Thursday, December 29, 2011

Wendy's reenters Japan with $16 foie-gras-and-truffle burger

Wendy's is making a high-end reentry into Japan with a $16 burger festooned with foie gras and truffles
Wendy's is making a high-end reentry into Japan with a $16 burger festooned with foie gras and truffles.

The third-largest fast-food chain in the U.S. (potentially soon to supplant Burger King for the No. 2 spot) took a breather from Japan for two years but returned this week to launch a restaurant in a luxury shopping area in Tokyo.

That franchisee developed the luxurious 1,280-yen (about $16.45) sandwich -? the folks at Wendy's corporate offices said they "really don?t have anything to do with it." The goose liver confection won't show up in the U.S. anytime soon -? Wendy's said its most expensive item here is likely a salad or a triple cheeseburger, in the $5-to-$6 range.

Besides, customers in California already have their pick of foie gras sandwiches -- at least before the delicacy is outlawed in the state next year. There's one sandwich for $16 at the Torrance restaurant Buffalo Fire Department, and another -- for $26 -- at RH in West Hollywood.

Wendy's Chief Executive Emil Brolick has said the company will aim to eventually triple its number of foreign restaurants to about 1,000 eateries. Other fast-food giants, including KFC owner Yum Brands, are also looking overseas for growth opportunities.

That's because chains are better able to experiment internationally, according to Nick Setyan, a restaurant industry analyst at Wedbush Securities Inc.

Fast-food chains that are associated with a "get-in, get-out" vibe in the U.S. are considered more high-end and even elite abroad, Setyan said. In many other countries, Pizza Hut is a sit-down casual dining concept and McDonald's is an event destination, he said.

Chains can work their creative magic trying to adapt to cultural preferences among foreign customers, Setyan said. Hence McDonald's Chicken Maharaja Mac in India,? where many residents don't eat beef for religious reasons. KFC sells congee rice porridge in China. Burger King?s recent Russian ads are much more flamboyant than the ingredient-focused equivalents in the U.S.

Fast-food chains are increasingly feeling pressure domestically, especially as a slew of "better burger" fast-casual brands, such as Five Guys and Smashburger, poach customers.

RELATED:

McDonald's gets a French makeover

Fast-casual restaurants gobble up market share

Russian Burger King ad with tattoos, unicorns goes viral

-- Tiffany Hsu

Photo: The Foie Gras Rossini from the Japan Premium series. Credit: Wendy's Japan via Bloomberg

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/LaLand/~3/tikSeZWkA1M/wendys-japan-foie-gras-truffle-burger.html

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The Nerdiest Thing I've Ever Wanted [Daily Desired]

Wi-Fi sucks. Well, it sucks if your router is lurking in a subterranean realm of your apartment and your gaming rig is located aboveground with an iron staircase in between the two and you don't want to run 100 meters of cable or wire the apartment with ethernet because you don't own the building. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/TLdoG4Jg4Pw/the-nerdiest-thing-ive-ever-wanted

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

NKorea calls heir Kim head of powerful committee (AP)

PYONGYANG, North Korea ? North Korea's state media on Monday called Kim Jong Il's heir the head of the ruling Workers' Party Central Committee, which would give Kim Jong Un power over one of the country's highest decision-making bodies more than a week after his father's death.

The reference in a commentary by the North's main Rodong Sinmun newspaper came as two groups of prominent South Koreans with ties to Pyongyang traveled to North Korea to pay respects to Kim Jong Il, who is being mourned by millions in his homeland.

North Korean soldiers, Rodong Sinmun said, are upholding a slogan urging them to dedicate their lives to protect the committee headed by Kim Jong Un. The slogan means that Kim will likely be appointed as the party's general secretary, one of the country's highest positions.

North Korea is in official mourning for Kim until after a memorial Thursday. But the country is also offering hints about Kim Jong Un's rise as ruler. North Korea began hailing him as "supreme leader" of the 1.2-million strong military over the weekend.

Kim Jong Un, who is in his late 20s and was unveiled in September 2010 as his father's choice as successor, will be the third-generation Kim to rule the communist nation of 24 million.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/nkorea/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111226/ap_on_re_as/as_kim_jong_il

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Harrison Ford & Family: Post-Christmas Jet Setters

Harrison Ford & Family: Post-Christmas Jet Setters

Harrison Ford, Calista Flockhart and almost 11-year-old Liam were seen getting ready to fly out of Santa Monica, Calif. on Monday (December 26). All three wore caps and carried their bags on board.

It's nice to have the luxury of using your own personal jet!

At 69, Ford is still ticking in the movie business. He just signed on with Abigail Breslin to star in Ender's Game. In an interview last year he talked about being satisfied with the final product and commercial success of a movie he's been in.

He said, "It doesn?t matter as much, maybe, but it always matters. It?s an effort at communication, and if you don?t communicate, then that?s not the best result of your efforts. And I always feel responsible for taking the money."

Photos: Flynet


Source: http://celebritybabyscoop.com/%20%202011/12/27/Harrison_Ford

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Gavin Shulman: Searching for Approval

According to Gallup's most recent poll, Congress's current approval rating of 11 percent is the lowest in the history of Gallup measuring the current approval rating of Congress. And while it could be a ton of fun to mock our chosen leaders and their never ending game of gridlock, I think this begs, on both its knees, another question. What does that say about us as an electorate? What is our approval rating? What is your approval rating?

We are a vicious cycle. We are a rut. We, the people, are an eternal stalemate. We love confrontation and hate cooperation. Can't we all just get along? Where would the fun be in that? Why would we watch? Why would we care? We'd much rather argue, and disagree, and scream at each other. It's what makes this country great. Compromise is for wussies. We inherited a two party system, and were going to stick with it, as long as we never find out which side is right.

