Saturday, December 31, 2011

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Russia slams US for its human rights record

(AP) ? Russia's Foreign Ministry has attacked America's human rights record in its first report on injustice elsewhere in the world, offering examples such as the Guantanamo Bay prison and wrongful death row convictions to paint the U.S. as hypocritical for lecturing other nations on the subject of rights.

"The situation in the United States is a far cry from the ideals that Washington proclaims," says the report released Wednesday.

Moscow has previously reacted angrily to the accusations of human rights breaches that the U.S. State Department has leveled at Russia in its annual reports. The State Department has expressed concern about the violent attacks on rights activists and journalists in Russia, most of which go unpunished. It also has criticized abuses in Russia's Caucasus, including extrajudicial killings, kidnappings and torture.

The 90-page Russian report slams EU nations, Canada and Georgia, but reserves its longest section of 20 pages for what it says are violations by the United States. The report does not cover Asia, Africa or the Middle East, other than a five-page section criticizing the NATO operation in Libya.

Moscow laments the ongoing operation of the "notorious" prison in Guantanamo Bay, where terrorism suspects have been held since the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, and criticizes President Barack Obama for "legalizing indefinite and extrajudicial custody and the return of court martials."

The report accuses the U.S. of prying into citizens' personal lives and violating the rights of Muslim Americans in the fight against terrorism. It also points to errors made by American courts.

"Judicial errors are the Achilles heel of American justice as concerns capital punishment," the report argues. It notes the roughly 130 people sentenced to death in the past 30 years who were later cleared of the charges, some after they were executed.

The Foreign Ministry also struck back at international criticism of Russia's recent parliamentary election, which independent observers said involved widespread fraud. Outrage over the vote set off a spate of protests led by citizens unhappy with Vladimir Putin's rule.

The report accuses the U.S. of blocking independent candidates from elections and criticizes the practice of allowing governors to nominate senators when a Senate seat is vacated, as when Obama became president. It refers to the conviction this year of former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich, who was accused of trying to auction off Obama's Senate seat.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-12-28-EU-Russia-US-Human-Rights/id-6dcf1af4c6ad48bfb2dd709ff50bb4bf

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Cops: Dad planned massacre in Santa suit

By NBCDFW.com

A father dressed as Santa?Claus arrived to his family's Christmas party with two guns, executed his entire family and then killed himself -- and planned the entire thing, police said Tuesday.

Police believe the Christmas Day massacre in Grapevine, Texas, which left seven people dead still surrounded by Christmas presents and wrapping paper, was premeditated, Grapevine Police Sgt. Robert Eberling said.

Late Tuesday afternoon, Grapevine police officially released the name of the gunman and his?victims.

Police confirm what family friends said Monday, that Azizolah "Bob" Yazdanpanah, 56, fired the fatal shots in the murder-suicide.

Grapevine police identified the victims as his wife, Fatemah "Nasrin" Rahmati, 55; their daughter, Nargis "Nona" Yazdanpanah, 19; and their son, Ali Yazdanpanah, 14. Nasrin's sister, Zohreh Rahmati, 58; her husband, Mohamad Hossein Zarei, 59; and their daughter, Sahra Fatemah Zarei, 22; were also killed, police confirmed.

See video, read the original story at NBCDFW.com

Police received a 911 call from an apartment in the 2500 block of Hall Johnson Road on Christmas morning. When officers arrived, they found the door locked from the inside, and the worst crime in Grapevine history.

Police recovered two weapons on the scene -- a Smith and Wesson 915 model 9 mm pistol with a 15-round magazine, and a Glock 23 .40-caliber pistol with a 10-round clip, according to Eberling.

Both guns were used in the murder-suicide, but Eberling would not say how many shots were fired; only saying that there were still bullets in both guns.

Last year, a bank foreclosed on Bob Yazdanpanah's house, and he separated from his wife in the March.

Police had previously said a text message prior to the shooting indicated Bob Yazdanpanah was probably invited to the party, but police on Tuesday afternoon changed their story.

Police now say Bob Yazdanpanah apparently was not invited.

At 11:16 a.m., one of the victims sent a text message to a friend indicating who was at the gathering at the apartment. The text message mentioned the gunman's name and that he was dressed as Santa. Police said there was no indication of fear or concern in the text.

Eighteen minutes later, someone placed a call to 911 from a landline inside the apartment.? Investigators could make out a muffled cry for help in the background, Eberling said.

All of the victims were found in the same room with no sign of a struggle, according to Eberling, but he said some of the victims had defensive wounds that indicate they tried to shield themselves from the bullets.

Police will wait for the Tarrant County Medical Examiner to release the identities of the victims,? Eberling said.

The gunman had some prior dealings with at least two other police departments but not Grapevine Police, according to Eberling. He did not say what kind of dealings, or when or how many incidents there were.

Investigators are still piecing together information, but Eberling said they aren't sure of a motive and may never know what led to the worst crime in Grapevine history.

Friends paint picture of loving family in turmoil
Yazdanpanah married Fatemah "Nasrin" Rahmati in 1987, according to court records. They had a daughter, Nargis "Nona," 19, who graduated from Colleyville Heritage High School in May and a son, Ali, 15, a high school freshman. All four are believed to be among the dead.

Neighbors say the family seemed tight-knit, and Aziz Yazdanpanah seemed protective of his children.

"He was pretty outgoing," said neighbor Fred Ditmars. "If you saw him, he'd say 'hi' to you and everything."

"It seemed like their whole existence was about family, so it's utterly shocking to me," said another neighbor, Terri Baum, whose daughter attended school with his daughter.

A close friend of the Yazdanpanah family said Fatemah "Nasrin" Rahmati's sister Zohreh, her husband Hossein Zarei and their 22-year-old daughter Sahra were also killed.

