More than one in five of the jobs lost nationwide over the past year were in New York City, according to the Center for an Urban Future, which says that the city accounts for only 2.8% of all jobs in the country.
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NYC job losses
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Categories: Linkage -
Internment
Rep. Howard Coble, R-N.C., chairman of the Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism and Homeland Security, said on a radio call-in program that he agreed with the internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II. There are some good posts on this over at David Neiwert, but I can’t link directly because blogspot’s archives are broken.
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India and Iran
India and Iran unveil a new strategic partership, bringing hope for a new way towards stability in the region.
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Categories: Linkage -
Williamsburg Galleries
Time to start selling ads! The number one result on Google when searching for Williamsburg galleries is me.
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Categories: Culture -
Go Liz
… and Go Richard Gere:
From Liz Smith:
MONDAY NIGHT’S American Foundation for AIDS Research fund-raiser, honoring Anna Wintour, Lorne Michaels and Richard Gere, while not by any means a somber affair, seemed definitely more serious and committed to the cause than has been evident recently.
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Gere was typically passionate and fired up, perhaps too fired up. Winding up remarks, he looked at Hillary Rodham Clinton and said, “I’m sorry, Mrs. Clinton, but your husband didn’t help us much.”
You have to love a gossip columnist who started and ended a column a few days ago with quotes by Doris Lessing and Gore Vidal.
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Categories: NYC -
Images from the first Gulf War
Peter Turnley is a photographer who refused to join the pool covering the first Gulf War, because he knew that it was designed to be “a major impediment for photojournalists in their quest to communicate the realities of war”. He has now published his photos of that war online.
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Categories: Politics -
Thicker insulation might have prevented the WTC collapse
A new study says that thicker insulation might have prevented the collapse of the WTC towers, or at least allowed them to remain standing for much longer.
It is widely accepted that the collapses were caused by the failure of the buildings’ steel structure as it was weakened by the heat of the fires. But Jim Quintiere of the University of Maryland, College Park, thinks the thickness of the surviving fire insulation, rather than the destruction of insulation during the impacts, explains why the towers collapsed when they did.
The south tower was the first to fall even though it was hit after the north tower. The insulation on its burning floors was only half as thick. According to Quintiere’s calculations, if the insulation had matched that in the north tower, the south tower would have stayed standing longer.
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No one doubts that the planes killed many people on impact and started the fires that led to the buildings’ collapse, says Quintiere. But if both towers had had insulation over 50 millimetres thick, he says, they might not have collapsed at all. His analysis calls into question the safety of other buildings constructed to the same standards as the twin towers. However, the Port Authority of New York, the owner of the twin towers, rejects his theory
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If the NIST tests back Quintiere’s theory, attention will turn to why the insulation was thinner in the south tower than the north tower. The New York City building code stipulates that the insulation on steel structures should be at least 38 millimetres thick. However, the Port Authority’s special legal status means it does not have to comply with the code.
When the twin towers were built in the early 1970s, fire insulation just 19 millimetres thick was sprayed onto the trusses. But in 1996, Lombardi recommended the thickness be doubled. “I made the decision, since there was a question from a general contractor as to how much thickness is needed to provide a two-hour fire rating of the floor joists and floor assembly that would be in conformance with New York City building code,” he says.
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Despite the recommendations by Lombardi, thicker insulation had been applied to fewer than a third of the trusses in the twin towers by 11 September. This, Lombardi says, was because it could only be done as floors became empty.
This is another example of how monstrous it (still) is to exempt the Port Authority from city regulations. The WTC complex was exempt from city smoking laws, and all PA territory, including the airports, is considered “private property” and exempt from free speech rights such as demonstrations or leafletting.
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Categories: NYC -
Those people don’t worship like Anglo-Saxons
They appeared to have changed the caption to this picture in the online version of the story about the raid on a London Mosque.

My print edition had this:
Lost your chewing gum?
I was shocked when I saw this. What’s next? Asking Jews at the Wailing Wall whether that’s a nervous tic?
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Categories: Politics -
This is the one
Here is where I’ll be for the anti-war demo on February 15.
Note that there is still no march permit. NYC has refused to grant one so far.
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Categories: Politics -
France preparing for war?
France is quietly preparing its military in case it decides to join the new Gulf war.
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Categories: Linkage