Da Bossi veto sui rifiuti al Nord:
"I napoletani non imparano mai"
Il Senatur avverte: "Il problema in Campania, lo abbiamo già risolto una volta"
ore 15:22
Commenta
Alla richiesta di Napolitano di risolvere il problema dei rifiuti a Napoli, il Senatur ribatte: "Il problema in Campania, lo abbiamo già risolto una volta". Per questo, sarà difficile che le Regioni del Nord li accoglieranno ancora una volta: "I napoletani non impareranno mai". Berlusconi ha presentato al tavolo con i Comuni il decreto legge, ma ha assicurato che per il futuro il problema sarà risolto definitivamente
Sgarbi show: "Musei, sistema mafioso"
"I napoletani non imparano mai"
Il Senatur avverte: "Il problema in Campania, lo abbiamo già risolto una volta"
ore 15:22
Commenta
Alla richiesta di Napolitano di risolvere il problema dei rifiuti a Napoli, il Senatur ribatte: "Il problema in Campania, lo abbiamo già risolto una volta". Per questo, sarà difficile che le Regioni del Nord li accoglieranno ancora una volta: "I napoletani non impareranno mai". Berlusconi ha presentato al tavolo con i Comuni il decreto legge, ma ha assicurato che per il futuro il problema sarà risolto definitivamente
MILANO
«Gomme tagliate perché ho una bimba disabile»
CRONACALa mamma della piccola: parcheggiano sul mio posto riservatoDi' la tua
News stories
| June 30, 2011 |
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June 30, 2011
Tomgram: Engelhardt, The President's Military Mantra
Signs of the Great American Unraveling
By Tom Engelhardt
It’s already gone, having barely outlasted its moment -- just long enough for the media to suggest that no one thought it added up to much.
Okay, it was a little more than the military wanted, something less than Joe Biden would have liked, not enough for the growing crew of anti-war congressional types, but way too much for John McCain, Lindsey Graham, & Co.
I’m talking about the 13 minutes of “remarks” on “the way forward in Afghanistan” that President Obama delivered in the East Room of the White House two Wednesday nights ago.
Tell me you weren’t holding your breath wondering whether the 33,000 surge troops he ordered into Afghanistan as 2009 ended would be removed in a 12-month, 14-month, or 18-month span. Tell me you weren’t gripped with anxiety about whether 3,000, 5,000, 10,000, or 15,000 American soldiers would come out this year (leaving either 95,000, 93,000, 88,000, or 83,000 behind)?
You weren’t? Well, if so, you were in good company.
Billed as the beginning of the end of the Afghan War, it should have been big and it couldn’t have been smaller. The patented Obama words were meant to soar, starting with a George W. Bush-style invocation of 9/11 and ending with the usual copious blessings upon this country and our military. But on the evidence, they couldn’t have fallen flatter. I doubt I was alone in thinking that it was like seeing Ronald Reagan on an unimaginably bad day in an ad captioned “It’s never going to be morning again in America.”
Idolator President
If you clicked Obama off that night or let the event slide instantly into your mental trash can, I don’t blame you. Still, the president’s Afghan remarks shouldn’t be sent down the memory hole quite so quickly.
For one thing, while the mainstream media's pundits and talking heads are always raring to discuss his policy remarks, the words that frame them are generally ignored -- and yet the discomfort of the moment can’t be separated from them. So start with this: whether by inclination, political calculation, or some mix of the two, our president has become a rhetorical idolator.
Click here to read more of this dispatch.
Tomgram: Engelhardt, The President's Military Mantra
[Note for TomDispatch Readers: The next TD piece will appear on Tuesday, July 5th. Have a fine Fourth of July! Tom]
The Militarized Surrealism of Barack ObamaSigns of the Great American Unraveling
By Tom Engelhardt
It’s already gone, having barely outlasted its moment -- just long enough for the media to suggest that no one thought it added up to much.
Okay, it was a little more than the military wanted, something less than Joe Biden would have liked, not enough for the growing crew of anti-war congressional types, but way too much for John McCain, Lindsey Graham, & Co.
I’m talking about the 13 minutes of “remarks” on “the way forward in Afghanistan” that President Obama delivered in the East Room of the White House two Wednesday nights ago.
Tell me you weren’t holding your breath wondering whether the 33,000 surge troops he ordered into Afghanistan as 2009 ended would be removed in a 12-month, 14-month, or 18-month span. Tell me you weren’t gripped with anxiety about whether 3,000, 5,000, 10,000, or 15,000 American soldiers would come out this year (leaving either 95,000, 93,000, 88,000, or 83,000 behind)?
You weren’t? Well, if so, you were in good company.
