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Showing posts with label USA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label USA. Show all posts

Obama to speak at inauguration of King memorial

Written By admin on Wednesday, September 14, 2011 | 10:58 AM

US President Barack Obama will speak at the dedication of a monument to civil rights leader Martin Luther King that has been rescheduled to October 16, the White House said on Wednesday.

The imposing stone monument on the National Mall in Washington was to have been dedicated on August 28, the 48th anniversary of King's riveting "I Have a Dream" appeal for racial equality in America.

But the passage of Hurricane Irene up the US East Coast forced the date to be pushed back.

In a brief statement, the White House said: "On Sunday, October 16, President Obama will deliver remarks at the Martin Luther King, Jr., Memorial dedication on the National Mall."

King, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964, championed an end to racial segregation through non-violence and civil disobedience. He was assassinated in April 1968 in Memphis, Tennessee, at the age of 39.

His $120 million memorial was designed by Chinese sculptor Lei Yixin and carved from imported Chinese granite.
10:58 AM | 0 comments

America Marks 10 Years Since Sept. 11 Terrorist Attacks

Written By admin on Sunday, September 11, 2011 | 11:44 AM

President Barack Obama touches the names of victims engraved on the side of the north pool of the World Trade Center site as former President George W. Bush, first lady Michelle Obama and former first lady Laura Bush (obscured) look on during ceremonies marking the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center, in New York September 11, 2011
Today marks 10 years since the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the United States that killed nearly 3,000 people and transformed a nation that had previously believed it was largely safe from a major attack on its mainland.

From New York to Washington, the skies were clear and blue on that morning when two hijacked jetliners crashed into the towers of the World Trade Center and another rammed into the Pentagon.

A fourth hijacked plane crashed in Pennsylvania after passengers tried to gain control of the aircraft.

An honor guard pay his respect at the bronze firefighter memorial at the World Trade Center site in New York, September 11, 2011
VOA - C. Presutti
An honor guard pay his respect at the bronze firefighter memorial at the World Trade Center site in New York, September 11, 2011

By the end of 2001, the United States was at war in Afghanistan. Two years later, the United States would invade Iraq. In the meantime, the nation overhauled its domestic security apparatus, creating the Department of Homeland Security, and rewriting laws to facilitate the detection and tracking of potential terrorist threats at home and abroad.

While Americans reflect and remember, President Barack Obama marks the anniversary with trips to all three attack sites. In his weekly Internet address, he paid tribute to those who responded on 9-11 in the face of great danger.

“Ten years ago, ordinary Americans showed us the true meaning of courage when they rushed up those stairwells [at the World Trade Center], into those flames, into that cockpit [in Pennsylvania]. In the decade since, a new generation has stepped forward to serve and keep us safe. In their memory, in their name, we will never waiver.”

Earlier this year, U.S. Special Forces killed al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden in Pakistan, fulfilling a pledge made by President Obama and his predecessor, George W. Bush.

In recent days, U.S. officials have warned of what they term credible, but unconfirmed, terrorist threats to coincide with the 10-year anniversary.
11:44 AM | 0 comments

Partisan Divides Sharpen Ahead of Major Obama Speech

Written By admin on Sunday, September 4, 2011 | 1:13 PM

Days before President Barack Obama is expected to unveil proposals to boost America’s sluggish economy and reduce stubbornly high unemployment, the White House is hearing conflicting messages from lawmakers and others as to what the president should put forth.

Thursday’s address before a joint session of Congress is expected to set political battle lines for the remainder of the year and perhaps all the way to the 2012 general election.

Progressive members of Mr. Obama’s Democratic Party say the president should champion bold government action to revive a languishing economy.  Congresswoman Maxine Waters of California spoke on NBC’s Meet the Press television program.

“He must have a jobs program, must create jobs,” said Waters. "I am talking about a program of a trillion dollars or more.  We have got to put Americans to work.  I am very hopeful that the president is going to put a big program out there and fight very hard for it.”

Already rejecting such an approach are Republicans, who control the House of Representatives.  Minnesota Congresswoman and Republican presidential hopeful Michele Bachmann blasted Mr. Obama’s economic policies on CBS’ Face the Nation program.