You. You voted for Obama. You put his sticker on your car. You celebrated his victory with a tall cocktail and a pat on the back. You were pumped. But then you got bored. Because you found out that politics is a bitch. That change maybe is a gonna come, but definitely it a gonna come slowly. That because you believed in one politician doesn't mean a bunch of the rest of them aren't crummy. That Obama didn't have a big, black magic stick after all. And so you got pissed. And you so were over it. And after two years you just couldn't be bothered. What's your approval rating?

And you. You tea drinking morons. You got all riled up when a guy named Obama became president. You were horrified. You shit in your separate, loveless beds. So you made signs. And wore funny hats. And went screaming into your church basements. You scared the hell out of everyone and rammed through the biggest bunch of crazies ever to sit in Congress. And now you don't even recognize yourself. Or them. What's your approval rating?

Or even you. Marching in the street. Fighting the good fight. Tarping against TARP. You crazy bastards. Getting pepper-sprayed for dinner. Dancing and chanting at the top of your lungs. Frightening off everyone who hears what you're saying. Horrifying everyone who wants to be on your side. You won't even pick a fight. Sure, it's great to be pissed off for pissed offs sake, but it's probably not going to get many results. So, what's your approval rating?

And finally you. Moderates. What the hell happened to you? Where'd you go in all of this? What are you, afraid to be reasonable? The middle of the road has never been so narrow. Everyone's loveable politically incorrect uncle is now just politically incorrect. From watching too much news. No one wants their politics in moderation. They want it full-on, fast and furious, loud and obnoxious, righteous and so effing wrong. So, how do you approve of something that doesn't exist?

You elected this congress, not them. So, if you're seeking approval, start by looking in the mirror, and deciding if you like what you see. Start by asking yourself if the other side were successful, and America were doing great, would you be satisfied, or furious? If America were on the right path, under control of the wrong party, would you be supportive, or would you put up a road block? If we ever chose a side, would we let them do what they said they were going to do, or would we freak out and immediately stop them in their tracks?

Maybe that's our dirty little secret. That when it comes right down to it we're scared to make up our minds. Me and you. We'd rather argue, and complain, and debate in the comments section, than find out. We're petrified to learn the results. Maybe that's why Congress is such a mess. Maybe it's our fear of disapproval.

?

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/gavin-shulman/congress-approval_b_1165948.html

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Obama marks Christmas with gifts, carols, church (AP)

HONOLULU ? President Barack Obama exchanged gifts with his family, sang carols and attended church services as he celebrated Christmas in Hawaii.

The president and his family woke up early Sunday to exchange gifts, the White House said, then had breakfast and sang Christmas carols at the multimillion-dollar house they rent in Kailua Beach, near Honolulu.

Later in the morning, the Obamas made the short trip to the chapel at Marine Corps Base Hawaii for Christmas church services. The president dressed casually in dark khaki pants and a short-sleeve blue shirt, and his wife and daughters donned sundresses for Christmas services on a bright and breezy day on the island of Oahu.

The White House said the president and Michelle Obama would return to the base later in the day to visit with service members and their families, as they have done in past years. Many of the Marines stationed at the base have deployed to Afghanistan, as well as Iraq, where the last American troops were withdrawn earlier this month.

The president also called 10 service members stationed around the world ? two from each branch of the military ? on Christmas Eve. The White House said he thanked them for their service and the sacrifice of being away from their families at the holidays.

The Obamas planned to wrap up their Christmas festivities with dinner at the rental home with friends and family. Among those joining the first family in Hawaii are the president's sister, Maya Soetoro-Ng, who lives on Oahu, and several friends Obama has known since high school.

The president has kept a low profile since arriving in Hawaii on Friday evening to start a vacation delayed by the stalemate in Washington over extending payroll tax cuts. He has no public events planned, and his only outings are expected to be to the golf course or to take his daughters for shave ice, a Hawaiian snow cone.

The Obamas are expected to return to Washington shortly after New Year's Day.

___

Associated Press writer Jaymes Song in Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/religion/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111225/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_obama

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Gifts for Mafia ... adjustments on tee shots ... a little history ... Christmas golf

MICK BROWN

A Mafia Christmas

Besides their usual lumps of coal, you might imagine what ol? St. Mick might have left under the tree for Tony Frost and his Salter Path Mafia gang:

(1) Floating golf balls, (2) A handheld score computer with two trillion megabytes memory, (3) A GPS, not for distance to flagstick info ? rather for finding their way back to the golf course after looking for their tee shots, (4) a larger whiskey flask, (5) a larger golf bag to hold the larger whiskey flask, (6) A driver with an 800cc head?? 460cc is maximum size by the rules, but they don?t follow the rules anyway, (7) a ball retriever with a claw that can also retrieve thrown clubs from the water, (8) a helmet for protection from Tony Frost?s tee shots, (9) a ?GET OUT OF JAIL FREE? card from Myrtle Beach Chamber of Commerce, (10) a golf course beverage cart pager, (11) a gift certificate for one free pickup from Designated Driver Cab Co., (13) a gift certificate for a foursome with carts at The Links at Plantation Harbor, which closed months ago, (14) passes to the Myrtle Beach Water Park and their Banzai Cold Water Enema Slide for Life, (15) Loon jerky energy bars, (16) a series of golf lessons from Angelo Spagnolo, winner of Golf Digest?s World?s Worst Avid Golfer contest.

-----------------

Adjustment for????????????? longer tee shots

Who couldn?t use a few more yards off the tee? There are several ways to increase distance.

One way, of course, is to increase clubhead speed. Lee Trevino tried to increase his club speed a few years ago, and after 12 months of hard work, he gained only two miles per hour. Let?s look at a faster and more efficient way to gain some yardage.

What we?d really like to do is to not only increase carry of the ball but also roll. If we can optimize ball flight to achieve both maximum carry and roll, we?ll find the golf course playing shorter and saying ?You?re away? to our opponents much more often.

One good way to optimize carry and roll is to swing the driver clubhead more up and to the right than you would with an iron. This will shallow the angle the clubhead approaches the ball and will produce a higher launch angle with maximum carry. Because of the shallow angle of attack, less backspin will be produced so that, after a long carry, the ball will also bound down the fairway upon landing.

