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Tuesday, 3 March 2015

Bibi the Clown in Congress: Iran = most terrible, horrible, no good thing ever, in the universe

netanyahu congress

© AP Photo/ Andrew Harnik

"Silence, my subjects! I am not finished!"



During his speech before Congress, Prime Minister Netanyahu used a number of grand, rhetorical sound bites. It was all part of a concentrated effort to convince a foreign legal body to disregard their own president's policies in favor of his own. And judging by the standing applause, these ten lines may have been the most convincing - and baffling.

1. It was "never my intention" for speech to become political.


As anyone with even a cursory knowledge of American politics knows, anything and everything is political once it comes before Congress. A New York soda ban last year made buying Coca-Cola a radical statement. Even Clint Eastwood's "American Sniper" became a way for Republicans to show their bonafides. But sure, Netanyahu thought everyone would be cool with him circumventing the leader of the United States.









2. "Iran is busy gobbling up nations."

"Gobbling" is defined as "eating (something) hurriedly and noisily," making it a curious choice of words. Given that Netanyahu is trying to reinforce the image of Iran as a source of ancient evil in the region, it seems odd he would choose language more evocative of a McDonald's cheeseburger than a mortal threat to global security.




3. "To defeat ISIS and let Iran get nuclear weapons would be to win the battle, but lose the war."

Somehow it seems harnessing nuclear energy is much less threatening than a group of fundamentalist marauders beheading any journalist they can get their hands on. Even aside from the broader fact that the Iran-ISIL comparison is a false equivalency, that sounds like a battle worth winning.




4. "We must all stand together to stop Iran's march of conquest, subjugation, and terror."

There has indeed been a recent wave of conquest, subjugation, and terror, but the marching hasn't been done by Iran, but - again - by ISIL. As seen, quite literally, below.


raqqa isis

© AP



5. "The days when the Jewish people remained passive in the face of genocidal enemies are over."

The sentiment is correct. It goes without saying that no one should tolerate genocide. But there is very little in modern history to suggest that Israel has remained "passive." There was the Six-Day War in 1967. There was the 1981 airstrike which destroyed the only nuclear reactor in Iraq. Not to mention the military strikes which killed six members of Hezbollah in the Golan Heights two months ago.




6. "This deal will change the Middle East for the worse and will spark a nuclear arms race in the region."

If you listened to the rest of the speech - or read the previous 5 quotes - it should be pretty clear that Netanyahu believes a nuclear arms race is already taking place in the region.


7. Netanyahu's insistence that Iran will always be an enemy of the United States.


Bibi may have gotten confused here. When addressing a joint session of the US Congress, it's easy to forget that you do not, in fact, represent the United States. He is also not a representative of Iran, making his bold statement about the relationship between the two nations a little speculative.


8. The standing ovation received after Netanyahu called for a nuclear free Middle East.


Good, then everyone is in agreement. Israel, as a preeminent member of the Middle East, must surrender any and all nuclear weapons it has developed.




9. "Israel's neighbors know that Iran will become more aggressive...when sanctions are lifted."

There he goes again, speaking for a number of nations which he does not, in fact, represent.


10. That Robert Frost reference.


Toward the speech's closing, Netanyahu referenced the famous Frost poem, "The Road Not Taken," to encourage US lawmakers to make a difficult choice. But as several scholars have noted, this interpretation is a gross misunderstanding of the poem's meaning, which is, in fact, a somber acknowledgement that our choices mean less than we think.


Probably not the message Bibi traveled 9,000 miles to deliver.


One person, at least, wasn't watching. According to Reuters, President Obama told reporters that he didn't watch, but read the transcript, and didn't see anything new.


Propaganda: Cousin of Gaddafi warns 'Europe will face a 9/11 within two years'


© Reuters/Asmaa Waguih

Ahmed Gaddaf al-Dam, cousin of Libya's former president Muammar Gaddafi





Colonel Gaddafi's cousin predicts a "9/11 in Europe within two years," as Islamic State militants join thousands of migrants beating a path to Europe. His warning comes as Home Secretary Theresa May says Britain's terror threat is "grave and growing."

