Archive for October 18th, 2010

Oct
18

Painting the Town Purple in Chicago to Raise Awareness About LGBT Bullying Suicide

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Painting the Town Purple in Chicago to Raise Awareness About LGBT Bullying  Suicide

Once again, local Chicago businesses are coming together to help confront the huge problem of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and questioning youth bullying and suicide. While LGBTQ bullying and the increased risk of suicide is not a new problem, the recent media coverage has finally helped put this important issue issue into the spotlight.
Local bars Scarlet and Minibar UltraLounge &Cafe in Boystown announced today that they will be participating in a local event called Painting the ‘Town Purple on October 20, 2010. That date has been deemed “Spirit Day”, where the LGBT community and their allies will wear purple in honor of the LGBTQ youth who have committed suicide due to homophobic abuse and bullying in their homes, at at their schools, or in their daily lives. Purple represents “Spirit” on the LGBT rainbow flag, so the color was chosen to honor the spirit of our community as we remember those we’ve lost and come together to make sure young people know they aren’t alone.
The Painting the ‘Town Purple event will benefit the Trevor Project, which works every day to save the lives of young LGBTQ people by running the Trevor Lifeline, the nation’s only 24-hour suicide and crisis prevention helpline for LGBTQ youth. They also also run TrevorChat, an online messaging service that connects young people with a counselor without having to pick up the phone and TrevorSpace, a bully-free zone online where LGBTQ youth, their friends and allies can connect with other people just like them all around the world.
Scarlet and Minibar will be donating portions of their proceeds to the Trevor Project and
Vivid Seats Ltd is donating 2 general admission floor seats to the February 28th Lady Gaga/Scissor Sisters concert at the United Center in Chicago to be raffled at the events!
Venues for Painting the Town Purple (Wednesday, October 20th, 10pm):
Scarlet – 3320 N. Halsted, Chicago IL (773) 348-1053
Will be donating a percentage of the entire night to go to The Trevor Project. There will also be a Video Filming Booth available for the It Gets Better Project, which helps LGBTQ youth realize that things do get better by hearing other peoples stories via website and videos, available to attendees.
Minibar UltraLounge &Cafe – 3341 N Halsted, Chicago IL (773) 871-MBAR
$5 Suggested Donation to benefit the Trevor Project and receive a free drink ticket- $6 Belvedere Martinis – $1 from each martini goes to the Trevor Project.
And of course the 2 general admission floor seats to the February 28th Lady Gaga/Scissor Sisters concert from Vivid Seats Ltd will be raffled off along with various gift certificates for local businesses!
LGBT young people face prejudice, fear and hate every day. That is why they are at a higher risk to do self-destructive things like attempt suicide. According to research done by The Trevor Project, LGBTQ teens are four times more likely to commit suicide than their straight counterparts. When a young LGBTQ person is thrown out of their family home or otherwise abused, they are up to 8 times more likely to attempt suicide, compared to youth whose families accept them for who they are. And when a young person is bullied at school – if they’re called names, fought with, had things stolen from them – their chances for attempting suicide more than double.
Suicide is one of the top three causes of death among 15 to 24-year-olds and is the second leading cause of death on college campuses.
There is good news, however. When a young person knows there is an adult they can trust, or a club they can belong to, like a Gay Straight Alliance, or even have the number for The Trevor Lifeline, they are much more likely to reach out for help when they face a crisis and those horrendous statistics drop dramatically.
That’s why Chicago and the Trevor Project aren’t sitting by silently in the face of this tragic problem. We can all come together to raise awareness and let LGBTQ youth know they aren’t alone and it does get better. We can show them there is a whole community of friends and allies that care about them and they aren’t alone. We can all make a difference and make sure those young people don’t become tragic statistics.
So wear purple all day, come out on Wednesday night, leave a message in the “It Gets Better Video Booth”, and get involved in the Chicago Ambassadors of the Trevor Project, who will be in attendance with information about how you can volunteer and help!
Let’s paint the town purple to save young lives!

Follow Waymon Hudson on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/WaymonHudson

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Oct
18

How Do We Judge the Homeowner

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How Do We Judge the Homeowner

In the rush to foreclosure, the banks and even government officials have been taking the position that the borrower/homeowners are fully to blame for the situations they find themselves in and that the paperwork technicalities just need to be worked out in order for there to be a just outcome, which is to say, a foreclosure.
Okay. This seems simple enough. The contract between the bank and the borrower says that the borrower will make their payments and that if they don’t, the bank can foreclose. Assuming the bank did everything right, it can.
We live under the free market paradigm and that is simple free market — and contract law — cause and effect.
But, what if the borrower was defrauded in either a legal sense or a moral sense at the inception of the contract? That may not make the contract unenforceable, but does it make the enforcement inequitable? Does it erode this moral high ground that lenders are claiming?
Perhaps we need to be more discriminating here. Some time ago I posted on asymmetrical information in regard to one type of transaction. But suppose that there was asymmetrical information at the time the mortgage was originated? According to Dealbroker, Jamie decided on October 2006 to get J.P. Morgan out of Subprime. According to the article, the JPM team decided that quality control had slipped at the originator level. What might this mean? I suspect “quality control” is a euphemism for rampant fraud. So lets just say that October, 2006 is “Day Zero.”
It used to be said that a business person needed a good banker, a good accountant, and a good lawyer. (Now it might be said that a banker needs a good lawyer.) Implied in this is that there is a professional relationship and that the customer depends on the advice of these professionals. Bankers have until recently seen themselves as professionals. In the less heady days of local banking, the President and senior officers of the bank made the loan decisions. One of them generally had a relationship with the borrower. They knew the borrower and had their interest in mind along with the interest of the bank. There was a certain implied fairness at work. The judgment of the banker often accrued to the benefit of the borrower. If the banker thought something was a bad deal, they said so. If they thought the borrower was making a bad investment either in general or in relation to their specific circumstances (knowledge, skills, income, liquidity, time horizons…) they would tell them that.
The mechanistic finance models took that away.
So is there any difference in the way we should look at someone who purchased a house on Day Zero minus One versus Day Zero Plus One? Perhaps before Day Zero, the general conditions in the market were that everyone was wrong. Everyone thought prices would continue to rise. Everyone thought the rising prices would mitigate the imprudent loan processes and structures, the no-doc loans, the 97% loans or 120% home equity loans. At Day Zero plus One, that changed. The caution light should have come on and the relationship of the professional banker to the client should have included caveats about the investments that were being made. This is idealistic, I admit.
But, someone should investigate when JP Morgan and every other bank changed their policies in regard to loan to value, income verification, product recommendations to customers, instructions to bankers, incentives to bankers, etc. If banks knew in the executive suite or the research department that the fundamentals were turning ugly, and still kept making loans and shoving them into government guarantee programs or selling them to investors, then there is no moral high ground. The information asymmetry was used to make more money. In a moral sensibility, the contract should be looked at what it was, a gamble by both parties. If at this point in time the stupidity of the lender has allowed the contract to become unenforceable, then that is the lender’s problem. Too bad, so sad.
Now, none of this absolves the borrower of responsibility for their decision. It just puts the borrower and the lender on a level moral ground and perhaps they find themselves on level legal grounds. If that is the case, the lenders should get off their high horse and negotiate modifications that share the losses between two equally culpable parties.

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Oct
18

Con Games A Jet All the Way

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Con Games  A Jet All the Way

If you are a true sports fan — and you know who you are — then you know that now and again a game between your favorites comes along that will expose your true colors.
In my case, as a transplanted New Yorker in Colorado — and a true sports fan — I have tried to bleed Denver Broncos blue from the start of my arrival here. It has not been easy, given the almost completely unlikeable attitude of the franchise post-Elway, and the constant mentions of Elway in the Denver sports pages. Nonetheless, I’ve persevered in my Rocky Mountain loyalties — until the New York Jets came to town.
I once cashed a Jets paycheck — $30 per week — so there’s that to consider. And I started working as a ballboy for the Jets when Buddy Ryan, the father of Jets head coach Rex Ryan, was breaking in as a defensive line coach the year they last won the Super Bowl. But that was over 40 years ago, and I awaited the kickoff Sunday to see how I really felt.
It was no contest. Once the ball was in the air my heart was in my throat and I was bleeding J-E-T-S green. Whatever feeling I once had for the Broncos was out the window. When the Jets finally won — thanks to a goal line pass intereference call against Denver — I could barely remember why I had ever liked the no-run, no-account Donkeys, who plunged to 2-4. The Broncos have gone 4-12 in the last sixteen games of head coach and boy genius Josh McDaniels. I’m not sure if I can even like the Broncos any more.
The Jets? They’re on a five-game winning streak heading into their bye week and it doesn’t get any better than that. They’re happy and confident. The defense is a work of art and second-year QB Mark Sanchez is coming along. Even LaDainian Tomlinson has recaptured Chargers lightning in a bottle.
Could they win a second Super Bowl as soon as this season? You never know. I remember the one time it happened like it was yesterday.

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Oct
18

Early Voting Over One Million Served

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Early Voting Over One Million Served

With the help of reports from California and updates from other states, the number of persons who have voted in the 2010 midterm election is now known to exceed 1.5 million voters. The number is likely much higher, given that some states are not reporting and other state reports are a little stale. I track these early voting statistics here.
What do the numbers tell us so far?
First, early voting continues along at a strong clip. If early voting continue at this pace, some states and localities appear poised to easily meet or exceed their 2008 levels.
Second, despite stories about an enthusiasm gap, registered Democrats have gotten off to a jack rabbit start in Ohio and Iowa, and are keeping up with registered Republicans elsewhere. The early voting period has become a marathon, so we will have to wait to see if the Democrats can sustain their sprint or if the Republican tortoise will win. This race ain’t over yet.
Third, the early numbers are not smelling so rosy for Democrats in Nevada. True, Democrats have an 9 percentage point registration advantage among early voters in Clarke County — home of Las Vegas — but this is not as the 21 point margin Democrats enjoyed in 2008. And they are currently behind in Washoe by 5 points, a county where they had a 12 point margin in 2008. Anecdotal evidence is that Tea Party supporters were out in force over the weekend for the opening of early voting, but that their efforts were not as organized as the Democrats. We will have to see if Nevada is a state where conservative enthusiasm can beat Democratic GOTV efforts.

