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Thursday, July 24, 2008
Subject: Obama Campaign News
Time: 11:23:55 PM EDT
Author: ddawncrawford71
Mood: Chillin'
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Dear Friend --
As you may have heard, Barack has been in Europe, the Middle East, and Asia this week.
Today, he spoke in Berlin, Germany.
In a city where a wall once divided the free from the oppressed, he talked about tearing down the walls that divide all peoples so we can address our common problems -- the threats of terrorism and nuclear weapons, global warming and genocide, AIDS and poverty.
Watch Barack's historic speech and share it with your friends:
Please forward this email to your friends, family, and colleagues.
Thanks,
David
David Plouffe Campaign Manager Obama for America
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Subject: We must remember, and never forget, that the ultimate aim and the denial objective of the United Sta
Time: 11:07:16 PM EDT
Author: ddawncrawford71
Mood: Chillin'
We must remember, and never forget, that the ultimate aim and the denial objective of the United States Government towards Black people is that we must never become effectively organized. -The Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan
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Subject: Gulf inflation and the dollar peg
Time: 10:55:21 PM EDT
Author: ddawncrawford71
Mood: Chillin'
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Gulf inflation and the dollar peg |
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| 23/07/2008 05:37:00 PM GMT |
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| (alshindagah.com) One cause of Gulf inflation is the peg of most Gulf currencies to the weakening dollar. | |
| If one cause of inflation is the sharp increase of wealth, another is the peg of Gulf currencies to the dollar.
By Patrick Seale
The oil-rich Arab states of the Gulf are suffering from a painful and insidious disease which, if unchecked, will eat away at their prosperity and stability. The disease is called inflation.
The figures tell the story. Inflation in Saudi Arabia - by far the region’s biggest economy - is running at about 10.4% a year; in the United Arab Emirates it is 11%; in Kuwait 10%; in Oman 13.2%; in Qatar 14%.
Double-digit inflation such as this is hard to check. Governments are forced to compensate by increasing subsidies on basic items, by introducing price controls and, above all, by increasing wages of public employees. Private employers have usually to follow suit - and inflation edges upwards.
In inflationary situations, it is always those who live by their labour - who have no access to oil revenues and are not cushioned by wealth - who suffer first and who start to agitate, threatening political stability.
The root cause of Gulf inflation is, of course, the stupendous avalanche of wealth which has poured over the region as a result of the soaring price of oil. Not so long ago, oil was selling at $20; now it is edging towards $150. The oil price has surged seven-fold since 2002. It has doubled in price in the last year alone.
If one cause of inflation is the sharp increase of wealth - too many riyals and too many dirhams chasing too few goods - another cause is the peg of most Gulf currencies to the weakening dollar. The Saudi riyal, for example, has been pegged at a rate of 3.75 riyals to the U.S. dollar since 1986.
As the dollar falls sharply against the euro and the yen, such dollar pegs contribute to inflation by making Gulf imports from Europe and Japan more expensive. Oman’s import bill, for example, surged in 2007 by almost 47% to $15.96bn.
Economists and central bankers up and down the Gulf are now debating whether it would be wise to end the dollar peg and revalue their currencies.
A committee of Saudi Arabia’s Shura Council has recommended to King Abdallah that the riyal should be revalued by up to 30%. But Hamad Saud al-Sayyari, head of the Saudi central bank, has said that adjusting exchange rates will not solve the problem of high inflation. Meanwhile, Muhammad al-Jahdhamy, executive vice-president of Oman’s central bank, has said that inflation will stabilise, a remark that implied that a revaluation was not necessary.
Some experts believe that Gulf currencies should abandon the dollar peg in favour of a peg to a basket of currencies. Others argue that only a floating exchange rate would give the Gulf countries the monetary policy independence they need in a situation of global financial turbulence.
Ala’a A-Youssuf, chief economist of the London-based Gulf Finance House, argued in a letter to the Financial Times (July 16) that exchange rate appreciation alone would not be effective. He called for a “comprehensive medium-term development framework that explicitly recognizes the need to contain inflation while fostering growth and development.” Such a programme, he might have added, would be easier to implement if the Gulf countries were to adopt a single currency, on the model of the European Union.
The Financial Times (8 July) has called for Gulf currencies to include the price of oil in the basket to which they could peg their currencies. Their currencies would appreciate when oil was strong and depreciate when it was weak.
