Top News
Welcome
International (1)
International (2)
Australia (1)
Australia (2)
Europe (1)
Europe (2)
Asia (1)
Asia (2)
Middle East (1)
Middle East (2)
Environment
Global Warming
Climate Change
Extinction
Africa (1)
Africa (2)
North America
America (2)
Central America
South America
Technology & IT
Computers and IT
Science (1)
Science (2)
Society
Social Issues
Government
Central Asia
Southeast  Asia
Oceania
Australasia
Business (1)
Business (2)
Editorials
Comment
Entertainment
Movies & TV
New Books
Sport (1)
Sport (2)
Health
Religion
Humour
Miscellaneous
This 'n That
Human Interest
Feedback
Your Vews
Links
Lifestyle
Features
Features (2)
Photo Gallery
Gallery (2)
Gallery (3)
e-mail me



NEWS from the USA and CANADA


MAFIA MAN JOHN GOTTI JR TO GO ON TRIAL

 

[Agence France-Presse, September 14, 2009]

John Gotti Jr, the most famous figure in New York mafia circles, goes on trial in a showdown that federal authorities hope will finally end his Houdini-like ability to escape charges. Jury selection is scheduled to start in a Manhattan federal court, where Gotti, aged 45, is accused of a role in three gangland slayings during a lengthy racketeering career in New York and Florida.

But Gotti, son of the late Gambino crime family boss "Dapper Don" John Gotti, and sister of Victoria Gotti, the star of the now defunct reality TV show Growing up Gotti,  says he's not even part of the mafia. Three other racketeering trials in the last five years have ended without verdict against him. His lawyers claim the authorities are pursuing a vendetta against a reformed man.

Prosecutors are expected to produce a slew of damaging testimony supporting the 26-page indictment against Gotti, whom they allege rose through the ranks to serve as acting boss after his infamous father's imprisonment. Key evidence will come from turncoats, what the authorities call "cooperating witnesses" and Gotti's supporters term "rats." A star witness could be Gotti's one-time friend, John Alite, a tough former goodfella, who says Gotti enthusiastically took up his duties as a mafia captain.

Testifying this February against another former comrade, a hitman called Charles Carneglia, Alite said Gotti ordered the killing of gangster Louis DiBono in the underground car park of the World Trade Centre in 1990. "This was Gotti's first job as a captain to kill somebody and he wanted to do it right," Alite said, describing how Gotti was "elated" when he heard that the rubout was complete. Alite also testified that Gotti was behind several other killings.

The defence says Gotti is not the successor to his father, who died in prison in 2002. Other than attempting to discredit the turncoats, defence lawyers are also expected to play tape recordings of Gotti's prison conversations from when he served time after pleading guilty to racketeering in 1999, and also with his father. The showdown promises a fascinating contest and enough gory testimony to fill many pages of New York's tabloids.

The Gotti family has been notorious since Gotti senior took over the Gambinos following the gunning down of the previous boss, Paul Castellano, outside a Manhattan steak house. Gotti senior was sentenced to life in prison in 1992 for racketeering, five murders and a long list of other serious crimes, making him the country's most notorious mobster. But he also lived a movie-style mafia life, earning two nicknames -- Teflon Don for his ability to shake off criminal allegations and Dapper Don for his flamboyance.


Silent Aryan Warriors tattoo..jpg

UTAH WHITE SUPREMACIST GROUPS ARE LINKED TO METHAMPHETAMINE

[Apologeticsindex.org, July 24, 2007]

Silent Aryan Warriors (SAW) originated in the Utah State prison system in the 1990s and is known for its involvement in the methamphetamine trade. [Picture shows SAW tatoo]. Law enforcement officials have reported a rash of crimes linked to SAW, particularly identity/mail theft, where personal checks are taken from homes and public letter boxes, then “washed” and forged. Mail theft has increasingly been linked to methamphetamine addicts and white supremacist gangs—more than 30 SAC/SAW members have been arrested on methamphetamine and mail fraud charges. [Source: Racist Skinhead Project, ADL]