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Oct
18

Sex Oil and Videotape

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Sex Oil and Videotape

So a guy goes into his neighborhood bar and in a dark booth in the back spots Senator Mary Landreiu of Louisiana with President Obama and some secret service agents. “Mr. President, Senator, what are you doing here?” he asks.
“The President’s agreed to reopen deep water drilling in the Gulf, even though we haven’t yet figured out what went wrong with that BP rig” Landreiu tells him.
“And the Senator’s been telling me how her colleague David Vitter’s favorite prostitute has been talking again and we might have to knock her off like we did the D.C. Madam,” Obama confesses.
“But Mr. President, why on earth would you kill a prostitute?” the man asks, now totally shocked.
“See,” Landreiu smiles at the President. “I told you he wouldn’t care about our oil deal.”
Talk about distractions, for the last week I’ve had two images of 26- and 21-inch pipes etched into my mind forever. One was the escape tube drilled through solid rock that gave new life to 33 Chilean miners who’d been trapped underground in the San Jose Cooper mine for over two months. The other is of that broken BP wellhead pipe that spewed oil and gas into the Gulf of Mexico for five months this spring and summer that we all watched live on an underwater camera, the most compellingly awful video since the towers fell on 9/11. Recently, the government put out an “oil budget” that said the oil’s mostly gone away. Their own spill commission then put out a report saying the oil budget, like the federal budget, was full of deficits.
Of course. the biggest pipeline that continues spewing is the one we don’t see that pumps money from the oil companies, who now make up the largest industrial combine in human history, into the pockets of local, state and federal politicians who despite some ideological differences share a common commitment to non-partisan greed.
There’s also the daily grease of politics such as the campaign to kill California’s climate change policy through Proposition 23 (backed by two Texas oil companies) that would forbid any funding for clean energy projects until there were three consecutive years in which the state could keep unemployment around five percent and fit five wind turbines on the head of a pin.
In the U.S. Senate they helped turn a climate bill into a coal subsidy bill and then killed it anyway, just because they could. In the New Yorker’s October 11th issue in an article titled “As the World Burns” reporter Ryan Lizza explained the whole process in eviscerating detail, including the White House’s lack of engagement. It reminded me of a 1998 story I did in Penthouse titled ‘While the World Burns’ about the Clinton/Gore administration’s climate change failures except that publication had naked ladies instead of cartoons.
When I covered the Earth Summit in 1992 then Senator Al Gore complained that the (first) Bush Administration’s pledge to reduce Carbon Dioxide emissions to 1990 levels by the year 2000 wasn’t ambitious enough to meet the threat posed by greenhouse gases. Today’s failed Senate bill aimed at returning to 2000 levels by 2017. So how’d you like the summer? Pretty toasty, huh? 113 degrees in L.A. and Moscow smoked out by forest fires.
What was also striking about the Senate bill was how the pols felt compelled to win agreement from the oil, coal and nuclear industries before even considering moving forward on it. By that logic, of course, you couldn’t pass an organized crime bill without approval from key stakeholders like the Mafia, Hell’s Angels and cartel money launderers. Of course, OC can’t compete with BP, Shell or Exxon when it comes to exerting a little muscle. Just ask Ken Saro-Wiwa of Nigeria. Unfortunately, you’ll need a Ouija board.
And finally, there’s this latest deal to reopen the Gulf of Mexico to deepwater drilling, months before the studies on what went wrong or what the impacts are have been completed but just weeks before the mid-term elections. Shill, baby, shill. This one smells worse than the petroleum stench that burned my sinuses when I was on and over the water near the BP eruption this summer and watched more than 100 dolphins and a whale trapped and dying in oil slicks that were toxic enough to kill any life form with the possible exception of Dick Cheney. And even he was probably shocked by the terrible waste of oil.
I ran into author/activist Bill McKibben the other day and congratulated him on his 350.org climate group’s more than 7,000 worldwide protest actions on 10/10/10 (a date chosen I suspect because the petroleum lobby already claimed 6/6/6).
We agreed that given the present state of our dysfunctional political system, necessary energy policy will probably have to come from the bottom-up. And that’s a thin reed of hope in an oil-covered swamp. See you at the Rally for Sanity.

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Oct
18

What Does a Cartoon Have to Do to Get a G These Days

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What Does a Cartoon Have to Do to Get a G These Days

The Lion King had a major character’s father being murdered onscreen, another major character being eaten alive by hyenas, and a young child snuggling up beside the corpse of the above-mentioned recently deceased father. Tarzan opened with a blood-stained cabin containing two corpses and an infant being eaten alive off screen, and it ended with the onscreen shooting death of a major character and the hanging of the lead villain. The Hunchback of Notre Dame had an onscreen neck-breaking murder of a young mother, the attempted drowning of her baby, and an entire subplot involving the villain’s desire to screw and/or murder the heroine because of his guilt-ridden lustings for her that felt like a cross between Schindler’s List and Sweeney Todd (great movie and great song though… why don’t they make kids toys that sing “Hellfire”?). Yet they all received G-ratings from the MPAA back in the 1990s. Yet just last week, Walt Disney’s Tangled received a PG rating for the unholy crime of ‘brief mild violence’ (trailer 01 and trailer 02).
Back in my day (about ten years ago), the PG rating was a kiss of death for an animated feature. The Black Cauldron in 1985 was the only major Disney cartoon to receive said rating, and it was an infamous flop for the struggling studio that instigated the changing of the guard which brought about the Jeff Katzenberg/Mike Eisner/Roy Disney 1986-1994 era-of-awesome (I’d argue that it lasted until 1999, but I’m a fan of their post-Lion King work). As the 90s drew to a close and Dreamworks waged a genuine campaign against the Disney animation monopoly, they used the PG rating to signal that their initial films (Antz, Prince of Egypt, etc) would be a bit more hard-edged than the stereotypical all-ages Disney films. Fox tried their luck with the PG-rated Titan A.E. in summer 2000 and flopped so hard ($75 million budget > $36 million worldwide gross) that Fox nearly ceased to even have an animation branch, and the one-time would-be Disney rival Don Bluth ceased to have a career all-together. While Disney tried their hand at hard-PG action in 2001 with Atlantis: The Lost Empire (if you want a film that feels like it inspired Avatar just as much as The Battle For Terra…), but the film grossed just $84 million domestic.
Ironically, just a month prior, Dreamworks would release the film that would more or less completely kill the notion that PG = box office death. Of course, we’re talking about Shrek, which received a PG for ‘mild language and some crude humor’. The film established Dreamworks as an equal to the Disney animation empire, grossed $262 million in the US, and won the first-ever Academy Award for Best Animated Film. Once Dreamworks proved that PG didn’t necessarily equal box-office doom, the floodgates opened. In fact, of their twenty animated features, only three Dreamworks cartoons have been rated G (Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron, Wallace and Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit, and Chicken Run). All three Ice Age films from Fox (the franchise that revitalized Fox’s animation department) all had PG ratings, as did Robots (Horton Hears A Who, a $145 million-domestic grosser, had a G).
The weird side-effect of this over the last decade is that while more and more animated movies have been willing to go with the PG rating, it has seemed harder and harder to actually get a G for films that seemingly would deserve it. Sure, the two Pixar PG-films (The Incredibles and Up) had onscreen deaths and heart-wrenching drama, but Lilo and Stitch basically got a PG for having a rude and obnoxious alien furball as a main character (or, um… ‘mild sci-fi action’). Most Pixar films, even the emotionally-devastating Toy Story 3, went out with G ratings, but Bolt went out with a PG for basically having a (fantastic) curtain-raiser opening action sequence that was quickly revealed to be fake and for a climactic moment of fiery peril for the lead characters.
Point being, back in my day, you had to EARN a PG rating for your cartoon. You had to have Earth being blown up in the opening scenes (Titan A.E.), you had to have corpses coming back to life and attacking our heroes (The Black Cauldron), you had to have a ten-year old child killing enemy henchmen (The Incredibles), you had to have a 200-person expedition team getting wiped out by robotic monsters (Atlantis: The Lost Empire). You at least had to have some token vulgarity and the occasional profanity (the Shrek series). But now that the PG rating is no longer considered kryptonite, and the G rating can be considered as ‘uncool’ for animated films as it generally is for live-action films, studios don’t seem to be even putting up a fight before taking that PG for something as meaningless as ‘brief mild violence’. It makes one wonder whether the Disney cartoons of my youth, such as The Hunchback of Notre Dame, would be PG-13 by today’s standards. Heck, maybe it would get an R.

Follow Scott Mendelson on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/ScottMendelson

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Oct
18

Review Bill HicksThe Essential Collection

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Review Bill HicksThe Essential Collection

“In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.” – George Orwell
When Bill Hicks died in 1994, he was not a household name in the world of pop culture, though his fans were truly heartbroken by the loss. In the years since, Hicks legend has grown as more and more people have discovered his often dark and satirical comedy and he’s now regarded as one of the greatest stand-up comedians of all time. And yet, calling his work “comedy” falls short of a true description for what he was really doing. Not to say he wasn’t funny; Hicks at his best could make you double over in laughter and he was as relentless in delivering his well-oiled material as we was when he’d go off the cuff. But behind the funny business was a serious social critic who saw the ugliest flaws in our society and was not afraid to hold a well-lit mirror to our hypocrisies and deficiencies. Whether it was politics, religion or the rampant consumerist mentality (and the marketing and media manipulation that fostered it), Hicks spoke the truths that even those who felt the same were reluctant to admit. Instead of truth to power, he told truth to the people, wrapped in a few “purple-veined dick jokes” to keep em laughing along the way.
In his own way, Hicks gave people the permission to discuss and debate things that were a little (or a lot) taboo. Most importantly, he gave people the opportunity to think beyond the social veneer of society, to examine our role in the superficial and rethink our connection to the spiritual. Comedian Brett Butler compared Hicks to Jesus at his angriest, overturning the moneychangers tables in the temple and decrying their greed and sins against humanity: “It was Jesus, Bill wanted to be. He wanted to save us all. Except he was freeze-framed in the scene when Jesus went into the temple and said ‘This is my father’s house and you’ve turned it into a den of thieves.’ That’s what Bill always wanted to do; he wanted to be Christ at his angriest.” Hicks wove anger into his comedy in such a way that as you were laughing, your “third eye” was being “squeegeed” as Hicks might have stated. He ripped off the veneer of ignorance that is spread across our culture and excoriated those who were blinded by it. He knew that fascism is a creeping entity and that those most easily swayed by it were oblivious. He knew the worst tendencies of our species and how susceptible people were to being controlled. Though his caustic commentary on our consumer-marketed society, he hoped to free or enlighten them a bit. There are some shackles that people cannot see and Hicks knew they just had to be aware enough to know they were being controlled to conform by those who set the norms in society. It is amazing to think of what Hicks would do if he were alive in the age of the internet and all it’s connectivity (aside from perusing copious amounts of online porn). I think he would have the same feel of horror and amazement that he did back then but perhaps have more avenues to express himself and connect with his fans. Surely his Tweets would be legendary rips on every phony in the biz! But sadly, he is no longer here to fight the good fight. However, there are quite a few CD’s and DVD’s for you to check him out, including the recently released Essential Collection.
The CDs and DVD’s that comprise The Essential Collection are quite a mix of material, much of it previously unseen. The two CD’s feature some of Hicks best known bits and comprise the Essential part, meaning if you haven’t heard Hicks, these are some choice bits to begin with. The DVD’s, however, are where more hardcore fans will start; novice Hicks fans should watch his scathing and polished performances on Relentless, Revelations and One Night Stand to get their first dose on video. Before Hicks was a hit, he honed his skills across the middle of America and chewed up audiences across the deep South. The first of the two DVD’s offer early career performances from the early 80′s in Houston and Indianapolis as well as interviews and performance footage from his Outlaws of Comedy troupe. These early performances feature Bill in his formative years, unleashing his ferocious wit on crowd after crowd to perfect his message. Calling it an “act” wouldn’t do justice to the underlying politics or philosophical threads, though there was more of the traditional stand-up feel to his early performances. Those 80′s clips are interesting to watch as Hicks evolved his material in the trenches of American comedy. However, the Austin Bootleg series from the 90′s show Hicks in full swing, ripping pop culture and the shallow end of the gene pool as he cut loose in a smoky Austin nightclub that was a regular haunt of his. Those clips were shot on videotape for Hicks private use but now that he is gone, they are wonderful to be able to view so we can enjoy more of Hicks than we were able to in the time since they were recorded.
The self-made Hicks-created film Ninja Bachelor Party is on here as well and quite frankly, it is for Hicks hardcore fans only. However, it came from the mind of Hicks and represents a creative and artistic endeavor that for better or worse is saved for posterity. Being able to pore through all this material gives the viewer/listener a deeper sense of where Hicks came from creatively and new perspective on where he wound up. Add to all this extra pictures, interviews and a bunch of Hicks original songs to download, and you’ve got an important chapter for your Hicks collection. Whether you are a long time fan or are just finding out about him, the legend of Bill Hicks burns bright in the annals of comedic history as well as sociopolitical commentary. The Essential Collection helps us to appreciate how much time and effort went into honing his act. It is to our great detriment that Hicks is no longer with us, but at least we can still watch and listen to him dish out the medicine for what ails our society and give us reason to laugh as well as think critically for ourselves. The one sad part of viewing Hicks live is seeing his incessant chain-smoking onstage while being all too aware that his life would be cut drastically short due to cancer. Sure, the cigs were part of his act and he got some great laughs with them as props, but it was at the cost of his health and ultimately, his life. Hicks light burned bright and his untimely death at 32 cut short the vast potential of this “satirist, social critic, stand-up comedian” who only strived to rip our blinders off and show us the folly of our ways. May we someday actually evolve our collective consciousness and learn to live together in peace. I’ll leave you with one of Hicks’ signature bits:
The world is like a ride in an amusement park, and when you choose to go on it you think it’s real because that’s how powerful our minds are. The ride goes up and down, around and around, it has thrills and chills, and it’s very brightly colored, and it’s very loud, and it’s fun for a while. Many people have been on the ride a long time, and they begin to wonder, “Hey, is this real, or is this just a ride?” And other people have remembered, and they come back to us and say, “Hey, don’t worry; don’t be afraid, ever, because this is just a ride.” And we…kill those people. “Shut him up! I’ve got a lot invested in this ride, shut him up! Look at my furrows of worry, look at my big bank account, and my family. This has to be real.” It’s just a ride. But we always kill the good guys who try and tell us that, you ever notice that? And let the demons run amok… But it doesn’t matter, because it’s just a ride. And we can change it any time we want. It’s only a choice. No effort, no work, no job, no savings of money. Just a simple choice, right now, between fear and love. The eyes of fear want you to put bigger locks on your doors, buy guns, close yourself off. The eyes of love instead see all of us as one. Here’s what we can do to change the world, right now, to a better ride. Take all that money we spend on weapons and defenses each year and instead spend it feeding and clothing and educating the poor of the world, which it would pay for many times over, not one human being excluded, and we could explore space, together, both inner and outer, forever, in peace.

