietly dropped a cool 100 million euros ($139 million US) on Veolia Voda, the Eastern European subsidiary of Veolia, the world's largest private water corporation. Its latest target? Privatization of Eastern Europe's water resources. “Veolia has made it clear that their business model is based on maximizing profits, not long-term investment,” Joby Gelbspan, senior program coordinator for private-sector watchdog Corporate Accountability International, told AlterNet. “Both the World Bank and the transnational water companies like Veolia have clearly acknowledged they don't want to invest in the infrastructure necessary to improve water access in Eastern Europe. That's why this 100 million euro investment in Veolia Voda by the World Bank's private investment arm over the summer is so alarming. It's further evidence that the World Bank remains committed to water privatization, despite all evidence that this approach will not solve the world's water crisis.” All the evidence Veolia needs that water grabs are doomed exercises can be found in its birthplace of France, more popularly known as the heartland of water privatization. In June, the municipal administration of Paris reclaimed the City of Light's water services from both of its homegrown multinationals Veolia and Suez, after a torrent of controversy. That's just one of 40 re-municipilazations in France alone, which can be added to those in Africa, Asia, Latin America, North America and more in hopes of painting a not-so-pretty picture: Water privatization is ultimately both a horrific concept and a failed project. “It's outrageous that the World Bank's IFC would continue to invest in corporate water privatizations when they are failing all over the world,” Maude Barlow, chairwoman of Food and Water Watch and the author of Blue Covenant: The Global Water Crisis and the Fight for the Right to Water, told AlterNet. “A similar IFC investment in the Philippines is an unmitigated disaster. Local communities and their governments around the world are canceling their contracts with companies like Veolia because of cost overruns, worker layoffs and substandard service.” The Philippines is an excellent example of water privatization's broken model. After passing the Water Crisis Act in 1995, the Philippines landed a $283 million privatization plan managed partially by multinational giants like Suez and Bechtel. After some success, everything fell apart after 2000, and it wasn't long before tariff prices repeatedly increased, water service and quality worsened, and public opposition skyrocketed. Today, some Filipinos still don't have water connections, tariffs have increased from 300 to 700 percent in some regions, and outbreaks of cholera and gastroenteritis have cost lives and sickened hundreds. “The World Bank has learned nothing from these disasters and continues to be blinded by an outdated ideology that only the unregulated market will solve the world's problems,” added Barlow. cont. added by: JanforGore

As cholera worsens, violence breaks out in Haiti

The death toll is quickly approaching 1,000 and health workers worry that its impact on earthquake-torn Port-au-Prince will be grave. The United Nations estimates that as many as 200,000 people could be sickened within six to 12 months. Anger over the cholera outbreak has led to violent demonstrations today as protesters set fire to a police station and clashed with U.N. forces in Cap-Haitien, a city on the north coast. One protester was killed. Many Haitians blame a Nepalese U.N. contingent for causing the outbreak when sewage from their camp leaked into the Artibonite. added by: btucker

Rare American Bird Gets Lost, Winds Up in England

Photos via The Mirror One tiny American bird has achieved celebrity status among birdwatchers after being spotted for the very first time — all the way in Europe. Hundreds of folks gathered on a remote field to catch a glimpse of the rare Yellow-bellied Flycatcher, native to the north-eastern US, which apparent got a bit turned-around dur… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Rare American Bird Gets Lost, Winds Up in England

CBS Begins Media’s Rehabilitation of ‘Fantastic’ Jimmy Carter, ‘Cursed’ Presidency Actually More Successful Than Reagan’s