Billed as the beginning of the end of the Afghan War, it should have been big and it couldn’t have been smaller. The patented Obama words were meant to soar, starting with a George W. Bush-style invocation of 9/11 and ending with the usual copious blessings upon this country and our military. But on the evidence, they couldn’t have fallen flatter. I doubt I was alone in thinking that it was like seeing Ronald Reagan on an unimaginably bad day in an ad captioned “It’s never going to be morning again in America.”
Idolator President
If you clicked Obama off that night or let the event slide instantly into your mental trash can, I don’t blame you. Still, the president’s Afghan remarks shouldn’t be sent down the memory hole quite so quickly.
For one thing, while the mainstream media's pundits and talking heads are always raring to discuss his policy remarks, the words that frame them are generally ignored -- and yet the discomfort of the moment can’t be separated from them. So start with this: whether by inclination, political calculation, or some mix of the two, our president has become a rhetorical idolator.
Click here to read more of this dispatch.
The New Republic Daily Report
06/30/11
Has Liberalism Entered a Post-Obama Era? Mark Schmitt
Imagine a new liberal policy magazine in which the word “Obama” appears only five times in 75 pages, and phrases like, “Obama should have …” or “Obama’s big mistake was …” never. Perhaps we have finally entered a post-Obama era, where debates about liberalism are not all refracted through the figure of the great or not-so-great man at the top.
A young colleague of mine at the Roosevelt Institute recently told me that he thought the goal of a progressive think tank should be to build up the arsenal of ideas so that, “the next time there’s a Democratic president, he has more to work with.” There seems to be an increasing awareness that our failure to get the economy on track, or build a vision of it for the future, is a result not just of a feckless president (although a bit of that), but also an absence of smart ideas about what to do—not just specific policies, but bigger, engaging narratives, equivalent to the right-wing conviction that cutting taxes for the wealthy will create jobs. (Except that ours should be, um, true.)
Continue reading "Has Liberalism Entered a Post-Obama Era?"
Why Diplomacy Isn't Working in Sudan Eric Reeves
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Messages In This Digest (23 Messages)
- 1.
- Democracy By Order Of Washington: Next Targets North Africa, Mideast From: Rick Rozoff
- 2.
- Libya: NATO Air Missions Exceed 13,000, Combat Sorties Near 5,000 From: Rick Rozoff
- 3.
- U.S. Special Forces Chief Nominee Pushes Afghan Night Raids From: Rick Rozoff
- 4.
- Pentagon To Concentrate On Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict From: Rick Rozoff
- 5.
- Montenegro: NATO Chief Completing Total Absorption Of Balkans From: Rick Rozoff
- 6.
- NATO To Hold "Emerging Security Challenges" Conference In Georgia From: Rick Rozoff
- 7.
- Senate Gives Obama Blessing For Military Intervention In Libya From: Rick Rozoff
- 8.
- Quarter Million Displaced: NATO Air Strikes, Raids Fuel Afghan Crisi From: Rick Rozoff
- 9.
- Canadian Warship Deploys To Mediterranean For NATO's Libyan War From: Rick Rozoff
- 10.
- Killing Of Libyan Civilians Weakens NATO's War Stance From: Rick Rozoff
- 11.
- Serbia Submits Kosovo Organ Trafficking Draft To OSCE From: Rick Rozoff
- 12.
- China Warns Japan Over Disputed Islands From: Rick Rozoff
- 13.
- U.S. AFRICOM To Supply Burundi, Uganda With Drones For Somali War From: Rick Rozoff
- 14.
- U.S. Building Alliance To Effect Regime Change In Syria From: Rick Rozoff
- 15.
- African Union Condemns France For Arming Libyan Rebels From: Rick Rozoff
- 16.
- "Vancouver to Vladivostok": NATO Chief Eyes North Africa, Middle Eas From: Rick Rozoff
- 17.
- Libyan War: 13,184 NATO Sorties, 4,963 Combat Missions From: Rick Rozoff
- 18.
- Majority Of Russians Want Warsaw Pact-Type Counterweight To NATO From: Rick Rozoff
- 19.
- U.S. Forces Ordered Out Of Pakistani Air Base From: Rick Rozoff
- 20.
- 'Expanding Fading Clout': Russia Slams West's Mideast Double Standar From: Rick Rozoff
- 21.
- NATO Still Pushing For Kazakh Troops In Afghanistan From: Rick Rozoff
- 22.
- Pentagon: Ex-CIA Director Out, Ex-CIA Director In From: Rick Rozoff
- 23.
- Mediterranean: U.S., Spain End Amphibious Assault Drills To Go To Wa From: Rick Rozoff