The truth is that the world economy is in great trouble. While oil and other commodities continue to climb, stock markets tumble and several leading commercial banks are struggling to stay afloat. In the United States, consumer confidence is at a 28-year low.
The biggest threat overhanging the world economy is the uncertain future of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the pillars of the U.S. mortgage market. Together, they own or guarantee almost half of the $12,000bn U.S. mortgage market. But, as house prices fall and foreclosures rise across the United States, they have incurred huge losses. If they collapsed, the consequences could be disastrous for the global financial system - and for the dollar.
To survive, Fannie and Freddie need to borrow and raise fresh capital. But it will not be easy to attract private lenders so long as it is not clear what the U.S. government will do to save these venerable institutions.
One solution being floated is not to nationalize them - which would be contrary to America’s liberal market ideology - but to place them in “conservatorship” - a sort of disguised nationalization, which would allow the U.S. government to pretend that the liabilities of Fannie and Freddie were not its own.
With the world teetering on the edge of a depression, these are not easy times for financial authorities, whether in the United States, in the Gulf, or indeed anywhere else.
-- Patrick Seale is a leading British writer on the Middle East, and the author of The Struggle for Syria; also, Asad of Syria: The Struggle for the Middle East; and Abu Nidal: A Gun for Hire.
Source: Middle East Online
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Subject: Obama seeks stronger Europe ties
Time: 10:51:14 PM EDT
Author: ddawncrawford71
Mood: Chillin'
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Obama seeks stronger Europe ties |
The speech is being compared to those of presidents Kennedy and Reagan
US presidential hopeful Barack Obama has told crowds in Berlin that the US and Europe have drifted apart and it is time for them to come together again.
"If we're honest... we know that sometimes, on both sides of the Atlantic, we have drifted apart and forgotten our shared destiny," he said.
At least 200,000 people heard the Democratic Party candidate make the only public speech of his world tour.
His words were broadcast live in Germany, where he is a popular figure.
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The burdens of global citizenship continue to bind us together 
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Mr Obama began his speech by paying tribute to the Berliners who held out against Soviet pressure during the blockade in 1948.
Appealing for a renewed partnership with Europe, he identified terrorism, nuclear proliferation, trade barriers and climate change as global challenges.
Mr Obama's appearance had the air of a rock concert in the Tiergarten Park, a place that has become associated with huge feel-good football parties in recent years, the BBC's James Coomarasamy reports.
His rhetorical flights and unusual background have captured the imagination of a country which views its own politicians as rather dour and grey, our correspondent says.
'Intertwined world'
"While the 20th Century taught us that we share a common destiny, the 21st has revealed a world more intertwined than at any time in human history," Mr Obama said.
Thousands turned out for the speech |
"In Europe, the view that America is part of what has gone wrong in our world, rather than a force to help make it right, has become all too common," he continued.
"In America, there are voices that deride and deny the importance of Europe's role in our security and our future.
"But the burdens of global citizenship continue to bind us together," he added.
He said that partnership and co-operation among nations was "not a choice".
"It is the one way, the only way, to protect our common security and advance our common humanity," he argued.
He spoke on Afghanistan, a sensitive issue in Germany because of pressure for it to send more troops.
Mr Obama said it was time to renew nations' resolve to "rout the terrorists who threaten our security in Afghanistan and the traffickers who sell drugs on your streets".
"The Afghan people need our troops and your troops... we have too much at stake to turn back now," he said.
Mr Obama addressed many issues in his speech:
- He said it was time to "defeat terror and dry up the well of extremism that supports it", arguing that Islamic extremism could be defeated just as communism had been in its time
- He urged support for the Iraqis rebuilding their lives as the US passes responsibility to the Iraqi government and "finally bringsthis war to a close"
- It was the moment, he said, to "renew the goal of a world without nuclear weapons" and not "stand idly by and watch the further spread of the deadly atom"
- He urged all countries to act with "the same seriousness of purpose" as Germany to reduce carbon emissions
- He called for global trade "that is free and fair for all"
World tour
Mr Obama's visit to Berlin kicked off the European leg of his world tour ahead of November's US presidential election.
One McCain supporter could be seen spreading the message in Berlin |
Earlier, he met German leaders including Chancellor Angela Merkel.
Mr Obama flew to Germany after visiting Afghanistan, Iraq, Israel, the West Bank and Jordan, and is due to visit France on Friday, then the UK on Saturday.
Most Germans seem to believe that an Obama victory in November would do much to improve relations between the US and Europe, our correspondent says.
