Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Richard (RJ) Eskow: Rogue's Gallery: CNN's Ideologically Rigid, Scandal-Tainted, Ethics-Investigation-Haunted GOP Debate 'Panel'

The story won't die. People keep commenting on the near-Stalinist level of ideological purity reflected in CNN's panel of "expert" questioners at last week's Republican national security debate.The neocons have been proven spectacularly and tragically wrong, over and over.

Remember "We'll be welcomed as liberators"? Or the claim that Iraq will be a "cakewalk"? Nowhere on Earth are their words given an ounce of credence.

Nowhere, that is, except CNN. We haven't seen national security commentary with so little credibility since Judith Miller interviewed "Curveball."

People are understandably outraged by CNN's ideological extremism and willingness to discard even the veneer of journalistic objectivity. But there's another cloud over this panel: a cloud of scandals, criminal investigations, and ethical lapses.

David Addington. Paul Wolfowitz. Ed Meese. It's a Rogue's Gallery of government officials gone wild, a motley crew of the short-sighted, the benighted, and the nearly-indicted.

Or, as CNN calls them, "experts."

CNN and the Right: Partners Again

CNN cosponsored one debate with the Tea Party, but maybe that group wasn't considered extreme enough. This time CNN's cosponsors were the American Enterprise Institute and the Heritage Foundation, radical-right organizations that played an active role in misleading the American people into a bloody and costly war. They accomplished that mission. Now these groups are pushing new disinformation campaigns, like the one that asserts that climate change is a hoax.

Steve Clemons says that CNN's choice of partners means that the old GOP foreign policy wing represented by Republicans like Lugar, Hagel, and even Kissinger is "an endangered species." Personally, I'd say it's already dead. CNN has all but officially declared its members "non-persons." If a Republican wants to get on CNN today, their r?sum? better include corruption or scandal.

The words "corruption" and "scandal" can only mean one thing: ladies and gentlemen, it's time to meet our panelists.

Meese the Honorable

The first question was asked by Ronald Reagan's former attorney general, a gentleman Wolf Blitzer described as "the honorable Ed Meese."

Honorable? As one report put it:

No other member of the Reagan administration, with the exception of Oliver North, was as tainted by scandal as Edwin Meese III ... At one point in his tenure as attorney general Meese was under investigation by three special prosecutors, each inquiring into separate allegations of influence peddling, bribery, and cover-up in the Iran-Contra affair. Though Meese was never charged with any crime, the last of the special investigators said that Meese "had probably broken conflict of interest and income-tax laws, though none of the indictments were worthy of prosecution."

Meese was also investigated for possible bribery and influence peddling regarding an oil pipeline... in Iraq.

But special investigators were oddly disinterested in prosecuting high government officials after the Reagan years. Several of them noted the officials' probable crimes on several occasions but deemed them, like Meese's, "unworthy of prosecution." Others found evidence of criminality that was outside the scope of their investigations. Still, even the most indifferent investigation from those years is an improvement over today's Justice Department, which prefers to simply ignore evidence of criminal wrongdoing by government officials.

The "honorable" Mr. Meese asked the candidates, "Shouldn't we have a long-range extension of the investigative powers contained in the PATRIOT act so that our law enforcement officers can have the tools that they need?"

Objection! Leading the witness! That's always unacceptable, especially from someone who should've been in the dock. Needless to say, Meese's mini-brief for continued suspension of our civil liberties was received with appropriate warmth and enthusiasm by candidates and broadcasters alike.

Torture Man

Chris Hayes was understandably outraged at the inclusion of David Addington, the lawyer employed by Dick Cheney to build specious arguments for deceptive war and illegal torture. Addington's even guiltier of promoting torture than the much-criticized John Yoo, who wrote his now-infamous memo under Addington's supervision.

Addington also pushed for illegal and unconstitutional actions such as "black bag" detentions, warrantless surveillance, and impeding Congressional oversight of intelligence. Colin Powell reportedly remarked that Addington "doesn't care about the Constitution" -- and it shows.

Mr. Addington would have been investigated for criminal violations of law and abuse of power at any other point in our history. Addington repeatedly advised other government officials to ignore both law and Constitutional obligations in order to pursue the agenda of his immediate boss, Dick Cheney.

This week he emerged from a long public silence to ask the candidates about "U.S. interests" in the Middle East.

Puppetry of the Panelists

Compared to the unethical and potentially illegal actions of panelists Meese and Addington, a questioner like the American Enterprise Institute's Fred Kagan comes across like a beacon of moral rectitude. Kagan's merely been wrong about Iraq war policy, consistently and repeatedly, while displaying no signs of remorse for his errors.

Kagan helped lead a pseudo Iraq Study Group for the American Enterprise Institute, after the one created by Washington's leaders displayed insufficient ideological purity. He also seems to have a propensity for letting himself be used as a media puppet for generals who are trying to undermine their civilian leadership by pushing their own preferred strategies in the press.

Kagan stands head and shoulders above some of his co-questioners, if only because he's never been accused of wrongdoing. But he's sure been wrong a lot.

A lot.

Call Them Irresponsible

The mendacious, the error-prone, and the scandal-ridden were well-represented on the panel. But it still felt strangely incomplete. Where was Curveball?

CNN violated journalistic ethics by allowing such biased and tainted questioners to participate in the debate. On the other hand, it was thoughtful of them to pick people who would make current Republican frontrunner Newt Gingrich feel at ease. As the Washington Post reported in 1997, Gingrich's own ethics scandal led to his unprecedented punishment, a $300,000 fine to settle charges of Federal tax law violations and lying to Congressional investigators.

Our last panelist is none other than Paul Wolfowitz, that key architect of Bush's disastrous Iraq war, who was immortalized on camera licking a comb and then running it through his hair. Apparently the shampoo that washes away conscience and moral legitimacy also leaves you with split ends and hard-to-manage hair.

Wolfowitz capped his mismanagement of the Iraq war by leaving the Bush administration to serve as President of the World Bank. There he became embroiled in scandal after giving preferential treatment to his then-girlfriend, an employee of the Bank. An Ad Hoc Group found that Wolfowitz had violated a number of internal Bank rules, as well as its ethical Code of Conduct, with his favoritism toward his lady friend and his public attacks on the investigation into his behavior.

World Bank investigators also expressed concern about "one central theme" that ran through Wolfowitz's self-justifications: his repeated assertions that "blame for the current situation lies with others."

Neocons never take responsibility for their own behavior. But then, why should they? They never get indicted. These days they're not even investigated. They know the only time they're ever going to serve is onscreen with CNN.