Sahra (pictured left in blue) was a pre-med student at the University of Texas at Arlington, and according to family friends she was a part of the Tri Delta sorority at UTA.

"Bob loved his kids. And I can't even fathom that that's what happened," Baum said.

The mother, Fatemah "Nasrin" Rahmati, worked the past four years doing manicures at a salon on Southlake's town square. The manager said she often talked about her family, but never in a bad way.

Police cautioned the investigation is far from over.

NBC 5's Scott Gordon, Ray Villeda and Ben Russell contributed to this report

More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

Source: http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/27/9744433-santa-claus-killings-financially-strapped-dad-planned-family-massacre-texas-police-say

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Wacky rules complicate race for GOP delegates (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Look out for some wacky results in the race for delegates in the Republican presidential primaries and caucuses. There might even be a state or two where the second-place candidate gets the most delegates, starting with Tuesday's caucuses in Iowa.

New GOP rules require states that hold nominating contests before April to award delegates proportionally. That usually means a candidate who gets 40 percent of the vote gets 40 percent of the delegates. But not always.

The rules give states a lot of leeway to define proportional, and some states have been pretty creative. For example, in Ohio, the candidate who gets the most votes in each congressional district wins three delegates. Ohio has 16 congressional districts based on the latest census, so 48 delegates will be awarded this way.

An additional 15 delegates will be awarded proportionally, based on statewide results. Candidates must get at least 20 percent of the statewide vote to qualify for these delegates. Under this system, it is possible in a close race for a candidate to narrowly win the most congressional districts ? and the most delegates ? but come in second in the overall statewide vote, said Bob Bennett, a member of the Republican National Committee from Ohio.

Early on, battles over small numbers of delegates won't get much attention because candidates are more concerned about winning contests and building momentum. But if the race continues into late spring, like the 2008 battle between Democrats Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton, delegate totals become much more important.

A tight race could draw a lot of scrutiny over obscure issues like this: If you qualify for 7.5 delegates under a proportional allocation, do you round up to eight or round down to seven? (In Ohio and other states you round up to eight. In Nevada, which is holding GOP caucuses Feb. 4, party officials are still working on those details.)

"All these rules are important in close races," Bennett said. "If you have a blowout, a sure winner, they don't matter as much."

In most national polls, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich are the front-runners for the GOP nomination. In Iowa, Rep. Ron Paul of Texas also is polling well, raising the possibility of a split vote.

The Iowa caucuses on Tuesday begin the process in that state that will result in 25 delegates being selected for the national convention. At the caucuses, voters will cast ballots in a presidential straw poll, and those results will get the most attention on election night.

Caucus-goers also will elect delegates to county conventions, who in turn will elect delegates to congressional district conventions and the state party convention in June. These are the conventions where delegates to the GOP national convention in Tampa, Fla., are selected.

Each of the four congressional districts will elect three delegates to the national convention. They will also appoint two members to a slate committee, which will choose 13 additional delegates. The slate is voted on at the party's state convention in June.

The system puts a premium on getting the most votes in individual congressional districts. If a candidate's supporters can control a congressional district convention, they can choose national delegates and slate committee members who support their candidate.

In a tight, three-way race, it is possible for a candidate to narrowly win two of the four congressional districts ? putting him or her in position to win the most delegates ? but come in second in overall votes statewide.

"The delegates are going to reflect the division within the party itself," said John Ryder, a member of the Republican National Committee from Tennessee who chaired the panel that wrote the new proportional rule. "The end result is nobody comes out of a proportional state with a clear mandate, unless of course they do, which would only happen if a candidate generates commanding support among Republican voters."

A total of 2,286 delegates are slated to attend the Republican National Convention in August, and 1,144 will be needed to claim the nomination, according to the Republican National Committee. No candidate can reach that total before April, though a dominant front-runner could build a commanding lead by then.

In the meantime, the primary calendar is full of quirks. South Carolina (Jan. 21), and Florida (Jan. 31), will award all their delegates to the candidate who gets the most votes, even though they are holding their contests before April. Both states already lost half their delegates for holding early contests, so the state parties decided to make them winner-take-all. The RNC says there are no additional penalties for violating the proportional rules.

Michigan's plan for awarding delegates is very similar to Ohio's. But Michigan, which holds its primary Feb. 28, lost half its delegates because it scheduled its primary before March 6, also known as Super Tuesday. GOP rules allow only four states to hold nominating contests before Super Tuesday: Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina. And those states weren't supposed to schedule contests before February.

Michigan started with 59 delegates, but now has only 30. Nevertheless, party officials plan to award 56 delegates based on the primary (the other three will be the state's RNC members), and simply reduce each candidate's total by half. That poses several problems: Half of 56 isn't quite 30, and what if a candidate wins 25 delegates? Do they get 12 or 13? GOP rules don't allow fractions of delegates.

"We'll work that out once we get closer to choosing the delegates who will go," said Matt Frendewey, spokesman for the Michigan Republican Party.

___

Lauren Johnert, Associated Press deputy manager for election research and quality control, contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111228/ap_on_el_pr/us_gop_delegates

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Seth Rogen Forms 'B Team,' Ryan Gosling Says Noe

Seth Rogen could be doing double duty as both producer and star of a film again, according to a new report. Meanwhile, Bret Easton Ellis stirs up some casting rumors on his Twitter account, and Christina Hendricks picks a new role that will return her to the '60s.
It's December 27, and you're tuning into [...]

Source: http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2011/12/27/seth-rogen-ryan-gosling/

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GG pays Christmas visit to troops overseas

Governor General David Johnston
Governor General David Johnston visits with Canadian Forces personnel at Camp Blackhorse in Kabul on Dec. 25, 2011. (Master Cpl. Chris Ward/DND/HO)

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Canadian troops and civilians serving overseas got a special Christmas visit.