Ahmed Gaddafi al-Dam, formerly one of Gadaffi's most trusted security chiefs, estimates a minimum of 500,000 migrants will make their way from Libya to Europe in 2015, as the Islamic State [IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL] increases its foothold in the North African state.


"There are many terrorists among them, between 10 and 50 in every thousand," he told the Mail Online. "They are going all throughout Europe [sic]. Within one year, two years, you will have another September 11."


The former security chief made the remarks in Cairo on Monday, during an interview with the newspaper. He has reportedly since fled.


Following his comments, Britain's Home Secretary Theresa May said Britons continue to face the risk of a terror attack. She added everyone in the UK needs to play their part to help fight the spread of radicalization.


IS gaining ground in Libya


Considered alarmist by some, Gaddafi al-Dam's warning will likely alarm Western governments.


Following the brutal massacre of 21 Egyptian Coptic Christians by IS militants in Sirte, northern Libya, concern is mounting that instability in the region poses a risk to the West.


Militants linked to IS have made gains in Libya in recent times, and are thought to have conquered three towns, including Sirte.


Gadaffi's cousin says the Islamic State in Libya could be in possession of over 6,000 barrels of uranium, previously guarded by the state's armed forces.


"They are not stupid anymore. They know how to make money. They will try and sell it," he added.



Is Libya the next stronghold of the Islamic State? http://bit.ly/1zVWZAl http://bit.ly/1Ee0lVG


— Foreign Policy (@ForeignPolicy) March 2, 2015



Colonel Gadaffi's family has remained largely out of the media spotlight since the Libyan dictator's death during the state's 2011 revolution. Gadaffi's passing marked the end of his 42-year reign as state leader.

Rival insurgents have battled for power ever since, ousting Libya's internationally recognized rulers from the state's capital and sparking fears of a full-blown civil war.


Last month, Britain's ex-director of MI6 Sir John Sawers called for a debate about UK military intervention in Libya.


Sawers said the country has descended into "growing chaos" after Britain joined US airstrikes to bring down Gaddafi's regime.


However, Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond has rejected calls for military intervention, insisting a political solution must be found to Libya's struggle against the Islamic State.


Hammond stresses efforts to install a national unity government will help Libya in its struggle against terror groups.


A state of unrest


Libya has remained restless since the demise of its autocratic ruler in 2011. After the uprising, sharp political divisions surfaced in the country, yielding two opposing governments each of which runs its own institutions and armed forces.


The separate parliaments, located in the eastern city of Tobruk and Libya's capital Tripoli, currently vie for supremacy.


Since Libya's 2011 uprising, accompanied by NATO airstrikes, critics argue the state has been abandoned by the West and left without any foreign assistance to foster stability.


There has been no attempt to manage a transition to a new system of rule, as Western allies did in the case of Iraq and Afghanistan.


Following the release of a video depicting the brutal beheading of 21 Coptic Christians in Libya earlier this year, the Egyptian government launched airstrikes against IS targets in the region.


Libya has also appealed to the UN Security Council to lift its arm embargo, in a bid to counter threats from the Islamic State and other militants.


Minnesota governor taxed the rich and increased minimum wage - now his state's economy is flourishing


The next time your right-wing family member or former high school classmate posts a status update or tweet about how taxing the rich or increasing workers' wages kills jobs and makes businesses leave the state, I want you to send them this article.

When he took office in January of 2011, Minnesota governor Mark Dayton inherited a $6.2 billion budget deficit and a 7 percent unemployment rate from his predecessor, Tim Pawlenty, the soon-forgotten Republican candidate for the presidency who called himself Minnesota's first true fiscally-conservative governor in modern history. Pawlenty prided himself on never raising state taxes -- the most he ever did to generate new revenue was increase the tax on cigarettes by 75 cents a pack. Between 2003 and late 2010, when Pawlenty was at the head of Minnesota's state government, he managed to add only 6,200 more jobs.


