Monday, October 29, 2012

Mary Landrieu wins maritime award | NOLA.com

Washington -- Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., was honored Friday night by USA Maritime, an association that represents ship owners, maritime labor groups and maritime trade groups. Awards like this are regular occurrences on Capitol Hill, but the name of this one is special: "The Admiral of the Ocean Sea Award."

Landrieu was cited for her support of the industry, including her efforts to increase funding for port and waterways maintenance.

Said Landrieu: "Louisiana is a maritime state by nature. We have more mariners per capita than any other state, a proud ship building history, the most productive fisheries in the lower 48, and the largest port complex in the world. I understand the need to support our seafarers and maritime infrastructure as well as the critical role this industry plays in our nation's economy and security."

Source: http://www.nola.com/politics/index.ssf/2012/10/mary_landrieu_wins_maritime_aw.html

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Friday, October 26, 2012

New study brings a doubted exoplanet 'back from the dead'

ScienceDaily (Oct. 25, 2012) ? A second look at data from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope is reanimating the claim that the nearby star Fomalhaut hosts a massive exoplanet. The study suggests that the planet, named Fomalhaut b, is a rare and possibly unique object that is completely shrouded by dust.

Fomalhaut is the brightest star in the constellation Piscis Austrinus and lies 25 light-years away.

In November 2008, Hubble astronomers announced the exoplanet, named Fomalhaut b, as the first one ever directly imaged in visible light around another star. The object was imaged just inside a vast ring of debris surrounding but offset from the host star. The planet's location and mass -- no more than three times Jupiter's -- seemed just right for its gravity to explain the ring's appearance.

Recent studies have claimed that this planetary interpretation is incorrect. Based on the object's apparent motion and the lack of an infrared detection by NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope, they argue that the object is a short-lived dust cloud unrelated to any planet.

A new analysis, however, brings the planet conclusion back to life.

"Although our results seriously challenge the original discovery paper, they do so in a way that actually makes the object's interpretation much cleaner and leaves intact the core conclusion, that Fomalhaut b is indeed a massive planet," said Thayne Currie, an astronomer formerly at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., and now at the University of Toronto.

The discovery study reported that Fomalhaut b's brightness varied by about a factor of two and cited this as evidence that the planet was accreting gas. Follow-up studies then interpreted this variability as evidence that the object actually was a transient dust cloud instead.

In the new study, Currie and his team reanalyzed Hubble observations of the star from 2004 and 2006. They easily recovered the planet in observations taken at visible wavelengths near 600 and 800 nanometers, and made a new detection in violet light near 400 nanometers. In contrast to the earlier research, the team found that the planet remained at constant brightness.

The team attempted to detect Fomalhaut b in the infrared using the Subaru Telescope in Hawaii, but was unable to do so. The non-detections with Subaru and Spitzer imply that Fomalhaut b must have less than twice the mass of Jupiter.

Another contentious issue has been the object's orbit. If Fomalhaut b is responsible for the ring's offset and sharp interior edge, then it must follow an orbit aligned with the ring and must now be moving at its slowest speed. The speed implied by the original study appeared to be too fast. Additionally, some researchers argued that Fomalhaut b follows a tilted orbit that passes through the ring plane.

Using the Hubble data, Currie's team established that Fomalhaut b is moving with a speed and direction consistent with the original idea that the planet's gravity is modifying the ring.

"What we've seen from our analysis is that the object's minimum distance from the disk has hardly changed at all in two years, which is a good sign that it's in a nice ring-sculpting orbit," explained Timothy Rodigas, a graduate student in the University of Arizona and a member of the team.

Currie's team also addressed studies that interpret Fomalhaut b as a compact dust cloud not gravitationally bound to a planet. Near Fomalhaut's ring, orbital dynamics would spread out or completely dissipate such a cloud in as little as 60,000 years. The dust grains experience additional forces, which operate on much faster timescales, as they interact with the star's light.

"Given what we know about the behavior of dust and the environment where the planet is located, we think that we're seeing a planetary object that is completely embedded in dust rather than a free-floating dust cloud," said team member John Debes, an astronomer at the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, Md.

A paper describing the findings has been accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.

Because astronomers detect Fomalhaut b by the light of surrounding dust and not by light or heat emitted by its atmosphere, it no longer ranks as a "directly imaged exoplanet." But because it's the right mass and in the right place to sculpt the ring, Currie's team thinks it should be considered a "planet identified from direct imaging."

Fomalhaut was targeted with Hubble most recently in May by another team. Those observations are currently under scientific analysis and are expected to be published soon.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center.

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


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Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/EyFP0izcSNo/121025174633.htm

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Rebecca Edmonds, Single Mom, Dismissed From Air Force For Being Pregnant

Rebecca Edmonds, the daughter of an Air Force captain, proudly followed in her father?s footsteps when she joined the armed forces. But her dream came to an abrupt halt when the Air Force found out that she was about to start a family of her own.

Edmonds, a graduate of Marquette University with a full scholarship from the Air Force, became pregnant 13 weeks before she was going to be commissioned as an officer, CNN reported. Six months into her pregnancy, she shared her news with the Air Force. In response, they revoked her $92,000 scholarship and ejected her from the ranks.

The Air Force strictly forbids single parents from enlisting -- a policy Edmonds alleges that she was unaware of when she found out she was pregnant. The Air Force put the single parent policy in place due to the difficult strains deployment puts on the children of single parents, according to CNN.

The U.S. military is committed to ensuring that enlisted members take care of family obligations, such as child care, before deploying for service. According to the 2012 research paper published by Indiana University ? Purdue University Indianapolis, a single parent must submit in writing that an individual not enlisted in the military will take responsibility over the child and individuals who do not comply could be immediately terminated from service.

The Air Force contends that if Edmonds was honest about her pregnancy from the beginning, she would not of been discharged so abruptly, according to CNN. In a letter written to Edmonds? attorney about the case, an Air Force official wrote, "If Ms. Edmonds had reported her pregnancy she would have been placed on medical recheck status until she gave birth.? The letter goes on to explain that Edmonds would only be able to be deployed ?if she were not a single parent, for example, if she were married, or had given the child up for adoption."

A policy that strictly forbids individuals from giving up custody of their child for the purpose of joining the ranks is outlined on the Air Force?s website. If a single parent attempting to join the Air Force indicates that their child is in the custody of someone else, they are required to acknowledge that ?his/her intent at the time of enlist was not to enter the Air Force with the express intention of regaining custody after enlistment.?

Edmonds isn?t the only single parent with dreams of joining the armed forces. In 2009, it was estimated that more than 30,000 single mothers had deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan. Researchers like Lieutenant Colonel Samantha Blanchard, the director of behavior medicine at Nellis Family Medicine Residency in Nevada, have have highlighted the need for more services for single parents in the military.

Although mothers serving their country face a unique set of battles when it comes to balancing their job and their family, many women in other professions have also alleged they were unjustly fired due to pregnancy. Jamera Lee Massop of Jamaica, N.Y. contends that she was abruptly fired from her job as an administrative assistant when she was six months pregnant. Jarretta Hamilton, previously a fourth-grade teacher in the Atlanta area, filed a lawsuit against her school district for being fired after telling her principal she was pregnant.

Edmonds case is currently under review. She told CNN that she hopes that her case will make the military reconsider its current policy on single parents enlisting for service.

