WASHINGTON, Apr. 24, 2012 (Reuters) — President Barack Obama’s administration, seeking to revive stalled Afghan peace talks, may alter plans to transfer Taliban detainees from Guantanamo Bay prison after its initial proposal fell foul of political opponents at home and the insurgents themselves.

As foreign forces prepare to exit Afghanistan, the White House had hoped to lay the groundwork for peace talks by sending five Taliban prisoners, some seen as among the most threatening detainees at Guantanamo Windows 7 serial key, to Qatar to rejoin other Taliban members opening a political office there.

In return Windows 7 Key, the Taliban would make its own good-faith gestures, denouncing terrorism and supporting the hoped-for talks with the government of Afghan President Hamid Karzai.

While that plan has not been scotched entirely, several sources familiar with preliminary discussions within the U.S. government said the United States may instead, as an initial gesture meant to revive diplomacy, send one of those detainees directly to Afghan government custody.

The sources identified the detainee as a former Taliban regional governor named Khairullah Khairkhwa, who is seen by American officials as less dangerous than other senior Taliban detainees now held at the U.S. military prison in Cuba.

No final decision appears to have been made on Khairkhwa’s fate.

A senior Obama administration official, while not disputing that Khairkhwa’s unilateral transfer had been suggested, cautioned that it was still at a “brainstorming” level. The onus was still on the Taliban to show it is interested in Afghan reconciliation, he said.

“It’s most definitely not policy,” said the senior official, speaking on condition of anonymity. “At the moment we’ve made clear what we expect from reconciliation … and the Taliban understand that, full stop.”

More than a year ago, the White House launched what began as a secretive diplomatic bid to coax the Taliban, the Islamist group that ruled Afghanistan until 2001, into peace talks. That campaign has become central to U.S. strategy as officials conclude the Afghan war will not end on the battlefield alone.

It remains far from clear whether the Taliban would embrace sharing power in Afghanistan and whether the militants are cohesive enough to agree on a joint diplomatic approach.

But Washington’s strategy, before a May summit of NATO leaders in Chicago, is to build on what officials see as military progress against the Taliban, and encouraging signs from the Afghan and Pakistani governments, to heap pressure on the Islamist group.

“As we head into Chicago obviously we’ll continue to highlight each of those (areas) and we’ll continue to work with Congress,” the U.S. official said.

The Chicago summit is expected to further detail plans for the withdrawal of most of NATO’s 130,000 troops there by the end of 2014 and set the course for future ties between Afghanistan and the West.

A LONG SHOT, BUT FEW ALTERNATIVES

U.S. efforts to broker the talks were dealt a blow last month when the Taliban suspended its participation and appeared to reject even minimal restrictions for prisoners transferred to Qatar.

From the beginning, a transfer of Taliban prisoners has posed major political risks for Obama in an election year.

U.S. lawmakers from both parties, but particularly Republicans, have warned that prisoners such as Mullah Mohammed Fazl, a “high-risk” detainee and former Taliban military commander alleged to be responsible for the killing of thousands of minority Shi’ite Muslims, might rejoin militant operations.

The transfer proposal has also been divisive within the Obama administration. Because Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, under U.S. law, must personally approve the transfer, Pentagon officials worry their agency will be deemed responsible for any future actions by those detainees.

Partly for those reasons, U.S. negotiators are now focusing on Khairkhwa. Once the Taliban’s governor of western Herat province, he was also a Taliban spokesman and interior minister.

The senior U.S. official said Karzai has been asking the United States for years to send Khairkhwa, imprisoned since 2002 at Guantanamo Bay, back to Afghanistan. The Taliban has long demanded release of its prisoners Server 2008 Key, in part as a good-faith move.

U.S. military assessments that have been made public characterize Khairkhwa as a ‘high-risk’ detainee and a ‘direct’ associate of the late al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and Taliban leader Mullah Omar.

But they also describe him as more of a civilian than a military figure, and he is said to be a friend of Karzai.

Khairkhwa was captured in Pakistan in early 2002, allegedly while seeking to negotiate surrender and integration into the new Afghan government.

