Sunday, September 30, 2012

Turkey's prime minister trumpets their democratic credentials

Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey's prime minister, said Sunday that Turkey's?successful?democracy should serve as an example to all Muslim countries. Critics say Erdogan is too?authoritarian?and stifles dissent.?

By Jonathon Burch,?Reuters / September 30, 2012

Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, (r.), and Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi salute the members of Turkey's ruling Justice and Development Party in Ankara, Turkey, Sunday. Morsi is in the Turkish capital to strengthen an emerging alliance between two moderate Islamist governments in a region beset by conflict and instability.

Kayhan Ozer/AP

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Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan trumpeted Turkey's credentials as a rising democratic power on Sunday, saying his Islamist-rooted ruling party had become an example to the Muslim world after a decade in charge.

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Addressing thousands of party members and regional leaders at a congress of his Justice and Development (AK) Party, Erdogan said the era of military coups in the nation of 75 million people was over.

He vowed to forge a more diverse constitution and turn a new page in relations with Turkey's 15 million Kurds, in a speech lasting almost two and half hours and meant to chart the AK Party's agenda for the next decade.

"We called ourselves conservative democrats. We focused our change on basic rights and freedom," Erdogan told thousands of cheering party members at the congress in a sports stadium in the capital Ankara.

"This stance has gone beyond our country's borders and has become an example for all Muslim countries."

Leaders including Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi, Kyrgyz President Almazbek Atambayev and Masoud Barzani, president of Iraq's autonomous Kurdistan region, were among the guests.

Under Erdogan's autocratic grip, the AK Party has won three consecutive landslide election victories since 2002, ending a history of fragile coalition governments punctuated by military coups and marking Turkey's longest period of single-party government for more than half a century.

Per capita income has nearly tripled in that time and Turkey has re-established itself as a regional power, with its allies seeing its mix of democratic stability and Islamic culture as a potential role model in a volatile region.

"Turkey has shown the bright face of Islam," Khaled Meshaal, Hamas's leader in exile, told the congress. "Erdogan, you are not only a leader in Turkey now, you are a leader in the Muslim world as well."

AUTHORITARIAN STYLE

But critics accuse Erdogan of an?authoritarian?approach, saying that he stifles dissent and uses the courts to silence his enemies. They also say he has failed to bring any hope of an end to a 28-year-old conflict in the mainly Kurdish southeast.

The crisis in neighbouring Syria has thrust Turkey to the forefront of international diplomacy, with Washington seeing it as the key player in supporting the Syrian opposition and planning for the era after President Bashar al-Assad.

Erdogan renewed his criticism of Russia, China and Iran, which have backed Assad in the 18-month uprising, saying history would "not forgive those who stand by oppressors".

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/ztaDqXAxvnU/Turkey-s-prime-minister-trumpets-their-democratic-credentials

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Bo Xilai's son defends disgraced Chinese politician

Bo Guagua (left) defended his father, Bo Xilai, in a statement he posted to his Tumblr.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • NEW: Bo Guagua said "it is hard for me to believe the allegations"
  • NEW: The 24-year-old is the son of disgraced politician Bo Xilai
  • He posts a statement on Tumblr defending his father
  • Bo Xilai is accused corruption, abuse of power and adultery

(CNN) -- The son of disgraced Chinese politician Bo Xilai says the laundry list of allegations leveled against his father contradicts "everything I have come to know about him throughout my life."

Bo Xilai was once considered a top contender for the Politburo Standing Committee, the team of nine politicians who effectively rule China. But last week, the Communist Party relieved him of his duties and expelled him.

He also faces possible criminal charges in connection with the murder of a British businessman, a crime for which is wife has been convicted.

On Saturday, Bo's son, Guagua, posted a statement on Tumblr, a microblogging site, where he defended his "upright" father. The statement made no mention of his mother.

"Personally, it is hard for me to believe the allegations announced against my father, because they contradict everything I have come to know about him throughout my life," the younger Bo wrote.

"Although the policies my father enacted are open to debate, the father I know is upright in his beliefs and devoted to duty."

