Thursday, January 31, 2013

Daily Kos: Marriage is meant to protect society from the threat of ...

Charlie Butchart-Cullen, 3, and her sister Sophia Butchart-Cullen, 1, sit in a wagon at the LA Pride parade in West Hollywood, California, June 10, 2012. The parade is part of the annual Los Angeles lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender pride celebration

These kids don't count because they weren't conceived accidentally enough

In the quest to protect 'Merica from the creeping Sharia feminist gay threat, the brave defenders of the sanctity of Newt Gingrich's three marriages have come up with what is quite possibly the most epically ridiculous argument ever:
Marriage should be limited to unions of a man and a woman because they alone can "produce unplanned and unintended offspring," opponents of gay marriage have told the Supreme Court.
Waaaaaaait a second. Only boy-girl sex can produce unplanned pregnancies?and that's a good thing? The very same sanctimonious whiners who say they're only hating gay people to protect family values and the kids and stuff ... Now they want to encourage unplanned pregnancies? Even though all the research in the history of forever shows that unplanned pregnancies actually undermine those precious boy-girl relationships? And are also bad for women. And their children. And society. And the almighty dollar. But let's just put all that stuff aside so the bigots can 'splain how this isn't totally bugfuck crazytalk:
The traditional marriage laws "reflect a unique social difficulty with opposite-sex couples that is not present with same-sex couples ? namely, the undeniable and distinct tendency of opposite-sex relationships to produce unplanned and unintended pregnancies," wrote Clement, a solicitor general under President George W. Bush. "Unintended children produced by opposite-sex relationships and raised out-of-wedlock would pose a burden on society."

"It is plainly reasonable for California to maintain a unique institution [referring to marriage] to address the unique challenges posed by the unique procreative potential of sexual relationships between men and women," argued Washington attorney Charles J. Cooper, representing the defenders of Proposition 8. Same-sex couples need not be included in the definition of marriage, he said, because they "don't present a threat of irresponsible procreation."

Waaaaaaait a second. So unplanned pregnancies are a bad thing after all? And only heterosexual couples can impose this "social difficulty" and "burden on society" by getting accidentally knocked up, so only they need marriage to protect us from the threat of their children? That's the new legal argument against marriage equality? Marriage should be limited to one man and one woman because Bristol Palin's accidental, unplanned out-of-wedlock baby threatens and burdens society.

Well, okay, maybe they have a point. Or maybe, just maybe, they should accept that it's the 21st century, and the number of cranky old people who don't believe in equality is dwindling every day?and most Americans are just fine with that.

Originally posted to Kaili Joy Gray on Wed Jan 30, 2013 at 09:04 AM PST.

Also republished by Daily Kos.

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Source: http://www.dailykos.com/story/2013/01/30/1183315/-Marriage-is-meant-to-protect-society-from-the-threat-of-Bristol-Palin-s-out-of-wedlock-baby

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Asia stocks up on strong US earnings

BANGKOK (AP) ? Asian stock markets rose Wednesday after strong U.S. corporate earnings led investors to ignore sagging consumer confidence.

Japan's Nikkei rose 1.1 percent to 10,990.77 as the yen continued to weaken against the U.S. dollar. Hong Kong's Hang Seng rose 1 percent to 23,884.24.

South Korea's Kospi rose 0.2 percent to 1,959.91 after the government said manufacturing output rose 0.8 percent in December from November.

Gains in resource stocks helped lift Australia's S&P/ASX 200 by 0.2 percent to 4,898.60. Mining giants Rio Tinto Ltd. gained 1.4 percent and BHP Billiton advanced 1.1 percent.

Benchmarks in Singapore, Taiwan, the Philippines and Indonesia rose. Mainland Chinese shares fell.

A survey on U.S. consumer confidence Tuesday was unexpectedly weak, but analysts said the result was likely a one-time blip due to the payroll tax increase that was part of the agreement reached by U.S. lawmakers to avert bigger spending cuts and tax increases.

Wall Street stocks rose Tuesday after drugmaker Pfizer posted strong earnings. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 0.5 percent to close at 13,954.42 points, ending higher for the seventh day in eight. The Standard & Poor's 500 rose 0.5 percent to 1,507.84. Refinery operator Valero Energy, which also posted strong fourth-quarter results, was the biggest gainer on the S&P.

The Nasdaq composite index was little changed at 3,153.66

Currently, analysts expect fourth-quarter earnings for 2012 to increase by an average of 4.7 percent for S&P 500 companies, according to the latest data from S&P Capital IQ. That's an improvement on the previous quarter when profit grew by 2.4 percent.

Benchmark oil for March delivery was down 4 cents to $97.53 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract rose $1.13, or 1.2 percent, to close at $97.57 on the Nymex on Tuesday.

In currencies, the euro rose to $1.3490 from $1.3486 late Tuesday in New York. The euro hit its highest level against the dollar in nearly 14 months Tuesday after data was released showing a rise in German consumer confidence. The dollar rose to 90.90 yen from 90.69 yen.

___

Follow Pamela Sampson on Twitter at http://twitter.com/pamelasampson

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/asia-stocks-strong-us-earnings-030421391--finance.html

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Wednesday, January 30, 2013

From gulags to dusty donkeys, Google Maps reveals Earth's mysteries

12 hrs.

On Monday, Google officially updated North Korea on Google Maps. Thanks to crowd-sourced data, the area is no longer blank, but instead includes markings for just about everything???right down to the locations of its prison camps. This isn't the first time Google Maps (and its 3-D counterpart, Google Earth) helped reveal previously obscured ??or even unknown ??geography.

In late 2011, Google Maps images called attention to strange patterns etched into the surface of China's Gobi Desert. There were speculations that the patterns were related to weapons-testing sites or even messages from aliens,?but?the?consensus,?according?to?Natalie Wolchover?of?Life's?Little?Mysteries,?was?that?they?were?satellite?calibration?patterns.?