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Oct
18

Hunting Down Prop 109 Wildlife Protection Voters Rights At Risk

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Hunting Down Prop 109 Wildlife Protection Voters Rights At Risk

The Humane Society of the United States trusts the voters of Arizona. The NRA doesn’t, and it wants to take away their rights to vote on citizen initiatives on some animal welfare issues.
That’s the underlying mentality that divides the backers and opponents of Arizona’s Proposition 109, which was referred to the ballot by the politicians who are the handmaidens of the NRA.
They don’t like that we succeeded in convincing Arizona voters to outlaw cockfighting and extreme confinement of veal calves and breeding pigs on factory farms by ballot initiative. And they especially don’t like that we succeeded in persuading the electorate to ban the use of cruel and inhumane steel-jawed leghold traps on public lands — since that was a restriction on the taking of wildlife.
Just a few years after the anti-trapping initiative, in 2000, the NRA and the rest of the trophy hunting lobby succeeded in getting state politicians to place a measure on the ballot to create a higher threshold for passing wildlife protection initiatives in Arizona — a two-thirds vote, rather than the simple majority vote that is the standard for elections in a democratic society. Even though we were outspent 20 to 1, we succeeded in alerting voters to this attack on their fundamental rights of citizenship; 63 percent of voters told the NRA to leave their voting rights alone, and its ballot measure went down in flames.
Now, the NRA-anchored coalition has come back with its latest attack on voting rights: Prop 109. It creates a constitutional right to hunt, but there’s much more to it than that. It takes power away from citizens and puts it in the hands of politicians, and its effect would be to block future statutory initiatives to protect wildlife and to establish that hunting is the “preferred means” of dealing with wildlife. It enshrines in the state constitution that no law or rule shall be adopted that “unreasonably restrict hunting, fishing and harvesting wildlife or the use of traditional means and methods.” It even weakens the authority of the Arizona Game and Fish Commission, and replaces sound scientific wildlife management with partisan politics.
If approved, Prop 109 could repeal the voter-approved ballot measure on trapping, legalize canned hunting, and protect outrageous practices like hound hunting of bears or even bear baiting, if someone decided to start engaging in that activity. And we could forget about any attempt to restrict the use of lead shot that is killing highly endangered California condors, since a requirement to use nontoxic shot would “unreasonably restrict hunting.”
Today the campaign launched an advertising campaign to alert voters once again to this attack on their voting rights and to this power grab by the NRA and the politicians who do their bidding.
Voters should reject Prop 109, just as they rejected the 2000 effort to accomplish the same end. The Arizona Republic called Prop 109 “a minefield of potential problems.”
Take a look at the new ad, and urge your friends and contacts in Arizona to vote “no” on Prop 109.
This post originally appeared on Pacelle’s blog, A Humane Nation.

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Oct
18

The Weeks Top 5 Funniest Videos Jack Black Zach Galifianakis Conan OBrien and more

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The Weeks Top 5 Funniest Videos Jack Black Zach Galifianakis Conan OBrien and more

Each week, I post the five funniest videos from the past week’s Gotcha Media right here for you to enjoy. If I missed anything good, please don’t hesitate to correct me in the comments below.
Jack Black was back in School of Rock-mode this week, interacting with children as Nathan Spewman, professional mis-informant in a new Web series sponsored by Health Care for America Now. While it sort of feels like this campaign is about a year too late, it’s good to see Jack Black using his comedy skills for good as he did so effectively in “Prop 8 the Musical.”
Zach Galifianakis somehow found some time outside of his busy schedule of promoting his new movies to release a new episode of “Between Two Ferns.” This week, his guest was Ashton’s dad Bruce Willis, who didn’t say word until about two minutes into the interview.
Conan O’Brien’s TBS and AT&T-backed promo machine keeps on rolling in advance of his new show’s November 8 start date. At least I think it starts November 8, since that’s the date I have drilled into my brain. While I had thought the big orange Conan blimp would be the most ridiculous thing they would create to promote the show, I was proven wrong this week when they released this mini-action movie spot in which Conan drives an explosives-packed car off a cliff.
The big question on everyone’s mind this week in the lead-up to the 30 Rock live episode was, “can they pull it off?” The cast and crew delivered not just one, but two live shows on Thursday night with minimal mistakes. I have to say that I agree with Tracy Jordan that it would have been fun to see someone break, but unlike Liz Lemon, Tina Fey is just too professional for that. Of all the guest stars, the most unexpected was also the most fun. The decision to cast Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Liz Lemon in the flashback scenes was simply brilliant.
The final video of the week comes from the always reliable Pee-wee Herman, who showed up on Jimmy Fallon’s show this week to take a tandem bike ride around the studio with the host and talk about his new Broadway show. Fallon looked like he was simultaneously fearing for his life and having the time of his life, trading “I know you are but what am I?” lines back and forth with Pee-wee.
More comedy videos at: http://www.gotchamediablog.com/

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Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Oct
18

Microsoft software head Ray Ozzie resigns

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Microsoft software head Ray Ozzie resigns

Ray Ozzie, chief software architect of Microsoft and proponent of cloud computing, has resigned unexpectedly.
Mr Ozzie was a top member of the company's management, having taken over the software role from Bill Gates.
Chief executive Steve Ballmer announced his colleague's departure in an email to company staff.
He said Mr Ozzie would remain with Microsoft during a transitional period, and that the company was not looking for anyone to replace him.
Microsoft shares dropped 2.2% in after-hours trading on the news.
“With our progress in services and the cloud now full speed ahead in all aspects of our business, Ray and I are announcing today Ray's intention to step down from his role as chief software architect,” .
He added that Mr Ozzie would focus on “the broader area of entertainment, where Microsoft has many ongoing investments”.
Nonetheless, his resignation may cast some doubt over the technological direction Microsoft will take next.
Mr Ozzie's decision to step down also follows a number of other senior departures at the company.
Business head Stephen Elop left in September to head up Nokia, while entertainment and devices head Robbie Bach is also planning to leave.
Mr Ozzie joined the firm in 2005 as chief technology officer after his own company was bought out by Microsoft.
A year after his arrival, he successfully pushed the software leviathan towards tackling the challenge of the internet, by adopting “cloud computing” technology.
Microsoft traditionally focused on desktop computers, but Mr Ozzie convinced management that in the future, processing power and functionality would be provided remotely via the web.
Previously, he also designed the Lotus Notes email system.

Source:BBC

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Oct
18

Bank of America restarts home repossessions

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Bank of America restarts home repossessions

Bank of America – the biggest bank in the US – has said it will restart legal proceedings to repossess 102,000 homes.
The lender had stopped its foreclosure process earlier this month after it emerged that thousands of cases may have been mishandled.
The bank said it would restart proceedings in 23 states.
It is continuing an internal review of cases in the other 27 states, but said it expected fewer than 30,000 foreclosures to be seriously delayed.
“As was the case for our judicial state review, our initial assessment findings show the basis for our foreclosure decisions is accurate,” said a spokesman for the bank.
The news was greeted well by markets, with Bank of America's and JP Morgan's share prices rising 2.9% and 2.4% respectively by the close of trading on Monday.
JP Morgan also suspended its foreclosures this month for similar reasons.
The news coincided with unexpectedly strong quarterly profits announced by Citigroup – who has not frozen its foreclosures. Citi's share price rose over 5%.
It follows revelations that foreclosures by some banks may have relied the legal testimony of “robo-signers” – junior employees who signed thousands of legal documents on behalf of the banks without understanding their content.
Meanwhile all 50 US states began investigations on Friday into the banks' foreclosure process.
“We've intensified the ongoing reviews of our process, and based up on these reviews we have not identified any systemic problems,” said John Gerspach, chief financial officer of Citigroup.
Some analysts think that the robo-signer problem arose simply because banks were struggling to cope with the sheer unprecedented volume of foreclosures and took short-cuts.
According to industry figures, more than 2.5 million US homes have been repossessed since December 2007.
However, others worry that it could belie a deeper problem.
They suggest that many home loans may not have been correctly documented when they were originally made during the housing bubble, leaving the banks unable to pursue their claims against borrowers through the courts.

