Merkel invites Hollande for early talks

PARIS (Reuters) – German Chancellor Angela Merkel invited French President-elect Francois Hollande to visit Berlin as soon he can for a first meeting that will set the groundwork for a consensus on growth policies vital to the euro zone’s future health.

The centre-right chancellor, who joined other European leaders in congratulating the Socialist Hollande for his election victory over conservative incumbent Nicolas Sarkozy, said she was sure the two would work closely together.

Foreign leaders in Berlin, London and Washington who had backed Sarkozy and declined requests to meet Hollande before the election lined up to welcome him to their club.

U.S. President Barack Obama was the first leader from outside Europe to call with congratulations. The White House said he looked forward to working with Hollande on “shared economic and security challenges”.

Hollande has long said that his first foreign trip will be to Berlin where he plans to challenge a German-imposed focus on austerity policies by asking that pro-growth elements be tacked onto Europe’s budget responsibility treaty.

He and Merkel are under pressure to smooth over ideological differences and start their relationship on a firm footing as worries resurface over the euro zone’s debt crisis and the prospect the bloc could tip back into recession.

While the pair have similar personalities that could make for warm relations Buy windows 7 key, they are from opposing political families and Merkel publicly backed Sarkozy’s re-election campaign.

German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle, speaking at the French embassy, said: “We will now work together on a growth pact for Europe, that delivers more growth through more competitiveness.”

Hollande – whose victory marks the end of the Franco-German power duo that earned the nickname “Merkozy” during the height of the euro zone crisis – will likely travel to Germany shortly after his swearing in on May 15.

He is due in Chicago by May 18 for a NATO meeting.

Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti also spoke to Hollande following the election result, as well as to other European leaders, and the pair agreed on the need for close collaboration at European Union level to promote growth.

Monti McAfee Product Key, who lent support to Hollande’s ideas last month by calling for a “growth pact” in Europe, reiterated that budget responsibility was necessary but not sufficient to create growth and said it was vital to adopt concrete measures for growth.

While financial markets are also warming to Hollande’s growth agenda, analysts say he will need to reassure investors quickly as fears resurface over the euro zone’s debt woes.

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Conservative British Prime Minister David Cameron, who backed Sarkozy’s re-election bid, also called Hollande to congratulate him. “They both look forward to working very closely together in the future and building on the very close relationship that already exists between the UK and France,” a British spokeswoman said.

Hollande’s win, making him only the second elected Socialist president after Francois Mitterrand, was cheered by left-wing parties elsewhere in Europe.

“This new leadership is sorely needed as Europe seeks to escape from austerity. And it matters to Britain,” said Ed Miliband, leader of Britain’s Labour Party, praising Hollande’s plans for Europe.

“He has shown that the centre-left can offer hope and win elections with a vision of a better, more equal and just world,” Miliband said.

In his victory speech, Hollande listed “reorienting Europe towards employment and growth” as among his top priorities.

He has made clear he will not to force a ground-up review of the EU’s fiscal pact, driven by Merkel and Sarkozy earlier this year, and aides say there will be give and take with Berlin.

Merkel’s camp says she is not opposed to his proposal to give the European Investment Bank a more active financing role and making better use of structural funds but she is skeptical on his idea of common EU project bonds to fund infrastructure.

Merkel herself spent an uncomfortable evening as her centre-right Christian Democrats looked likely to lose further local power after a state election in Schleswig-Holstein Windows XP Key, continuing a pattern that may erode her chances of a third term next year.

(Reporting by Noah Barkin in Berlin, James Mackenzie in Rome and Stephan Mangan in London; Writing by Catherine Bremer; editing by Anna Willard)

World France Election

Miners battling depression and anxiety

Thousands of Australian miners suffer from mental health problems and a “macho mining culture” stops them from getting help, a new study has found.

Up to 10,000 mining company employees each year have mental health problems such as anxiety, depression or substance abuse, the study commissioned by the NSW Minerals Council says.

