Breaking News and Commentary from
CLG16 Feb 2014
http://www.legitgov.org/
All links are here:http://www.legitgov.org/#breaking_news
All links are here:http://www.legitgov.org/#breaking_news
Previous edition: US to pump
$300mn into Afghanistan to end 'war economy' - report [which NSAssociate Google
relegated to the sp-m
bin].
TEPCO reveals record cesium level in Fukushima No. 1
well --Experts:
radioactive water could be leaking from underground tunnel, located close to
second power unit on seashore 14 Feb 2014 A record high level of
radioactive cesium has been found in groundwater beneath the crippled Fukushima
No. 1 nuclear power plant, operator TEPCO revealed. On February 13, Tokyo
Electric Power Co. reported 37,000 becquerels
of cesium-134 and 93,000 becquerels of cesium-137 were detected per liter of
groundwater sampled from a monitoring well earlier that day... These figures
(the total reading) are the highest of all the cesium measurements taken
previously.
4.1 magnitude earthquake strikes near Georgia Power nuclear
plant --Quake strong
enough to send tremors into Georgia, Tennessee 15 Feb 2014 An
earthquake with an epicenter northeast of Augusta shook metro Atlanta homes
Friday night. The quake measured a magnitude of 4.1 and happened at 10:23 p.m.,
according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The earthquake's epicenter was
Edgefield, S.C., about 25 miles from Augusta. Plant Vogtle, which is on the
outskirts of Augusta in Waynesboro, [allegedly] suffered no problems from the
earthquake, a Georgia Power spokesman said Saturday
afternoon.
Agency seeks funding to track
Vogtle nuclear plant costs 26 Jan
2014 Badly outnumbered regulators in Georgia want to hire two more employees to
keep tabs on the 14 billion project to build a first-of-its-kind nuclear plant.
Southern Co. subsidiary Georgia Power says its share of the project to build
Plant Vogtle is projected to go hundreds of millions of dollars over budget.
Its 2.4 million customers will pay for the company's building costs
unless regulators force the utility to take losses on questionable
spending. Regulators are at a disadvantage when contending with Georgia
Power, a monopoly that owns a 46 percent stake in the nuclear
plant.
Afghanistan releases 65 prisoners against objections from
US 13 Feb 2014 The Afghan government
has released 65 prisoners who the US says are dangerous fighters with American
and Afghan blood on their hands but Kabul argues are innocent men illegally
locked up for years by foreign soldiers. The decision to let the men go is the
latest blow to a creaking relationship between the Afghan government and its
main fin-ncial backer. [That would be the US
t-xpayer.] Karzai said then that a government investigation had found
there was evidence to potentially try only 16 of the prisoners. It is unclear
why 23 have been retained in custody.
Blast Kills NATO Soldier in
Afghanistan 15 Feb 2014 An
improvised explosive device killed a NATO service member in southern Afghanistan
on Saturday, the U.S.-led international military coalition said. Saturday's
death brings to five the number of coalition troops who have died in Afghanistan
so far this month. In a statement commemorating the 25th anniversary of the
Soviet withdrawal, the Taliban drew parallels with American forces in the
country and called on Afghans to drive them out.
Listen up, Obusha: There will be no coup in
Venezuela: President Maduro 13 Feb 2014 Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has ruled out
the possibility of any coup by the [CIA-backed] opposition, as protests turn
deadly in the South American country. "There will be no coup d’état in
Venezuela; you can rest assured. Democracy will continue, and the revolution
will continue," the president said on a national television broadcast on
Wednesday. Maduro has promised to tighten security across the country after
clashes between anti-government protesters and police left three people dead in
the Venezuelan capital of Caracas.
U.S. Army builds fake city to shoot at during
training 13 Feb 2014 The U.S. Army
has built a fake city designed to be used during combat training [aka martial
law implementation] exercises. The 300 acre 'town' includes a five story
embassy, a bank, a school, an underground subway and train station, a mosque, a
football stadium, and a helicopter landing zone. Located in Virginia, the
realistic subway station comes complete with subway carriages and the train
station has real train carriages. The U.S. Army's Army Asymmetric Warfare Group
opened the 96 million training centre last month.
Snowden-leaked document shows NSA monitored U.S. law
firm 15 Feb 2014 The National
Security Agency monitored a U.S. law firm representing a foreign government, a
document leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden reveals. The New York
Times reported Saturday the top-secret document provides rare insight into
eavesdropping by the U.S. security agency. The newspaper said lawyers in the
United States with overseas clients have expressed concern such government
snooping.
Three former NSA workers accused of aiding
Snowden 14 Feb 2014 Three people at
the National Security Agency have been implicated in Edward Snowden's efforts to
copy classified material, including a civilian employee who resigned last month
after acknowledging he allowed Snowden to use his computer ID, according to an
NSA memo sent to Congress. The other two were an active-duty member of the
military and a civilian contractor. The memo does not describe their conduct,
but says they were barred from the NSA and its systems in August.