During his first four years in office, Gov. Dayton raised the state income tax from 7.85 to 9.85 percent on individuals earning over $150,000, and on couples earning over $250,000 when filing jointly -- a tax increase of $2.1 billion . He's also agreed to raise Minnesota's minimum wage to $9.50 an hour by 2018 , and passed a state law guaranteeing equal pay for women . Republicans like state representative Mark Uglem warned against Gov. Dayton's tax increases, saying, "The job creators, the big corporations, the small corporations, they will leave. It's all dollars and sense to them." The conservative friend or family member you shared this article with would probably say the same if their governor tried something like this. But like Uglem, they would be proven wrong.


Between 2011 and 2015, Gov. Dayton added 172,000 new jobs to Minnesota's economy -- that's 165,800 more jobs in Dayton's first term than Pawlenty added in both of his terms combined. Even though Minnesota's top income tax rate is the 4th-highest in the country , it has the 5th-lowest unemployment rate in the country at 3.6 percent. According to 2012-2013 U.S. census figures, Minnesotans had a median income that was $10,000 larger than the U.S. average, and their median income is still $8,000 more than the U.S. average today.


By late 2013, Minnesota's private sector job growth exceeded pre-recession levels, and the state's economy was the 5th fastest-growing in the United States. Forbes even ranked Minnesota the 9th-best state for business (Scott Walker's "Open For Business" Wisconsin came in at a distant #32 on the same list). Despite the fearmongering over businesses fleeing from Dayton's tax cuts, 6,230 more Minnesotans filed in the top income tax bracket in 2013, just one year after Dayton's tax increases went through. As of January 2015, Minnesota has a $1 billion budget surplus, and Gov. Dayton has pledged to reinvest more than one third of that money into public schools. And according to Gallup, Minnesota's economic confidence is higher than any other state


Gov. Dayton didn't accomplish all of these reforms by shrewdly manipulating people -- this article describes Dayton's astonishing lack of charisma and articulateness. He isn't a class warrior driven by a desire to get back at the 1 percent -- Dayton is a billionaire heir to the Target fortune. It wasn't just a majority in the legislature that forced him to do it -- Dayton had to work with a Republican-controlled legislature for his first two years in office. And unlike his Republican neighbor to the east, Gov. Dayton didn't assert his will over an unwilling populace by creating obstacles between the people and the vote -- Dayton actually created an online voter registration system, making it easier than ever for people to register to vote.


The reason Gov. Dayton was able to radically transform Minnesota's economy into one of the best in the nation is simple arithmetic. Raising taxes on those who can afford to pay more will turn a deficit into a surplus. Raising the minimum wage will increase the median income. And in a state where education is a budget priority and economic growth is one of the highest in the nation, it only makes sense that more businesses would stay.


It's official -- trickle-down economics is bunk. Minnesota has proven it once and for all. If you believe otherwise, you are wrong.


Russian media monitoring group releases first report on world media hostility to Russia

putin mh17 newspaper

On Feb. 18 the Russian Institute for Strategic Studies (RISS), a think tank established by the Russian President in 1992, presented its new the main goal of which is to rank how friendly countries are to Russia by analyzing their mass media content. It aims to identify the states that exercise the most aggressive media policy towards Russia and threaten its "information security."

This analytical report is the result of detailed analysis of the media policies of different countries in 2014, when crucial shifts in the rhetoric employed by Western media about Russia occurred. The author of the mass media hostility index is a senior fellow at RISS, Dr. Igor Nikolaichuk. He suggests that, over the course of 2014, Western media started to "spread anti-Russian propaganda more actively than ever," which he calls the beginning of "the global information war" against Russia.


The RISS positions its index as the first-ever comprehensive analysis of the world's media content pertaining to Russia. The analysis is based on complex statistical data (provided by Russian news agency Rossiya Segodnya) that is examined via a new applied discipline known as "political mediametrics." A unit for analysis is a significant media publication that gives a reader certain assessments of Russia or its leadership. Ordinary news was excluded from the analysis.




The origins of the World Mass Media Hostility Index

As the world entered the information age, the mass media took on a big part in our lives, and over the last decade, started to influence it to an even greater degree. The mass media contributes to the formation of public opinion and leads to the creation of certain narratives in the political discourse in a country, in a region or even in the world.


The word 'propaganda' in recent years has become a new favorite word in the media world. Google Trends show that interest in the word 'propaganda' has been rising over time in the 'news search category'.


