Wednesday, December 26, 2007
Dickey Chapelle: An Unsung Hero
Tuesday, December 25, 2007
The Sandbox
Thursday, December 20, 2007
Playing into my '08 predictions: Edwards a threat
Nominee for King of England: JoePa
2007 Congressional session a bust
Raising the minimum wage to $5.85 an hour.
Increasing fuel-efficiency standards for automobiles.
Overhauling ethics and lobbying rules.
Instituting most homeland security recommendations of the 9/11 Commission.
Tightening mental-health background checks for gun buyers.
I can't believe they call this progress.
- Unless you are 16 years old, work 65 hours per week or you live in shack in Centreville, Ky. $5.85 is nowhere near a living wage.
- The fuel efficiency laws will not be entirely in effect for another 15 years.
- There are no ethics in American politics, just look at the scandal record of the past - think Alan Mollohan, former House ethics committee chairman, who stepped down under the heat of an investigation into realty investments. He was later subject to an investigation into earmarks appropriated to a nonprofit run by one of his former aides, and cited for using public money to pay $220,000 to a Washington law firm to clear the whole thing up. Just a small example of business as usual in Washington - Ethics - Gawfah!
- Most Homeland Security recommendations of the 9/11 Commission... and we are giving these guys accolades? For what? They're speedy reaction to a nation crisis that occurred six years ago? Or, wait, no... It must be their ability to steal our civil liberties without anyone taking notice. Yea Free Press!!
- Tightening mental health checks for gun buyers. Now that is an important one. Just ask Michele Cossey, 46, of Plymouth Township, Pa. She bought a weapons stash for her 16 year-old son who then proceeded to plan a Columbine-style attack on a local high school. Fortunately he was found out and convicted prior to launching his plan, but I bet he sure is proud that his mom was able to pass the mental health checks. And, can you say "Black market?"
Calif. emissions law slapped down
Sure, this will make things easier to regulate from a national level. Sure, it will make it easier for automakers to comply. But in reality, it is only stalling the process.
Washington Post reports: The decision set in motion a legal battle that EPA's lawyers expect to lose and demonstrated the Bush administration's determination to oppose any mandatory measures specifically targeted at curbing global warming pollution. A total of 18 states, representing 45 percent of the nation's auto market, have either adopted or pledged to implement California's proposed tailpipe emissions rules, which seek to cut vehicles' greenhouse gas emissions by 30 percent between 2009 and 2016.
In a telephone news conference last night, [EPA Administrator Stephen L.] Johnson said he thinks that the higher fuel-economy standards and increased renewable-fuel requirements in the energy bill President Bush signed into law yesterday will do more to address global warming than imposing tailpipe rules in individual states.
"The Bush administration is moving forward with a clear national solution, not a confusing patchwork of state rules, to reduce America's climate footprint from vehicles," Johnson said. "President Bush and Congress have set the bar high, and, when fully implemented, our federal fuel-economy standard will achieve significant benefits by applying to all 50 states."
Congress passed an emissions regulation Tuesday aimed at reducing gasoline consumption (read about it... it's a good article), but California's rules would target total greenhouse gas emissions, including auto air conditioning units and the so-called "carbon-footprint" of cars.
California standards are seeking a miles-per-gallon average of 33.8 by 2016 in every vehicle operating within the state. The federal energy law is slightly more lax, requiring an average fuel economy of 35 mpg by 2020.
You can anticipate a battle like many California laws that have come before (cough, cough: legal marijuana) over states rights.
Wednesday, December 19, 2007
Refugees in limbo
As for those who have made the return, their outlook is bleak. They return with no money, no jobs, no homes and a lingering question: "What will I do now?"
New York Times ran a piece on Maha Hashim, the widow of an Iraqi police officer, which encapsulated the problem. Read it here.
It is still my hope to pursue more stories exactly like this one in Syria. For more information on my plan, email me.
Tuesday, December 18, 2007
Media in media spotlight
WASHINGTON (AP) Tuesday — Congress struck back at the Bush administration's trend toward secrecy since the 2001 terrorist attacks, passing legislation to toughen the Freedom of Information Act and increasing penalties on agencies that don't comply. ... It would be the first makeover of the FOIA in a decade, among other things bringing nonproprietary information held by government contractors under the law. The legislation also is aimed at reversing an order by former Attorney General John Ashcroft in the wake of the attacks, in which he instructed agencies to lean against releasing information when there was uncertainty about how doing so would affect national security.
Rupert Murdoch led the charge to convince the Federal Communications Commission to ease restrictions on media owners which had previously prohibited industry-moguls from owning multiple media companies on multiple media platforms in one market.
In english: Corporations can now own print, television and radio broadcasting outlets in the same American cities.
Yahoo! reported Tuesday:What does this mean for the future of the media? Look for a lot more advertising driven news. Period.
There was never any doubt that FCC chair Kevin Martin, a Bush-Cheney administration appointee and acolyte, would lead the two other Republican members of the commission to a 3-2 endorsement of a move to begin dismantling the historic "newspaper/broadcast cross-ownership" ban which has long served as the only barrier to the buying by one powerful individual or corporation of newspapers, television and radio stations and other media outlets in a community.
CBS 3's soon-to-be-former newsanchor Alycia Lane was arrested in NYC last weekend and apparently got hostile with the officer attempting to take her into custody. She allegedly assaulted the officer, punching her and calling her a "fucking dyke." Great choice of words Alycia.
Dec. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Billionaire investor Sam Zell completed the $8.2 billion buyout of Tribune Co., ending the newspaper publisher's 24 years as a publicly traded company. ...
"The whole newspaper industry has realized that the world is changing around them,'' said James Goss, an analyst with Barrington Research in Chicago. `It's clear that the changes are more dramatic than anybody was really envisioning and the business model revamp is going to be much greater than people were thinking.''Look for a heck of a lot more uniformity across the board, folks. We are consolidating the industry... rapidly.