Contrast this approach with what you would do with an iron. With an iron, you are thinking ?down and through.? The clubhead approaches the ball on a relatively steep angle. The ball starts out low, climbs steeply because of the backspin on the ball. This backspin was produced by the clubhead vector going down while the clubface loft vector is looking up. The ball settles down with little or no roll, and in some cases, may even back up.

So with a driver, tee the ball fairly high and up off the front heel. Have the image of hitting the ball high and right. If you can do that, the clubhead will impact the ball on a shallow angle and from the inside. You?ll like what you see and you?ll be finding your ball further down the fairway.

-----------------

This week in golf history

When the PGA Tour season ended this week in 1963, Arnold Palmer was atop the money list with $128,230.

It was the first time in PGA history that anyone had won over $100,000 in a single season. A mere 10 years earlier, Lew Worsham was at the top of the money list with $34,002. Twenty-five years later, Curtis Strange would become the first to top $1 million in a year.

Incidentally, 1963 was the fourth time that Arnie led the money list. It was also the last time he would finish on top.

-----------------

Christmas Day golf

Four old friends were playing their weekly game of golf. One remarked how nice it would be to wake up on Christmas morning, roll out of bed, and without an argument go directly to the golf course and play a round.

They all agreed that it was a great idea and would make it a priority to figure out a way make it happen. Christmas morning arrives, and all four make it to the golf course.

The first player says, ?Wow, this game cost me a fortune! You should see the diamond ring I had to buy my wife!?

The second guy replies, ?I spent a ton of money too. My wife is home planning the cruise I gave her.?

The third guy says, ?Well, my wife is home reading the owner?s manual of the new car I bought her.?

They all turn to the last one of the group who is staring at them like they had lost their minds.

?I can?t believe you all went to such expense for this golf game,? he said. ?I slapped my wife on the backside and said: ?Well, baby, Merry Christmas! We can play around here, or had you rather I go to the golf course and play a round??

?All she said was, ?You?ll need a sweater.? ?

-----------------

Merry Christmas to everyone, and I hope you fared better than the Salter Path Mafia.

?

(Editor?s note: Mick Brown writes a regular golf column for The News-Times. Brown is a PGA of America teaching pro at the Golfin? Dolphin practice facility in Cape Carteret. He is also the head pro and director of golf at the Star Hill Golf Club in Cape Carteret.)

Source: http://www.tidelandnews.com/articles/2011/12/25/news-times/sports/doc4ef4fc0d3296d639897392.txt

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How to Set Up All Your Kickass New Gear [How To]

Someone out there must think you're pretty special if you got such great gadgety goodness for Christmas. Now all you have to do get it up and running. Don't worry: we've got you covered.
More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/E1BY2NcFs-4/how-to-set-up-all-your-kickass-new-gear

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Friday, December 23, 2011

Cooking Kate Middleton and Prince William Win Hearts at London Homeless Shelter [PHOTOS]

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, William and Kate, had a ball as they danced and cooked the day away in a visit to a homeless centre for young people in south London.

The couple visited Centrepoint's Camberwell Foyer, south London, where William is a patron of the charity.

William and Kate took part in a "healthy living cooking session", and were shown how the charity helps young people out of ruts of unemployment and homelessness.?

Britain's future king also showed off his moves as he danced with other attendees at a reception for him and his wife.

A trainee nurse even told the Daily Mirror that William had spoken about his future heirs.

"He joked he was going to make his kids come to my nursery and I can discipline them," she said.

William took over the patronage from his mother, Princess Diana, who supported the charity until her untimely death in 1997.

Source: http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/271366/20111222/cooking-kate-middleton-prince-william-win-hearts.htm

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Janet Carlson: Buying Gifts For Your Ex: Is That The Spirit?

Last year during the holiday shopping madness I always fail to avoid, I found myself at Chef Central with my daughters, whipping out my charge card to pay for $150 worth of gifts they'd selected for their father, his longtime girlfriend, and her two children. A wine carafe, some stemware, cookie-cutters, a root-beer float maker, a few of those "reindeer poop" candy packages. It added up.

"Ouch," crossed my mind as I signed for the charge. How insane is this? I asked myself, thinking about the child-support my ex and I had negotiated a few years earlier (not without some argument) and about the extra expenses -- medical and educational -- that I keep close track of to make sure he pays his share. We get along fine now, but we do have residual issues surrounding finances, to put it politely. If he buys clothes for our girls on "his" weekend, I'd subtract my share from what he owed me for camp payments, etc. And now, what do I do with this expense? What category in my psyche do I file this under? Am I nuts? I even went on to finish that thought, I'm ashamed to admit: ...nuts to spend my hard-earned money on my ex and the woman he replaced me with? And her children? This at a time when I'm working hard as heck to try to keep a roof over the heads of my own children?

The thing is, I knew it wouldn't occur to my ex to plan ahead and take our daughters shopping for a gift for me; so even-steven was not going to be at play here. I felt myself sinking into a moment of awful pettiness. I imagined my girlfriends chastising me for spending on gifts for my ex and his new family while I'm a single working mother who'd suddenly found herself unemployed six months earlier.

Of course, I didn't express any of this or even allow any ungenerous feelings to show on my face at the register with our children. It's important to me that they learn that giving is -- maybe not better than receiving, come on -- but at least a rewarding experience they ought to have, especially this time of year, to balance all the "I want this; I want that" our society encourages. I found myself shrugging inwardly -- her kids are nice. I like them.

I enjoyed watching the girls wrap these gifts later at home and head out to their Hanukkah celebration with what I refer to as my new extended family. We are one big, happy, divided family after all. And we get along; she and I in particular. We sometimes sit and share a cup of tea or a glass of wine and catch up on new books or movies while kids are being dropped off or picked up. She's given me birthday gifts, and I her. If this were forced, or faux friendliness then I could maybe justify my petty feelings about springing for the holiday gifts. Maybe.