“If you were to take all the senior leaders associated with the Taliban since the start of the movement, and try to find the inclusive figures, acceptable to fellow Afghans and competent to work for a political agreement, Khairkhwa would definitely be in the top five,” said Michael Semple, a former U.N. official with more than 20 years experience in Afghanistan.

SETBACKS

Afghanistan’s High Peace Council, under the leadership of the late former President Burhanuddin Rabbani, had advocated for Khairkhwa’s release, saying he might play a positive role in the peace process.

“The cause of Mullah Khairullah Khairkhwa is good for peace, and totally acceptable to Karzai,” Semple said, in part because Karzai and Khairkhwa both come from the Popalzai tribe.

Last year, a U.S. federal court rejected a challenge to Khairkhwa’s detention by his lawyers, and an appeal is now pending.

If a unilateral transfer were approved, Khairkhwa would be moved to Afghan custody in a country other than Qatar, without involvement of the Taliban. It was not immediately clear whether this might mean a transfer directly back to Afghanistan.

The transfer would still require the Obama administration to notify Congress 30 days ahead of time. But the hope is that Khairkhwa’s transfer would avoid the furor in Congress that moving the other prisoners might bring.

Efforts to salvage the peace process follow a series of U.S. setbacks in Afghanistan: bloody riots caused by soldiers’ burning of the Koran; a staff sergeant’s alleged massacre of 17 villagers; and an 18-hour militant assault of Kabul last week.

Still, officials point to statistics charting a drop in ‘enemy-initiated attacks’ this spring. They were encouraged by recent steps to finalize a deal outlining the U.S.-Afghan relationship, along with statements of support for the peace process by Pakistani Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani.

U.S. officials hope to use all these developments to coax the Taliban’s leadership, under pressure from less senior fighters who oppose negotiations, to formally resume talks.

(Additional reporting by Hamid Shalizi and Rob Taylor in KABUL; Editing by Warren Strobel and David Storey)

Those with a love of football and of a certain age will remember the 1970 Esso World Cup Collection. These were coins of the England 1970 World Cup squad that were given away whenever a driver bought more than four gallons of petrol.

As a nine-year-old kid and raised on the success of England’s 1966 team, collecting these coins was mandatory in the playground. I can’t remember if it was Allan Clarke or Keith Newton who was the most difficult coin to procure, but I know I never finished my album and often wondered why.

The 1970 World Cup was also the first time I filled in my first football wall chart. I had everything marked in, from scorers to the first corner in every match. When we were stuck in the traffic on the way back from a family holiday and missed the first 15 minutes of the Brazil v Italy final I was devastated. My wall chart could not be finished, in those days it wasn’t possible to know the time of the first corner unless you watched the match live.

So more than four decades later and still without a major tournament win from England, what’s changed? Well, I always seem to buy my petrol from Esso garages so that particular campaign worked, but I fear the days of the printed football tournament wall chart are over.

The process has been inexorable as the internet became our preferred medium and the printed press grew obsolete. In the mid-1990s online football wall charts were clunky, in the following decade they became ‘interactive’ and some time in the past five years that interactivity became digital.

At the last World Cup I was sent an online wall chart that resembled a spacecraft. Granted, it was beautiful and a paragon of design, it also helped me know where and when games were playing, but it wasn’t the same as that folded, battered broadsheet supplement Sellotaped to the fridge.

As this summer’s Euros approach it’s now the time of mobile to take the place of print replica watches, interactivity and digital. The official Uefa and Orange app for the 2012 championships has been launched and it has all-singing, all-dancing features that MY nine-year-old son will revere as much as I adored the 1970 Esso World Cup Collection.

Rather like my father who paid for the petrol that acquired the coins that I collected, I’ll be showing it to him on my device, but unlike Esso’s petrol, this app is free and it doesn’t matter what mobile I have and what language I speak, it will work.

The app has been launched across eight platforms including the iPhone replica watches, iPad, Android, Windows 7 and BlackBerry. It has been published in 11 languages and includes geolocation and augmented reality features. It also has a strong social network bias with fans being able to share content from the app on Facebook and Twitter.

Instead of being stuck in a car late for the final as I was in 1970, fans will be able to watch text commentaries and view premium video highlights. Furthermore, if they’re lucky to be at the tournament they’ll be able to find travel information, where to stay and all that 2012 jazz.