The cost to the industry may be as high as $450 million a year replica watches, it says.

Staff across all levels, from managers to those at the coal face replica watches, are being affected.

NSW Minerals Council CEO Stephen Galilee said on Monday the resources industry must do more to tackle the issue.

“We have the policies in place, but we need to consider ways to link them into a wider strategy,” he said in a statement.

The report, prepared by the University of Newcastle and the Hunter Institute of Mental Health, found some resource-sector employees were reluctant to seek help until their issue gets really bad.

“Cultural impediments like the old macho mining culture, the 'we're tough, this doesn't happen to us' mentality, needs to be swept away if employees are to confidently seek advice,” Mr Galilee said.

“We want to break the attitude that a doctor is like a plumber – you only need one when something is broken.”

The mental health report was launched at a NSW Minerals Council conference on occupational health in the Hunter Valley on Monday.

Former Newcastle league player Andrew Johns and senior federal Liberal MP Andrew Robb, who has struggled with depression replica watches, were speakers at the event.

Bessemer council authorizes mayor to explore purch

First Presbyterian Church in Bessemer, Ala. (The Birmingham News/Beverly Taylor)

BESSEMER, Alabama — The Bessemer City Council today authorized Mayor Kenneth Gulley to begin actively exploring the possibility of purchasing a former church building downtown as the site for a new city hall.

The First Presbyterian Church building in Bessemer, at 1723 Third Ave. North, has been eyed by the city for months as a possible site for a city hall, although officials said last week the former Zeigler commercial property at Third Avenue and 19th Street might could serve as city hall.   

Gulley said the city will see over the next 90 days whether the church property is a good fit for its needs. All options, including the Zeigler building, are still on the table, he said.

“We’ve got three months to explore and see if it works,” he said.

The church building is for sale with a list price of about $1.5 million, but city officials said they believe the city can get the property for $1.2 million. The church property, which sits catty-cornered from the current city hall Tattoo Case Box, had an initial asking price of $1.8 million.

Gulley said previously that the church building could be renovated for $800,000 to $1 million. Gulley has described the current city hall as being in a “deplorable state.”

The current city hall was built in 1938 under the Works Progress Administration on the site of an older city hall and fire station. It last underwent renovation about 30 years ago.

The City Council also today approved a new “capital recovery fee” for new connections to the city’s water service. The fee, which goes into effect immediately, will be used to pay for future upgrades to the city’s water system, officials said.

Upgrades and repairs to the system are currently paid for through Bessemer Utilities’ operating funds.

City engineer Ron Gilbert told the council the water system has several upgrades it will need to make to the system Tattoo Guns And Kits, including upgrading water lines along Morgan Road as part of a widening project by the state and moving water lines along Alabama 150 in conjunction with a state widening project from the Hoover city limit to Lakeshore Drive.

The widening project alone could cost the city about $3.5 million, he said. There are also lines inside the city that are more than 100 years old that will need to be replaced, Gilbert said.

The recovery fees will range from $1,000 to $5 Tattoo Machines Suppliers,000 and will be based on the size of the water line. There is also a formula in place to assess cost to multi-unit facilities such as motels, hotels, hospitals and nursing homes.

In other action, the council authorized Gulley to enter into a contract with Pyro Productions, Inc. to provide fireworks for the city’s annual Fourth of July celebration.

The council also called a meeting for Thursday night at 6 p.m. to discuss appropriating about $125,000 toward the Camp Bessemer summer youth program.  

Queens, NY – Former NY Senator Pleads Guilty To Fr

State Sen. Hiram Monserrate, D-Queens, spoke outside court in Kew Gardens after his acquittal on three charges and conviction on one.

Queens, NY – A disgraced New York politician who was expelled from the state Senate after a misdemeanor conviction for assaulting his girlfriend pleaded guilty in a separate case Friday to using taxpayer money to fund an unsuccessful 2006 campaign.