But this amicability is real to me -- to us -- and it benefits the children. So I corrected my course and didn't indulge further in that knee-jerk pettiness that tried to creep in last year and spoil my Christmas spirit. Last week, I took my younger daughter shopping and told her we're on a tighter budget, like everyone else in the country, but -- hey, look, would your dad like this sweater? I think it's his size.... No, Mom; that's dumb. Let's keep looking.

?

Follow Janet Carlson on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JanetRCarlson

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/janet-carlson/buying-gifts-for-your-ex-_b_1153691.html

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Thursday's 'critical' Iowa debate: 4 predictions (The Week)

New York ? The GOP gang is getting together Thursday night for one last hurrah in 2011 ? the final chance to make their pitch before the voting starts

Thursday night's Republican presidential debate in Sioux City, Iowa, "will be the final episode in one of the most popular reality television series of 2011," say Peter Hamby and Paul Steinhauser in CNN, and "the stakes could not be higher for all involved." After this face-off between the remaining seven GOP presidential contenders, most voters will tune out until Jan. 3, when the Iowa caucuses launch the actual vote-counting phase of what's already been a long and grueling campaign. What can we expect from this "critical" Fox News/Iowa GOP debate?

1. This will be the last debate for some of the candidates
"If first impressions matter in politics ? and they do ? so too does the last thing voters see before casting a vote," GOP strategist Doug Heye tells CNN. At least half of Iowa caucus-goers are still undecided, giving everyone a strong incentive to shine. That's especially critical for the low-polling candidates ? Michele Bachmann, Rick Santorum, and to a lesser extent Rick Perry ? who have staked their campaigns on a strong finish in Iowa. When the next debate rolls around Jan. 7, "the GOP field will undoubtedly be smaller," says Catalina Camia in USA Today. This debate will help determine "who stays and who goes."

SEE MORE: The 'cheapest' primary in a decade: 5 theories

?

2. Romney will try to knock Gingrich out
"Expect Mitt Romney, in his elegant way, to slice Newt Gingrich to pieces," Republican strategist Alex Castellanos tells CNN. Romney doesn't have to win Iowa, but if he can keep Gingrich from coming out on top, "his last serious opponent will be dead and stored in a freezer." As the acknowledged and self-proclaimed frontrunner, Gingrich "has the most at stake when the bantering begins tonight," says Bret Hayworth in the Sioux City Journal, but "Romney has the most to gain."

3. Everyone else will be gunning for Gingrich, too
"Frankly, Romney would be more than happy to see Reps. Ron Paul (Texas) or Bachmann (Minn.) have a good night," says Jennifer Rubin in The Washington Post. Paul especially, since he has a real shot at winning Iowa, and Romney wants him to. But "the more votes Gingrich loses, the better for everyone else," so with all his rivals "trying to provoke and skewer him," Gingrich had better turn in "a steady and uneventful performance." He "can't afford to lose his cool," agrees CNN's Castellanos. "If Newt does his 'angry badger' impression, he will be finished."

SEE MORE: Saturday's GOP 'alpha dog' debate: 4 key questions

?

4. Someone will have an "oops" moment
"Expect to see at least one candidate make a significant mistake," says the Sioux City Journal's Hayworth, something like Romney's $10,000 bet or Perry's brain freeze. "But don't expect to learn much more about where the candidates stand on the issues." The format of the debate is definitely skewed toward forcing "an oops moment," says Iowa State political science professor Steffen Schmidt. "That's been the biggest news from almost all these debates ? who is gonna slip on the banana peel." Everyone will be waiting for, or trying to cause, those pratfalls.

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politicsopinion/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/theweek/20111215/cm_theweek/222514

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Friday, December 16, 2011

House passes bill to keep welfare program going (AP)

WASHINGTON ? The nation's main welfare program would be funded for the next nine months under a bill passed Thursday by the House, which also banned recipients from accessing their benefits in strip clubs, liquor stores and casinos.

A voice vote by the House approved the measure. The welfare provision is included in legislation to extend a payroll tax cut, but the separate bill was passed in case it's eliminated from the tax bill. Without the legislation, the welfare program would halt at midnight Dec. 31.

Similar legislation has been introduced in the Senate.

The chief House sponsor, Republican Rep. Erik Paulsen of Minnesota, said that welfare caseloads have fallen by 56 percent since welfare reform was enacted in 1996. The figures go through June.

Paulsen said the restrictions applying to casinos, strip clubs and liquor stores were prompted by several news stories on misuse of welfare money. He said some states already have closed what is called the "strip club loophole," but the bill insists that all states take steps to end this access.

Rep. Gwen Moore, D-Wis., said she opposed the provision. "Authors of this bill have brought it up so that they could just have another kick at poor people," Moore said. "The bill sort of suggests that people who are poor are of very low moral character and they can't be trusted."

Many states issue welfare recipients an Electronic Benefits Transfer card, or EBT, with cash benefits. The systems have simplified the distribution of financial assistance, but they also provide a way of tracking where the benefits are withdrawn.

Paulsen said the welfare program that now exists "is designed to promote and support work. Unfortunately, it is one of the only anti-poverty programs that actually does so, focusing on helping people move from government checks to paychecks."

The latest census data shows a record number of Americans ? nearly 1 in 2 ? have fallen into poverty or are scraping by on earnings that classify them as low income.

Many formerly middle-class Americans are dropping below the low-income threshold ? roughly $45,000 for a family of four ? because of pay cuts, a forced reduction of work hours or a spouse losing a job.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/uscongress/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111215/ap_on_go_co/us_welfare_bill

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Calif. Takes Big Step Toward Greenhouse Gas Limits

A new law in California, which goes into effect in January 2013, will put a cap on the amount of greenhouse gases coming from vehicles and industry. Above, the Alamitos natural gas-fired power station in Long Beach, Calif. David McNew/Getty Images

A new law in California, which goes into effect in January 2013, will put a cap on the amount of greenhouse gases coming from vehicles and industry. Above, the Alamitos natural gas-fired power station in Long Beach, Calif.