Governor General David Johnston, joined by Defence Minister Peter MacKay and Chief of Defence Staff Gen. Walt Natynczyk, travelled to Italy and Afghanistan over Christmas to personally thank our representatives abroad.

"It was a privilege to extend my heartfelt gratitude and support to the Canadian men and women in uniform, and the many diplomats, aid specialists and police officers deployed abroad, who are committed to making parts of the world a safer and better place," Johnston said. "The sacrifice of troops and civilians who are away from their families and friends at this time of the year is tremendous, and I wish them the best of luck in the completion of their missions."

In Rome, the GG met with troops on the HMCS Vancouver and thanked them for their efforts in the NATO mission in Libya that led to that country's liberation in October.

Johnston attended the state funeral of Vaclav Havel, former president of the Czech Republic, then went on to Kabul, where he met with the Afghan president, Hamid Karzai.

He later stopped in at the Armed Forces Academy of Medical Sciences, where Canadian Forces medical personnel are mentoring Afghan medical staff. Then he visited with troops at Camp Alamo, Camp Blackhorse and Canada House, where Canadian performers put on a Christmas concert.

Canada ended its 10-year combat mission in Afghanistan earlier this year, but Canadian troops are still in the country in a training capacity until 2014.

?

Source: http://www.torontosun.com/2011/12/25/gg-pays-christmas-visit-to-troops-overseas

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Economic inequality an issue for US 2012 campaign

President Barack Obama salutes as he steps off of Air Force One at Hickam Air Force Base in Friday, Dec. 23, 2011, in Honolulu. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

President Barack Obama salutes as he steps off of Air Force One at Hickam Air Force Base in Friday, Dec. 23, 2011, in Honolulu. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

(AP) ? Fighting to win over unhappy American voters, President Barack Obama and his Republican challengers are seizing on one of the most potent issues this election season: the struggling middle class and the widening gap between rich and poor.

Highlighted by the Occupy movement and fanned by record profits on Wall Street at a time of stubborn unemployment, economic inequality is now taking center stage in the 2012 presidential campaign, emphasized by Obama and offering opportunities and risks for him and his GOP opponents as both sides battle for the allegiance of the angst-ridden electorate.

For Obama, who calls boosting middle-class opportunity "the defining issue of our time," the question is whether he can bring voters along ? while parrying GOP accusations of class warfare ? even though he's failed to solve the country's economic woes during his first term in office.

For Republicans, Obama's potential vulnerability gives them an opening, but they also must battle perceptions that their policies favor the wealthy at a time when voters support Obama's call to raise taxes on the very rich. Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney has already made clear he'll resist Obama's attempts to capitalize on the issue, adopting the language of Occupy Wall Street in an interview with the Washington Post this month where he called the president "a member of the 1 percent."

For both sides, the question is how to find political advantage in light of a weak economy with unemployment above 8 percent. Since Obama is expected to run for re-election with higher unemployment than any recent president even if the economy continues to show signs of improvement, he must aim to set the terms of the debate in a way that helps him and hurts the GOP ? while Republicans will be working just as hard to deny him any advantage.

The president won a year-end victory Friday with the passage of a two-month extension of a payroll tax cut that had bipartisan support in the Senate.

The measure will keep in place a 2 percentage point cut in the Social Security payroll tax ? worth about $20 a week for a typical worker making $50,000 (?38,293) a year ? and prevent almost 2 million unemployed people from losing jobless benefits averaging $300 a week.

House Republicans had unsuccessfully attempted to push for further negotiations toward a yearlong extension, which allowed Obama to argue for the two-month extension of the tax cuts and prevention of a pending tax increase. The two sides resume discussions on the payroll tax cut early next year.

Obama's campaign pressed its economic argument Friday in an op-ed by Vice President Joe Biden in The Des Moines Register where Biden, taking direct aim at Romney, wrote that the former Massachusetts governor "would actually double down on the policies that caused the greatest economic calamity since the Great Depression and accelerated a decades-long assault on the middle class."

Romney, campaigning in New Hampshire, quickly countered that it's Obama who is hurting the country and expressed astonishment that Biden would have the "chutzpah ... the delusion" to write such a piece. "This president and his policies have made it harder on the American people and on the middle class," Romney said.

It was a preview of an argument certain to carry through the 2012 race, as the Obama campaign, viewing Romney as the likely GOP nominee even before any votes have been cast, works vigorously to define him early on, and Romney does everything he can to resist.

And the dispute taps into a striking reality. After-tax income grew by 275 percent between 1979 and 2007 for the top 1 percent of the population, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office found in a report this fall. But for the 20 percent of the population making the least money, income growth over the same period was only 18 percent.

Obama "is viewed as more likely to help the middle class than is the GOP, so he can capitalize on this by playing on concerns about inequality and contrasting his positions and the GOP's on issues like tax cuts for the wealthy," John Sides, political science professor at George Washington University, said by email. "However," Sides added, "it's an open question whether that strategy would enable him to overcome a weak economy and win."

Aides say Obama has long been concerned with economic inequality given his background in community organizing. But he brought the issue into much sharper focus in a speech in Osawatomie, Kan., earlier this month, where he reprised a populist message delivered in the same town by Theodore Roosevelt decades ago, and decried a growing inequality between chief executives and their workers.

"This kind of inequality ? a level that we haven't seen since the Great Depression ? hurts us all," Obama said at the time.

"This kind of gaping inequality gives lie to the promise that's at the very heart of America: that this is a place where you can make it if you try."