This speech is being compared to those made in Berlin by John F Kennedy and Ronald Reagan - but they were sitting presidents.
For Mr Obama to become president himself, this event - and the tour of which it is part - must be seen in a positive light by the voters back home in America, our correspondent says.
Mr Obama's Republican rival, John McCain, visited a German restaurant in Columbus, Ohio, on Thursday to eat bratwurst sausage with local business leaders.
"I'd love to give a speech in Germany but I'd much prefer to do it as president of the United States rather than as a candidate for president," he told reporters. |
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Subject: Obama Echoes Reagan in Call for Global Unity
Time: 10:47:47 PM EDT
Author: ddawncrawford71
Mood: Chillin'
Obama Echoes Reagan in Call for Global Unity
Democratic Contender Calls for Troop Support in Victory Column Address in Berlin
By JENNIFER PARKER July 24, 2008
In a soaring speech delivered before tens of thousands of cheering Germans, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., argued America has no better partner than Europe, and stressed the need for European troops in Afghanistan to help defeat the Taliban and al Qaeda.
Sen. Obama recounts history and calls for global unity in Berlin, Germany.
"I come to Berlin as so many of my countrymen have come before. Tonight, I speak to you not as a candidate for president, but as a citizen -- a proud citizen of the United States, and a fellow citizen of the world," Obama said, standing before Berlin's famed Victory Column in Berlin.
WATCH MORE ON OBAMA'S TRIP AND BERLIN SPEECH ON WORLD NEWS WITH CHARLES GIBSON AT 6:30PM ET AND ON NIGHTLINE AT 11:30 ET ON ABC
At one point the crowd, estimated by Berlin police to number more than 200,000, burst into a chorus of "Yes we can!" -- Obama's campaign refrain in the United States.
"People of Berlin – people of the world – this is our moment. This is our time," he said.
Back home, the speech was greeted with much less enthusiasm by Obama's political rival, Sen. John McCain.
"I'd love to give a speech in Germany," McCain, R-Ariz., told reporters ata stop outside Columbus, Ohio. "But I'd much prefer to do it as president."
McCain visited Schmidt's Sausage Haus und Restaurant -- an intentional choice in a dig at Obama after the campaign's plans to visit an oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico were thwarted by Hurricane Dolly-related weather.
Obama Calls for Troops in Afghanistan
The presumptive Democratic nominee also argued that both European and American troops are needed in Afghanistan.
"This is the moment when we must renew our resolve to rout the terrorists who threaten our security in Afghanistan, and the traffickers who sell drugs on your streets," he said. Obama has called for more U.S. troops and NATO troops to be sent to Afghanistan.
"No one welcomes war," he said. "I recognize the enormous difficulties in Afghanistan. But my country and yours have a stake in seeing that NATO's first mission beyond Europe's borders is a success. For the people of Afghanistan, and for our shared security, the work must be done. America cannot do this alone. The Afghan people need our troops and your troops; our support and your support to defeat the Taliban and al Qaeda, to develop their economy, and to help them rebuild their nation. We have too much at stake to turn back now."
Obama has been greeted warmly in his first European trip as a presidential candidate.
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Subject: Board declines comment on grand jury report
Time: 10:38:08 PM EDT
Author: ddawncrawford71
Mood: Chillin'
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Board declines comment on grand jury report2:24 PM Thu, Jul 24, 2008 Posted by: PE News |
The Riverside County Board of Supervisors has declined to comment on a recent grand jury report critical of the Beaumont-Cherry Valley Water District.
The grand jury routinely forwards its reports to the Board of Supervisors and requests comment.
In a letter to John B. Todd, foreman of the 2007-2008 grand jury, Gary Christmas, deputy county executive officer, wrote, "Since the Beaumont-Cherry Valley Water District has no reporting relationship with Riverside County officials or the Board of Supervisors, it would be inappropriate for the County to comment upon the Grand Jury's findings."
The grand jury, in a report published on June 23, said it had found examples of Brown Act violations, nepotism and misuse of public funds in the water district. District General Manager Chuck Butcher has denied the allegations.
The grand jury report was forwarded to the Riverside County Auditor-Controller and the ethics division of the District Attorney's office, as well as the Board of Supervisors and water district.