Isn’t that fantastic? Everything you ever needed to know about a football tournament in your pocket. Frankly, I think it stinks. I’ve played around with the app and it IS fantastic, but the nine-year-old in me stirs and as contrarian as all older people seem to become, so will be the case with me.

I’m not sure whether any newspapers will be publishing a wall chart this year (they’ll probably be too busy with the Olympics anyway) but if they do I’m going to buy one and complete it.

If not I’ll get some card and make one and show my little boy that the future may well be Orange and its wonderful app replica watches, but the past is definitely a physical wall chart.

I might even get him interested in that 1970 Esso World Cup Collection. Coins of all the members of the squad are only 99p each on eBay, although none I note of the elusive Allan Clarke or Keith Newton. Some things never change.

Last week, I posted an audio recording of Yahoo CEO Scott Thompson, from a radio interview he did in early 2009, in which he did not deny he had a computer science degree when the host of the show stated it as a fact as a key part of her question.

Thompson did not have such an academic credential.

The host of Tech Nation, Moira Gunn, sat down with me yesterday to further explain in the video interview below why she asked the question that particular way of Thompson.

In the video and in emails to me, Gunn firmly asserts that she did so because Thompson and she had a conversation about their CS degrees leading up to the interview and also kibitzed about the importance of such an education in the pre-roll of the interview.

(That audio is also embedded below, along with the part of the interview itself in which he does not correct Gunn’s assertion that he has a CS degree.)

At the time of the interview, Thompson was president of eBay’s PayPal payments unit and was there to talk about its growth.

As I previously wrote:

At the end of the largely charming interview, Moira Gunn asked him a direct question about his college degrees, specifically noting they were in accounting and computer science.

“Your bachelor’s degree is in accounting and computer science. Now, from both of those, I mean that’s, that’s pretty obvious that’s PayPal,” said Gunn. “What are the most important things you learned?”

“Yeah,” begins Thompson, failing to correct her at all on the fact that he does not actually have a computer science degree — only one in accounting.

He then went even further, touting his early tech training at Stonehill College, near Boston, which did not offer a computer science degree and had only one basic computer course at the time he went there, from 1975 to 1979.

“And that’s really the background that I have, and it started back in my college days, and I think that’s really the wonderful part of being an engineer is you think that way,” said Thompson.

In the most generous interpretation, it’s not quite clear whether Thompson was saying “Yeah” to her statement of his academic credentials, or if he was not actually listening.

But it’s a careless oversight on his part not to have corrected her about the degrees, which could also be said about a computer science degree being present on his bio for more than a half-dozen years at eBay and later at Yahoo without some notice by him.

Because while Thompson has had a long career as a tech exec, as well as a stint as a CIO, academically speaking, a computer science degree did not happen in his college days nor did he graduate as an engineer.

While it is entirely possible that Thompson did not correctly grok what Gunn was saying Tattoo Machine Equipment, it seems pretty clear that he implied his college background was in tech and he was an engineer.

It is true that Thompson did take some computer science classes at Stonehill. And it is entirely possible that he thinks of himself as an engineer by work training and not by college degree.

But Gunn claims that Thompson put himself out to her in the time before and during the interview as someone who did have such a degree and never corrected her assumption about that or her direct statement about it.

Here are excerpts from several emails she sent to me this week before we did the video:

My recollection is that they sent me some talking points (they had a message they wanted to get out) and a bio — I always insist on an official bio from the PR folks — the PR folks would have booked him. I didn’t seek him out — they approached me — I would have gotten it from them. I would have done more research, but likely not confirming his degrees.

And:

I could swear I talked to him about the bachelors in CS before we did the interview. Maybe in the elevator before the tape rolled — you see, *I* have a bachelors in computer science. I thought it was opportune and important. I always mention it to people who have the same degrees I have or went to the same schools. I would have thought it was important. (I have a bachelors in CS Tattoo Machine Parts, a masters in CS and a PhD in mechanical engineering). I mentioned it to the google boys when they first came in 2001, and everyone before and everyone since — whether it enters the interview or not.