The issue has become a rallying cry of the Occupy Wall Street movement that's swept the country, with activists proclaiming "We are the 99 percent" ? as opposed to the "1 percent" at the top. And Obama advisers have identified this sense of inequality as the strongest current running through politics, one that they will be focusing on through Election Day.

But some polling suggests a note of caution for Obama in pressing the inequality argument. Gallup found this month that a majority of Americans don't view the country as divided into haves and have-nots. The polling also found that more people thought it was important for the government to focus on growing and expanding the economy, (82 percent) and increasing equality of opportunity (70 percent) than on reducing the income and wealth gap between the rich and poor (46 percent).

"The middle class certainly believes that it's in trouble and rightly so, because it is," said Bill Galston, a former Clinton administration domestic policy adviser now at the Brookings Institution. "But they are yet to be convinced that going after the rich will go to the heart of the problems that now afflict them."

That may suggest an opening for some GOP attacks against Obama. Romney charged in a speech in New Hampshire this month that Obama is pursuing an "entitlement society," versus the "opportunity society" that the former Massachusetts governor said he wants to offer the country. Newt Gingrich, Romney and other Republicans also regularly accuse Obama of "class warfare."

Obama senior adviser David Axelrod called such criticism the "Republican cartoon" of Obama's argument.

"In some ways the race will be different depending on who the nominee is but in some ways the same because they largely subscribe to the same economic theory" of cutting taxes for the wealthy and paring back regulations, said Axelrod. He added that Obama's speech in Osawatomie, Kansas, "was a very, very good statement of his values and vision and will help frame much of what comes in the next year."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2011-12-24-Obama-Economic%20Inequality/id-22070b166ae3474482cca17f56682bcb

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NCAA Issues Ohio State One-Year Bowl Ban

Graphic Designer Gary Finkler of 7thInningSketch.com dropped us an email sharing his latest sports cartoon -- a depiction of Ohio State and the NCAA regarding the announcement of the Buckeyes 2012-2013 bowl game ban.


I grew up watching Seinfeld, so I get it, but I'm guessing not everyone -- especially younger fans -- watched the show and thus, they do not understand or appreciate the illustration as I do.

Hopefully this will help.

I must admit, while the ban seems excessive and I do not agree with the NCAA decision, the cartoon is humorous. The decision is final and Ohio State apparently won't appeal.

As much as I hate the ruling and as bitter as I was about it right after hearing it, I have to say -- Thanks for the laugh Gary!



Ohio State - NCAA Sanctions article from Nick Weaver coming later today.

Follow @BlockONation on Twitter.




Click For The Block Nation Front Page

Source: http://blog.blockonation.com/2011/12/ncaa-issues-ohio-state-one-year-bowl.html

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

StevenL57: @StevanRidley You're gonna get a bunch of new followers via @ochocinco . Well deserved, lots of energy to the offense. Merry XMas

Twitter / Steven Leibowitz: @StevanRidley You're gonna ... Loader @ You're gonna get a bunch of new followers via @ . Well deserved, lots of energy to the offense. Merry XMas

Source: http://twitter.com/StevenL57/statuses/150724115609821184

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OnLive gamepad support comes to Sony Xperia Play

Sony's release of the Xperia Play smartphone was heavily hyped as the launch of the "Playstation Phone" thanks to its slide-out gamepad that made playing games easier than just using the touchpad. Now OnLive, the streaming PC game service, has announced that a new version of the Android OnLive app has been released that allows the gamepad of the Sony Xperia Play to be used in playing OnLive's library of high end PC games.

This will obviously be a huge help to Xperia Play users who should be able to button mash combos easily in games such as Super Street Fighter IV Arcade Edition, which just happens to be the newest game added to the OnLive library. The Android app update has also allowed even more Android phones to gain access to OnLive although the release notes don't go into any more detail.

In related news, OnLive will be holding some contests during the holiday period starting today. It includes a chance to win a trip to Las Vegas simply by playing Super Street Fighter IV Arcade Edition for a few hours. OnLive users will be able to play Borderland for free from December 28-30. There are a lot of other activites planned for the next couple of weeks.

Image via OnLive

John Callaham

John began his journalism career writing for print newspapers but 11 years ago moved on to write mostly for online outlets, particularly PC gaming sites. He has worked for a variety of sites including Firing Squad and most recently AOL's Big Download web site.

Source: http://feeds.neowin.net/~r/neowin-all/~3/0D1Xuapj32A/onlive-gamepad-support-comes-to-sony-xperia-play

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Mexico makes huge meth precursor chemicals seizure (AP)

MEXICO CITY ? Mexico said Friday that it seized 229 metric tons of precursor chemicals used to make methamphetamine, the third such huge seizure this month at the Pacific port of Lazaro Cardenas, all of which were bound for a port in Guatemala.

The seizure brings to more than 534 tons the amount of meth chemicals detected at the Mexican port in less than a month.

Authorities announced on Dec. 19 that they had found almost 100 metric tons of methylamine at Lazaro Cardenas, and earlier said that 205 tons of the chemical had been found there over several days in early December.

Experts familiar with meth production call it a huge amount of raw material, noting that under some production methods, precursor chemicals can yield about half their weight in uncut meth.

The Attorney General's Office said the most recent seizure was found in 1,600 drums, and had been shipped from Shanghai, China. All three shipments originated in China and were destined for Puerto Quetzal, Guatemala.

The office has not indicated which cartels may have been moving the chemicals, but U.S. officials have noted that the Sinaloa cartel, Mexico's most powerful, has moved into meth production on an industrial scale.

Sinaloa also has operations in Guatemala, and given recent busts by the Mexican army of huge meth processing facilities in Mexico, the gang may have decided to move some production to the Central American country.