Another pattern found not far from there, a?"Stonehenge-like arrangement of objects radiating outward, with fighter jets parked at its center,"?is?likely?used to test radar from space.

A year later, yet another mysterious pattern was spotted in yet another Chinese desert.?LiveScience's?Tia Ghose?reported?that?these?were?the?result?of?geological surveys for nickel mines.

Google Earth, another aspect of Google's geo project,?has also?helped an?archaeologist discover ancient Egyptian ruins.Much of the excitement over that discovery evaporated though as ? after some initial confusion regarding whether they ruins were previously undiscovered pyramids or other formations ? it turned out that at least some other researchers were already aware of this point of interest.

Thanks to Google Maps' Street View, folks have been exploring areas they may never see in person. For example, thousands of images from Australia's Great Barrier Reef and other coral locales were stitched together into 360-degree panoramas, so that anyone can take a trip from the comfort of his or her own desk.

"This will allow the 99.9 percent of the population who have never been diving to go on a virtual dive for the first time," said Richard Vevers, project director for the Catlin Seaview Survey (which worked in partnership with Google to capture images for these panoramas), told NBC News?when the project was first publicized.

Ancient Mexican monuments such as Teotihuacan, Chichen Itza and Palenque are also included in virtual tours, along with?countless businesses which, as part of an extension to the Google Street View project, allow users to virtually explore building interiors.

Sometimes Google's mapping products can cause controversy. When?a data glitch related to Google Earth's underwater seafloor imagery led to the appearance of a grid-like pattern, some proclaimed it?must indicate the existence of Atlantis. The "evidence" of the mythical city's presence disappeared as soon as Google incorporated fresh data and smoothed over imaging artifacts.

At least one mapping controversy ended with new research, however.?When a Nicaraguan general?alleged that Google Maps displayed erroneous borders between his country and Costa Rica. The secretary general of the Organization of American States was sent in to examine the area and resolve the cartographic drama.

And then there was that time a?Google Street View car ran over a donkey ? or at least appeared to. ?"Over the last 24-hours concerned members of the public and the media have been speculating on the fate of a donkey pictured in Street View in the Kweneng region of Botswana,"?wrote?Google's?Kei?Kawai?in?a?blog?post.?Fortunately?for?Google,?the?car?took?many?photos,?and?a?review?of?them?clearly?showed?the?donkey?moving?aside?safely.?"I'm pleased to confirm the donkey is alive and well."

Google's not above showing us what's behind the curtain in its own data centers, either. Thanks to Street View tours of the interiors of the company's previously unseen buildings, we now know that Stormtroopers and R2 units guard our precious data.

Want more tech news?or interesting?links? You'll get plenty of both if you keep up with Rosa Golijan, the writer of this post, by following her on?Twitter, subscribing to her?Facebook?posts,?or circling her?on?Google+.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/gulags-dusty-donkeys-google-maps-reveals-earths-mysteries-1B8166498

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Target launches 6 new brands, all online

target.com

Target has launched six new online-only brands, including Too by Blu Dot, a home furnishings line.

By Dana Macario, TODAY contributor

If you?re looking to buy something from one of Target?s six new brands, you?ll need to skip the store and hit up their website instead. The online exclusive offers include everything from a collection of baby apparel designed for Target by Zutano to home d?cor lines.

?We?re excited that for the first time Target has developed new brands exclusively for Target.com," said Target spokesman Eddie Baeb. "We believe these new brands will further differentiate Target.com from other online retailers and help us create a great shopping experience for our guests.??

The new brands are primarily home d?cor lines, an area that has long been a Target strength. Each of the four home furnishings lines has its own, distinct personality. Too by Blu Dot has a funky, retro '50s vibe, while MudHut features eclectic designs that reflect a global theme, with offerings like Mexican motif and Moroccan gem. Boho Boutique is a home line that is reminiscent of a lower-priced Anthropologie. The last of the home lines, Room 365, is the most contemporary of the home brands.

That Target would focus so heavily on home furnishings for its first online exclusive brands is not a surprise to some retail experts. ?They?ve always been in home goods. They?ve been strong and leaders in that area. And, that strength has eroded in the last two to four years," said Mike Tesler, founding partner at consulting firm Retail Concepts and a marketing lecturer at Bentley University in Waltham, Mass. "They?re looking to inject some excitement in that.?

In addition to the four new home-furnishings brands, Target.com is also offering up a women?s clothing line, Labworks, and Zutano Blue, a collection of clothing, and again, bedding and d?cor, for infants.

Online retail isn?t new, but Target?s mammoth push into the virtual space is new. Several retail experts agreed that the new, online venture is a low-risk way for Target to test new brands and increase profit margin. ?The only thing that?s really going on here is higher margins in categories that traditionally aren?t brand-sensitive,? said Rob Frankel, branding specialist and author of ?The Revenge of Brand X.?

Tesler also noted that offering products exclusively online is a good way for the company to experiment with new lines. ?When you test it out online, then you have confidence that it?s going to work in the stores later,? Tesler said. At present, Target has not announced that any of the lines will be introduced in stores. ?There are no current plans to have these brands in Target stores, but we?re always evaluating and considering new merchandise for our stores,? Baeb said.

Although you can only buy the products online, the Too by Blu Dot collection will be featured in five Target locations in Chicago, Seattle,?Los Angeles, San Francisco and Westwood, Calif., through the end of January. There, guests can scan QR codes to buy the items online.

Dana Macario is a Seattle-area writer who loves to shop ? both off and online.