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Follow Richard (RJ) Eskow on Twitter: www.twitter.com/rjeskow

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rj-eskow/rogues-gallery-cnns-ideol_b_1115560.html

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Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Sam Brownback, Kansas Governor, A Favorite Target Of Ridicule After Tweet Firestorm

Roll Call:

Now Brownback faces the wrath of the Twitterverse, including this tweet from @MildlyRelevant: ?Gov. Brownback?s office tattled on a high school girl who tweeted ?#heblowsalot.? I?m tattling on them for being a colossal Brownback.? There you have it: a proper noun.

Read the whole story: Roll Call

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/11/29/sam-brownback-emma-sullivan-tweet_n_1118468.html

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The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 1 Still No. 1 at the Box Office (omg!)

The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 1 Still No. 1 at the Box Office

Kermit the Frog and Miss Piggy's long-awaited return to the silver screen was no match for the Twilight juggernaut.

The Muppets -- costarring Jason Segel and Amy Adams -- debuted in second place with $43.5 million, falling behind The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 1, which earned $61.3 million over the five-day holiday.

EXCLUSIVE VIDEO: Nikki Reed tells Us about her Breaking Dawn role

The vampire love story -- starring Kristen Stewart, Robert Pattinson and Taylor Lautner -- has earned $220.3 million since its November 18 debut.

PHOTOS: Love lives of Breaking Dawn stars

Family friendly films dominated the box office this weekend, with Happy Feet Two falling one spot to third place with $18 million. The 3-D movie Arthur Christmas earned $16.5 million in its opening weekend, while Martin Scorsese's Hugo -- starring Chloe Moretz and Jude Law -- debuted in a disappointing fifth place with $15 million.

VIDEO: Kristen and Rob exchange vows in Breaking Dawn

Rounding out this week's Top 10: Jack & Jill (No. 6, $14 million), Immortals (No. 7, $13.3 million), Puss in Boots (No. 8, $11.5 million), Tower Heist (No. 9, $10 million) and The Descendants (No. 10, $9 million).

Tell Us: Which movie did you see this weekend?

Get more Us! Follow us on Twitter, Friend us on Facebook, Subscribe to Us Weekly

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/news_twilight_saga_breaking_dawn_part1_still_no_210525882/43728622/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/twilight-saga-breaking-dawn-part-1-still-no-210525882.html

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Monday, November 28, 2011

The Entire Sovereign Debt Crisis Can Be ... - Business Insider

These two charts basically explain everything.

The first chart shows the yield on the Swedish 5-year bond.

As you can see, it's absolutely plummeting right now.

Now here's a look at its neighbor, Finland, and the yields on its 5-year bond.

Basically they look identical all through the year up until November and then BAM. Finnish yields are exploding higher, right as Swedish yields are blasting lower.

The only obvious difference between the two: Finland is part of the Eurozone, meaning it can't print its own money. Sweden has no such risk.

This is a narrow version of something that much of the media picks up on earlier last week that UK gilts were trading with a lower yield that German bonds, a reflection of the same principle: In UK the government can print. In Germany, it can't.

Right now, this is what investors demand, and if you don't have your own central bank that can pay off your debts, you're in trouble.

There's one other point here, which is that the spike in Finnish yields stands on its own as being remarkable. Clearly November will go down as the month when sovereign debt fears in Europe stopped being a peripheral issues, but rather an issue for everyone, including Northern states that you'd figure are bastions of stability.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/sweden-vs-finland-2011-11

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Wall Street gains on euro zone optimism, retailers (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) ? Stocks surged about 3 percent on Monday on hopes that fresh proposals may emerge out of Europe to help solve the region's debt crisis.

The rally was broad-based, with all 10 S&P sectors up more than 1 percent and all but two of the stocks in the S&P 500 stocks in positive territory.

Efforts heated up on several fronts to ease Europe's sovereign debt crisis, which contributed to the S&P's recent seven-day losing streak.

Germany and France stepped up a drive to acquire powers to reject national budgets in the euro zone that breach European Union rules ahead of an EU summit on December 9.

Sentiment was also boosted after an Italian newspaper report suggested the International Monetary Fund was preparing a rescue plan for Italy worth up to 600 billion euros. The IMF denied the report.

"It looks like we're seeing progress in the euro zone, and if that leads to a more stable Europe the S&P could move back to at least 1,300," said Marc Pado, U.S. market strategist at Cantor Fitzgerald & Co in San Francisco.

The Dow Jones industrial average (.DJI) rocketed 307.88 points, or 2.74 percent, at 11,539.66. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index (.SPX) was up 36.55 points, or 3.15 percent, at 1,195.22. The Nasdaq Composite Index (.IXIC) soared 87.84 points, or 3.60 percent, at 2,529.35.

Retail stocks were among the top gainers after U.S. retailers racked up record sales over the Thanksgiving weekend.

The S&P retail index (.RLX) advanced 3.5 percent while Best Buy Co Inc (BBY.N) added 2.5 percent to $26.28 and Macy's Inc (M.N) climbed 6 percent to $31.23.

"These results show that people are focused on having a good holiday despite all the uncertainties in the world, which makes me think the market has more to go on the upside," Pado said.

Materials stocks were also big gainers, advancing on the back of higher commodity prices. The S&P materials index (.GSPM) surged 4.1 percent, with Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc (FCX.N) jumping 6.5 percent to $36, and Alcoa Inc (AA.N) rising 5.5 percent to $9.45.

But some analysts think the gains were just a technical rebound as Wall Street came off its worst week in two months.

"An oversold trading opportunity is likely pending this week, given short-term indicators are increasingly oversold, but the longer-term technical background is increasingly at risk," said Robert Sluymer, analyst at RBC Capital Markets in New York.

About 91 percent of New York Stock Exchange-listed issues rose, while 85 percent of Nasdaq stocks were in the green.

(Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111128/bs_nm/us_markets_stocks

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Western states report comeback of cattle rustling (Reuters)

SALMON, Idaho (Reuters) ? Cattle rustlers, casting aside saddle and spurs for modern horsepower, are roaming the West with four-wheel drive and GPS technology in a resurgence of livestock thievery considered a hanging offense on the old frontier.

State livestock officials said the increase in cattle crimes was linked to the slumping economy, soaring beef prices and the advent of handheld global positioning systems that allow rustlers to more easily navigate the wide-open range.

They said contemporary thieves may find it more convenient and lucrative to pick off a couple cows, worth as much as $2,000 a head, than to rob a convenience store.

"When the market is extremely high, the bad guys come out," Idaho State Brand Inspector Larry Hayhurst said.

Hayhurst said the incidence of cattle gone missing under suspicious circumstances in Idaho during the past three months had already surpassed the 250 such reports he received for all of last year. That coincides with spikes in cattle thefts in Colorado, Montana, Nevada, Wyoming and elsewhere.

Regionwide tallies for rustling are hard to come by because no uniform reporting system or central database exists.

However, Western state livestock agencies have put the value of cattle deemed lost, stolen, strayed or in questionable ownership in recent years in the tens of millions of dollars.