CBS broke into summer re-runs of 60 Minutes to let Lesley Stahl promote Jimmy Carter’s new book, White House Diary , which he maintained delivers “absolute unadulterated frankness” and which she described as an “often harsh critique” of his presidential term. She, however, was far from harsh toward him. Noting an “image of ‘a failed President’ haunts the Carters,” Stahl trumpeted: “Carter argues that despite the image of failure, he actually had a long list of successes, starting with bringing all the hostages home alive,” as if that wasn’t because of Ronald Reagan’s inauguration. Stahl proceeded to tout as a success his installation of “solar panels on the roof of the White House.” Absolving Carter of responsibility, Stahl contended he “was cursed by a dismal economy, poor relations with Congress, and a nightmarish standoff over 52 Americans held hostage by Iran.” Yet, “when all is said and done, and many will be surprised to hear this,” Stahl insisted, “Jimmy Carter got more of his programs passed than Reagan and Nixon, Ford, Bush 1, Clinton or Bush 2.” She empathized with his treatment from an unappreciative public: “And yet, as I say, there’s the sense that you were a failed President.” (Obvious observation: Of all those administrations, only Carter had the luxury of his party in control of both the House and Senate during his entire tenure.) As the two strolled inside Atlanta’s Carter library, Stahl gushed about how a “lot of critics of yours, when you were President, say that you’ve been a fantastic ex-President. You hear that all the time,” leading to a post-presidential “life of good works and good reviews.” This may well have been a start to a media effort to rehabilitate the 85-year-old Carter. NBC is promoting an interview with Brian Williams, an intern in the Carter White House, on Monday’s NBC Nightly News. Williams, though, already got an early start, as detailed in a MRC BiasAlert from about a year ago: “ Williams Prompts Carter: What, In ‘Your Wiring,’ Has ‘Set You Apart’ from Other Presidents? ” Excerpts from Stahl’s story, the only fresh one, on the September 19 edition of 60 Minutes ( CBSNews.com online version with accompanying video of the entire 15-minute segment): LESLEY STAHL: …His tenure, which I covered as the CBS News White House correspondent, was tumultuous. The problems he confronted kept mounting and people wondered if he was cursed by a dismal economy, poor relations with Congress, and a nightmarish standoff over 52 Americans held hostage by Iran. After just one term he was trounced by Ronald Reagan… STAHL: Carter argues that despite the image of failure, he actually had a long list of successes, starting with bringing all the hostages home alive. He normalized relations with China, brokered a peace treaty between Israel and Egypt, deregulated railroads, trucking, airlines and telephones; and his energy conservation programs resulted in a 50 percent cut in imported oil, down to just 4.3 million barrels a day. CARTER: Unfortunately, now we’re probably importing 12 million barrels a day, since part of my energy policies were abandoned. STAHL: Well, and you built solar panels on the roof of the White House. CARTER: That’s right, which were ostentatiously removed as soon as Ronald Reagan became President He wanted to show that America was a great nation. So great that we didn’t have to limit the enjoyment of life. STAHL: And the public seemed to like that better than they liked your message, which was “we have to be limiting.” CARTER: That’s right, America responded to that quite well. STAHL: But when all is said and done, and many will be surprised to hear this: Jimmy Carter got more of his programs passed than Reagan and Nixon, Ford, Bush 1, Clinton or Bush 2. CARTER: I had the best batting average in the Congress in recent history of any President, except Lyndon Johnson. STAHL: And yet, as I say, there’s the sense that you were a failed President. CARTER: I think I was identified as a failed President because I wasn’t re-elected. STAHL: The lesson: getting a lot of legislation passed, even when it’s significant, is not enough. STAHL: A lot of critics of yours, when you were President, say that you’ve been a fantastic ex-President. You hear that all the time. CARTER: I don’t mind that. STAHL: You like that? CARTER: I don’t mind, yes. STAHL: President and Mrs. Carter devote their lives to fighting disease in poor countries and resolving conflicts, as when he recently obtained the release of an American held in North Korea. It’s been a life of good works and good reviews. In 2002 he won the Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts at global diplomacy. But he was called “undiplomatic” when he broke the code that ex-Presidents don’t criticize their successors. STAHL: About Reagan, you said: “If I had been President for four more years, we wouldn’t have had a resurgence of racism and selfishness.” Now that’s pretty pointed. That’s an ouch. CARTER: Yeah, I don’t remember when I said that but I can’t deny that I felt that way. STAHL: But are you suggesting that he stoked racism? CARTER: No, I’m not. STAHL: But that’s what that kind of suggests. CARTER: But there may have been times when I was too outspoken in criticizing an incumbent President. I can’t deny that. …

