Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Jack White Drops New Song, 'Love Interruption'

Track is from White's first solo album, Blunderbuss, due April 24.
By James Montgomery


Jack White
Photo: WireImage

Jack White hasn't exactly been living life outside the public eye since announcing the end of the White Stripes last year, making records with everyone from Tom Jones to the Insane Clown Posse and appearing on a (really pretty excellent) episode of "American Pickers," to name just a few of his endeavors.

And on April 24, he'll officially add "solo artist" to that résumé, with the release of Blunderbuss, the first album to bear his name — and his name only. And while we suppose the move was inevitable, according to White, he never really had any plans to go solo. In fact, Blunderbuss, the first album basically began life as a happy accident.

"I didn't really even think of recording under my own name for a long time," White told BBC Radio 1's Zane Lowe on Monday. "A few months ago, we had a session booked and someone didn't show up. So I said, 'I guess we'll do some of my songs' ... It kick-started the whole process."

In further kick-startery, White has also premiered the first song from the album, "Love Interruption" on his brand-new official site. A smoky, sumptuous mix of winsome Wurlitzer, acoustic guitar (and maybe a clarinet?), the song sees White harmonizing with Nashville singer Ruby Amanfu and lamenting over the power and promise of love. Yes, it is pretty great.

Fans can download "Interruption" now, and it will be available on 7-inch (of course) on February 7. Blunderbuss will be released through White's own Third Man Records, in conjunction with Columbia, and will reportedly feature contributions from the likes of Seasick Steve and Chris Thile, formerly of Nickel Creek.

Sound off on Jack's "Love Interruption" on our Facebook page!

Related Artists

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1678225/jack-white-love-interruption.jhtml

cliff harris cliff harris josh turner bishop eddie long barnaby barnaby giuliana rancic

Panasonic introduces Lumix DMC-ZS20 and ZS15 compact superzoom cameras

We've seen Panasonic's 2012 lineup of ruggedized and entry-level point-and-shoot cameras, but now the Japanese-based manufacturer is unleashing a pair of compact "Traveler Zoom" cams to the 2012 mix. The Lumix DMC-ZS20 and ZS15 include 20x (24-480mm) and 16x (24-384mm) optically stabilized zoom lenses, respectively, 3-inch 460k-pixel LCDs, 1/2.3-inch High Sensitivity MOS sensors and a 10 fps burst shooting mode (5 fps with continuous AF). The higher-end ZS20 features a 14.1 megapixel sensor and 1080/60p video shooting while the ZS15 captures 12.1 megapixel stills and 1080/60i HD clips. Both cameras include 0.1-second "Light Speed Autofocus" and top sensitivity levels of ISO 3200, though you'll need to opt for the ZS20 to take advantage of GPS with map logging and a noise-canceling stereo mic. The pair will ship in March, with a black, red, white or silver ZS20 running you $350, compared with a $280 price tag on the black or silver ZS15. As always, you'll find the full PR after the break.

Continue reading Panasonic introduces Lumix DMC-ZS20 and ZS15 compact superzoom cameras

Panasonic introduces Lumix DMC-ZS20 and ZS15 compact superzoom cameras originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 31 Jan 2012 00:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/01/31/panasonic-lumix-dmc-zs20-dmc-zs15/

dukan diet non hodgkin lymphoma lymphoma ciara world trade center memorial world trade center memorial spartacus

Monday, January 30, 2012

Joe. My. God.: Bill Clinton Causes Oral Cancer

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://joemygod.blogspot.com/2012/01/bill-clinton-causes-oral-cancer.html

the thin man republic wireless space ball drops on namibia prometheus colts colts matt barkley

Gingrich's baggage gives voters pause in Panhandle

Republican presidential candidate, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, with his wife Callista, bow their heads in prayer during a campaign event at the The Villages, Sunday, Jan. 29, 2012, in Lady Lake, Fla. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke))

Republican presidential candidate, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, with his wife Callista, bow their heads in prayer during a campaign event at the The Villages, Sunday, Jan. 29, 2012, in Lady Lake, Fla. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke))

(AP) ? Newt Gingrich's personal and political baggage is giving even the most hard-core Republicans pause in a conservative swath of the state.

"Not Gingrich" is how Annette Purvis says she plans to vote. "I've never liked Gingrich. Never. Never in the history of Gingrich."

She's turned off by what she calls his moral and ethical issues. He's been divorced twice, is an admitted adulterer and was the first House speaker to be reprimanded by his colleagues for ethical misconduct. All that has Purvis, a 49-year-old wife and mother from Laurel Hill near the Alabama border, looking elsewhere. "I'll probably do Romney," she adds, her hesitation apparent.

Marty Upfield, a 64-year-old retiree from Pensacola, seems equally uneasy with Gingrich. She, too, pointed to Gingrich's political record and personal background as a problem. She's considering voting for Mitt Romney, who she says isn't conservative enough, even though her political views are more in line with Gingrich's positions.

"But it is about trust," says Upfield. "I need to have a little more certainty that he's changed in some ways."

This deep reluctance to back Gingrich was voiced by many of the dozen and a half people interviewed last week in this city in the Florida Panhandle that borders the Gulf of Mexico to the south and west and Alabama to the north. Gingrich's past, it seemed, was heavily influencing decisions about who to back. Many said they were resigned to choosing Romney.

In one of the most conservative parts of the state, many of those interviewed said they see their political philosophy more in line with Gingrich ? who led the GOP revolution that took control of the House in 1994 ? than with Romney, the former Massachusetts governor who in the past has espoused more moderate positions on social issues. But many also said they're considering voting for Romney, or already did during the state's early voting period, because they fear that Gingrich's history ? both personally and professionally ? will hurt him in a general election match up against President Barack Obama.

"I really like him. He's one of the finest speakers. He's got fantastic memory and recall," said Tim Fuller of Gingrich.

But Fuller, 68, and wife Vicki, 67, didn't pick him.

"We voted for the more electable candidate," Fuller said, adding that they chose Romney ? "the lesser of two evils."

On the minds of many interviewed: Gingrich's ethics case while serving as House speaker, the $1.65 million his businesses made off Freddie Mac before he criticized the mortgage giant during his campaign, and his three marriages.

"I like him. I like his mannerisms. I just don't think I can vote for him. There's too much out there," said Bonnie Meenen, 64. Romney may get her vote because of that.

Some also were put off by Gingrich's personality.

"I think Newt's temper is too short," said David Nobles, 57, who voted for Romney. "It came down to Newt and Mitt, and Mitt just seems like more presidential material than Newt."

That Gingrich, who has emerged as the more conservative alternative to Romney, doesn't have a lock on this part of the state, regardless of his flaws, may not bode well for his prospects in other, more diverse parts of Florida ahead of Tuesday's pivotal primary. And the reluctance among some Republicans here to embrace Gingrich indicates that Romney's strategy to raise questions about Gingrich's character may be working.

Over the past week, Romney and his allies have castigated Gingrich on the campaign trail and in TV ads blanketing the state.

"While Florida families lost everything in the housing crisis, Newt Gingrich cashed in," says a Romney campaign ad airing in this state. The commercial says that Gingrich collected more than $1.6 million from "the scandal-ridden agency that helped create the crisis."