Source: http://lifeinc.today.com/_news/2013/01/29/16741351-target-launches-6-new-brands-but-you-cant-buy-them-in-stores?lite

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Set Your Multiple Desktops to These Ultra-Wide, Dual Monitor Wallpapers

One desktop just isn't enough for some of you, and that causes a serious wallpaper problem. Fortunately, there are ultra-wide wallpapers to save the day and cover both of your screens. Here are some of our favorites.

We've done dual-monitor wallpapers before, so if 10 options won't cut it you can find more in our previous posts here and here.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/yWn7b9fQmIk/

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Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Immigration Reform Framework Faces Skepticism From Republicans

WASHINGTON -- Comprehensive immigration reform may hinge on convincing Republicans they aren't signing on to give undocumented immigrants legal status only to see another surge. So far, they're not convinced, and the bipartisan group of senators dubbed the "gang of eight" is working hard to sell them a proposal that ties a pathway to citizenship to enhancing border security.

"I'm sorry they're afraid," Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) told reporters, referring to senators skeptical of immigration reform. "We explained it very well: We have to have operational control of the border before we can move forward."

McCain and seven other senators introduced a framework on Monday for a bipartisan immigration deal. The group also includes Sens. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.), Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) and Michael Bennet (D-Colo.).

Their plan allows for some of the estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants already living in the United States to remain legally. But they plan to link green cards to border enforcement, disallowing anyone on provisional immigrant status to receive a full visa until certain metrics are met.

The idea behind tying the two together, according to the text of the framework, is to "demonstrate our commitment to securing our borders and combating visa overstays by requiring our proposed enforcement measures be complete before any immigrant on probationary status can earn a green card."

Many Republicans feel the Obama administration is thwarting current immigration law -- despite record-high deportation -- through policies that have stopped the removal of certain groups. At the same time, lawmakers are haunted by the memory of 1986, when Republican President Ronald Reagan signed into law an amnesty bill that did not turn out to have the teeth needed to curtail unauthorized immigration in the future. Graham said the group hopes to prove its framework would be different.

"The big problem with immigration is convincing people it won't turn into a 1986 end game where you provide legalization and you still have a third wave 30 years later," he said. "The goal for me is to go back home and say, 'You may not like everything we did, but it's fixed.'"

The framework would establish a group "comprised of governors, attorneys general, and community leaders living along the Southwest border" to monitor the situation and advise Congress on when the green card provision should come into effect. Though the group members have not been selected, McCain said they will be "credible" and will play an important role, but not have any veto power to hold up the green card process. The exact definition of a secure border has yet to be determined.

"It doesn't take a genius to figure it out ? I know a secure border when I see it," McCain told reporters. "I've been there hundreds of times."

Flake said the border requirements in the framework should not be interpreted as an attempt to block or delay visas to immigrants, particularly because there's already proof in Arizona that the border can get to operational security.

"It can be done," he said. "It's not something that people are going to throw up as an impediment to reform."

During a speech Tuesday on immigration reform, Obama said he would require undocumented immigrants to go through a process to receive legal status and called for tighter border security and more enforcement, but did not propose any border requirements before immigrants could earn visas.

Flake, speaking to reporters before Obama's speech, said it might not hurt to have Obama differ from the group of eight plan in that respect.

"To the extent the president points out that we can't have a secure border in order for people to obtain citizenship, that brings up the point and reinforces the point that we're making that a requirement," he said. "That's a good thing."

Senate Minority Whip John Cornyn (R-Texas) said he wasn't prepared to rule in or out any of the framework's key elements, noting that it was premature to raise concerns over amnesty when the actual bill is still in the works.

"I know everybody wants to ask that question, but it gets the cart ahead of the horse," Cornyn said, though he added that people "don't have confidence the federal government's enforcing current law" and would hope to see any reform effort go through the full legislative process in Congress.

Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Ala.), who has in the past voted against giving undocumented immigrants benefits and other incentives, such as welfare, health care and education services and in-state tuition, declined to state his opposition to the inclusion of a pathway to citizenship as part of comprehensive reform.

Like many other senators questioned on the subject, Shelby was reticent to pour cold water on what has been lauded as a truly bipartisan effort to tackle a difficult issue, and opted instead to approach it with a wait-and-watch mentality.

"I have no illusions that the 10, 12 [or] 15 million people that are here are going to go home ... you know they're not going to go home," Shelby said. "I've had problems in the past -- I always have problems with people who break the law, but let's see what comes up."

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) declined to say at a press conference whether he supports the framework, but said he is glad the bipartisan group is working on the issue.

Ultimately, garnering support among Republicans could rest in the hands of Rubio, who continues to be regarded as a GOP front-runner for the 2016 presidential race.

Schumer was optimistic that Rubio's role in the gang of eight would help bring Republicans on board.

"I think having Marco Rubio is very important," Schumer said. "We want to have as much Republican support as we can get."

Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) also played up Rubio's involvement, telling reporters that the Florida senator's comments "regarding how we deal with people in this country certainly are important." He added that Rubio will address members of his caucus at a Wednesday lunch to elaborate on the bipartisan effort.

Graham had a message for those who criticize the framework as amnesty.

"If you don't like our way of doing it," he said, "come up with one of your own."

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/29/immigration-reform_n_2576999.html

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Fitness Wearables: Only 4 Percent of U.S. Adults Actually Want ?Em

Fitness Wearables: Only 4 Percent of U.S. Adults Actually Want ‘Em
If you're a tech-loving urban hipster who's into their smartphone, buying organic produce, and exercising, guess what? You are incredibly likely to purchase wearable fitness-tracking tech like the Fitbit Flex or the Basis band. Although many of us at Wired ...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/GearFactor/~3/XwHeAiT6pBE/

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Who wore it best? Vote on your favorite SAG look

Kevork Djansezian / Getty Images

Take a look at Hollywood's biggest stars showing off their designer gowns and tuxes on the red carpet.