Source:BBC

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Oct
18

Chess Puzzles Prokess Windmills

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Chess Puzzles Prokess Windmills

In the magical world of chess composition, he was called “the player’s composer” since his gems resembled positions from practical play. He spread the pieces, usually not too many, around the board naturally and the solutions were very logical.
Ladislav Prokes (1884-1966) was a strong player who represented Czechoslovakia in three chess olympiads (1927, 1928 and 1930). He was also a prolific writer and columnist, but his main contribution to chess was composing nearly 1,200 wonderful chess studies. His creations were clear, witty, instructive and easy to understand.
I am presenting Prokes’s two works, in which the white queen acts like a windmill.
In the first study, Prokes teamed up with Oldrich Duras, the first Czech grandmaster and one of the greatest Czech players, who was also an eminent composer. It was published in Casopis ceskoslovenskych sachistu in 1921.
Ladislav Prokes / Oldrich Duras
White wins
In the second study, Prokes swings the windmill in two different directions. It appeared in the magazine Sachove umeni in 1947.
Ladislav Prokes
White wins
Solutions will appear next week.

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Oct
18

A World Made by War How Old Will You Be When the American War State Goes Down

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A World Made by War How Old Will You Be When the American War State Goes Down

Crossposted with TomDispatch.com.
When you look at me, you can’t mistake the fact that I’m of a certain age. But just for a moment, think of me as nine years old. You could even say that I celebrated my ninth birthday last week, without cake, candles, presents, or certainly joy.
I’ve had two mobilized moments in my life. The first was in the Vietnam War years; the second, the one that leaves me as a nine-year-old, began on the morning of September 11, 2001. I turned on the TV while doing my morning exercises, saw a smoking hole in a World Trade Center tower, and thought that, as in 1945 when a B-25 slammed into the Empire State Building, a terrible accident had happened.
Later, after the drums of war had begun to beat, after the first headlines had screamed their World-War-II-style messages (“the Pearl Harbor of the 21st century”), I had another thought. And for a reasonably politically sophisticated guy, my second response was not only as off-base as the first, but also remarkably dumb. I thought that this horrific event taking place in my hometown might open Americans up to the pain of the world. No such luck, of course.
If you had told me then that we would henceforth be in a state of eternal war as well as living in a permanent war state, that, to face a ragtag enemy of a few thousand stateless terrorists, the national security establishment in Washington would pump itself up to levels not faintly reached when facing the Soviet Union, a major power with thousands of nuclear weapons and an enormous military, that “homeland” — a distinctly un-American word — would land in our vocabulary never to leave, and that a second Defense Department dubbed the Department of Homeland Security would be set up not to be dismantled in my lifetime, that torture (excuse me, “enhanced interrogation techniques”) would become as American as apple pie and that some of those “techniques” would actually be demonstrated to leading Bush administration officials inside the White House, that we would pour money into the Pentagon at ever escalating levels even after the economy crashed in 2008, that we would be fighting two potentially trillion-dollar-plus wars without end in two distant lands, that we would spend untold billions constructing hundreds of military bases in those same lands, that the CIA would be conducting the first drone air war in history over a country we were officially not at war with, that most of us would live in a remarkable state of detachment from all of this, and finally — only, by the way, because I’m cutting this list arbitrarily short — that I would spend my time writing incessantly about “the American way of war” and produce a book with that title, I would have thought you were nuts.
But every bit of that happened, even if unpredicted by me because, like human beings everywhere, I have no special knack for peering into the future. If it were otherwise, I would undoubtedly now be zipping through fabulous spired cities with a jetpack on my back (as I was assured would happen in my distant youth). But if prediction isn’t our forte, then adaptability to changing circumstances may be — and it certainly helps account for my being here today.
I’m here because, in response to the bizarre spectacle of this nation going to war while living at peace, even if in a spasmodic state of collective national fear, I did something I hardly understood at the time. I launched a nameless listserv of collected articles and my own expanding commentary that ran against the common wisdom of that October moment when the bombing runs for our second Afghan war began. A little more than a year later, thanks to the Nation Institute, it became a website with the name TomDispatch.com, and because our leaders swore we were “a nation at war,” because we were indeed killing people in quantity in distant lands, because the power of the state at home was being strengthened in startling ways, while everything still open about our society seemed to be getting screwed shut, and the military was being pumped up to Schwarzeneggerian dimensions, I started writing about war.
At some level, I can’t tell you how ridiculous that was. After all, I’m the most civilian and peaceable of guys. I’ve never even been in the military. I was, however, upset with the Bush administration, the connect-no-dots media coverage of that moment, and the repeated 9/11 rites which proclaimed us the planet’s greatest victim, survivor, and dominator, leaving only one role, greatest Evil Doer, open for the rest of the planet (and you know who auditioned for that part, and won, hands down)!
Things That Go Boom in the Night
I won’t say, however, that I had no expertise whatsoever with a permanent state of war and a permanent war state — only that the expertise I had was available to anyone who had lived through the post-World War II era. I was reminded of this on a recent glorious Sunday when, from the foot of Manhattan, I set out, for the first time in more than half a century, on a brief ferry ride that proved, for me, as effective a time machine as anything H.G. Wells had ever imagined. That ferry was not, of course, taking me to a future civilization at the edge of time, but to Governor’s Island, now a park and National Monument in the eddying waters of New York harbor and to the rubble of a gas station my father, a World War II vet, ran there in the early 1950s when that island was still a major U.S. Army base.
On many mornings in those years, I accompanied him on that short ride across the East River and found myself amid buzzing jeeps and drilling soldiers in a world of Army kids with, among other wonders, access to giant swimming pools and kiddy-matinee Westerns. As a dyed-in-the-wool city boy, it was my only real exposure to the ‘burbs and it proved an edenic one that also caught something of the exotically militarized mood of that Korean War moment.
As on that island, so for most Americans then, the worlds of the warrior and of abundance were no more antithetical than they were to the corporate executives, university research scientists, and military officers who were using a rising military budget and the fear of communism to create a new national security economy. An alliance between big industry, big science, and the military had been forged during World War II that blurred the boundaries between the military and the civilian by fusing together a double set of desires: for technological breakthroughs leading to ever more efficient weapons of destruction and to ever easier living. The arms race — the race, that is, for future good wars — and the race for the good life were then, as on that island, being put on the same “war” footing.
In the 1950s, a military Keynesianism was already driving the U.S. economy toward a consumerism in which desire for the ever larger car and missile, electric range and tank, television console and submarine was wedded in single corporate entities. The companies — General Electric, General Motors, and Westinghouse, among others — producing the large objects for the American home were also major contractors developing the big ticket weapons systems ushering the Pentagon into its own age of abundance.
More than half a century later, the Pentagon is still living a life of abundance — despite one less-than-victorious, less-then-good war after another — while we, increasingly, are not. In the years in-between, the developing national security state of my childhood just kept growing, and in the process the country militarized in the strangest of ways.
Only once in that period did a sense of actual war seem to hover over the nation. That was, of course, in the Vietnam years of the 1960s and early 1970s, when the draft brought a dirty war up close and personal, driving it into American homes and out into the streets, when a kind of intermittent warfare seemed to break out in this country’s cities and ghettos, and when impending defeat drove the military itself to the edge of revolt and collapse.
From the 1970s until 2001, as that military rebuilt itself as an all-volunteer force and finally went back to war in distant lands, the military itself seemed to disappear from everyday life. There were no soldiers in sight, nothing we would consider commonplace today — from uniforms and guns in train stations to military flyovers at football games, or the repeated rites of praise for American troops that are now everyday fare in our world where, otherwise, we largely ignore American wars.
In 1989, for instance, I wrote in the Progressive magazine about a country that seemed to me to be undergoing further militarization, even if in a particularly strange way. Ours was, I said:
Of course, that was then, this is now. Little did I know. Today, it seems, our country is triumphant in producing only things that go boom in the night: We have a near monopoly on the global weapons market and on the global movie market, where in the dark we’re experts in explosions of every sort. When I wrote in 1989 that the process was “so far gone,” I had no idea how far we still had to go. I had no idea, for instance, how far a single administration could push us when it came to war. Still, one thing that does remain reasonably constant about America’s now perpetual state of war is how little we — the 99% of us who don’t belong to the military or fight — actually see of it, even though it is, in a sense, all around us.
Warscapes
From a remarkable array of possibilities, here are just a few warscapes — think of them as like landscapes, only deadlier — that might help make more visible an American world of, and way of, war that we normally spend little time discussing, questioning, debating, or doing anything about.
As a start, let me try to conjure up a map of what “defense,” as imagined by the Pentagon and the U.S. military, actually looks like. You can find such a map at Wikipedia, but for a second just imagine a world map laid flat before you. Now divide it, the whole globe, like so many ill-shaped pieces of cobbler, into six servings — you can be as messy as you want, it’s not an exact science — and label them the U.S. European Command or EUCOM (for Europe and Russia), the U.S. Pacific Command or PACOM (Asia), CENTCOM (the Greater Middle East and a touch of North Africa), NORTHCOM (North America), SOUTHCOM (South America and most of the Caribbean), and AFRICOM (almost all of Africa). Those are the “areas of responsibility” of six U.S. military commands.
In case you hadn’t noticed, on our map that takes care of just about every inch of the planet, but — I hasten to add — not every bit of imaginable space. For that, if you were a clever cartographer, you would somehow need to include STRATCOM, the U.S. Strategic Command charged with, among other things, ensuring that we dominate the heavens, and the newest of all the “geographic” commands, CYBERCOM, expected to be fully operational later this fall with “1,000 elite military hackers and spies under one four-star general” prepared to engage in preemptive war in cyberspace.
Some of these commands have crept up on us over the years. CENTCOM, which now oversees our wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, was formed in 1983, a result of the Carter Doctrine — that is, of President Jimmy Carter’s decision to make the protection of Persian Gulf oil a military necessity, while both NORTHCOM (2002) and AFRICOM (2007) were creations of the Global War on Terror.
From a mapping perspective, however, the salient point is simple enough: At the moment, there is no imaginable space on or off the planet that is not an “area of responsibility” for the U.S. military. That, not the protection of our shores and borders, is what is now meant by that word “defense” in the Department of Defense. And if you were to stare at that map for a while, I can’t help but think it would come to strike you as abidingly strange. No place at all of no military interest to us? What does that say about our country — and ourselves?
In case you’re imagining that the map I’ve just described is simply a case of cartographic hyperbole, consider this: We now have what is, in essence, a secret military inside the U.S. military. I’m talking about our Special Operations forces. These elite and largely covert forces were rapidly expanded in the Bush years as part of the Global War on Terror, but also thanks to Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld’s urge to bring covert activities that were once the province of the CIA under the Pentagon’s wing. By the end of George W. Bush’s second term in office — think of that map again — Special Operations forces were fighting in, training in, or stationed in approximately 60 countries under the aegis of the Global War on Terror. Less than two years later, according to the Washington Post, 13,000 Special Operations troops are deployed abroad in approximately 75 countries as part of an expanding Global War on Terror (even if the Obama administration has ditched that name); in other words, Special Ops troops alone are now operating in close to 40% of the 192 countries that make up the United Nations!
And talking about what the Pentagon has taken under its wing, I’m reminded of a low-budget, sci-fi film of my childhood, The Blob. In it, a gelatinous alien grows ever more humongous by eating every living thing in its path, with the exception of Steve McQueen, in his debut screen role. By analogy, take what’s officially called the “IC” or U.S. Intelligence Community, that Rumsfeld was so eager to militarize. It’s made up of 17 major agencies and outfits, including the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI). Created in 2004 in response to the intelligence dysfunction of 9/11, ODNI is already its own small bureaucracy with 1,500 employees and next to no power to do the only thing it was really ever meant to do, coordinate the generally dysfunctional labyrinth of the IC itself.
You might wonder what kind of “intelligence” a country could possibly get from 17 competing, bickering outfits — and that’s not even the half of it. According to a Washington Post series, Top Secret America, by Dana Priest and William Arkin:
Oh, and keep in mind that more than two-thirds of the IC’s intelligence programs are controlled by the Pentagon, which also means control over a major chunk of the combined intelligence budget, announced at $75 billion (“2 1/2 times the size it was on Sept. 10, 2001,” according to Priest and Arkin), but undoubtedly far larger.
And when it comes to the Pentagon, that’s just a start. Massive expansion in all directions has been its m.o. since 9/11. Its soaring budget hit about $700 billion for fiscal year 2010 (when you include a war-fighting supplemental bill of $33 billion) — an increase of only 4.7% in otherwise budget-slashing times — and is now projected to hit $726 billion in fiscal year 2011. Some experts claim, however, that the real figure may come closer to the trillion-dollar mark when all aspects of national security are factored in. Not surprisingly, it has taken over a spectrum of State Department-controlled civilian activities, ranging from humanitarian relief and development (aka “nation-building”) to actual diplomacy. And don’t forget its growing roles as a domestic-disaster manager and a global arms dealer, or even as a Green Revolution energy innovator. You could certainly think of the Pentagon as the Blob on the American horizon, and yet, looking around, you might hardly be aware of the ways your country continues to be militarized.
With that in mind, let’s consider another warscape, one particularly appropriate to a moment when numerous commentators are pointing out that the U.S. seems to be morphing from a can-do into a can’t-do nation, when the headlines are filled with exploding gas lines and grim reports on the country’s aging infrastructure, when a major commuter tunnel from New Jersey to Manhattan, the sort of project that once would have been tattoo-ably American, has just been canceled by New Jersey’s governor.
Still, don’t imagine that the old can-do American spirit I remember from my childhood is dead. Quite the contrary, we still have our great building projects, our pyramid- and ziggurat-equivalents. It’s just that these days they tend to get built nearer to the ruins of actual ziggurats and pyramids. I’m talking about our military bases, especially those being constructed in our war zones.
I mean, no sooner had U.S. troops taken Baghdad in April 2003 than the Pentagon and the crony corporations it now can’t go to war without began to pour billions of taxpayer dollars into the construction of well-fortified American towns in Iraq that included multiple bus routes, PXes, fast-food joints, massage parlors, Internet cafés, power plants, water-treatment plants, sewage plants, fire stations, you name it. Hundreds of military bases, micro to mega, were built in Iraq alone, including the ill-named but ginormous Victory Base Complex at the edge of Baghdad International Airport, with at least nine significant sub-bases nestled inside it, and Balad Air Base, which — sooner than you could say “Saddam Hussein’s in captivity” — was handling air traffic on the scale of O’Hare International in Chicago, and bedding down 40,000 inhabitants including hire-a-gun African cops, civilian defense employees, Special Ops forces, the employees of private contractors, and of course tons of troops.
And all of this was nothing compared to the feat the Pentagon accomplished in Afghanistan where the U.S. military now claims to have built something like 400 bases of every sort from the smallest combat outposts to monster installations like Bagram Air Base in a country without normal resources, fuel, building materials, or much of anything else. Just about all construction materials for those bases and the fuel to go with them had to be delivered over treacherous supply lines thousands of miles long, so treacherous and difficult in fact that, by the time a gallon of fuel reaches Afghanistan to keep those Humvees and MRAPs rolling along, it’s estimated to cost $400.
At some level, of course, all of this represents a remarkable can-do achievement and tells you a great deal about American priorities today, about where our national treasure and can-do efforts are focused.
Ziggurats or Tunnels?
And I could go on. The Pentagon and the military make going on easy. After all, the list is unending, the militarization of our American world ongoing, and it’s all happening in your time, on your watch. This is the world you are going to walk out into. I may be nine years old in TomDispatch terms, but I’ve been around for 66 years and this won’t be my world for so long.
So let me ask you: Are you sure that you want the U.S. military to be concerned with every inch of the planet? Are you sure that you want your tax dollars to go, above all, into building pyramid-equivalents in Iraq or Afghanistan instead of tunnels at home, or into fighting a multigenerational war on terror planet-wide, instead of into putting the unemployed to work here? If you can’t imagine reducing the American military mission and “footprint” on this planet significantly, then, of course, it’s probably best to ignore this talk. But rest assured: You won’t save our country that way, you’ll destroy it.
A decade ago, when I was born as TomDispatch.com, many of you were only ten or eleven years old, as were many of our soldiers now in Afghanistan and Iraq. A decade from now, if the war in Afghanistan (and increasingly Pakistan) is still being fought, most of you will be entering your fourth decade on this planet and you may even have a 10 year old of your own. A decade from then, if — as some top Washington officials insist — the global war on terror is “multigenerational,” that child may be fighting in Pakistan or Yemen or Somalia or some other military “area of responsibility” somewhere on the planet. A decade from then…
Of course, whatever skills we may lack when it comes to predicting the future, all things must end, including the American war state and our strange state of war. The question is: Can our over-armed global mission be radically downsized before it downsizes us? It will happen anyway, and it won’t take forever either, not the way things are going, but it will happen in an easier and less harmful way, if you’re involved, in whatever fashion you choose, in making it so. Had I had a birthday cake with candles on it for that ninth birthday of mine and blown them out, that, I think, would have been my wish.
Tom Engelhardt, co-founder of the American Empire Project, runs the Nation Institute’s TomDispatch.com. His latest book, The American Way of War: How Bush’s Wars Became Obama’s (Haymarket Books), has recently been published. You can catch him discussing war American-style and his book in a Timothy MacBain TomCast video by clicking here. This was originally a talk given to students attending Hofstra University’s lecture series, The International Scene.
[Note: If Marty and Margaret Melkonian hadn’t offered me a double invitation to speak at Hofstra College and the Unitarian Universalist Congregation at Shelter Rock, this talk would never have seen the light of day. A bow of appreciation to both of them! If it weren’t for Juan Cole’s Informed Comment website, Antiwar.com, and Paul Woodward’s The War in Context, which jostle fiercely in my mind each morning as I try to decide where to stop first in my online travels, I would be so much poorer in good information and analysis. So let me add a bow to them as well! In a world made by war, Noah Shachtman’s Danger Zone blog also shouldn't be missed. It contains all things warlike. And Katherine Tiedemann’s AfPak Daily Brief is the best ongoing summary of mainstream coverage of our Afghan (and increasingly Pakistan) War. For any of you interested in learning more about my childhood in Cold War America -- from G.I. Joe to Star Wars and beyond -- check out the updated edition of my book, The End of Victory Culture.]
Copyright 2010 Tom Engelhardt