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/25/rebecca-edmonds-single-mom-air-force_n_2016510.html

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Video: Finding Value in Global Markets

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/49548407/

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Thursday, October 25, 2012

'The Hobbit' to be released in Dolby Atmos

FILE - This publicity film image released by Warner Bros., shows Martin Freeman as Bilbo Baggins in a scene from the fantasy adventure "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey." Dolby Laboratories Inc. and director Peter Jackson's Park Road Post Production announced Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2012 that "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey" will be mixed and released in Dolby Atmos. The first of three films in ?The Hobbit? series is slated to be released Dec. 14, 2012. (AP Photo/Warner Bros., James Fisher, File)

FILE - This publicity film image released by Warner Bros., shows Martin Freeman as Bilbo Baggins in a scene from the fantasy adventure "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey." Dolby Laboratories Inc. and director Peter Jackson's Park Road Post Production announced Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2012 that "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey" will be mixed and released in Dolby Atmos. The first of three films in ?The Hobbit? series is slated to be released Dec. 14, 2012. (AP Photo/Warner Bros., James Fisher, File)

FILE - This publicity file photo released by Warner Bros., shows from left, Dean O'Gorman as Fili, Aidan Turner as Kili, Mark Hadlow as Dori, Jed Brophy as Nori and William Kircher as Bifur in a scene from the fantasy adventure "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey." Dolby Laboratories Inc. and director Peter Jackson's Park Road Post Production announced Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2012 that "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey" will be mixed and released in Dolby Atmos. The first of three films in ?The Hobbit? series is slated to be released Dec. 14, 2012. (AP Photo/Warner Bros., File)

FILE - This publicity file photo released by Warner Bros., shows the character Gollum voiced by Andy Serkis in a scene from the fantasy adventure "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey." Dolby Laboratories Inc. and director Peter Jackson's Park Road Post Production announced Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2012 that "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey" will be mixed and released in Dolby Atmos. The first of three films in ?The Hobbit? series is slated to be released Dec. 14, 2012. (AP Photo/Warner Bros., File)

(AP) ? Middle-earth will sound more realistic in "The Hobbit."

Dolby Laboratories Inc. and director Peter Jackson's Park Road Post Production announced Wednesday that "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey" will be mixed and released in Dolby Atmos, the company's immersive new sound system that features two extra arrays of overhead speakers and the ability to direct sounds to individual speakers inside movie theaters.

"(Jackson) felt it was going to make a big difference in how he tells stories," said Stuart Bowling, Dolby's senior technical marketing manager. "He doesn't want people to just go and observe his movies. He wants you to feel like you're part of the experience of the stories that's he's trying to tell on the screen and allow you to be part of Middle-earth."

The director of the Oscar-winning "The Lord of the Rings" films adapted J.R.R. Tolkien's tale of Bilbo Baggins, set in the fictional realm of Middle-earth 60 years before "The Lord of the Rings." Besides the standard 2-D format, Warner Bros. Pictures and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures are releasing the series in high-frame-rate 3-D, IMAX and other 3-D formats.

Bowling said Dolby's goal is to have the Atmos platform installed in 80 to 100 theaters in time for "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey," which is scheduled to premiere on Dec. 14.

The second and third films, "The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug" and "The Hobbit: There and Back Again," are set for release Dec. 13, 2013, and July 18, 2014.

Other movies slated to be released in the Atmos format include Fox's "Chasing Mavericks" and "Life of Pi." Disney-Pixar's "Brave" was the first film to debut with the audio format earlier this year.

Bowling said the company expects more than 15 films to be released in Atmos next year and hoped to have the system in 1,000 theaters by the end of next year.

"Dolby Atmos is fantastic from a sound quality position," said John Neill, head of sound at Park Road Post Production. "We can now hear full range surround speakers, meaning that when we pan from the front to surround, the sound does not change in quality. The overhead speakers give us the opportunity to place the theater patron really in the location."

Jackson shot "The Hobbit" in 3-D and at 48 frames a second, twice the speed that's been the standard since the 1920s. He received a mixed reception for high-frame-rate preview footage of "The Hobbit" at the Cinema Con theater owner's convention last year. Some thought the images were too clear and realistic, taking away from the magic of the film medium.

___

Online:

http://www.thehobbit.com

___

Follow AP entertainment writer Derrik J. Lang on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/derrikjlang

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-10-24-Film-The%20Hobbit/id-dee4def09b2349a194ac07031d763864

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Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Video: Wanted: New Panthers GM

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Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/21134540/vp/49510342#49510342

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Heli Skiing, Thrilling but Deadly | CoolHQ

What is heli skiing? You might probably be amazed at how many different kinds of skiing there are.

In general, skiing as a whole can always be dangerous and challenging. There is the snow skiing, the water skiing, and now another form and type of skiing? the heli skiing.

Heli skiing comes from the word skiing and helicopter. The literal analysis of the word would come up with the literal and practical definition for this recreational or sports acivity.

Heli skiing is a term used to denote the practice or action of Alpine skiing with the use of the helicopter. Why the helicopter? You might ask.

The helicopter

Helicopter is used in heli skiing so the skier can be able to gain extreme altitude that would be impossible to be gained or attained by any person without the help of the helicopter.

Heli skiing enables the skier to ski coming off from different and various starting points. Skiing in very remote areas can also be made possible by heli skiing.

As such, heli skiing can be safely and appropriately classified as a very extreme sports. Because heli skiing is mainly done in remote and unlikely places or areas for skiing, the dangers of avalanches is very evident.

Heli skiing is also never free of the dangers posed by the existence of rocks and trees.

The helicopter used for helis skiing is also not the ordinary helicopter used in the modern times. They are specially designed and are used to carrying out the task of helping heli skiers lift up and ski at great heights.

A short history

Heli skiing is an extreme sport developed and introduced in April 1965 in Canada by Hans Gmoser.

Hans Gmoser is an Austrian who migrated to Canada in the 1950s to pursue and chase after greener pastures. Ironically, the man found whiter pasture, because the Canadian state where he got into turned out to be covered with thick snow.

By that time, there are a number of Austrians who went up and posed on top of Mt Everest in the Himalayas. The thrill and excitement aroused the national pride in the extreme sports fanatic, Mr Gmoser.

To have his own participation in the emerging Austrian pride for the heights, Mr Gmoser devised and designed an extreme recreation or sports to lift snow skiers in the Bugaboo Mountains.

Because no one has ever tried it before, he introduced skiing using helicopters to lift up the skier to greater altitudes.

The result was an extreme fun and thrilling exercise. Hel skiing was born.

The modern times

The modern times is characterized by extreme recreation and sports. That is because most people are earning their living through the corporate scene.

Most people are engaged in seats and in front of computers in general to earn their living. That is why the opportunity of going out and sweating it all out through extreme activities in the great otdoors thrill most people.

Heli skiing has it all and more. It can also be too risky and deadly. Experts and less-gutsy people stay away from it because the activity is truly not one to keep your visceral parts at peace.

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Source: http://coolhq.com/heli-skiing-thrilling-but-deadly/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=heli-skiing-thrilling-but-deadly

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Monday, October 22, 2012

U.S. prepared to meet one-on-one with Iran

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The White House says it is prepared to talk one-on-one with Iran to find a diplomatic settlement to the impasse over Tehran's reported pursuit of nuclear weapons, but there's no agreement now to meet.

National Security Council spokesman Tommy Vietor said Saturday that President Barack Obama has made clear that he will prevent Iran from getting a nuclear weapon and will do whatever's necessary to prevent that from happening. Vietor said Iran must come in line with its obligations, or else faced increased pressure.