When it comes to the Screen Actors Guild Awards, it?s all about Hollywood?s brightest honoring their own. And on Sunday night, red-carpet veterans such as Nicole Kidman and Naomi Watts shared the spotlight with newcomers including Jennifer Lawrence and Amanda Seyfried. Highlights included quite a few navy gowns, a whole lotta updos, and yes, Justin Timberlake in plaid.

We took a look at all the celebs on the red carpet, but only a few left us impressed. Which star had the best style? Check out our favorites below and cast your vote!

Frazer Harrison / Getty Images

"30 Rock star" Jane Krakowski in a bright, sherbet-colored Kaufman Franco dress at the 19th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards held at The Shrine Auditorium.

Kevork Djansezian / Getty Images

Disney chic? "Zero Dark Thirty" star Jessica Chastain channels Jessica Rabbit in a sexy Alexander McQueen silk gown.

Matt Sayles / AP

Nicole Kidman goes for sheer in an embellished gown by Vivienne Westwood.

Matt Sayles / AP

Flower power: Julianne Moore opts for a sexy, plunging Chanel gown.

Matt Sayles / AP

Marion Cotillard wears a festive two-tone gown designed by Dior Haute Couture.

Jordan Strauss / AP

"Les Miserables" star Amanda Seyfried wears a chic, romantic gown by Zac Posen.

Joe Klamar / AFP - Getty Images

Kerry Washington of "Django Unchained" wears a structured, sexy Rodarte gown.

Adrees Latif / Reuters

Going for gold: Actress Jennifer Garner looks regal in an Oscar de la Renta gown.

Jordan Strauss / AP

Freida Pinto goes for a hot-pink Roland Mouret design.

Kevork Djansezian / Getty Images

Bright white: Actress Naomi Watts sparkles in Marchesa.

Who wore it best?

More from TODAY:
Busy Philipps shows off baby bump at SAGs
Sundance style: Celebs in winter white, plaid and more

DIY: Michelle Obama's embellished J.Crew belt

Kerry Washington

?

20.7%

(2,367 votes)

Amanda Seyfried

?

18.4%

(2,102 votes)

Jennifer Garner

?

15%

(1,716 votes)

Nicole Kidman

?

11.4%

(1,310 votes)

Marion Cotillard

?

9%

(1,029 votes)

Jessica Chastain

?

6.8%

(783 votes)

Jane Krakowski

?

6.7%

(773 votes)

Naomi Watts

?

6.6%

(759 votes)

Freida Pinto

?

3.7%

(421 votes)

Julianne Moore

?

1.7%

(193 votes)

Display Comments:

Source: http://thelook.today.com/_news/2013/01/27/16726419-who-wore-it-best-vote-on-your-favorite-sag-look?lite

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Monday, January 28, 2013

New technique sheds light on RNA

Jan. 28, 2013 ? When researchers sequence the RNA of cancer cells, they can compare it to normal cells and see where there is more RNA. That can help lead them to the gene or protein that might be triggering the cancer.

But other than spotting a few known instigators, what does it mean? Is there more RNA because it's synthesizing too quickly or because it's not degrading fast enough? What part of the biological equilibrium is off?

After more than a decade of work, researchers at the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center have developed a technique to help answer those questions.

The method involves a compound called bromouridine, which can be used to tag or label newly created RNA. Researchers apply the bromouridine for 30 minutes then isolate the RNA to see where the new RNA was made. They call this process Bru-Seq.

On the other hand, the researchers can follow up the bromouridine labeling with a rinse with the chemical uridine for different periods of time. They call this BruChase-Seq because the uridine chases away the newly made RNA so they can look at how the RNA ages over the course of one hour, two hours or six hours. In other words, is the RNA degrading like it's supposed to?

"We can see the whole pattern of all the RNA that's synthesized and all the RNA that's stable vs. degrading. We can sort it out in terms of synthesis and stability and see if a particular RNA is more stable in the cancer cell than the normal cell or if it is taking longer to degrade in the cancer cell than in the normal cell," says study author Mats Ljungman, Ph.D., associate professor of radiation oncology at the U-M Medical School.

"With our technique, we're adding 10-fold more depth to the picture of how genes are expressed," he adds.

Ljungman is part of the Cancer Center's new Translational Oncology Program, which brings together cancer researchers from across the University of Michigan to speed the translation of basic science into clinical trials and new treatment opportunities for patients.

The Cancer Center is currently using gene sequencing techniques to help match advanced cancer patients with potential clinical trial opportunities based on the make-up of their tumor.

In addition to helping with cancer sequencing, Ljungman sees potential for this new technique to help with identifying diseases such as diabetes or inflammation. In the paper describing the technique, published online in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the researchers describe how they used it to understand an inflammatory response in cells. The researchers have also used the technique to test blood samples.

With a great deal more investigation, Ljungman envisions that one day the test could potentially be offered to people visiting their doctor as a way to monitor changes in the RNA.

"If something is significantly changed from one test to the next, it could be a red flag or an early warning sign of disease. That would be the broadest use of this technology," Ljungman says.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Michigan Health System.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. M. T. Paulsen, A. Veloso, J. Prasad, K. Bedi, E. A. Ljungman, Y.-C. Tsan, C.-W. Chang, B. Tarrier, J. G. Washburn, R. Lyons, D. R. Robinson, C. Kumar-Sinha, T. E. Wilson, M. Ljungman. Coordinated regulation of synthesis and stability of RNA during the acute TNF-induced proinflammatory response. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2013; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1219192110

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/d-5_GxygMd4/130128104636.htm

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Panel approves debt relief, KD 1,000 grant | Kuwait Times

national assembly 300x195 Panel approves debt relief, KD 1,000 grantKUWAIT: The National Assembly?s financial and economic affairs committee yesterday unanimously approved a draft law stipulating that the government will forgive interest on loans taken by Kuwaiti citizens and providing a grant of KD 1,000 to those who will not benefit from the interest write-off. HH the Amir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah meanwhile told a number of MPs not to rush the issue of the loan interest write-off so as not to negatively impact the Reserve Fund for Future Generations. MP Yacoub Al-Sane, one of those who met the Amir, said ?we assured the Amir that we represent the nation and that we will never accept anything that may harm national interests or the Future Generations Fund?.