Utah’s white supremacist groups are not as wedded to racist philosophies as they are to drugs — particularly methamphetamine — and money, two gang experts said Thursday. “Everything about these guys is just meth, meth and meth,” said Ogden police Detective Tony Hansen, a member of the federal Joint Terrorism Task Force. “They’re not the neo-Nazis you see on TV.” Hansen and Detective Brent Jex, a West Jordan police officer and member of the Salt Lake Area metro gang unit, spoke recently at the 2003 Gang Conference at the Salt Palace Convention Center. Aimed mainly at law enforcement, the conference is sponsored by the metro gang unit.

There are five major supremacist gangs in Utah — the Soldiers of Aryan Culture, the Silent Aryan Warriors, Fourth Reich, American Peckerwoods and Krieger Verwandt. Their members are “really into dope and ripping people off” despite their sometimes prominently displayed racist tattoos, Hansen said. The crimes they commit are more likely to be drug-related than triggered by racism, he said — home invasions to collect owed drug debts, for example. Members have also been known to dabble in identity theft. And Utah’s white supremacists are not averse to hooking up with Latino gangs or those of other races for drug-related business deals. “When it comes to meth, they don’t care,” Jex said. “It’s funny to see how they’re trying to portray themselves and how they actually are.”

At least one of the groups also sought to align itself with a national white supremacy organization, the World Church of the Creator, Jex said. But “a lot of the national groups are looking at them and saying, ‘You guys are a mess,’ ” he said. “I have no doubt there are some that have the [white supremacist] belief system,” he said. “But they don’t follow it.”

Utah’s white supremacist groups originated in state prisons or jails, mostly during the 1990s, the officers said. They continue to flourish there today, although some people join the groups for protection in prison and disavow them when released, Hansen said.

[Source: Meth Fuels Supremacist Utah Gangs, The Salt Lake Tribune, Apr. 25, 2003]

More about the white supremist groups in Utah

There are four principal white supremacist groups in Utah: SAC, Silent Aryan Warriors (SAW), 4th Reich and Krieger Verwandt (KV). The origins of these groups can be traced to Utah correctional facilities in the 1990s. Police say most people who join a white supremacist group in prison do it for protection and survival, not necessarily because they share racist beliefs. Despite the accusations of violence that surround them, white supremacist members will try to pass off their organizations as nothing more than a fraternity, Johnson said. But, he added, they’re only doing that to try to divert attention.

“These people are dangerous,” Johnson said. “These groups are not fraternities.” SAC is the biggest Aryan Nation group in Utah — and the most violent, Draper said. There are estimated to be more than 150 SAC members in the state. Members have established a SAC chapter in Sunset, where many members head after they are paroled, Davis County sheriff’s detective Ty Berger said. There are also reports that SAC wants to use Box Elder County as its home base and has secured a compound in a secluded area, Brigham City police Cpl. Jeff Johnson said.

SAW is the second-biggest group, followed by 4th Reich and KV. Because KV isn’t as well-organized as the other gangs, Draper said that group is apparently being taken over by 4th Reich. Police say 4th Reich has been the most active in recruiting members in and out of prison. American Peckerwood and Lone Wolf are two other small white supremacist gangs in Utah that are merging with 4th Reich, according to law enforcers.

[Source: Racist groups catching Utah’s eye: Police see rise in activity of white supremacy gangs, Deseret News, Sep. 7, 2002]


AMERICA'S DISILLUSIONED VOTERS

 

[Washington Post, July 6, 2007]

In conjuction with the Washington Post-Kaiser Family Foundation-Harvard University poll exploring attitudes of political independents, Behind The Numbers will take an in-depth look at each of the types of independents identified in the survey. Today's post focuses on the Disillusioned, independents who have lost faith in the political system.