Lazaro Cardenas is located in the western Michoacan state, which is dominated by the Knights Templar cartel and previously by the La Familia group.

However, a series of arrests, deaths and infighting may have weakened those gangs' ability to engage in massive meth production.

Also Friday, the attorney general's office in the Gulf coast state of Veracruz reported that it had found ten bodies in an area along the border with the neighboring state of Tamaulipas. The office said investigators were alerted to the bodies by a tip, and are working to identify them and the cause of death.

The area has been the scene of bloody battles between the Gulf and Zetas cartels.

Finally Friday, federal police captured Javier Mercado Guerrero, alias "El Indio," who allegedly led the operations of the Zetas drug cartel in the Veracruz city of Poza Rica and surrounding areas inland.

Police said Mercado Guerrero had served as a local police officer in 2010, and passed information to the Zetas.

Local police in Veracruz have become so corrupt that on Wednesday, the government decided to dissolve the entire police force in the state's largest city, also known as Veracruz, and sent the Navy in to patrol.

State spokeswoman Gina Dominguez said 800 police officers and 300 administrative employees were laid off. Dominguez said they can apply for jobs in a state police force, but must meet stricter standards.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111224/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_drug_war_mexico

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Friday, December 23, 2011

6 comments Ron Paul has to explain (Politico)

The storyline dogging Ron Paul as his numbers continue to rise in Iowa ? the racist content in newsletters published in the 1990s under his name ? poses a significant impediment to his campaign?s momentum.

But that?s not his only problem.

Continue Reading

Even as he disavows the newsletters ? the Texas congressman asserts he didn?t write them and never even read them ? Paul?s got a collection of other statements that he?ll likely need to explain in greater detail if he expects to capture the Republican Party nomination.

Here are six of them:

The ?disaster? of Ronald Reagan?s conservative agenda

?I think we can further thank Ronald Reagan for doing a good job [on furthering the Libertarian Party]. He certainly did a good job in 1980 pointing out the fallacies of the Democratic liberal agenda and he certainly did a good job on following up to show the disaster of the conservative agenda as well.?

The first rule in modern GOP politics is that you do not diss Ronald Reagan. The Reagan embrace may not be as tight as it was, say, a decade ago, but he is still a revered figure in the party. Thus, the above line from Paul?s nomination speech at the 1987 Libertarian Party convention in Seattle may not go over well with GOP regulars.

Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid are unconstitutional

Fox News?s Chris Wallace: You talk a lot about the Constitution. You say Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid are all unconstitutional.

Ron Paul: Technically, they are. ? There?s no authority [in the Constitution]. Article I, Section 8 doesn?t say I can set up an insurance program for people. What part of the Constitution are you getting it from? The liberals are the ones who use this General Welfare Clause.

Technically, he?s right: None of those programs are explicitly laid out in the Constitution. But even as many in the party are looking to reform entitlements and slash spending, almost no one takes it as far as Paul did in this March 2011 appearance on ?Fox News Sunday.? His position is not only ripe for devastating ads, it puts him at odds with a constituency that turns out to vote in high numbers.

American drug laws are designed to fund rogue governments, CIA programs

?I think that might be the No. 1 reason for the drug laws ? to raise the funds necessary for government to do illegal things, whether it?s some terrorist government someplace or whether it?s our own CIA to fund programs that they can?t get Congress to fund. I think it?s tragic and the sooner we get rid of the drug laws, the sooner this will end.?

While American attitudes toward drug laws have evolved over the years, Paul?s views on the legalization of drugs are still far out of the mainstream. And they are especially far out of the GOP mainstream.

During his 1988 Libertarian presidential campaign, Paul went after Republican nominee George H.W. Bush over his tenure as the head of the Central Intelligence Agency and made provocative allegations about CIA involvement in drug trafficking.

Paul has gotten much quieter about his views on drug legalization during the 2012 campaign, but there is a video trail that won?t be easy to dismiss. In his 1988 bid, he frequently gave interviews in which he spoke at length about his desire to see drugs legalized. That year, he appeared on ?The Morton Downey Jr. Show,? a provocative program designed to have people to yell at one another over political issues (Downey previews the segment by saying: ?We?ll talk to a man who could be snorting cocaine in the Oval Office.?); the performance makes the Howard Dean scream video clip seem like Masterpiece Theatre.

None of it will be helpful to him.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/politico_rss/rss_politico_mostpop/http___www_politico_com_news_stories1211_70798_html/43986823/SIG=11mi6549h/*http%3A//www.politico.com/news/stories/1211/70798.html

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Monday, December 19, 2011

Video: After Kuwait, next stop for troops is home



>>> the war in iraq is officially over, but there are still u.s. troops in the country preparing to make the long journey home. it begins with a layover in the place where it all began for our troops nine years ago. and our chief foreign correspondent richard engle is there.

>> reporter: a last roll call before going home .

>> it's definitely a great thing. i can't wait to go home.

>> seeing my wife again. spend some time with the family.

>> reporter: the u.s. military command closed in baghdad, but troops are still leaving iraq, crossing the border and coming here to kuwait . kuwait is iraq's official out processing center, where the war is packed up and shipped home.

>> we're all looking forward to getting home. but six months, a year from now, everybody's going look back on it, wow, we were the last people there.

>> reporter: the iraq war was launched from here in kuwait nearly nine years ago. now everything seems in reverse. the troops are leaving from where they once prepared to fight a dictator. the war is ending where it began. tanks are being washed instead of prepped for battle. kuwait 's now being described as the world's biggest parking lot. it's packed with $8 billion worth of vehicles.

>> it's coming all here, it's getting put on the property book and making sure we can account for all the equipment.

