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Founded in 1876 Tuesday, October 09, 2007 Edition Nº 1782
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Editorial Roundup


Jyllands-Posten
— on Putin considering becoming Russia's prime minister

AARTHUS, Denmark
Russia has had a hard time with democracy ever since the Soviet Union collapsed, and during his nearly eight years as president, Vladimir Putin has made no effort to push development in that direction, although it has been his declared ambition to create a strong, modern and internationally respected Russia.
None of these ambitions have been met, least of all the international respect, which has been further eroded by Putin's decision to remain the central figure in the Kremlin.
Quite true, he doesn't want to be president but in the autocratic structure that he created, Russia's next president can be the puppet of a strong prime minister. Should the next president fail to stay the course, the constitution says the presidency should be taken over by ... the prime minister.
Russia today is ruled by the circle (of people) around Putin who all, by and large, have a past in the KGB, and consequently are trained to think and act uniformly.
That might have been a strength following the tumultuous (President Boris) Yeltsin era but can only weaken Russia's international position now.

On the Net
http://www.jp.dk


Red Deer Advocate
— on new technologies
and consumerism

ALBERTA, Canada
... All of what we say over e-mail or phone calls, or even chatting as we walk downtown, is being recorded by somebody, somewhere.
And it's being used to sell us stuff.
The technology to do this is straight out of Orwell-meets-science fiction.
Mass readers can monitor cellphone calls, record the caller's identity and listen in on what's being said.
Last week, a U.S. phone company announced it can run these recorded conversations through software that will send advertisements to the owner of the cellphone, based on the content of the call.
So be careful about how you describe certain hockey players from last night's game.
Either you'll get a travel ad with a special deal to the teams next game or the listing of thugs for hire.
Radio chips are being put into common consumer items, says Schneier, that will transmit our shopping patterns through a store, spy on what's in our fridge and count our personal hygiene items.
Big Brother stores your e-mail address and your medical records.
Anything you say or do in the electronic world is impossible to erase.
That's scary stuff to people who value their privacy. But in numbers growing too fast to contemplate, it seems that young people are not only unafraid of this lack of privacy, they eagerly embrace the brave new world. ...
... And there appears to be no technical barrier for someone, somewhere to know every minor factoid of our daily existence.
For one generation, the prospect chills.
For another, it's just how we live — in fact, it's kind of cool. ...

On the Net:
http://www.reddeeradvocate.com/

The Independent
— on Myanmar

LONDON
Two weeks of sustained popular protest against one of the most repressive and vicious regimes on earth have alerted the world to the terrible suffering of the Burmese people. But the fruits of this spectacular demonstration of courage have so far been depressingly meager. The military regime has been rattled by the protests, but the generals remain in control.
The United Nations special envoy to Burma, Ibrahim Gambari, was forced to wait four days before he was finally granted access to General Than Shwe and the other top generals of the so-called State Peace and Development Council yesterday. Mr. Gambari has now returned to New York to report to the UN Secretary General, Ban Ki-Moon. But there are no indications that he will have anything positive to relate. The generals seem to be in no mood to make political concessions.
This is because the streets are no longer thronging with outraged crowds. ... The protests are continuing, but the participants have been made invisible. Some 4,000 monks, who have spearheaded these protests, were dragged out of their monasteries by night last week and herded into military camps. ...
One might have expected the international community, after its loud condemnation of the Burmese regime last week, to be alive to the ways in which these protests have shifted form. But there seems to be almost a sense of relief from western capitals now that the situation in Burma appears to have calmed and the domestic pressure to make uncomfortable decisions has subsided. ...
The streets of Burma's cities may give the impression of calm, but this is a country still in turmoil. It is the responsibility of the international community to stand in solidarity with the Burmese people through the coming storm.

On the Net:
http://comment.independent.co.uk
Lietuvos Rytas
— on elections in Ukraine:

VILNUS, Lithuania
Ukraine made one more step toward democracy. ... Not just because pro-Western forces who once were behind the Orange Revolution won a majority of ballots. And not even because (Viktor) Yanukovych, often labeled as pro-Russian, will probably lose the prime minister's post for the time being. ...
The main victory for Ukraine is that these elections have peacefully ended a serious political crisis, paving the way for the country's further development toward a truly democratic regime and the family of European nations. This means that Kiev passed a serious exam and strengthened the foundations of its democracy.
Secondly, the Ukrainian people, tired of never-ending political scandals, voted actively on Sunday. A 63 percent turnout is a result Lithuania and other European countries can only dream of.