The Disillusioned make up about 18 percent of independents and are largely disheartened by American politics today. They hold unfavorable views of both national parties, overwhelmingly feel unrepresented by the two-party system and express widespread feelings of frustration with today's politics.

Six in 10 Disillusioned say they do not lean toward either party and about the same number believe both parties are pretty much the same, though a third considered themselves partisan in the past. Most say a major reason they call themselves independent today is because they are not comfortable with either party.

The Disillusioned are slightly older than other independents (about half fall between the ages of 40 and 65) and they are less educated than other politically-engaged independents (77 percent have not graduated college). About a quarter profess no religious affiliation, and they are the least likely of independents to say they are born again or evangelical Christians. About one in six live in union households.

Anger and frustration have driven the Disillusioned from the party system, but what views would they like to see represented and how will they affect the 2008 presidential election? Much more after the jump. The Disillusioned express intense levels of concern about four issues: the situation in Iraq, corruption in government, health care and the economy. Half or more say the situation in Iraq, corruption in government and health care are extremely important to them personally. About four in 10 say the economy is extremely important. On each of these issues, six in 10 or more say that neither party better represents their views.

Where do the Disillusioned stand on their top issues?

On Iraq: Two-thirds feel strongly that the war in Iraq was not worth fighting, and just 20 percent believe that the U.S. goal of bringing stability to Iraq is still possible. Disillusioned independents are among the few who do not side with either party on Iraq: 71 percent say neither represents their view, 60 percentage points or more higher than any other type of independent.

The Disillusioned are also among the most concerned about the impact of the war on terror: 63 percent say the U.S. government is not doing enough to protect Americans' civil liberties and 57 percent say the country is less safe now than it was before 9/11.

On corruption: Although they are deeply concerned about corruption, few feel that the two-party system will solve the problem. Three-quarters of the Disillusioned say that neither party better represents their views on the issue, and the same percentage says neither party can manage the federal government effectively.

On health care: A plurality of Disillusioned independents say they would like presidential candidates to focus on lowering the cost of health care and insurance over expanding coverage to the uninsured. And like Deliberators, fewer than half are willing to pay more to increase the number of insured Americans.

On the economy: The Disillusioned have a far more negative view of the economy than other independents. More than four in 10 describe it as "poor" while only 24 percent say it is in excellent or good shape. For most in this segment of independents, this "not-so-good" economy has brought trying times: just two in 10 say they are getting ahead financially.

What are the Disillusioned looking for in 2008? About half of Disillusioned independents say their past presidential votes have been split about equally between Democrats and Republicans, but right now, just 37 percent say they would seriously consider a Republican candidate for president and about half would do the same of a Democrat. But their preference lies outside the two-party structure. Nearly four in 10 say they would prefer that an independent occupy the White House for the next four years.

Disillusioned independents do not look upon the front-runners of either party with a friendly eye: nearly half say they definitely would not vote for Hillary Clinton and the same number definitely would not vote for Rudy Giuliani. But they are more open to an independent run from either Chuck Hagel or Michael Bloomberg.

Wherever their preferences lie, the Disillusioned appear somewhat less likely than other independents to be engaged in the campaign. As of now, just 46 percent say they are very interested in the 2008 race, while nearly one-quarter (more than all independents except the Disengaged) say they are not interested this time around. For the Disillusioned, frustration with the system and the possibility of a choice between two candidates they have already ruled out could lead them to stay home on election day.


HillaryClinton_crop.jpg

"RELIGIOUS LEFT" BECOMING A POLITICAL FORCE

[CS Monitor, June 6, 2007]

John Edwards spoke about how prayer helped him get through the death of his son and his wife's cancer diagnoses. Barack Obama repeatedly invoked the biblical phrase "my brother's keeper" as he spoke about poverty and injustice.

Hillary Rodham Clinton credited her faith with getting her through her husband's infidelities. [Editor's note: The original version misquoted the Bible and may have inferred that Mr. Obama did the same.]