--Erin Waldner ewaldner@PE.com
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Subject: Revealing a massacre, or stating the obvious
Time: 10:29:12 PM EDT
Author: ddawncrawford71
Mood: Chillin'
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Revealing a massacre, or stating the obvious |
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| 24/07/2008 12:47:00 AM GMT |
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| (revisionisthistory.org) 'A single day of fighting resulted in the death of 50 Arabs' | |
| Those killed in the 'massacre of Beit Daras', according to Palestinian accounts, were 265, women, children and elders.
By Ramzy Baroud
For some folks interested in genealogy, tracing one's roots is a stimulating activity. It's immensely interesting and meaningful to learn where one's life started. DNA testing has made it possible to trace one's roots back many generations and there are even free web sites that can help users trace their family history based on a few simple clues.
Recent findings in my own personal history have been interesting indeed. The present task of tracing my family roots was inspired by a book project with Pluto Press, narrating the story of my father, as once a fighter from Gaza who died recently under tragic circumstances in the same refugee camp to which he was expelled, along with his family sixty years ago.
Just weeks into my research, I found myself stumbling into the details of a massacre, one that is conveniently overshadowed by the dust of the battle, the rigidity of academic research and the lack of media access of those who have survived.
And now, what started as a mere phase of my father's torn childhood in Palestine has morphed into being the core of my book's narrative.
My family came from the village of Beit Daras, one of the hundreds of villages destroyed by Zionist Jewish militias prior to the establishment of the state of Israel. Growing up in a refugee camp in the Gaza Strip, decades after the destruction of Beit Daras, I heard many stories of our village that now only exist in memory. The objective behind the story was hardly a calculated intent to ensure that we don't forget what has befallen us. It was a daily narrative that simply defined our internal relationship as a community.
The "Bedrasawis" - the collective name of those originated from Beit Daras - were often stereotyped as "large headed" - literally - and stubborn. Although we Bedrasawis protested the recurring accusation, we also shared unspoken pride in it. But that reputation of zeal and prowess was fostered by the dramatic events of 1948, during the Zionist drive to evacuate Palestine from its inhabitants.
Israeli historian Benny Morris, in his volume, The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem, makes a couple of references to Beit Daras. Nothing notable, aside from the fact that a Haganah's unit, Givati, had shelled the village on May 10, 1948 "promoting the flight of its inhabitants."
But there is more to what took place in Beit Daras than Morris's footnote. Arab historians, Walid Khalidi, Salman Abu Sitta, among others, provided the story within a greater context. Still, documenting the history of anywhere between 400 to 500 destroyed Palestinian villages in one volume is not a simple feat, thus much of Beit Daras' history is lumped as one of many: the Zionists attacked on day such and such, the Arabs resisted, then fled, then the village was blown up to ensure that the inhabitants would not return.
As sinister as the above summation is, much is left untold. Peoples, faces, stories and families were torn apart, often neverto meet again, along with the decimated village's 401 homes, two mosques and lone elementary school.
Those killed in the 'massacre of Beit Daras', according to Palestinian accounts, were 265, largely women, children and elders. The gender and age groups of the victims were not selective nor coincidental, but related to the nature of the battle, where the fighters of Beit Daras were engaged in fighting against successive Zionist army units, first involving militants from a nearby settlement, then Haganah forces and finally Givati units.
The battle for Beit Daras was long and arduous, and duly mentioned in the writings of Jamal Abd Al-Nasser, the first president of Egypt, during his military service in southern Palestine, and of David Ben Gurion's War Diaries (1947-1949).
Morris's chronological research methods discounted the fact that although Beit Daras was located in southern Palestine - approximately 30 kilometers north of Gaza - the Zionist aggression to conquer the once peaceful village began earlier than the Givati's "Operation Lighting" (Mivtza Barak) of early May 1948, and that the village didn't fall for at least another month after the date he sketchily provides.
Indeed, Beit Daras' strategic location, near important Zionist military hubs - located inside settlements bordering the village - and near the supply routes to the Negev, made it a target as early as March 16, and several times more in the same month; then, again, in April, and twice in May, and finally in June. Zionist losses were high and their attempts failed, time after time. There was much fury that a small village of roughly 2000 people would not surrender under intense bombardment. A single day of fighting resulted in the death of 50 Arabs, according to Ben Gurion's own account.
Um 'Adel is an 80-year-old woman who now lives in Gaza. Today she sells foodstuffs at a tiny and humble stand to help her family as they struggle to survive the siege on Gaza. She vividly recalls the events that led to the massacre in 1948. It struck me how apolitical she was, and how, until this day, she is dumbfounded, not able to comprehend the dramatic events of those short months between March and June of 1948.