“At the time I knew my conduct was wrong and not legal, and I take full responsibility for my actions,” Queens Democrat Hiram Monserrate told a federal judge in Manhattan.

Monserrate, 44, faces about two years in prison under sentencing guidelines. Sentencing was set for Sept. 14.

The corruption case stemmed from when Monserrate was a City Council member. In 2006 Tattooing Machines, he directed $300,000 in council discretionary funds to a group in his Queens district What Is The Best Tattoo Machine, the Latino Initiative for Better Resources and Empowerment, or LIBRE.

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An indictment alleged that more than $100,000 was secretly funneled to Monserrate’s failed Senate primary race. It says LIBRE spent $30,000 on a petition drive and $31,000 to register voters for the councilman.

The group paid another $48,000 in salary to employees “for doing pretty much nothing else except working on the campaign Buy Tattoo Kits,” U.S. Attorney Brett Bharara said at the time the fraud charges were announced.

Monserrate, a former New York Police Department officer, was elected in 2008 to the state Senate. In 2009, he was convicted of misdemeanor assault and sentenced to three years on probation for dragging his bleeding girlfriend through a hallway in his apartment building.

Monserrate was ousted from the Senate in early 2010 on a 53-8 vote.

Romney Won’t Rule Out Romney-Santorum Ticket

WARWICK, R.I. – For the second time in as many days Discount Karen Millen Dresses, Mitt Romney was quizzed about his potential vice presidential pick during a town hall and declined to rule out a possible Romney-Santorum ticket.

“Everybody is on my list,” said Romney in answer to a voter who asked whether he would consider former presidential candidate Rick Santorum as his running mate. “Everybody is on my list. I’m not taking anybody off the list, alright?”

But Romney quickly stopped himself – backtracking to say that there actually isn’t a list of potential vice presidential candidates. At least not yet.

“I actually don’t, I don’t have a list, yet,” said Romney. “So I can’t say someone is on or off my list.”

“But I can tell you that the people who I had the privilege of running against would surely be among those I would consider,” said Romney. “The criteria, I think, has to be, first and foremost, is this a person who could be president of the United States, if that were needed? And do people recognize that and see that as a person who has that kind of qualification and so he– I’ve said this before. If any of the people I ran against happened to become the nominee, I would have endorsed them and supported them for president.”

“So of course they’d be on that list — and he, among others,” Romney said of Santorum.

“If any of you have any other ideas, just pass them along here,” Romney added Hale Bob Dresses sale, laughing, before searching the room for another questioner.

Movin’ On Up

The Washington Postleads with the continuing battle among states for political influence as South Carolina’s Republican Party will apparently announce today that its presidential primary will be moved up to Jan. 19. The announcement will undoubtedly spur more changes, which could lead to the Iowa caucuses taking place before Christmas. The New York Timesleads with investigators announcing that they may have found a flaw in the “steel plates that connect girders” in the Minneapolis bridge that collapsed last week. Investigations are ongoing, but federal officials warned that states should be careful about how much weight they put on bridges when carrying out construction projects. The Wall Street Journal tops its world-wide newsbox with U.S. troops in Baghdad killing 32 people during a raid in  Sadr City, a district largely run by Shiite cleric Muqtada Sadr’s militia.

USA Todayleads with new census numbers showing that, as has been much talked about, a growing number of Hispanics are moving into areas that are far away from cities with traditionally large immigrant populations. Many see this growth as the reason why immigration has become a political priority for more people who began seeing this trend in their backyards a few years ago. “What causes the friction is the rapid change much more than the absolute number,” an expert said. The Los Angeles Timesleads locally with the failure of California’s lawmakers to pass a budget, which has put all other legislative priorities on hold.

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South Carolina’s Republican primary had been scheduled for Feb. 2 Tattoo Supplies, but the state wants to hold on to its banner of being the “first in the South,” which was threatened by Florida’s decision to move its contest to Jan. 29. After South Carolina acts, New Hampshire and Iowa are bound to follow. South Carolina’s move won’t affect the Democratic primary, but the changes in New Hampshire and Iowa will affect both parties, and the campaigns aren’t too happy about these constant changes. More changes could still be in store as Michigan and Nevada continue to explore whether they will also move up their primaries.