This was no garden-variety political presentation by the top three Democratic presidential candidates Monday night on the campus of George Washington University, in the shadow of the White House. The forum, sponsored by the progressive Christian group Sojourners, represented the boldest indication yet that the "religious left" is building as a political force, no longer willing to cede "values voters" to the religious conservative movement that has long formed the activist base of the Republican Party.

The candidates' easy willingness to appear at the forum also represents a watershed for the modern Democratic Party: Intimate discussion of faith, and how it informs policy views and personal behavior, is no longer an arms-length proposition at the party's highest levels. "It's an important strategic move for all these people – not to say their faith isn't genuine," says Jim Guth, an expert on religion and politics at Furman University in Greenville, S.C. "But I think they recognize that in a very closely divided electorate, any ability they have to peel off moderate religious conservatives or centrists, by making it clear they're comfortable with the language of faith – that's a political advantage and wise strategy and maybe good policy and good politics."

In an ironic twist – following a 2004 election in which white Evangelicals went 80 percent for the Republican, President Bush – today's top Democratic contenders may be more comfortable fielding questions on religion than today's top Republicans. On the GOP side, Rudolph Giuliani is a Roman Catholic who is on his third marriage and who takes liberal positions on social issues; John McCain is an Episcopalian, but, like Mr. Giuliani, rarely mentions his faith. Mitt Romney describes his Mormonism as central to his life, but it's a religion that leaves many voters uncomfortable – and could make him an awkward fit for conservative Evangelical voters. The three top Republicans have been invited by Sojourners to appear at a forum in September. Still, experts on religion and politics agree that the religious left has a way to go to catch up to the religious right in organizational strength and that there are structural barriers that could prevent it from happening.

"When you look at religious progressives, generally, they come in many different varieties," says John Green, a senior fellow at the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life. Some are theological liberals who happen to be politically liberal, some are theological conservatives who happen to be politically liberal, and some are a bit of both, Mr. Green says. And they come from different backgrounds – evangelical, Catholic, mainline Protestant. So while religious conservatives can easily organize within their congregations, for the religious left it is more complicated. Also, adds Green, "people on the liberal side of these debates tend toward ecumenism and interfaith. A lot of Reform Jews might be considered part of this. Certainly, black Protestants would be part of this."

A look at the numbers also shows a religious left that is still on the beginning end of a trajectory movement leaders hope will make it a major force in shaping political and policy debate. At this week's four-day Pentecost conference sponsored by Sojourners, there are 600 people in its attendance. At its height in the mid-1990s, the Christian Coalition could summon 4,000 people to Washington for its annual convention. And while that organization has faded, the religious right's top mass gathering – now sponsored by the Family Research Council and allied groups – was able to draw 1,700 attendees to a Values Voter Summit in 2006, with another scheduled for this fall, according to Joe Conn of Americans United for Separation of Church and State.

Each side emphasizes different issues, and so the rise of one is not necessarily dependent on the decline of another. For the right, abortion and gay rights have long been the driving issues, while on the left, poverty is the top issue – and was the focus of Monday's presidential forum. The Iraq war, climate change, energy, and the environment have also grown in importance among religious liberals, and the rise of those issues in public consciousness in the past couple of years has also given religious progressives more to rally around.

On the left, many political religious activists disagree over abortion and gay rights, and so those issues are not central to the movement. The founder and organizer of Sojourners, the Rev. Jim Wallis, is an Evangelical Christian who calls himself pro-life, but it is the issues of poverty and social justice that animate him in the political sphere. Religious conservative leaders say they welcome the rise of a religious left and see it as a validation of their own entry into politics in the 1970s, after a long period when the blending of religion and politics on the right was seen as anathema.

"I think it points to the success that Christians have had," says Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council. "It means we're no longer on the outside looking in. Faith has very much permeated the political process in this country."