“His solutions have all been government-focused and very temporary gimmick fixes,” said Bachmann. "It is destabilizing if you do not have permanent fixes.  I want to see permanency in the [U.S.] tax code.”

That view was echoed by Republican Senator Jim DeMint of South Carolina, who spoke on ABC’s This Week program.  DeMint said actions, not words, are sorely needed to boost confidence in the private sector and encourage businesses to hire workers.

“I, frankly, am very tired of speeches,” said DeMint. "I do not want to be disrespectful of the president, but what I want to see is something in writing.  I do not think the president is going to come out with things that are really going to create jobs.  I am afraid it is just pandering to his [political] base.”

President Obama has only hinted at the measures he will propose Thursday.  Last week, reporters repeatedly pressed White House spokesman Jay Carney for details, without success.

“Economists will be able to look at this series of proposals and say that, based on history, based on what we know, that it would add to economic growth and it would cause an increase in job creation,” said Carney.

For months, U.S. joblessness has been stuck at the nine-percent range.  Since World War II, no U.S. president has been re-elected with an unemployment rate that high.  Constraining the federal government’s ability to stimulate the economy are trillion-dollar deficits and chronic political gridlock in Washington.
1:13 PM | 0 comments

Sitting in Two States at Once

Written By admin on Saturday, September 3, 2011 | 5:35 AM

Texarkana, Texas and Texarkana, Arkansas are joined by a single street

Is it possible to be in two places at once?  It certainly is if you’re in the southwest city of Texarkana, which straddles the border between Texas and Arkansas.

In almost every regard, Texarkana is one community. But it’s two distinct cities: Texarkana, Texas, population 36,000; and Texarkana, Arkansas, with about 30,000 people. They’re not twin cities. They’re more like Siamese twins, joined at a single, wide street. 

State Line Avenue runs through a common downtown and dead-ends at a historic federal building that - like the street itself - is half in Arkansas, half in Texas.  Upstairs in the courtroom, the judge’s chair is bolted to the floor, so he or she is always sitting in two states.

The yellow line separates not only the two sides of State Line Avenue, but also Texas to the left and Arkansas to the right.
Texarkana Chamber of Commerce
The yellow line separates not only the two sides of State Line Avenue, but also Texas to the left and Arkansas to the right.

Outside, at a painted line and sign on the street, visitors photograph each other with one foot in “the Lone Star State” of Texas and the other in “the Natural State” of Arkansas. 

But if you ask most townfolk, there’s only one Texarkana. Texas Texarkansasans and Arkansas Texarkansansans often go the same church, the same theater, the same parades and shopping malls.

Yet each side of the line has its own mayor, high school and police and fire departments. Most of the shopping centers and car dealerships are in Texas, and most of the industry, including a big Cooper Tire plant, is in Arkansas.

There are liquor stores on the Arkansas side, but Texas is “dry,” as the saying goes. You can’t buy booze on that side of town.

This mural, saluting legendary ragtime-music composer Scott Joplin, decorates a building on the Texas side of Texarkana, where he was born.
Texarkana Chamber of Commerce
This mural, saluting legendary ragtime-music composer Scott Joplin, decorates a building on the Texas side of Texarkana, where he was born.

Arkansas imposes an income tax on state residents, while Texas does not. To make sure everybody in Texarkana, Arkansas, doesn’t pack up and move across the line into Texas to avoid the tax, the Arkansas legislature in Little Rock passed an exemption. If you’re an Arkansan living within the city limits of Texarkana, you pay no Arkansas income tax. 

Each Texarkana needs the other. The airport’s in Arkansas, and most college and medical facilities are in Texas. 

Once, in the early 20th century, for the only time in U.S. history, two sitting United States senators lived in the same small town at the same time. You guessed it. When Morris Sheppard wasn’t home in Texarkana, Texas, or William Kirby back in Texarkana, Arkansas, they were in Washington together, representing “Texarkana, U.S.A.”