And:

FYI the entire time I was conducting the interview, I was under the impression that Scott had a degree in Computer Science and considered himself to be an engineer. I wouldn’t have asked many of these questions as such if I had known he didn’t have that degree — in CS you learn about “architecture” which is what he was discussing in the pre-interview which you will hear. I would have instead asked “How does a guy with an accounting degree get the technology right? How does he possibly understand it? How can he possibly have the technology vision?”

In this case, it was sufficiently important that I had it in my written interview questions — it was not an afterthought.

And:

As a professor in a business school — who has also taught in computer science — I knew it was highly unusual to have someone with degrees in both accounting and computer science. Typically, these are two very different kinds of people — it would be a very unusual credential to have, and I immediately noticed it.

This multiple major combination would also lift a person above other resumes immediately, as you don’t see the combination. It would be a highly [sought] after combo-combination in any high-tech field which relates to finance and which requires that new technology be developed to uniquely create the business opportunity. It follows Scott’s career path, including CIO. One presumes a chief information officer to know about technology architectures and software risk — something he would definitely have background in with a computer science degree … but he doesn’t have one. (Remember in the run-up to the interview, even Scott was talking about the difficulty of finding people who could imagine the architecture?)

And, lastly:

I’m always a stickler about a person’s biography — here’s from my “Media Information” section on technation.com.

Under “Basic Steps to Booking Tech Nation Guests:”

“Essential in the materials to be submitted is a detailed biography of the proposed guest or guests, identifying relevant experience and education.”

Here’s the complete link:

“A detailed biography of the guest is essential. Traceable credentials are a must.”

I’ve been doing this for 20 years, and it’s always relevant — especially in tech and science. It affects perspective Top Tattoo Machine, insight, depth of understanding, basic skills, etc. I also want to know what *they* say is relevant in the person’s official biography.

Yahoo confirmed last week that it included inaccurate information about Thompson’s academic background on its Web site and in its regulatory filings.

The admission came after activist shareholder Dan Loeb of Third Point correctly asserted that Thompson’s resume was overstated related to his education.

Yahoo first called the inclusion of the computer science degree on his bio an “inadvertent error,” but has given no other explanation as yet. Later, the Yahoo board said it was reviewing the matter and would then make appropriate disclosures afterward.

There is now an official board probe taking place.

I sent the Gunn email quotes, which are similar to the video interview I did, to a Yahoo spokeswoman. She declined comment.

Here’s Gunn talking about the circumstances of her interview with Thompson, as well as the new audio segment of them talking about computer science education, which she said flowed out of an earlier non-recorded bonding over their CS degrees. I also included the part in the actual interview where he does not deny her assertion that he had a CS degree.

Here is video interview with Gunn:

Here is new audio of Gunn and Thompson discussing CS education, just before the formal interview:

Here is the actual interview, where Thompson does not refute Gunn’s clear assertion he has a CS degree:

And here are Gunn’s interview notes from the time, too, in which she goes into why she asked Thompson the CS question directly:

_Interview-Scott Thompson

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A new Miami Ink, expedited assessment of Gulf of Maine cod will be conducted this year for use in setting 2013 catch limits.

But a fishing industry leader is predicting continued consolidation of the fleet, and is fearful that, after this year’s 22 percent cut in the allowable cod catch, the worst by far is still to come.

The extent of the new assessment will not be determined until after the New England Fishery Management Council’s meeting in two weeks, a spokeswoman for National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said Tuesday.

On the heels of the 2011 assessment report that set the industry on its heels, the decision to conduct another Gulf of Maine cod assessment was mentioned almost as an afterthought in the announcement last week of the 22 percent cut in the 2012 catch limit for Gulf of Maine cod.

Yet, pending a game-changing surprise, industry analyst, fisherman Micky Sharpz Tattoo Machines, banker and businessman Vito Giacalone predicts the industry faces a bleak future that will encourage a continuation of “cannibalism,” a word he prefers to the more technocratic “consolidation.”

The 22 percent cut coming out of the dire 2011 cod report was a “transitional” decision, based on legal theories of what the Magnuson-Stevens Act allows — reducing overfishing but not ending it, while a rebuilding program to replace the one that failed is crafted by the council and NOAA.