In Montana alone, investigators have recovered more than 7,300 stolen or missing cattle worth nearly $8 million during the past three years, numbers believed to account for just a fraction of the problem, officials said.

"What you see as far as figures from livestock departments is a drop in the bucket from what's been going on," said Kim Baker, president of the Montana Cattlemen's Association.

RIDING THE BRAND

For ranchers in the open-range states of the West, the livestock brand -- a symbol of ownership imprinted on the animal's hide -- is considered a cow's only return address.

Brands provide vital clues for Western agricultural inspectors who are required to verify ownership of livestock when it is sold, shipped for slaughter or transported over certain distances.

But in a region where several hundred brand inspectors oversee millions of cows on rangelands stretching across some of the nation's most rugged and remote terrain, there are many ways to beat the system, said Rick Wahlert, veteran brand inspector with the Colorado Agriculture Department.

Today's rustlers bear little resemblance to the varmints of yore, whose crimes prompted the formation in the western United States of cattle associations that paid a bounty to bring cow thieves to justice.

For starters, rustlers are now equipped with trucks and trailers that allow them to easily haul cattle to distant slaughterhouses and auction barns where re-branded animals may draw less suspicion.

Western livestock owners who turn their cows out in the spring on sprawling grazing allotments they lease from the federal government expect to lose up to 3 percent of their stock to injuries, illnesses and predators.

But any such losses, or any missing animals suspected of having been stolen, typically go unnoticed until late fall, when ranchers gather in their herds and sort out which animals will be kept for breeding, put up for sale or go to slaughter.

Moreover, cattle can end up categorized as lost or missing, rather than stolen, even though evidence may suggest theft, said Terry Fankhauser, vice president of the Colorado Cattlemen's Association.

"We're ruling out alien abduction," he said.

BREEDING ISSUES

Theft costs ranchers dearly in an industry that generates billions of dollars in revenues a year in Western states.

The losses are not tallied in dollars alone. Producers build up their herds while selecting for preferred traits over the course of generations, said Wyatt Prescott, vice president of the Idaho Cattle Association.

"Cows are professional mothers," he said. "It's their job to get bred every year, calve successfully and bring that calf home in the fall. You go through a lot trying to replace that cow."

The recent comeback in cattle rustling has stockmen on edge across the region.

After 200 cattle went missing last year in a four-county area of western Idaho, Tom Blessinger, a rancher north of Boise, said he was writing down the license plate numbers of any unfamiliar vehicles he sees.

"That's a lot of meat," he said. "This isn't a case of the cowboy with the good horse and the dog. This is too many."

Authorities in Montana and Nevada last month broke up a multi-state cattle-rustling ring in an investigation expected to bring criminal charges against suspects in Oregon, Nevada and Washington state, said Blaine Northrop, enforcement supervisor with the Nevada Department of Agriculture. The livestock bust has so far netted 61 head of cattle.

Officials said livestock thieves typically know how to handle animals and how to elude the industry's safeguards.

"Just anybody off the street can't walk in and steal a cow," Idaho's Prescott said.

Once snatched, cows are hard to get back. Recovery rates for stolen cattle can be as low as 10 percent.

Two years after the fact, authorities are still searching for rustlers who stole 21 cows and an equal number of calves from the Cross Ranch in northwestern Montana, and owner Mary Cross said her operation continues to suffer the effects of the thefts.

"It takes the profit right out," she said.

(Editing by Steve Gorman and Cynthia Johnston)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111127/us_nm/us_cattle_rustling

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Sunday, November 27, 2011

Chrome to gain plug and play gamepad support and WebRTC video chat in 2012

Seems like Big G updates its browser of choice with fresh features every time we turn around, and one of Google's own, dev advocate Paul Kinlan, revealed that another spate of upgrades are arriving for Chrome early next year. The headliner is plug-and-play support for gamepads, but native support for cameras, microphones and open-source video chat app WebRTC are on the docket too -- features that give Chrome some considerable gaming chops when combined with its existing WebGL and HTML 5 prowess and, he says, could bring OnLive to the web without plugins. If you thought Angry Birds on a browser was a great, we can't wait to see what's in store when a proper controller and integrated video chat are involved.

Chrome to gain plug and play gamepad support and WebRTC video chat in 2012 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 25 Nov 2011 14:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink TechCrunch  |  sourceEdge, Paul Kinlan (Google+)  | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/25/chrome-to-gain-plug-and-play-gamepad-support-and-webrtc-video-ch/

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NBA owners, players reach tentative deal (AP)

NEW YORK ? NBA owners and players reached a tentative agreement early Saturday to end the 149-day lockout.

After a secret meeting earlier this week, the sides met for more than 15 hours Friday, working to try to save the season. This handshake deal, however, still must be ratified by both owners and players.

"We've reached a tentative understanding that is subject to a variety of approvals and very complex machinations, but we're optimistic that will all come to pass and that the NBA season will begin Dec. 25," Commissioner David Stern said.

The league plans a 66-game season and aims to open camps Dec. 9.

"We thought it was in both of our best interests to try to reach a resolution and save the game," union executive director Billy Hunter said.

The Christmas Day deadline created a sense of urgency because that schedule is traditionally a showcase for the league. This season's three-game slate was to include Miami at Dallas in an NBA finals rematch, plus MVP Derrick Rose leading Chicago into Los Angeles to face Kobe Bryant and the Lakers.

A majority on each side is needed to approve the agreement. The NBA needs votes from 15 of 29 owners. (The league owns the New Orleans Hornets.) Stern said the labor committee plans to discuss the agreement later Saturday and expects them to endorse it and recommend to the full board.

The union needs a simple majority of its 430-plus members. That process is a bit more complicated after the players dissolved the union Nov. 14. Now, they must drop their antitrust lawsuit in Minnesota and reform the union before voting on the deal.

Because the union disbanded, a new collective bargaining agreement can only be completed once the union has reformed. Drug testing and other issues still must be negotiated between the league and the players.

The settlement first was reported by CBSSports.com.

When last talks broke down, the sides were still divided over the division of revenues and certain changes sought by owners to curb spending by big-market teams that players felt would limit or restrict their options in free agency.

On Nov. 14, players rejected the owners' proposal, which included opening a 72-game schedule on Dec. 15, announcing instead they were disbanding the union, giving them a chance to win several billion dollars in triple damages in an antitrust lawsuit.

Two days later, players filed two separate antitrust lawsuits against the league in two different states. On Monday, a group of named plaintiffs including Carmelo Anthony, Steve Nash and Kevin Durant filed an amended federal lawsuit against the league in Minnesota, hoping the courts there will be as favorable to them as they have been to NFL players in the past.

Now, players will dismiss that lawsuit and get back to the business of basketball.

The previous CBA expired at the end of the day June 30. Despite a series of meetings in June, there was never much hope of a deal before that deadline, with owners wanting significant changes after saying they lost $300 million last season and hundreds of millions more in each year of the old agreement, which was ratified in 2005.