>> reporter: for the troops, the procedures are relatively simple but can seem slow and boring. most of the troops spend about five days in kuwait , turning in gear, filling out paperwork, packing and loading. until finally a preflight inspection x-raying weapons in a scene that might terrify the tsa. then as they pass a sign that reads "freedom" the troops move to a holding pen called lockdown. with home so close, kuwait can feel like the worst five-day layover. they play cards and games, but the flights do eventually come.

>> happy to go home.

>> reporter: and after a war that tested and at times tore the nation, the army is going home . richard engle, nbc news, kuwait .

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/45708943/

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

#SciAmBlogs Thursday - X-men bacteria, feedback loops and livestream of brain surgery.


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Check out the new Video of the Week!

- S.E. Gould ? Bacteria that could pass as X-men: part 1

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- Hogan Sherrow ? The origins of bullying

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- Alex Wild ? Visiting the Devil?s Garden

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- David Wogan ? Hacking Minecraft to calculate carbon emissions [video]

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- Bora Zivkovic ? The New Meanings of How and Why in Biology?

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- Lucas Brouwers ? Return of the Yeti Crab

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- Ingrid Wickelgren ? Patients Risk Brain Surgery to Fix Shaky Hands

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- Sarah Fecht ? Translating Calorie Counts into Exercise Equivalents Leads to Healthier Choices

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- Christina Agapakis ? I Heard You Like Feedback Loops

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- Krystal D?Costa ? Editor?s Selections: Snakes, Dangerous Honey, And Friendly Rats

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Conversations on our articles and blog posts often continue on our Facebook page ? ?Like? it and join in the discussion. You can also put our official Google Plus page in your circles.

You should follow the Blog Network on Twitter ? the official account is @sciamblogs and the List of all the bloggers is @sciamblogs/sciambloggers.

Bora ZivkovicAbout the Author: Bora Zivkovic is the Blog Editor at Scientific American, chronobiologist, biology teacher, organizer of ScienceOnline conferences and editor of Open Laboratory anthologies of best science writing on the Web. Follow on Twitter @boraz.

The views expressed are those of the author and are not necessarily those of Scientific American.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=102f472f5de3ad05870d7246f025f0a9

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Duke-Progress merger facing competition worries (Providence Journal)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/174886474?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Fox News' Chris Wallace Has an Anti-Ron Paul Agenda (ContributorNetwork)

COMMENTARY | With the most recent Republican presidential debate occurring on Thursday, Dec. 15, Fox News wants Iowans -- and the rest of the nation -- to understand that if Texas congressman Ron Paul should win, their first-in-the-nation caucus will count as a waste of time and serious GOP-leaning voters should look toward New Hampshire and South Carolina to choose a truly viable Republican candidate to run against President Obama.

Or that seems to be the gist of what Chris Wallace had to say on Fox News' "Your World with Neil Cavuto" (as reported by Mediaite) a few hours before the sole remaining debate standing between Paul, who is surging in the local polls, and a possible victory in the Hawkeye State on Jan. 3.

"Well, and the Ron Paul people aren't going to like me saying this," Wallace said, "but, to a certain degree, it will discredit the Iowa caucuses because, rightly or wrongly, I think most of the Republican establishment thinks he is not going to end up as the nominee. So, therefore, Iowa won't count and it will go on."

So, to reiterate: "Iowa won't count." But only if Ron Paul wins. Otherwise, because every other GOP candidate is presumably acceptable to the "Republican establishment" (oddly enough, this line of reasoning would seem to include Tea Party Caucus leader Rep. Michele Bachmann and ultra-conservative ex-Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum as part of the "establishment" -- unless they have been discounted altogether), a victory in Iowa will count and should be looked upon as a voter mandate for the legitimacy of their candidacy.

What? Regardless of who wins the Iowa Caucus, it counts. Delegates are elected that will eventually choose a presidential nominee. It could be the presidential hopeful that is a long-shot that faces the Democratic incumbent in November 2012, or it could be someone more in tune with the GOP party apparatus. Just because the "establishment" does not accept a candidate as party-friendly does not mean that a voter's choice and the majority voters' choice does not count.

But such a statement and its source are somewhat problematic. Wallace is a moderator at the debate which kicks off at 9 p.m. EST on Fox News Channel in Sioux City, Iowa. He will co-moderate with Fox News anchors Megyn Kelly and Neil Cavuto.

With that type of pre-debate and pre-Iowa Caucus analysis of Rep. Paul's candidacy, Wallace might as well be standing at the polls and buying votes for other establishment approved contenders. He has essentially told Iowans that Paul, who has replaced Romney as the second-strongest candidate in Iowa in two of the last three local polls (via Real Clear Politics tracking), cannot win the national election and that a vote for Paul is worthless. Such comments are only designed to weaken

Succinctly: If you're planning to vote for Texas congressman Ron Paul in the upcoming Iowa Caucus, don't bother. It won't count. Or, rather, it will count for Iowa -- the state does send delegates to the Republican National Convention, after all -- but not nationally. According to Wallace, the rest of the nation will just "go on" and select someone who can actually win the Republican nomination.

Fox News and its primary media outlet, Fox News Channel, has long been viewed as a propaganda source for all things conservative and a direct-to-consumer mouthpiece for the Republican Party. Wallace, for better or worse, is generally viewed as one of Fox News' few truly "fair and balanced" newsmen. But as conservative blogger Andrew Sullivan pointed out on his blog, "The Dish," such a statement by Wallace not only shows bias against a candidate, it does so in a manner that appears to push the agenda of "Republican establishment" by marginalizing an unacceptable contender.

Sullivan has called for Chris Wallace to recuse himself from the Iowa debate.

Whether purposeful or unwittingly, Wallace allowed himself to become a tool of the Republican establishment and the promulgator of said establishment through Fox News.