Oh, by the way, there may be two Texarkanas, but there’s only one city slogan: “Texarkana, U.S.A., where life is so large, it takes two states!”
5:35 AM | 0 comments

Hurricane Irene dumps foot of rain; 2M powerless

Written By admin on Sunday, August 28, 2011 | 3:43 AM

NEW YORK (AP) — Barely a hurricane Sunday but massive and packed with rain, Irene flooded towns, killed at least eight people and knocked out power to more than 2 million homes and businesses as it plodded up the East Coast, saving the strongest winds it had left for New York.
The streets of the nation's largest city were eerily quiet, its transit system shut down because of weather for the first time in history. Mayor Michael Bloomberg warned late Saturday that no matter whether residents of low-lying areas heeded his calls to evacuate, "The time for evacuation is over. Everyone should now go inside and stay inside."
The National Hurricane Center said that although tropical-storm-force winds covered a vast area of the mid-Atlantic states early Sunday morning, the only hurricane-force winds — 74 mph or above — covered a relatively small area over the Atlantic Ocean, east of the storm's center. Those winds were expected to retain hurricane strength until they finally reached land around midday Sunday over New York's Long Island.
Tornadoes were reported in Maryland and Delaware, and several warnings were issued elsewhere, including New York and Philadelphia.
Irene caused flooding from North Carolina to Delaware, both from the seven-foot waves it pushed into the coast and from heavy rain. Eastern North Carolina got 10 to 14 inches of rain, according to the National Weather Service. Virginia's Hampton Roads area was drenched with at least nine inches, with 16 reported in some spots.
More than 1 million homes and businesses lost power in Virginia alone, where three people were killed by falling trees, at least one tornado touched down and about 100 roads were closed. Emergency crews around the region prepared to head out at daybreak to assess the damage, though with some roads impassable and rivers still rising, it could take days.
Some held out optimism that their communities had suffered less damage than they had feared.
"I think it's a little strong to say we dodged a bullet. However, it certainly could have turned out worse for the Hampton Roads area," said National Weather Service meteorologist Mike Montefusco.
In North Carolina, where at least two people were killed, Gov. Beverly Perdue said Irene inflicted significant damage along the North Carolina coast and some areas were unreachable.
"Folks are cut off in parts of North Carolina, and obviously we're not going to get anybody to do an assessment until it's safe," she said.
Television coverage showed evidence of damage across eastern North Carolina with downed trees and toppled power lines.
A falling tree also killed one person in Maryland. A surfer and another beachgoer in Florida were killed in heavy waves caused by the storm.
The storm arrived in Washington just days after an earthquake damaged some of the capital's most famous structures, including the Washington Monument. Irene could test Washington's ability to protect its national treasures and its poor.
A nuclear reactor at Maryland's Calvert Cliffs went offline automatically when winds knocked off a large piece of aluminum siding that came into contact with the facility's main transformer late Saturday night. An "unusual event" was declared, the lowest of four emergency classifications by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, but Constellation Energy Nuclear Group spokesman Mark Sullivan said the facility and all employees were safe.
Near Callway, Md., about 30 families were warned that a dam could spill over, causing significant flooding, and that they should either leave their homes or stay upstairs. St. Mary's County spokeswoman Sue Sabo said the dam was not in danger of breaching.
Irene made its official landfall just after first light near Cape Lookout, N.C., at the southern end of the Outer Banks, the ribbon of land that bows out into the Atlantic Ocean. Shorefront hotels and houses were lashed with waves, two piers were destroyed and at least one hospital was forced to run on generator power.
Across the Eastern Seaboard, at least 2.3 million people were under orders to move to somewhere safer, though it was unclear how many obeyed.
Annette Burton, 72, was asked to leave her Chester, Pa., neighborhood because of danger of rising water from a nearby creek. She said she planned to remain in the row house along with her daughter and adult grandson, although with a wary eye on the park across the street that routinely floods during heavy rains.