The conflict in Ukraine, which erupted in 2014, galvanized a struggle in the media space and contributed to the broad usage of the word 'propaganda,' which mostly referred to the information reported by state-owned media, particularly Russian state-owned media.


Propaganda, as defined by the Oxford dictionary, is "the information, especially of a biased or misleading nature, used to promote a political cause or point of view." The Russian dictionary of Ozhegov defines it as "spreading in society an explanation of ideas, thoughts, knowledge or learnings."


The difference in the definitions is quite obvious, as is the perception of different types of information. From a Russian linguistic point of view, propaganda mostly serves as a tool for explanation of certain ideas, thoughts and policies. The Anglo-Saxon definition stresses the biased or misleading nature of the promoted information. Herein lies the main dichotomy in understanding the information war between Russia and the West.


However, there is a factor that contributes to the misunderstanding between both Russia and the West. In fact, Anglo-Saxon and Western countries dominate the global media world. This puts the Russian media in a sort of defensive position, forced to explain an alternative, different view of events that may not be popular in the West.


This inevitably led to a clash in the type of information the media promotes, especially at a time of geopolitical controversy. In such circumstances, information warfare became a real fact and the world media started to be engaged in a struggle for "hearts and minds" as never before.


The methodology and findings of the new index


Dr. Nikolaichuk says that the volume of analyzed data is about 70 thousand media pieces that were published between Jan. 1, 2014 and Dec. 30, 2014. The data was monitored for 60 countries. Before the introduction of the research results, Dr. Nikolaichuk touched on the topic of - information security - that has turned into a top agenda issue in the world over the past 12 months. In the light of the Ukrainian crisis, hostile rhetoric in the world media towards Russia, predominantly Western, increased.


The index is calculated as the ratio of negative publications to neutral publications. The author defines a ratio of more than one neutral to five negative publications as an indicator that the country wages information warfare against Russia.


media index

According to this methodology, there are two countries that currently engage in an "information war" against Russia: Germany and the U.S. The countries that follow after them but are less aggressive in their media policies include Austria, France, the UK and Poland.

Here are some findings of the report. Based on the analysis of the media space around Russia in 2014, it became evident that the media front against Russia was comprised first of all by the Anglo-Saxon countries, EU states, Japan, Ukraine, Georgia and Jordan, reports Nikolaichuk. During 2014, Germany had the largest amount of significant publications about Russia - 8,929, followed by the U.S. - 5,771, the UK - 5,209, France - 4,810, and Switzerland - 4,105.


media index

Among the European countries, Italy is out of the picture with its traditionally friendly rhetoric towards Russia. Belgium follows this example. Sweden and Denmark are dominated by the negative media approach; Norway and Iceland are predominantly neutral. The only country with a dominant positive trend in its media was Syria. If one were to compare 2014 with 2013, in 2013 the UK and Georgia had a neutral media policy towards Russia, and the mass media of South Africa, Canada, Japan, and Ukraine did not have strong anti-Russian tendencies. In general, the report concludes that the media environment for Russia worsened in 2014.

A comprehensive report on the Media Hostility Index will be released annually with a detailed description and analysis of trends that changed during the year. RISS also produces short weekly reports on changes in the Media Hostility Index to track how the media environment reacts to different international or domestic events.


RISS views this new index as the start of a comprehensive, statistically-backed product that intends to underscore the biased nature of Western media reporting on Russia, consequently raising this issue to a higher degree of attention and discussion.


Big Pharma and media's pro-vaxxer agenda is a propaganda assault on informed consent


© David Dees



Major US news media have presented a grossly distorted and misleading interpretation of vaccines and their relationship to public health since early January. These journalistic organs have suggested the recent measles outbreak in the Western US has been a crisis of monumental proportions.

This flagrant and cynical sensationalism has become a foundation for intense advocacy on behalf of the pharmaceutical corporate and regulatory cartel targeting patient informed consent—a founding principal of modern medical practice and personal freedom. Keeping in mind the close to 300 vaccine products now in the pharmaceutical industry's pipeline,[1] closer analysis of "measles outbreak" press coverage suggests a conscious effort by corporate news media to virtually banish such notions and practices from the public mind. A news media dependent on over $1 billion in advertising dollars from big pharma must almost by necessity indulge their clients' broader agenda.