Owners wanted to keep more of the league's nearly $4 billion in basketball revenues to themselves after guaranteeing 57 percent to the players under the old deal. And they sought a system where even the smallest-market clubs could compete, believing the current system would always favor the teams who could spend the most.

Initially, the salary cap emerged as the biggest obstacle. Owners first proposed a hard cap, but players fought hard to maintain the current system that allows teams to exceed the cap through the use of various exceptions.

The league was adamant the system needed some adjustment, because the old rules gave too many advantages to teams who could afford to keep adding to their payrolls. So the league's proposals targeted the highest-spending teams, seeking to eliminate the use of the midlevel exception by teams over the luxury tax and prevent them from participating in sign-and-trade deals.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111126/ap_on_sp_bk_ne/bkn_nba_labor

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Endangered baby gorilla born at Chicago zoo dies (AP)

CHICAGO ? The endangered baby gorilla born nine days ago at the Lincoln Park Zoo has died.

Zoo workers found the baby gorilla dead Friday morning. The baby was being carried around by her mother. Workers let the mother gorilla, 16-year-old Bana, keep the baby for several hours "in order to make peace with what happened."

The zoo says Bana is a first-time mother. The baby's father is Kwan, a 22-year-old silverback gorilla.

The baby was the first Western lowland gorilla born at the zoo since 2005. She had not been named.

In a statement, the zoo says the baby appeared to be fully developed and a cause of death isn't known yet. A necropsy is planned.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/pets/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111125/ap_on_re_us/us_baby_gorilla

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Intel decides Pentiums are good enough for servers too, at least the low-end ones

PentiumAh, the venerable Pentium CPU. Few chips are as recognizable but, these days, the brand is relegated to the low-end of the desktop and laptop market. Now Intel is looking to broaden its appeal, by pushing the classic line into servers, though, again targeting the bottom of the spectrum. The Pentium 350 is a 1.2GHz dual-core CPU with 3MB of cache and no integrated GPU, which most servers have no need for -- especially in low-power machines dedicated to file sharing or low-traffic web hosting. While the 15W part is already shipping, we couldn't find any pricing information. Then again, Intel has no intention of selling these to consumers and they're likely only available to OEMs in bulk. Check out the more coverage link for the full specs.

Intel decides Pentiums are good enough for servers too, at least the low-end ones originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 24 Nov 2011 08:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/Zss-9LeVTMw/

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Saturday, November 26, 2011

Police Tactics In Occupy Protests Vary From Crackdowns To 'Peaceful Coexistence'

NEW YORK -- In the two months since its inception in a small park in lower Manhattan, the Occupy Wall Street movement has spread from coast to coast, inspiring hundreds of like-minded encampments and demonstrations in city centers and college campuses.

But while the vast majority of demonstrators have hewed consistently to a non-violent ethos, the tactics of law enforcement have been anything but uniform. From jurisdiction to jurisdiction, official responses have varied from paramilitary style crackdowns to peaceful accommodation.

In Oakland, Calif., riot-gear clad police officers cleared demonstrators from their encampment using rubber bullets and tear gas grenades, gravely wounding an Iraq war veteran in the process. At the University of California at Davis, campus police doused the faces of seated protesters with pepper spray at close range, in an incident that quickly went viral after video of the event appeared online.

Other cities have taken a different approach. In Albany, N.Y., a planned move by the mayor -- with the support of Gov. Andrew Cuomo -- to oust Occupy demonstrators from a city park near the capitol was quashed after the city's police chief and district attorney aired reservations.

"So long as we have no violence that is being perpetrated against law enforcement and no damage to state property, there's room for peaceful coexistence here," the district attorney, P. David Soares, said in a recent interview with the Associated Press. "I support the right of all parties to assemble peacefully and express their points of view."

Such an approach has been scorned in other cities, but not without consequences. In Oakland, the violent raid, authorized by Oakland Mayor Jean Quan, was harshly criticized by Dan Siegel, the mayor's top legal adviser. He called the raid "tragically unnecessary" in a press conference announcing his resignation.

Siegel, a civil rights attorney, followed up the press conference with a sharply-worded Twitter post.

"Support Occupy Oakland, not the 1 percent and its government facilitators," Siegel wrote.

Norm Stamper, who resigned as Seattle's police chief after the city's chaotic globalization protests in 1999, which included the use of tear gas and rubber bullets against demonstrators, said the behavior of officers in Oakland was symptomatic of the highly authoritarian style of policing common in U.S. cities. Stamper, an author, has become an advocate for policing reforms in the years since.

"These officers are brought up steeped in a tradition of authority and power," Stamper said. "They are taught that they can never back down, that you meet force with force, and too many of them have been taught that passively resisting demonstrators represent force."

Oakland's Mayor has vowed to avoid future violent police action against demonstrators, and so far protests in the city have been met with substantially reduced force.

The city's Occupy demonstrators, however, show no sign of backing down. In their latest provocation, they have called for a shutdown of all West Coast ports on Dec. 12.

As protests continue -- and possibly grow in size and ambition -- the potential for violence will remain, in Oakland and other cities, Stamper said.

"I just don't see police changing their tactics tomorrow," he said. "Unless and until the police recognize that there's a better way to deal with this we're going to see repeats."

In New York City, where the Occupy movement began, police tactics toward the demonstrators have shifted away from accommodation and toward confrontation. Mayor Michael Bloomberg initially gave protesters permission to stay in Zuccotti Park, but then authorized the police department to clear the encampment in an unannounced early morning raid.

The raid on Zuccotti was followed by a march on the New York Stock Exchange, which was met with harsh tactics by police officers, according to protesters who participated and attorneys representing demonstrators who were arrested that day.

"Multiple friends got the shit kicked out of them," said Katama Rose, 23, an Occupy demonstrator.

Martin Stoller, an attorney with the National Lawyers Guild, said that several demonstrators he represented after their arrest during the Nov. 17 marches had been injured by police officers throwing punches and swinging batons. The injuries were mostly "soft-tissue damage," he said.

"I arraigned a couple of people they pushed around and beat up pretty good," he said. "They were not resisting arrest."

"There's no necessity to use a baton on somebody who's essentially non-violent," he added.

Bloomberg, however, praised the officers for their handling of the demonstrators, saying that they exercised restraint. NYPD commissioner Ray Kelly, meanwhile, accused the demonstrators of provoking the police.

"There is no question about it, there was a group of people bent on confronting the police," Kelly said in a press conference. "They were taunting them."

The NYPD did not respond to a request for comment.

But while harsh action against non-violent demonstrators may restore order to city streets, it can have both short and long-term political consequences, warned Timothy McCarthy, a professor of history and public policy at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government.