And to think I would actually consider joining the military for 'structure'
Which Pixar Character Are You? | |
You are Nemo. Your are the rebel in the group. You do things differently, not because you think they should be done that way, but because your Mommy told you not to do such "bad" things. This is cool if you ask us, and we are pretty sure your friends agree. | |
Find Your Character @ BrainFall.com |
Wednesday, December 12, 2007
"Marry sexy arab women," ad says
Perusing the volumous pages of dailies, the only thing I found worth sharing was an ad I saw on the lower rail of a European travel site:
Marry Sexy Arab WomenUmm. Gross and a little bit amusing until it settles in just what exactly is being implied here.
Meet Beautiful arab girls. Chat,
dating, marriage. Join free now
www.Arabs4Dating.com
Wednesday, December 05, 2007
She was too cute to be in jail.
The Washington Post reports:
Gillian Gibbons, 54, a British teacher jailed in Sudan for allowing her 7-year-old students to name a teddy bear Muhammad as part of a class project, was released Tuesday. She is seen here (right) embracing her son John after arriving at London's Heathrow airport. (Photo: Steve Parsons/ AP)
Why Iran NEEDS nuclear energy, not weapons.
1. Why does Iran only supply 5 percent of the world's oil?
and
2. Why does Iran need nuclear energy?
The answers are actually much clearer than the American people like to see or the American government likes to admit.
Dirty deals for a cleaner energy source
Believe it or not, it was the US that actually sponsored the early atomic proliferation program in Iran. After the CIA-supported coup of 1953, Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi was brought to power and the US deemed the Iranian regime sufficiently friendly to possess nuclear technology. From a Cold War mindset, this was practical because it gave the US a nuclear-powered ally on the doorstep of the USSR and conveniently sitting atop the world's second-largest oil supply in the heart of the Middle East. Through the '60s, the Shah constructed a plan to rollout a nuclear program and, with the aid of the US, 23 nuclear facilities. He was emboldened by a firm belief that some day in the near future, the world's oil supply would be depleted and the need for energy would persist. Nuclear energy, in the Shah's mind, was the answer.
IN 1976, President Gerald Ford (with Dick Cheney as White House Chief of Staff and Donald Rumsfeld as Sec. of Defense) made an offer to the Shah to buy a US-built plutonium reprocessing facility - a nuclear reactor. The goal on both sides was to preserve the natural well beneath Iran, guaranteeing a long-term oil supply for the future, but the deal was put off by the 1979 Revolution.
Following the revolution, Iran attempted to restart its nuclear program with the same intentions as before: a need to prepare for the future. But the international community reneged on agreements signed prior to the revolution neither delivering fuels that were promised to Iran or aiding in the construction of new facilities, nor returning the billions of dollars that had been paid by Iran for the aid. This led to the tension between Iran and the West that we are still dealing with today and the placement of sanctions over Iran by the US.
US Sanctions
Now imagine for a minute that you are Iran and the West is, say, a case of Coca-Cola. Now every time you tried to deal with this case of Coke through the '80s, the cans were either empty or blew up in your face. What would you do? Switch to Pepsi maybe?
Well, that's what Iran did. Since the capitalists screwed Iran over, they turned to the Communists and began making deals with Russia and China. The US didn't like this very much, and when Iran purchased a nuclear conversion plant - much like the one they were promised by Cheney and Company twenty years before- the US (like an Amy Winehouse song) said, "No, no, no." Iran has been under official sanctions by the US for nearly two decades, but following this event, the US tightened its grip approved secondary sanctions over any country that does business with Iran. That was 1996. Since then there has been no (recorded) foreign investment into Iran - especially not by American firms.
Refineries, subsidies and a need to import energy.
No one is doing official business with Iran, but there are plenty of black market sales. Petrol is highly subsidized by Iran, which means easy access at low prices - the A-B-C of that means high consumption and a huge smuggling problem into boarding countries. And because Iran not seen a lot of capital for industry development, there aren't many refineries in the country. So lacking the ability to convert crude into a usable energy source coupled with an enormous consumption level, although Iran is one of the world's largest oil producers, it still has to import petrol.
Pipeline projects and international pressures.
Iran actually has an enormous pipeline network and because of its massive production, it would be a contender for more pipeline projects, but sanctions have prevented investment in this area as well. To add insult to injury, the US has consistently negotiated to have pipelines circumvent Iran. They are even pressuring India to move their big project through America's favorite Pakistan.
You decide
Sure Iran has lots of energy sources. Yes, a massive quantity of their primary natural resource is being wasted through corruption and smuggling. They need to regulate their borders and find ways to secure their oil. And there is little doubt that the Iranian government is hoarding an incredibly valuable international asset. But are they wrong for doing it? Really? With all of the talk about global warming and all of the concern globally about renewable energy sources, the Shah of Iran was actually ahead of in foreseeing the day that the wells run dry.
To date, there is no evidence that Iran has weaponized nuclear technology. Nor is there evidence that it is seeking to manufacture nuclear weapons. So ask yourself this, considering the magnifying glass under which the country is operating, doesn't it make sense that the people of Iran would trade oil that they can't refine for weapons rather then spend years and billions of dollars trying to figure out how to manufacture them?
Iran war rhetoric marches on.
Still, Bush has maintained that Iran is still a threat and that they are operating a covert program to develop a nuclear arsenal. He says that this report is a sign that the international community needs to ramp up its efforts unearth such a program and that the responsibility lies at the door of the Iranian leadership to prove that they are willing to cooperate and cease such production.
New York Times reports, Bush said the Iranians had a "strategic choice" to make - to fully acknowledge past nuclear activities and suspend their uranium enrichment work, or to "continue on a path of isolation that is not in the nest interests of the Iranian people." He added, "The choice is up to the Iranian regime."
[Iranian President] Ahmadinejad said the intelligence report's conclusions had come about as a result of Iran's resistance to international pressure.
"This report tried to extract America from its impasse but it also is a declaration of the Iranian people's victory against great powers," Ahmadinejad said in a rally today in the western provice of Illam, the ISNA student news reported. "With the help of God, our people have resisted, are resisting and will resist until the end," he said, referring to Western effort to make Iran stop enriching uranium to make nuclear fuel. "They are disappointed that they cannot make you compromise even an iota," he added.