An impartial journalistic approach to the question of vaccination and personal choice would provide equal and unprejudiced airing of "both sides," in addition to the varied grey areas in the debate, from the corporate and statist entities flying the banner of mandatory vaccination to cautious segments of the citizenry voicing reservations toward such technology alongside the foremost prerogative of personal choice.


A LexisNexis search of US newspaper and wire service articles from December 28, 2015—the official start date of the California measles outbreak—to February 8, 2015 [2] using the search terms "measles" and "vaccination" yields 799 press releases or wire stories and 746 newspaper articles and opinion pieces. Much of this coverage predictably emphasizes the array of vaccine-friendly assumptions and pronouncements from entities abetting the pharmaceutical industry's long-term profit-specific objectives.


For example, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is, alongside the Food and Drug Administration, the most powerful bureaucratic arm utilized by the global pharmaceutical cartel to elicit compliance with the federal vaccine schedule for children from the medical profession and broader population. Of the article sample referenced above, close to one-third (517) reference the "Centers for Disease Control" or "CDC" in their text, suggesting citation of the agency and its policies to persuasively instruct readers on vaccine efficacy and safety.


In contrast, the same body of over 1,500 press releases, news stories and editorials reference "informed consent" only three times—and when the term used it is done so either in passing or to disparage the practice itself. For example, Arthur Caplan, a professor of medicine at New York University, warns against doctors even considering the practice of informed consent in regard to vaccines. "The science is unimpeachable," Caplan proclaims. " Vaccines do not cause autism; measles is dangerous and contagious; inoculating against the disease is neither pointless nor riskier than abstention." The physician then amazingly suggests that genuine informed consent - explaining how a vaccine such as Measles, Mumps, Rubella, which can severely injure, incapacitate, or kill the child patient - must be categorically replaced by the dissemination of pharmaceutical industry propaganda and half-truths. "Those doctors who counsel otherwise - who distort what patients need to know to preserve their health or that of their children - have crossed a bright red line. They have violated a patient's right to informed consent, which depends on accurate information."[3]


The foremost US organization advocating the fundamental doctrine of informed consent, the National Vaccine Information Center, is referenced a paltry 22 times in the sizable article sample. And while the NVIC routinely emphasizes that it is not "anti-vaccine" and merely advocates that patients or their parents fully understand the risks associated with the industrialized, "one size fits all" immunization process, it is nevertheless framed as the official voice of "anti-vaccination." A recent article from the data set is exemplary of this practice. "Members of the anti-vaccine movement said the public backlash had terrified many parents. 'People are now afraid they're going to be jailed,' said Barbara Loe Fisher, the president of the National Vaccine Information Center, a clearinghouse for resisters."[4]


Of the 746 articles published in newspapers, 143 are editorial and opinion pieces. Almost without exception each vigorously supports wide-scale vaccination, even proposing punitive measures for those clinging to informed consent and personal choice. Such uniform opinion among newsroom management provides a clear indication of exactly how warped the overall news coverage of the "measles outbreak" has been.


"If we're not willing to permanently exile anti-vaxxers from the public square," one opinion in the remarks, "we should at least make emergency provisions to do so. Anti-vaxxers should be made to understand that when there is a public-health emergency - such as a measles outbreak - they'll be quarantined for the duration."[5] "Those who refuse to vaccinate are wrong," the argues. "They endanger themselves and those around them."[6] "The growing anti-vaccination movement is one of the most frustrating developments of this decade," the similarly contends. "Some of the parents who mistrust vaccine are uneducated and have no access to pediatric counsel, but there's no excuse for the irresponsible parents who have access to the latest science yet irrationally fear that vaccines are not safe for their children."[7]


In an effort to console parents concerned about the very real possibility of vaccines causing autism, US government press releases and US news outlets alike reference a 1998 study authored by British physician and medical scientist Andrew Wakefield linking vaccination to Crohn's disease and autism. "Public health officials blame a decline in parents having their kids vaccinated that began after a now-thoroughly discredited 1998 British report alleged that common early childhood vaccinations triggered autism," the grouses. "Unfortunately, that discredited report continues to be cited by know-nothing celebrities and vapid New Age authors who broadly reject modern medicine. They do so even as life expectancy hits all-time highs and medical researchers make steady progress on many fronts."[8]