"I would be very cautious if I was the mayor of a city that was being occupied," McCarthy said. "When the state engages in forceful and violent acts of repression against folks engaged in non-violent civil disobedience, the state doesn't come out as the hero."

"The Birmingham police are not the hero of the civil rights story," he said.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/11/23/occupy-movement-police-tactics_n_1111163.html

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Apple Removes Game Subscription Service from App Store (Mashable)

Big Fish Games made headlines Wednesday when it announced that it had become the first app developer to offer games by subscription through Apple's App Store. That app has now been removed from the App Store without explanation. The app, dubbed Play Instantly!, let subscribers play dozens of iPad games over streaming Wi-Fi for $6.99 per month. It was not only the first subscription game service offered in the App Store, but also the first cloud-based one to our knowledge. To date, App Store games have only been available for individual, one-time purchase and download.

[More from Mashable: U.S. Patent Office Honors Steve Jobs with iPhone-Shaped Exhibit]

A spokesperson for Big Fish Games said in an email accompanying the original announcement Wednesday that the company "worked collaboratively with Apple over several weeks to ensure the service met all their guidelines" and that "it was handled via [Apple's] standard submission and review process." Apple wanted "to verify that the service we were offering was a good customer experience and that the value proposition warranted a recurring monthly charge," the spokesperson added.

It's not clear why Apple has pulled the game, nor if it intends to introduce game subscriptions to the App Store in the near future. Apple commentator John Gruber suggested the app might have been accidentally approved by an App Store reviewer in violation of App Store guidelines, despite what appears to have been a lengthy collaboration period.

[More from Mashable: Apple vs. Samsung: The Patent Wars, Explained [INFOGRAPHIC]]

Apple could not be reached for comment by press time.

This story originally published on Mashable here.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/applecomputer/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/mashable/20111124/tc_mashable/apple_removes_game_subscription_service_from_app_store

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Introducing the monarch butterfly genome

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

The Monarch butterfly is famous for its ability to travel up to 2,000 miles from North America to central Mexico every fall. Now, it's enjoying fame of a different sort. In the November 23rd issue of Cell, researchers report the full genomic sequence of this iconic butterfly. The new genome is the first for any butterfly. It is also the first complete genome of any long-distance migrant.

"With this genome sequence in hand, we now have an overwhelming number of opportunities to understand the genetic and molecular basis of long-distance migration," says Steven Reppert of the University of Massachusetts Medical School.

Reppert's team has been studying the monarch migration for years, with a particular interest in how their brains incorporate information in time and space to find their way. Monarchs are all the more remarkable given that migrating butterflies are always at least two generations removed from those that made the journey the previous fall. "It is in their genes," Reppert said.

The researchers focused their genome analysis on pathways known to be critical for this migration, including those responsible for vision, the circadian clock, and oriented flight. The genome also revealed the complete set of genes required for synthesizing juvenile hormone. Changes in that hormone are required for migrating butterflies to shut down reproduction and extend their lifespan up to nine months. By comparison, non-migrants only live for about a month.

Comparisons of the new monarch genome with other insect genomes also reveal that butterflies and moths (Lepidoptera) are the fastest evolving insect order yet examined.

"Overall," the researchers write, "the attributes of the monarch genome and its proteome provide a treasure trove for furthering our understanding of monarch butterfly migration; a solid background for population genetic analyses between migratory and non-migratory populations; and a basis for future genetic comparison of the genes involved in navigation yet to be discovered in other long-distance migrating species, including vertebrates like migratory birds."

###

Cell Press: http://www.cellpress.com

Thanks to Cell Press for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/115441/Introducing_the_monarch_butterfly_genome

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Friday, November 25, 2011

?Personal Finance Experts? vs ?Personal Finance Bloggers?: Who ...

By Ginger on November 24th, 2011


Did you catch CNN Money this afternoon?? Or what about the latest financial expert featured on Oprah?? Did their advice speak to your situation, personally?

Good, I didn?t think so either.

One of the issues I take with some of the ?personal finance experts? out there today is that none of the advice is truly personal. Their approach is often too generalized because they are catering to a large audience which means they lack true accessibility to people that need personalized advice.

We Need More Coaches (real people), Not Experts

Experts tend to preach and throw the advice at the people receiving it without any consideration for the individual situation they speak about.? Every one?s situation is different, right?? So why do we flock to experts? Rarely are they able speak to our lives the way someone who had the time to sit down and review our situation would.

Over the summer, I had an opportunity to sit and meet with a financial coach who reviewed my situation personally gave me advice based on my situation.? That?s something I really needed because my situation, is just that-my situation.? After spending what seemed like years sifting through certified financial planners who only wanted to set me up with the next best fee based investment account, I gave up.? They just didn?t get it.? I needed someone who got me and it was truly the best decision that I made for myself and for my finances.

Personal Finance Bloggers vs Personal Finance Experts

Recently, a ?personal finance expert? confessed to me that she doesn?t mingle with personal finance bloggers since they dilute her message and dance in her space.? She felt this was a threat to her brand being that we essentially discuss the same issues.? Looking at her social media profiles, I could easily see why.? She spent more time promoting herself and ?her brand?, rather than finding a way to intimately communicate with her audience about their financial issues.

This is something I have always taken issue with and just one of the reasons why I started this blog.? While Suze Orman is someone I?ve admired since the age of 11, I wanted to lend a more personal voice to the personal finance blogosphere.? Where these experts often miss the mark is they spend too much time talking at and preaching to their audience while never sharing much of their own experiences.

One of the reasons why personal finance bloggers are so popular (IMHO) is that readers are able to connect with them because we are just like you.? We talk about our daily struggles because we aren?t perfect. Some of us even tell our readers how much debt we owe, savings in the bank and what we spent this past weekend.

That?s what people want to see.? Experiences which look like theirs, not another book with regurgitated and refashioned financial advice like ?save more? and ?spend less?.? My advice to the experts?? Get real with your audience and help them see that you?ve been in their shoes while addressing their situations personally.

Become Your Own Money Expert

One of the things I value since starting this blog is the awareness about myself and the things I?ve learned along the way based on my own experience.? I don?t need Suze yelling at me telling me how silly I am for wanting to take that trip to Costa Rica because I am in debt.? I also don?t need a financial website for women to tell me about my money in intellectually insulting lipstick chatter while selling me blushes and blowing me kisses.? I want it straight with no chaser.? And, I think the best place to get it is through my own experience while sharing it with others.

You already have the answers, don?t wait for a ?personal finance expert? to be the ?be and end all? for your finances.? It doesn?t take an Ivy League MBA to help us understand why we should spend less and save more.?? Sure, you may pick up one of their books to learn the basics but everything else is basically about your experience and the lessons learned from it.

What are your thoughts?? Who are you listening to and why?? Do personal finance experts have your attention?

?

