Welcome to the Hell.

US Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia said that aggressive interrogation could be appropriate to learn where a bomb was hidden shortly before it was set to explode or to discover the plans or whereabouts of a terrorist group.

“It seems to me you have to say, as unlikely as that is, it would be absurd to say you couldn’t, I don’t know, stick something under the fingernail, smack him in the face. It would be absurd to say you couldn’t do that,” Scalia told British Broadcasting Radio Corp.

“I suppose it’s the same thing about so-called torture,” he said in the interview. “Is it really so easy to determine that smacking someone in the face to find out where he has hidden the bomb that is about to blow up Los Angeles is prohibited by the Constitution?

“Is it obvious, that what can’t be done for punishment can’t be done to exact information that is crucial to the society? I think it’s not at all an easy question, to tell you the truth.”

Scalia, a judicial icon among American conservatives, an acerbic wit and often abrasive personality, said Europeans had no business “smugly” decrying those techniques as torture. Earlier in the interview he also faced down criticism of the U.S. death penalty.

“Europeans get really quite self-righteous, you know, (saying) ‘no civilized society uses it.’ They used it themselves — 30 years ago,” he said, adding that a majority of Europeans probably supported capital punishment anyway.

Scalia said that neither he nor any of the eight other Supreme Court justices who collectively make up the United States’ highest court should be seen as setting the moral tone for the international community.

“I don’t look to their law, why do they look to mine?” he said.

Scalia also took issue with his “tough guy” reputation, saying he would have had trouble navigating the Supreme Court nomination process as it exists today with his feelings intact.

“I’m very tender,” he said.

Georgia Election.

A German newspaper has published the interview with a Head of the OSCE/ODIHR Election Observation Mission Dieter Boden, in which he said that contrary to their previous reports, European election observers said voting fraud took place during Georgia’s recent election that returned President Saakashvili to power.

Dieter Boden had a meeting with Davit Gamkhrelidze leader of the Right Opposition party, on Tuesday. The meeting was held in the office of the Right Opposition party and was closed for journalists.

As Dieter Boden said after the meeting, the key subject of their discussion was the election and the following processes and Davit Gamkhrelidze stressed upon the alleged violations.

At the Begining.

Just surfing through the internet I have found ocationally this wonderful photo.

Hillary and Bill Clinton. At the beginning.

President Hillary Clinton.

Our modern historical period is characterized by more activity of women involved in politics. Have you ever thought that this right was not always a right for women? Today women play really major role in politics.
In 2007, 86 women serve in the U.S. Congress. Sixteen women serve in the Senate, and 70 women serve in the House. The number of women in statewide elective executive posts is 76, while the proportion of women in state legislatures is at 23.5 percent. Now, a Senator for New York and a candidate for the democratic nomination, Hillary Clinton could be set to become America’s first woman president.

Born 26 October, 1947 in Chicago
Attended Wellesley College
Graduated from Yale Law School in 1973
Married Bill Clinton in 1975
Campaigner for expanding health insurance coverage and woman’s rights
Elected New York senator in 2000;
Join the movement to elect Hillary Clinton President in 2008.

Election in Kenya.

The Head of Electoral Commission of Kenya (ECK) said on Sunday that President Mwai Kibaki has beaten opposition leader Raila Odinga by a narrow margin to win re-election in Kenya’s closest ever vote.
The Republic of Kenya is a country in Eastern Africa. It is bordered by Ethiopia to the north, Somalia to the east, Tanzania to the south, Uganda to the west, and Sudan to the northwest, with the Indian Ocean running along the southeast border. The country is named after Mount Kenya, a significant landmark mountain.

Area:
582,600 km2

Population:
30,765,900

Capital:
Nairobi

Time GMT:
+3 hours

Main Languages:
Kiswahili (Official) & English (Official)

Main Religions:
Mainland - Christian 63%, Muslim 7%, indigenous beliefs 26%

Currency:
Kenyan Shilling

Shared Borders:
Uganda, Tanzania, Sudan, Somalia, Ethiopia.

Benazir Bhutto has been Killed in Blast.

Former Pakistani prime minister and Pakistani opposition leader Benazir Bhutto has been killed today in a suicide attack, two months after she returned from eight years of exile to attempt a political comeback. Bhutto was shot at close range as she was leaving the rally in this garrison city south of Islamabad, aides said. Immediately after the shooting, a suicide bomber detonated explosives near Bhutto’s car, killing at least 15 other people.