Romney's team has taken a more subtle approach in attacking Gingrich for his flawed personal life. He has been emphasizing his own 42-year marriage to the same woman, as well as his five sons and numerous grandchildren, as a way to contrast himself to Gingrich. And an outside group backing Romney has run ads mentioning Gingrich's "baggage."

A Quinnipiac University poll released Friday showed Romney leading Gingrich, 38 to 29 percent. Among voters who identify as conservative, Romney and Gingrich are in a virtual tie.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-01-30-Florida-Panhandle%20Voters/id-73000d8ec5a943abaa3ed0e6f963bef9

w.e. christopher plummer katharine mcphee kevin hart idris elba kelsey grammer donald driver

Sunday, January 29, 2012

NBC: The Voice Extended Sneak Peek ? Meet Jesse Campbell!

One week from tonight The Voice returns, woohoo! In anticipation of this I have an extended sneak peek form the show that will introduce you to contestant Jesse Campbell. It has been Jesse?s life dream to be an artist and those dreams have been dashed time and time again. However The Voice is giving Campbell one more shot at making his life long dream come true. So do you think he will have the chops the make it all the way, well take little look at the below preview video clip to see. I have to say after watching the clip I am kind of intrigued by this guy. I can?t wait to see what really goes down when he get his chance to sing for Blake, Christina, Cee Lo and hunky Adam have to say about this guy. Actually I am just super excited for this show to come back. I admit that I am a bigger fan of The Voice than I am American Idol. Don?t hate me too bad for that. So now that you have seen one preview clip I want to let you know a couple of things. First be sure to keep checking back [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RightCelebrity/~3/3CVV-gZ8oYI/

2pac kabul build build miss usa 2011 miss usa 2011 stevie nicks

Yemeni president heads to US

FILE - In this Saturday, Dec. 24, 2011 file photo, Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh speaks to reporters during a news conference at the Presidential Palace in Sanaa, Yemen. Yemen's President's office says Yemeni leader Saleh has arrived in London en route to the U.S. (AP Photo/Mohammed Hamoud, File)

FILE - In this Saturday, Dec. 24, 2011 file photo, Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh speaks to reporters during a news conference at the Presidential Palace in Sanaa, Yemen. Yemen's President's office says Yemeni leader Saleh has arrived in London en route to the U.S. (AP Photo/Mohammed Hamoud, File)

(AP) ? A presidential spokesman says Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh has left Oman on route to the United States.

Spokesman Ahmed al-Soufi says Saleh has arrived in London and will leave later Saturday for New York for medical treatment in the United States. He gives no futher details.

Saleh left Yemen to neighboring Oman a week ago, planning to head to the United States, under pressure from Washington and others to leave his homeland to allow a more peaceful transition from his rule. In November, Saleh handed over his powers to his vice president and promised to step down completely.

But opponents say he has continued to interfere in the work of a unity government through his allies and relatives in key posts.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-01-28-ML-Yemen/id-4fb678882d104902b695735f5d2260fb

mario manningham holes courageous courageous red tide red tide norman mailer

Saturday, January 28, 2012

Let Me Finish

JACKSONVILLE, Fla.?These are boom times for hecklers. Republican members of Congress have scaled back public town hall meetings, chastened by the screams that embarrassed the old Democratic Congress. Powerful Democrats, meanwhile, get ?mic-checked? by Occupy protesters. And three of the four remaining Republican presidential candidates?Mitt Romney, Rick Santorum, and Newt Gingrich?are constantly on alert for hecklers. (Nobody seems to heckle Ron Paul; perhaps it?s unconstitutional.)

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=ec0e8a86b7588e08da7be4dd6c48a1c9

battlefield 3 review real housewives of new jersey coraline coraline jacqueline laurita mcfadden mcfadden

What really happened prior to 'Snowball Earth'?

Friday, January 27, 2012

In a study published in the journal Geology, scientists at the University of Miami (UM) Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science suggest that the large changes in the carbon isotopic composition of carbonates which occurred prior to the major climatic event more than 500 million years ago, known as 'Snowball Earth,' are unrelated to worldwide glacial events.

"Our study suggests that the geochemical record documented in rocks prior to the Marinoan glaciation or 'Snowball Earth' are unrelated to the glaciation itself," said UM Rosenstiel professor Peter Swart, a co-author of the study. "Instead the changes in the carbon isotopic ratio are related to alteration by freshwater as sea level fell."

In order to better understand the environmental conditions prior to 'Snowball Earth', the research team analyzed geochemical signatures preserved in carbonate rock cores from similar climactic events that happened more recently ? two million years ago ? during the Pliocene-Pleistocene period.

The team analyzed the ratio of the rare isotope of carbon (13C) to the more abundant carbon isotope (12C) from cores drilled in the Bahamas and the Enewetak Atoll in the Pacific Ocean. The geochemical patterns that were observed in these cores were nearly identical to the pattern seen prior to the Marinoan glaciation, which suggests that the alteration of rocks by water, a process known as diagenesis, is the source of the changes seen during that time period.

Prior to this study, scientists theorized that large changes in the cycling of carbon between the organic and inorganic reservoirs occurred in the atmosphere and oceans, setting the stage for the global glacial event known as 'Snowball Earth'.

"It is widely accepted that changes in the carbon isotopic ratio during the Pliocene-Pleistocene time are the result of alteration of rocks by freshwater," said Swart. "We believe this is also what occurred during the Neoproterozoic. Instead of being related to massive and complicated changes in the carbon cycle, the variations seen in the Neoproterozoic can be explained by simple process which we understand very well."

Scientists acknowledge that multiple sea level fluctuations occurred during the Pliocene-Pleistocene glaciations resulting from water being locked up in glaciers. Similar sea-level changes during the Neoproterozoic caused the variations in the global carbon isotopic signal preserved in the older rocks, not a change in the distribution of carbon as had been widely postulated.

###

University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine & Atmospheric Science: http://www.rsmas.miami.edu

Thanks to University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine & Atmospheric Science 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.

This press release has been viewed 52 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/117150/What_really_happened_prior_to__Snowball_Earth__

constitution day constitution day dolly parton stephen colbert running for president richard threlkeld moonrise kingdom coachella lineup

Friday, January 27, 2012

Rubio: Immigration not only issue for Hispanics (The Arizona Republic)

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, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/191764459?client_source=feed&format=rss

andy reid elf on the shelf elf on the shelf 2012 grammy nominations stephen sondheim los angeles news grammys 2011

Sponsored By:

We were unable to forward you to the advertisement you clicked on.

The likely cause for this is that your browser, feed reader, or email application is configured to not accept cookies, or your reader may launch an external browser to view links without sharing cookies.

