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December 28th, 2011
08:48 pm

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Gate In The Alczar / Seville

photo

Gate In The Alczar / Seville

Tags

Sevilla

Andalusien

Andalusia

Spain

Leica

M8

Star

Gate

Gatter

Stern

Photo

Alczar

maurischer

Palast

UNESC
Flickr.com

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12:48 am

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60th Lane

photo

60th Lane

Proposed Central Ridgewood Historic District, Ridgewood, Queens, New York City, New York, United States

Tags

Borough of Queens

New York

New York City

New York City, NY

New York, New York

New York, NY

Nova Iorque

Novjorko

Nueva York

Nueva York, EE.UU.

Nueva York, Estados Unidos

Nueva York, Nueva York

NY

NY, NY

NYC

NYC, NY

NYC, New York

Queens

Queens County

Ridgewood

U.S.

U.S.A.

United States

United States of America

Proposed Central Ridgewood Historic District

LP-2448

EE.UU.

Estados Unidos

LaneProposed Central Ridgewood Historic District, Ridgewood, Queens, NYNew York, York, New YorkNew York, Estados UnidosNueva York, Central Ridgewood

Flickr.com

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December 27th, 2011
04:48 am

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SanctuaryOfApollonYlatis6127

photo

SanctuaryOfApollonYlatis6127

Tags

Europe

Cyprus

Ancient Kourion
Flickr.com

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December 26th, 2011
08:45 am

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First Snow of Winter in Aichi, Japan... JTM Photo No.106

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First Snow of Winter in Aichi, Japan... JTM Photo No.106

Woke up this morning (December 26th 2011) and was greeted with the first snow of the winter!

Tags

Snow

Toyota City

Aichi

Japan

Winter

JTM Photo, First Snow of Winter, Aichi

Flickr.com

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December 25th, 2011
12:42 pm

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Phalacrocorax sulcirostris

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Phalacrocorax sulcirostris

Phalacrocorax sulcirostris (Brandt, 1837), Little Black Cormorant, Lake Ginninderra, Belconnen, ACT, 25 December 2011

Tags

Aves

Pelecaniformes

Phalacrocoracidae

Phalacrocorax

sulcirostris

Belconnen

ACT

Australia

December

2011

Phalacrocorax sulcirostris

Lake Ginninderra, Belconnen, ACT, Little Black Cormorant, Phalacrocorax

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December 24th, 2011
04:42 pm

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Just Take A Minute.

photo

Just Take A Minute.

Krller-Mller Museum.

Tags

Krller

Mller

Museum

Otterlo

Nationaal

Park

Hoge

Veluwe

Holland

Netherlands

Painting

Black

White

Nikon

D60

18-105

Jurriaan

Vogel

Photography

2011
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December 23rd, 2011
08:39 pm

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Guitar, garamut, and kundu band

photo

Guitar, garamut, and kundu band

Celebrating the Bargam New Testament dedication

Tags

Papua New Guinea

PNG

Madang

Province

Niugini

Bargam

Bible

dedication

Testament
Flickr.com

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12:36 am

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Boehner: Still 10 days to reach a deal on payroll tax break

House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio walks off the floor of the House chamber in Washington Tuesday.

House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio walks off the floor of the House chamber in Washington Tuesday. (Evan Vucci / Associated Press / December 20, 2011)

The standoff over preserving a tax break continued as House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) showed little sign of reversing course despite sustained criticism from his own party and President Obama.

Boehner assembled his top negotiators for a second day at an otherwise empty Capitol, but their position is being overpowered by the risk of a looming tax hike on Jan. 1. Obama planned to showcase stories of workers who will lose $40 a paycheck later Thursday at the White House.

 “We’re fighting to do the right thing,” said Boehner, who wants to launch formal negotiations with Democrats to resolve differing approaches to the issue. “It’s time for us to sit down and have serious negotiations.”

To broker a compromise, Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the GOP leader, floated a way out:  Have the House accept the Senate’s stopgap payroll tax cut compromise while formal talks get underway.

It was not immediately clear if House Republicans would take the offer. Boehner noted that 10 days remain to reach a deal – a signal the GOP may not be willing to reverse course despite the political pressure to ease out of the stalemate.

The toll the political battle was taking on the GOP leaders was apparent as they insisted the differences between the House and Senate approach could be swiftly resolved. The impasse over the $200-billion package also risks a lapse in unemployment insurance for 3 million jobless Americans and a 20% pay cut for doctors who serve Medicare patients.

“We could probably resolve the differences in an hour,” said Rep. Eric Cantor (R-Va.), the majority leader, who was among those fighting hardest for the House approach. He suggested the president, who ducked out of the White House for a quick Christmas shopping trip this week while his family is in Hawaii for the holidays, could bring the family's dog Bo to the Capitol for talks. “We’re here and we want to solve the problem.”