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Oct
18

Essential Tourist Traps Part Four Fishermans Wharf San Francisco

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Essential Tourist Traps Part Four Fishermans Wharf San Francisco

It is said that San Franciscans hate Fisherman’s wharf. To some extent that’s probably true. The reason is simple. Too many tourists! San Franciscans hate tourists, those who aren’t in the tourist/hospitality industry at least. It reminds them that the hospitality/ tourist industry is in fact the largest in the city and that it’s possible that the city’s best days are behind it. Granted, gentrification has improved much of the burg, but be that as it may, whether the locals like it or not, Fisherman’s wharf is an essential tourist trap.
If it wasn’t so, then how do you explain the fact that it has three (count’em three) national parks, decent food, a sizable percentage of the world’s sea lions, good fishing, and really good views of the bay. What more do you want? A cheesy shopping mall? They got that too.
The reason most San Franciscans rarely go there (or admit that they do) is the main reason it’s essential. It’s too famous. This is why most people don’t go to their area’s famous attractions. It’s also arrogance. After all, the area stinks with tourists, and unless they work there, the locals are better than that, thumbing their noses at us fat visitors who come to see the city by the bay. This is just something you have to see…
Starting with the national parks…
The three NP’s, Alcatraz, San Francisco Maritime, and Golden Gate/Miller Field aren’t exactly in the wharf, they frame it, Alcatraz, on Pier 33, is the eastern boarder of the area, the other two on the west. As far as Alcatraz goes, trip is definitely worth it, however you just can’t walk up to the ticket kiosk and get on the next boat. Everything’s booked up for at least a day in advance, so go to the website first and get a reservation. The whole thing takes about a day, which means that Fisherman’s Wharf is a two-day operation.
If you forgot to make a reservation for Alcatraz, then find out when the first available boat is and head west to Pier 39, which is where the carousel, aquarium and the notorious hoard of sea lions are. This is the little bit of Disneyland that the shishi San Franciscans so love to hate. Unless you’re looking for high culture or a quiet bucolic setting (in which case what the hell are you doing in San Francisco?), this is the best spot for people watching (Union Square is a close second). The prices for souvenir tchotchies are high, but not that high, and the street performers are for the most part entertaining. This is San Francisco the theme park, and as such is pretty successful.
West of Pier 39 is the Wharf proper, bordered by the bay to the north and North Point St. to the south, and Hyde St., where the cable cars and Maritime National Park are, to the west. Here you will find a huge number of souvenir stands and seafood restaurants, just what a tourist wants and a local doesn’t. After all, except for the occasional patriotic tee shirt and baseball caps during the season, who really goes around with stuff festooned with one’s hometown’s logo on it?
But behind the all the kitsch, you will discover that Fisherman’s Wharf is a real wharf with real fisherman. Go ahead, have an expensive bowl of chowder or crab cakes. It’s part of the experience. Finally, there are the two national parks. Maritime has an interesting museum and for a small fee you get to see some interesting old ships. Then there’s a place to rest and look at the bay, which is owned by the US government and is absolutely free. Further to the west, you’ll see a cliff. That’s the Fort Mason Unit of the Golden Gate National Parks, and is technically part of the Marina district.
Fisherman’s Wharf is an essential tourist trap….and why do you think they call them that?