  • If you're using Internet Explorer, make sure your privacy setting is at medium or below.
    • Select 'Internet Options' from the 'Tools' menu in your browser window
    • Click the Privacy tab
    • Adjust your privacy setting if necessary
      ?
  • If you're using a reader that embeds Internet Explorer (examples: Microsoft Outlook, Outlook Express, Feed Demon), you'll also need to select Internet Explorer as your default web browser.
    • Open Internet Explorer
    • Select 'Internet Options' from the 'Tools' menu in your browser window
    • Click the 'Programs' tab and check the box for Internet Explorer to check if it is the default browser and save your change
    • Close your browser, re-open it, and when prompted, select Internet Explorer as your default
    • You can then click on an ad in your newsletter and visit the site you wish to view

Source: http://ads.pheedo.com/click.phdo?s=6461aadc12955d126114ea5c54cb17e8&p=4

patrice patrice tether lana peters lana peters jennifer nettles jennifer nettles

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Vegas casinos relying more on baccarat (AP)

LAS VEGAS ? In the days before the Chinese New Year celebration began this week, six high rollers sat down at the private baccarat tables one day at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas and began throwing down wagers of $100,000 to $200,000 a hand. It was a scene hardly out of place these days in Sin City.

Big-time gamblers, primarily from Asia, are flocking to Las Vegas to play baccarat and providing a big lift to the overall bottom line of the city's casinos.

Baccarat has easily surpassed blackjack in terms of casino revenue in Las Vegas and now represents nearly 60 percent of the MGM Grand's table games revenue over the past year. It's especially popular this week with tens of thousands of tourists from Asia in town to celebrate the Chinese New Year.

"For us to make money in gaming today without baccarat is almost impossible," said Debra Nutton, senior vice president of casino operations at the MGM Grand hotel-casino. "We need the big whales to make money."

In Las Vegas parlance, a "whale" is a big-time gambler who easily wagers more in one night at the tables than most American families make in a year. Casinos cater to them with plush, secluded gambling salons inside the top casinos ? with baccarat games that often start out at a minimum $10,000 per hand.

The whales typically favor baccarat ? a game romanticized in James Bond flicks and highly popular in Macau and Singapore.

The game is built on a simple premise: Who will end up with a better hand, the player or the banker? Gamblers are dealt two cards and predict whether they will beat the banker, typically a position that rotates among the players at the table. Smaller tables, known as midi-baccarat, start at $100 limits and look more like large blackjack tables, skipping the rotating banker and leaving that role to the dealer. Even smaller-limit tables are called mini-baccarat.

Nevada figures show that during the 12 months ending Nov. 30, casinos statewide won $1.27 billion from baccarat players, with the game offered at 258 total tables in 24 casinos. Blackjack, meanwhile, pulled in just $1.03 billion ? even though it was offered across 2,810 tables in 151 casinos.

While casinos hope to pocket 12 percent of the money wagered on baccarat, the large amounts played in fewer bets mean big swings in revenue quarter to quarter, depending on how lucky the gamblers are.

Slots are still the most popular and lucrative form of gambling in Nevada, with nearly 165,000 machines over 330 locations including supermarket, gas stations and airports.

Baccarat has been the most lucrative table game since 2009, and has been increasing its share since then, according to an analysis of gambling revenues by Dave Schwartz, director of the Center for Gaming Research at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.

That's even though the game isn't widely offered, he said.

"The real high-end play is happening in maybe six or seven casinos," Schwartz said.

As Americans struggled during the Great Recession, Las Vegas casinos have worked harder to increase tourism from wealthy international visitors, especially Asians. Their game of choice, casinos say, is baccarat.

The MGM Grand is among those Strip casinos counting on their highest of high rollers coming to town this weekend for the Chinese New Year. Nutton said her casino could double the number of baccarat tables during the Chinese New Year and still be busy.

In addition to private flights and luxury accommodations, Nutton said casinos around Las Vegas attract baccarat play year-round by offering high-roller tournaments with million-dollar prize pools.

One three-day tournament held at the MGM Grand's mansion casino in early October cost $5,000 to enter and offered the winner $750,000, seven others at least $10,000 each, all participants a brand new tablet computer and a drawing among finalists for a 2012 BMW convertible.

Similar tournaments run several times a year around Sin City, Nutton said, in hopes that entrants will also play on their own and come back to each particular casino again.

Wynn Resorts Ltd. and Las Vegas Sands Corp., which run two casinos each on the Las Vegas Strip, derive the majority of their revenue from Asia, where baccarat is the undisputed king of games.

Caesars Entertainment Corp., which owns or manages 52 casinos in 12 U.S. states and seven countries, reported $6.66 billion in revenue from baccarat during the first 9 months of 2011. Over the same time, Sands ? with four casino-resorts in baccarat-heavy Asia and three in the United States ? beat that with $6.87 billion.

The casinos are fiercely competing for a relatively small number of players who can afford five- or six-figure bets, Nutton said.

"There's only that select universe," she said.

Schwartz said that if casinos become more dependent on baccarat's bottom line, they're in for less predictable results. From 2004 to 2010, baccarat showed to have the biggest variance among casino games in its hold percentage, the amount of money casinos keep from the amount wagered.

Hold is generally governed by complex math, designed so gamblers slowly lose money and the house always wins overall.

Between 2004 and 2010, the average hold for baccarat was 11.7 percent, but casinos statewide saw monthly hold for the game as high as 19.5 percent or as low as 3.6 percent.

If a player gets lucky one day and quickly wins several million dollars, casinos are reminded of it when they report their quarterly results, Schwartz said.

"A lot of the more business-oriented folks don't like this kind of volatility in the company," he said. "It's lucrative, but it's also risky."

Steve Rosen, chief marketing officer at Santo Gaming , which runs the Plaza Las Vegas casino in downtown Las Vegas, said he still expects baccarat to become more popular as more people learn to play, casinos add more tables designed for smaller limits and companies keep pushing to attract Asian customers.

"I think a lot of casinos are trying to, they just don't understand how yet. You're going to see more and more baccarat and you're going to see baccarat become more mainstream," Rosen said. "You can't have 91 percent of revenues across the world coming from one game and not have people here paying attention to it."

Tim Fong, co-director of the UCLA Gambling Studies Program, said several cultural factors among Asians combine to encourage gambling, especially during the holiday.

Generations of Chinese citizens, for example, accept gambling in society and also strongly value notions of luck and predetermined destiny, Fong said. Many lived as farmers or peasants before China liberalized its economy, and looked forward to the new year in part because it was the only time they could take a genuine break from work.

"It's much more driven by (the idea that) things are predetermined. It's kind of, well, this is our opportunity to almost test the fates, test our luck as to what's in store for us for the next coming year," Fong said. "There's a lot of value placed on if you do and win really well ... then you're going to have a great year.

"It's kind of like a little litmus test, if you will," he said.

___

Oskar Garcia can be reached at http://twitter.com/oskargarcia

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120126/ap_on_en_ot/us_baccarat_vegas_casinos

mash alec baldwin kicked off plane alec baldwin kicked off plane mumia mumia uss arizona memorial uss arizona memorial

The West's inimical posturing on Iran (The Week)

New York ? The EU approves a ban on Iranian oil imports, but what the West really needs is a complete reappraisal of its dealings with Tehran

The standoff over Iran's nuclear program threatens the health of the global economy and risks boiling over into armed conflict. Western preoccupation with the Iranian nuclear program has reached new extremes as Europe and the U.S. have taken measures against Iran that are clearly contrary to their own economic self-interests. Worst of all, these measures are likely to harm ordinary Iranians without changing regime behavior on the nuclear issue.