"I'm not a fool; if it starts coming up from the park, I'm leaving," she said. "It's the wind I'm more concerned about than anything."
As the storm's outer bands reached New York on Saturday night, two kayakers capsized and had to be rescued off Staten Island. They received summonses and a dressing-down from Bloomberg, who said at a press conference that they recklessly put rescuers' lives at risk.
The storm hugged the U.S. coastline on a path that could scrape every state along the coast. By Sunday morning, it had sustained winds of 75 mph, down from 100 mph on Friday. That made it a Category 1, the least threatening on a 1-to-5 scale, and barely stronger than a tropical storm. Nevertheless, it was still considered highly dangerous, capable of causing ruinous flooding with a combination of storm surge, high tides and 6 to 12 inches of rain.
"Everything is still in effect," National Hurricane Center spokesman Dennis Feltgen said. "The last thing people should do is go outside. They need to get inside and stay in a safe place until this thing is over."
Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett warned that the state will not necessarily be out of danger once the storm has passed: "The rivers may not crest until Tuesday or Wednesday. This isn't just a 24-hour event."
Ed Rappaport, deputy director of the National Hurricane Center in Florida, said the storm is so large that areas far from Irene's center are going to be feeling strong winds and getting large amounts of rain, he said.
"It is a big, windy, rainy event," he said.
Irene was the first hurricane to make landfall in the continental United States since 2008, and came almost six years to the day after Katrina ravaged New Orleans on Aug. 29, 2005. Experts said that probably no other hurricane in American history had threatened as many people.
Defense Secretary Leon Panetta told 6,500 troops from all branches of the military to get ready to pitch in on relief work, and President Barack Obama visited the Federal Emergency Management Agency's command center in Washington and offered moral support.
"It's going to be a long 72 hours," he said, "and obviously a lot of families are going to be affected."
In New York, authorities undertook the herculean job of bringing the city to a halt. The Metropolitan Transportation Authority shut down its subways, trains and buses for a natural disaster for the first time, a job that began at noon Saturday and took into late that night to complete.
On Wall Street, sandbags were placed around subway grates near the East River because of fear of flooding. Tarps were spread over other grates. Construction stopped throughout the city, and workers at the site of the World Trade Center dismantled a crane and secured equipment.
The city was far quieter than on an average Saturday. In some of the busiest parts of Manhattan, it was possible to cross a major avenue without looking, and the waters of New York Harbor, which might normally be churning from boat traffic, were quiet. About 370,000 people living in low-lying areas of the city, mostly in Lower Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens, were under orders to clear out.
New York has seen only a few hurricanes in the past 200 years. The Northeast is much more used to snowstorms — including a blizzard last December, when Bloomberg was criticized for a slow response.
Airlines said 9,000 flights were canceled, including 3,000 on Saturday. The number of passengers affected could easily be millions because so many flights make connections on the East Coast.
Greyhound suspended bus service between Richmond, Va., and Boston. Amtrak canceled trains in the Northeast for Sunday.
In Philadelphia, Mayor Michael Nutter declared a state of emergency, the first for the city since 1986, when racial tensions were running high. "We are trying to save lives and don't have time for silliness," he said.
In New Jersey, the Oyster Creek nuclear plant, just a few miles from the coast, shut down as a precaution as Irene closed in. And Boston's transit authority said all bus, subway and commuter rail service would be suspended all day Sunday.
___
Mitch Weiss reported from Nags Head, N.C. Associated Press writers contributing to this report were Tim Reynolds and Christine Armario in Miami; Bruce Shipkowski in Surf City, N.J.; Geoff Mulvihill in Trenton, N.J.; Wayne Parry in Atlantic City, N.J.; Eric Tucker in Washington; Martha Waggoner and Gary D. Robertson in Raleigh, N.C.; Jessica Gresko in Ocean City, Md.; Mitch Weiss in Nags Head, N.C.; Alex Dominguez in Baltimore; Brock Vergakis in Virginia Beach, Va.; Samantha Bomkamp and Jonathan Fahey in New York; and Seth Borenstein in Washington.
3:43 AM | 0 comments