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CBS Begins Media’s Rehabilitation of ‘Fantastic’ Jimmy Carter, ‘Cursed’ Presidency Actually More Successful Than Reagan’s

UK Press Finds Possible ‘Muslim,’ ‘Islamic’ Plot to Kill Pope; AP Finds ‘Street Cleaners’

Check out the following headlines in the British press about the arrest of six men who may have been planning to kill the Pope during his visit to England: “Muslim Plot to Kill Pope” (Daily Express) “Pope visit: Five suspected Islamist terrorists arrested over assassination plot” (Telegraph) “Police question six street cleaners held over plot to attack the Pope” (Daily Mail) (2nd paragraph: “Armed officers detained the men, all believed to be Muslims of North African origin, as they prepared to go on shift at a cleaning depot in Central London.”) Yet in neither of two separate articles by the Associated Press ( Nicole Winfield and David Stringer/Victor L. Simpson ) do the writers mention a possible extremist Muslim/Islamic connection. The writers simply identified the suspects as “London street cleaners.” Why is the mention of at least a possible Muslim connection warranted? Because if these men are indeed Muslims who had a lethal plan, it would not mark the first time that Islamic extremists have sought to kill the Pope. Only by sheer luck did Philippine police thwart a terrorist plot to kill Pope John Paul II during a visit to Manila in 1995 . If Ramzi Yousef did not accidently set some explosives on fire in a Manila apartment, the deadly plan, which was less than a week away , likely would have gone forward undiscovered. In addition, the Daily Express reported that the “alleged plot is believed to be the second planned assassination on the Pope recently . In April, Moroccan students Mohamed Hlal, 26, and Ahmed Errahmouni, 22, were deported from Italy, strengthening fears that Al Qaeda were seeking recruits there.” (This also refutes Stringer’s and Simpson’s claim in their article that “there have been no known plots against Benedict in his five-year papacy.”) Like other media outlets, the AP has downplayed the seriousness of the plot. However, the Daily Express quoted a Vatican source , “Publicly the incident is being played down but privately the arrests verge towards the serious side and came as a result of intelligence work .” The two articles by the AP follow dreadful coverage by the AP’s Nicole Winfield earlier this week. In an error-ridden and slanted piece on Monday (9/13/10), she falsely claimed that Pope Benedict XVI had “broken his own rule” in his plans to beatify 19th century Anglican convert John Henry Newman. (Read more about that here .) — Dave Pierre is the author of the heralded new book, Double Standard: Abuse Scandals and the Attack on the Catholic Church .

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UK Press Finds Possible ‘Muslim,’ ‘Islamic’ Plot to Kill Pope; AP Finds ‘Street Cleaners’

Earthquake in Delhi 2010

Tremors from the quake were felt as far away as New Delhi, more than 1,000 kilometres (620 miles) to the southeast, an AFP correspondent in the Indian capital said. The International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), which has almost 150,000 foreign troops fighting an insurgency in Afghanistan, said it had received no immediate reports of any damage in the north of the country. A strong 6.3-magnitude earthquake on Friday struck the Hindu Kush region of northeastern Afghanistan, causing buildin

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Earthquake in Delhi 2010

BP Slammed for Safety Failings in North Sea, Months Before Deepwater Horizon Explosion

A BP rig in the North Sea. Photo via BP Could we see deja vu all over again? This little bit of news emerged yesterday, though it was received with very little fanfare (could be that the ever-vigilant media is turning it’s focus away from the BP narrative, now that the most dramatic stuff is over? Nah …) — that just months before the explosion in the Gulf , BP was cited for failing to complete safety training and emergency exercises for i… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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BP Slammed for Safety Failings in North Sea, Months Before Deepwater Horizon Explosion