USAT notes “tons of construction material” got to the Minneapolis bridge on the day of the collapse and the extra weight could have caused too much stress on the steel support plates. As the NYT makes clear, this announcement raises the possibility that the bridge had always been structurally deficient. If that’s the case, it raises the questions of why the bridge didn’t collapse earlier and how inspectors failed to catch the design flaw throughout the years.

The Post emphasizes that the raid in Sadr City angered many of Baghdad’s Shiites because it came on the eve of a major religious festival. The WSJ cites the U.S. military saying the 32 people killed were suspected insurgents, but the WP talks to Iraqi police who claimed several women and children were also among the dead. Meanwhile, Iraqi Prime Minsiter Nouri al-Maliki began a three-day visit to Iran, where he is expected to discuss security issues with several leaders, including President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

The NYT fronts a dispatch from Afghanistan’s southern Helmand Province where British officers are criticizing American Special Forces for causing a large number of civilian casualties that are turning the local population against all foreign troops. A senior British commander has reportedly even asked the Special Forces to leave the area that is under his control. The officers are particularly critical of the reliance on airstrikes, which sometimes kill civilians in large numbers. For its part, the U.S. military blames the Taliban for using civilians as cover.

The WP fronts President Bush hinting that he might try to pass a new round of tax cuts for U.S. businesses to make them more competitive abroad. But the president recognized it’s unlikely Congress would pass such a measure. Bush also tried to ease economic worries by stating the problems in the housing market amount only to a natural adjustment and dismissed calls to give government-sponsored Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac more power to buy up mortgages. The president also vowed to veto spending bills that are deemed too expensive, including the measure to expand the children’s health insurance program.

Everyone mentions word that Pakistani President Gen. Pervez Musharraf is considering imposing a state of emergency, which would restrict movement and could result in the postponing of elections. Meanwhile, the NYT emphasizes how Musharraf is suffering from a large decrease in popularity.

The NYT fronts a look at how difficult it is to be former President George Herbert Walker Bush these days, as people aren’t shy about approaching him to share their negative opinions about his son. “It wears on his heart,” Ron Kaufman, a longtime adviser, said. The piece also takes a look at how it seems Bush gets more involved in his son’s presidency than what has been publicly acknowledged. Bush pere plays a decidedly behind-the-scenes role, but he does talk to his son often, expresses his opinions, and has even talked to White House officials about seeking advice from outsiders.

In the Post’s opinion pages, a wiretapping expert warns that the new warrantless surveillance law “could create huge long-term security risks for the United States.” Susan Landau says that in order to avoid wiretapping every single communication, “the NSA will need to build massive automatic surveillance capabilities into telephone switches.” The problem is that once this new infrastructure is in place, others Tattoo Supplies, including foreign governments, could hack into the system and have access to U.S. communications.

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A Dandy’s Guide to Girl-Watching

As we enter the dog days of summer, men across the country will be engaging in the same time-honored tradition: Girl-watching. Last August, Troy Patterson examined the intricacies and history of, well, checking out women. The article is reprinted below. See our Magnum Photos gallery on girl-watching. Follow Slate’s Today’s Pictures on Twitter. 

Some girl-watchers are more subtle than others

I write to you at one of the three peak seasons for girl-watching in North America. Sweater-sheathed Ms. October will knock ‘em out in the fall, and the darling buds of May will spring fresh in their sundresses all too shortly, but meanwhile this is sultry deep August—impossibly flimsy fabrics, exquisite lengths of limb. Addled by murderous heat, provoked by brutal hot-to-trotness Cheap DKNY Clothes, I here risk gathering some modest notes on visual experience and modern manners.