The recent European Union decision to ban Iranian oil imports and freeze assets of Iran's central bank has contributed to the worsening tensions between Iran and Western governments. Europe's embargo on Iran makes no sense as a matter of European self-interest, since some of the countries that are most dependent on Iranian oil also have the weakest economies in Europe and the heaviest loads of debt. Particularly for Greece, which imports a third of its oil from Iran, the prospect of increased energy prices could hardly have come at a worse time. Even though Iran's threats to close the Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly 20 percent of the world's oil supply passes, are almost certainly empty ones, the mere possibility of it is enough to roil oil markets and dampen global economic growth.?

SEE MORE: Will Iran execute an American citizen?

?

If Western governments continue to pressure and cajole Iran, it gives Tehran more incentive to cross the line.

U.S. sanctions on Iran's central bank have already done significant damage to the Iranian economy by undermining confidence in Iran's currency. Ordinary Iranians are being subjected to economic suffering as the rial plummets, prices soar, and their savings are destroyed. At the same time, these sanctions pose a threat to the international oil market and could cause a spike in energy prices, which jeopardizes the slow economic recovery here in the U.S. and around the world.

SEE MORE: Will Europe's Iranian oil embargo backfire?

?

Europe's oil embargo will likely have little effect on Iranian regime behavior. Iran expects to be able to offset lost revenues from Europe with new sales to China and other Asian countries that have great demand for energy and do not have the same fixation on the nuclear issue. For its part, China has no interest in cutting itself off from a major energy supplier for the sake of a U.S.-led policy that it doesn't support. India relies on Iran for over a tenth of its oil supply?and it has announced that it will continue to buy from Iran. Japan has been reducing its imports from Iran in recent years, but it still cannot afford to cut itself off from Iranian oil completely, and has requested waivers from the latest round of sanctions.

Because sanctions and embargoes seem unlikely to change Iran's behavior, it will just be a matter of time before the advocates for these latest sanctions will begin agitating for even "tougher" measures to coerce Iran into accepting U.S. and allied demands. When sanctions fail to isolate Iran as planned, Americans will begin hearing more about the supposed necessity of military action to delay Iran's nuclear program. Attacking Iran would have adverse consequences for all parties involved and for the global economy. The U.S. must not blunder into another unnecessary "preventive" war. It would be a grave mistake, as well as a violation of international law. What is needed instead is a reappraisal of our entire Iran policy.

SEE MORE: 6 so-called vices banned by Iran's morality police

?

Iran clearly desires to have a nuclear capability, but as far as anyone can tell, the regime has not yet decided to build nuclear weapons. This is a critical distinction that needs to inform all policymaking toward Iran. If the U.S. and its allies handle the nuclear issue wisely, the regime may not opt for nuclear weapons at all. If Western governments continue to pressure and cajole Iran, however, it gives Tehran more incentive to cross that line.?

The real focus of the nuclear standoff concerns Iran's enrichment of uranium, to which Iran is formally entitled under the Non-Proliferation Treaty. So long as the U.S. insists on halting Iranian enrichment, Iran's government cannot yield without suffering humiliation that would follow from backing down over an issue that it has insisted was a matter of Iranian national rights. This is why it is imperative that the U.S. and EU find terms for a nuclear deal that Iran can accept, so that the standoff can be resolved or at least so that tensions can be reduced.

SEE MORE: Iran downs a U.S. drone: Is 'all-out war' next?

?

Unfortunately, electoral politics in the U.S. may close the small window of opportunity for renewed talks that exists. President Obama's hawkish critics have regularly accused him of "appeasement" and "emboldening enemies," and nowhere more so than on his decisions relating to Iran. Even though these criticisms are baseless, they have shaped the way Iran's nuclear program and administration policy have been perceived at home, which leaves Obama with little room to maneuver. That may make it politically impossible for Obama to reach any deal with Iran, and Obama's Republican opponent will have no interest in negotiating for one.

View this article on TheWeek.com
Get Iran's Feb. 11 surprise

  • In-depth briefing: The struggle for Turkey's soul
  • Opinion Brief: Iran vs. tanning
  • Like on Facebook?-?Follow on Twitter?-?Sign-up for Daily Newsletter

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/oped/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/theweek/20120124/cm_theweek/223615

    apple keynote seattle news seattle news jenna fischer ben bernanke anwar al awlaki amanda knox

    Wednesday, January 25, 2012

    U.S. commandos free two pirate hostages in Somalia (Reuters)

    MOGADISHU (Reuters) ? U.S. special forces swooped into Somalia on Wednesday and rescued an American and a Dane after a shootout with pirates holding them hostage, in a rare raid into the Horn of Africa nation to free foreign captives.

    The aid workers, American Jessica Buchanan and Poul Hagen Thisted of Denmark, were kidnapped from the town of Galkayo in the semi-autonomous Galmudug region in October while working for the Danish De-mining Group.

    "This is yet another message to the world that the United States of America will stand strongly against any threats to our people," President Barack Obama said in a statement.

    Military helicopters ferried elite troops to the pirate camp in scrubland close to Haradheere, a major pirate base in central Somalia, Germany-based U.S. Africa Command said in a statement.

    "All nine captors were killed during the assault," it said.

    Defense Secretary Leon Panetta confirmed no American soldiers were killed in the operation.

    The Danish Refugee Council said Buchanan and Thisted were now at a safe location. Media reports said they had been flown to neighboring Djibouti, home to the only U.S. military base in Africa and France's largest base on the continent.

    Somali pirate gangs typically seize ships in the Indian Ocean and Gulf of Aden and hold the crews until they receive a ransom. The kidnapping of the aid workers in Galkayo was an unusual case of a pirate gang being behind a seizure on land.

    U.S. and French forces have intervened to rescue pirate hostages at sea, but attacks on pirate bases are rare.

    The U.S. raid was unlikely to deter pirates, who rake in tens of millions of dollars each year in ransoms.

    Danish Foreign Minister Villy Sovndal earlier said the poor health of one hostage had led the United States to take action.

    People involved with the hostages had said earlier this month Buchanan was suffering from a possible kidney infection. Pentagon officials, who would not elaborate on her condition, said the sense of urgency about her health had increased over the past two weeks.

    "About 12 U.S. helicopters are now at Galkayo. We thank the United States. Pirates have spoilt the whole region's peace and ethics. They are mafia," Mohamed Ahmed Alim, leader of the Galmudug region, told Reuters.

    He was speaking from Hobyo, a pirate base north of Haradheere, where he said he was negotiating the release of an American journalist seized on Saturday, also from Galkayo.

    "GOOD JOB TONIGHT"

    Pirates and local elders say the American journalist and a number of sailors from India, South Korea, the Philippines and Denmark are being held by pirate gangs.

    A British tourist kidnapped from Kenya on September 11, 2011 is also still held captive in Somalia.

    U.S. officials said the raid was carried out by a joint special operations force that included U.S. Navy SEALs as well as members of other U.S. military services.

    The raiding party arrived prepared to detain the kidnappers but were not able to do that and all nine were killed, Pentagon officials said. The kidnappers were heavily armed and had explosives nearby, said the officials, who could not confirm a link between the kidnappers and pirate gangs.