First of a two-part series on California's climate policies

California is about to try a radical experiment. A little over a year from now, the state will limit the greenhouse gas emissions from factories and power plants, and, eventually, emissions from vehicles.

The U.S. Congress tried to pass a similar plan for the whole country but dropped the idea last year.

Paying a price for emissions has many Californians worried about what they'll have to pay for electricity and fuel and everything that takes energy to make. But the state's argument is that this will be good for the economy.

The law, actually a suite of measures generally lumped under the name AB 32, is a risky step at a time when the state's economy is shaky. Essentially, the law puts a statewide cap on the amount of greenhouse gases coming out of smokestacks and tailpipes.

At a hearing recently in Sacramento, skeptics gave state regulators an earful. Among them was single mother Kathy West.

"I'm a maintenance mechanic at the ConocoPhillips refinery," she told the California Air Resources Board, which administers AB 32. "At our Santa Maria refinery, we just hired 12 operators and two mechanics. What's going to happen to their future, their families? What about your jobs when you get rid of the refining out of California?"

There's no doubt the new laws will make electricity and gas prices rise, but just how much is a matter of much debate ? some say thousands of dollars a year for businesses.

The state says costs pale in light of new business the law will create.

Matt Horton is CEO of Propel Fuels, a company that installs equipment and pumps to handle biofuels. Horton says California is a great market because consumers are interested in renewable fuels. Enlarge Christopher Joyce/NPR

Matt Horton is CEO of Propel Fuels, a company that installs equipment and pumps to handle biofuels. Horton says California is a great market because consumers are interested in renewable fuels.

Christopher Joyce/NPR

Matt Horton is CEO of Propel Fuels, a company that installs equipment and pumps to handle biofuels. Horton says California is a great market because consumers are interested in renewable fuels.

Mary Nichols, who runs the Air Resources Board, says capping emissions forces companies to adapt. "Putting that cap on top of that whole system would be the best way to unleash the power of private capital to really get the most out of not just research and development, but actual deployment of green technologies," she says.

One businessman who believes that is Matt Horton, CEO of Propel Fuels. The company installs seals, gaskets, hoses, underground tanks and pumps that can handle new biofuels that are required by the emissions laws. At a gas station near San Francisco, he chats with customers pumping biodiesel into their cars and talks about why he's bullish on green fuels.

"We did start out in Seattle as a company, [then] we moved down here to California because it's a great market, a lot more consumers that are interested in renewable fuels," he explains. Horton says the climate laws create business. "We would not be here in the state if it were not for the favorable policies that the state enacted."

Propel will open its 27th station this year. Most are in California. Customers like Shawn Leong say, "Bring it on." Leong owns a 1984 Mercedes that can run on straight biodiesel, like the recycled vegetable oil pumped at this station.

"It's my lifestyle," Leong says. "I choose. I own a florist and, you know, we don't create pollution, we try not to. My home has solar panels on it." In fact, Leong is disappointed that the station here only pumps fuel with 5 percent biodiesel ? he prefers the pure stuff.

Some drivers are looking beyond the environmental benefits. Student Andre Savastru has modified his car to run on 85 percent ethanol, which is also sold at this station. "You get a great deal of difference in performance," he says. "Personally, I've got about 40 to 50 horsepower more" from using ethanol.

Putting A Price On Emissions

The biggest reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, however, will have to come from refineries and power plants. Each company will get allowances to emit a certain amount. If they can't live within the cap, they can pay someone else to reduce gases somewhere else.

A worker at Jaco Environmental saws into an old refrigerator to remove the insulating foam in the fridge's walls. The 10 pounds of foam contains about 1 pound of CFC 11 gas, a very powerful greenhouse gas. Jaco sends the foam and other CFCs in the fridge's compressor to be destroyed. Enlarge Christopher Joyce/NPR

A worker at Jaco Environmental saws into an old refrigerator to remove the insulating foam in the fridge's walls. The 10 pounds of foam contains about 1 pound of CFC 11 gas, a very powerful greenhouse gas. Jaco sends the foam and other CFCs in the fridge's compressor to be destroyed.

Christopher Joyce/NPR

A worker at Jaco Environmental saws into an old refrigerator to remove the insulating foam in the fridge's walls. The 10 pounds of foam contains about 1 pound of CFC 11 gas, a very powerful greenhouse gas. Jaco sends the foam and other CFCs in the fridge's compressor to be destroyed.

And that means business for a company called Jaco Environmental. In a warehouse in the San Francisco Bay Area, hundreds of cast-off refrigerators are scattered across the floor. Michael Dunham cuts into one with a power saw. He calls it "filleting" the fridge, and he clearly enjoys hacking it up, first with the saw, then with a shovel.

The local electric utility pays people $35 each for these old, inefficient appliances ? they're a drain on the electricity grid. Then they're brought here, to refrigerator purgatory, where Jaco takes over.

Cutting up old refrigerators sometimes offers surprises: "The most interesting thing we ever found was a rattlesnake," Dunham says. Dunham is head of energy and environmental programs at Jaco. He and his crew are after the 10 pounds of foam that's inside the walls of a typical fridge.

"Embedded in that 10 pounds of foam is 1 pound of CFC 11 gas," he explains. CFC 11 is a chlorofluorocarbon, a form of Freon and a very powerful greenhouse gas ? the kind that warms the planet. There are other CFCs in the fridge's compressor as well: "It will all go up into the atmosphere if it's not taken care of," says Dunham. "So what we do is we capture it."

Jaco removes the foam and other CFCs in the refrigerator's compressor and sends it out to be destroyed. California's climate law sets up a system to verify that the CFCs are destroyed, and each pound that's eliminated creates a "credit."

A company called EOS Climate buys those credits and then sells them to California companies that need to reduce their carbon footprint.

Jeff Cohen, vice president of EOS, says CFCs are a climate time bomb buried inside old refrigerators.

"So what we did was create a financial incentive to pull this stuff out, to address the remaining banks of CFC, not only in the U.S. but around the world," Cohen explains.