Shall we define our terms? When I say girls, I am employing a common archaism meaning women, also known as chicks. For the purposes of this discussion, any woman who is older than a child and younger than a matron is a girl. By watching, I mean checking out. Despite all the many philosophical inquiries into beauty since the Greeks and into sidewalk scenes since Baudelaire, there is an acute shortage of discourse on the subject of checking out hot chicks, a silence all the more appalling because they are famously difficult to ignore.

To understand this lack of critical inquiry, we might revisit a New York Observer piece written 11 Augusts ago by a hot and bothered George Gurley. He described “a standoff between men and women” in public spaces: “While the happy gains of post-feminism may have given women permission to wear skimpy garments in the city heat, the earlier and more sober gains of feminism have made it very uncouth indeed for any civilized man to acknowledge the delights that meet his eye.” Not much more interesting has been said on the topic. What academic work there is on the subject tends to get bogged down in a male-gaze sound bite from the critic John Berger: “Men look at women. Women watch themselves being looked at.” That quote is also a favorite of people producing social-science papers on body image, sexual harassment, and gender equity. Those are all very serious issues, none of which will be addressed here, this not being a very serious article, I hasten to clarify for those readers already drafting indignant letters to the editor.

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The rest of us can get our bearings by recognizing girl-watching and people-watching as distinct activities. An illustration: The alert people-watcher observes that two girls going out about town together, each clad in shorts, are very likely to be wearing shorts of precisely the same length. The girl-watcher Discount Karen Millen Dresses, confronted in the flesh by a pair of shorts-clad women, may not notice the identical brevity of their garments, concentrating as he is on how one of the girls is wearing her shorts beautifully. The pleasures of people-watching are anthropological; those of girl-watching are aesthetic.

Modern girl-watching began in 1954, when Harper published The Girl Watcher’s Guide. It is still the great text on the topic Discount DKNY Clothes, a delightful and occasionally profound novelty book constructed on the model of birding manuals: “Although we believe that girl watching has it all over bird watching, we feel that these two hobbies do share one important feature. They are both genteel. They both respect the rights of the watched … A girl watcher never leers Discount Karen Millen Dresses, nor does he utter any sound which might betray his joy.”

Author Don Sauers wrote The Girl Watcher’s Guide during hours stolen from his job as—what else?—a New York City ad man. Indeed, there is a distinct Mad Men vibe to the production, much helped along by the va-va-voom illustrations from Eldon Dedini. In fact, Sauers went on to design girl-watching-themed ad campaigns for Pall Mall and Diet Pepsi. For nearly a decade-and-a-half—until about the time of the Miss America Protest of 1968—the author received invitations from the likes of the Tonight Show, Expo 67, and Life (where he once helped out with a photo spread about ski pants).

Sauers’ recommended “girl watching centers” in Manhattan include Fifth Avenue between 49th and 59th Streets, and 58th Street between Madison and Sixth Avenue, selected on their strength as shopping areas. Employing that standard, the Manhattan girl-watcher is today best served by Prince Street between Sullivan and Elizabeth Buy DKNY Clothes, where some girls distinguish themselves through their alluring poise, others through flamboyant bralessness. In order to investigate possibilities further uptown, I arranged a lunchtime rendezvous with a friend who works on the same block that Sauers did, Fifth Avenue between 57th and 58th. Before embarking on our field trip, we digested the book’s instructions on “mastering the once-over,” which are predicated on the idea that “it is never in good taste to look down after watching a beautiful girl’s face.” Rather, after sighting a striking face, you quickly look at girl’s shoes Buy Bandage dresses, then “slowly, taking about three seconds, raise your eyes … remembering always not to move the head.” That last directive reminded my companion of instructions he’d gotten on his golf swing.

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Bush’s Latest, Lame Libby Excuse

After four years of saying very little about the CIA leak investigation, George Bush and Karl Rove are finally speaking up, and they’re blaming former deputy secretary of state Richard Armitage.