"The onus is on the Iranians to do so, otherwise they will continue to face crippling sanctions and increased pressure," Vietor said in a statement. He noted that efforts to get Iran back to the table with the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council and Germany ? the so-called "P5+1" ? continue.

Iran has been a recurring issue in the presidential election campaign and Vietor's statement was released shortly after The New York Times reported Saturday that the U.S. and Iran have agreed in principle for the first time to negotiations. The paper said Iran has insisted the talks wait until after the Nov. 6 election.

Vietor, however, denied that any such agreement had been reached.

"It's not true that the United States and Iran have agreed to one-on-one talks or any meeting after the American elections," he said. We continue to work with the P5+1 on a diplomatic solution and have said from the outset that we that we would be prepared to meet bilaterally."

Obama and Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney will meet Monday night in a debate focusing on foreign policy and Iran's nuclear ambitions will likely be a topic. Obama has said he'll prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons. He hopes sanctions alongside negotiations can get Iran to halt uranium enrichment. But the strategy, which began during President George W. Bush's administration, hasn't worked yet. Obama holds out the threat of military action as a last resort. Romney has accused Obama of being weak on Iran and says the U.S. needs to present a greater military threat.

Despite unprecedented global penalties, Iran's nuclear program is advancing as it continues to defy international pressure, including four rounds of sanctions from the U.N. Security Council, to prove that its atomic intentions are peaceful.

Those sanctions, coupled with tough measures imposed by the United States and European nations are taking their toll, particularly on Iran's economy. Iranian authorities have in recent weeks been forced to quell protests over the plummeting value of the country's currency, the rial. The rial lost nearly 40 percent of its value against the U.S. dollar in a week in early October, but has since slightly rebounded.

U.S. officials say they are hopeful that pressure from the sanctions may be pushing Iran's leaders toward concessions, including direct talks with the United States. But several said on Saturday that they did not believe such discussions would happen any time soon.

If one-on-one talks are to occur, they would likely follow the model that the U.S. has used in six-nation nuclear disarmament talks with North Korea, the officials said.

In those discussions, U.S. negotiators have met separately with their North Korean counterparts but only as part of the larger effort, which also involves China, Japan, South Korea and Russia. Direct U.S.-North Korean talks are preceded and followed by intense consultations with the other members of the group.

However, the direct talks with North Korea have yet to bear fruit and U.S. officials warned that talks with Iran may not yield anything either. If U.S.-Iran talks do occur, they would likely be part of the P5+1 process, which groups the Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States and is overseen by the European Union. The group has met numerous times with Iranian officials but has yet to achieve any significant progress.

In late September, the group instructed EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton to reach out to Iran's top nuclear negotiator, Saeed Jalili, to organize another meeting. No date had been set for the possible resumption of talks.

Iran says its program is for peaceful energy and research purposes but Western nations fear the Islamic republic is determined to develop nuclear weapons and fundamentally reshape the balance of power in the Middle East. That would pose a grave threat to Israel.

Israel has threatened to strike Iran's nuclear facilities if Tehran doesn't stop uranium enrichment a process that can be a pathway to nuclear arms. Israel could decide to strike Iran's nuclear sites on its own, and Israeli leaders say time to act is running out. They have also hinted they would like U.S. support for any such attack.

An Israeli strike on Iran with or without Washington's involvement would likely draw retribution from Tehran including possible attacks on U.S. and Israeli interests overseas or disruptions to the transit of tankers through the Strait of Hormuz, which could send oil prices skyrocketing.

Obama has counseled patience as public as American public support for another Mideast conflict is low with the Iraq war over and the conflict in Afghanistan winding down.

___

Associated Press writers Matthew Lee and Andrew Miga contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/white-house-prepared-meet-one-one-iran-234043257.html

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Colorado Peak Politics - FORECLOSURES: What Do CO's High ...

RealtyTrac , a national real estate database that tracks foreclosure information, recently published third quarter foreclosure statistics that showed a so-called five-year low in foreclosures ? a talking point the Obama campaign has fully embraced.

But, the foreclosure stats in?swing state?Colorado are doing the Obama campaign no favors. The stats ranked Colorado?tenth among all 50 states in foreclosure rate.? At one in every 216 homes in the foreclosure process, it is evident that the much awaited housing recovery has not yet found its way to many parts of Colorado.

Some of these problems can be linked to weaker wage earnings in Colorado than the nation as a whole. A report published by the Colorado Division of Housing on September 28, 2012 showed year over year Q2 earnings from wages up just 2.9% in Colorado, versus an increase of 3.4% nationally.

Weak wage earnings, coupled with rising prices at the gas pump, grocery store, and child care center, have left many Colorado families with difficult decisions to make regarding the reduced purchasing power of their stagnate wages.? With the average foreclosure process taking hundreds of days, a decision to put off the mortgage payment is often less painful that forgoing other necessities.? Not exactly the change that many Coloradoans were seeking four years ago.

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Source: http://coloradopeakpolitics.com/2012/10/22/foreclosures-what-do-cos-high-numbers-show/

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A CUP OF JO: Personalized memory game


Pinhole Press, my friends' company which makes beautiful photo gifts, just came out with a personalized memory game! It's really easy to make: You just choose 12 favorite photos (of friends, family, pets, vacations, whatever you'd like), and Pinhole puts them on thick cards with graphic backgrounds. I'm looking forward to playing it with our family over the holidays. Wouldn't it make a wonderful gift?

(Photos above by Alpha Smoot, styling by Kendra Smoot. Pinhole Press is one of my beloved long-term sponsors)

Source: http://joannagoddard.blogspot.com/2012/10/personalized-memory-game.html

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Sunday, October 21, 2012

Religious Affiliation in America ? First Thoughts | A First Things Blog

This month?s Pew Report on religious affiliation in America has drawn much well-deserved attention, particularly two of its findings: a continuing increase in the percentage of Americans who do not identify with any religion ? the ?Nones? ? and a continuing decrease in the percentage who identify as Protestant. In the last five years, the Nones have gone from roughly 15% of American adults to roughly 20%. The increase is especially pronounced among adults under the age of 30, a third of whom say they are religiously unaffiliated. And, for the first time since Pew started polling, the percentage of adults who identify as Protestant has dropped below 50%.

These statistics could have profound significance for the future of American religion and law. Take the increased percentage of Nones among people under 30. In a couple of decades, this age cohort will be running American cultural, legal, and political institutions. Traditionally, American institutions have viewed religion as a good thing, both for individuals and society. Will they continue to do so if they are run by people who themselves lack a religious identity, who view religion, at best, with indifference? Will legislatures accommodate religious minorities as readily? Will courts defer to traditions that reflect assumptions large percentages of the population no longer share? It seems doubtful.

The media has jumped on the rise of the Nones, predicting everything from a political realignment (good news for Democrats, bad news for Republicans) to major changes in education and family structure. Maybe ? but we need to be cautious. We shouldn?t assume that the increase in the percentage of Nones will remain stable over time. Generations typically become more religiously observant as they age (though this generation seems to be starting from an unusually non-religious position). More important, the future has a way of surprising us. For example, according to Putnam and Campbell?s recent study, American Grace, a marked upsurge in religious observance among young adults (ages 21-34) occurred in America between 1952 and 1964. On the basis of that upsurge, one would have predicted a bright future for American religious institutions over the next couple of decades. Let?s just say things didn?t turn out that way.