Source: http://www.girlsjustwannahavefunds.com/personal-finance-experts-vs-personal-finance-bloggers-who-are-you-listening-to/

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Sticky goo on Pa. turnpike disables about 150 cars (AP)

PITTSBURGH ? A flood of gooey black muck dropped from a tanker truck disabled about 150 cars and damaged an unknown number of other vehicles along a nearly 40-mile stretch of the Pennsylvania Turnpike, officials said.

A leaking valve on a tanker spread driveway sealant over the eastbound lanes of a long stretch of the Turnpike between New Castle and the Oakmont Service Plaza on Tuesday night, Turnpike spokesman Bill Capone said.

Turnpike operations officials on Wednesday said 150 or more cars were disabled when the sticky goo covered their tires and wheels. Some state police and turnpike maintenance vehicles had to be towed away after getting stuck in the tar-like substance, according to the turnpike operations center.

Traffic was moving normally by Wednesday morning, but the sticky mess had already hindered the travel plans of some motorists traveling for the Thanksgiving holiday.

Laura Frick told WTAE-TV she was traveling from Cleveland to New Jersey for the holiday.

"Now we have to turn around and go back home," Frick said. "It's horrible."

Retired firefighter Bob King told the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review the experience was the most harrowing of his life.

"It caught us off guard," said King, who now lives near Chicago. "It didn't seem like anyone knew what it was or what to do. It had to be an incredible amount of tar. It's still piled on my tires."

Cpl. Mike Corna, with the state police barracks which patrols the pike near Pittsburgh, said Wednesday the driver will be cited for not properly securing his load, though the specific tickets to be issued were still being determined. Police have yet to trace the origin of the load. The tank was filled somewhere in Ohio.

Maintenance crews got out quickly, dumping sand on the pooled goop and using snow plows to push it on to the shoulder, turnpike spokesman Carl DeFebo said. The mess was mostly confined to the right lane and the roadway didn't have to be shut down while workers tried to clean it up because the substance hardens in about 15 minutes, DeFebo said.

"It's been cleaned up since about 11 o'clock last night," DeFebo said Wednesday.

Turnpike officials urged motorists whose cars were damaged to stop calling its operations center and instead call Traveler's Insurance at 800-238-6225 and follow the prompts to file "business claims."

The insurance company is handling claims on behalf of Marino Transport Services of Stevensville, Md., which operates the truck.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111123/ap_on_re_us/us_sticky_substance_turnpike

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Esther Wojcicki: Why I Am Thankful (Huffington post)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/166018885?client_source=feed&format=rss

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2nd earthquake of day shakes northern Japan (AP)

TOKYO ? Two strong earthquakes rattled northern Japan on Thursday, but neither caused any apparent damage or a tsunami.

A magnitude-6.1 quake struck Thursday evening south of the northern island of Hokkaido, Japan's Meteorological Agency said.

It hit about 465 miles (750 kilometers) northeast of Tokyo and 19 miles (30 kilometers) below the sea surface. The agency did not issue a tsunami warning.

About 3,900 households in the towns of Erimo and Samani lost electricity shortly after the quake, but power was restored about an hour later, according to the Hokkaido Electric Power Co.

The shaking was not felt in Tokyo, though a morning quake was.

That magnitude-6.0 temblor struck just off the coast near the nuclear power plant damaged by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami.

The two shakings are believed unrelated and did not affect the crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi plant or other nuclear plants in the region.

The March 11 magnitude-9.0 earthquake and tsunami wiped out large parts of Japan's northeastern coast and left nearly 20,000 people dead or missing. The twin disasters also triggered a nuclear crisis, forcing about 100,000 people to flee their homes due to leaking radiation.

Japan lies on the "Ring of Fire" ? an arc of earthquake and volcanic zones that stretches around the Pacific Rim. About 90 percent of the world's quakes occur in the area.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111124/ap_on_re_as/as_japan_earthquake

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Thursday, November 24, 2011

Romo looks to remain perfect on Thanksgiving

Tony Romo

By JAIME ARON

updated 6:05 p.m. ET Nov. 22, 2011

IRVING, Texas - The first time Tony Romo started a Thanksgiving game for the Dallas Cowboys "Romo-mania" was so frenzied that a group of fans strung together the letters in his name and hung it alongside the Ring of Honor at Texas Stadium.

Security guards made the fans take it down before kickoff, which sure looked foolish considering what Romo did next: five touchdown passes, tying a club record, all in just the first three quarters. Club owner Jerry Jones was so giddy afterward that he joked about firing those security guards.

Five years later, Romo has yet to live up to the hope and hype of those heady days.

But another wave of "Romo-mania" may not be far away.

Romo goes into a Thanksgiving game against Miami looking on one of the best rolls of his career. He's gone three straight games without an interception, and Dallas has won them all, pushing the Cowboys into a tie for first place in the NFC East.

The timing is great for him as he's made a tradition of shining on this holiday. Romo is 4-0 on Thanksgivings, having thrown 12 touchdowns and just two interceptions. (He missed last year's game because of a broken collarbone.)

Miami presents an intriguing challenge.

The Dolphins are only 3-7, but they've won three straight and haven't allowed a touchdown in any of those games. Plus, their roster, coaching staff and front office are filled with guys who worked with Romo in Dallas, perhaps giving them a degree of insight that goes beyond the usual scouting reports.

It starts at the top, with Miami general manager Jeff Ireland having been on the staff when the Cowboys signed Romo after he went undrafted. Dolphins coach Tony Sparano was Dallas' offensive line coach and play-caller when Romo replaced Drew Bledsoe as the starter in 2006 ? including that five-TD performance against Tampa Bay on Thanksgiving ? and he remained on the staff in 2007, when current Cowboys coach Jason Garrett took over as offensive coordinator.

"First of all is he's an outstanding player," Sparano said. "He's a guy that from Day 1 down there has been able to get that team moving. ... I think he's got a good relationship with a lot of his players there. And those guys obviously trust his leadership."

At his best, Romo can be a Brett Favre-like gunslinger, turning seemingly doomed plays into highlight-reel touchdowns. He did so several times Sunday against Washington by relying on a nifty spin move to his left.

"I always thought Tony always had eyes in the back of his head, which was good for a line coach," Sparano said. "But he's got a good sense about him. He extends plays. ... That stuff can hurt (opponents)."

That stuff also has hurt the Cowboys.

Dallas has three narrow losses this season and Romo's turnovers were to blame for the first two. Garrett's reluctance to unleash him with a narrow lead at New England paved the way for the Patriots' late comeback.

The low point came in Week 4, when Romo threw two interceptions that were returned for touchdowns, plus a third interception, while giving away a 24-point lead at home against Detroit. It was the biggest blown lead in franchise history.

Now look at what Romo has done since then.

In six games, he has two interceptions. That matches the cleanest stretch of his career. Only this one is better because he's also thrown more touchdowns, 12. That includes three in each of the last two games, and he's done while top receiver Miles Austin has been out with a hamstring injury.