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Oct
18

A More Mature Immigration Policy

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A More Mature Immigration Policy

I’ve never been one of those people who, in lamenting policy and politics in the U.S., builds up another country to disparage my own. Yet I must admit, this week I felt pangs of envy in hearing Qubec officials talk with cool rationale about the economic calculations behind their immigration policies.
I was in Montreal on a trip organized by the Qubec delegation in NYC. While I was there I had the opportunity to meet with high-level officials and community groups working on immigration and the integration of future and recent arrivals into Qubec’s economy and society. The ways they described their policies and their future efforts couldn’t contrast more with what is occurring in the United States. For those in Qubec, immigration is a demographic imperative: they need an influx of young workers to replace the province’s aging workforce. Getting them is critical to sustaining the province’s economic growth, competitiveness and paying for the pensions of those soon-over-the-hill French Canadians approaching retirement. As the Immigration Minister Kathleen Weil said, “We’re now in competition with Ireland and Australia for skilled labor.” (Her mention of Australia revealed tough competitors Canada faces today in trying to attract immigrants, “Sure they have the weather and beaches, but they also have sharks,” she said trying to put the best face on Qubec’s notoriously brutal winters. On this, I would also encourage the Ministry to highlight Australia’s baby-eating dingoes for the non-swimming immigrants thinking of setting up a new life in Australia.)
You would never hear the same immigration maturity just south of the Canadian border. While the problem of labor force replacement is more acute in Qubec than in the U.S., we do need to worry about replacement rates for our declining fertility rates–and it is only going to become more serious. Between 2002 and 2012, 28 million jobs will be created in the U.S. requiring less than a high school education–given rising education rates in the U.S., the native-born population will not be able to fill that demand.
Like Qubec, we also need a regular flow of immigrant labor too to shore up our social security system. Despite what the anti-immigrant nativists would have you believe, immigrants–even undocumented immigrants–pay more in taxes than they take out, providing a critical source of new revenue for those soon-to-be retiring baby boomers that threaten to bankrupt our social security system. According to a 2007 Social Security Administration Report just the addition of 100,000 new, net immigrants per year increases the long-range actuarial balance of our taxable payroll by .07 percent. If you multiply that with the approximately million immigrants that arrive on our shores each year, that’s a real revenue source.
For these reasons, the economic rationale for immigration should be the organizing principle for our policy and for our public debate. It should be the basis of our public discussion on the matter, and it should be the central basis for how we allot worker and temporary visas. Instead, from Arizona to Northern Virginia, the public discourse over immigration is too often being driven by fear, racism and efforts to close off the border. When government officials do talk immigration, as a recent White House report did, the tone is often defensive, marshaling data to prove that immigration doesn’t lower wages to stave off opposition. Even those in favor of immigration often cloud the matter by lobbying to give greater weight to matters of family re-unification, overblowing fears of exploitation of workers under temporary visa programs and engaging in a starry-eyed romanticism about the place of immigration in U.S. history.
Because the Qubec provincial government (and Canada in general) has made clear its economic need for immigration, it has no qualms about setting targets, weighing potential immigrants by specific qualifications (age, profession, education) and talking about immigration generally. And from this logically follows a host of state-funded programs to promote the integration of immigrants.
For a U.S. citizen, talking to Qubec officials about immigration is like entering a parallel universe. Here are government officials who look like and talk like you (o.k., with a French accent) that are willing to discuss proudly and openly how they need immigrants and seek immigration. They state with precision the sorts of immigrants they want and how they rationally (even coldly) weigh qualifications. No fear of vitriolic denunciations by anti-immigrant activists for promoting immigration or by pro-immigrant groups for applying the economics of immigration.
Stranger still, Minister Weil and provincially supported community groups proudly ticked off government programs to integrate immigrants, from French-language classes in which students are paid (paid!) to attend civics courses and assistance in looking for jobs once in Qubec. Imagine a similar program in the United States. You can’t. And it’s on the issue of integration that the U.S. is really in a vicious circle. There are no federal programs in the U.S. for the integration of immigrants–all in line, I suppose, with our bootstrap mentality. Yet, it is the concerns about the integration of Hispanic immigrants that, in large part, is driving the backlash.
Now, I realize that Qubec and Canada are not the United States–something which my hosts reminded me of several times (as if the accents and poutin-heavy menus weren’t enough). For one, the province’s need for immigrants is immediate, unlike the U.S. where the real crunch won’t become evident for at least a decade. And Qubec’s needs are primarily in high-tech, an area where even in the U.S., if you were to strip out the issue of low-skilled immigrants, the immigration policy would be much easier and saner. For another, the U.S.–unlike Qubec and Canada–is a traditional destination for immigrants. In the U.S. the question has been how to regulate immigration not attract immigrants.
But each of these counterpoints shouldn’t preclude a more sensible debate and policy in the United States. First, while our need for immigration may not be as acute, even today our labor market (and competitiveness) are suffering as a result. Neither this nor the long-term consequences have entered into debate in a serious way, but must if we are going to move forward. Second, the issue of high and low-skilled workers isn’t as clear cut as it seems. Reaction against immigration has impeded the U.S.’s ability to attract the skilled technicians it needs because the ceilings are too low. At the same time, in Qubec, even the search for high-end immigrants has not reduced the flow of lower skilled workers, and it hasn’t produced a reaction. The fact is: they are the same issue, something that U.S. policymakers and a number of U.S. business leaders who lobby for more high-skilled visas refuse to recognize. And last, sure the U.S. has been more of a destination for immigration, but that shouldn’t preclude us from regulating it rationally–something we’re not doing largely because too many are preoccupied with sealing off our borders.
Finally, when it comes to integration programs, in Qubec they have the seemingly quaint issue of “Frenchness.” This is the concept–as I came to understand it through my meetings–as the near-constitutional guarantee to preserve Qubec’s French character by establishing a quota of French speakers in the province. OK, that’s uniquely French Canadian.
But aside from the special aspects of the relationship that provides legitimacy to a generous provincial program to teach immigrants French and about Qubec, there is nothing that should prevent even a modest U.S. federal program to help immigrants adjust. It doesn’t have to include paying students to attend classes. In fact, in many of the cases I’ve seen in the U.S., immigrants are willing to attend language classes on their own. Many times they are offered by employers, who, unlike many in my country, do understand the economic value and contribution of immigrants. If the economics of immigration were placed more in the center of the debate–as in Qubec–it wouldn’t be too much to ask even the U.S. federal government to help recent immigrants–the ultimate engine of our economic competitiveness and future–find their way into the fold of U.S. society, with all the rights and responsibilities that entails. I don’t think it makes me un-American (or even pro-Qubcois) to say that. Quite the opposite, I find it positively American and evolved.

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Oct
18

Where Do People Think Govt Workers Come From

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Where Do People Think Govt Workers Come From

Public rancor directed at government workers is a bit confounding. It’s on all levels: state, local, federal. Much of this particular election cycle has been spent bashing the government worker, blaming civil servants for everything from budget calamities to impending Greece-like insolvency which will afflict our kids in a not-so-distant future. In tight races such as the gubernatorial race between eBay Founder and CEO Meg Whitman (R) and lifetime politician and current Attorney General Jerry Brown (D), the pitch against government workers has reached an unusually high decibel range. Nationally, activists from tea party stalwarts to Republican rank-and-files egging on hard red state voters wave the banner for smaller government, including plans to dramatically cut government payrolls as a way to deflate bloated deficits.
Demonizing government workers, especially teachers and unionized public sector bureaucrats, is the newest political fad. In a recent Washington Post poll, 52% of Americans believe federal government workers are paid more than they deserve. Elated, conservative candidates are sure to latch on to this in the next round of talking points; if they take the House, Republican leaders will use it as an excuse to shut government down during the coming budget impasse. But, politically, it’s playing with fire. Economically, it upends some pretty basic, common sense fiscal logic that could, potentially, worsen an unemployment situation that can’t get any worse unless it’s an official depression no one wants to announce.
And, it’s a bit baffling considering over 15% of the national workforce is in the public sector. Which begs the question: where do people think government workers come from?
It’s a valid query. If you go along with full throttled red rage, you might think government workers are as automated as the wired robotic arms on manufacturing assembly lines, mindless automatons devoid of blood and cartilage. Public safety workers, police and firefighters, are typically left out of that assessment, hence the somewhat demeaning, yet common snowstorm practice of distinguishing “non-essential” from “essential” government employees. Sometimes, I think many of us believe government workers are pulled from breeding grounds similar to the human battery farms in a scene from The Matrix.
Still, when a good size of your national workforce – not including contractors who pull loot from government procurement – is on the public trough, everyone is fairly essential. Which is why all candidates and elected officials who get elected and come in as hard charging, take-no-prisoners government reformers get schooled quick on some tough lessons. Those who don’t, risk political doom at the polls. I get the feeling New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, who happily role-plays fictitious Garden State mob boss Tony Soprano, is slowly figuring this out.
In the California Governor’s race, the GOP nominee proposes a mass layoff of 40,000 state workers as a way to cut budget fat. That sounds easy. Clearly, in formulating this master plan, she probably missed the fact that California’s state workforce is comprised of 330,000 likely voters. How cutting 40,000 workers from state government won’t contribute to California’s already high unemployment rate and smash state revenues into oblivion is a Rubik few can explain. Even the state’s Austrian-born Republican Governor gets that, opting for furloughs instead. No surprise she’s flipped script rather quick and exempted emergency workers – police and firefighters – from her proposal to transition state workers from their pension plan to a more volatile 401(k) scenario. Real surprise here that Whitman (despite spending $140 million of her own cash) is trailing Brown by an average of 5 points. She’s actually energizing the public sector voting base against her.
Current, and possibly outgoing Washington, D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty discovered this the hard way in a recent primary in which he lost his bid for a second term. Or: maybe he didn’t discover anything new given this new write-in movement he quietly backs. The D.C. Fiscal Policy Institute recently found that the unemployment rate in the city doubled under his watch – from 6% in 2008 to over 12% in 2010. Or, in human numbers: 19,000 people in 2008 to a mind-staggering 40,000 people in 2010. This is in a city of 600,000. While the recession can be blamed for most of that, there is some basic math in that calculus showing rather gleeful axing of local government employees and teachers by his Administration contributed to it.
It’s amazing to watch politicians casually forget public workers vote or that they are acutely aware of the political landscape – in Fenty’s case, he forgot D.C. is not a state and that Maryland and Virginia tie the nation’s capitol into an interconnected regional economy. While he dismissively cut his workforce, thinking that the nearly 40% of his workforce that lived outside of D.C. wouldn’t impact his re-election chances, he didn’t care to think that, perhaps, folks who live outside of D.C. can still contribute to and volunteer for the opposition. Not to mention they have family and friends within city limits, too.
Public workers are taxpayers and voters, too, so it’s odd how candidates steamroll government employees in their talking points and speeches as if this isn’t the case. It’s comical how they think their own employees don’t hear them blasting them on every note, publicly berating their own employees as if they can muscle budgets, trash pick-ups, unruly kids and clogged traffic on their own. Plus, last I checked, government workers eat, gas their cars and pay bills, too. They fuel whole local and state economies. They use their money, too, to buy lunches from corner delis and restaurants or they shop at the local mall. As a matter of fact, they buy houses and cars, too. And, others who work for those businesses rely on public sector employees as economic drivers just as much as they rely on private sector employees. That’s 15% of the working population that also helps drive the 75% of the economy that is consumer-based.
No wonder that local and state jurisdictions continue to see revenues drop after every round of layoffs.
Yet, civil servants are used as political footballs and vilified as if their money doesn’t contribute to the economy or their property taxes don’t help sustain tax revenue. Yes: it’s true that we need to find a quick way to fundamentally re-shape public pension systems. And, we also need to compel a combination of stronger oversight, fiscal prudence and better performance from those who must preserve our public trust.
But, it’s also common sense that when you eliminate government workers, you’re increasing your unemployment rate. Thereby increasing unemployment benefits; thereby reducing tax revenue; thereby placing an even greater strain on public services; thereby inflating local, state and federal deficits; thereby triggering social unrest if all of that remains unattended to.
It’s not so much an attempt to defend the government worker. It’s simply the introduction of a practical argument that politicians should pay closer attention to rather than getting caught up in the moment. So, really, it’s about time folks spill their cups of hater-ade and find a way to embrace their public sector neighbor. After all, elected officials are government workers, too.
– CHARLES D. ELLISON
(originally appeared in Politic365.com)