Beyond the 22 percent cut under interim limits covering from the May 1 start to the new fishing year to Sept. 30, uncertainty in even the existence of a directed inshore cod fishery next year is the great destabilizer, Giacalone said in a New Bedford radio interview.

Giacalone is a board member and policy director of the Northeast Seafood Coalition, the region’s largest industry group, president of the Gloucester Fishing Community Preservation Fund or permit bank, developer of a fish auction business property, as well as an active groundfisherman, and an industry representative in cod crisis discussions with NOAA since last year.

Because of the uncertainty and fear that the 22 percent cut for this year will set the stage for truly draconian limits on inshore cod landings next year, Giacalone predicted that more and more fishermen will decide to stay at home and lease out meager catch share allocations this year.

“As leasing (becomes) more aggressive,” he said, “profitability (goes) out of the business.”

Giacalone said that, if the industry is not already in failure from the cut announced last week and fear of far worse yet to come, it will be by 2013.

He reiterated the written position of the Northeast Seafood Coalition that the governors of the five coastal New England states should coordinate with the governors of New York and New Jersey to convince the federal government to declare a systemic fisheries failure before it is too late.

“We have a federal fisheries failure, we need to prepare now before we have a whole set of vessels ready to go out and no place to go (next spring),” he said in the radio interview. “Why do we have these crazy roller coaster rides of TACs (total allowable catches)?”

Deep in the news release announcing the 22 percent cut in the TAC for inshore cod for the year beginning May 1 Tattoo Kits Supplies, NOAA said it “will also conduct a new assessment of Gulf of Maine cod in 2012, in time to set fishing year 2013 catch limits.”

“Whether it is a full benchmark assessment is yet to be determined,” NOAA spokeswoman Allison McHale said Tuesday in a telephone interview. “The extent of the new assessment is uncertain” and will be until after the regional council meeting in Mystic, Conn., two weeks hence.

During the 2012 catch limit teleconference announcement on April 2, the new assessment was described as using the same “modeling approach” as was used in the 2011 assessment, which was a benchmark assessment because of changes in the modeling and formulas.

That assessment — based on trawl survey data, commercial landing reports and estimates of recreational landings — landed with shock value, showing that the size of the spawning stock was barely one-third the size found only three years earlier.

There has been no explanation by NOAA of the contradictory assessments, and when U.S. Sen. John Kerry last fall urged NOAA to undertake an emergency assessment to resolve the conflict before setting catch limits for this year, NOAA administrator Jane Lubchenco demurred, explaining there was insufficient time.

As described by NOAA last week, the expedited assessment would plug updated catch reports and modified assumptions about the survival rate of discarded fish (now assumed to be zero) into the preexisting formulas.

But McHale emphasized the “extent of the new assessment is uncertain.”

© 2012 the Gloucester Daily Times (Gloucester, Mass.)

Distributed by MCT Information Services

Do you remember the first tool you used? For me, it was a screwdriver I stuck in the electric socket (I don’t recommend that.) The first tool I used for its intended purpose though was my father’s Stanley No. 45 Yankee Drill. I vividly remember him helping me to drill my first hole using it. For those that don’t know, a Yankee drill it a mechanical tool that is powered by you; you put in the bit, grasp the handle, push down, and the shaft rotates clockwise spinning the drill bit. Release the pressure and an internal spring pushes the handle back up, rotating the shaft in the opposite direction returning it to its original state. It’s simple, effective, and perfect for pilot holes, light drilling jobs, and tight spaces where you can’t fit your cordless drill. I’ve had my eye on dad’s Yankee drill for quite a while so when the opportunity arose to to review Garrett Wade’s reproduction, I leapt at the chance.

Around 10 years ago Stanley discontinued manufacture of the Yankee drill due to the popularity of battery powered cordless drills. Fortunately Buy BCBG Dresses, Garrett Wade stepped into fill the void in the market releasing their own version. The first thing you’ll notice is that while both drills are mechanically similar and have bit storage in the handle, they look quite different. That is because the GW version is modeled after the original Yankee drill which was made first by the North Bros. and later by Stanley. The Garrett Wade is said to be an identical reproduction of the original. The Stanley No. 45 I borrowed from dad is a later revision of the original.