"Sometimes when guys focus on taking care of the football they go into a shell, they don't make any plays. So they're not making any mistakes, but they're really not doing anything either," said Garrett, a former quarterback. "I think we've all seen Tony's been able to strike that balance. ... He's made a lot of significant plays in the last few weeks that have allowed us to win ballgames."

The rapid rise of rookie running back DeMarco Murray has helped balance the offense, giving defenses more of a challenge. Romo also has recovered from a broken rib and torn lung suffered in Week 2.

Just in time for the holidays.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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PFT picks: Mike Florio and Gregg Rosenthal predict the three Thanksgiving games, and they are split on whether the Packers will stay undefeated.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/45407699/ns/sports-nfl/

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Western states step up sanctions on Iran (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? The United States, Britain and Canada on Monday announced new sanctions on Iran's energy and financial sectors, steps analysts said may raise pressure on Tehran but were unlikely to halt its nuclear program.

The United States named Iran as an area of "primary money laundering concern," a step designed to dissuade non-U.S. banks from dealing with it; blacklisted 11 entities suspected of aiding its nuclear programs; and expanded sanctions to target companies that aid its oil and petrochemical industries.

The United States stopped short, however, of targeting Iran's central bank, a step that could have cut it off from the global financial system, sent oil prices skyrocketing and jeopardized U.S. and European economic recovery.

In a coordinated action, Britain ordered all British financial institutions to stop doing business with their Iranian counterparts, including the Iranian central bank. A source familiar with the sanctions said the steps would not directly target trade in Iranian oil.

Canada said it would ban the export of all goods used in Iran's petrochemical, oil and gas industry and "block virtually all transactions with Iran," including with its central bank, with an exception for Iranian-Canadians to send money home.

While not taking concrete actions, France urged European Union and other nations to immediately freeze the assets of Iran's central bank and to suspend purchases of Iranian oil, steps it called "sanctions on an unprecedented scale."

The series of announcements were in response to a Nov. 8 International Atomic Energy Agency report that presented intelligence suggesting Iran had worked on designing an atomic bomb and may still be secretly carrying out related research.

That report, calls by U.S. lawmakers to sanction Iran's cental bank and media speculation about a possible Israeli military strike against Iran's nuclear sites have pushed the Obama administration to seek tougher sanctions against Tehran.

NOT THE STRAW THAT BREAKS THE CAMEL'S BACK

Analysts said they did not believe the steps would dissuade Iran from pursuing its nuclear program, which Washington and its allies suspect is a cover for seeking nuclear arms. Iran says its nuclear work is entirely peaceful.

"Is this the straw that will break the camel's back? No," said George Perkovich, director of the Nuclear Policy Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, a Washington think tank.

The range of unilateral steps planned by Western powers reflects the difficulty of persuading Russia and China not to veto further measures at the U.N. Security Council, where they have supported four previous sanctions resolutions.

The U.S. decision to name Iran as a money laundering concern has no direct effect - U.S. banks are already barred from transactions with Iranian financial institutions - and seems more a warning about the risks of dealing with Iran.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said any bank that deals with Iran's central bank or other financial institutions runs the risk of supporting Iran's "illicit activities" such as its alleged pursuit of nuclear weapons, support for terrorism and efforts to evade sanctions.

"Any and every financial transaction with Iran poses grave risk of supporting those activities, so financial institutions around the world should think hard about the risks of doing business with Iran," Geithner said in a joint appearance with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to announce the steps.

While the United States already seeks to prevent non-U.S. companies from large-scale investment in Iran's energy sector, the sanctions announced on Monday would also target companies providing goods, services and technology for such activities.

Separately, diplomats said EU governments could reach a preliminary deal on Tuesday to add about 190 Iranian people and entities to a list of those targeted by asset freezes and travel bans.

The new EU measures will likely aim at industries such as shipping and will be formalized at a meeting of EU foreign ministers on Dec. 1, but discussions on possible further steps could take place in the coming days, diplomats said.

'SANCTIONS ARE A LOSE-LOSE GAME'

U.S. sanctions have already made it extremely difficult for many global oil companies and traders to obtain bank financing to trade Iranian crude, of which less than a third goes to Europe with the rest flowing to China and India.

In Tehran, Trade Minister Mehdi Ghazanfari said sanctions were hitting the Iranian economy but warned Western countries they were harming their own interests.

"Sanctions are a lose-lose game in which both sides make a loss. If they don't invest in our oil projects, they will lose an appealing market," Ghazanfari told a news conference before the British and U.S. announcements.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has often said sanctions have little effect and in some cases make the economy stronger by making Iran find domestic solutions to challenges.

Ghazanfari reiterated that Iran had found alternatives to Western imports and investments but did not deny the downside.

"Facing hardship in a fight is inevitable. I admit projects will get harder as our trading costs will go up, delays will hit projects and money transfer will get harder," he said.

(Additional reporting by Fiona Shaikh in London; Ramin Mostafavi in Tehran; Peter Apps, Yeganeh Torbati and Dmitry Zhdannikov in London; David Ljunggren in Ottawa; Leigh Thomas in Paris; Justyna Pawlak in Brussels; and David Lawder in Washington; writing by David Stamp, Jon Hemming and Arshad Mohammed; editing by Janet Lawrence and Mohammad Zargham)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/india/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111122/india_nm/india606531

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Tibet group video allegedly shows nun burning

(AP) ? A Tibetan rights group has released graphic video of what it says is a Buddhist nun engulfed in flames on a city street in one of several apparent self-immolation protests against Chinese rule.

The video, released Monday by Students for a Free Tibet, purports to show Palden Choetso, whose death on Nov. 3 in predominantly Tibetan Ganzi prefecture in Sichuan province had previously been reported.

The video shows a woman in nun's robes standing on a street corner covered in bright red flames. She collapses to the ground after about 15 seconds.

Additional footage shows about 10,000 mourners gathering at a monastery for a candlelight vigil on Nov. 6 to pay their respects to the 35-year-old nun while about 1,000 monks and nuns hold prayers inside.

The video also shows Chinese security forces in riot gear shadowing monks and nuns taking part in a protest march, and a column of armored paramilitary police patrol vehicles traveling down a country road. The New York-based Students of a Free Tibet said it obtained the video from sources in the region.

China restricts journalists' access to Tibetan areas of western China and to Tibet itself, and it is nearly impossible to verify statements about conditions there.

Those who filmed the incidents and then smuggled out the footage must have gone to great lengths and undertaken huge risks, said Tenzin Dorjee, Students for a Free Tibet's executive director.

"And for us there is absolutely no question that this needs to be seen by the world so that the world may be galvanized to take action on behalf of the Tibetan people who are at this point completely silenced by the Chinese government," he told The Associated Press in New York.