    The freed hostages were taken away by helicopter and placed under the care of U.S. military medical doctors.

    Obama was overheard congratulating Panetta on the success of the operation as the president entered the U.S. House of Representatives chamber on Tuesday for his annual State of the Union speech.

    Panetta had been at the White House, where he had monitored the progress of the operation, before the speech. The raid was still being wrapped up when the president spoke to him.

    "Leon. Good job tonight. Good job tonight," said Obama.

    Obama authorized the raid on Monday and military commanders gave the final go-ahead on Tuesday, Pentagon officials said. They said a confluence of factors, from the health of the hostages to the available intelligence and the weather prompted Washington to move ahead with the raid.

    "We're confident that there was enough of a sense of urgency, there was enough actionable intelligence to take the action that we did, for the president to make the decision that he did," said Navy Captain John Kirby, a Pentagon spokesman.

    Panetta visited U.S. troops in Djibouti last month on his way to Afghanistan and Iraq, in a stopover that reflected Obama's growing focus on the militant and piracy threats from Yemen and the eastern edge of Africa.

    In Djibouti, the United States has a platform to monitor al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula in Yemen and Somalia's al Shabaab, a hardline rebel group with links to al Qaeda.

    Somalia's government applauded the mission and said it welcomed any operation against pirates.

    U.S. special forces killed senior al Qaeda militant Saleh Ali Saleh Nabhan in a raid in southern Somalia in 2009. Several other al Qaeda or al Shabaab officials have been killed in U.S. drone strikes in Somalia over the past few years.

    It was also U.S. Navy SEALs who killed al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in a raid on his Pakistan home in May.

    (Additional reporting by Mohamed Ahmed in Mogadishu, John Acher and Mette Fraende in Copenhagen, David Clarke in Nairobi and Eric Beech, Phil Sewart and David Alexander in Washington; Writing by Richard Lough and David Clarke; Editing by Yara Bayoumy and Richard Meares)

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120125/us_nm/us_somalia_hostages

    critics choice awards marines urinating on taliban super pac dre kirkpatrick mls superdraft bald barbie school cancellations

    Tuesday, January 24, 2012

    Egypt's Hosni Mubarak Trial: Defense Concludes, Argues Ousted Leader Still President

    CAIRO -- Hosni Mubarak's lawyer concluded his defense on Sunday, arguing that the ousted leader should be acquitted of criminal charges because he is technically still the president of Egypt.

    Mubarak, who stepped down nearly a year ago, is charged along with his security chief and four police commanders of complicity in the killing of protesters during an 18-day uprising in January and February. They could face the death penalty if convicted. Mubarak and his two sons are facing separate charges of corruption in the same case.

    Farid el-Deeb, Mubarak's chief defense lawyer, said during the closure of arguments that spanned five court sessions that Mubarak did not formally resign and should enjoy immunity from prosecution.

    He said Mubarak gave verbal instructions to his vice president Omar Suleiman to announce that he was delegating the armed forces to "run the affairs of the nation," something that he said did not amount to a resignation.

    "This court is not qualified to try him and he must be acquitted," said el-Deeb, a suave celebrity lawyer.

    El-Deeb received a round of applause from other defense lawyers when he finished his statements. Lawyers for the victims responded with chants of, "Execution, execution," and, "Down, down with Mubarak."

    Addressing Mubarak, a former air force chief and a decorated war hero who ruled Egypt for 29 years, el-Deeb said: "You, Mubarak, are a wounded eagle in the sky. Don't be sad, be tough, for you are not any better than the Prophet."

    He was alluding to the persecution endured by Islam's seventh-century Prophet Muhammad during the early days of his prophecy in what is now Saudi Arabia.

    El-Deeb has argued in previous hearings that a 1979 law issued by Mubarak's predecessor Anwar Sadat gave the ousted leader immunity from being tried before a civilian court as a hero of the nation's 1973 war against Israel.

    Mubarak and his two sons, wealthy businessman Alaa and one-time heir apparent Gamal, were arrested in April following mass protests calling on the generals who took control of Egypt to detain them and try them. The trial began on Aug. 3.

    Nearly 40 stalwarts of the Mubarak regime, including two former prime ministers and several key cabinet ministers and regime-linked businessmen, are currently held in a prison south of Cairo. Some of them have been convicted and are serving jail terms, while others are awaiting trial.

    However, activists behind the uprising that toppled Mubarak's regime say the ruling generals, led by the ousted leader's defense minister of 20 years, are not serious about dismantling the former regime.

    They say the generals remained beholden to Mubarak, whose consent was essential to their rise through the ranks.

    Also on HuffPost:

    "; var coords = [-5, -72]; // display fb-bubble FloatingPrompt.embed(this, html, undefined, 'top', {fp_intersects:1, timeout_remove:2000,ignore_arrow: true, width:236, add_xy:coords, class_name: 'clear-overlay'}); });

    Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/22/egypts-hosni-mubarak-trial_n_1221895.html

    farrah abraham whats going on venus williams bowl projections bedlam bedlam cotto vs margarito 2

    Why does Mitt Romney have money in the Caymans? Two potential reasons.

    The Cayman Islands used to be known as a 'tax haven.' ?That's not necessarily true anymore, but there could be other reasons for Mitt Romney use the Caymans to store his millions.

    Mitt Romney?s official residence is Belmont, Mass., a suburb of Boston. But at least a part of his money resides in the Cayman Islands, best known to many Americans as a nice place to escape winter.

    Skip to next paragraph

    Mr. Romney says he reports his income from there and pays his taxes ? and will prove it in April or whenever he releases his taxes ? assuming he does.

    But why was it there in the first place?

    The Cayman Islands used to be known as a ?tax haven,? a place where people could set up an account with a friendly banker whose lips were sealed. However, tax experts, say in 2009 the Caymans agreed to exchange tax information with at least a dozen IRS-type organizations around the world. Suddenly, it became more difficult to hide assets or income and some banks actually shut down their operations on its sunny shores.

    But there could be other reasons to use the Caymans to store millions, other than the discreet bankers.

    One of the reasons could relate to Bain Capital, which Romney founded and ran from 1984 to 1999. The company could have been trying to attract foreign investors who did not want to deal with the US tax code. A Cayman Islands-based company could invest in US companies and then move their profits offshore.

    ?A company that is set up in the Caymans would not subject their foreign investors to US taxation,? says Seth Cohen, a principal in the accounting firm WeiserMazars in New York.

    But Romney is a US investor and must report his income to the IRS, which he apparently has done. ?Because he [Romney] is reporting this we know he is obeying the law,? says Mr. Cohen. ?If we did not know about his Cayman?s investment that would be a problem.?

    However, some other tax experts think Romney may have had a different reason for having money in the Caymans.

    While Romney says he paid taxes on his Bain investments,?Daniel Shaviro, a professor of taxation at New York University Law School, says Romney may have been trying to avoid paying a specific tax on investments made by his Individual Retirement Account (IRA).