Similarly, we shouldn?t assume that the decline of American Protestantism will radically transform our religious culture. American religion has so completely adopted the Protestant form that the decline of the original model ? even if it continues ? seems unlikely to change things. In America today, even Buddhists and Hindus organize themselves as self-governing, Protestant-style congregations, with entrepreneurial clergy, Sunday Schools, and community outreach programs. The New England way lives on in the temples of Orange County.

The statistics in the Pew Report are an important indication of where are today, and Pew deserves a lot of credit for compiling them. And maybe we really are on the verge of something unprecedented in American religious life. We shouldn?t assume, though, that we can predict the future.

Mark Movsesian is Director of the Center for Law and Religion at St. John?s University.

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Source: http://www.firstthings.com/blogs/firstthoughts/2012/10/21/religious-affiliation-in-america/

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Kofi Annan: Syria Military Intervention Won't Work (VIDEO)

  • A Syrian boy, who fled his home with his family due to fighting between government forces and rebels, stands near his tent at a refugee camp near the Turkish border, Azaz, Syria, Sunday, Oct. 7, 2012. (AP Photo/ Manu Brabo)

  • An elderly Syrian woman, who fled her home with her family due to fighting between government forces and rebels, chants, "Allah," meaning God in Arabic, inside her tent at a refugee camp near the Turkish border, in Azaz, Syria, Sunday, Oct. 7, 2012. (AP Photo/ Manu Brabo)

  • A Syrian woman, who fled her home with her family due to fighting between government forces and rebels, stands near her tent at a refugee camp near the Turkish border, Azaz, Syria, Sunday, Oct. 7, 2012. (AP Photo/ Manu Brabo)

  • A Syrian man, who fled his home with his family due to fighting between government forces and rebels, plays with his nephew near their tent at a refugee camp near the Turkish border, Azaz, Syria, Sunday, Oct. 7, 2012. (AP Photo/ Manu Brabo)

  • Syrian women, who fled their homes due to fighting between government forces and rebels, drink tea inside their tent at a refugee camp near the Turkish border, Azaz, Syria, Sunday, Oct. 7, 2012. (AP Photo/ Manu Brabo)

  • Syrians, who fled their homes with her families due to fighting between government forces and rebels, sit in their tent at a refugee camp near the Turkish border, Azaz, Syria, Sunday, Oct. 7, 2012. (AP Photo/ Manu Brabo)

  • Syrias, who fled their homes with their families due to fighting between government forces and rebels, take refuge at a camp near the Turkish border, Azaz, Syria, Sunday, Oct. 7, 2012. (AP Photo/ Manu Brabo)

  • A Syrian woman, who fled her home with her family due to fighting between government forces and rebels, sits near her tent at a refugee camp near the Turkish border, in Azaz, Syria, Sunday, Oct. 7, 2012. (AP Photo/ Manu Brabo)

  • A Syrian girl, who fled her home with her family due to fighting between government forces and rebels, flashes the victory sign at a refugee camp near the Turkish border, Azaz, Syria, Sunday, Oct. 7, 2012. (AP Photo/ Manu Brabo)

  • A Syrian boy, who fled his home with his family due to fighting between government forces and rebels, plays near his tent at a refugee camp near the Turkish border, Azaz, Syria, Sunday, Oct. 7, 2012. (AP Photo/ Manu Brabo)

  • Syrians, who fled their homes with their families due to fighting between government forces and rebels, wait for food distribution from an NGO at a refugee camp near the Turkish border, in Azaz, Syria, Sunday, Oct. 7, 2012. (AP Photo/ Manu Brabo)

  • A Syrian boy, who fled his home with his family due to fighting between government forces and rebels, holds a plate with food to eat at a refugee camp near the Turkish border, Azaz, Syria, Sunday, Oct. 7, 2012. (AP Photo/ Manu Brabo)

  • Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/20/kofi-annan-syria_n_1993496.html

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    Video: Small business expert: ?You do not need a billion-dollar advertising budget?

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    Saturday, October 20, 2012

    Huge car bomb blast in Beirut kills at least eight

    BEIRUT (Reuters) - A huge car bomb exploded in central Beirut during rush hour on Friday, killing eight people, wounding about 80 and raising fears of renewed sectarian violence in a country still scarred from a long civil war.

    The explosion did not appear to target any political figure in Lebanon's divided community but it occurred at a time of heightened tension between Lebanese factions on opposite sides of the conflict in neighboring Syria.

    It ripped through the street where the office of the anti-Damascus Christian Phalange Party is located near Sassine Square in Ashrafiyeh, a mostly Christian area.

    Phalange leader Sami al-Gemayel, a staunch opponent of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and a member of parliament, condemned the attack.

    "Let the state protect the citizens. We will not accept any procrastination in this matter, we cannot continue like that. We have been warning for a year. Enough," said Gemayel, whose brother was assassinated in November 2006.

    The war in Syria, which has killed 30,000 people in the past 19 months, has pitted mostly Sunni insurgents against Assad, who is from the Alawite sect linked to Shi'ite Islam.

    Lebanon's religious communities are divided between those supporting Assad and those backing the rebels trying to overthrow him.

    The blast occurred during rush hour, when many parents were picking up children from school, and sent black smoke billowing into the sky.

    Eight people were killed and at least 78 were wounded, the state news agency said, quoting civil defense officials.

    Several cars were destroyed and the front of a multi-storey building was badly damaged, with tangled wires and metal railings crashing to the ground.

    In the aftermath, residents ran about in panic looking for relatives while others helped carry the wounded to ambulances. Security forces blanketed the area.

    In scenes reminiscent of the dark days of Lebanon's civil war, ambulances ferried the wounded to several hospitals, where doctors, nurses and students waited for casualties at the doors. At one hospital, an elderly woman sat in the emergency room with blood staining her blouse.

    The hospitals put out an appeal for blood donations.

    An employee of a bank on the street pointed to the blown-out windows of his building.

    "Some people were wounded from my bank. I think it was a car bomb. The whole car jumped five floors into the air," he said.

    Michael Fish, 25, a British musician visiting Beirut, said he was in his hotel a street away when the explosion happened.

    "At first I thought it was an earthquake. It shook the whole hotel for a second. I ran down and started filming on my iPhone."

    Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati said in a statement the government was trying to find out who carried out the attack and said the perpetrators would be punished.

    The prospect that Syria's war might spread to Lebanon has worried many people here, and fighting broke out in February between supporters and opponents of Assad in the northern city of Tripoli.

    Syria has also played a major role in Lebanese politics, siding with different factions during the 1975-1990 civil war. It deployed troops in Beirut and parts of the country during the war and stayed until 2005.

    In Damascus, Syrian Information Minister Omran al-Zoabie told reporters: "We condemn this terrorist explosion and all these explosions wherever they happen. Nothing justifies them."

    Tension between Sunnis, Shi'ites and Christians in Lebanon has continued after the civil war but has increased since the Syria conflict erupted.

    Sunni-Shi'te rivalry hit a peak when former Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri, a Sunni, was killed in 2005. Hariri supporters accused Syria and then Hezbollah of killing him - a charge they both deny. An international tribunal accused several Hezbollah members of involvement in the murder.

    Hezbollah's political opponents, who have for months accused it of aiding Assad's forces, have warned that its involvement in Syria could reignite the sectarian tension of the civil war.

    The last bombing in Beirut was in 2008 when three people were killed in an explosion which damaged a U.S. diplomatic car.

    (Reporting by Mariam Karouny, Oliver Holmes and Samia Nakhoul, Writing by Angus MacSwan; Editing by Jon Boyle)

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/explosion-rocks-central-beirut-witnesses-120610495.html

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    RU12? Community Center for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender ...