According to the bill, interests incurred on bank loans taken between Jan 1, 2002 and March 31, 2008 will be forgiven and debtors will be asked only to repay the principal of the loan. The committee did not provide figures on how many people will benefit from the write-off or the cost of the bill on state coffers. Earlier this month, Central Bank Governor Mohammad Al-Hashel told the same committee that the cost of such a measure will be around KD 1.7 billion. The bill also stipulates that citizens who did not benefit from the waiving off of interest will be given a KD 1,000 grant which will be deposited in a fund called the family fund.

Rapporteur of the panel MP Safa Al-Hashem said the fund will be used to pay all the beneficiary?s debt toward the state like electricity and water bills and others and the rest will be paid to the citizens. Those who have no debt will get the whole amount. Hashem did not provide figures about how much this will cost the state. The bill also allows retired people to seek bank loans equal to 40 percent of their monthly income. There has been no immediate government comment on the bill but Finance Minister Mustafa Al-Shamali had repeatedly said the government will reject any new legislation because it had already established a defaulters? fund to resolve the issue.

In another development, MP Saadoun Hammad sent around 60 new questions to Minister of Oil Hani Hussein as he prepares to grill the minister over a variety of alleged violations. The new questions deal with Kuwait Petroleum Corp (KPC) companies outside Kuwait, the reported sale of liquor at its facilities in foreign countries, their reported losses and the controversial promotions. Hammad had said he would grill the oil minister and is expected to be joined by MPs Nawaf Al-Fuzai and Abdullah Al-Tameemi.

The criminal court meanwhile yesterday sentenced controversial activist and member of the scrapped 2012 Assembly Mohammad Al-Juwaihel for three months in jail and fined him KD 2,000 for writing remarks on Twitter deemed offensive to the Mutairi tribe. Under the ruling, Juwaihel must go to jail immediately but he left the country just before the ruling was issued. Juwaihel later denied that he had fled the country. ?I am in Poland to follow up the studies of my daughter, a genuine Kuwaiti,? he said, promising to turn himself in once he was back in Kuwait.

The criminal court meanwhile will today resume the trial of former opposition MP Musallam Al-Barrak for remarks he made that were deemed offensive to the Amir at a public rally on Oct 15. A defense team of around 20 lawyers was formed to defend Barrak, who was detained for five days and interrogated over the charges which he denied.

By B Izzak, Staff Writer

Read by 2208

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Source: http://news.kuwaittimes.net/2013/01/28/panel-approves-debt-relief-kd-1000-grant/

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Kumbh Mela: A million man dip

The Hindu festival is billed as the world's largest gathering, a chance to wash away karmic debt and liberate oneself from the cycle of rebirth and death.

By Shivam Vij,?Correspondent / January 16, 2013

Indian Hindu devotees perform rituals and prayers at Sangam, the confluence of the holy rivers Ganges and Yamuna and mythical Saraswati at the Kumbh Mela in Allahabad, India, Wednesday, Jan. 16.

Kevin Frayer/AP

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This week,?Hindu ascetics in ostentatious chariots pulled by elephants and horses along with pilgrims and tourists from around the world arrived in Allahabad, about halfway between New Delhi and Kolkata, India.

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Their faces smeared with ash and bodies covered in little more than marigold garlands, the religious men marked the opening of the Kumbh Mela, by rushing into the cold water to bathe at 5 a.m. on Monday.?

The Hindu festival is billed as the world's largest gathering, a chance to wash away karmic debt and liberate oneself from the cycle of rebirth and death. It's also a broadly shared experience in a country where the saying goes that there are as many Indias as there are Indians.?

"What is most endearing about the Kumbh festival is that all Hindus across caste and class come together. All hierarchies melt in the great river. It's unity in diversity," says Ram Naresh Tripathi, a retired journalist and Hindu astrologer?in Allahabad.

This is one of four Kumbh Melas, each held in different cities over different intervals???this one comes to Allahabad every 12 years. These festivals?are all miraculous, at the very least in terms of logistics.

On Monday's opening, at least 10 million people bathed in the?sangam,?or confluence, of three rivers, the Ganga, the Yamuna, and the Saraswati.?By the end of the festival on March 10, an estimated 100 million people will have bathed in the river. Feb. 10 is the day considered most?auspicious?by religious followers, and is therefore the busiest day.

A temporary tent city has been set up on 6,000 acres of land, and the Indian Railways is running 750 special trains to make sure people from different parts of the country can reach it. ??

The numbers indicate the scale of the exercise: 18 pontoon bridges, 35,000 toilets, 97 miles of new roads, 355 miles of water pipelines, 497 miles of electric wires, 48 power sub-stations, four warehouses for grains, groceries and vegetables, 22 doctors, 120 ambulances, 30 new police stations, 100 beds for local hospitals and so on, according to Mela Officer Mani Prasad Mishra.

At a press conference addressed, journalists complained about incomplete work, to which Mr. Mishra replied that the authorities had been rushing against time. "We are in control of the situation and whatever requirements are needed to conduct it successfully have been put in place," he said.

The government has taken measures to fight contagious diseases, expected stampedes and fires, and terrorist attacks. Some 30,000 policemen are patrolling the Kumbh, which is under the surveillance of 56 watchtowers and 89 CCTV cameras. A market made up of 11,000 stalls has been set up to sell everything from food to?ornaments and curios.