Seven Dead as Hurricane Irene Churns Up US East Coast

Hurricane Irene continues to pound the U.S. East Coast with heavy rains and strong winds, leaving at least seven people dead in its wake and paralyzing ground and air traffic.

New York started feeling the effects of the hurricane Saturday shortly before midnight, with winds increasing early Sunday.  Forecasters say Irene will move into southern New England in the northeastern U.S. by Sunday afternoon before reaching Canada Sunday night.

Irene blasted ashore in North Carolina early Saturday, flooding streets and toppling trees with sustained winds of 140 kilometer per hour.  The storm later moved into the Washington area, which continues to be hit with strong winds, heavy rain, localized flooding and falling trees.

More than 1.5 million homes and businesses are without power in the eastern U.S, with at least seven people killed.  Tens of millions of people are in the path of the storm, which is passing through some of the country's most densely populated areas, with winds of 130 kilometers per hour.  Tornadoes spurned by the hurrican destroyed homes in Delaware and Virginia.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center said the massive storm system is expected to continue moving north-northeast at about 24 kilometers per hour.

American Red Cross spokesperson Kate Meier is in North Carolina, and told VOA that even away from the coast, conditions are worrying.

"When I was driving to the shelter, a tree branch hit the windshield of my car, which was terrifying. Fortunately everything was okay, and that's what we're seeing here is some downed branches, but hopefully not a lot of damage in this immediate area. But knowing that I'm 150 miles [241 kilometers] inland and that it's that much worse on the coast is pretty frightening," said Meier.

Along with organizations like the Red Cross, federal, state and local authorities have mobilized resources to confront the storm, which is on track to move up the U.S. East Coast.

Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said officials anticipate heavy rain, flooding and significant power outages throughout the region. There also is a threat of tornadoes.

"Irene remains a large and dangerous storm. People need to take it seriously. People need to be prepared," she said.

Top emergency coordinators in Washington also got a visit Saturday from President Barack Obama.

"This is still obviously going to be a touch-and-go situation for a lot of communities," said the president.

Already there have been large-scale evacuations and thousands of flight cancellations.

In New York City, the entire public transit system, including subway trains and buses, shut down Saturday for the first time ever. Red Cross spokesman Steve Bayer is on New York's Long Island, where he said the organization is prepared with shelters that can care for thousands of people.

"We have registered nurses, and in some cases, even doctors. And we have a lot of mental health professionals that come to us, volunteer their time to work in our shelters, because it is a pretty heavy load for people who have left their house. They don't know where their animals are," said Bayer.

The Red Cross said its response to Irene could be one of the largest it has undertaken in recent memory.

The organization is responding in more than a dozen states, and said it could take weeks, even months, to be able to fully address the disaster.

National Hurricane Center forecaster Todd Kimberlain said the problem with Irene is its path.

"It's dangerous in the sense that this part of the country is not used to receiving many hurricane strikes. In fact, New England has not received a hurricane strike in 20 years. [In] the mid-Atlantic states, the last hurricane was Isabel in 2003, so this is a significant weather system for this part of the country," he said.

Kimberlain also said Irene is not the strongest hurricane, and nowhere close to 2005's devastating Hurricane Katrina, but he says it is still capable of causing damage.
2:23 AM | 0 comments

Global Stocks Fall on US Recession, European Debt Worries

Written By admin on Sunday, August 21, 2011 | 9:24 AM

Global Stocks ended the week lower as fresh worries over a possible U.S. recession and Europe's debt crisis roiled markets anew. The inability of political leaders on both continents to deal with the crisis is adding to the volatility.
Renewed worries about the health of the global economy produced another roller coaster ride Friday in financial markets.

Asian shares took a beating. Hong Kong's Hang Seng index fell three percent, while Japan's Nikkei lost more than two-and-a-half percent.

The main indexes in Europe extended losses from the previous day - declining more than one percent as the trading day closed.

Howard Wheeldon, a senior strategist at BGC partners, said, "At the moment markets, when they don't see the potential for growth, they look back on themselves and when fear and the lack of understanding comes and where the politicians are going - you put all of that together - markets just run away and that's basically what we are seeing."

Wall Street added to its losses this week, following warnings from investment bank Morgan Stanley that the United States and the 17 nations that use the euro may be on the brink of a recession.

Eric Green, chief economist at TD Securities, said the U.S. economy may already be shrinking.

"With an economy operating around stall speed, you can figure anywhere between one percent and two percent, any hiccup, any shock is enough to put it into recession, so that the risk is that if things go awry in Europe, it will eventually feed through into the U.S.," he said.

Green says he's not feeling very optimistic. He blames eroding business and public confidence on the recent political drama in Washington over the U.S. debt - and the ineffective response this week by EU leaders on a debt crisis that now threatens Italy and Spain.