At his press conference Thursday, President Bush was asked if he was disappointed in the senior advisers involved in the outing of CIA employee Valerie Plame and whether he’d communicated that disappointment to them in any way. “I haven’t spent a lot of time talking about the testimony that people throughout my administration were forced to give as a result of the special prosecutor,” Bush began. “I didn’t ask them during that time, and I haven’t asked them since.”

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For the last two weeks the president and his aides have asserted that Bush was deep in contemplation over the details of the Libby case as he weighed whether to commute the sentence. But on the larger, four-year episode with national security implications, the inquisitive chief executive asserts he didn’t ask a single question of those involved. This is not going to help his reputation for operating in a bubble. It’s smart for Bush to play dumb on the details of the case because, of course Buy Chloe Dresses, the president doesn’t want to have to account for the role of his chief political adviser Karl Rove, who discussed Plame’s identity with two reporters.

But Bush didn’t stop his answer with that dodge. He also offered one coy observation: “I am aware of the fact that perhaps somebody in the administration did disclose the name of that person, and, you know, I’ve often thought about what would have happened had that person come forth and said, ‘I did it.’ Would we have had this, you know, endless hours of investigation and a lot of money being spent on this matter?”

The president was talking about either Armitage, or (much less likely) his former press secretary Ari Fleischer. But contrary to Bush’s claim, both Armitage and Fleischer did come forth. In October 2003, once Armitage realized he was the source of the leak to columnist Robert Novak, he told Secretary of State Colin Powell and the FBI before  special prosecutor Fitzgerald called his first grand jury witness. Fleischer told Fitzgerald about mentioning Plame’s name to reporters in his first grand jury appearance.

By highlighting Armitage and Fleischer Buy Herve leger strapless, Bush aligns himself with those who define the case narrowly around the leaking of Plame’s actual name. It shifts the focus from Rove, who discussed Plame with two reporters and whose recollections were complex enough that he made five grand jury visits. It also shifts the story away from Libby, who was not convicted of passing along Plame’s name, but of lying and obstructing justice in the investigation into who did. Libby’s advocates, such as presidential candidate Fred Thompson, argue that since it couldn’t be proven that Libby committed the crime of naming Plame—which put special prosecutor Fitzgerald in business—Libby should never have been prosecuted for perjury and obstructing justice.

Five days before Bush highlighted Armitage, Karl Rove did, too. At an Aspen Institute forum last Saturday, Walter Isaacson asked him about his role in the case and unlike previous instances in which he declined to speak, Rove answered: “The record pretty well shows that it is one [who] used her name … Armitage.”

During the audience questioning period afterward, none other than Colin Powell himself rose to defend his longtime friend, relating how Armitage had come forward, talked to the FBI investigators and how they told the news to White House counsel Alberto Gonzales. (Though in Powell’s telling Armitage never used Plame’s actual name.) Then, Powell seemed to turn it back on Rove. The special prosecutor’s investigation continued, Powell asserted, despite Armitage’s confession, because “there were others involved—a lot of others—and [prosecutors] couldn’t get all of the answers they needed to get resolution. If everybody who had talked with reporters during that period had done what Armitage had done, I think this would have ended early on and not dragged out.”

Patrick Fitzgerald had to call Rove so many times to the grand jury in part because he thought Rove wasn’t telling him the whole story. It was only in October 2004, eight months after his first grand jury visit Cheap BCBG Dresses, that Rove told Fitzgerald he remembered that in addition to talking to Robert Novak he’d also talked to Time reporter Matt Cooper about Joe Wilson’s wife.