But to some activists, especially those who are fighting to maintain strict separation between church and state, the growth of a religious left raises the risk that the public loses sight of the proper place of religion and faith in government. "My concern is that merely mentioning religious matters or using religious language is not a way to run a political campaign," says the Rev. Barry Lynn, executive director of Americans United for Separation of Church and State. "The bad news is that the religious left could begin to use religion in the same way that the religious right does…. We already have too much religious rhetoric in what should be a secular-oriented campaign."

But, he adds, it's "possible for right and left to talk about values and explain the source of their beliefs, and that's an important part of the public dialogue."


KevinPhillips_enhance.jpg

CONCERN OVER AMERICA'S PRIVATE AND BUSINESS DEBT

[Mewsmax.com, March 19, 2007]

Veteran political strategist and author Kevin Phillips says he is less troubled by the USA’s $8 trillion national debt than by the $43 trillion debt racked up by individuals and businesses. Phillips devised the strategy that brought the then-Democratic South into the Republican fold when he worked for Richard Nixon’s 1968 presidential campaign.

Speaking to a Society of the Four Arts gathering in Palm Beach, Fla., the strategist — now a National Public Radio commentator — said the individual and business debt equals 320 percent of the U.S. gross domestic product, and that frightens him.

“It’s a huge problem, and it’s systemic now,” he said in remarks reported by the Palm Beach Daily News. Phillips said crippling debt is one of five “commonalities” the U.S. today shares with the declining years of the Roman, British, Spanish, and Dutch empires.

The others: The populations felt their societies were failing; religious extremists were on the rise; their economies turned away from the livelihoods that had supported ordinary people; and their imperial reach exceeded their grasp. Phillips is particularly concerned about the loss of manufacturing jobs in the U.S., and the prospect of higher oil prices in the near future.

The Democrats’ victories in the November elections indicate that voters are getting “fed up” with Republican leadership, Phillips said. But he added that a Democratic takeover of the government isn’t a sure thing: “If any group of people can blow an opportunity, it’s these guys.”

BACKGROUND

For more than three decades, Kevin Phillips has been consistently and “transcendentally right” (as one reviewer has put it) about the dynamics of political change in America and an avid analyst of the role of wealth in democracy. Kevin’s best-selling books have influenced presidential campaigns and changed the way America sees itself.

In his two most recent New York Times bestsellers, American Dynasty and Wealth and Democracy, Kevin established himself as a powerful critic of the political and economic forces that are ruling—and imperiling—the U.S.

Now, in “American Theocracy: The Peril and Politics of Radical Religion, Oil and Borrowed Money in the 21st Century,” Kevin uncovers and assails the political coalition, led by radical religion, that he believes is driving the country to the brink of disaster.

One of Kevin’s first books, The Emerging Republican Majority, set the political strategy for Richard Nixon's presidential campaign in 1968 and transformed the American political landscape for the generation that followed.

Phillips’ commitment to public service and strong sense of history make his presentations valuable to any audience—business, college, or public forum—that cares about where America is headed in the future. Called a “modern Thomas Paine,” Kevin Phillips is a regular commentator for National Public Radio and a former commentator for CBS News.


RUSSIAN GOVERNMENT KNEW ABOUT LEWINSKY

 

[Newsmax.com, April, 2007]

The Russian government had inside knowledge about President Bill Clinton’s ongoing sexual relationship with Monica Lewinsky, a former senior U.S. intelligence official told NewsMax.

Clinton had his final encounter with Lewinsky in the White House on March 29, 1997, after he invited her there because he had “something important to tell her,” according to the official. “He told her that he suspected his phone was bugged by a foreign embassy.”

Four months before that meeting, Russian intelligence reported to then President Boris Yeltsin about Monica, the official disclosed. “Sometime between March 5 and March 29, this was communicated back to Clinton.

“Then in August 1998, Clinton under oath denied the fact of this meeting. This was a grave and consequential perjury, not about sex, but about a huge national security vulnerability. “Two special prosecutors and the impeachment process let him off the hook about this, despite knowing of the perjury.”