Until now, she views the fight for Beit Daras based on a simple equation: They tried to take our land, and we fought them off until the end. "They (The Zionist militias) knew well that we, Bedrasawis would not go down easily. They knew that their fight for that whole area was one battle, but to take over Beit Daras was another."
As simple as the equation was, her confusion about the whole event haunts her until this day, and even now decades later, she is still baffled as to what happened and why the people of her village were betrayed. Beit Daras, lived up to its reputation of hard-headedness and tenacity, but many details remain murky, yet incredibly revealing and deserve more than a footnote.
One can only hope that the memory of the village survives without having to wait the authentication of an Israeli historian, which may or may not ever arrive. I know that I will do my part to make that happen. After all, I owe Beit Daras my (relatively) large head, and the tenacious spirit of my children, who carry the names of those who lived in Beit Daras, and died there.
-- Ramzy Baroud is a Palestinian-American author and editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His work has been published in numerous newspapers and journals worldwide, including the Washington Post, Japan Times, Al Ahram Weekly and Lemonde Diplomatique. His latest book is The Second Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of a People's Struggle (Pluto Press, London). Read more about him on his website: RamzyBaroud.net
Source: AJP
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Subject: McCain Camp Rips Obama for Cancelling Troop Visit
Time: 9:59:44 PM EDT
Author: ddawncrawford71
Mood: Chillin'
McCain Camp Rips Obama for Cancelling Troop Visit
July 24, 2008 1:38 PM
The McCain campaign is slamming Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., over a decision to cancel a visit with U.S. troops in Germany.
The German magazine Der Spiegel is reporting online that Obama has “cancelled a planned short visit to the Rammstein and Landstuhl U.S. military bases in the southwest German state of Rhineland-Palatinate. The visits were planned for Friday.”
“Barack Obama will not be coming to us,” a spokesperson for the U.S. military hospital in Landstuhl told Der Spiegel. “I don't know why.”
Obama senior adviser Robert Gibbstold ABC News in a statement, “During his trip as part of the CODEL to Afghanistan and Iraq, Sen. Obama visited the combat support hospital in the Green Zone in Baghdad and had a number of other visits with the troops. For the second part of his trip, the senator wanted to visit the men and women at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center to express his gratitude for their service and sacrifice. The senator decided out of respect for these servicemen and women that it would be inappropriate to make a stop to visit troops at a U.S. military facility as part of a trip funded by the campaign.”
But the campaign of Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., issued the following comment on Obama’s decision.
"Barack Obama is wrong," said McCain spokesman Brian Rogers. “It is never ‘inappropriate’ to visit our men and women in the military."
An Obama adviser, Air Force Maj. Gen. Scott Gration (Ret.), later elaborated on Obama's decision to skip the event.
"We learned from the Pentagon last night that the visit would be viewed instead as a campaign event," Gration said. "Sen. Obama did not want to have a trip to see our wounded warriors perveived as a campaign event when his visit was to show his appreciation for our troops and decided instead not to go."
--jpt
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Subject: Obama Speaks to Germany on European Ties
Time: 9:51:42 PM EDT
Author: ddawncrawford71
Mood: Chillin'
Obama Speaks to Germany on European Ties
Miguel Villagran/Associated Press
Senator Barack Obama spoke at the Tiergarten in Berlin on Thursday.
Published: July 25, 2008
BERLIN — Senator Barack Obama stood before a sea of people here Thursday evening and issued a call for cooperation, imploring America and Europe to bridge differences and rekindle old alliances in an effort to restore global stability and better confront existing and unforeseen threats.
“If we’re honest with each other, we know that sometimes, on both sides of the Atlantic, we have drifted apart and forgotten our shared destiny,” Mr. Obama said. “In Europe, the view that America is part of what has gone wrong in our world, rather than a force to help make it right, has become all too common. In America, there are voices that deride and deny the importance of Europe’s role in our security and our future.”
Pausing for a moment, the Illinois Democrat added: “Both views miss the truth.”
Mr. Obama, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, who is on a weeklong international tour, delivered his address at the base of the Victory Column in the Tiergarten, a sprawling park in the center of the city.
He looked out toward the Brandenburg Gate, where President Ronald Reagan implored the Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev to “tear down that wall” and end the Cold War, and spoke to crowd that the German News Agency DPA estimated at 200,000 people.