And Rove is still trying to minimize and revise his Plamegate history. In the Aspen interview Rove forgot about Cooper again. He told Isaacson, “my contribution to this was to say to a reporter—and this tells you something about talking to reporters—the words: ‘I heard that too.’ ” He was referring to his conversation with Bob Novak Cheap Marc Jacobs Dresses, only one part of his contribution to the drama. Rove’s lawyer has said that Rove told Cooper that Wilson’s wife worked at the CIA, but when Isaacson mentioned Cooper in a follow-up, Rove talked about everything but that. “I don’t remember the conversation with Matt Cooper,” he said. “But even his own notes of it are that it’s an off-the-record conversation on Friday morning when I know that Novak’s column has been written and is going to be published, and that the CIA is coming out with a statement that says Joe Wilson was not sent at the direction of the CIA or the CIA director, or the Vice President, and is not dispositive, not conclusive, in fact added to the case, didn’t detract from the case and was suspect because of the methods he used to collect the data, and I’m trying to tell Matt Cooper—by his own notes—don’t get ahead of yourself on this, don’t be writing about this thing for Time magazine.”

The Plame scandal broke four years ago this month Replica Herve leger strapless, and now it is finally ending. In his press conference DKNY Clothing sale, President Bush encouraged the country to move on from Libby—but before they do, the president and Karl Rove wanted to make sure they got the last word.

Toyota Tacoma X-Runner RTR hits the strip ahead of

Cheap Herve leger strapless
We’ve got a Tacoma-sized soft spot for factory-built high performance trucks Cheap Herve Leger gown, even if they’re just concepts. It’s why we loved the F-150 Lightning and why we think the new Ford F-150 SVT Raptor is one of the best things to happen to the pickup world in a long time. Toyota is helping to fuel that fire with the introduction of its new Tacoma X-Runner RTR. In this case Herve Leger sale, those last three consonants stand for “Ready to Race.” The machine looks like our kind of absurdity and was built for that mecca of inanity Chanel Dresses sale, SEMA.

The RTR follows an age-old hot rodding recipe; shove the biggest engine you’ve got into the lightest chassis on hand. Under the hood Replica Karen Millen Dresses, a supercharged 5.7-liter V8 borrowed from the larger Tundra should help the Tacoma RTR dominate the drag strip. The engine is coupled to a stock six-speed automatic transmission Cheap Missoni Dresses, also from the Tundra, and a Tundra rear axle dumps all of the power to the pavement.

Toyota says that the drivetrain is good for 504 horsepower and 550 pound-feet of torque, and that those numbers are good enough to get the truck to scoot down the quarter mile in around 11 seconds. If you can’t tell, we’re grinning from ear to ear. Head over to Pickuptrucks.com for a closer look.

[Source: Pickuptrucks.com]

She’s No Fundamentalist

W.H. Auden, whose centenary fell late last month, had an extraordinary capacity to summon despair—but in such a way as to simultaneously inspire resistance to fatalism. His most beloved poem is probably September 1 Best place to buy Replica Romain Jerome Watches, 1939, in which he sees Europe toppling into a chasm of darkness. Reflecting on how this catastrophe for civilization had come about, he wrote:

Exiled Thucydides knew
All that a speech can say
About Democracy,
And what dictators do,
The elderly rubbish they talk
To an apathetic grave;
Analyzed all in his book,
The enlightenment driven away,
The habit-forming pain,
Mismanagement and grief:
We must suffer them all again.

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“The enlightenment driven away … ” This very strong and bitter line came back to me when I saw the hostile, sneaky reviews that have been dogging the success of Ayaan Hirsi Ali’s best seller Infidel Buy Cheap Replica Calvin Klein Watches,which describes the escape of a young Somali woman from sexual chattelhood to a new life in Holland and then (after the slaying of her friend Theo van Gogh) to a fresh exile in the United States. Two of our leading intellectual commentators, Timothy Garton Ash (in the New York Review of Books) and Ian Buruma, described Hirsi Ali Fake Tissot Watches, or those who defend her, as “Enlightenment fundamentalist[s].” In Sunday’s New York Times Book Review, Buruma made a further borrowing from the language of tyranny and intolerance and described her view as an “absolutist” one.

Now, I know both Garton Ash and Buruma, and I remember what fun they used to have, in the days of the Cold War, with people who proposed a spurious “moral equivalence” between the Soviet and American sides. Much of this critique involved attention to language. Buruma was very mordant about those German leftists who referred to the “consumer terrorism” of the federal republic. You can fill in your own preferred example here; the most egregious were (and, come to think of it Jacob & Co Replica Watches, still are) those who would survey the U.S. prison system and compare it to the Gulag.