    A Note From Jean-Denis:

    Last weekend brought the Translating Identities Conference, an annual conference at UVM which explores a wide variety of topics related to gender and transgender identities, expressions, communities, and intersections. After a brief post-TIC recovery time (whew!), I'm excited to share my experiences with all of you!

    The conference is always a pleasure to attend; You know it's a great conference when you can't decide which of the many interesting workshops you'd like to attend. This year brought workshops relating to human rights and refugees, family, the criminalization of gender non-conformity, sex, asexuality, polyamory... such a wide array! I was happy to bring two workshops of my own- one on health care reform in Vermont and the movement to make it trans-inclusive and another in a town hall-style format on community, done with educator and advocate Samuel Lurie.

    Informing the community about what is currently happening in health care reform and why gender transition exclusions are harmful (and illegal) was amazing. More and more people in our community are starting to become aware of the issue and have already shown such support and dedication to expanding equality in Vermont. Currently, care available to Vermonters accessing it for reasons other than gender transition?(such as post-menopausal people listed as female who choose hormone replacement therapy or people listed as female who have a hysteretomy for endometriosis) are not available to people seeking those same services for the purpose of gender transition, discriminating against trans people. These services are considered by expert agencies (such as the American Medical Association and American Psychological Association) to be effective and medically necessary for people needing to alleviate the gender-related body dysphoria they experience.?

    I was inspired to see the passion of those working on, or just learning about, this issue and I look forward to continuing to work with the fabulous people in our community/ies!

    - Jean-Denis

    Are you interested in joining this fight for equality? If so, email?or call Jean-Denis (trans@ru12.org, 802-860-7812) to join the community committee forming!

    Transgender remove APAExciting News! The next version (5th) Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, which mental health and other professionals use to guide diagnosis and treatment of patients, will no longer list "Gender Identity Disorder", only "Gender Dysphoria", which describes the depression many trans people struggle with when their body doesn't match their internal sense of themselves. This is a big win for trans and gender non-conforming people, de-pathologizing gender non-conformity and the natural variations of human gender experience.?

    Don't forget to check out our 2nd Trans Town Hall on November 1st at 6:30p in the McClure Multigenerational Center in Burlington. This Town Hall's focus is on relationships: how can we work towards healthy relationships? What that looks like for us? What is working in our lives and what might we need to change to best fulfill that vital need for love, intimacy, and human connection? We welcome guest speaker Nancy Feldman, LCMHC.

    Finally, November 3rd is a special series of workshops about trans sexuality and the use of gender in kinky play, presented by Vermont Alternative Sexuality Education and RU12?. Register now and come check it out! (ages 18+)

    Source: http://www.ru12.org/2012/10/translating-identities-conference-more.html

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    Friday, October 19, 2012

    That Superman legal decision means we'll see Justice League - Blastr

    Now that Warner Bros. Pictures is legally able to keep using the character of Superman, plans for the long-awaited Justice League movie are about to move faster than a speeding bullet.

    As a result of yesterday's major legal victory for the studio, in which a judge ruled that the heirs of Superman co-creator Joseph Shuster were not able to win back the rights to the character, a source has told the Los Angeles Times that Warner Bros. plans to accelerate the timetable for getting the DC superhero team onto the screen.

    If the studio had lost the case, it would not have been able to produce any movies, comics or TV show featuring key elements of the Superman mythology after 2013 unless it negotiated a new deal with the estates of Shuster and Jerry Siegel, Superman's other "father."

    With that in mind, the studio has been hesitant about ramping up the development of the Justice League movie, in which Supes would of course be a major character. But now that the path is clear, the studio intends to begin casting and finding a director (a script has already been written). If all goes well, production should begin next year and the movie will be in theaters in the summer of 2015?where it will go head to head with The Avengers 2 for a real clash of the titans.

    But now the work begins: who will get this thing on the screen and which actors/heroes will appear in it? With Christopher Nolan and Ben Affleck both passing on being involved, Warner Bros. has to find someone who can deliver the epic goods.

    As for the actors, it's presumed that Henry Cavill will play Superman after making his debut next year in Man of Steel. As for Batman, Wonder Woman, the Flash, Green Lantern and whoever else makes up the team...it's all yet to be determined.

    One thing's for sure though: if Justice League is a hit, the characters will spin off into their own movies. It's the exact opposite of the Marvel strategy of individual movies leading to one big team-up, but if works, we'll be seeing the DC Universe on the screen for years to come.

    Who should direct Justice League and who should be in it? The speculation starts now!

    Source: http://blastr.com/2012/10/that-superman-legal-decis.php

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    Naming, shaming: Group targets Iran sanction busters

    John Makely / NBC News

    Mark Wallace, right, talks with United Against Nuclear Iran Executive Director David Ibsen in the group's New York City offices.

    By Richard Engel and Robert WindremNBC News

    Editor?s note: This story contains a graphic image that some readers may find disturbing.

    Perched high above midtown Manhattan, behind security-locked doors in an unmarked office, a half-dozen 20-somethings sit at computers, looking for ways to inflict hardship on the Iranian government and the people it rules. The ?war room,? as its occupants call it, is a mere 20 blocks from Iran?s Mission to the United Nations and even closer to the hotel where Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad stays during his visits to New York.

    But this is not a U.S. government intelligence facility brimming with incoming feeds of classified data. The offices belong to the private nonprofit group United Against Nuclear Iran, and the computers contain a wealth of (mostly) open source economic data culled from Iranian and other sources.?

    UANI, as it calls itself, has one mission: to wage ?economic warfare against the Islamic Republic of Iran ...The regime must be forced to choose between having a nuclear weapon or a functioning economy."


    That?s not to say the group doesn?t have roots in government. It is headed by Mark Wallace, a former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, and former heads of the CIA, the counterterrorism office of the National Security Council and the Mossad, Israel?s national intelligence agency, sit on its advisory board.

    John Makely / NBC News

    UANI printed up T-shirts for a recent protest against Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

    Part of what UANI does is psychological warfare, though it?s the smallest part. The group pays for a billboard high above Times Square that takes shots at Ahmadinejad and placed a blow-up Ahmadinejad punching-bag doll outside the Hotel Warwick when he stayed there recently while in town to address the United Nations. It also lobbies effectively, working with friendly congressmen to get sanctions strengthened.

    Using 'name and shame' tactics
    Mostly, it uses ?reputational risk? to achieve its aims, trying to shame U.S. and international companies to end business dealings with the Islamic Republic or Iranian businesses, particularly those with Revolutionary Guard ties, even if those dealings aren't clearly in violation of economic sanctions against Iran.?If those efforts don?t succeed, Wallace isn?t averse to using a bigger hammer: If you work with Iran, he is fond of saying, you shouldn?t get contracts from the U.S. government.

    While the group?s impact is difficult to quantify vs. the overall impact of economic sanctions against Iran by the U.S., European Union and the United Nations, Wallace?s private network has contributed to some significant successes. Those include persuading an international money exchange to ban Iran and forcing Ahmadinejad out of his preferred New York hotels in September when he visited to deliver his final speech at the U.N. General Assembly as Iran?s president.?

    U.S. officials welcome the private group?s efforts, telling NBC News that UANI?s ?name and shame? campaigns complement the government?s efforts to enforce the sanctions, which are limited to pursuing civil or criminal cases when companies are found to be in violation.