(Read more)
This all sounds strangely familiar. Recall the ramp up to the Iraq invasion in 2002 when the Bush administration was insistent, even after UN inspectors maintained otherwise, that Iraq was housing weapons of mass destruction. The problem with this stance is that it puts the accused in an inexorable position: You cannot disprove a double negative. How do you prove that you are not doing something without incriminating yourself?
If the US wants war with Iran, it is going to have it.
Tuesday, December 04, 2007
Remembering Our Troops for the Holidays
'Tis the season to be selfish and greedy for an 8 year-old, but for those of us who are worried about the price of gasoline, crude oil and the stability of our IRAs, it is the time of year to think about others, and who better than the men and women overseas who work every day to ensure our ability to continue watching 'Family Guy' without Osama bin Ladan banging on our door. There is no time in the year more difficult to be deployed in a war zone. So, here are some ways to let the troops fighting to preserve the image of infallible strength which guarantees our liberty know that they'll be home for Christmas, if only in our dreams.
Wednesday, November 28, 2007
How to have a Green Christmas
THE TREE
Studies have shown that live trees are actually better for the environment than fake ones. I suppose they figure that if you recycle the thing, you can at least make enough paper to wrap next years presents. But, if the idea of having a tree for two weeks and then dumping it on the curb still feels like a wast to you, go the extra mile. Here are some suggestions.
1. Buy a potted tree. You can replant it in the backyard, or if you get a small one, even keep it for indoor decoration until you decide to throw the garland back on it for next year. Get a Charlie Brown-style tree and it just might make your parents feel sorry enough for you to open up their wallets, and it won't take up any space. Murray Buechner suggests donating potted trees to your local parks department if they will take it.
2. Rent a tree. Yes, some places will actually let you borrow a tree for a fee. LivingChristmasTrees.org rents living trees to the tree-loving people of Portland, Ore., for $75 each. Friends of the Urban Forest of San Francisco rents nontraditional trees, such as Southern Magnolia and Strawberry, for $150, and upon the end of the holiday cheer, plants them on the city streets.
3. Buy a "Green Tree." If you want a regular cut tree, there are environmentally safer ones to choose from. Organic is en vogue, so now you can buy a tree grown without pesticides or chemical fertilizers. Look for the Green Tag when shopping at lots, or check out Freshchristmastree.com, a grower that ships to 46 states and uses sustainable methods.
4. Recycle, recycle, recycle: most municipalities collect trees to mulch. So when you are done with your yule tides and ferns, search Earth911.org to find programs in your area.
LIGHTS
Everyone's going LED (light-emitting diode). LEDs use up to 90 percent less energy that traditional incandescent bulbs, and it has finally become economical to use them when decorating your tree and home. They are a bit more expensive, but the trade is that last much longer and energy efficiency means you save on your power bill. Plus, they stay cool to the touch so they won't singe the tree or your dumb kid's lips when they try to suck the red ones that look like lollipops (or, maybe that was just me). Costco has 100-bulb strands for about $8, or try HolidayLEDs.com for a variety of shapes, sizes and colors.
GIFT GIVING
I would never encourage regifting, but before you buy that gift for your cousin's uncle's boyfriend's daughter, ask yourself: Do the close relatives your list really need more stuff? Murray Buerchner suggests giving more non-traditional, service-oriented gifts such as a home-cooked gourmet meal or free night of babysitting, or donate to a charity in their name. "Oxfamamericaunwrapped.com invites donors to "buy," for example, a camel ($175), cow ($75), sheep ($45), building tools ($25) or the planting of 50 trees ($30) as a way to support Oxfam's programs in developing countries (the recipient gets a card with a photo, not an actual cow)." For green gift ideas ranging from recycled champagne glasses to Radio Flyer Earth wagons go to GreenHome.com or Treehugger.com.
GIFT WRAP
Think about how much paper is wasted during the holiday's. Eight crazy nights of Hanukkah, followed by one explosion of greed on Christmas day produces enormous amounts of paper gift wrap, gift bags, tissue stuffing, ribbons and bows that end up in the landfill. Why not help eliminate some of this waste and use some creative new ways to wrap this year like using the funny pages of the newspaper that you were going to toss anyway, or using brown paper bags with a pretty bow?
ORNAMENTS
Artist Jeff Clapp turns discarded aluminum oxygen canisters from Mt. Everest into decorative bells for $2,400 a pop. The leftover aluminum shavings make a nice tree ornament that someone might actually buy (the "Everest" balls are $48 for four at Eco-Artware.com). You can also use that pile of holiday greeting cards you get in the mail to decorate. Use hemp twine to hang them around the house, or even use them as tree decorations if you are desperate. For those of us with slightly deeper pockets and less propensity for crafts, check out Sprig.com's Greener Holiday section for some suggestions on where to find fanciful recycled glass bulbs, red and white eco-felt birds, birch-bark trees, and reclaimed tin angels that will turn your living room into an eco-friendly winter wonderland this holiday season.
WREATHS
Murray Buechner was full of suggestions in this area. "An original door hanging fashioned out of retired aluminum street signs can be ordered for $140 at Eco-Artware.com, where you'll also find step-by-step instructions for creating a "silver bell" wreath using old soda cans and fishing line," she said. "McFaddenFarm.com, meanwhile, sells handmade garlands and wreaths of fresh bay leaf (harvested from the hills of Northern California, where it grows wild) that provide more than enough herb to cook with for six months or more."
CANDLES
My mother always liked to burn candles during the holidays. She said it brought ambiance to an already flammable situation. But Murray Buechner suggested an update. "Toss the old ones—they could have lead wicks, which are toxic when burned and were banned in the U.S. only as recently as October 2003 (visit cpsc.gov for details). And choose soy, vegetable wax or beeswax—all renewable and biodegradable materials—over paraffin wax candles, which are petroleum based. Big Dipper Wax Works' 100% beeswax candles run $10 to $24 at 3Rliving.com," she said. Another place to find awesome candles is Eco-Mall, which carries incense, baskets, stationary and toys that will make decorating, carding and gift giving a greener proposition.