The GW version is every bit as hefty as the Stanley. Both have a solid, sturdy feel in your hand as a quality tool should. The way you access the bit storage on each is different. The Stanley uses a simple Herve Leger sale, twist off cap while the GW requires you to loosen a collar and slide the handle down to access the bits. I’m assuming this design was chosen because that’s the how the original was. It also ensures that you’ll never lose the cap. The bits hidden inside are sharpened so they they cut on both the push and pull strokes making for fast, efficient drilling. The Garrett Wade bits are exactly the same as the originals which is great news for owners of Stanleys. You can purchase a full set of replacement sets at GarrettWade.com for $24.95

The action on the GW version is incredibly smooth, much more so than the Stanley. I’m sure years of use the Stanley has received attributes to this. The GW also has a slightly lighter spring tension which I found makes it much easier to drill holes. The Stanley would occasionally bind in the piece of 2×4 I was testing with but the GW experienced no binding at all (I used the same bit in each for consistency.)

The chuck on each tool is mostly identical. Pulling the chuck out loosens a captive ball bearing allowing you to insert a bit. Releasing the chuck tightens the ball bearing against a notch in the bit, locking it into place. The Stanley locked the bits in very tightly and allowed only slight rotational play to occur and only a slight amount of side to side “wobble” (or runout in CNC speak) despite it’s age.  When a bit is chucked into the Garrett Wade there is about 45° of rotational play between the chuck and the bit and there is considerably more “wobble.” It didn’t seem to effect the functionality in the least and it’s possible that the 45° is present to add some “snap” when the rotation of the tool changes direction to reduce binding. I would appreciate less wobble but it’s not enough to make me question the quality of the tool.

Overall, I do like the Garrett Wade Yankee Drill. It is a high quality, well made product. My only gripes are the bit wobble and the price. At nearly $70 at GarrettWade.com, I’m not going to encourage everyone to go out and buy this one. However, a Yankee drill is a great tool that I think every maker should have in their toolbox. A quick search of online auction sites brought up several good (original) examples for less than half of the cost of this unit. Also, since Yankee drills have been in production for so long, chances are you have a relative or friend that might be willing to part ways with one that’s collecting dust in their toolbox.

Having said that, I fully expect this drill to hold up as well as dad’s Stanley and one day, I hope to teach my kids how to use it like my dad taught me.

In a moment that makes us want to put on our most pensive face and say “Yes… that’s profound…”, Bob Lutz has said “It’s really much better to have fewer brands, do it well and then market the hell out of them.” Specifically, he’s talking about the fact that a car like the Saturn Aura — Saturn’s take on the Chevy Malibu — hasn’t done nearly as well as the Malibu. So far this year the Aura trails the Malibu almost 3-to-1. Why? Because the Malibu got pushed out of the gate with a marketing budget somewhere over the $200 million mark, and the Aura didn’t. That is why, according to Lutz Tattoo Supplies, “Three years later Tattoo Supplies, people are still saying ‘What’s an Aura?’”

We know that GM has the talent to get the job done, but it’s this kind of self evident thinking (to us, at least, and not a few of our commentators) that makes us wonder what’s been going on in the hallowed halls of the RenCen all this time. GM has said that it might try to rebuild Saturn rather than kill it, but with new spending at Saturn put on hold, if they decide to keep it alive, we sincerely hope they will “market the Hell” out of what they rebuild.

[Source: Automotive News - Sub. Req.]

Lexus GS 450h – Click above for high-res image gallery
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It looks like Lexus is planning to go to both extremes on the green-performance continuum. When the next-generation IS appears in a couple of years, it will likely add a hybrid powertrain option. Such a move would be in keeping with Toyota’s oft-stated commitment to having hybrid drive available in almost all of its platforms by the end of the decade. The IS hybrid may also spawn a new rear-drive hybrid sports car around the same time. If these IS based hybrids are consistent with the current GS450h they will definitely be biased more towards performance than efficiency, using the hybrid drive to enhance acceleration without consuming more gas.