The festival cost an estimated $290 million to organize, but a study by The Association of Chambers of Commerce and Industry in India says the Uttar Pradesh state government is likely to recover most of it through revenues generated by tourism.

Tourists and pilgrims are expected from across the world. Among the expected visitors: The Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama, and actors Richard Gere, Michael Douglas, and his wife Catherine Zeta Jones.

Mr. Tripathi, the journalist-turned-astrologer, said the Kumbh had changed a lot since his childhood, with the gathering now catering to Hindus with newfound wealth. ?The?sadhus?[ascetics] have all become hi-tech. They used to come on foot from hundreds of miles away but today they come in cars and carry gadgets like tablet computers,? he says.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/FOxMeL8hqNc/Kumbh-Mela-A-million-man-dip

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Sunday, January 27, 2013

XM MLB Chat: Internet TV viewing cutting into broadcast and cable ...

1/26/13, "Watching TV on web is disrupting cable, broadcast worlds," Miami Herald, Glenn Garvin

"When Barnett and 5,000 or so others gather Monday for the National Association of Television Program Executives (NATPE) convention at the Fontainebleau Hotel on Miami Beach, there will be plenty of sweaty foreheads, some acquisitive smiles and ? perhaps most numerous ? blank looks of confusion. Not since cable turned the old three-channel TV universe on its head in the late 1970s has the industry been in such a state of disoriented befuddlement.

New technologies that give viewers more say in what they watch, where they watch and how much they pay for it are great for consumers. But they?re inducing a collective nervous breakdown among industry executives, who have to figure out new ways to make money in a business facing serious threats to its traditional sources of revenue ? advertising and cable-TV subscriptions....

The industry last year was blindsided by everything from a leap in the use of TiVo and other digital video-recording devices that pushed Nielsen ratings down as much as 50 percent to a new device called the Hopper that allows viewers to instantly zap by commercials.

But the biggest tremors came from the Internet, which is threatening to remake television as thoroughly as it already has the newspaper and music industries, by letting viewers bypass cable to watch shows online.

There was explosive growth in what the industry calls over-the-top or OTT, little boxes that sell for as little as $50 or so and allow viewers access to hundreds of streaming-video Internet television channels from their TVs. Apple and Roku, who make the most popular OTT players, have sold about five million apiece. But other companies like Amazon, Google and Western Electric are pushing into the market, and industry analysts say Intel, the world?s largest semi-conductor chip manufacturer, is also poised to leap into the OTT business.

Another major OTT force: video-game consoles like Xbox and PlayStation, which can also be used to watch streaming Internet video. ?They may be doing more business than anybody,? says Andy Tarzon, founding partner of the media research company TDG. ?Xbox is the leading viewer for Netflix content.? It will, soon enough, have its own content; parent company Microsoft late last year hired senior CBS programming executive Nancy Tellem, who helped develop Friends and ER, to direct an on-line TV operation.

??The use of programming services that deliver television program via the Internet is mushrooming, with Netflix, YouTube, Amazon and other big names ? even Walmart ? setting up or expanding operations. ?More than anything, that?s gotten everybody?s attention,? says Terence Gray, a longtime network producer who now runs the New York Television Festival. ?When you see YouTube?s $100 million investment in programming, or what Amazon?s studios did last year, or Microsoft hiring Nancy Tellem, this is no longer a conversation. This is being done.?

Hulu, a website that offers shows from NBC, ABC and Fox, doubled its subscribers last year while increasing its revenue 65 percent. Meanwhile, many of the online services are starting to make their own shows: Hulu debuted 10 of its own programs last year and Netflix has five in production, including House of Cards, a political thriller starring Kevin Spacey that debuts next week.

Attacking cable from a different direction, Aero TV uses tiny but powerful antennas to capture broadcast signals from the air, records them, then reroutes them into a viewer?s computer or OTT player to be watched whenever he wants. Because Aero pays nothing to the broadcasters (a practice being challenged in court) it can offer its service for as little as $8 a month. Last year?s start-up in New York City was so successful that Aero is expanding to 22 more cities ? including Miami ? this year.

Senior television executives caution against any expectation that their industry is about to embark on an instant makeover, and the numbers bear them out. Hulu?s three million subscribers are about one-seventh the number of viewers who watch NCIS each week on CBS, and its $700 million in annual revenues is tip money compared the $3.4 billion CBS generated in a single fiscal quarter last year. ?This is going to be an evolution, not a revolution,? says Bruce David Klein, president of the independent production company Atlas Media.

But the technological advances in Internet television come at a time when customer grumbling over escalating cable prices has grown to a roar and a younger generation of viewers more comfortable with computers than TVs is starting to set up its own households. The new alignment of attitudes is already taking a toll.

Subscriptions to cable and satellite television peaked in 2010 and have fallen five percentage points since then, the research company TDG reported late last year. Meanwhile, consumer satisfaction with cable service, which had held steady for years between 65 and 70 percent, dropped 10 percentage points.

?The most interesting part of that report, to me, was that it said a lot of the people without cable are not ?cord-cutters? but cord-never-havers,? says Jim Flynn, president of Massachusetts-based Overlook TV. ?We employ some of those people at my company. They?re in their early 20s, just out of college, and for them, paying $100 or $200 a month for cable TV is just not an option. And they don?t feel bad about it. They?re part of this millennial generation who are perfectly happy getting all their video over the Internet.?:...via Free Republic


Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/01/26/v-fullstory/3201660/watching-tv-on-web-is-disrupting.html#storylink=cpy


Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/01/26/v-fullstory/3201660/watching-tv-on-web-is-disrupting.html#storylink=cpy


Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/01/26/v-fullstory/3201660/watching-tv-on-web-is-disrupting.html#storylink=cpy

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Source: http://xmmlbchat.blogspot.com/2013/01/internet-tv-viewing-cutting-into.html

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SPECIAL REPORT: History of hospices in Zambia | Times of Zambia

By HECTOR BANDA -

JULIUS Caesar in Shakespeare?s Julius Caesar says: ?Of all the wonders that I yet have heard, it seems to me most strange that men should fear death, seeing that death will come when it will come.?