The US government's own public relations service—US Official News—likewise chimes in on Wakefield's alleged deceit. "A 1998 article in the medical journal caused a firestorm of controversy when it was published and helped create the anti-vaccine movement that continues today," one US government press release reads. "There's only one problem - the article was later retracted by the publisher for being 'utterly false,' and the author, Andrew Wakefield, was found to have been paid big bucks by plaintiffs' lawyers."[9]


The fact that Wakefield's 1998 findings have been upheld in 19 peer-reviewed papers he has contributed to the literature between 1998 and 2010, in addition to 28 studies from other scientists around the world [10] has been consciously overlooked by US newspaper editors and other drug industry propagandists. That this key piece of disinformation - soundly rebutted in the published research - continues to be repeated by journalists and government publicists alike suggests the hardcore disinformation tactics deployed to perpetuate the misunderstanding and unwarranted faith the majority of US families continue to place in big pharma's immensely profitable vaccine agenda.


As direct result of this well-coordinated publicity campaign and resulting hysteria the legal right by which families may exercise informed consent is now under intense legal assault across the US. "Hearings to remove philosophical/conscientious exemptions to vaccine mandates have already taken place in Washington and Oregon," NVIC reports.



California, Maine, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Vermont all have bills already filed or press announcements of bills about to be filed to remove philosophical/conscientious exemptions. Maine, Minnesota and Texas have bills to substantially restrict philosophical/conscientious exemptions. Religious exemptions are also under attack. Maryland, New Jersey, Texas and Vermont have bills filed or announced to eliminate religious exemptions, and Illinois, New Mexico and Texas have bills filed or announced to unconstitutionally restrict religious exemptions.



In addition, Connecticut, Florida, Indiana, Maine, Maryland, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New York, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, and West Virginia all have legislation underway to expand vaccine mandates.[11]

In light of the above one should be unsurprised at the mob-like antipathy toward "anti-vaxxers," and how the notions of personal liberty and informed consent have been made to appear increasingly bizarre by being effectively stricken from public discourse. The population has been expertly propagandized on the issue by medical practitioners, their professional associations, and regulatory agencies tethered to the pharmaceutical industry's agenda vis-a-vis a news media reliant on drug advertising revenue. With these observations in mind one must seriously ask themselves, In what meaningful way would a wholly scientific authoritarianism differ from what is witnessed in America today?


Notes


[1] Medicines in Development: A Report on the Prevention and Treatment of Disease Through Vaccines, Pharmaceutical Researchers and Manufacturers of America, 2013.


[2] Jennifer Zipprich, Kathleen Winter, et al, "Measles Outbreak - California, December 2014-February 2015," Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, February 20, 2015.


[3] Arthur Caplan, "Quacks Against Vaccines? Revoke Their Licenses," , February 8, 2015.


[4] Jack Healy and Michael Paulson, "Vaccine Critics Turn Defensive Over Measles," , January 31, 2015.


[5] Joel Mathis and Ben Boychuck, "The Vaccination Debate Continues," , February 9, 2015.


[6] "Washington Post: Measles in America," , February 3, 2015.


[7] "Disneyland's Measles is a Hard Lesson in How Vaccines Work," , January 29, 2015.


[8] "Anti-Vaccination Charlatans Take Toll on Public Health," , January 19, 2015.


[9] "Flashback: The Anti-Vaccine Movement and a Trial Lawyer-Funded Climate of Fear," Plus Media Solutions/US Official News, February 17, 2015.


[10] Joseph Mercola, "Why Medical Authorities Went to Such Extremes to Silence Dr. Andrew Wakefield,", April 10, 2010


[11] "You Need to Act Now: Vaccine Exemptions and Mandates Threatened in Even More States," National Vaccine Information Center, February 23, 2015.