Bhutto was rushed to a hospital with extensive wounds to her torso, her supporters said. Shortly after she arrived at the hospital, an official came out of the building and told a crowd of supporters Bhutto was dead.

That’s done it!

May be that’s just the ticket this guy wanted to get?
Or is this’s exactly the promised “rupture” with political tradition, which was given by French President Nicolas Sarkozy at the begining? Anyway according to ABC News French President and Italian model and singer Carla Bruni are seen holding hands as they stroll in Luxor, Egypt, Christmas day. The two were first spotted together at Disneyland Paris and have since been the talk of many gossip columns all over the world. The president and Bruni are on a private visit to Egypt.

Observed that among Carla Bruni’s Previous Lovers are such not bad guys as literay editor Jean Paul Enthoven, Raphael Enthoven, the son of Jean Paul Enthoven (that relationship produced a son), guitarist Eric Clapton, who made the fatal mistake of introducing his then 21-year-old girlfriend to friend Mick Jagger, then Mick Jagger, actor Kevin Costner, French actor Vincent Perez, Donald Trump.

Vivat Cristina!

According to the latest official results published Monday. Mrs Cristina Fernández de Kirchner has succeed her husband Nestor Kirchner and become Argentina’s first elected female president. Mrs. Kirchner, 54, the center-left Peronist party candidate and a senator, defeated a fractured opposition and avoided a runoff. With 96 percent of the voting locations reporting, Mrs. Kirchner had 45 percent. More than anything, Mrs. Kirchner’s victory would serve as a referendum on the four years under her husband, who steered Argentina out of its worst economic crisis in 2001, when it defaulted on $80 billion in loans. In her victory speech, she urged the whole society to work together without rancour and hatred. A country, she said, could not be built by a government alone. She promised a battle without respite against poverty and unemployment.

The first lady will formally announce her candidacy on July 19 in her home city of La Plata, capital of Buenos Aires province, the cabinet chief, Alberto Fernández, told the state news agency, Telam. The interior minister, Aníbal Fernández, said Mrs Kirchner was the most qualified candidate and would “deepen change”. Mrs Kirchner, a lawyer who worked her way up the party ranks, was first elected to the senate in 1995. She established herself as a formidable political operator and helped her husband, whom she met at law school, to rise to the top.

In contrast to her blunt and often dour husband, who won the presidency in 2003, the first lady is seen as a more glamorous, worldly figure who can mix as easily with foreign leaders as with grassroot Perónists. Recent trips to France, Venezuela, Mexico and other countries were seen as an effort to groom that image. Some analysts say that beneath the polish she is more ideological and radical than her pragmatist partner. An effective speaker and popular with the poor as well as the middle class, she is more conventional than Evita, the actress from humble origins whose personality cult produced the title “spiritual leader of the nation” as well as a musical.

Freezing mortgage rates in US.

As it became known President George W. Bush is going to freeze mortgage interest rates to help homeowners hit by a credit crisis that has roiled financial markets, a White House official confirmed.s, saying the slump in the housing market was “source of concern” throughout the United States.

“The steps I outlined today are a sensible response to a serious challenge,” Bush said, according to The Associated Press. The plan will help struggling American homeowners avoid foreclosure, addressing a mortgage crisis that risks tipping the U.S. economy into recession and has shaken financial markets around the world.

Democratic lawmakers and presidential contenders criticized the plan for being too timid and promoted more-ambitious proposals of their own.

The agreement contains numerous limitations that would exclude many - if not most - subprime borrowers. It notably excludes those who are delinquent on their payments - about 22 percent of all subprime borrowers, according to First American Loan Performance, an industry research firm.
Bush said the plan did not represent the imposition of a government solution to the mortgage crisis.
“We should not bail out lenders, real estate speculators or those who made the reckless decision to buy a home they knew they could not afford,” he said.

Russian election. The vote was free and fair?

The vote affirmed the main idea - that Vladimir Putin is the national leader and one can nothing to do with that.  The fact is Russian people trust and support Putin and they have showed that with absolute majority and high citizen activities. Mr Putin described the election as a “good example of domestic political stability” and thanked the voters for the turnout of 63%.

“This feeling of responsibility of our citizens is the most important indication that our country is strengthening, not only economically and socially but also politically,” Mr Putin said.