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                                             BREAKING NEWS - Tropical storm Hermine triggers hurricane watch

Monday September 06, 2010




Headline News


Bear deaths in Angoon under investigation - Anchorage Daily News/AP
Cole:
BP again talking about selling Alaska assets, London newspaper reports - Fairbanks Daily News-Miner
Obama
to propose $50 billiion in infrastructure projects; stimulus continues - Washington Times
Murkowski,
Miller and Sealaska measure - Juneau Empire
As
clock ticks, Bush tax cuts about to expire - NPR
Congressional
charities pulling in corporate cash - NYTimes
Bradner:
Alaskans will get to know Miller, McAdams - Alaska Journal of Commerce
Tea Party
a double edge sword for GOP - NYTimes
Soros
launches frontal assault on Tea Party - Infowars.com
A wall
to remember; Seattle memorial for Japanese WWII internment - Seattle Times
Huge
outpouring of support for Murkowski, aide says - Fairbanks Daily News-Miner
Why
aren't employers hiring? - NPR
Grisham
on writing as a job - NYTimes
Abused
toddler dies after spending two years in hospital - Chicago Tribune
Housing
woes; let market collapse? - NYTimes
Gas
storage moves ahead; Kenai council OKs rezoning - Kenai Peninsula Clarion
Mexican
drug cartels terrorize, cripple Pemex in parts of Burgos Basin - LATimes
Not
much of a 'summer' for Dems pitching recovery - Washington Times
Dad
bitten as he fends off coyote, saves 2-year-old - NYPost
Valdez
fish derby disqualifies record halibut; honors angler's honesty - Fairbanks Daily News-Miner
Alaskan Independence Party
picks Michigan militia founder for ballot - Fairbanks Daily News-Miner/AP

Editorials

 

Labor Day

Let’s take a few moments today from our end-of-summer chores to remember the debt we all owe America’s workers for making this great nation what it is now.

Labor Day, though, is a national holiday born in strife. More than a century ago, when a Congress nervous about President Grover Cleveland’s crushing of a nationwide Pullman railroad strike, added it to the calendar.

Read more...
 

The right thing to do

When the U.S. Justice Department without explanation dropped its investigation of sex abuse allegations against Bill Allen many Alaskans were flabbergasted.

But Alaska Attorney General Dan Sullivan says prosecutors now are examining allegations the former Veco Corp. chief had sex with a 15-year-old prostitute. Allen was a key federal witness in a string of Alaska political corruption cases.

Read more...
 

Run

This will be a long weekend in more than one respect for Bill Walker and Sen. Lisa Murkowski. They both lost their GOP primary election bids, but are considering whether to continue their campaigns either under another party’s banner or as a write-ins.

We urge both of them to continue their campaigns.

Read more...
 

Long way to go

A Rasmussen Reports poll shows Alaskans favoring Republican incumbent Gov. Sean Parnell over Democrat Ethan Berkowitz in the gubernatorial race, but only by a modest 10 percentage points.

A telephone survey Aug. 31 of 500 likely voters in Alaska showed Parnell with 53 percent of the vote, while Berkowitz got 43 percent.  Two percent said they preferred some other candidate, while 2 percent - and, again, we wonder who these folks are - said they were unsure.

Read more...
 

Walker should continue

Bill Walker is thinking about continuing his campaign for governor after finishing as runner-up in the GOP gubernatorial primary by winning about a third of the votes in the six-way race .

He should quickly finish reviewing his options and come to the same conclusion we did: He must continue his race, perhaps as a third-party candidate. The Associated Press, for instance, reported Don Wright of Fairbanks, the Alaskan Independence Party pick, has withdrawn from the race.

Read more...
 

Thanks, Lisa

Alaskans owe Sen. Lisa Murkowski a round of applause for her above-board GOP Senate primary campaign and her years of thoughtful, energetic and dedicated service to this state.

When it would have served her better to sink to her Tea Party Express opponent’s level during the campaign as he mischaracterized her record and shaded the truth more than a little, she did not. She remained above all that.
Read more...
 

That was then . . .

With Joe Miller’s vow to cut federal spending in Alaska if he unseats Lisa Murkowski in the GOP primary and goes on to beat his Democrat opponent, you have to wonder if he held that view when he ran for House District 8 and whether he will go on to become his own biggest problem.

Miller says the growing national debt requires belt tightening that should include cutting back on federal dollars Alaska receives. But has he always felt that way?

Read more...
News & Commentary
alt
 

Social Security: What's their plan?

By MICHAEL D. TANNER
Cato Institute

altFaced with a dismal political climate, Democrats appear ready to revive the hoary charge that Republicans seek to dismantle Social Security. But what's the Dems' answer?

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has run TV ads attacking his opponent, Sharron Angle, for wanting "to wipe the program out." In Kentucky, Republican senatorial candidate Rand Paul is being criticized for remarks he made in favor of Social Security privatization — in 1998. Several strategists are calling for Democratic candidates to tie their opponents to privatization efforts, including President George W. Bush's failed efforts to reform the troubled program.
 

Racism or stupidity

By WALTER E. WILLIAMS

altA black or white person, now dead, who lived during the civil rights struggles of the 1930s, '40s or '50s, might very well be appalled and disgusted by black behavior accepted today. Yesteryear, it was the Klan or White Citizens Council who showed up at polling places to intimidate black voters. During the 2008 elections, it was the New Black Panthers who showed up at a Philadelphia polling place to intimidate white voters and tell them, "You are about to be ruled by the black man, cracker." What's worse is the U.S. Department of Justice has decided to not to prosecute.

Black intimidation of voters, to my knowledge, is rare, but black intimidation of Asians is not. Recent reports out of Philadelphia and San Francisco tell of black students beating up Asian students. The Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund, in the wake of serious black-on-Asian violence at South Philadelphia High School, charged the district with "deliberate indifference" to the harassment of Asian students and with "intentional disregard" for their welfare.

 

Fasten your seatbelts folks; Alaska could have a wild ride ahead

By TOM BRENNAN

altIf you have any fingernails left, you might want to bite them. The next six to 12 months are likely to be what the pundits call “interesting times.”

With looming elections, a gas pipeline decision and a federal legislative firestorm — not to mention a fading oil patch — Alaska may soon see what it’s economic future will look like. The possibilities range from not bad to OMG. Right now very few people actually know which end of that spectrum the state is headed for.

 

Editor’s note:

The Anchorage Daily Planet will not be updated again until Tuesday morning, July 27. It is summer after all, and time, at least briefly, to answer the call of the wild.


 

Making Americans Sick

By WALTER E. WILLIAMS


altHealth and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius promised, "The U.S. government plans to increase funding to battle obesity and views healthcare reform as an opportunity to encourage better eating habits." Rather than spending money and attacking the food industry, the secretary and others concerned with the health of Americans ought to go after the U.S. Congress. Let's look at it.

According to a study by researchers at the University of California, Davis, published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation (May 2009), widespread use of fructose may be directly responsible for some of the ongoing increase in rates of childhood diabetes and obesity. Consuming fructose-sweetened, not glucose-sweetened, beverages increases abdominal fat and decreases insulin sensitivity in overweight/obese people. The participants in the study who consumed fructose-sweetened food showed an increase of fat cells around major organs including their hearts and livers, and also underwent metabolic changes that are precursors to heart disease and diabetes.

 
 Click for Anchorage, Alaska Forecast
Should Lisa Murkowski continue her run for the U.S. Senate as a write-in candidate?
 

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