But Sullivan, quick with the double entendre, said it best: "A man who is openly backing the Establishment against the possible winner of the vote is not an impartial moderator. He is a tool."

Chris Wallace noted that the "Ron Paul people" were not going to like him saying what he did. He was undoubtedly correct. And they should not like it. Nor should anyone else in a democratic society. Why? Because going into the debate and the Iowa Caucus, which is less than three weeks away, congressman Paul has just as good a chance of winning as does any other person on the ballot, including the lowly polling former Utah governor, Jon Huntsman. For a respected newsman to tell Iowans that voting for Paul or any other candidate that might not be acceptable to the establishment is tantamount to tampering with the vote itself. Saying that a Paul vote discredits or makes valueless the vote only promotes voting dishonesty and truly marginalizes the outlying and long-shot candidates, further solidifying the power of the "establishment." And it devalues the democratic process by padding the numbers of those contenders that are acceptable to the powers that be instead of being reflective of who the voters truly would like to see represent the Republican Party.

In the democratic process, majority rules. What truly invalidates the process is not voting for the candidate one actually wants to see elected. Pay no attention to the guy behind the Fox News curtain. A win by Ron Paul -- or Santorum, or Bachmann, or Perry, or whoever -- will not discredit Iowa. Making that statement, however, certainly was a discredit to Chris Wallace.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20111215/pl_ac/10687737_fox_news_chris_wallace_has_an_antiron_paul_agenda

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Friday, December 16, 2011

GDP up, happiness down

ScienceDaily (Dec. 16, 2011) ? The gross domestic product of the United States -- that oft-cited measure of economic health -- has been ticking upward for the last two years.

But what would you see if you could see a graph of gross domestic happiness?

A team of scientists from the University of Vermont has made such a graph -- and the trend is down.

Reporting in the Dec. 7 issue of the journal PLoS ONE, the team writes, "After a gradual upward trend that ran from January to April, 2009, the overall time series has shown a gradual downward trend, accelerating somewhat over the first half of 2011."

"It appears that happiness is going down," said Peter Dodds, an applied mathematician at UVM and the lead author on the new study.

How does he know this? From Twitter. For three years, he and his colleagues gathered more than 46 billion words written in Twitter tweets by 63 million Twitter users around the globe.

In these billions of words is not a view of any individual's state of mind. Instead, like billions of moving atoms add up to the overall temperature of a room, billions of words used to express what people are feeling resolve into a view of the relative mood of large groups.

These billions of words contain everything from "the" to "pancakes" to "suicide." To get a sense of the emotional gist of various words, the researchers used a service from Amazon called Mechanical Turk. On this website, they paid a group of volunteers to rate, from one to nine, their sense of the "happiness" -- the emotional temperature -- of the ten thousand most common words in English. Averaging their scores, the volunteers rated, for example, "laughter" at 8.50, "food" 7.44, "truck" 5.48, "greed" 3.06 and "terrorist" 1.30.

The Vermont team then took these scores and applied them to the huge pool of words they collected from Twitter. Because these tweets each have a date and time, and, sometimes, other demographic information -- like location -- they show changing patterns of word use that provide insights into the way groups of people are feeling.

The new approach lets the researchers measure happiness at different scales of time and geography -- whether global patterns over a workweek -- or on Christmas.

And stretched out over the last three years, these patterns of word use show a drop in average happiness.

Or at least at drop in happiness for those who use Twitter. "It does skew toward younger people and people with smartphones and so on -- but Twitter is nearly universal now," Dodds said, "Every demographic is represented."

"Twitter is a signal," Dodds said, "just like looking at the words in the New York Times or Google Books." (Word sources that the team is also exploring in related studies). "They're all a sample," he says. "And indeed everything we say or write is a distortion of what goes on inside our head."

But -- like GDP is a distortion of the hugely complex interactions that make up the economy and yet is still useful -- the new approach by the UVM team provides a powerful sense of the rising and falling pulse of human feelings.

"Individual happiness is a fundamental societal metric," the researchers write in their study. Indeed the ultimate goal of much public policy is to improve and protect happiness. But measuring happiness has been exceedingly difficult by traditional means, like self-reporting in social science surveys. Some of the problems with this approach are that people often don't tell the truth in surveys and the sample sizes are small.

And so efforts to measure happiness have been "overshadowed by more readily quantifiable economic indicators such as gross domestic product," the study notes.

The new approach lets the UVM researchers almost instantaneously look over the "collective shoulder of society," Dodds says. "We get a sense of the aggregate expressions of millions of people," says Dodds's colleague Chris Danforth, a mathematician and a co-author the study, while they are communicating in a "more natural way," he says. And this opens the possibility of taking regular measures of happiness in near real-time -- measurements that could have applications in public policy, marketing and other fields.

The study describes hundreds of insights from the Twitter data, like a clear weekly happiness signal "with the peak generally occurring over the weekend, and the nadir on Monday and Tuesday," they write. And over each day happiness seems to drop from morning to night. "It's part of the general unraveling of the mind that happens over the course of the day," said Dodds.

In the long-term graph that shows an overall drop in happiness, various ups and downs are clearly visible. While the strongest up-trending days are annual holidays like Christmas and Valentine's Day, "all the most negative days are shocks from outside people's routines," Dodds say. Clear drops can be seen with the spread of swine flu, announcement of the U.S. economic bailout, the tsunami in Japan and even the death of actor Patrick Swayze.

"In measuring happiness, we construct a tunable, real-time, remote sensing, and non-invasive, text-based hedonometer," the Vermont scientists write. In other words, a happiness sensor.

Right now the sensor is only available to the researchers, but Dodds, Danforth and their colleagues have in mind a tool that could go "on the dashboard" of policy makers, Dodds says. Or, perhaps, on a real estate website for people exploring communities into which they might move, or, simply, "if someone is flying in a plane they could look at this dashboard and see how the city below them is feeling," he says.