But maybe your like me and you don't really feel safe with fire at family functions. In that case, try the Sun Jar, a jelly jar that will store the sunlight for you to use at night. It's an LED light with a small solar panel that will pick up solar energy, store and provide light for up to 5-hours. It's available for $40 at Elsewares.com. Don't want to spent the $40? Learn how to make one at home at Instructables.com. They make great gifts too.
Tuesday, November 27, 2007
Iraq's new export: Opium
A side-effect of every war is the surge of two markets fed: natural resources and the black market. Natural resources are generally an after effect - think the oil crisis of the late 1970's and the Iran/Iraq War, and cotton/textile market growth after the Civil War. As far as the black market is concerned, drug prices are an obvious reflection on business.
During the Vietnam, the US saw a surge in heroine sales, thanks in no small part to the entrepreneurial spirit of Frank Lucas, now famed through the hit movieAmerican Gangster. Today, the drug of choice is opium.
It is no coincidence that the opium crop was up 90 percent in 2006. And a report released in May in The Independent reflects the rise of the underground markets in Iraq as well. The problem that many exporters are having is getting their product out of the country, as the condition in Iraq are exceeding dangerous.
Cocaine prices maybe souring, but the heroin will be flowing by the end of next year around the globe. Expect a rise in the rate of heroine overdoses over the next six to nine months.
Buddhist traditions hang in the balance
The Associated Press reports that the Dalai Lama has agreed to hold an election among his people prior to his death to determine his successor. This is an enormous break with tradition and his religious beliefs, but the step has been taken for political reasons: to prevent China from appointing the next Dalai Lama.
Buddhists believe that when the Dalai Lama dies, he is reincarnated, and the leader is found, not chosen. For centuries, the search for the reincarnation of religious leaders, known as lamas — including the Dalai Lama, Tibet's spiritual head — has been carried out by Tibetan monks following the leaders' deaths. For an election to be held prior to the death of the Dalai Lama is to deny their entire belief system.
China has been pressuring the monks of Tibet for years to come into line with the leadership of the Communist Republic, but the predominantly religious state has resisted. Recently, China has ramped up its efforts to secularize Tibet, and attempted to assert the atheist, communist government's iron-fisted control. The Dalai Lama has obviously resisted. By initiating elections, he has side-stepped China's ability to appoint a pro-Chinese leader in Tibet upon his death.
"If I die today, there will be some setback to the Tibetan struggle," he said "But the Tibetan spirit will not go away with my death."
Heroes do exist: Cockburn Speaks
Patrick Cockburn, discusses “The Surge: A Special Report” which he wrote for the Independent, where he is Middle East correspondent: the split between the Sadr and Hakim factions; American propaganda that Iran is behind Sadr and the Mahdi Army and the “new” EFP bombs; the widespread humanitarian catastrophe; the occupation and sectarian war it has created; divisions in Kurdistan; the crisis in Kirkuk; predictions in the event of an eventual withdrawal; the redirection toward the Sunni insurgency; the unimportance of Allawi, Maliki or anyone else America installs in power; the danger to U.S. soldiers in Iraq if Cheney bombs Iran; predictions for the short and long term
Visit the site for the MP3. The audio is long, 43 minutes to be exact, but well worth it to get some perspective on what is going on inside of Iraq from a journalist who spent two years in Baghdad both leading up to, and post-invasion. After leaving the country in 2006, Cockburn authored a book,The Occupation: War and Resistance in Iraq that has inspired me over and over again to be educated and open-minded in preparation for becoming a foreign correspondent.
Riots in France: Night 2
You can mute you computer if you don't speak French, the visuals are compelling enough.
For the second consecutive night, riots broke out in Villiers les Bel, 12 miles north of Paris. The riots are in response to the deaths of two African-born youths which occurred after their motorbike collided with a police car.
Though police attempted to revive the 15- and 16-year-old boys using mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, the primarily poor, immigrant population of Villiers le Bel has risen up with a violent response as seen in the video above. Seventy-seven police officers have been injured so far, many vehicles and several business have been torched, and the rioters continue to elude police in pursuit by use of the labyrinths within local project apartment houses.
These images are nothing compared to what I found earlier on YouTube, but most of the private party produced posts have been removed due to "violent content."
This is reminiscent of the LA riots in 1992, following the Rodney King verdict. The police felt they were unjustified, and the people destroyed their own neighborhoods.
Check beck for better footage.
Bush Admin: Iraq "ready to stand up on its own"
Lute's statement came in response to a vague, ambiguous, non-binding agreement negotiated between Bush and Iraq Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki, which effectively guarantees relations between the US and Iraq post-Bush. The declaration calls for the U.N. mandated control of Iraq, a condition that has been in effect since sanctions were put into place in 1990, to be extended one year. It will then replaced at the end of 2008 with bilateral governing the of economic, political and security aspects of the US/Iraq relationship - in other words, the US-led occupation will continue without a UN mandate.
It's dealings like this that make it clear the Bush Administration is looking to save face and abandon ship prior to his departure from office. Though there are no moves to leave Iraq militarily, politically the US is not making clear commitments to reconstruction.
Violence is continuing to increase and there is less support for the reconstruction effort.
Mideast peace talks breed stupidity
Appearing in the United States Naval Academy’s Memorial Hall, flanked by Prime Minister Ehud Olmert of Israel and Mahmoud Abbas, the president of the Palestinian Authority, President Bush announced today that peace talks between Israel and the Palestinian Authority will resume by the end of 2008.
New York Times reports that Bush was insistent of a commitment to a return to the negotiation table because he believes peace in this conflict is central to the "broader struggle against extremism in the MIddle East."