Wisconsin governor Scott Walker proposes budget that eliminates requirement that colleges report sexual assaults


Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker's proposed budget would not merely cut nearly $300 million from the University of Wisconsin system, it would eliminate the requirement that campus employees report sexual assaults they have witnessed, as well as the requirement that campuses report the number of sexual assaults to the Department of Justice, Jezebel's Natasha Vargas-Cooper reports.

In light of the recently discredited article about an alleged gang-rape at the University of Virginia, the reporting of sexual abuse on campus has become a politicized issue — especially among conservatives.


Fox News contributor Stacey Dash claimed that women who were sexually assaulted at fraternity parties were "bad girls" who "like to be naughty" and "might go out and play and get hurt."


Universities in the Wisconsin system are currently required to report the number of sexual assaults — regardless of whether the victims are "bad girls" or not — to the Department of Justice. The Walker budget not only removes that mandatory report, but also the requirement that any university employee "who witnesses a sexual assault on campus or receives a report from a student enrolled in the institution that the student has been sexually assaulted report the assault to the dean of students."


The new Walker budget would simply "delete" those requirements without offering any alternative policy recommendation, as outlined in a section of the budget titled "DELETE LANGUAGE RELATED TO SEXUAL ASSAULT INFORMATION AND REPORTING" — in which the first word of every sentence is "delete."


"Delete the requirement," the budget's language states, "that each institution report annually to the Department of Justice (DOJ) statistics on sexual assaults and on sexual assaults committed by acquaintances of the victims that occurred on the campus of that institution in the previous years, and that DOJ include those statistics in appropriate crime reports."


US: Electricity price index hit an all-time high for January

In contrast to the steep decline in the gasoline price index over the past year (which led to a decline in the overall Consumer Price Index), the seasonally adjusted electricity price index hit an all-time high in January, according to data released last week by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

In January, the seasonally adjusted price index for electricity was 212.290. That was up from 210.489 in December, which was the record up until then. Before that, the high had been the 209.341 recorded in March of last year.


The annual electricity price index set a record in 2014 of 208.020 up from 200.750 in 2013.



In January, the average price for a kilowatthour (KWH) of electricity also hit an all-time high for that month of the year.

According to BLS, a KWH of electricity cost an average of 13.8 cents in January 2015, which was less than the 14.3-cent cost in June, July and August of 2014 (and 14.1-cent cost of September 2014) but more than the average cost of a KWH in any month—including the summer months—of 2013. In that year, the average price of a KWH peaked at 13.7 cents in the months from June to September.


The price of electricity tends to follow an annual pattern--rising in the spring, peaking in the summer, and declining in the fall.



The rise in the electricity price index ran counter to the gasoline price index, the overall energy price index, and the overall Consumer Price Index, all of which declined in January as well as over the past twelve months.

"The energy index fell 9.7 percent in January, its seventh consecutive decline and the largest 1-month decrease since November 2008," said the Bureau of Labor Statistics in its press release on the CPI.


"The 18.7-percent decline in the gasoline index was the main factor. (Before seasonal adjustment, gasoline prices fell 17.1 percent in January)," said BLS. "The fuel oil index also fell sharply, declining 9.9 percent after a 7.8-percent decline in December. The index for natural gas, which rose in December, fell 3.4 percent in January. The electricity index was the only major energy component to increase, rising 0.9 percent, its largest increase since May 2014. The electricity index is also the only major energy component to rise over the last 12 months, increasing 2.5 percent over the span. The gasoline and fuel oil indexes have declined sharply over the period, falling 35.4 percent and 29.7 percent, respectively. The index for natural gas has declined slightly over the span, decreasing 0.4 percent."


"Over the last 12 months, the all items index decreased 0.1 percent before seasonal adjustment," said BLS.


"The gasoline decrease was overwhelmingly the cause of the decline in the all items index, which would have risen 0.1 percent had the gasoline index been unchanged," said BLS.


The BLS's price indexes measure relative change in prices against a baseline of 100. The seasonally adjusted monthly electricity price index exceeded 100 between September and October of 1983, when it rose from 98.9 to 101.0.


Historically, increasing electricity prices have not been inevitable in the United States. From 1913 to 1946, the electricity price index trended down from 45.5 to 26.6. By 1974, it was still only 44.1, which was less than it had been in 1913.