Posts Tagged ‘world news’

Alton Desiree: Alton Desiree, crew of Survivor, drowned

September 25th, 2008

Alton Desiree, of Loubiere, was a crew member of Survivor, the relity TV show. Alton Desiree has been reported as drowned in Brazil.

The newspaper reported a woman crew of Survivor telephoned Mrs. Alton Desiree to inform her that her hsuband had died. Alton Desiree had been instructed to go underwater to fix something ofr the show. Desiree did not surface. Someone from ethe Survivor crew went down in the water to search for Alton Desiree. Desiree was found drowned. The news report on Desiree was not available in full as there was a download error.

Our condolences to Mrs. Desiree. Prayers and thoughts to the Desiree family, the crew and cast of Survivor.

Alton Desiree, RIP.

Poll:McCain takes slim lead over Obama

September 13th, 2008

Republican John McCain has taken a modest lead over Barack Obama entering the final seven weeks of their presidential contest, buoyed by decisive advantages among suburban and working-class whites and a huge edge in how people rate each candidate’s experience, a poll showed on Friday.

McCain has had some success parrying his Democratic opponent’s efforts to tie him to the deeply unpopular President Bush, according to the AP-GfK Poll of likely voters. Half say they believe the Arizona senator would chart a different path from Bush, including a slight majority of independents, a pivotal group of voters.

The survey has plenty of positive signs for Obama as well. The Illinois senator is generally doing about as well with whites as Democrat John Kerry did in his losing but close 2004 race against Bush.
Obama has an 18-percentage-point lead over McCain among voters who look more to a contender’s values and views than experience, and a modest advantage in the number of supporters who say they will definitely vote for their candidate.

Even so, the survey conducted after both parties staged their conventions and picked their vice presidential candidates conforms with others that have shown the Republicans grabbing the momentum after a summer in which Obama had steadily maintained a slim lead. According to the AP-GfK Poll, McCain leads Obama 48 percent to 44 percent.

“My heart sort of runs with McCain and my mind probably tends to run toward Obama,” said David Scorup, 58, a county government official in Othello, Wash. “I think I resonate more with McCain.”

Underscoring how tight the race remains, several swing groups who traditionally help decide presidential races remain about evenly divided between the two tickets. These include independents, married women and Catholics.

Seven in 10 said Alaska Governor Sarah Palin made the right decision in becoming McCain’s running mate, despite the demands of a family whose five children include a pregnant, unmarried teenage daughter and an infant with Down syndrome.

Men were slightly likelier than women to back her choice, and even Obama supporters were split evenly over whether she did the right thing.

“She was able to cope when she was governor of Alaska, so she must have great coping strategies,” said Nancy Skinner, 58, a retiree and McCain supporter from Scottsbluff, Neb. She said Palin’s decision to give birth to their youngest child, knowing he had Down syndrome, “shows she has compassion and is not afraid to face heartache and hard decisions.”

McCain leads Obama by 55 percent to 37 percent among whites. That includes comfortable leads of 24 points with suburban whites and 26 points with whites who haven’t finished college, and has similar advantages with white men and whites who are married.

He also leads by 23 points among rural voters and by 13 points with voters age 65 and over.

Obama leads 61 percent to 35 percent among voters under age 30. He has about a 5-to-1 edge with minorities and a narrow 5-point lead with women, though he trails among white women 53 percent to 40 percent.

Eighty percent say McCain, with nearly three decades in Congress, has the right experience to be president. Just 46 percent say Obama, now in his fourth year in the Senate, is experienced enough.

Another 47 percent say Obama lacks the proper experience an even worse reading than the 36 percent who had the same criticism about Palin, now in her second year as governor after serving as a small-town mayor in her state.

“This is his fourth year in the Senate, and two of those four years he spent campaigning for president,” said Arthur Koch, 63, an undecided voter from Wallington, N.J. “I’m not too comfortable with that.”

Asked to choose between a presidential candidate with solid experience and another whose values and views they support, two-thirds picked the latter. While those preferring experience overwhelmingly back McCain, people seeking agreement with a contender’s values say they’ll back Obama over McCain, 56 percent to 38 percent.

“I find his approach worth taking,” Ron Long, 60, of Pella, Iowa, said of Obama, whom he supports. “I think the Bush-McCain legacy is you can solve problems by killing people.”

Even so, McCain has a slight 9-point advantage when people were asked whether they had similar values and principles with the candidates, and an 8-point edge over whether they agreed with the contenders’ stances on issues.

The AP-GfK Poll was conducted Sept. 5-10 and involved landline and cell phone interviews with 1,217 adults, including 812 considered likely voters. The margin of sampling error was plus or minus 2.8 percentage points for the entire sample and 3.4 points for likely voters.

US officials evade queries on Pak raids

September 13th, 2008

Amid strong reactions from Pakistan to US-led coalition forces’ raids against militants on its soil, the Bush administration has refused to comment on the issue, evading queries on the reported go-ahead given to American special forces by President George Bush.

Asked whether the forces operating in Afghanistan had the powers to launch cross-border attacks, Defence Secretary Robert Gates refused to address the issue but said the commanders had the authority to protect their troops in Afghanistan.

“I would just say that our commanders, I think, have the authorities that they need to protect our troops in Afghanistan, and just leave it at that,” Gates replied.

For the last several days senior officials of the Bush administration have refused to comment on attacks inside Pakistan that have sent the government there and its diplomats in Washington DC in a tizzy.

What has especially come to bother officials and diplomats of Islamabad are media reports that the President George W Bush himself may have signed off on a policy approving these raids into Pakistan.

The Deputy Press Secretary Tony Fratto also parried questions on the President’s secret approval to the cross-border raids inside Pakistan.

“I’m aware of the reports that you’re talking about. It’s not a story that I’m going to comment on. And I’m not going to comment on rules of engagement with the enemy,” Fratto said when asked under what authority did Bush order the operations in Pakistan and on whether he made his decision on an Executive Order.