It never ceases to amaze how out of touch this man really is with reality. Forty-nine countries in the world still do not recognize the Nation of Israel. Palestinians will not settle for a country "side-by-side" with Israel if it does not include the return of their land, especially Jerusalem, a city that the Israelis will not concede. And the issue in the Israel/Palestine conflict is neither extremist, nor does it have to do with terrorism. It is a fundamental struggle over land rights.
What history books are in the Oval Office anyway?
Verizon's expanding options
Interesting questions remain however, and anyone who has been with Verizon long enough to lose a phone is already asking: What about sim cards? Verizon has notoriously maintained a policy of not carrying phones equipped with sim cards as a "theft deterrent." It will be interesting to see how the company incorporates sim card-ready phones into their network.
Also, domestic Verizon phones have historically not been internationally compatible. If you wanted to take your Verizon Network with you across the ocean, you had to purchase a new phone. Does this new announcement mean that Verizon is officially going global? We shall have to wait and see as the details on today's announcement are ironed out.
Tuesday, November 20, 2007
Apologies
I apologize.
Those were the stories that stuck out like a sore thumb as I perused the wires and the pages of the Metro.
I promise, tomorrow will be more upbeat.
Rape. Murder. Interpol. Facebook. Better than OJ
Meredith Kercher, a 21-year-old British international college student studying in Italy was raped and murdered Nov. 1.
Suspects from multiple countries have been arrested in the case.
On Nov. 6, Amanda Knox, 20, the victim's American roommate who is a student of University of Washington was arrested along with her Italian boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito, 24. Knox implicated Patrick Lumumba Diya, 38, a Colognese musician and bar owner in an interview following her arrest.
Seems that there is a lot of finger-pointing going around, and that the young undergrads were highly interested in sexual experimentation. There have even been suggestions that Kercher was killed because she refused to engage in an orgy, and that upon refusal, she was raped while Knox held her down with a grip so strong that it left her fingerprints in Kercher's arms.
Today, in an Interpol operation, German police arrested Rudy Herman Guede, 21, whose fingerprints had been found at the bloody scene. Police found Guede trying to board a train between the German cities of Mainz and Koblenz without a ticket. He was tracked down in Milan when he momentarily turned on his cell phone, and then traced through a communication he sent on Facebook.
Following Guede's arrest, Diya was released from jail.
For gorey details, check out the dedicated Wiki page , or this article in The Independent.
Saudi rape victim sentenced to lashing, 6 months.
The 19-year-old Shi'ite woman and a male companion were abducted and raped by seven men in 2006. According to Saudi law, the woman was originally sentenced to 90 lashes for being alone with an unrelated man, and 10 months to five years in jail for each of the rapists, but the sentence was increased last week because the woman provoked response from the media.
The court also disciplines the girl's attorney, Abdul-Rahman al-Lahem, forcibly removing him from the case for discussing it with the media.
The US State Department made a rare rebuke of the ruling, and New York-based Human Rights Watch has made a direct appeal to King Abdullah to intervene on the girl's behalf.
( Read more. )
Tuesday, November 13, 2007
Hit in head by airplane: Now that's a bad day.
An NBC affiliate in Georgia reports that a 44-year-old woman was hit in the head by an airplane. Talk about a bad day. A 77-year-old man was piloting the plane and taxiing for take off when she walked under the wing. Genious move lady.
Read the story here.
I move that American medical insurance companies begin using IQ scores as another qualification for medical coverages.
Stardust Implosion - The End of an Era
Everyone's talking about the implosion of the Sands in Atlantic City, but as usual, AC pales in comparisson to the glitz and glamour of Las Vegas. This weekend, the Frontier, my favorite place for hotdogs and blended margaritas saw its end. Check out the clip on CNN here.
But the video above is from the implosion of the Stardust, which closed in November 2006 and imploded Mar. 13, 2007.
Best of the best as far as I'm concerned.
Thursday, November 08, 2007
Global warm my cold buttocks
Two years ago, everyone was pointing to the skies saying, "See, all of these hurricanes are a sign of global warming." Some people even went so far as to say that "Hurricane frequency is a sign of global climate change." Fundamentalists we screaming from the rooftops that the hurricanes were a sign of end-times, and Jesus was back in fashion for a moment.
With Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth winning a Oscar this year and Green Week making its debut on Sunday Night football, it is clear that America has embraced the concept of global warming. Stage One complete.
But what the hell are we doing about it?
Generally, nothing. And Danish economist Bjorn Lomborg argues that as long as we continue to focus on socioeconomic problems in the world - like poverty, starvation and Bob Geldoff concerts - that isn't such a horrible approach. Lomborg released a "Cool It: The Skeptical Environmentalists Guide to Global Warming" earlier this year in which he essentially argues that if global warming is happening, there is nothing that can be done at this point to stop it. What needs to be done at this point is to invest money into developing nations now to limit poverty and the harmful effects of developing without concern for the environment. At least this will slow the process of global warming a bit, and it will allow many impoverished people to die with a bit more money, right? (Click here to hear him talk about it.)
Is Lomborg right?
Well, from a hurricane standpoint, he may not be wrong. Perhaps the media is hyping this idea of global warming a bit. I mean, really, do you remember hearing about a hurricane this year?
As of Octobers end, the Atlantic listing with the National Hurricane Center was only up to Kiko, which means it was at 11 for the year, and believe me when I tell you they were mostly weak cyclones - certainly not the category 4 or 5's that Katrina and Rita showed us in 2005.
One. Hurricane Felix back in August, killed 101 people in clay huts in the Dominican Republic. One. Hurricane Dean threatened winds over 160 mph.
One. Hurricane Flossy posed any threat in the Pacific ocean at all.
Yeah, it was hot in October. So what? It's hot in January in California every year. You know what they call it? Earthquake season. The truth is that the weather is unstable, and you certainly can't predict what it is going to be. That's why network news stations pay so-called meteorologists millions of dollars to make their best guesses about it.
I'm not saying that global warming is a lie, merely saying: Stop looking at temperatures as a reflection of greenhouse gases. It don't work that way. I swear.