    The public shaming is a familiar strategy -- with a twist. Activists demonstrated and demanded U.S. pension funds and university endowments divest stock in South African companies during the dying days of apartheid in the 1980s and ?90s. The AFL-CIO and Harry Wu, a Chinese labor activist, exposed U.S. companies that used Chinese prison labor in the 1990s. And Chinese companies doing business in Sudan were accused in the early 2000s of aiding genocide in Darfur.

    But UANI?s mission is more comprehensive and it?s led by a high-profile political figure, not a celebrity or anonymous activist. In addition to serving as U.S. ambassador, Wallace worked in the presidential campaign of Republican Sen. John McCain in 2008, working as the GOP nominee?s debate coach. ?

    It?s also riskier and could backfire. Iran is not without the capability of striking back.

    But Wallace feels comfortable that he?s on the side of right and believes he has a unique opportunity to affect history by forcing Iran to abandon its nuclear ambitions, which Tehran insists are intended to meet its energy needs, not build nuclear weapons. In his view, that begins with ?crashing the currency.?

    ?You have all the elements that are there with the currency,? he said. ?We measure everything we do. I challenge you to find a better mechanism of judging the impact of economic hardship that we're placing on the elites.?

    UANI has a modest budget -- less than $700,000 in 2010, according to federal records ? that it says it raises only from U.S. donors. ?It declines to identify them, citing security concerns.

    But it claims some big results.

    'Stealth sanctions' have big impact
    The biggest was its lobbying of SWIFT, a Belgian-based international financial clearinghouse, to expel Iran, then pressuring the U.S. Congress to demand that SWIFT ban Iranian financial transactions from its worldwide network. Without SWIFT codes, international financial transactions become difficult, if not impossible, to complete.? Since SWIFT expelled Iran on March 15, the value of the Iranian currency, the rial, has dropped precipitously.?

    Dan Yergin, the energy historian and author of? ?The Quest: Energy, Security, and the Remaking of the Modern World,? calls the SWIFT expulsion the ?stealth sanctions.?

    ?Much of the international focus on sanctions has been on the oil side,? Yergin told NBC News. ?But the SWIFT and other related banking restrictions have been the ?stealth sanctions? that are impacting on Iran?s ability to do business in the international economy.

    ?Less attention may have originally been paid to them, but they rank with the oil sanctions in terms of their effects on Iran. Overall, the ? sanctions are imposing a much bigger cost on the Iranian economy than Tehran would have anticipated last winter and thus are creating a much bigger problem for the leadership.??

    Now, UANI and Wallace want to strike harder. Iran?s currency, the rial, is near collapse, by some estimates having lost 80 percent of its value in the last year and 15 percent in the last week as measured against the dollar and euro. One dollar now equals 36,000 rials at the unofficial rate.

    Iran, which for months resisted the suggestion that the sanctions were effective, now acknowledges that inflation, much of it caused by sanctions and the SWIFT ban, is hurting the economy.?

    In recent weeks, Wallace?s group publicly pressed European companies that it believed were supplying Iran with the special paper, inks and presses used to print Iranian currency to stop doing business with Tehran.? In a letter early this month to the German company Koenig & Bauer AG, which had provided the Central Bank of Iran with presses in the past, Wallace demanded to know if the company was still supplying Iran, then raised the possibility that continuing work with Iran could threaten its business with the U.S. government.?

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    ?UANI finds KBA?s apparent business in Iran particularly galling in light of its extensive contracts with the U.S. Department of Treasury and its role in U.S. banknote production,? Wallace wrote. ?KBA has been the recipient of over $131 million in contracts from the U.S. Treasury?s Bureau of Engraving and Printing, in addition to $2.39 million awarded to KBA subsidiary KBA North America by the U.S. Department of Defense.

    ?UANI strongly believes that the only responsible action for KBA in light of the fact that the CBI is a sanction-designated entity under U.S. and EU law is for KBA to immediately and publicly reject CBI solicitations for KBA services.?

    On Wednesday, KBA told NBC News that it had stopped supplying printing presses to Iran nine years ago.

    But in a written response to Wallace dated Oct. 10, KBA acknowledged it had provided ?spares and auxiliary equipment? to its ?Iranian client? since then. KBA also said that early this year, it submitted a ?conditional offer? to the Central Bank of Iran when it sought bids on a contract to for new banknote machines.

    Ultimately, KBA decided to discontinue sales to Iran, not long before it received Wallace?s letter, it said.

    The lack of such equipment could have the added benefit of making Iranian currency more susceptible to counterfeiting, perhaps by an enemy of Iran, Wallace said. That uncertainty about the rial would make it even less valuable on whatever open markets on which it was still exchanged.

    KBA?s rapid response to Wallace is indicative of UANI?s growing clout in the international business community.

    As a result of actions like these, ?regime change? in Iran is now being discussed seriously in Washington policy circles. Wallace won?t say whether that is his specific goal, but acknowledges that virtually any alternative would be preferable to the current ?theocratic regime.?

    Beyond SWIFT, Wallace said UANI?s efforts have led to dozens of agreements from U.S.-based and other international companies agreeing to stop doing business with Iran.?

    In some cases, trading partners have credited UANI in announcing their decisions to stop doing business with Iran. In others, they have not.

    Targeting Iran's auto industry
    Iran has the world?s 13th largest auto manufacturing industry and the largest in the Middle East and Central Asia. The industry is a major employer and a prestige piece for the Iranians. Not every country?s president can boast that his limousine is built in a local factory. Ahmadinejad can.

    Numerous European and Asian auto companies had supplied parts and ?build kits? to Iran. But UANI lobbied the companies early this year and again ?called them out,? as Wallace put it. He again cited the EU and U.N. sanctions and suggested that a publicity campaign would hurt U.S. sales of their cars.

    Of the companies targeted in the campaign -- Hyundai, Fiat, Peugeot, Porsche and Renault ? Wallace says only the latter continues to supply Iran.

    A Renault spokeswoman, Raluca Barb, told NBC News on Thursday that the company's Iranian venture, Renault Pars, in which it owns a 51 percent interest, does not violate the sanctions.

    ?Renault respects the regulations,? she said. ?The automotive business is not included in sanctions against Iran.?

    The Hyundai Motor Co. said it decided to discontinue operations in Iran after being contacted by UANI. The other auto companies that are no longer doing business with Iran didn?t cite UANI?s campaign, but numerous Iranian press accounts have connected the pullout to the threatened publicity blitz.

    The auto company withdrawals contributed to a 42 percent nosedive in Iranian auto production over the past six months, Agence France Press reported last week, citing industry ministry figures.

    UANI also says it forced Caterpillar, the huge U.S.-based construction company, to stop supplying equipment to Iran. After a letter-writing campaign failed, UANI bought a billboard opposite the company?s headquarters in Peoria, Ill., showing a piece of earth-moving equipment alongside a photo of Ahmadinejad and the words, ?Today?s work, tomorrow?s nuclear Iran.? As soon as the company halted the sales in February 2010, the billboard came down.

    At the time, Caterpillar said it did not have extensive business dealings with Iran, and that it couldn?t control sales in the secondary market. But it did bar non-U.S. subsidiaries from accepting orders that it knew were destined from Iran.

    The company did respond to requests from NBC News this week for comment.

    Vahid Salemi / AP file

    Two Iranian police officers look at the dangling body of Mohammed Bijeh, convicted of raping and murdering 16 children, after he was hanged from a construction crane in a public execution in Pakdasht, Iran, on March 16, 2005.