Before he helped start EOS, Cohen worked at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to help draft the international treaty that banned CFCs because they create holes in the atmosphere's ozone layer. He says the California emissions controls are a way to get rid of the "legacy" chemicals that remained in appliances after the worldwide ban on CFCs.

What the California laws do is put a price on all these greenhouse gases: They will become a commodity, and people will pay to emit them but also make money by getting rid of them. The controls are scheduled to go into effect Jan. 1, 2013.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2011/12/06/142942778/calif-takes-big-step-toward-greenhouse-gas-limits?ft=1&f=1007

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

PFT: Passengers says Suh lied about Portland crash

Bears v DolphinsGetty Images

Former Raiders and Buccaneers coach Jon Gruden has been the subject of plenty of articles.? Most recently, he served as the subject of a comprehensive profile in The New Yorker.

It?s a lengthy article, and I actually read the whole thing.? Which means it?s good; otherwise, the adult ADD would have kicked in within the first few paragraphs.

Still, something was missing.

The article points out that Gruden routinely is ?criticized for overpraising players? publicly, but also points out that, in private settings, Gruden displays far less charity.

Writes Kelefa Sanneh of Gruden:? ?He is forever judging players who don?t or can?t excel ? ?slapdicks,? he calls them, or, more familiarly, ?slappies.?? A defensive lineman gets shoved back on his heels and collapses, too calmly, onto the turf.? ?He just looks like he?s enjoying this, getting blocked,? Gruden says.? Three receivers run malformed routes, and they all end up in the same throwing lane. ?That?s horrific,? Gruden says.? An offensive tackle dives halfheartedly at the feet of a defender, who leaps over him and knocks down the quarterback. ?I can?t take it,? Gruden says.?

So why the disconnect between the public and private persona?? ?His enthusiasm isn?t meant to fool the fans,? Sanneh writes, ?it?s meant to motivate and inspire them, as if they were players.?

Even if that isn?t a large chunk of baloney (and it probably is), the article overlooks the most prevalent theory regarding Gruden?s homage to Harvey Dent.? Many believe that Gruden fully intends to coach again, and that his ?everyone is the greatest? routine is aimed at ensuring that no bridges are burned, so that he?ll have maximum options ? and leverage ? when he decides to return.

It?s clear he?ll return.? ?I miss it a ton,? Gruden told Sanneh.? ?In some ways, I can?t believe I?m not a coach.?

And I can?t believe that a lengthy profile of Gruden was written without pointing out the possibility that his lack of authenticity in the broadcast booth flows from that desire to return to the sidelines under the best possible conditions.

Gruden was at it again on Monday night, chiding on-air partner Ron Jaworski for being ?the most negative guy I?ve ever met? after Jaws expressed an opinion that the Chargers won?t turn around their current 4-7 record.? Gruden then proceeded to apply his lips to the buttocks of Chargers quarterback Philip Rivers, rattling off Rivers? record in the months of December and January and eventually encouraging him to tune out ?negative people? like Jaworski.

It makes sense.? With the Chargers reportedly poised to fire Norv Turner, there?s a chance that Gruden will be Rivers? next head coach.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/12/05/passengers-in-suhs-crash-disputes-original-report/related

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Lehman hearing may herald end of bankruptcy (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) ? Lehman Brothers Holdings Corp is about to take its last step toward exiting a more than three-year-long bankruptcy process, a move that should enable it to begin paying back investors next year.

Lehman, which filed for bankruptcy in September 2008 and worsened the global financial crisis, is due to present its payout plan to Federal Bankruptcy Judge James Peck on Tuesday in a 10 a.m. hearing in Manhattan.

The defunct financial institution said in a recent court filing the plan essentially continues the efforts it has made while in bankruptcy to sell assets and maximize payments to creditors.

During the past three years, Lehman has sold billions of dollars' worth of real estate and other assets as it worked with debt investors and former trading partners to hammer out a plan on how to divide the fraction of its assets that remained.

Lehman's wind-down plan proposes to pay out $65 billion in periodic distributions to those creditors starting in what it previously forecast would be early next year.

After bankruptcy ends, the company will have a new board of directors, the members of which Lehman released in a court filing on Monday. They include executives from financial companies such as Capmark Financial Group Inc, American International Group Inc, Goldman Sachs Group Inc and Morgan Stanley.

They are as follows: Frederick Arnold, Robert Gifford, Thomas Knott, Sean Mahoney, David Pauker, Ronald Tanemura and Owen Thomas.

Shareholders, whose stock hit a high of $86.18 a share in February 2007 according to Reuters data, will receive nothing, as is typical in bankruptcy. Unsecured creditors, depending on the type of debt, will receive from 21.1 cents to 27.9 cents on the dollar, if Peck approves the plan at the hearing.

Peck, who is tasked with determining whether the bankruptcy plan is fair and equitable, is expected to set a date for Lehman's exit from bankruptcy once he confirms the plan. Before it can start paying creditors, the company must sort through any other issues, such as other types of reserves it must set aside for other expenses.

Lehman heads into the hearing with support from more than 95 percent of its voting creditors and many of its major objections behind it. Lehman tackled some of its biggest opposition from financial firms such as Goldman Sachs and Paulson & Co in 2010 and 2011 by overhauling the plan several times and changing its payout schemes.

Lehman's last hearing, in which the judge approved the details of the vote that were sent to voting creditors, lasted about three hours. The hearing is essentially the last time creditors can voice objections, however, and more than a week has been set aside on the judge's calendar in case it is needed.

ASSET SALES AHEAD

Many of Lehman's biggest assets have been sold while the company was in bankruptcy, such as its investment banking operations, which went to Barclays Plc within days of its filing.

But more than half of its $65 billion in assets remains to be sold, including the rest of its stake in asset manager Neuberger Berman, its stake in apartment owner Archstone, two banking units and some private equity investments.