"What you're seeing is a crisis of confidence here and a crisis of confidence in Europe, the effects of which are now coalescing into a very rapid slowing in the economy I have never seen in my 20 years of doing this - an economy losing so much momentum so quickly, and that's worrisome," said Green.

Prospects for a slowing global economy sent oil prices below $80 a barrel. Gold hit another high Friday - above $1,880 dollars an ounce.  And the Dow lost another one-and-a-half percent Friday -  to close at 10,818 points.
9:24 AM | 0 comments

Obama Appeals to Congress to Put Country First



President Barack Obama has renewed his appeal to Congress to put the country ahead of politics and get people back to work.

Obama delivered his weekly address from a farm town in Illinois.
He urged Congress to pass a road construction bill that creates jobs rebuilding roads, bridges and airports.  He also urged lawmakers to extend a payroll tax cut that saves families $1,000 a year.

Obama said "these are common sense ideas that have been supported by Democrats and Republicans."  He said members of Congress playing politics are holding the country back.

President Obama is set to unveil a new jobs initiative in early September after Congress returns from summer recess.

In the Republican address, Ohio Governor John Kasich appealed to his party members to work with Democrats on policy, but he cautioned them not to compromise their principles.

On Friday, the government said the jobless rate increased in 28 states and the nation's capital, Washington, last month.  Nine states recorded decreases and the unemployment rate was unchanged in 13 states.

The U.S. jobless rate has remained at 9 percent or higher for more than two years
3:20 AM | 0 comments

Iran Sentences 2 US Hikers to 8 Years in Prison

American hikers Shane Bauer (L) and Josh Fattal and their 
translator attend the first 
session of their trial in Tehran (file photo)
Iran has sentenced two Americans, arrested more than two years ago while hiking along the Iraq-Iran border, to eight years in prison for illegal entry and spying.

Iranian TV on Saturday quoted judicial sources as saying that Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal each were given five-year prison sentences for spying and three additional years for illegal entry into the country.  The TV report did not indicate whether they would or could be given credit for the time they have already spent in jail.

Bauer and Fattal were arrested on July 31, 2009, along with a third American, Sarah  Shourd, who was freed on $500,000 bail last year and returned to the United States.  The trio has always proclaimed their innocence and said they were hiking in the mountains of northern Iraq while on vacation.  They said that if they crossed the unmarked border into Iran, it was by mistake.

The United States, which does not have diplomatic relations with Iran, has repeatedly called for the hikers' immediate release from Tehran's notorious Evin prison.  The U.S. State Department said it was trying to confirm the verdict through Swiss diplomats in Tehran, who represent U.S. interests there.

The Iranian lawyer representing the hikers, Masoud Shafiei, said authorities in Tehran did not notify him of any decision in the case since court sessions ended on July 31.  Bauer and Fattal have 20 days to appeal the sentence.
3:14 AM | 0 comments

US Vice President Arrives in Chengdu, China

U.S. Vice President Joe Biden is visiting the southwestern Chinese city of Chengdu following two days of high level meetings in Beijing.

Biden arrived in the manufacturing hub in Sichuan province Saturday, accompanied by his granddaughter and the new U.S. Ambassador to China, Gary Locke.

The U.S. vice president is scheduled to give a speech to students at Sichuan University and tour areas devastated by the 2008 earthquake that killed an estimated 87,000 people.

Biden's trip is one in a series of meetings planned during Chinese President Hu Jintao's visit to Washington earlier this year.

On Friday, China and the United States renewed their commitment to bilateral cooperation, with Beijing expressing confidence the battered U.S. economy will rebound.

Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping told a meeting with Biden and businessmen the American economy is highly resilient and has a strong capacity for self-repair. 

China holds about $1 trillion of the U.S. debt, making it the United States' biggest foreign creditor.  It has expressed concern that the deal to raise the U.S. debt ceiling and barely avoid default does not do enough to cut the budget deficit.

U.S. officials say Biden is also using his trip to get to know the next generation of Chinese leaders, especially Xi, who is expected to succeed Hu Jintao as president.

Biden assured his counterpart the United States is economically sound and that Chinese investments are safe.
2:51 AM | 0 comments

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