This is a conducive setting for the discourse this week: Hospices. Hospices are small residential institutions for terminally ill patients, focusing on the patient?s well-being rather than cure.

The relief of pain and spiritual counseling are the main thrust. This care for the dying may include home visits by professional personnel such as nurses and clergy to provide for the person?s physical and emotional needs.

In olden times hospices provided refuge for pilgrims, travellers, and the homeless were offered lodging, usually by a religious order.

Indeed the Lord Jesus Christ gives the Parable of the Good Samaritan in Luke 10: 29-35 where the man who fell among robbers was reposed at an inn.

The term ?hospice? stems from the same linguistic root as ?hospitality?. It can be traced back to medieval times when it referred to a place of shelter and rest for weary or ill travelers on a long journey.

The name was first applied to specialised care for dying patients by physician Dame Cicely Saunders.

Starting in 1948 Dame Saunders began her work with the terminally ill and eventually created the first modern hospice, St Christopher?s Hospice, in a residential suburb of London.

Saunders introduced the idea of specialised care for the dying to the United States during a 1963 visit with Yale University.

She gave a lecture to medical students, nurses, social workers and chaplains about the concept of holistic hospice care, included photos of terminally ill cancer patients and their families.

The dramatic differences before and after the symptom control care were also depicted.

This lecture resulted in the development of hospice care as we know it today.

These developments resulted in? Florence Wald, then Dean of the Yale School of Nursing, inviting Saunders to become a visiting faculty member of the school for the spring term.

In 1967 Wald took a sabbatical from Yale to work at St Christopher?s and learn all she could about hospices.

However, it was the book based on more than 500 interviews with dying patients published in 1968 titled On Death and Dying written by Dr Elisabeth Kubler-Ross that most highlighted the concept of hospices.

Within it, Kubler-Ross makes a plea for home care as opposed to treatment in an institutional setting and argues that patients should have a choice and the ability to participate in the decisions that affect their destiny.

In 1972 Kubler-Ross testified at the first national hearings on the subject of death with dignity, which are conducted by the US Senate Special Committee on Aging.

In her testimony, Kubler-Ross states, ?We live in a very particular death-denying society. We isolate both the dying and the old, and it serves a purpose. They are reminders of our own mortality.?

Kluber-Ross pleaded for families to be given more help with home care and visiting nurses, giving the families and the patients the spiritual, emotional and financial help in order to facilitate the final care at home.

By 1974 Wald, along with two pediatricians and a chaplain, founded Connecticut Hospice in Branford, Connecticut.

In 1974 the first hospice legislation was introduced by Senators Frank Church and Frank E Moss to provide federal funds for hospice programmes. It failed to be passed into law.

In 1977 in England, a dying boy was refused hospice care due to his age. Following that situation, an epoch for hospices began.

In Zambia, the five main providers of palliative care within an inpatient setting include:

Mother of Mercy Hospice, Jon Hospice, Ranchhod Hospice, Our Lady?s Hospice, Martin Hospice and Cicetekelo.

Most have an additional home care service because the dying are too sick to stay at home.

Yet traditionally and biblically, it is more dignified and peaceful to die at home surrounded by one?s kith and kin.

There are several reasons for dying away from home as hospice in-patient units in Zambia: The inconvenience of informing the hospital and police of a death at home and costly procedures for BIDs (brought in dead), 20 per cent of urban employees have no social safety network normally provided by the extended family system (families reject the dying and orphans).

Mother of Mercy Hospice: The programme was established in 1992 in Chilanga, 16 kilometres south of Lusaka. Most patients are HIV positive. More than 520 inpatients occupy the 22 beds.

An out-patient clinic and a school for children affected by HIV/AIDS operate alongside it.

The small day centre is now a large community school, Guardian Angel School, with about 130 pupils.

The outpatient clinic attends to up to 60 patients daily. About 300 patients from the home-based care programme receive food from the World Food Programme.

Less than 10 per cent of in-patients are on ARV therapy. A local doctor specialised in ARV treatment allocates two to four hours weekly.

The donor picks up the bill for treatment during the patient?s life.

Patients are counselled for 15 minutes or more daily to discuss the importance of regular taking of medication.

Up to 100 patients are visited in their homes each month by the home care team. All in-patients are screened for HIV, have a full blood count, and urine and stool analysis.

Donations in cash or kind are made by the local community, international donors, individual benefactors and local companies to purchase school uniforms and materials.

The hospice is primarily funded by the Archdiocese of Lusaka, nothing comes from the Government.

Jon Hospice: Run by Kara Counselling, the hospice was founded in 1999 and covers greater Lusaka. Initial funds for its establishment came from Pola van der Donck, a Dutch benefactor.

It is now being sustained by a combination of donors. The hospice itself also receives operating funds from the Diana, Princess of Wales Memorial Fund.

Local donations include 25 kilogrammes of beef to contribute towards food costs.

The day care centre for children is funded by Firelight Foundation and AIDS Alliance.

In addition to a 26-bed hospice unit, it operates a mobile hospice service, primarily for children, in the community.

A day care centre for children also operates there. Of the approximately its 500 admissions in 2003, nearly 40 per cent died.

In April 2004, there were 56 admissions. The multidisciplinary mobile hospice team works closely with other home-based care programmes, thus avoiding duplicating services.

Other Kara Counselling programmes include Hope House (life skills training and

VCT), Umoyo Training Centre (skills training and literacy classes for orphaned girls),

Martin Hospice and Ranchhod House (palliative centres).

Ranchhod House: This is named after the Asian businessman who donated the house; it incorporates a 15-bed adult hospice unit that opened in 2003.