On the Net:
http://www.lrytas.lt

The Sun Herald
— on a presidential veto and the effect on south Mississippi

BILOXI, Miss,
President Bush has visited South Mississippi 15 times since Aug. 29, 2005. ...
On his most recent visit here, on the second anniversary of the great storm, he sat in a room in Bay St. Louis with our political leadership, including Sen. Trent Lott, Congressman Gene Taylor and local mayors and county supervisors, and they told him that the thing we need most now, the one thing that is necessary for our rebuilding and recovery efforts, is multiple-peril insurance.
So it was with disappointment, sadness, and perhaps bewilderment, that we learned Wednesday that the president was being advised to veto this most important piece of legislation on the very eve of debate in the House of Representatives. ...
We have gone back and reviewed the sweet words and promises that the president has uttered on each of his visits. And while we have appreciated each visit, and the support, including billions in aid that he has supported and that the Congress and the American people have provided us following the worst natural disaster in American history, we must regard his administration's threat of a veto as breaking faith with our people, tens of thousands of whom are still struggling to survive in the devastation zone. ...

On the Net:
http://www.sunherald.com

The Advocate
— on the Jena 6

BATON, Rouge
Evoking memories of civil rights marches in Birmingham and Selma, although thankfully without the violence, is not at all a bad thing. A new generation, we hope, will be inspired by ideals of justice. Perhaps Jena will help teach the positive values of activism to the young.
Yet we cannot help but wonder what national attention on the Jena 6 controversy missed. ...
One thing that has received too little national attention in all this: the grinding poverty of the Delta region.
Many of the farm towns of the Delta, from just north of Baton Rouge to Memphis, are places where schools are poor, expectations for the future are low, opportunities for advancement extremely limited. ...
Some of the poorest towns in America are in the Delta.
Across the nation, people are talking about a rebirth of activism because of Jena. We hope there's a rebirth of action about the waste of lives in the Delta, every day.

On the Net:
http://www.2theadvocate.com

The Kentucky Post
— on Social Security

COVINGTON, Ky
With the national election just over the horizon, the Bush administration is quickly approaching lame-duck status and has run out of time to resolve the Social Security crisis. ...
Candidates for the presidency and Congress should not be allowed to ask for the country's votes next November without explaining in detail where they stand.
With baby boomers retiring, the Social Security system is expected to begin paying out more in benefits than it collects in payroll taxes by 2017. Unless there are changes on either the benefits or revenue side, the program will have depleted its reserves by 2041. ...
There is no question Congress is just as aware of the ticking time bomb of Social Security as the American people are, especially those at or near retirement age.
But summoning the political courage to act will be difficult. Anyone running for office will have to be pushed to promote the painful remedy that will be required. It will be up to the press and the people to make that happen.

On the Net:
http://tinyurl.com/2zff2d

Seattle Post-Intelligencer
— on Iraq

The fact that the Senate last week voted in favor of a measure — albeit a non-binding one — that would divide Iraq into sectarian regions shows how out of touch our well-meaning lawmakers are with what Iraqis, who make up what President Bush repeatedly refers to as a sovereign, democratic nation, want.
Fortunately, there are those who know the hearts of Iraqis, such as Raed Jarrar, a political analyst and consultant to the D.C.-based American Friends Service Committee's Iraq Program. In a recent piece he co-wrote for alternet.org, Jarrar said that those defining the civil war within Iraq as a religious conflict alone miss the point. Iraq's war is over control of the country and its energy supplies, not over Allah. ...
The White House last week put on a show about disagreeing with the Senate measure, but in reality, our government supports the separatists, who control Iraq's Cabinet, not the nationalists, who want a unified Iraq and aren't keen to pipe out their energy resources as the U.S. sees fit, and who are frequently the targets of attacks by al-Qaida in Iraq. The parties in the Cabinet are the same parties that appeared at the London Conference in 2002, when the case for war on Iraq was being made. In other words, nothing has changed since that time.

On the Net:
http://www.seattlepi.com

 


 

    Science
   Brain, oh don’t you fail me right now
  Latin America
   Drug trade, once passing by, takes root in Mexico
  Focus
   Buenos Aires welcomes 2007 Gay World Cup
   Wine with a touch of iron(y)? Wine with a touch of iron(y)?
   Oyster lore
   United we eat
   Thumbs down to America (except the Bronx)
   Where west met east, and then asked for a dance
   Happiness
   Africa, names for newborns often a sign of the times
   With leadership shuffle, China is deadlocked on anointing new leader
   ‘Kink’ at the Museum of Sex: what’s latex got to do with it?
   British poets certain that poetry is alive and read and growing
   Globalization, according to the world, is good — sort of
   The commoner
   A real Lulu of an experience
   The world as a walk
  Feature and Review
   Czechs grateful to US, but many say hold the radar
   Three decades a prisoner, at 89 he’s ready to confess
   For troubled stars, a fickle memorabilia market
   A new wave of support for Anne Frank’s ailing tree
   Clinton says she would shield science from politics
   What Sputnik meant to a kid studying science
   Korean summit results exceed low expectations
  Edit. RoundUp
   Editorial Roundup
  Art and Books
   It’s only rock and art, but they like it
   ‘Howl’ in an era that fears indecency
   ‘The shock doctrine’: it’s all a grand capitalist conspiracy
   Expotrastiendas: here and now (and back a century)
   India’s art now booming and shaking
   Passing through what we all forgot: a cliché
   Art auciton for museum
   Art on display




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