The impasse is rooted in the budget issues that have been the signature issue of the House GOP majority. House Republicans want the tax cut paid for with spending cuts that Democrats, who had proposed taxing millionaires to cover the costs, reject.

Unable to reach agreement, the Senate approved a stopgap measure to continue the tax break for two months while talks continue. The GOP-led House rejected that approach.

McConnell, who had been an architect of the compromise, said Thursday both sides should give to reach a solution.

Democrats should appoint negotiators and the “House should pass an extension,” McConnell said in a statement.

Democratic leaders have been skeptical of such an approach. Democrats have resisted formal talks, concerned they will be forced to make further concessions. Already Democrats feel they gave into the GOP demand to include a provision that would accelerate a decision on the Keystone XL pipeline, a controversial project Obama had postponed. They are hestiant to give in further and want assurances the payroll tax cut will be continued.

Both sides say they want to keep the payroll tax break, even though Republicans were initially cool to continuing it into 2012. The tax cut has shaved 2 percentage points off the Social Security tax workers paid in 2011 and mainstream economists say letting workers keep the cash is vital to the growth of nation’s struggling the economy in 2012, a position rank-and-file Republicans take with skepticism.

Now, though, it is the GOP that is fighting for the full-year continuation of the tax break. Boehner called Obama Thursday to reiterate that position. They reject a stopgap measure that passed in the Senate with broad bipartisan support. Republican senators have urged their House counterparts to take the temporary deal that would continue the tax break for two months while talks continue.

A chorus of leading Republicans – in Washington and across the country – have criticized Boehner and his leadership team for threatening a tax hike. Keeping taxes low has been the signature issue of the Republican party, and is now jeopardized.

Democrats are running an orchestrated campaign targeting lawmakers in their home states for risking a tax hike in the new year.

Most lawmakers are home for the holidays, but the Capitol was the scene of dueling news conferences over the issue.

“What are you doing here letting the clock run down?” said Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.).

 lmascaro@tribune.com
khennessey@tribune.com

House Speaker John Boehner, White House, House Republicans, the White House, GOP, GOP, payroll tax, payroll tax, Republicans, tax break, tax hike, tax hike, Mitch McConnell, Washington

Latimes.com

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12:36 am

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U.S. leaders say they are hard at work on payroll tax

Payroll tax cut

John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) listens to questions from the media before a meeting in Washington with Republican negotiators, including Rep. Renee Ellmers (R-N.C.), about the payroll tax cut. (Alex Wong, Getty Images / December 21, 2011)

Reporting from Washington—

With no endgame in sight to prevent a looming payroll tax hike, President Obama and congressional leaders took turns trying to convince Americans that they were hard at work to save the tax break — even though Congress has essentially closed for the holidays.

Obama called House Speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) on Wednesday to nudge him to compromise. Boehner assembled his top negotiators but, with no one to negotiate with, they talked among themselves. House Democratic leaders staged a lonely protest on the empty House floor, shouting for the chance to bring a bipartisan tax break bill to a vote.

Away from the antics, ways out of the stalemate were being debated. House Republicans found themselves increasingly isolated from the rest of their party over their resistance to a two-month, stopgap measure that would extend the tax break for 160 million working Americans. Back-channel talks continued.

"The compromise exists," said White House spokesman Jay Carney. "They should just get it done."

Boehner couldn't agree more, and told the president as much when Obama called, an aide recounted.

"Let's get this done today," the speaker told Obama.

But finding consensus is easier said than done. Republicans and Democrats remain at odds over how to pay for the legislation, which would cost $200 billion for a full year. The package would extend the 2-percentage-point reduction on the payroll tax workers contribute to Social Security that has been in place all year and that expires Dec. 31. It also would continue unemployment insurance for 3 million jobless Americans and shield doctors who treat Medicare patients from a 20% pay cut.

Because lawmakers were unable to agree on how to fund the full-year package, the Senate overwhelmingly approved the two-month compromise to provide more negotiating time. But the GOP-led House rebuffed that deal. Rank-and-file members, who have been cool to the tax break, now say the stopgap measure is insufficient and want a one-year package — but one that differs sharply from the Senate approach.

The standoff puts in doubt whether the tax break — which adds an average $20 a week to paychecks — will be extended into 2012.

The one figure not playing a public role in the standoff was Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the GOP leader, who was an architect of the stopgap compromise. McConnell, at home in Louisville, has been in touch with Boehner and could help orchestrate a way out of the stalemate.

One strategy would be for the House to approve the temporary measure while talks continue, but aides downplayed that possibility. Some in the GOP have said they have until Jan. 3 to reach a deal, knowing the tax cut could be made retroactive.

Democrats are hesitant to reenter formal talks with the House GOP until the stopgap measure is approved. They doubt that Republicans really want to extend the tax cut and worry they will try to extract further concessions in exchange for votes.