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Oct
18

NOLA Iced Coffee

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NOLA Iced Coffee

Strong, delicious and oh so easy to make. If you’re a coffee lover it’s practically a crime that you don’t have a jug of this sitting in your fridge right now. The touch of chicory gives the coffee an authentic New Orleans flavor and a lovely roasted, chocolatey kick. Enjoy!
Ingredients:
1/2 pound coarse ground coffee 1 tablespoon roasted and ground chicory 5 cups of cold water Brown sugar syrup (equal parts brown sugar and water simmered until the sugar is dissolved) Milk to taste (low fat or whole tastes best) Ice
Freshly grind the coffee beans and combine with the chicory powder. Place in to bottom of a french press and pour in a third of the water. Stir until you see the grounds form a golden brown foam. Add the rest of the water, place the lid on top (but not pressed) and leave it in the fridge over night (8-12 hours). The next day, to make your coffee, push the press down and pour the coffee into a glass through a strainer. Pour until a third full. Top off with a few teaspoons of the brown sugar syrup and milk to taste (it’s a coffee concentrate, so I usually go for a 1:1 ratio). Add some ice and stir. Enjoy!
(Note: the coffee concentrate can last in your fridge for about 4-5 days by itself. Fully mixed with milk and sugar, it’s best that day.)
For more articles like this one, check out Claire’s blog, The Kitchy Kitchen.

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Oct
18

US fears Chinese companies are breaking Iran sanctions

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US fears Chinese companies are breaking Iran sanctions

The United States has asked the Chinese government to do more to stop Chinese companies helping Iran with its nuclear programme and missile technology.
A senior US official told the BBC that Washington had provided Beijing with a list of firms it believed had been operating in violation of UN sanctions.
Beijing promised it was committed to implementing the sanctions and that it would investigate, the official added.
The US believes Iran is seeking to build a nuclear bomb. Iran denies this.

  • In June, the UN Security Council imposed a fourth round of sanctions on Iran over its refusal to halt uranium enrichment activities.
    The technology used to enrich uranium for use as fuel for nuclear power can also be used to enrich the uranium to the higher level needed to produce a nuclear explosion. Tehran says its intentions are peaceful.
    On Sunday, that the US intelligence believed several Chinese companies and banks were involved in providing restricted technology to Iran, mostly for its missile programme.
    A second official, also speaking anonymously, told the Post that Chinese companies had been discovered selling Iran high-quality carbon fibre, which could help make better centrifuges needed to enrich uranium.
    In 2008, Iran allegedly obtained 108 pressure gauges, which are critical to the functioning of a centrifuge, from one Chinese company
    On Monday, a senior US official told the BBC that the concerns were raised during a visit to Beijing last month by state department official Robert Einhorn, who oversees the enforcement of sanctions against Iran and North Korea.
    The official said the Chinese government had promised it was committed to implementing UN resolutions against Iran, and that Washington expected it to take the appropriate steps to stop any violations.
    “We did provide some information to China on specific concerns about individual Chinese companies and the Chinese assured us that they will investigate,” state department spokesman PJ Crowley later told reporters.
    The BBC's Kim Ghattas in Washington says it is believed that Chinese officials did not authorise the activity of the companies.
    When sanctions were passed this summer at the UN, the US and the EU were concerned that Chinese companies would fill the vacuum left by Western companies pulling out of Iran, our correspondent adds.
    On Sunday, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said it was ready to resume negotiations with the West on its nuclear programme.

    Source:BBC

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    Oct
    18

    Apple shares fall despite surprisingly strong profits

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    Apple shares fall despite surprisingly strong profits

    Apple shares drop 7% in after-hours trading, despite reporting expectations-beating profits of 4.3bn (2.7bn) for the last quarter.
    The net income figure – announced after the close of trading in New York – was up 70% on a year earlier, and beat expectations of 3.8bn.
    But the company's stock responded by falling sharply.
    Apple's shares have hit historic highs lately, and the drop may be due to speculators selling to lock in profits.
    Trading on the Nasdaq exchange closed just before the results were announced, with Apple's shares at 318.30, up more than 50% since March.
    The after-hours selloff may also have been influenced by underwhelming sales of Apple's new tablet computer – the iPad, which came it at just 4.2 million.
    That represents a rise of just 28% on the previous quarter, which was when the company first launched the new product.
    However, Apple can take solace that iPhone sales were not hit by bad publicity over antenna problems with the newly-launched iPhone 4.
    The firm sold 14.1 million of its smart phones in the quarter.
    Total revenues for the quarter rose 67% to 20.3bn, topping already high expectations by 1bn, thanks largely to the strong iPhone sales.
    Sales of its Macintosh computers were up 27% on a year ago, while those of its iPod were down 11% – partly because the latter has been superseded by the iPhone.
    The company revised its revenues forecast for the current quarter up to 23bn.

    Source:BBC

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    Oct
    18

    The Untold Truths of a Teen With Cancer

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    The Untold Truths of a Teen With Cancer

    You will find that the third place winner of the Andre Sobel Essay contest, Arianna Elnes, could have easily been the first. She could be first for the special reason that all the courageous young people who enter this contest could; it is with no ordinary yardstick that our judges measure the testimonies of the entrants. We see their writing as messages directly transported from their souls to us, the readers, as they reach deep inside of themselves and offer up their insight.
    Arianna’s essay could have been titled, “Behind the Curtain.” She lifts the veil of illusion that she created to appear comforting for her parents’ sake and fiercely pulls it aside and exposes the truth. It is her truth and perhaps the untold truth of my own son Andre who died at about the same age Arianna is. Is this how my son felt? Is this how everyone feels whose life is threatened by illness, regardless of age? Is the visible face of our beloved patient’s face, not the real one?
    Once we glimpse behind the mask put on for the sake of those they love, I don’t think so. Arianna announces up front that she has a need to tell her parents at last what she feels. While ill, she did not want to burden them. This noble gesture is common among children. I know that my Andre showed only courtesy and valor in order to lighten the immensity of our sorrow and fear. The patient Arianna consoled her parents, but, at last, she feels at a safe distance from the threat of her brain tumor to tell them about the interminable waiting without assurance of safety at the end of the road. She writes about feeling jealous of the photos of herself before being damaged by the illness. She is envious of the girl who could run and ski. She speaks about the smile that she offered up as a shield of protection to others because she had nothing else to give.
    She ends on the note that is felt by all that have been to edge: that of thankfulness for her ferocious strength that she could not have imagined that she would have, and for reaching the mindset that she can conquer the impossible.
    Arianna’s battle with cancer has empowered her and given her the courage to live the life she’s always imagined. After graduating high school in 2009, she took a year off to simply gain experiences while continuing her recovery. With a new outlook on life, she spent the summer working at a salmon cannery in Alaska before traveling around Central and South America as well as Iceland, seeing the world with a new set of deeply appreciative eyes. Arianna is now attending Knox College in Illinois, and is currently undecided in terms of a major, but has an interest in Creative Writing, Linguistics, and Anthropology.
    Arianna’s advice to somebody else going through a similar battle is to acknowledge that this process is life altering; it’s a shock. “You will hit times when you are emotional, and you won’t understand. Just know that it’s OK to be sad sometimes. Recognize that feeling, but don’t feel a need to try to explain it.”

    Follow Valerie Sobel on Twitter:
    www.twitter.com/asriveroflife

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    18

    Join Julian Bond He will appear in New Jersey and you can go see him

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    Join Julian Bond He will appear in New Jersey and you can  go see him

    New Jersey’s residents have a rare chance to hear arguably the most elegant and inspiring civil rights leader since MLK. His name is Julian Bond. Bond has been a courageous and controversial figure in civil rights since his student years in the 1960s, when he helped found the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. SNCC played a pivotal role in integrating the South and building the civil rights movement. Bond and other SNCC organizer often found themselves pushing Martin Luther King to move faster and harder. From 1960 to 1963, Bond led student protests against segregation in public facilities in Georgia. Because of his speaking and writing skills, he was appointed communications director for SNCC a position he held from 1960 until 1966.
    After serving in Georgia’s legislature for several terms in both houses, Bond took up his post as a professor at the University of Virginia in 1998. In 1965, Bond was elected to the Georgia House of Representatives after passage of civil rights legislation, including the Voting Rights Act of 1965. On January 10, 1966, however, the Georgia state representatives refused to seat him by a vote of 184-12 because he endorsed SNCC’s opposition to U.S. policy in the Vietnam War.
    The conservative and racists Georgia legislators also criticize Bond for his support for young men “unwilling to respond to a military draft”. A U.S. District Court panel ruled 2-1 that the Georgia House had not violated any federal rights, but 1966, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled 9-0, in the case of Bond v. Floyd (385 U.S. 116), that the Georgia House of Representatives had denied Bond his freedom of speech and order the legislature to seat him.
    From 1965 to 1975, the people of in his district elected Bond to four terms as a Democratic member in the Georgia House, where he organized the Georgia Legislative Black Caucus, and then elected him for six terms in the Georgia Senate.
    Known for helping his district’s low and moderate income residents of his, concentrating on such issues as street paving and garbage collection, he became less interested in legislating and electoral politics, and more focused on expressing his views, writing and giving speeches.
    In the 1980s Bond narrowly survived a challenge to his Senate seat in 1986 Bond gave up his that seat to run for U.S. Congress, but lost a controversial Democratic primary to longtime SNCC colleague, John Lewis.
    Since then Bond, an inspiring speaker, has narrated the highly acclaimed Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) documentary on the civil rights movement, Eyes on the Prize, hosted the television program America’s Black Forum, wrote a nationally syndicated newspaper column titled “Viewpoint,” contributed numerous newspaper and magazine articles, and led the NAACP as its chairman fighting for civil rights, racial equality, economic justice and peace. He recently resigned from that post, but continues to push the NAACP in a progressive direction.
    Bond, who holds 20 honorary degrees and is a Professor of History at the University of Virginia, has recently become a leading advocate within the NAACP to get the group to reach out to gay rights groups and support same-sex marriage rights. The NAACP’s national board has taken no stance on the issue.
    On Friday, October 22, 2010, at 6 pm, The New Jersey Citizen Action Education Fund will present a very special appearance by Bond. In “Crossing the Color Line: From Rhythm ‘n’ Blues to Rock ‘n’ Roll,” Bond will present a history of American music, tracing the melding of jazz, blues, country music and pop into rock & roll, stopping along the way to examine the influences of race, demographics, war, immigration and technology in this transformation. Music and photos describing how black and white Americans, immigrants and their music, came together to create a new type of music. will accompany Bond’s presentation.
    This entertaining and informative program recognizes among other things the interplay of race and public policy. This program is being held in partnership with the Rutgers University Constitutional Law Clinic. Dean John J. Farmer Jr., Rutgers School of Law-Newark and Dr. Clement Price, Distinguished Service Professor will welcome guests and introduce Bond
    Time: Friday, October 22, 2010 6pm
    Place: Rutgers Law School, Herbert M. Ellend Atrium (lower level) 123 Washington Street Newark, NJ 07102
    To get tickets go to: http://org2.democracyinaction.org/o/5699/p/salsa/event/common/public/?event_KEY=24525
    TICKETS: $100
    Tickets are available for students at a special ticket price of $25 each, current college ID required.