    The most vivid of UANI?s efforts was its ?cranes campaign.? After grisly images emerged showing of Iranians being hung by construction cranes, UANI tracked down all the crane manufacturers who had done business with Iran and asked them to divest.? For the most part, they did.

    There are other less obvious successes, ?like pressuring all 13 of the world?s major shipping registries, including those in Russia, South Korea, and Japan, to deny Iran access to their services. That, in turn, has prevented the regime and from insuring their tankers. UANI also quietly obtained pledges from Moldova, Mongolia and other nations to stop reflagging Iranian vessels.

    Not all of its initiatives have worked, however.?

    Its biggest campaign has been against MTN, the South African cell phone company that owns 49 per cent of Irancell, which controls the mobile market in Iran and has been accused of tracking Iranian dissidents. But MTN has refused to get out.?

    Last week, Wallace excoriated MTN?s leadership in typical, no-holds-barred language. ?It is widely known that MTN has carried out orders from the Iranian regime to shut off text messaging and Skype during times of political protest in Iran, and reportedly has a floor in its Tehran headquarters where Iranian military officials compile and access data to track, apprehend, torture, and murder regime opponents,? he wrote in a letter to the company that also went out as a press release.

    ?MTN has blood on its hands ? We call for a global boycott of MTN's products and services and divestment from its stock, until it ends its reckless partnership,? he concluded.

    'A liberating force for Iranians'
    MTN did not immediately respond to Wallace?s most-recent broadside, but in a press release in February in reply to an earlier letter, it said its investment in Iran was ?in compliance with applicable sanctions regulations and law? and that it viewed its non-controlling stake in Irancell as being in keeping with its core mission: ?to speed up the progress of the emerging world by enriching the lives of the people within it.?

    ?Our success in widening access to mobile technology has been, and continues to be, a liberating force for Iranians, whatever their political allegiances,? it said. ?Mobile technology has brought communities together, empowered individuals and helped raise living standards for millions in the developing world.? MTN is proud of this legacy.?

    Swatch, the Swiss watch manufacturer, has also resisted UANI?s appeals, saying in a letter to Wallace that it ?sells to consumers, not regimes.? Why would UANI, which is concerned with nuclear proliferation, care about watches?? Because, Wallace said, the high-end watches Swatch sells and other luxury items go to the ?elites,? particularly officials of the Revolutionary Guards, and he wants them to feel the pain of sanctions, even if only on their wrists.

    UANI?s allies in Congress give it high praise.?

    ?What I like,? said Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, the Florida Republican who chairs the House Foreign Affairs Committee, ?is they are in the weeds. You name a sector in the Iranian economy and they have been inside it, putting a lot of pressure on them. We?ve worked with them, especially on embargo and sanctions legislation. So many of the bills had their genesis with them.?

    The campaign also finds favor on the other side of the aisle. ?

    ?Part of their approach involves putting pressure on corporations to end existing business relationships with Iran,? said Rep. Steve Israel, D-N.Y. ?Along with their success on that front, UANI has used that experience to communicate effectively with members of Congress on how best to strengthen existing sanctions and ensure companies are complying with our laws.?

    One major concern about the success of the sanctions is that the Iranians might lash out, having tired of seeing their nuclear scientists assassinated, their nuclear research sabotaged, their currency ravaged.

    That may already be happening. U.S. officials ascribe continuing attacks on U.S. banks? computer networks that began last month to Iran, perhaps in response to U.S. and EU sanctions on its banks. Israel claims Iran was behind the drone mission Hezbollah carried out over northern Israel this week, and Hezbollah acknowledged that the unmanned aircraft that was shot down was manufactured in Iran. And Tehran still has many other options for retaliation, experts say. ?

    ?The main concern for the market is that the Iranian regime acts out in desperation, as the financial noose tightens,? said John Kilduff of Again Capital and a CNBC oil analyst. ?If Iran attempts to make good on its threats to close the Strait of Hormuz or attempts some other attack, prices will spike higher, at least temporarily. If, however, there is regime change in Iran, resulting in a Western-friendly government, we could see the mother of all price breaks at the gasoline pump.?

    'Punishing the innocent'

    There are those who also characterize what Wallace and UANI are doing as harming the Iranian people rather than the government.

    John Makely / NBC News

    UANI Executive Director David Ibsen works in the "war room" of the organization's offices.

    ?It is profoundly immoral. It is punishing the innocent,? said Haroon Moghul, a fellow at both the New American Foundation and the Fordham Law School Center for Security, speaking of UANI?s campaign.?

    ?I'm no fan of Iranian government,? he continued. ?I wish it would go away. But what do the people have to do with the government?? It is weakening the people of Iran. We are making harder for them to change their government. Sanctions empower criminal elements, make it harder to civil society to operate, make it harder for Iran to become a real democracy.?

    Reacting to that kind of criticism, Wallace acknowledges that his and his colleagues are involved in ?a proxy war,? but adds, ?I'm comfortable fighting that war.?

    The Iranian Foreign Ministry said it is aware of the efforts of UANI and Wallace, but says the group?s campaign is misguided.

    ?I think that the nature of this organization is known to all of us,? said the spokesman, Alireza Miryusefi. ?They take actions based on the false presumption that my country is pursuing a nuclear weapon program. As we have emphasized on several occasions, Iran's program is fully peaceful and their presumption is totally wrong.?

    Wallace, however, has no doubts that Iran is bent on becoming a nuclear military power, and remains convinced that the pressure that UANI is bringing to bear will ultimately succeed. ?

    ?Our message is clear: You have to choose between doing business with our checkbook or their checkbook -- with the reality being we're the biggest checkbook in the world,? he said. ?Notwithstanding the purported demise of the United States, we're still the biggest checkbook in the world.?

    Richard Engel is chief foreign correspondent of NBC News; Robert Windrem is a senior investigative producer.

    More from Open Channel:

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    Source: http://openchannel.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/10/18/14516469-us-nonprofit-names-and-shames-businesses-to-put-bite-into-iran-sanctions?lite

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    Ubuntu 13.04 will be called Raring Ringtail, emphasize mobile and battery life

    DNP Ubuntu's next codenamed Raring Ringtail focus on mobile

    After running with other alliterative codenames such as Oneiric Ocelot, Precise Pangolin and Quantal Quetzal, Canonical has announced the latest in its line of fauna-inspired Ubuntu releases -- Raring Ringtail. With version 13.04 CEO Mark Shuttleworth plans to start seriously laying the groundwork for phone, tablet and TV interfaces, which he hopes to have in place for the next LTS release in April of 2014 (14.04). Don't expect a full-fledged Ubuntu smartphone OS in six months, however, the first step will be working on core aspects of the OS, such as power and memory management, that will prove crucial to its success as a mobile platform. First though, the company needs to get through today's planned launch of 12.10, which will deliver some highly-anticipated webapp integration. For more, check out the source.

    Filed under:

    Ubuntu 13.04 will be called Raring Ringtail, emphasize mobile and battery life originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 18 Oct 2012 09:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink   |  sourceMark Shuttleworth's Blog  | Email this | Comments


    Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/FABQeyjQtxs/

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    Thursday, October 18, 2012

    Abortion: As Mitt Romney Moves To The Middle, Anti-Abortion ...

    (RNS) As Mitt Romney has moved to the center in an effort to overtake President Barack Obama in the campaign's homestretch, he has by necessity muted -- or even muddied -- his previous opposition to abortion rights, a shift that has left some abortion foes aghast.