As each side waits for the other to blink, they are calculating who will take the blame if taxes rise. So far, House Republicans have endured heavy criticism, even from allies, for rejecting the Senate deal — which passed by a bipartisan 89-10 vote — and for tarnishing the GOP's reputation as the party of low taxes.

The Wall Street Journal editorial board called the GOP strategy a fiasco, arguing that it allowed the president to look like a tax-cutter. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) tweeted that the editorial was "right on the mark."

"I'm amazed by how badly this payroll tax cut is being mishandled," said Ron Nehring, chairman emeritus of the California Republican Party, in a tweet. "Let's extend it a year, throw in a new pipeline" — a reference to a provision that would expedite a decision on the controversial Keystone XL project — "and call it a day."

Boehner answered critics Wednesday during a photo opportunity with his negotiators. Republicans sat on one side of a conference table, facing empty chairs supposedly set out for Democrats.

"We are the party of lower taxes for the American people," Boehner said. "We have fought for lower taxes for the 21 years that I've been in this Congress, and we are going to continue to be the party of lower taxes."

House Democrats, meanwhile, have launched a campaign to target Republican lawmakers at home for rejecting the Senate compromise.

Rep. Steny H. Hoyer of Maryland, the minority whip, tried to bring the Senate bill up for a vote during a pro forma session in an empty Capitol. But the GOP representative in the speaker's chair, Rep. Michael G. Fitzpatrick (R-Pa.), gaveled business to a close.

Boehner was planning another meeting with negotiators Thursday.

Christi Parsons in the Washington bureau contributed to this report.

lisa.mascaro@latimes.com

kathleen.hennessey@latimes.com

John A. Boehner, President Obama, House Speaker John A. Boehner, Renee Ellmers, payroll tax, payroll tax, payroll tax, tax break, House Republicans, House Republicans, Boehner, Boehner, Boehner, GOP, negotiators, negotiators, California Republican Party, stopgap measure, the Senate, the Senate, Washington

Latimes.com

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December 22nd, 2011
04:36 am

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EU Asylum Seekers Win Concession

BRUSSELS—Europe's top court ruled Wednesday that the U.K. and other European governments should not return asylum seekers who entered the EU through Greece to that country, saying they cannot be exposed to "inhuman or degrading" conditions.

The ruling is the latest to find major fault with Greece's treatment of asylum seekers. Greece accounts for around 90% of illegal migration into the 27-nation bloc, according to EU statistics. The EU estimated around 104,000 illegal border crossings in 2010. Only a fraction of those are asylum seekers.

In two cases referred to the European Court of Justice by the Irish and U.K. courts, the ECJ said a country can't return asylum seekers to another member state if they are aware of "systemic deficiencies" in the asylum procedure and reception conditions.

The court said transferring an asylum seeker was not permitted if the person "would face a real risk of being subjected to inhuman or degrading treatment."

Both cases involved migrants who had been arrested in Greece, released, but who had then traveled elsewhere in the EU. The EU's Schengen system means people can easily travel across borders without being checked.

Greece's treatment of asylum seekers has long garnered concerns and Athens has committed to improving the system.

Greece traditionally accepted only a tiny fraction of asylum applicants and a recent Human Rights Watch report condemned what it called an "appalling" system that left migrants, including children, stuck "for weeks or months in filthy and grossly overcrowded conditions."

The European Court of Human Rights in January found Greece in violation of its rules because of the poor reception conditions and inadequate access to a fair asylum procedure.

With the ECJ decision looming, some countries, including Britain, had already stopped returning asylum seekers.

However Brussels has been slow to act to force change, especially at a time when Greece was struggling through a deep recession and struggling to prevent economic collapse.

The European Commission, the EU's executive body, formally notified Greece of its concerns about various parts of its asylum system in November 2009, the first step in what could have eventually led to Greece being sued at the ECJ. Two years later, no further steps in that process have been taken.

"The EU needs to continue to assist Greece in dealing with the significant pressures it faces but it should also back up its carrot with a stick to push Greece into ending the current unacceptable state of affairs," European parliamentarian Timothy Kirkhope of the European Conservatives and Reformists Group said Wednesday after the ruling.

Brussels has however devoted money and personnel to help Greece control its borders and work to improve the asylum system. It is also pushing for an EU agreement on a common asylum system by next year, a proposal that is faced with resistance in several EU capitals.

Meanwhile, Greece's government put in place a plan more than a year ago pledging to improve its system.

The plan has led to improvements, with a British minister telling the U.K. parliament in November it had led to a rise in the recognition of refugee status from less than 1% to 12% of applicants.

"However, there is still much more progress needed and the government remains concerned about the lack of improvements to the poor detention conditions, particularly at the Greek-Turkish border," U.K. Immigration Minister Damian Green said last month.

Write to Laurence Norman at laurence.norman@dowjones.com

European Court of Justice, ECJ, asylum seekers, asylum seeker, return asylum seekers, European Court of Human Rights, European Commission, U.K., reception conditions

Online.wsj.com

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