24 Postponed by writers strike
Californication is sweeping the nation, and apparently even affecting the immortal Jack Bauer. The Associated Press reports that Fox's hit show '24' was not on the network's revised midseason schedule, and its premier will be delayed indefinitely to ensure that there will be a continuous 24-episode run.
Looks like Jack will have to wait to jump the shark one more time.
(Read more.)
Wednesday, November 07, 2007
New Jersey Gay Marriage TV Ads
Two liberal New Jersey groups are debuting pro-gay-marriage television commercials beginning tonight. Garden State Equality and Blue Jersey are running the spots on News 12 New Jersey for the next two weeks to motivate lawmakers to pass laws that would allow same sex marriages in New Jersey.
The state presently sanctions civil unions, but the groups say that civil unions do not provide enoug protections for gay couples.
The groups say that the ads will run longer if they can raise enough funds to keep them on the air.
Sarkozy and Bush get all buddy buddy
But President Sarkozy says he would like to see aggressive action only as a last result to diplomatic efforts, or what he calls "the outstretched hand of dialogue" because he says Iran deserves better than isolation. "It is unacceptable that Iran should have at any point a nuclear weapon, but Iran is entitled to the energy of the future which is civilian nuclear energy," said President Sarkozy. "I believe in the effectiveness of sanctions. I believe even in the need to toughen the sanctions." Bush also emphasized the need for diplomacy. Guess the whiskey loosened his lips for the entire international community. "The idea of Iran having a nuclear weapon is dangerous," said President Bush. "And therefore now is the time for us to work together to diplomatically solve this problem."
Iran says it is not secretly developing nuclear weapons. The government in Tehran says it is enriching uranium solely for the peaceful civilian purpose of generating electricity. While Russia and China are resisting tougher UN sanctions, France is with the United States and Britain in calling for harsher Security Council action against Iran.
(Read more.)
President Sarkozy says Bush needs to come to France and sample the wine selection at Palaise de l' Elysees soon.
Brace yourselves for the pro-France campaign due to start in December across the US. Public relations experts and press advisors for the President are already brainstorming ideas. I wish them luck in finding something more creative than "Freedom Fries."
Photo : Aug. 7, 2007 Bush and Sarkozy took a boat ride to Goat Island in Kennenbunkport, Maine. (BRIAN SNYDER/Reuters)
Pakistan can not be target for invasion
In a traditional ramp-up for "preemptive strikes" American military and government begin the churning of the propaganda machine with talks of nuclear armament. Recall the UN imspections in Iraq (recent reports reveal that these the US military was preparing for them in the Clinton-era) and the present converstation about Iran. But don't let this rhetoric about Pakistan fool you. The US will not be invading Pakistan any time soon.
According to a Reuters report released today, the military is not only aware of the nuclear weapons, but it is monitoring their positions with a high level of priority.
"Any time there is a nation that has nuclear weapons that has experienced a situation such as Pakistan is at present, that is a primary concern," Lt. Gen. Carter Ham told reporters. "However, we'll watch that quite closely and I think that's probably all I can say about that at this point."
Pakistan houses its nuclear devices on the opposite end of the country from its launch devices, so any preparations for a nuclear strike would not go unnoticed by American military intelligence agencies. Additionally, Pakistan is an important ally for the military efforts in the Middle East.
Pakistan receives about $80 million a month from the United States for counter-terrorism efforts, which include manning posts along the Afghan border meant to help stem the flow of Taliban and al Qaeda fighters.
With that aid review ongoing, Ham said the military needs to ensure both the flow of supplies through Pakistan to U.S. troops and Pakistan's continued cooperation along the border.
"From an operational standpoint, those are the two most significant concerns," he said when asked about the U.S. review of aid.
Gorillaz usher in the era of Multimedia music
Remember these guys? This song takes me back to ninth grade gym class when we used to convince Mr. Washburn that we had cramps and could run the mile on Friday's, then we would sit on the bleachers and listen to mellow music that rebelled against the mainstream of the period.
Well, if they we rebelling and forging ahead into new creative territory then, wait until you hear what they are into now.
Nov. 6, Gorillaz released an autobigraphical graphic novel entitled "Gorillaz: Rise of the Ogre," (Riverhead Trade Paperback, $20) which was concieved and compiled by acclaimed comic book writer Jamie Hewlett ("Tank Girl"). The art is in the same style as their classic video "Clint Eastwood," seen above, and the story is a compilation of "half-truths, lies, jokes and time-wasting information" according to bassist Murdoc Niccals.
The story is a a spoof on "Hammer of the Gods: The Led Zepplin Saga," documenting the "virtual band's" rise to fame with demented tails of adventure and debauchery. It spans from demonic possessions, underworld dealings and amnesia to stupidity, stadium tours and high-profile collabroations with artists like Madonna and Ike Turner.
So bust out your Starter jacket, put on your headphones and let yourself jump back into the era when hit music-video station "The Box" played the music "You want to hear" and you could fall into the multimedia cartoon world filled with the disgruntled soft-rock of the Gorillaz.
AIDS vaccine got a cold
My analysis: Anyone who is will ing to put the AIDS virus into their blood stream, dead or alive, is insane. The idea that there can be a vaccine developed against a virus that is constantly adapting is insane as well.
Think of flu vaccines. Every year, people get the flu vaccine, which is essentially an injuection of dead virus cells from the strain of flu that reseachers feel is most likely to spread over the course of the flu season and allowing their bodies to develop an immunity to that strain. And every year, people inevitibly get sick from the flu anyway. Why? Because they catch a different strain of the virus.
The same thing will happen with AIDS.
"There is something magical about the replicating virus, because it has virtually its entire genome," IAVI head Dr. Seth Berkley said in the Time article and that genome adapts, adjusts grows and changes every year and with each new host.
A vaccine is not the answer to AIDS. It's not small pox or even chicken pox which are both stable viruses effecting each host in much the same way. Creative research by Berkeley's group is investigating ways to stimulate so-called neutralizing antibodies, a special class of antibodies that appear to be able to defuse HIV. This is the kind of research that needs to be funded with $25 million grants from the Gates Foundation, not vaccines.