In her book, Ayaan Hirsi Ali says the following: “I left the world of faith, of genital cutting and forced marriage for the world of reason and sexual emancipation. After making this voyage I know that one of these two worlds is simply better than the other. Not for its gaudy gadgetry, but for its fundamental values.” This is a fairly representative quotation. She has her criticisms of the West, but she prefers it to a society where women are subordinate, censorship is pervasive, and violence is officially preached against unbelievers. As an African victim of, and escapee from, this system, she feels she has acquired the right to say so. What is “fundamentalist” about that?

The Feb. 26 edition of Newsweek takes up where Garton Ash and Buruma leave off and says, in an article by Lorraine Ali, that, “It’s ironic that this would-be ‘infidel’ often sounds as single-minded and reactionary as the zealots she’s worked so hard to oppose.” I would challenge the author to give her definition of irony and also to produce a single statement from Hirsi Ali that would come close to materializing that claim. Accompanying the article is a typically superficial Newsweek Q&A sidebar, which is almost unbelievably headed: “A Bombthrower’s Life.” The subject of this absurd headline is a woman who has been threatened with horrific violence, by Muslims varying from moderate to extreme, ever since she was a little girl. She has more recently had to see a Dutch friend butchered in the street, been told that she is next, and now has to live with bodyguards in Washington, D.C. She has never used or advocated violence. Yet to whom does Newsweek refer as the “Bombthrower”? It’s always the same with these bogus equivalences: They start by pretending loftily to find no difference between aggressor and victim, and they end up by saying that it’s the victim of violence who is “really” inciting it.

Garton Ash and Buruma would once have made short work of any apologist who accused the critics of the U.S.S.R. or the People’s Republic of China of “heating up the Cold War” if they made any points about human rights. Why, then, do they grant an exception to Islam, which is simultaneously the ideology of insurgent violence and of certain inflexible dictatorships? Is it because Islam is a “faith”? Or is it because it is the faith—in Europe at least—of some ethnic minorities? In neither case would any special protection from criticism be justified. Faith makes huge claims Fake Chaumet Watches for sale, including huge claims to temporal authority over the citizen, which therefore cannot be exempt from scrutiny. And within these “minorities,” there are other minorities who want to escape from the control of their ghetto leaders. (This was also the position of the Dutch Jews in the time of Spinoza.) This is a very complex question, which will require a lot of ingenuity in its handling. The pathetic oversimplification, which describes skepticism, agnosticism, and atheism as equally “fundamentalist,” is of no help here. And notice what happens when Newsweek takes up the cry: The enemy of fundamentalism is defined as someone on the fringe while Fake Richard Mille Watches, before you have had time to notice the sleight of hand, the aggrieved, self-pitying Muslim has become the uncontested tenant of the middle ground.

Let me give another example of linguistic slippage. In ACLU circles, we often refer to ourselves as “First Amendment absolutists.” By this we mean, ironically enough, that we prefer to interpret the words of the Founders, if you insist, literally. The literal meaning in this case seems (to us) to be that Congress cannot inhibit any speech or establish any state religion. This means that we defend all expressions of opinion including those that revolt us, and that we say that nobody can be forced to practice, or forced to foreswear, any faith. I suppose I would say that this is an inflexible principle, or even a dogma, with me. But who dares to say that’s the same as the belief that criticism of religion should be censored or the belief that faith should be imposed? To flirt with this equivalence is to give in to the demagogues and to hear, underneath their yells of triumph, the dismal moan of the trahison des clercs and “the enlightenment driven away.” Perhaps, though, if I said that my principles were a matter of unalterable divine revelation and that I was prepared to use random violence in order to get “respect” for them, I could hope for a more sympathetic audience from some of our intellectuals.