Of course feelings change quickly and the nature of happiness itself is one of the most complex, profound issues of human experience.

"There is an important psychological distinction between an individual's current, experiential happiness and their longer term, reflective evaluation of their life," the scientists write, "and in using Twitter, our approach is tuned to the former kind."

And looking ahead, the Vermont scientists hope that by following the written expressions of individual Twitter users over long time periods, they'll be able to infer details of happiness dynamics "such as individual stability, social correlation and contagion and connections to well-being and health."

Dodds and his colleagues are no strangers to the debates over the role of happiness that can be traced back through Brave New World to Jeremy Bentham, Thomas Aquinas, and Aristotle. "By measuring happiness, we're not saying that maximizing happiness is the goal of society," Dodds says. "It might well be that we need to have some persistent degree of grumpiness for cultures to flourish."

Nevertheless, this study provides a new view on a compelling question: why does happiness seem to be declining?

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Vermont, via Newswise.

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/WaBdl7orTrw/111216174440.htm

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Can an online auto insurance quote save me money? | FAQ

If you haven?t shopped around for automobile insurance recently, taking a few minutes to get an online quote has the potential to save you hundreds of dollars per year. Even if you just compared auto insurance quotes six months ago, it?s time to do it again.

By gathering the proper documentation, providing the right information, and ensuring that you are properly comparing one car insurance policy to another, you have the potential to save a large sum of money with one quick, simple online auto insurance quote.

save money on auto insuranceInformation to Include When Getting Online Auto Insurance Quotes

Including the right information when getting online auto insurance quotes can provide car insurance companies with the information necessary to give you a better rate. A wide variety of factors, many of which may not seem intuitive, can influence your online car insurance quote. Information you should be sure to mention when seeking online quotes include the following:

  • Include your marital status and how many children you have in your online quote application. Although this information is typically optional, lower car insurance rates are often offered to married people and people with children. Car insurance companies believe that you are likely a safer driver if you have loved ones? lives in your hands on a regular basis.
  • If you have a clean driving record, be sure to mention that when applying for a quote. A clean driving record makes you appear to be a safer driver and a better risk for insurance companies.
  • Mention any security features your car has, including a car alarm or GPS tracking system. These features lead insurance companies to believe it is less likely for your car to be stolen, thereby making insuring your vehicle a better risk.
  • If you park your car in a garage, be sure to include this information when apply for a car insurance quote. Cars parked in garages are protected against theft and weather damage.

Information to Gather Before Applying for an Online Auto Insurance Quote

Obtaining an online auto insurance quote is quick and easy, but only if you have the right information readily available. Gathering the documents you are likely to need when applying for an online car insurance quote can save you time and frustration. Documents you should gather include:

  1. Your driver?s license. Your driver?s license is both a form of personal identification to prove that you are who you say you are, but is also linked to your driving record. Car insurance companies often ask for your driver?s license number and state of issue when providing online quotes.
  2. The driver?s license number of anyone else who will be listed on your policy. For example, if your spouse or children will be driving a car you want to insure, the car insurance company will want their driver?s license information to verify their identities and driving records.
  3. The vehicle identification numbers of all of the cars you want to insure. A car?s VIN is its unique identifying number. Car insurance companies often ask for cars? VINs when providing online insurance quotes to ensure they are providing appropriate quotes for the cars listed. For example, the quote for insuring a Mitsubishi Eclipse would be different than insuring a Dodge Ram.

Driving school educationMake Sure You are Comparing Apples to Apples

When reviewing your online auto insurance quote it is important that you are comparing similar types of auto coverage when deciding if you should switch car insurance companies for what appears to be a better deal. There is more to a car insurance policy than your premium. Make you compare the following when you receive your online auto insurance quote:

  • The amount of liability coverage offered by the new insurance company compared to your current policy. It?s worth paying a little bit more for additional liability coverage.
  • The deductible for fixing your vehicle if it were to become damaged. You must pay the deductible before your car insurance company will pay for the remainder of the necessary repairs. Deductibles vary greatly from one policy to the next, so be sure you compare these numbers when determining if the online quote is a good deal.
  • Any extra benefits, such as roadside assistance and a rental vehicle allowance if your car is in the shop. These benefits are not standard with all auto insurance policies, so take a close look at both your current and potentially new policies before deciding which deal is better.

The bottom line is that taking the time to get an online auto insurance quote has the very real possibility of saving you money. However, you won?t know just how much money you can save until you apply for a quote. The process is generally very quick as long as you have the right documentation readily available and understand how to compare your current policy with the policy you are receiving an online quote for.

compare car insurance onlineIf your ultimate goal is to save the most amount of money and you are willing to sacrifice coverage where necessary, choose the lowest coverage levels you are comfortable with when requesting an online auto insurance quote. State minimum car coverage is suitable for many drivers.

Many car insurance companies which offer online quotes have staff available by phone, e-mail, or instant messaging to assist you with any problems, questions or concerns that may arise while requesting a quote. If you are not happy with the online quote you receive, be sure to ask if there is anything you can do to lower your quote. Sometimes there are auto insurance discounts you may be eligible for or coverage changes you can make to lower your quote.

Although it takes a bit of time, taking the opportunity to gather necessary documents prior to applying for an online auto quote and ensuring you compare the insurance policy you are considering with the policy you currently have can save you a lot of money. When done right, getting an online auto insurance quote can save you a lot of money. Enter your ZIP into our comparison tool and compare cheap auto insurance TODAY!

Source: http://www.autoinsurance.org/can-an-online-auto-insurance-quote-save-me-money/

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