N.S.A. Fires Civilian Employee Tied to Snowden
Leaks 13 Feb 2014 The National
Security Agency has told Congress that it has forced out a civilian employee
after a lengthy investigation to "assign accountability" for the disclosure of
intelligence secrets by Edward J. Snowden, one of its former contractors. Two
others - identified only as an "active-duty military member" and another
contractor -- were "removed from access to N.S.A. information" and facilities
last August. But because neither worked directly for the N.S.A., the agency told
the House Judiciary Committee in a letter, any further action would have to be
determined by their employers.
Former German chancellor surprised that NSA continued to spy
on Merkel 14 Feb 2014 The former
chancellor of Germany now says he was surprised to hear that the United States
National Security Agency, or NSA, spied on his country's current head of
government after he left office almost a decade ago. Earlier this month, NSA
documents showed that the spy agency conducted surveillance operations
starting in 2002 that targeted Gerhard Schröder during his term as chancellor.
Schröder told reporters at the time that he wasn't surprised about the
operation, which was made public due to documents disclosed by former NSA
contractor Edward Snowden.
China Reports Another Case of New Bird Flu
Strain 15 Feb 2013 Chinese officials
have said a new strain of avian influenza, H10N8, has killed another
person, according to a report on Friday by
Xinhua, the state news agency. The man's illness is the third case of H10N8. Scientists are also concerned about the rapid spread of another
strain of avian flu, H7N9. It has already infected about 300 people and infects
more each day. A quarter of those infected have died.
Pandemic Potential Seen in Gene Changes of Bird
Flu 13 Feb 2014 Genetic variations
in the deadly bird flu virus circulating in China increase the potential for a
pandemic strain to emerge, researchers in Shanghai said. Three new variants of
the avian influenza type-A H7N9 virus have been found this winter, spurred by
transmission in poultry and the incorporation of genetic material from another
strain called H9N2, scientists at the Shanghai Public Health Clinical Center and
Institutes of Biomedical Sciences said... Each case increases the risk of the
virus becoming better suited to humans, rather than birds, giving it the ability
to spread easily from person to person.
New bridge scandal subpoenas seek records related to Chris
Christie, ARC tunnel and more 12 Feb
2014 The legislative panel investigating the George Washington Bridge scandal
wants to know how closely Gov. Chris Christie's office and allies at the Port
Authority of New York and New Jersey coordinated to blame the lane closings on a
traffic study, records released today show. The 18 subpoenas issued this week
also cast a far wider net than past rounds, seeking information about the
defunct ARC (Access to the Region's Core) tunnel project, any dossiers compiled
by Christie and his campaign on Fort Lee Mayor Mark Sokolich, and a month and a
half of State Police helicopter records.
Court tosses California's concealed-weapons
rules 13 Feb 2014 A divided federal
appeals court on Thursday struck down California concealed-weapons rules, saying
they violate the Second Amendment right to bear arms. The 2-1 ruling of a
three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said California
counties were wrong to require law-abiding applicants to show "good cause"
beyond self-defense to receive a concealed-weapons permit.
Comcast takeover of Time Warner Cable 'will throttle choice on
the web' 13 Feb 2014 Consumer groups
reacted angrily to the merger of cable giant Comcast and Time Warner Cable on
Thursday, claiming the combination could "throttle" choice on the internet.
Comcast’s proposed 45.2bn takeover of TWC will create a media behemoth that will
dominate broadband internet access across the US. Jodie Griffin, senior staff
attorney at consumer rights group Public Knowledge said: "This is a deal that
needs to be blocked." She said Comcast was likely to use the extra leverage to
"drive up costs and reduce choices for consumers.", and claimed the new company
would be too powerful, becoming a "gatekeeper" capable of "throttling
competition."
Virginia gay marriage ban overturned by US
judge 14 Feb 2014 A US federal judge
in Virginia has ruled that the state's ban on same-sex marriage is
unconstitutional. It is the first time that a southern state has had a
voter-approved prohibition on gay marriage overturned. The ruling will not apply
pending a possible appeal.
Pennsylvania Turnpike turned into parking lot after 100-car
pileup 14 Feb 2014 The Pennsylvania
Turnpike was turned into a parking lot after as many as 100 vehicles were
involved in a chain-reaction of car crashes Friday morning. An eight-mile
stretch of I-276 between exits 343 and 353 was reopened after a seven-hour
shutdown as officials got a handle on the early morning wreck, according to
police and local reports. First responders transported roughly 30 people to area
hospitals, all of which were expected to survive, according to Bill Capone with
the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission.
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