Meanwhile Replica Missoni Dresses, the GS – as rumored previously – could be setting its sites on the new BMW M5 and Cadillac CTS-V. Even though only 500 LF-As will be built Buy Herve Leger gown, the 4.8-liter V10 may find its way into a much-rumored new GS-F model. The GS-F won’t arrive until 2013 so it should be based on the next generation sedan. In the LF-A, the V10 has the power to compete with the German and American models but falls short of the Cadillac’s torque. If the new M5 gets the uprated 4.4-liter twin-turbo V8 from the X5/X6 M Bandage dresses sale, it would also be way ahead of the Lexus. Unless the Lexus engine gets boosted or the GS looses a lot of weight Replica Christian Audigier Clothing, this could be the only high-revving sports sedan of the pack left.

[Source: Autocar Hale Bob Dresses sale, Autocar]

John McEnroe Missoni Dresses sale

The U.S. Open —a brash mix of great tennis and frenzied fans—today begins its annual two-week run at Flushing Meadows in New York. Though shaken by the rare combination of an earthquake and a hurricane, the indominatable spirit of the city and its tournament will shine through, culminating with finals on Sept. 11, the 10th anniversary of the event that redefined our nation.

For those of us who came of age watching Jimmy Connors and John McEnroe do battle, followed by years-long domination by Pete Sampras, something is missing at this Open, something, unfortunately, that we have gotten used to over the past several years: a legitimate American men’s challenger. The field is dominated so totally by the grace of Roger Federer, the power of Rafael Nadal, and the flawless execution of Novak Djokovic, that it’s easy to forget that it has been eight years since an American man—Andy Roddick at the 2003 U.S. Open—has won a Grand Slam tournament. Indeed, the only American among the top 10 men’s seeds this year is No. 8 Mardy Fish. The next American man—Andy Roddick—is seeded 21st.

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I can’t help but see men’s tennis as a metaphor for America’s long-term struggles. Twenty years ago, the U.S. was the undisputed superpower. The Berlin Wall had fallen. Our economy was the symbol of capitalism ascendant over all other ideologies. President Reagan had restored Morning in America. And the U.S. dominated the men’s tennis circuit.

Twenty years ago, four American men graced the top 10: Jim Courier, Ivan Lendl (who got a green card in 1987), Sampras, and Andre Agassi. And McEnroe still survived at No. 17. In the entire ’90s, American men won an amazing six U.S. Open championships and an even more amazing seven Wimbledon titles. We were at the top of our game.

So what does this mean? As a tennis player Cheap White Herve leger, I hope the lesson is: If we regain our stature in the tennis pantheon, our position in global affairs will return.

That sounds silly, but the logical error in that statement is not dissimilar from the one that is made all the time on serious issues: confusing simultaneity and causation. It is one of the grave flaws in our political dialogue.

Example: Deficits are up, the economy is not growing Emilio Pucci Dresses sale, therefore we must shrink the deficit to restore growth. Wrong. Deficits are up for multiple reasons Discount Christian Audigier Clothes, but most economists now would agree—not just the fervent Keynesians—that we have a demand crisis, not a deficit crisis, and that the underutilization of our capacity is the grave issue to address now. The Paul Ryan-Tea Party mania for slashing spending will reduce GDP. Look at the impact of British Prime Minister David Cameron’s economic polices as Exhibit A for this. Look at President Herbert Hoover’s failed policies during the Great Depression as Exhibit B.

The real import of the decline of American men’s tennis is that it vividly demonstrates the most significant change in the world over the past 20 years: globalization. For 50 years after the end of World War II, we were the only nation that had the rule of law, liberal democracy, market-based competition, intellectual capital, traditional capital, skilled labor, and a middle-class consumer base. As these critical inputs to prosperity have spread around the world, amounting to an enormous victory for the ideology we have espoused, the playing field—or rather, the tennis court—has gotten a bit more crowded.  It is not just in the realms of cars, airplanes, computers, fashion, and political leadership, that globalization has led to Tom Friedman’s flat world or Fareed Zakaria’s “rise of the rest.” It is in women’s soccer, swimming Buy DKNY Dresses, basketball, and tennis.

But this is no reason for despair and resignation. Great competition allows great competitors to rise to the occasion. Who knows? Mardy Fish may pull the upset, Andy Roddick may serve his way to glory one more time, and emerging from the junior ranks may be the next McEnroe Marc Jacobs Dresses sale, Connors, or Arthur Ashe, ready to lift our spirits.