    But veteran anti-abortion leaders say they are confident that Romney remains committed to their agenda and, in the final weeks before the Nov. 6 vote, they are busy trying to keep rank-and-file activists from pouncing on the Republican candidate's ambiguous statements. Their fear? That going after Romney could prompt defections and cost the GOP a surprisingly strong shot at winning the White House.

    "If it's hurting him to bring up the abortion issue, then I'm OK if he doesn't," said Bradley Mattis, head of the Life Issues Institute in Cincinnati.

    "I think our movement has to be savvy enough to understand how political campaigns are run," he said. "And if they don't, now would be a good time to have that revelation."

    Several other anti-abortion leaders echoed Mattis, saying that abortion opponents around the country have been coordinating their strategy to reflect a political realism that is not often associated with the prophetic tenor of anti-abortion activists. Romney, they say, is the best they will get, and he's not really so bad, especially given the alternative.

    "We don't necessarily need in public office someone who is going to be a crusader on this issue. We just need someone who's going to make it easier for us to do our job," said the Rev. Frank Pavone, head of Priests for Life.

    "We understand why a candidate wouldn't make this their leading issue," Pavone said, adding that he was comfortable with Romney's positions. "I've found that the more I really try to sincerely understand how politics and government work, the more I'm OK with what might be seen as reason for criticism or concern. It's just the nature of the way it works."

    Marjorie Dannenfelser, head of the Susan B. Anthony List, said she gets "outrageous" emails every day saying "it is your obligation to expose Romney's weaknesses."

    But she rejects those demands as "off-the-charts unwise," telling her followers that they need a healthy dose of political pragmatism. Romney isn't perfect, she said, but Obama is far worse, and abortion opponents "have the power to make Romney follow through on his commitments" -- if he is elected.

    "Politics isn't a science; it is not the art of the perfect," she said. "It's a tool."

    If anti-abortion groups can in fact preach that message of political realism, it could prove crucial for Romney, who has long struggled to present a clear position on abortion and reproductive rights.

    As governor of Massachusetts a decade ago, Romney strongly supported abortion rights and said he was "effectively pro-choice." The health care plan he shepherded into law, which was a model for Obama's 2010 national reform, even included taxpayer funding for abortions.

    In 2005, as Romney began his quest for the Republican presidential nomination, he announced that he had changed his views and was now "pro-life."

    But many abortion opponents were never fully convinced of Romney's conversion, and they blasted Romney throughout the GOP primaries as being insincere. He responded by pledging to work to overturn Roe v. Wade, defund Planned Parenthood, and to take other steps demanded by anti-abortion groups.

    Since winning the nomination and moving to the general election, however, those statements appeared to hurt him with key voting blocs -- women, in particular, but also independents and young adults.

    So several weeks ago, facing an uphill slog in the polls, Romney and his running mate, Paul Ryan, a Catholic, began to de-emphasize issues like abortion and gay rights in order to win over some of those voters. When they did discuss abortion, it was in terms that seemed to soften or even contradict Romney's earlier positions.

    In late August, for example, Romney dismayed some hard-line abortion foes by sharply denouncing Missouri GOP senate candidate Todd Akin for his controversial remarks about rape and abortion. Romney followed that by distancing himself from the Republican platform that bars abortion in all cases, adding that he viewed the Supreme Court's 1973 Roe decision legalizing abortion as "settled."

    Then on Oct. 9, Romney told The Des Moines Register that he would not push any abortion-related legislation if elected -- which seemed to contradict a column he wrote in National Review last year detailing the anti-abortion legislation he would support.

    And this week, the Romney campaign released a new ad aimed at women voters that stresses Romney's support for contraception and provisions that would allow women to have legal abortions.

    Romney followed that up in Tuesday (Oct. 16) night's debate with President Obama by declaring that "Every woman in America should have access to contraceptives." He also said employers should not be able to bar women from receiving such insurance, an apparent reversal of his previous position on that hot-button topic.

    While Romney's campaign has often issued follow-up clarifications to reassure social conservatives of Romney's underlying commitments, the initial impression of a more moderate Romney endured -- and many abortion opponents who are passionate about their issue took offense.

    "I'm running out of fingers and toes to count the number of positions he has taken on abortion," Steve Deace, a conservative radio host in Iowa, told The Washington Post. "This is someone who does not have a deep or abiding position on this issue either way, and I think what it does is it puts pro-life leadership in America in a difficult position. I don't know anybody in the pro-family movement who is not for sale who trusts him."

    On Wednesday, Anna Williams at the conservative journal First Things said she was nonplused by Romney's comments on contraception. "I remain nervous, for there appears to be more than one Mitt Romney," Williams wrote.

    Others argue that Romney has simply misstated his views or been quoted out of context. "No alarm bells here," Tony Perkins, president of the anti-abortion Family Research Council, told Talking Points Memo last week after Romney's Iowa remarks.

    Romney's faith-based supporters also say that their political pragmatism should be informed by a sense of charity as well.

    "It's not just saying,'Suck it up and move on -- vote for him,'" said Dannenfelser. "Mitt Romney is a human being, and it's important to be an asset and a friend to him, to say the best possible things about him."

    "I know Romney's weaknesses. He knows his weaknesses. Our role is to provide good counsel to this guy."

    Also on HuffPost:

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    Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/18/mitt-romney-abortion_n_1975509.html

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    Saturn Moon Titan Has a 'Hot Cross Bun' in NASA Photo

    A NASA spacecraft has spied some unusual terrain on Saturn's moon Titan ? a giant cracked mound that resembles a cosmic hot cross bun, scientists say.

    NASA's Cassini probe captured the new radar images of Titan of the 40-mile-long (70 kilometer-long) feature during a May 22 flyby. Researchers believe baking-hot plumes of magma might have lifted and fractured Titan's surface, creating the cross-shaped fissures, much like steam causes bread in the oven to rise and crack.

    Rosaly Lopes, a Cassini scientist based at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., said astronomers have never before seen this type of feature on?Titan.

    "The 'bun' may be the result of what is known on Earth as a laccolith, an intrusion formed by magma pushing up from below," Lopes explained in an Oct. 16 statement. "The Henry Mountains of Utah are well-known examples of this geologic phenomenon."

    A similar feature was spotted on Venus in a dome-shaped region about 20 miles (30 kilometers) across at the planet's Kunapipi Mons volcano, the researchers said. The findings were presented Tuesday (Oct. 16) at the American Astronomical Society's Division of Planetary Sciences conference in Reno, Nev.

    ?

    Other images from the May 22 flyby supplied scientists with new evidence about the stability of the hydrocarbon lakes in Titan's northern hemisphere.

    A group of researchers led by Ellen Stofan, based at Proxemy Research, Rectortown, Va., compared new pictures of the lakes with Cassini images taken of the same region about six years earlier (one Titan season). They found that the shorelines stayed about the same.

    Liquid bodies on other parts of Titan are more transient, the researchers said, noting that parts of the moon's equator darkened after a rainstorm in 2010. The team also presented their research Tuesday in Reno.

    The?Cassini spacecraft?launched in 1997 and arrived in orbit around Saturn in 2004. The mission was supposed to last four years, but it's still going strong at more than double its projected lifetime. The probe regularly passes by Titan, beaming new images of Saturn's massive moon back to Earth.

    Follow SPACE.com on Twitter?@Spacedotcom. We're also on?Facebook and?Google+.

    Copyright 2012 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/saturn-moon-titan-hot-cross-bun-nasa-photo-115055181.html

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