    Mr. Shaviro thinks Romney may have invested some of his IRA money in ?super high performers.? But Romney wanted to increase his return on investment by getting his IRA to borrow so that he could buy even more of the stocks. However, under IRS rules Shaviro says, nonprofits such as IRAs that borrow to hold investments?face?something called the Unrelated Business Income Tax (UBIT).

    Shaviro hypothesizes that to avoid paying that tax, Romney?s lawyers set up a separate Caymans entity, which would borrow and buy the stocks. Romney?s IRA invested in that entity.

    ?Congress is sort of aware of this but has not changed the law,? says Shaviro. ?It is not a top secret tax planning trick but it is a common end-run around the purpose of the law.?

    If Shaviro is correct ? that the funds are accumulating tax-free ? in the Cayman Islands, Romney may have no reason to repatriate them to the US. ?It?s not as if he needs the money back here to pay his rent,? says Shaviro. ?Plus, if he did the same thing using a US entity, then it would face US corporate tax on the income.?

    Shaviro points out that Romney?s Cayman Islands stash is likely to be debated politically. ?If I was thinking of working with someone in business and I heard they had done this, I would not be upset,? he says. ?You could say he did something that any clever and savvy investor would do.? But, he adds, ?If you believe that someone who is running for President should live by a higher standard, then you could take offense at it.?

    Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/iZMtA26oqJ8/Why-does-Mitt-Romney-have-money-in-the-Caymans-Two-potential-reasons

    weldon danica patrick david garrard indy car kinder morgan zachary quinto zachary quinto

    Monday, January 23, 2012

    Cooley leads Irish to upset over No. 1 Syracuse

    Notre Dame students rush the court following their 67-58 victory over Syracuse of an NCAA college basketball game Syracuse, Saturday Jan. 21, 2012, in South Bend, Ind. (AP Photo/Joe Raymond)

    Notre Dame students rush the court following their 67-58 victory over Syracuse of an NCAA college basketball game Syracuse, Saturday Jan. 21, 2012, in South Bend, Ind. (AP Photo/Joe Raymond)

    Notre Dame guard Jerian Grant throws the ball into the stands as fans rush the court following Notre Dame's 67-58 victory over Syracuse in an NCAA college basketball game, Saturday Jan. 21, 2012, in South Bend, Ind. (AP Photo/Joe Raymond)

    Notre Dame guard Pat Connaughton celebrates following their 67-58 victory over Syracuse in an NCAA college basketball game on Saturday Jan. 21, 2012, in South Bend, Ind. (AP Photo/Joe Raymond)

    Syracuse guard Scoop Jardine (11) drives the lane as Notre Dame guard Eric Atkins pursues during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game, Saturday Jan. 21, 2012, in South Bend, Ind. (AP Photo/Joe Raymond)

    Syracuse forward CJ Fair (5)drives the lane between Notre Dame forward Scott Martin and Pat Connaughton during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game, Saturday, Jan. 21, 2012, in South Bend, Ind. (AP Photo/Joe Raymond)

    (AP) ? Mike Brey's viewing selection for his players the night before meeting top-ranked Syracuse was an easy choice. The Notre Dame coach showed a video of former Irish teams upsetting No. 1 teams over the years.

    Brey and the current group of Irish now have their own spot in that collection.

    Jack Cooley had 17 points and 10 rebounds against a Syracuse team missing its shot-blocking, rebounding center Fab Melo and the Irish surprised the top-ranked and previously unbeaten Orange 67-58 on Saturday night.

    Fans stormed the court after the Irish's rousing victory, hoisting players on their shoulders in a wild scene at the Purcell Pavilion. It was the eighth time Notre Dame has beaten a No. 1 team ? that ties for fourth-most all-time, with North Carolina having the most with 12.

    "Notre Dame has an unbelievable history against No. 1 teams," Irish forward Scott Martin said. "We saw a little video to just kind of pump us up a little bit."

    Cooley was certainly inspired.

    Without Melo in the middle, Notre Dame's 6-foot-9, 248-pound center was a major force as the Irish won the rebound battle 38-25.

    "I can't even describe this right now. They were 20-0. I can't put it to words how amazing this is," Cooley said. "We came out with energy. This was a great opportunity and we didn't want to squander it."

    Melo had started all 20 of the Orange's first games, was their leading rebounder with 5.7 a game, averaged 7.2 points and three blocks. School officials gave no explanation why the talented center did not make the trip. He will also miss Monday's game against Cincinnati.

    "We had all week to prepare for Melo (not playing). We didn't know for sure (he would not play), but we were prepared for it," Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim said, without elaborating on the reasons.

    "I don't know how he affected the game because he wasn't here."

    Syracuse guard Scoop Jardine said Melo was definitely missed but his absence was no excuse for such a weak offensive performance in their lowest scoring game of the season.

    "Fab is the key to our defense. He's an anchor. It wasn't that, though. Our offense wasn't going today," Jardine said. "Fab only averaged six points for us. That's not too much points."

    James Southerland scored 15 points for Syracuse, which shot just 34 percent and was 7-for-23 on 3-pointers. Martin added 13 for Notre Dame, which hit 50 percent of its field-goal attempts.

    Southerland's 3-pointer with 53.9 seconds left brought the Orange to within 62-56 before the Irish held on as Jerian Grant sank four free throws in the final 32 seconds.

    It was the first time the Irish have beaten a top-ranked team since 1987 when they defeated North Carolina, also in South Bend. One of the Irish's most dramatic victories over a No. 1 came in 1974, when they stopped UCLA's 88-game winning streak by 71-70, also on the Irish's homecourt.

    Hence the video selection from Brey.

    "I just wanted them to see the history of our place against No. 1s," Brey said. "I mean, we were channeling all week as much as possible. In the midst of the videos, I had our guys doing good things and making big plays. It was only about five minutes, but it was really well done and we watched it last night in the team meeting.

    "It is awesome that the players have said that they wanted to see me in some of them. ... This is a great memory for them. This is the kind of thing that will be talked about at the reunions when they come back in 10 years."

    Boeheim was denied his 877th career victory, which would have put him in sole possession of fourth place among Division I men's coaches.

    Notre Dame led in the first half by as many as 18 and was up 35-23 at the half, shooting 54.4 percent and holding the Orange to 2.6 (8-for-18). Syracuse was only 4-of-13 from the 3-point line and was beaten on the boards 20-13 as Notre Dame seemed to be half-step quicker.

    "We knew that. It's been like that all year for us. We're the No. 1 team in the country and we're going to get everybody's best shots," Jardine said. "We knew Notre Dame was going to come out and make some shots. ... We didn't bounce back fast enough, and that's why we lost."

    Syracuse got off to a better second-half start and whittled the lead to eight less than three minutes in. But Martin hit another 3-pointer for the Irish as the shot clock was winding down and Cooley ? benefiting from Melo's absence ? bulled his way in for a layup to restore the lead to 12. Cooley then dropped in two free throws and Martin again sank a 3-pointer and the Irish were rolling with a 17-point lead.

    The Orange then went on a 9-2 run and Kris Joseph's 3-pointer made it a 10-point game with 7:43 to go. Syracuse again cut it to eight before Cooley roared down the court for a dunk with just over five minutes left.

    Triche's three-point play with 2:24 left cut it to seven as the Orange made a final run.

