Monday, May 23, 2011

Thousands protest G-8 summit this week


Le Havre, France (CNN) -- Several thousand demonstrators marched through this industrial port city in a mostly peaceful protest against an upcoming summit of the world's group of eight wealthiest countries.

Activists from an eclectic mix of labor unions, leftist political parties, and environmentalist and women's rights groups participated in the march through Le Havre's mostly deserted streets, under the slogan "G-8 Degage."

Degage means "get lost." It was also a rallying cry for the revolution in Tunisia last January that toppled Western-backed dictator Zine el Abidine Ben Ali.

The protest is being held days ahead of the summit. On Wednesday, leaders from the U.S., France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Britain, Canada and Russia will converge in the coastal resort of Deauville, more than 20 miles away from Le Havre.

"No, of course they are not welcome here," said Baptiste Simon, who held a sign denouncing government cutbacks in social services. "If it was the G-182, like all of the countries of the United Nations, then they would be welcome here."

"Deauville is the capital of the grand bourgeoisie in France," said union activist Philippe Saunier, referring to Deauville's reputation as an exclusive playground for the French aristocracy. "It is a symbol of the bourgeoisie."

"We are part of the protest here because we feel that with all the issues that are being discussed here, whether it be trade or the crisis, it's always that women are left behind, voices of women are never heard," said Wilhelmina Trout, a South African activist with the group World March of Women.

After marching peacefully for several hours, several younger, black-clad members of the protest began smashing shop windows and spray-painting anarchy signs on store fronts, sending several city residents running in panic down a side street.

A half dozen plain-clothes police officers who had infiltrated the march tried to detain one of the suspected vandals. The young man resisted, prompting other anarchists to come to his rescue. They hurled stones at the undercover police officers and chased them as they fled the scene. For the moment, the suspect escaped arrest.

Moments later, the anarchists clashed with fellow anti-G8 protesters. They threw paint and oil at security volunteers from one of the largest labor unions organizing the protest when they were barred from entering the main grounds where a concert was to be held.

Large international summits and meetings of the world's largest financial institutions are regular targets of anti-globalization demonstrators, whose radical fringes often engage in vandalism and clashes with police.

"We are clearly against violence," said Saunier, who was a member of the protest's volunteer security force. "But there are always some provocateurs."

Though the demonstrators were clearly from the left wing of the political spectrum, there was little to no mention of the disgraced former International Monetary Fund chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn. Up until his arrest in New York last Saturday, Strauss-Kahn was widely considered to be the French Socialist Party's best hope for wresting the presidency away from Nicholas Sarkozy in next year's presidential election.

Saturday's anti-G8 protesters had little positive to say about Strauss-Kahn.

"He's not a good candidate of the left," said Saunier, the labor activist. "He is a member of the grand bourgeoisie," he added, referring to Strauss-Kahn's vast wealth, and his residences in Paris, Washington and Morocco, which are widely reported to be worth millions of dollars.

Monday, May 9, 2011

Tea Party Slams Boehner and Ryan on Debt Ceiling

Most of people recognize that once they are elected to offices, they become partners of crimes as many call "Federal Government" is a new organized crime. And we are seeing it.

Tea Party Slams Boehner and Ryan on Debt Ceiling

William Temple, chair of the National Tea Party Convention speaks  at a Washington press conference Monday.  (Fox News Photo / Wes  Barrett)

William Temple, chair of the National Tea Party Convention speaks at a Washington press conference Monday. (Fox News Photo / Wes Barrett)

Tea Party leaders ripped into House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, as well as other House Republicans, saying any vote to raise the debt limit without major fiscal policy changes will amount to selling out the Tea Party, adding the group will work to unseat those who vote for an increase in the next election.

"We're telling Boehner and all of the House Republicans, they came into office with Tea Party help. We now expect them to keep their promises and hold the ceiling on the national debt," said William Temple, head of this fall's Tea Party National Convention. "The Tea Party will not be in a very forgiving mood this fall, nor as the GOP primary season opens, if House freshmen and others elected by the Tea Party cave to Obama. We will find replacements for them this fall."

He added the group could go along with a small increase in the debt ceiling, but only if Republicans were able to win a major policy battle such as a repeal of health care or the passage of a balanced budget amendment.

Temple appeared at a Washington press conference dressed in colonial garb and was especially critical of the 2011 budget compromise Boehner worked out with Republicans last month. The deal cut $37.8 billion in spending and narrowly avoided a government shutdown, but was short of the $100 billion in cuts Republicans originally sought.

Temple noted the emotion the house speaker famously wears on his sleeve and suggested Boehner and House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis., caved during the 11th hour negotiation.

"I wish our tearful House Speaker would just show some compassion for American taxpayers and our children, but he and Mr. Ryan have already surrendered to President Obama," Temple said. "It's a cowardly act of treason against coming generations, and we may be able to give Boehner something to really cry about in 2012."

Chair of the Congressional Tea Party caucus Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., echoed the idea that the 2011 vote was a missed opportunity, saying the debt ceiling vote offers a chance for a do-over.

"The debt ceiling vote will offer an opportunity that was squandered during the vote for the 2011 Continuing Resolution," she said in a statement.

In a Monday night speech to the Economic Club of New York, Boehner is expected to challenge Obama on the debt limit, warning that a hike in the ceiling without major spending cuts and reforms will actually hurt the economy and destroy more American jobs.

Economists who side with the Tea Party point to the idea that a no-vote on a debt increase should be easy for conservative Republicans, dismissing downsides of allowing the U.S. to hit the ceiling. CATO Institute Senior Fellow Dan Mitchell says the government will still be able to pay interest on the current federal debt even if there is no increase in the ceiling.

"The Treasury Secretary is being deceitful, the Fed chairman is being very misleading on the issue as well," he said. "Default is not the issue, the issue is whether we get government spending under control. The debt and deficit are the symptoms. The underlying problem of a government that is too big."

And it's that idea of downsizing government the Tea Party says its members will be looking for as the U.S. approaches its debt limit.

"We will be judging the House Republicans and their Democratic colleagues on one issue only: Did you vote for more debt? That's it," Temple said. "Red ink requires pink slips, federal layoffs and downsizing for D.C.'s ruling class just like the rest of us out there."

Boehner is expected during his Monday evening speech to reaffirm that Republicans have to show they are serious about the debt problem and will say again there won't be a debt limit increase without significant cuts and reforms.


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