Time: Facebook more popular than porn
A study done by Bill Tancer, the general manager of global research at Hitwise.com, revealed that social networking sites are accessed more often by this demographic than even traditional email accounts.
A new era in communication has arrived, and Facebook seems to be rapidly taking over.
Visits to porn sites have dropped from 16.9% of all site visits in the U.S. in October 2005 to 11.9% as of last week, a 33% decline. Currently, for web users over the age of 25, Adult Entertainment still ranks high in popularity, coming in second, after search engines. Not so for 18- to 24-year-olds, for whom social networks rank first, followed by search engines, then web-based e-mail — with porn sites lagging behind in fourth. (Read more)While older groups of web surfers are still caught up on their virtual sexual encounters, living vicariously through a camera lens which sees more action then most of they "whackers" will in a lifetime, the younger generation is happy hunting on social-networking pages.
Now the question waiting to be answered is: can Facebook resist the temptation to commercialize, and capitalize on this massive network by going corporate.
Please, Facebook. Don't sell out. We are begging you.
Tuesday, November 06, 2007
Congress has no balls
Is this a sign that Congress is prepared to send and international message and hold the present administration accountable? Don't count on it.
The vote started out along party lines, but midway through House Republicans began taking direction from GOP leadership and actually changed votes to bring the issue to the floor for debate. With the turnaround, the total was 251-162 against tabling the proposal. But in the end Democrats faltered, and they moved to refer the resolution to House committee where it will be buried.
Too bad Dems don't have the balls to push a trial in which Cheney has to atone for shooting his buddy in the face, war profiteering with the Hallibutonization of Iraq, or wagging the dog with tales of weapons buried in the desert. Too bad.
But this country has a record of challenging leadership decisions that were distasteful across the board. I thought, in honor of the gross politicking taking place on Capitol Hill, I would take a moment to examine what exactly impeachment is.
What is it?
The US Constitution states in Article II, Section 4 that "The President, Vice President, and all civil officers of the United States shall be impeached and removed from office for conviction of treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors," and it commissions the House of Representatives to press charges and empowers the Senate alone to make the final decision on removal.
Ambiguity of it all
"High crimes and misdemeanors" is an ambiguous phrase. Abuse of power and serious misconduct in office fit this category, but one act that is definitely not grounds for impeachment is partisan discord. Several impeachment cases have confused political animosity with genuine crimes (think William Jefferson Clinton, impeached for saying he "Did not have sexual relations with [Monica Lewinsky]" which was probably a lie, but not an impeachable offense. Thus the reason it was important to prove that he had in fact committed perjury with this statement). This is often the most difficult part of the impeachment process for the public to digest and for the government to process because it is left up to Congress, the most bipartisan entity in the American government. Implication: The most political creature of government must put aside politics and put on their lawyer caps, viewing the issue at hand through legislative eyes.
It's a miracle anything ever happens in this country at all.
The History of Impeachment in the United States
There have been sixteen officials impeached in the US since the Constitution was ratified in 1796. Most were judges, and most were let off the hook or quit before they could be removed from office.
Small Fries
- William Blount, Senator, Tenn., plotted to incite Cherokees and Creeks to aid the British in assuming Spanish lands in Florida. He was voted out of office is just five days 1797.
- John Pickering, US District Court judge, New Hamp. An alcoholic with a propensity for disappearing and shunning duties, he was removed from office when he showed up drunk to hear a case in 1804.
- Samuel Chase, US Supreme Court associate justice, was charged on eight fabricated counts primarily surrounding his ruling in a treason case against John Fries. His impeachment was really payback by President Thomas Jefferson for the Marbury v Madison decision. He was acquitted in 1805.
- James Peck, US District Court judge, Tenn. Had a lawyer, Luke Lawless, jailed for contempt and revoked his license to practice for 18 months when Lawless published a letter in the newspaper rebutting Peck's ruling in a Louisiana Purchase land claim case. He was acquitted in 1831.
- West Humphreys, US District Court judge, Mo. In a post-Civil War case, he was charged with publicly calling for secession, aiding an armed rebellion, conspiracy, serving as a Confederate Judge, confiscating theproperty of government officials, and imprisoning a Union sympathiser with "intent to injure him." He failed to appear for his own hearing and was removed from office in 1862.
- William Belknap, secretary of war, was charged with taking bribes for appointing post tradesman. He resigned his office, but was acquitted in 1876.
- Charles Swayne, US District Court judge, Fla. He was charged with 12 counts of corruption and abuse of power, including filing false travel vouchers, improper use of private railroad cars, unlawfully imprisoning two attorneys for contempt, and living outside of his district but wasacquitted in 1905.
- Robert W. Archbald, US Commerce Court associate judge, was charged with 13 counts of corruption and abuse of power. His case revealed he had accepted gifts such as free trips to Europe. He was convicted on five counts and removed from office in 1913.
- George English, US District Court judge, Ill. He was charged with corruption, embezzling, failure to give impartial consideration to cases and for his abusive treatment of lawyers and litigants. He resigned in 1926 before he was tried.
- Harold Louderback, US District Court judge, Calif., was charged with corruption for his dealing of several bankruptcy cases and acquitted of all charges in 1933.
- Halsted Ritter, US District Court judge, Fla., was also charged with corruption for his dealing with bankruptcy cases and for charging exorbitant legal fees with the alleged intent to embezzel. He removed from office in 1936.
- Harry Claiborne, US District Court judge, Nev., was charged with tax evasion and removed from office in 1986.
- Alcee Hastings, US District Court judge, Fla. He was charged with taking $150,000 bribe for a lenient sentence, racketeering, corruption and perjury and removed from office in 1988.
- Walter Nixon, US District Court judge, Miss., spoke to a long-time friend and attorney, convincing him to drop a case against the son of Nixon's business partner. When asked by the FBI and before a grand jury about the matter, he denied involvement. He was charged with perjury and removed from office in 1989.