Lehman's 47 percent stake in Archstone is seen as one of its most valuable assets. Last week, Equity Residential agreed to buy a 26.5 percent stake in the company for $1.325 billion from Bank of America Corp and Barclays, which together own most of the balance of the company.

Lehman has the right to match that offer and could try to buy the stake as it tries to maximize its investment. Archstone was sold for $22 billion at the peak of the housing boom and later helped bankrupt Lehman.

(Reporting by Caroline Humer in New York; editing by Matthew Lewis and Andre Grenon)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111205/bs_nm/us_lehman

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Monday, December 5, 2011

Cain announces he's suspending his campaign (AP)

ATLANTA ? Republican candidate Herman Cain says he's suspending his bid for the Republican presidential nomination to avoid news coverage that is hurtful to his family.

Cain's announcement came five days after an Atlanta-area woman claimed she and Cain had an affair for more than a decade, a claim that followed several allegations of sexual harassment against the Georgia businessman. Cain, whose wife stood behind him on the stage, made the announcement before several hundred supporters gathered at what was to have been the opening of his national campaign headquarters.

Cain had surged in polls until news surfaced in late October that he had been accused of sexual harassment by two women during his time as president of the National Restaurant Association in the 1990s.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

Does he stay or does he go?

Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain is keeping supporters in suspense ahead of his expected announcement Saturday about whether he will quit the race after a string of sexual harassment allegations and a claim of an extramarital affair.

The Georgia businessman planned to announce his decision at what was supposed to be a festive opening of a new headquarters in Atlanta. The space was rented when Cain sat surprisingly atop the GOP pack.

With the candidate's poll numbers plummeting and fundraising stalled, some campaign aides said privately they expected him to drop out. But Cain spokesman J.D. Gordon said late Friday that no decision had been made.

A meeting with top staff members was expected early Saturday and he was expected to take the stage at 1:30 p.m.

Even some top supporters who had spoken with Cain were arriving Saturday unsure what he would say.

Cain returned to his suburban Atlanta home Friday and met with his wife, Gloria. It was the first time they have seen each other face to face since 46-year-old Ginger White came forward on Monday, and said she and Herman Cain had carried on a 13-year relationship.

Cain has denied having an affair with White. He said the concern over the toll the allegations were having on his family as well as a candid assessment of whether his campaign could still attract the needed support would inform his decision on whether to press ahead.

Campaign volunteers were keeping busy Friday night, tacking up signs at his headquarters. A contingent of Secret Service agents inspected the site in advance of Cain's arrival.

"We are moving ahead," said Cain's Georgia director David McCleary, who said he had talked to the candidate earlier in the day and describe him as "upbeat."

Cain, the former Godfather's Pizza chief executive who has never held elected office, rose to become an unexpected front-runner in the volatile Republican race just weeks ago. A self-styled outsider, Cain enjoyed strong tea party support from conservatives who viewed him as an alternative to former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney.

But once in the national spotlight, Cain fumbled policy questions, leaving some to wonder whether he was ready for the presidency. Then it was revealed at the end of October that the National Restaurant Association had paid settlements to two women who claimed Cain sexually harassed them while he was president of the organization.

A third woman told The Associated Press that Cain made inappropriate sexual advances but that she didn't file a complaint. A fourth woman also stepped forward to accuse Cain of groping her in a car in 1997.

Cain has denied wrongdoing in all cases.

Polls suggest his popularity has suffered. A Des Moines Register poll released Friday showed Cain's support plunging, with backing from 8 percent of Republican caucus-goers in Iowa, compared with 23 percent a month ago.

Fundraising has also fallen off. He issued an email appeal to supporters on Friday asking for donations, in an attempt to gauge whether his financial support has dried up.

"I need to know that you are behind me 100 percent," Cain told backers. "In today's political environment, the only way we can gauge true support is by the willingness of our supporters to invest in this effort."

On Friday, Cain urged backers in South Carolina to look past the allegations.

"There's a lot of garbage on the Internet. There's a lot of garbage out there on the TV. There's a lot of garbage out there about me, don't you know? There's a lot of misinformation out there. You have to stay informed and check out the facts for yourself," Cain said.

He added: "I'm on this journey for a reason. I don't look back."

___

Associated Press writers Philip Elliott in South Carolina and Steve Peoples in New Hampshire contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111203/ap_on_el_pr/us_cain

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Now This Is the Way to Suspend a Campaign (Herman Cain Dept) (Atlantic Politics Channel)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/169444979?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Sunday, December 4, 2011

Google Mulling Quick-Shipment Partnerships For Online Shoppers

white_truckWith online retail shopping growing every year, it's no surprise that practically everyone wants in. Web-based companies are falling over themselves providing recommendation engines, web storefronts, payment systems, and backend management. Google is in most of those fields already, but it's probable that they feel somewhat frustrated at being unable to siphon users away from major retailers like Amazon. So many searches lead right there, but Google is unable to monetize what are clearly purchase-oriented users. It's not a new situation, of course: if you want to find stuff, you use Google. If you want to get stuff, you use Amazon. But Google has increasingly been placing itself in the getting stuff business, and may soon expand into real goods, by way of partnerships with retailers and shipping providers.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/3TJVmVtFSWY/

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Saturday, December 3, 2011

Australia's ruling party endorses gay marriage (AP)

SYDNEY ? Australia's ruling party voted Saturday to endorse same-sex marriage, a reversal of its long-standing position that has little practical effect on the chance of gay marriage being legalized in the country.

The impact of the vote at the center-left Labor Party's annual conference was diluted by the party's endorsement of a motion by Prime Minister Julia Gillard to allow lawmakers to make a "conscience vote" on bills attempting to legalize gay marriage. That means legislators can vote on the issue according to their personal beliefs rather than being forced to vote in line with the party's official position.

Gillard's government holds a wafer-thin majority in Parliament over the conservative Liberal Party ? which opposes same-sex marriage ? and several Labor members personally oppose gay marriage. So any bill proposing to legalize gay marriage will still face a tough battle.

