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Tuesday, May 21 2013
The Violence Card
EVER since the culture wars of the 1980s, Americans have been familiar with "the race card" - an epithet used to discredit real and imagined cries of racism. Less familiar, however, is an equally cynical rhetorical tactic that I call "the violence card." Here's how it works. When confronted with an instance of racially charged violence against a black ...
NOT ENOUGH INFLATION
AFEW days ago, Alan Greenspan, the former chairman of the Federal Reserve, spoke out in defence of his successor. Attacks on Ben Bernanke by Republicans, he told The Financial Times, are "wholly inappropriate and destructive." He's right about that - which makes this one of the very few things the ex-maestro has ...
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London Olympic chief cautions against disruptions

AFP

LONDON BRITAIN’S Olympic chief warned on Sunday that security forces cannot rule out the threat of disruption to the London Games after a protester halted the historic Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race.

Australian activist Trenton Oldfield, 35, was charged with a public order offence after he caused a half-hour hiatus in Saturday’s race by swimming in front of the two universities’ boats in the River Thames.

British Olympic Association chairman Colin Moynihan said there was a high risk of similar incidents during the London Olympics, which begin on July 27, with the torch relay starting next month.

“It just takes, and is likely to be, one idiot. It’s not likely to be a well-orchestrated campaign through Twitter or websites,” Moynihan, himself a former Olympic rowing silver medallist, told BBC radio.

“It is likely to be someone similar to the idiot yesterday who causes major disruption.

That is why all the security measures need to be put in place to minimise the chance of that happening.

“You can never completely remove it but you can do everything possible to protect the interests of the athletes by minimising it.” Moynihan said the British government and the London Olympic Organising Committee had been aware of the security challenges “since day one” and were looking at “every conceivable scenario.” “In many respects that is the biggest ask of the Games: you are not just talking about the competitions, you are talking about the pre-Games training camps, athletes will come well in advance based around the country, you’ve got the torch relay coming up, the public need to be protected.

“It’s not impossible but it is a major challenge. You can never get it perfect unless you remove all the crowds and nobody is going to dream of doing anything like that.”


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