- President Andrew Johnson. There were actually two attempts at this. Division in Congress over Reconstruction led to the entrapment of Johnson. He was ultimately charged for breaking a law he had vetoed when he replaced his secretary of war. He was acquitted in 1868.
- President William J. Clinton. Remember Kenneth Starr. Remember the infamous blue dress. The charges initially began with a real estate scam commonly referred to as White Water. It turned into a sex scandal and Clinton was charged with perjury for stating that he did not sleep with a White House intern. He was acquitted in 1999.
- Richard Nixon. I won't bother going into details. If you don't know the story by now, read this.
Open-Source Going Mobile
If you thought your phone was still safe from those pescky hackers, you were wrong.
Google has announced that it is in the development stages on the first mobile open-source platform, Android. The basic principle: no one knows how to meet your needs better than you do, so why not give yourself the ability to choose applications for your phone that meet your needs.
Google released some details about its plans to alter how mobile applications are created and distributed, industry watchers are compiling a long list of follow-up questions about the Android platform and the Open Handset Alliance on Monday. A comprehensive overview is set for release on Nov. 12.
IDG News Service took a chance to talk to Rich Miner, a key member of Android's technical staff and a co-founder of the namesake company Google acquired in 2005, and ask him about the project.
2007 Election
Here's my vote. And even my justifications. I think the only thing I disagreed with here was Michael Nutter's actual ability to deal with the crime rate in Philadelphia. He is the better choice, but it is because he has more overall experience and a better sense of the city's pulse.
Thursday, November 01, 2007
(OMG!) Oh My Google!
The alliance now presents a powerful counterweight to Facebook, which, after opening up its site to developers last spring, has persuaded thousands of them to create programs for its users. The addition of MySpace, the world’s largest social network, and Bebo, the No.1 site in Britain, could also put pressure on Facebook to drop its own standard and join the alliance, called OpenSocial.
Facebook is refusing to join the alliance, but has not yet offered an explanation why.
Why don't they call it the United Federation of Players for all of the people that have degraded the concept of online social networks to meet markets or perhaps an ode to all the people that understand what these sites are really for - fun -, and adopt a flag bearing a planetary symbol to represent the global reach of social networks? That would certainly appeal to the Star Trek-loving tech geeks out there, and perhaps it would make a statement about the futility of such a merger. I mean really, the only real benefit here is to Google as it will grow its outlets for advertising sales.
When free speech costs too much
Albert Snyder sued Westboro Baptist church after a protest last year at the funeral of his son, Marine Lance Cpl. Matthew Snyder, who was killed in Iraq. He claimed the protests invaded and violated the sanctity of what was supposed to be a private ceremony.
The Associated Press reports that a jury agreed. On Wednesday, the church and three of its leaders — Fred Phelps and his two daughters, Phelps-Roper and Rebekah Phelps-Davis — were found liable for invasion of privacy and intent to inflict emotional distress. Jurors awarded Snyder $2.9 million in compensatory damages and $8 million in punitive damages.
Snyder, of York, Pa., said he hoped other families would consider suing.
"The goal wasn't about the money, it was to set a precedent so other people could do the same thing," he said.
There is a point when any freedom goes too far, and although this is neither hate speech, nor is it speech intended to insight violence, treason or coup, it is blatantly disrespectful to, well, just about everyone.
The media is qualifying this group as right wing, but face it, they are challenging the boundaries of free speech, that is not a very right-winged thing to do. They are also doing so in the face of mourning survivors of dead Iraq War soldiers - ummm, hello McFly, that is no way to gain support with the right, or to be aligned with conservatives. It's no way to be aligned with anyone for that matter.
IN truth though, the Westboro Baptist church is not political, but rather they are fundamentalists, and the politicized label holds no water here anyway. But political labels, alignments and support are not what this group seeks.
The Christian Post report read:
Westboro Baptist, which is not affiliated with any Baptist denomination, holds an unorthodox view on predestination, the idea that God determined at the time of one's creation whether they were bound for heaven or hell.
While the belief, stemming from the teachings of John Calvin, is also taught in mainstream churches, members of Westboro Baptist particularly emphasize God’s hatred in spreading their message.
The members of the church, made up of mainly Pastor Fred Phelps and his relatives, also believe that they must alert the condemned of their fate even though such people have no chance of going to heaven. According to past media reports, the congregation prays that all of God’s chosen people will come to this church. When the last person comes, they believe, Christ will return and the world will end.
Given their background, it is not a surprise that most members of the church seemed pleased with the ruling. The Associated Press reported that they left the court room with tight-lipped smiles.
Rev. Phelps was confident an appeal would rule in their favor.
“Oh, it will take about five minutes to get that thing reversed,” he said.
Jonathan Phelps, son of Fred Phelps Sr, said the national media attention will just give church members another platform to preach their message.
Wednesday, October 31, 2007
Singapour Airlines offers private memberships to the Mile-High Club
Want to become a member of the Mile-High Club without concern over falling in to the toilet? Not is Singapore Airlines has anything to say about it.
Singapour Airlines made a public announcement today requesting that its passangers not to engage in sexual acts onboard its planes as it has begun flying its new A380 Airbus which are complete with 12 first-class private cabins. Though the cabins are not much more spacious than the standard airplane port-a-potty, they are more private. The airline released its statement according to BBC News upon learning that the cabins are not sound proof.
"All we ask of customers, wherever they are on our aircraft, is to observe standards that don't cause offence to other customers and crew," the airline said in a statement.
"Nothing different applies for our Singapore Airlines Suites customers."
Singapore Airlines took delivery of its first A380 earlier this month, with the first services between Singapore and Sydney starting on Oct. 25.
It is now set to take delivery of a further five A380s in 2008, out of its order of 19.
tuckerch Show Hide Marked as spam
We've had marriage equality here in Massachusetts for a few years now. We still have the lowest divorce rate in the US. Straight people are still getting married. Not a single church has been forced to marry a gay couple, nor will any church be forced to marry a gay couple.