It acts as a drop-in centre for HIV counselling and testing.

A street children?s programme is also being established as a preventative measure for vulnerable children.

These services are financially managed by Kara Counselling in Lusaka although local and international donations are sourced by Kabwe directly.

Funding has come from Irish Aid (water system), Abbot Pharmaceuticals (HIV test kits), local farmers and businesses (foodstuffs) and the Zambian NGO ? Community Response to HIV and AIDS (extension of the women?s ward). It is twined with Hospice of Illinois (USA).

Our Lady?s Hospice: This training and outreach programme started in 2001 and the custom-designed 22-bed in-patient unit opened in 2003.

It comprises 4 houses, each with 3 rooms that are furnished with 2 beds.

Acute day patients are stabilised and then transferred to an 8-bedded special care/observation unit/wards.

Trained volunteers visit patients in their homes. Relatives support work of the hospice.

Our Lady?s Hospice: The main funding for this service comes from the Catholic Church. Franciscans in the USA made the start up payment of US$10 000 for the feasibility study for hospice model. The UTH provides free ARVs.

Funds from the Catholic Church in USA supported the building of a laboratory for HIV testing.

Martin Hospice: Located in Choma, about 5 hours drive from Lusaka, this programme offers a 12-bed in-patient unit, a day care centre for 25 children and an outreach programme using already existing Catholic Church diocese home based care programmes.

Cicetekelo Hospice (Ndola Hospice/Ecumenical Hospice Association: It serves both urban and rural Ndola.

It also runs businesses to generate income. There is a 25-bedded inpatient unit for cancer patients and HIV patients. There is also home based care for 200 registered patients and 1200 orphans.

The World Food Programme provides food. Funding comes from both local and international: the Nuffield Foundation; the Diana Fund; Irish GPs (who raised 27,000 Euros following the recording of a Band-Aid type Song in my Heart CD) and the Irish Government?s Joint Committee on Foreign Affairs. It is run by Sr Eileen Keane of the Holy Rosary Sisters.

The University Teaching Hospital (UTH): Officially there are 1500 beds but unofficially close to 2,000 patients, many of them on the floor. It has called a ?departure lounge?.

NATIONAL AND PROFESSIONAL ORGANISATIONS

Some of national and professional organisations that are involved in various ways to support the work hospices in Zambia include: Catholic Archdiocese of Lusaka (52 home based care services); Zambian Palliative Care Association (an informal national association mainly linking Mother of Mercy Hospice and Jon Hospice); Power of Love Foundation (USA-based NGO aiming to minimise the impact of HIV/AIDS and is undertakes projects in Zambia and works in associate on with the Anglican Children?s Project); and The Diana, Princess of Wales Memorial Fund (works in 9 sub-Saharan Africa countries and committed an initial ?5 million over 5years).is sparse. Enthusiasm from government has been lacking, until last week when it undertook to fund hospices.

CHALLENGES FACED BY HOSPICES IN ZAMBIA

The main challenges faced by hospices in Zambia can be summarised as: paucity of funds to meet running costs, inadequate and poorly trained staff, lack of transport, insufficient supply of palliatives (drugs), absence of policy and the ambivalence of political dispensation, and the breakdown of the extended family system that has lead to many patients being abandoned.

BENEFITS OF PARTNERSHIPS

Benefit from partnering with other hospice fraternities in Africa and beyond include: the knowledge that they are being supported in their hospice and palliative care efforts to care for their patients, families and communities; partnerships provide financial and in-kind support hospice partners; funds can help support and expand their programs as well as in-kind donations providing medical and home care supplies, professional journals, books and training materials; partnerships can lead creation of long-lasting relationships and a deeper understanding of and access to lessons from other hospice partner?s challenges, goals and successes.

FUTURE PROSPECTS

Based on Zambia?s political economy and consideration of ethical issues, it is incumbent that a realignment of the budget be more skewed more towards health services.

A sick nation cannot be expected to be optimally productive.

Zambia?s Gross Domestic Product per capita is US$906 which falls within the range of US$8,272 (Libya) and US$346 (Democratic Republic of the Congo) in the countries of Africa.

Moreover, copper output has continued to increase and is expected to continue doing so in the coming years, due to the anticipated higher copper prices.

Also, the maize harvests doubled in 2010/2012 marketing season which helped to boost GDP by nearly 5.0 per cent.

Poverty reduction programs continue to receive support international bodies, including the IMF.

A tighter monetary policy has helped to cut inflation to single digit currently; but Zambia still needs to watch its fiscal discipline, for good health support, especially for the hospice movement in Zambia.

(The author is Executive Chairman of Sylva Group of Companies, former Principal Lusaka Campuses of Zambia Institute of Management, Zambia?s Poet Laureate 1998, immediate past president of Zambian PEN Centre, an association of writers affiliated to International PEN). Contact lanku2001@yahoo.com; 0979487788

Source: http://www.times.co.zm/sunday/?p=12936

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Presidents' Day Patriotic Crafts, | Family Holiday

Try these free President?s Day Patriotic Crafts and projects. Use many creative techniques and supplies to celebrate President?s Day. These crafts projects use materials found around the house, easy to make which make the Celebrating of President?s Day so much fun. You will find George Washington white wigs, Abraham Lincoln?s black hat, cabin crafts, George Washington face, Lincoln?s famous log cabin, President?s Day crafty food, and so much more!
Presidents Day is always celebrated on the third Monday of February. Presidents? Day in 2013 is on Monday, the 18th of February.
Presidents? Day is a federal holiday held for Washington?s Birthday the USA?s first president on February 22; it has become known as ?President?s Day?, honoring Washington and Lincoln, as well as all presidents of the United States.

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Source: http://www.familyholiday.net/presidents-day-patriotic-crafts

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