“I come to Berlin as so many of my countrymen have come before,” Mr. Obama said, confronting the delicate issue of campaigning abroad. “Tonight, I speak to you not as a candidate for president, but as a citizen — a proud citizen of the United States, and a fellow citizen of the world.”
Mr. Obama, as he visits the Middle East and Western Europe, is eager to prove himself on a worldwide stage as a potential leader of the United States, whose imagehas become tarnished in Europe, largely because of its decision to go to war with Iraq.
He seemed intent on trying to achieve two goals — healing the wounds left by the Bush administration, which dismissed the “old Europe,” and present an image to voters at home as a president whom the world could embrace.
“No one nation, no matterhow large or powerful, can defeat such challenges alone,” Mr. Obama said. “None of us can deny these threats, or escape responsibility in meeting them.”
Linking the battle against terrorism to the struggle of the cold war that defined this city for decades, Mr. Obama spoke directly on the need for more soldiers to fight in Afghanistan, a politically unpopular stance in Germany.
“The Afghan people need our troops and your troops, our support and your support to defeat the Taliban and al Qaeda,” Mr. Obama said.
Mr. Obama was warmly embraced by the German press, which frequently referred to his aura, or as the newspaper Bild put it in Thursday’s paper, the “political pop star.”
Manfred Krause, 65, a retired citizen of the former East Germany, said Mr. Obama’s address brought back memories of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s quieter visit to East Berlin in 1964, when he was a student. “I thought, here is someone coming from the same place,” he said.
Yet while Mr. Obama was addressing the sprawling crowd, the most important audience was watching in the United States. The television images, which showed Germans and others waving American flags, created a curious tableau that Republicans in the United States sought to seize on.
In his 30-minute address, Mr. Obama did not overtly criticize President Bush or his presumptive Republican opponent, Senator John McCain, but he did offer a gentle dose of criticism of his own nation.
“I know my country has not perfected itself,” he said. “We’ve made our share of mistakes,and there are times when our actions around the world have not lived up to our best intentions. But I also know how much I love America.”
On the other side of the Atlantic, where Mr. McCain campaigned in the nation’s midsection on Thursday, he criticized Mr. Obama for traveling to Germany to deliver the address.
“I’d love to give a speech in Germany — a political speech or a speech that maybe the German people would be interested in,” he told a crowd in Ohio, “but I’d much prefer to do it as president of the United States rather than as a candidate.”
The response to Mr. Obama has been so warm that the coordinator for German-American relations in the foreign ministry here, Karsten D. Voigt, has tried to scale back expectations. He reminded Germans in interview after interview that Mr. Obama would have to support positions unpopular with the German public, like a stronger presence engaged in more fighting for the Bundeswehr, the German army, in Afghanistan.
First and foremost, Mr. Obama is popular because he is not Mr. Bush, who is wildly unpopular in Germany. Asked why they support Mr. Obama, his opposition to the Iraq War usually comes up first.
The excitement in Germany over Mr. Obama has grown steadily through the Democratic primaries, reaching its peak with his address here Thursday in the Tiergarten, Berlin’s equivalent of Central Park. Mr. Obama’s photograph was splashed across the front pages of German newspapers. Leaflets advertising the speech with quotes from President John F. Kennedy — who came to this divided city at the height of the Cold War and urged those who did not believe in freedom: “Let them come to Berlin” — fluttered in the street.
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Subject: Latino-vs.-black violence drives hate crimes in L.A. to 5-year high
Time: 9:43:45 PM EDT
Author: ddawncrawford71
Mood: Chillin'
Latino-vs.-black violence drives hate crimes in L.A. to 5-year high
The County Human Relations Commission reports a 28% increase last year, with assaults and vandalism the leading categories.
By Teresa Watanabe, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer 12:32 PM PDT, July 24, 2008
Hate crimes in Los Angeles rose to their highest level in five years last year, led by attacks between Latinos and blacks, county officials reported today. The annual report by the Los Angeles County Human Relations Commission showed hate crimes rose by 28% overall for a total of 763, with assault and vandalism leading the way. The largest number involved Latino suspects against black victims; the second largest involved black suspects against Latino victims.
Despite the intense national debate over illegal immigration, hate crimes against immigrants decreased slightly. Incidents against Muslims, which increased after the 2001 terrorist attacks, also decreased slightly. The largest number of religion-based hate crimes were directed against Jews. The rise in hate crimes contrasted with the decline in the general crime rate in Los Angeles. teresa.watanabe@latimes.com
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