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We have no idea when such a vehicle might hit the showrooms Discount Herve leger strapless, so direct your requests, complaints, and begging towards your nearest Chrysler representative.

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Picking a secretary of commerce isn’t complicated. The president usually wants a close friend or business ally. He almost always chooses someone from the same party. And he would prefer someone who has not voted to abolish the Department of Commerce. Fake Bell & Ross Watches

Sen. Judd Gregg, whom President Obama named as his nominee Tuesday, fits none of these criteria. He does not know Obama beyond the occasional hello. He is a fiscally conservative Republican from New Hampshire. And in 1995 he voted to kill the department he will now lead.

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All of which makes him a superb choice. From a political perspective, Obama gets to put another bipartisan notch in his belt—he’s the third non-Democratic Cabinet nominee, in addition to Ray LaHood for Transportation and Robert Gates for Defense. Plus, he paves the way for a more philosophically attuned, if not Democratic, senator from New Hampshire and a possible political ally later.

From a policy standpoint, the appointment may make even more sense. In Gregg, Obama gets a guy who understands economic issues (he’s currently the ranking Republican on the budget committee) and will likely rein in spending in his own agency. The commerce secretary must also play well with others, which Gregg apparently does (although perhaps not quite as well as Bill Richardson, who withdrew his name from the running in January). Says Barbara Franklin, a former commerce secretary under President George H.W. Bush: “He’s a person who has always worked across the aisle on the Hill.”

The job also requires superior management skills, since the secretary is responsible for overseeing the department’s patchwork of sub-offices. “If Judd Gregg is not a managerial type of guy, then he needs a managerially inclined deputy,” says Franklin. An official at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce described Gregg as “not flashy, but he is one of the smartest members of the Senate and does not suffer fools gladly.” Let’s hope so: One of Gregg’s first tasks will be shepherding the transition from analog to digital television—a logistical nightmare for which Obama is trying to extend the deadline.

Despite the job’s reputation as a patronage gig Buy Cheap Replica Patek Philippe Watches, it’s not particularly ideological. The secretary’s main task is to promote U.S. business interests and talk up American exports in other countries. Nor are the sub-offices subject to much partisanship. The secretary oversees the International Trade Administration, the Patent and Trademark Office, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Where find Replica Piaget Watches, which runs the weather service. It’s hard to read the weather in a partisan way. In that respect, Gregg probably won’t be hugely different from Richardson. “I bet in terms of broader philosophies, there’s not much difference,” says Mickey Kantor, commerce secretary under President Clinton. As a result, Obama gets credit for appointing a Republican without having to deal with the policy consequences of appointing a Republican.

There is still room for disagreement. (One of the areas they disagree on, Obama jokingly noted in Tuesday’s press conference Replica Franck Muller Watches, is “who should have won the election.”) The Cato Institute approvingly calls Gregg a “free trader” for consistently voting against trade barriers and trade subsidies. Gregg voted for the Central American Free Trade Agreement, whereas Obama opposed it. On the other hand, Obama supported the Peru Free Trade Act, which many fellow Democrats opposed. During the campaign, Obama promised to “renegotiate” NAFTA—a sentiment Gregg’s surely disagreed with. But in practice, Obama knows that was an overstatement, and Gregg must have signed on for revising labor and environmental standards before accepting the job.

There could also be drama over the 2010 Census. In the past, Democrats and Republicans have battled over whether to use sampling, which favors Dems because they tend to increase the count in urban areas, or headcounts, which favor Republicans since they tend to undercount minorities. Even then, however, it would be difficult for Gregg to put on his Republican hat without creating a firestorm.

Finally, there is Gregg’s vote to abolish the Commerce Department. At the time, Congress was voting on the 1996 budget. A representative from Michigan added an amendment that would balance the budget faster by killing the Departments of Housing and Urban Development Replica Ebel Watches for Cheap, Education Discount Replica B R M Watches, Commerce, and Energy—an absurdity, but also an attempt to signal to Democrats that balancing the budget would require cutbacks. Every Republican senator voted for it, plus a few Democrats. In a department with as many moving parts as Commerce, a conservative instinct to streamline could be a positive.

Now let’s see if he knows how to file his taxes correctly.