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    18

    Play the World Hunger Game

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    Play the World Hunger Game

    Most people WANT to make a contribution to charities, but many have no idea which ones to donate to, and how much of their money actually goes through to the people in need on the other end. So, they usually end up not donating at all, except for maybe some clothes to the Goodwill every now and then.
    So what should you do?
    First, do research. Read up on different charities you can donate to, perhaps more local ones if you can find them. Talk to the people from the charities you research and ask them questions. Ask your friends and people you know where they donate to and how much. But if that even seems like too much for you, then just go to FreeRice.com. I heard about Free Rice from a documentary on world hunger and poverty called One Peace At A Time (which was excellent by the way; be sure to pick it up from the library or add it to your Netflix que!). What Free Rice is is a nonprofit game. Several games to choose from to be precise. All you do is play the games and with every correct answer, you donate 10 grains of rice. You can play multiple choice games that test your vocabulary, grammar, famous paintings, chemistry symbols, geography, math and languages like Spanish and French. If you get a question wrong, no grains of rice are donated. Once you get a question correct, the 10 grains of rice are automatically and immediately donated. Your following question will be harder, and your next three consecutive correct answers will progress you to a harder level.
    So where do these grains of rice go? They go to the United Nations World Food Programme. And you don’t have to have an account to play Free Rice, you can start playing the moment the homepage loads. But you can have an account if you wish to track your totals of donated rice. And the best thing about donating to this charity is it’s fun, educational, and addictive. I sat there and played Free Rice the first time I visited the site until I donated about 5,000 grains of rice. And I felt wonderful about it. There’s no money lost in the process, it’s just grains of rice being directly donated, and Free Rice donates 100 percent of it’s earnings. The sponsors that advertise on the site are paying for the rice you donate. As quoted in the FAQ page on FreeRice.com, “FreeRice is not sitting on a pile of rice. You and other FreeRice players earn it 10 grains at a time. Here is how it works: when you play the game, sponsor banners appear on the bottom of your screen for every correct answer that you choose. The money generated by these banners is then used to buy the rice. So by playing, you generate the money that pays for the rice donated to hungry people.”
    Where does the rice go exactly? The grains of rice goes to hungry countries all over the globe, including Bangladesh, Cambodia, Uganda, Nepal, Bhutan and Myanmar. Watch a video of free rice being donated in Bangladesh.
    So who started this wonderful way to help stop world hunger? His name is John Breen, and he launched the fabulous FreeRice.com in October of 2007. In March 2009, he donated Free Rice to the UN World Food program, and it’s been accumulating billions of grains of rice since.
    So what are you waiting for? Play Free Rice today, and as many days as you can, and tell all your friends about it who don’t know how to contribute to charities or think it’s too hard or not worth it! And if you have a blog, promote Free Rice on it by having a banner, which can be found here: Free Rice Banners. You can feed the hungry…grain by grain.

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    18

    Sankai Juku studio by the mountain and the sea

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    Sankai Juku studio by the mountain and the sea

    used by permission of Sankai Juku
    In 1975 I was sitting in the balcony of the Elgin Theatre one electric Manhattan midnight watching through the haze of an opiate ambiance the film Siddhartha, which is based on a Hermann Hesse novel that inundated my generation with yearning. I blink and 35 years later I am sitting in the middle of a silver half moon Autumn Chelsea night, in the reincarnation of the Elgin, the Joyce Theater, witnessing Sankai Juku reveal our lives. The air is filled with translucent (iridescent) white sand and dust. Our hearts are touched with wonderment. The piece is entitled Tobari – as if in an inexhaustible flux. Ushio Amagatsu founded this Japanese Butoh dance company in 1975 while I traveled with Siddhartha at the Elgin.
    Nine years after my Elgin sojourn, I am standing in the balcony of the City Center near Times Square watching what I thought to be a group of aliens emanating from another dimension. Or were they living embryos without need of corporal existence. Sankai Juku. With me must have been half the dance community of New York City standing from beginning to end replete with one communal expression – eyes, mouths wide open. Breathing in the silence.
    What was this chubby, Jewish boy from the Bronx doing in such esteem company? A few weeks earlier I had seen a documentary dance video on PBS featuring this incredible company performing in a factory in England. The soundtrack consisted entirely of factory noises. I promised myself to see these otherworldly emanations in person. Since that time I have attended a Sankai Juku performance every time they and I have been in New York. I knew they toured the world and their arrival on this Island came about every two years or so. During their 35 years I have grown old. Mr. Amagatsu and his company have grown brighter.
    Mr. Amagatsu has often stated that his company’s style is a “dialogue with gravity . . . sympathizing or synchronizing with the gravity.” In their search we are allowed to journey within to a singular, elegant chord of a universal soul, which they embody. We are given the privilege to fly unencumbered by gravity. Critics have said that Sankai Juku is “pure metaphor.” I say they personify Time.
    Butoh is a term shortened from ”ankoko butoh,” which means ”dance of utter darkness.” How wonderful. How luminescent. It isn’t just how they move, or how they look, it is their totality of existence, focus; they manifest love.
    Through these decades I have had a growing awareness that there is a constant soundtrack to all of Sankai Juku’s performances. That is the sound of breath. It is the performer’s breath. It is our breath. It is infinite. Magical sounds that Mr. Amagatsu and his frequent collaborators, Takashi Kao, YAS-KAZ, Yoichiro Yoshikawa float throughout space wafting alongside the inhalation and exhalation of incandescent lungs of audience members whenever an essential particle arises from the innocence of an image forming slowly or suddenly. This image bubbles into our core from the carefully placed gesture and movement of Sankai Juku.
    In Chelsea Manhattan, two weeks before Halloween, white powdered, barefoot Beings in saffron skirts and robes moving on crystal sand escort us to our essence where we are quiet; grace reigns (rains). How sublime that Siddhartha’s image was animated in this once decrepit, now elegant theatre. Sankai Juku deepens that voyage.
    I have witnessed thousands of people in much larger venues stand at the end of a Sankai Juku performance with tears silently drenching their faces with awe. I have jumped up not caring if I came down at the end of a Sankai Juku dance so I may express how grateful I am to have had the privilege of swimming in their light. Tonight, however, I remember why Butoh dance was created. It was a response to the overwhelming destruction unleashed by atomic weapons over Japan. Start from nothing. Strip all accessories of humanity. Open our eyes so we may see a myriad of luminous laughter, tears, fear and love.
    According to Mr. Amagatsu, “tobari is a veil of fabric hung in a space as a partition.” Once, while lying on my side on a cot in a small Manhattan studio as a very young man, I saw a vision of a black, lucid curtain dangling in front of me. I was not scared. I wanted to know what was on the other side. I could barely make out form and feeling prowling behind the fabric. When I thought I would die from curiosity, I clearly heard a loving voice tell me, “Wait. One day the curtain will dissipate and you will be on the other side.” When Sankai Juku appears, the curtain dissolves. Exhilarating.
    Used by permission of Sankai Juku
    Sankai Juku’s tour continues. If you wish to learn where you may see their transcendent performance in the U.S., click here.

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    18

    Relish the Art That Surrounds You

    by , under NEWS
    Relish the Art That Surrounds You

    We are surrounded by art and beauty — all of us, wherever we live, whatever we do. Our challenge is to recognize and relish it. Let me explain.
    First, I have had a lifelong love affair with art and have been fortunate to have studied in, learned from, guided and been guided by the great museums that enrich us all, and the schools and colleges that have been unique to my own education. My life has been much influenced and enhanced by the work of fine artists, and by the study of art history, by my involvement with art museums and their exhibitions. Art and artists are so much a part of me.
    And I find myself thinking about the incredible surround or envelope that wraps all of these influences together for me — my experience, day in and day out, in every circumstance, of the breathtaking beauty of the world. I’m sure this sounds romantic and far from everyday reality — a kind of poetic vision of the world. But that is not at all what I have in mind. I don’t mean something remote or rare or abstract or hard to reach or recognize. Rather, what I see, what I know, what I experience as beauty is a common, usual, daily occurrence.
    I’m talking about the leap of recognition and reward I feel when I go by a garden or a body of water, or catch the glint of a skyscraper in the sun, or see a sculpture in the park as though for the very first time, or pass by a store window with an irresistible theme or collection of colors, or get brushed by the sweep of a yellow dog’s tail.
    I’m talking about the ubiquitous examples of the lift, the alert, the surprise and small thrills that come from acknowledging the loveliness that is both momentary and constant in the every day, ordinary encounters of our lives.
    Walking down a street, seeing and visually absorbing the buildings, the signage, the storefronts and street lights, the hanging flower pots and street-level plantings, the strollers and delivery trucks and tricycles, the iciness of winter or the colors of fall. The visual revelation that a city — big though it may be — is simultaneously a village, a “neighborhood,” just as Jane Jacobs always told us.
    The humanizing of our spaces reveals itself in today’s cities in a variety of ways — in the bike trails along parks and rivers, the transformation of decayed buildings into usable places, the public art along avenues and squares and plazas, the pocket gardens and playgrounds, fresh paint and plants. We should be open-eyed, I think, at the many ways in which we are invited to enjoy our places. Glinting, darkening, clouding, shining, beeping and yelping, running or skipping, our cities’ sights vividly catch the moments and define our days right before our eyes.
    Take my own beloved city of New York and how its latest evolution adds to its beauty. Recent local improvements derive directly from this attention to the visual:
    There is more attention to design in our stores and on our streets.
    Governors’ Island is beautifully being restored.
    A park has been built in the sky (The High Line).
    Flowers and art installations and farmers’ markets rise in Rockefeller Center.
    There are fewer car lanes and more pedestrian pathways on Broadway; even the edges of FDR Drive, which pushes traffic in and out of the city, are newly softened with benches and lights and places for play.
    New York City seems to be providing its citizens and its visitors with so many new things to look at, so many opportunities to see. And similar initiatives are sprouting up in cities throughout the nation.
    It is not an exaggeration to say that when I observe these phenomena around our neighborhoods, I feel the same visual happiness I do when I look at a Rauschenberg composition, an Eliasson iceberg, a Wegman dog, a Warhol film still or any of the other wonders that visual artists put before me.
    Artists like these have given me an instinct to see the world around me in the intense and loving and inspiring way that they do. In terms of discovering beauty in daily life, it is almost as though I have learned to be an artist myself.
    Indeed, works of art are significant precisely because we learn so much about seeing the world from seeing them. If we want our children to love what is beautiful and meaningful–not only in the works of art they see hanging in museums but also in the parks and store windows and buildings they pass on the street–then we should encourage them to experience art and see as artists do: with intensity and clarity and eyes wide open.

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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