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Updated Sun, July 27, 2008.
301.www.rutlandherald.com30700
302.www.news-journalonline.com30300
303.www.tri-cityherald.com30300
304.www.stamfordadvocate.com30200
305.www.myrtlebeachonline.com30000
306.www.timesargus.com30000
307.www.PressTelegram.com29600
308.www.mailonsunday.co.uk29600
309.www.metrowestdailynews.com29500
310.www.newsok.com29000
311.www.onlinenewspapers.com28200
312.www.pressdisplay.com28200
313.www.rrstar.com28100
314.www.pressofatlanticcity.com27800
315.www.ouest-france.fr27700
316.www.thestar.com.my27600
317.www.timesdispatch.com27500
318.www.townonline.com26500
319.www.ekathimerini.com26200
320.www.indiadaily.com25900
321.www.pressconnects.com25900
322.www.helsinginsanomat.fi25800
323.www.chicoer.com25500
324.www.gannett.com25400
325.www.unitedmedia.com25100
326.www.winnipegfreepress.com25000
327.www.tribstar.com24800
328.www.joplinglobe.com24600
329.www.record-eagle.com24200
330.www.lacrossetribune.com24100
331.www.herald-dispatch.com23900
332.www.canadaeast.com23900
333.www.dailysouthtown.com23700
334.www.washblade.com23400
335.www.dnj.com23000
336.www.timesonline.com22900
337.www.lowellsun.com22000
338.www.sctimes.com21800
339.www.manoramaonline.com21500
340.www.metronews.ca21500
341.www.gazettetimes.com21400
342.www.ctnow.com20700
343.www.savannahnow.com19800
344.marca.recoletos.es19300
345.www.businessday.co.za19100
346.yoki.ru18900
347.www.bostonphoenix.com18800
348.www.ljworld.com18700
349.www.themonitor.com18600
350.www.santacruzsentinel.com17100
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332. www.canadaeast.com

Rating: 23900 points*
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www.canadaeast.com

canadaeast.com

Description: canadaeast.com - New Brunswick's newspapers

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Manchester City set to sack Mark Hughes and appoint Roberto Mancini
Manchester City are ready to sack Mark Hughes as manager and replace him with former Inter Milan coach Roberto Mancini.
telegraph.co.uk
A decade of global crimes, but also crucial advances | Seumas Milne
US strategic defeat in Iraq, a discredited market model, China's rise and Latin American freedom offer hope for the worldEight years on, we're still caught in the shadow of the twin towers. As a rule, terrorism in its proper sense isn't just morally indefensible – it also doesn't work. In contrast to mass national resistance campaigns or guerrilla movements, the record of socially disconnected terror groups, from the Russian anarchists onwards, has been one of unmitigated failure. But the wildly miscalculated response of the United States government succeeded in turning the 9/11 atrocities into what may rank as the most successful terror attack in history.It also triggered the first of four decisive changes which have ensured that the 21st century's first decade has transformed the world – in some significant ways for the better. Osama Bin Laden's initial demand was the withdrawal of US troops from Saudi Arabia, which was carried out in short order. But it was George Bush's war on terror that paradoxically delivered the greatest blow to US authority and the world's first truly global empire, in ways al-Qaida could scarcely have dreamed of.Not only did the lawless savagery of the US campaign of killings, torture, kidnappings and incarceration without trial spawn terrorists across the Muslim world and beyond, while comprehensively disposing of western pretensions to be the global guardians of human rights. But the US-British invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, in the latter case on a flagrantly false pretext, starkly exposed the limits of US military power to impose its will on recalcitrant peoples prepared to fight back.In Iraq, that had already amounted to a strategic defeat, at a cost of hundreds of thousands of lives, by the time the US surge bought some time by splitting the resistance movement. Both on a regional and global scale, the demonstration of US military overreach strengthened the hand of those prepared to defy America's will, and revealed 2003 as having been the high-water mark of US imperial pomp.The election of Barack Obama on a platform of withdrawal from Iraq, and Russia's crushing response to the attack on South Ossetia by the US client state of Georgia, confirmed that shift by signalling the end of unchecked US unilateralism. The unipolar moment had passed.America's unexpected decline was further underlined by the economic meltdown of 2008-9, the greatest crash since the 1930s and the second epochal development which has defined this decade. Incubated in the US and deepened by the vast cost of multiple wars, the crisis has played the greatest havoc with those economies that bought most enthusiastically into the catechism of deregulated markets and unchained corporate power, including Britain's.A voracious model of capitalism forced down the throats of most of the world for the last 20 years as the only acceptable form of economic management, at a cost of ever-widening inequality and devastating environmental degradation, has now been discredited – and has been rescued from collapse only by the greatest global state intervention ever. In less than 10 years, the baleful global twins of neoconservatism and neoliberalism have been tried and tested to destruction.Both failures have accelerated the rise of China, the third vital change of the past 10 years, which has not only taken hundreds of millions out of poverty as the economic gap with the US has halved (China has in fact overtaken the US in domestic capital generation), but also begun to create a new centre of power in a multipolar world that should expand the freedom of manoeuvre for smaller states. Its blithe disregard for free market orthodoxy has only added to its success in riding out the west's slump. So perhaps it's no surprise that western politicians are increasingly anxious to blame China for their own failures, in everything from trade imbalances to the fiasco of the Copenhagen climate change negotiations.The decade's last globally significant shift, less often remarked on than the others, has been the tide of progressive social change that has swept Latin America. Driven by the region's dismal early experience of neoliberal economics, and assisted both by US absorption in the war on terror and the emergence of China, a string of radical socialist and social-democratic governments have been swept to power, attacking social and racial injustice, challenging US domination and taking back resources from corporate control. Twenty years after we were told that there would be no 21st century alternatives to neoliberal capitalism, Latin Americans are creating them here and now.Of course, the positive dimensions of the events of this decade come with a heavy dose of qualifications. The US will remain the richest and overwhelmingly dominant global power, with a military presence in most countries in the world, for the foreseeable future. Its defeat in the Middle East, in any case partial, has been bought at huge human cost. It continues to wage the war on terror, in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen and elsewhere. And the emerging global multipolarity brings its own risks of conflict.Free market capitalism may now be reviled, but governments have mortgaged their citizens' futures to keep it afloat, while the crisis has generated mass unemployment and attacks on the living standards of the already poor across the world. China's success has been bought at a high price in civil rights and inequality. And in Latin America, the elites show every sign of wanting to reverse the social gains of the past decade, as they have already succeeded in doing by violent coup in Honduras, with US acquiescence.But at least there is now more space for progressive movements and states to manoeuvre. The Washington consensus is gone and the post-Soviet new world order is mercifully no more. Who predicted that at the millennium? Meanwhile, citizens of the US and its allies have shown increasing reluctance to send their sons and daughters to die in neocolonial wars. With the re-emergence of other independent powers, American leaders might even see the advantage in a rules-based system of international relations.Liberal commentators in the US have branded the past 10 years as a "lost decade" and a "big zero". They have certainly seen catastrophes and crimes on a wanton scale. But for most of the rest of the world, there have also been crucial advances.IraqMiddle EastGlobal terrorismTerrorism policyChinaSeumas Milneguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Blast in Afghanistan Kills 2, Including British Journalist
Four other Marines were reported to be seriously wounded in the blast
www1.voanews.com
Prince William pays warm tribute to his late mother at children's hospital
Prince visits children's hospital in Wellington on third day and final day of his New Zealand visit.
telegraph.co.uk
Britain emerges from recession, but only just
After almost two years of consecutive contraction, figures confirm that the UK economy had finally begun to expand.
telegraph.co.uk