    Pat Connaughton, inserted into the Irish starting lineup, had a pair of 3s in the early going and Notre Dame bolted to an 11-2 lead.

    Notre Dame kept up the long-range accuracy, making four of its first six attempts. And when Eric Atkins grabbed a rebound and went the length of the floor for a layup, the Irish were up 21-10 as the fans at Purcell Pavilion went wild.

    And without Melo in the middle, the Irish were all over the boards with an early 13-4 advantage.

    Atkins picked up his third foul with 9:04 left, but Jerian Grant's 3-pointer gave the Irish a two-touchdown lead at 28-14.

    The Orange missed 14 of their first 19 field-goal attempts and nothing was falling. Tom Knight's left-handed shot in the lane doubled the score, putting the Irish up 32-16.

    Alex Dragicevich's 3-pointer as the shot clock was running down put the Irish up 35-18 with 1:12 left in the half. Dion Waiters then responded with a pair of quick 3-pointers to get the Orange to within 12 at the end of a frustrating first half.

    The 23 points represented the Orange's lowest-scoring half of the season.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-01-22-T25-Syracuse-Notre%20Dame/id-7cae47a1ad6e4ce899e71707dbae21c7

    junior dos santos evelyn lauder devin hester devin hester shayne lamas cain velasquez dos santos

    Lawyer Demands Pacemaker Vendor Supply Source Code

    Last year at OSCON. Sadly the line was too long for me to shake her hand and say thanks for starting this.

    There's a few points I'd like to add, many already covered.

    1) She's qualified to do this. Not to review the software. But she has plenty of good colleagues for that.

    She's a director of GNOME (I know, I know...), former GC of the SFLC, an attorney... and... from listening to her talk, she either genuinely gets software -- or someone that did wrote her whole speech for her.

    2) This is a real, not a hypothetical problem.

    People commenting without RTFA need to understand--These devices are 802.11 enabled. Remote exploits/have/ been demonstrated.

    This is not a wholly uncommon situation -- one of my coworkers has a daughter with a computerized glucose pump that has also had remote compromise demonstrated.

    And even a trivial interest in breathatlizers reveals there has been...myriad incidences of these devices not just being a total failure of design, but having rollover and similar bugs in their implementations.

    3) People may be correct that it would be hard to get people to understand the code. That is wholly irrelevant and a false front of an argument. I don't care what your medical experience is in your industry or company. What your experience with regulators or lawsuits are. There's companies that commit fraud, lie, cheat, steal. They exist. This is indisputable. There's places where MBA's and biologists that can barely write a hello world by themselves compose pointer arithmetic, hit compile, hit test, and go home at the end of the day. I've worked at places like that on applications that could kill if they failed. It is why I do not as of two years ago.

    I presently work with a woman that could not compose a CSV in a basic ETL from another filetype without help. She has the language being used using on her resume. Her workflow involved copy/paste off of the internet, and then changing one line at a time, saving it as file.### and trying to run it. If it didn't crash, she'd examine the output and try to put in what she thought would fix it. If it did, she'd try to find the error. When I offered a hand, she was currently at over her 500th revision.

    So let me be damend clear -- even an unqualified person can do a basic code review just by running a fucking linter on it and looking at the warnings. Because if it generates one or a million -- that says something about the quality right there.

    Why? Because unless you're in a business whose core business *IS* software, my personal experience is that 80% plus of the developers have never heard of one, and 95% don't know how to use it if they have. And that is why my code has less bugs than my colleagues.

    Now -- even if my experiences are anecdotal, and "invalid" -- I've just proven the existence of the problem.

    This is her life we're talking about. Her life entrusted to a piece of cybernetics that has had a demonstrated remote exploit.

    Please/., have a little bit of humanity for once. This isn't about corporate profits, NDAs, lawsuits. This is about someone asking to read something to make an informed choice about their continued existence.

    Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/MBaFPIyBa00/lawyer-demands-pacemaker-vendor-supply-source-code

    world aids day horse slaughter horse slaughter world aids day 2011 chester mcglockton chester mcglockton arsenic

    Sunday, January 22, 2012

    Romney on the ropes (Americablog)

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

    Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/188972121?client_source=feed&format=rss

    thurston moore the island the island mcdonalds beating dreamcatcher georgia tech big east expansion

    Helicopter crashes in Venezuela, 5 killed (AP)

    CARACAS, Venezuela ? A helicopter has crashed during a tour of the tabletop mountains of southern Venezuela, and an official says five people have been killed.

    Col. Julio Fuentes tells Venezuela's state news agency that the helicopter crashed Wednesday into Auyantepui mountain in the Canaima National Park.

    Auyantepui is a popular tourist destination. The world's tallest waterfall, Angel Falls, cascades down its sheer rock faces.

    Fuentes says a pilot and four passengers were aboard the Bell 206 Long Ranger helicopter. Their nationalities haven't been released.

    Fuentes says authorities believe the helicopter may have crashed because of rough weather. He says a team reached the crash site Thursday after it was initially spotted by a plane.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120119/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_venezuela_helicopter_crash

    uganda rick ross black hawk down black hawk down dennis the menace dylan ratigan dylan ratigan

    Saturday, January 21, 2012

    'Django Unchained' Is 'Old School' Tarantino, Says FX Artist Greg Nicotero

    Just about all we need to know about a new Quentin Tarantino movie to be interested is the fact that he is making a new movie. With "Django Unchained," the latest project in question, we have been completely sold ever since the cast and plot synopsis were announced.
    Part of what have made Tarantino's scripts so [...]

    Source: http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2012/01/20/django-unchained-greg-nicotero/

    fsu fsu defiance acc mayweather vs ortiz ncaa football 12 ncaa football 12

    Friday, January 20, 2012

    European court: Cleric can't be deported from UK (AP)

    LONDON ? An extremist cleric described as one of Europe's leading al-Qaida operatives should not be deported to face terrorism charges in Jordan because of the risk evidence obtained through torture would be used against him, Europe's highest court ruled Tuesday.

    After a six-year legal battle, the European Court of Human Rights ruled that deporting Abu Qatada from Britain ? where he is in prison ? would "give rise to a flagrant denial of justice."

    Abu Qatada ? whose real name is Omar Mahmoud Mohammed Othman ? is an extremist Muslim preacher from Jordan who has been described in both Spanish and British courts as a leading al-Qaida figure in Europe.

    A Palestinian-Jordanian citizen, Abu Qatada arrived in Britain in 1993 and was detained in 2002 under anti-terrorism laws which at the time allowed suspected terrorists to be held in jail without charge.

    Though Abu Qatada was released in 2005, when the unpopular law was overturned, he was kept under surveillance and arrested again within months, to be held pending his deportation to face terrorism charges in Jordan.

    He was convicted in his absence in Jordan of terrorist offenses related to two alleged bomb plots in 1999 and 2000, and would face a retrial if deported there from Britain.

    Although Abu Qatada has never faced criminal charges in Britain, authorities in the U.K. have accused him of advising militants and raising money for terrorist attacks. He "is a leading spiritual adviser with extensive links to, and influence over, extreme Islamists in the U.K. and overseas," prosecutors told a British court in 2007.