At least 11 monks, nuns and former monks have self-immolated this year in what are seen as acts of desperation in the face of tightening controls over Tibetan life and Buddhist culture.

Most ignited the flames while calling for Tibetan freedom and the return of their spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, who fled to India amid an abortive uprising against Chinese rule in 1959.

China claims Tibet has always been part of its territory, but many Tibetans say the Himalayan region was virtually independent for centuries.

Authorities routinely deny Tibetan claims of repression, although they have confirmed some cases of self-immolations and accused supporters of the Dalai Lama of encouraging such acts. The Dalai Lama and representatives of the self-declared Tibetan government-in-exile in India say they oppose all violence.

Tibet experts say self-immolation is not a traditional means of political protest among Tibetans, but the recent cases are a sign of how difficult conditions have become in western China.

Tibetan areas of western China were relatively calm in the 1980s and 1990s, especially compared to protest-hit Tibet proper. But conditions there have deteriorated since the introduction of new controls and a campaign of vilification against the Dalai Lama, said Robbie Barnett, head of modern Tibetan studies at New York's Columbia University.

Self-immolations are an extreme expressions of tensions that have spiked since the outbreak of massive anti-government protests in 2008, Barnett said.

"It is a new chapter in the way that Tibetans try to communicate their concerns to the Chinese government," Barnett said. "China would be very unwise not to take this seriously."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-11-22-AS-China-Tibet/id-e3ec86bd3f034ffd878a572c7f1c18c0

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Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Republicans Feel Really Bad About the Super Committee (The Atlantic Wire)

In this case, "doing nothing" feels a whole lot like doing something.?

Related: The Super Committee Lays an Egg

Related: Ways to Defuse the Super Committee's Trigger

This feature may not be reproduced or distributed electronically, in print or otherwise without the written permission of uclick and Universal Press Syndicate.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/atlantic/20111122/pl_atlantic/republicansfeelreallybadaboutsupercommittee45285

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Egypt stock market plunges on political crisis (AP)

CAIRO ? Egypt's benchmark index plunged on Tuesday, with a temporary suspension of trading failing to cool a frenzy of selling by investors panicked by escalating violence and protests in the capital that have thrust the nation into its worst political crisis since former President Hosni Mubarak's ouster.

The EGX30 index closed 4.78 percent lower, or at 3,676 points, continuing its slide after trading was suspended for nearly an hour on the Egyptian Exchange after the broader EGX100 index fell by over 5.4 percent.

Underscoring market unease with the political situation, the country's five-year credit default swaps ? the cost of insuring Egypt's sovereign debt against default ? widened by 25 basis points to 563 basis points, according to Markit. Also, the Egyptian pound weakened against the U.S. dollar, briefly breaching the six pound to the dollar mark, according to currency Web site XE.com.

The slide in the market Tuesday was the third consecutive day of declines, and reflected the worries about the country's political future as thousands gathered in central Cairo protesting against the country's military rulers. The escalating tension came just days before the scheduled Nov. 28 parliamentary elections ? the first since Mubarak left office in mid-February.

Traders put the support point for the benchmark index at 3,800 points, but the market blew past that level with little difficulty early in the day, building on Monday's 4 percent slide and dragging its year-to-date decline down to more than 48 percent.

"We passed the support point, so the only thing that will stop further declines in the market is fixing the political situation in the country," said Khaled Naga, a senior broker with Mega Investments. "We have to wait and see what happens."

State television reported that the day's losses on the exchange amounted to 12 billion pounds ($2 billion).

The suspension of trade was a safety measure set up by market authorities in the weeks after the uprising against Mubarak. The measures were intended to guard against what many, at the time, feared would be the market's collapse after its reopening more than two months after the start of the Jan. 25 uprising.

The violence and continuing demonstrations prompted the civilian Cabinet to offer its resignation late Monday. But the move failed to appease the activists who see the civilian government as little more than subservient to the military rulers.

While far from presenting a united front, the activists massed in Cairo's Tahrir Square ? the epicenter of the uprising that toppled Mubarak ? are demanding that the military rulers either immediately hand over power to a civilian administration or set a fixed date for a transition to civilian rule.

Firmly entrenched in Tahrir Square, the activists issued a call for a million-man rally on Tuesday ? a move that had thousands streaming into downtown Cairo and raising the specter of further clashes and violence, even as officials called for restraint from all sides.

The threat of continued trouble only builds on already growing political uncertainty that has battered the country's economy and placed tremendous pressure on the country's currency.

The government has struggled to keep the pound from breaking the six pounds to the dollar level for months, with economists attributing at least a portion of the net international reserves that have been spent going to support the currency. Egypt's net international reserves fell from $36 billion in December to about $22 billion by the end of October, according to Central Bank of Egypt figures.

Naga said the stock market has lost about 180 billion pounds ($30.25 billion) since the start of the year ? with most of that linked to the unrest in the country versus the overall global financial concerns linked to the Eurozone debt crisis and broader fears of recession. He said Monday's losses were about 7 billion pounds.

The Tuesday losses marked the 10th consecutive trading session in which the market ? one of the worst performing emerging market indices in the world ? suffered a slide as a result of Egypt's tenuous political situation.

Rami Sidani, the Dubai-based head of Middle East and North Africa investments for British asset management firm Schroders, said there is a "very negative sentiment" over Egyptian stocks at the moment. The uncertainties surrounding the country's political future have triggered a panicked sell-off on the Egyptian exchange, he said.

"There is no discrimination between one company or another," said Sidani. "Investors are just selling across the board without taking into consideration the value of the underlying assets."

The declines came as several markets elsewhere in the region extended slumps of their own following Monday's rout on Wall Street.

The Dubai Financial Market dropped 0.3 percent to close at 1,351 points Tuesday, its lowest level in more than seven years. Saudi Arabia's main index was trading down 0.8 percent at 6,103 points by mid-afternoon.

___

AP Business Writer Adam Schreck in Dubai contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111122/ap_on_bi_ge/ml_egypt_economy

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Revamped Xbox 360 dashboard to launch on December 6th, Microsoft confirms

Earlier this month, Microsoft announced that its Xbox 360 dashboard would be getting an upgrade "in the coming days." Today, the company has clarified that statement, declaring that the revamped interface will launch on December 6th. As we've previously noted, the update promises to bring deeper Kinect integration (including sharper voice recognition capabilities), Facebook sharing mechanisms, and a cleaner interface. Redmond also says that the fall cleanup will introduce "a wealth of new content," including live TV, music and movies, available for streaming. For now, the dashboard is still in beta, though it certainly won't be long before the masses get their hands on it.

Update: Read Microsoft's e-mailed announcement in full, after the break.

Continue reading Revamped Xbox 360 dashboard to launch on December 6th, Microsoft confirms

Revamped Xbox 360 dashboard to launch on December 6th, Microsoft confirms originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 Nov 2011 03:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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