Recent polls show a majority of Australians favor allowing same-sex marriage, and several Australian states already permit civil unions between gay couples. But Gillard opposes any changes to Australia's Marriage Act, which prohibits same-sex marriage.

She called the party's support of the conscience vote "the right decision," but brushed off questions about its endorsement of the policy change.

"My focus was on the conscience vote and people should be able to vote in accordance with their conscience ? and certainly now they will," Gillard said.

Marriage equality advocates said they were disappointed with the conscience vote, but praised the policy change as historic.

"The momentum toward achieving marriage equality is unstoppable," Australian Marriage Equality national convener Alex Greenwich said. "A major obstacle to reform has been removed and we are prepared to face the new challenge we have been given of achieving reform with a Labor conscience vote."

The vote followed a fiery debate in which gay marriage advocates pleaded for equal treatment of all couples, regardless of sexual orientation, and opponents argued for the status quo.

"This issue is one we should decide with our heads, not on the basis of emotion," said Joe de Bruyn, national secretary of the Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees Association, one of the country's largest unions. "The definition of marriage as set out in the legislation is that it is the union of one man and one woman, voluntarily entered into for life. It has always been that way since the dawn of humanity."

In a passionate speech that brought much of the audience to its feet, Labor Sen. John Faulkner said it was the government's job to protect human rights.

"Human rights can never be at the mercy of individual opinions or individual prejudices. They are not privileges to be extended to one person and denied to another according to the whims of popular opinion or the whims of the government of the day," he said. "They are inherent in each and every one of us simply because we are human."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111203/ap_on_re_as/as_australia_gay_marriage

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White House renews veto threat on defense bill

Treasury Undersecretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence David S. Cohen testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011, before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing to examine US strategic objectives towards Iran. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

Treasury Undersecretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence David S. Cohen testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011, before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing to examine US strategic objectives towards Iran. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

Senate Foreign Relations Committee member Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., speaks on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011, during the committee's hearing to examine US strategic objectives towards Iran. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs Wendy R. Sherman listens at right, as Treasury Undersecretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence David S. Cohen testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011, before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearings to examine US strategic objectives towards Iran. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

(AP) ? The White House on Friday accused the Democratic-controlled Senate of "political micromanagement" at the expense of national security after it approved legislation requiring military custody of suspected terrorists, even those captured within the U.S., and indefinite detention of some without trial.

In a statement, National Security Council spokesman Tommy Vietor renewed the White House threat of a presidential veto of the sweeping $662 billion defense bill that includes the far-reaching policy changes on how to handle suspected terrorists. The Senate voted 93-7 Thursday night for the legislation.

Vietor pointed out that counterterrorism experts from Republican and Democratic administrations had said the provisions would restrict the president's authority in the fight against al-Qaida and jeopardize national security.

"By ignoring these non-partisan recommendations, including the recommendations of the secretary of defense, the director of the FBI, the director of national intelligence and the attorney general, the Senate has engaged in political micromanagement at the expense of sensible national security policy," he said.

The Senate bill must be reconciled with a House-passed version in the closing days of the session. The administration opposes provisions in the House bill that would require military commissions for suspected terrorists and limit the president's authority to transfer terrorist suspects from the U.S. naval facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to installations in the United States, even for trial. It also would make it difficult for the administration to move detainees to foreign countries.

Overall, the Senate bill would authorize money for military personnel, weapons systems, national security programs in the Energy Department, and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan in the fiscal year that began Oct. 1. Reflecting a period of austerity and a winding down of decade-old conflicts, the bill is $27 billion less than President Barack Obama requested and $43 billion less than Congress gave the Pentagon this year.

In a resounding vote, the Senate unanimously backed an amendment to impose harsh sanctions on Iran as fears about Tehran developing a nuclear weapon outweighed concerns about driving up oil prices that would hit economically strapped Americans at the gas pump.

"Iran's actions are unacceptable and pose a danger to the United States and the entire world," said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev.

In an escalating fight with the White House, the bill would ramp up the role of the military in handling terror suspects. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and FBI Director Robert Mueller both oppose the provisions as does the White House, which said it cannot accept any legislation that "challenges or constrains the president's authorities to collect intelligence, incapacitate dangerous terrorists and protect the nation."

The bill would require military custody of a suspect deemed to be a member of al-Qaida or its affiliates and involved in plotting or committing attacks on the United States. American citizens would be exempt. The bill does allow the executive branch to waive the authority based on national security and hold a suspect in civilian custody.

The legislation also would deny suspected terrorists, even U.S. citizens seized within the nation's borders, the right to trial and subject them to indefinite detention.

The series of detention provisions challenges citizens' constitutional rights, tests the boundaries of executive and legislative branch authority and sets up a confrontation with the Democratic commander in chief. Civil rights groups fiercely oppose the bill.

"The bill is an historic threat to American citizens and others because it expands and makes permanent the authority of the president to order the military to imprison without charge or trial American citizens," said Christopher Anders, ACLU senior legislative counsel.

The bill reflects the politically charged dispute over whether to treat suspected terrorists as prisoners of war or criminals. The administration insists that the military, law enforcement and intelligence agents need flexibility in prosecuting the war on terror after they've succeeded in killing Osama bin Laden and Anwar al-Awlaki.

Republicans counter that their efforts are necessary to respond to an evolving, post-Sept. 11 threat, and that Obama has failed to produce a consistent policy on handling terror suspects.

On Iran, Sens. Bob Menendez, D-N.J., and Mark Kirk, R-Ill., had widespread bipartisan support for their amendment, which would target foreign financial institutions that do business with the Central Bank, barring them from opening or maintaining correspondent operations in the United States. It would apply to foreign central banks only for transactions that involve the sale or purchase of petroleum or petroleum products.

The sanctions on petroleum would only apply if the president determines there is a sufficient alternative supply and if the country with jurisdiction over the financial institution has not significantly reduced its purchases of Iranian oil.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-12-02-Congress-Defense/id-d95a46b8f8e445eaa1360ac9c347049e

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