    Britain's Home Secretary Theresa May said she was disappointed by the ruling and the government would consider appealing the European court's decision. It has a three-month window in which to make any appeal, the court said.

    "This is not the end of the road," May said. She confirmed Abu Qatada would remain held in British prison custody while a decision is made.

    May has not specified what Britain would do if it loses any appeal, though it is likely Abu Qatada would be freed from prison and monitored under a surveillance program which requires those suspected of involvement in terrorism, but not charged with any crime, to abide by a curfew and wear an electronic anklet.

    Abu Qatada's lawyer, Gareth Peirce, said the European court had sent a clear message that it would be wrong to prosecute a suspect on "evidence emanating from torture."

    Peirce said she hoped Britain would not appeal and that the U.K. had been wrong to press to have her client deported since 2005.

    "The court's judgment of today is long, thoughtful and complex, and sets out important guidelines for Europe's member states on a number of difficult issues," she said. "It would indeed be disappointing if the implications of this judgment were not carefully and adequately digested and the United Kingdom were to continue a challenge which flies so directly in the face of internationally accepted standards."

    Britain's Special Immigration Appeals Commission has previously been told Abu Qatada also was suspected of links to a bomb plot in Strasbourg, France, and to the raising of funds for terrorism in Chechnya.

    In their ruling, the European judges based in Strasbourg said they did not accept Abu Qatada's claims that he would face ill treatment or torture at the hands of Jordanian authorities if sent there for trial, citing recent agreements between Jordan and the U.K.

    But the judges warned that evidence in his case had been obtained by torturing his co-accused.

    "The court found that torture was widespread in Jordan, as was the use of torture evidence by the Jordanian courts," the ruling said. "In relation to each of the two terrorist conspiracies ... the evidence of his involvement had been obtained by torturing one of his co-defendants."

    Judges said evidence obtained through torture is illegal under international law and is also unreliable. The ruling said "there was a high probability that the incriminating evidence would be admitted ... and that it would be of considerable, perhaps decisive, importance."

    Britain's highest court had ruled in 2009 that Abu Qatada should be deported to Jordan, despite fears over his potential mistreatment.

    Human rights group Liberty urged the British government to make efforts to have Abu Qatada prosecuted in Britain.

    "The court found that torture and evidence obtained that way is widespread" in Jordan, Shami Chakrabarti, the group's director, said in a statement. "So it is clear that, if Abu Qatada is to be tried for terrorism, this should happen in a British court without further delay."

    British Prime Minister David Cameron will call for reform of the European court in a long-planned speech next week at the Strasbourg-based Council of Europe. He has frequently complained over the human rights court's rulings and said it had made him "physically ill" when Britain was ordered in 2010 to overturn a centuries-old law and allow prisoners to vote in national elections.

    "We have been talking for some time about reform for the European Court of Human Rights," Cameron's spokesman Steve Field said following the Abu Qatada ruling. Field said the court's backlog of about 160,000 cases proved "something isn't working quite as it should be."

    Cameron believes the court must focus on the most important cases "rather than essentially being a court of appeal for national judgments," the spokesman said.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/terrorism/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120117/ap_on_re_eu/eu_britain_radical_preacher

    caucus occupy rose parade vesta williams stanford stanford oklahoma state university badgers

    Thursday, January 19, 2012

    Astrophile: How to spot a dark-matter galaxy

    Object type: Dwarf galaxy
    Mass: 190,000,000 times the mass of the sun
    Composition: Mostly dark matter

    If we could don dark matter glasses and look at the universe around us, we might see thousands of miniature galaxies swarming about the luminous spirals that make up the Milky Way and Andromeda.

    We can't ? but we have the next best thing. A technique known as gravitational lensing has allowed one of these dark dwarfs to be glimpsed, suggesting the Milky Way isn't as lonely as it looks to us Earthlings.

    Astronomers think that galaxies usually grow by devouring smaller nearby clusters of stars called dwarf galaxies, no bigger than 100 million times the mass of the sun. According to this theory, the Milky Way and all other full-size galaxies should keep company with thousands of dwarfs. However, only 30 such companions have been spotted in our neighbourhood.

    Where are all the missing minis hiding? One explanation is that they're mostly made of dark matter, the mysterious, aloof substance thought to make up 83 per cent of the mass in the universe but which is reluctant to interact with regular matter.

    "They are there, but we just don't see them," says Simona Vegetti of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

    Warped lens

    Some of the Milky Way's known satellites, such as the Sagittarius dwarf galaxyMovie Camera, do seem to be mostly dark matter, hosting just 100 or fewer visible stars. It's hard to know how many more are lurking undercover, though. And it's especially hard to know if distant galaxies host any dark satellites at all.

    "When you're trying to test theories using the Milky Way, at a certain point you have to ask, is the Milky Way a special place or not?" Vegetti says. "It's important to test in other galaxies."

    Now, Vegetti and colleagues have tracked down a dark dwarf galaxy orbiting a massive elliptical galaxy 10 billion light years away. The invisible entity, part of a system called JVAS B1938+666, weighs in at about 190 million times the mass of the sun, making it similar in size to the Sagittarius dwarf.

    The team found the dark galaxy by looking at the way its gravity warped the space-time around it, a technique called gravitational lensing. When the dwarf's vast companion passed in front of an even more distant galaxy, its gravity made the background galaxy look stretched out in a ring of light. Normally these rings, called Einstein rings, form nearly perfect circles. But the presence of the otherwise invisible dwarf galaxy introduced a small flaw, making the further galaxy look like a perfect china bowl with a chip in it.

    Purely dark

    "The great thing about the technique is that we can use it to detect satellite galaxies that are purely dark matter," says study co-author Chris Fassnacht of the University of California, Davis ? although it's hard to tell from here whether the galaxy has a handful of stars or not.

    This is the second dark galaxy to be spotted outside our galactic system, but the first that is as small as the Milky Way's known companions. The other galaxy was just 2.6?billion light years away and 18 times as massive.

    "These two together are telling us that it's not something special to have a satellite that small," Vegetti says. The universe may be swarming with small, dark galaxies, she says, though she and her team will have to keep looking to know for sure.

    "We've found two, so everything looks promising," she says.

    Journal reference: Nature, DOI: 10.1038/nature10669

    If you would like to reuse any content from New Scientist, either in print or online, please contact the syndication department first for permission. New Scientist does not own rights to photos, but there are a variety of licensing options available for use of articles and graphics we own the copyright to.

    Have your say

    Only subscribers may leave comments on this article. Please log in.

    Only personal subscribers may leave comments on this article

    Subscribe now to comment.

    All comments should respect the New Scientist House Rules. If you think a particular comment breaks these rules then please use the "Report" link in that comment to report it to us.

    If you are having a technical problem posting a comment, please contact technical support.

    Source: http://feeds.newscientist.com/c/749/f/10897/s/1bef9e78/l/0L0Snewscientist0N0Carticle0Cdn21370A0Eastrophile0Ehow0Eto0Espot0Ea0Edarkmatter0Egalaxy0Bhtml0DDCMP0FOTC0Erss0Gnsref0Fonline0Enews/story01.htm

    weeds wings wings brooke burke secretariat adventure time weather atlanta