In an e-mail to CNN on Sunday, the son declined to comment further on the case. He said his statement posted to Tumblr was all he could say at the moment.

The statement followed news Friday by the state-run Xinhua new agency that the elder Bo had been expelled from the Communist Party and faced prosecution on criminal charges. The Xinhua report on his expulsion painted a portrait of corruption, abuse of power and improper sexual relationships.

The party said the politician made "severe mistakes" in the killing of the British businessman and a diplomatic incident involving a police official, Xinhua reported.

Investigators cited influence peddling, bribery and womanizing, new details found in the course of the party's investigation.

"Bo had or maintained improper sexual relationships with a number of women," the state news agency said.

He also took advantage of his power to seek profits and received bribes, and his family "accepted a huge amount of money and property from others," Xinhua said.

The son said he could not reconcile the man accused of such acts and the man he knows as his father.

"He has always taught me to be my own person and to have concern for causes greater than ourselves. I have tried to follow his advice," he said in the statement.

"At this point, I expect the legal process to follow its normal course, and I will await the result."

The elder Bo is a charismatic, albeit controversial, politician who launched a "smashing black, singing red" campaign in the southwestern city of Chongqing that promoted Communist ideology and zealously cracked down on organized crime.

His economic programs, which included millions spent on social welfare, made him a popular leader in Chongqing. But analysts say his populist policies and high-profile personal style were seen as a challenge to the more economically liberal and reform-oriented faction that dominates the current party leadership.

The politician's fortunes changed when news surfaced this year that his wife, Gu Kailai, was a suspected accomplice in the poisoning of businessman Neil Heywood.

Heywood died in November in Chongqing, where the elder Bo was the Communist Party chief. His death was originally blamed on excessive alcohol consumption.

The politician was soon stripped of his top posts for "serious breach of discipline." In August, his wife received a suspended death sentence after a seven-hour trial.

The case also put the son under scrutiny as reports emerged over his lavish student lifestyle. Photographs of him bare-chested with his arms around women at a party at the University of Oxford were widely published and received badly in China.

The father defended his son when the reports first came out, accusing people of trying to make the 24-year-old look bad.

The younger Bo graduated from Harvard's Kennedy School of Government in May. He previously attended the University of Oxford, graduating in 2010.

Wang Lijun, the former police chief of Chongqing, set off the controversial story on February 6, when he fled to the U.S. Consulate in Chengdu and told American diplomats that Gu was a suspected accomplice in a murder case.

After his request for asylum was turned down, Wang left the consulate and was taken away by Chinese officials. But his accusations rocked the world's most populous nation.

Wang last week was sentenced to 15 years for defection, cover-up, bribe taking and abuse of power.

CNN's Jason Kessler and Paul Armstrong contributed to this report.

Source: http://edition.cnn.com/2012/09/30/world/asia/china-bo-xilai-son/index.html?eref=edition

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'Transient electronics' melt away in the body

Many of us may fret about losing our electronic gadgets. John A. Rogers, a professor of materials science and engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, is working to build electronic devices that vanish on purpose.

In a study published this week in the journal Science, Rogers and colleagues described how they assembled a toolbox of tiny biodegradable components made of silicon, magnesium and silk that can completely dissolve in the body. In a conversation with The Times, Rogers explained the virtues of such "transient electronics" ? and why someday you might want your smartphone to disappear too.

What do you mean by "transient electronics"?

It is a new kind of electronics whose characteristic feature is that it physically disappears over time in an engineered, controlled, programmable way. The materials dissolve in water or in biofluids and yield a biocompatible end product. As a result a number of new, interesting application opportunities open up.

Like what?

Like a biomedical implant that's designed to either diagnose or treat an internal wound ? and then simply disappear so you don't have to go back in and fish it out.

How do you make electronics dissolve?

You have to go back and look at all the different components that are required to build an electronic circuit ? such as semiconductors, conducting materials, and substrate materials ? and then find materials that are transient and can also work well together to yield high-performance electronic properties. We wound up with a complete palette of materials that allow us to do sophisticated things, in which all of the constituents will completely dissolve in water or biofluids.

And these are made of silicon, magnesium and silk?

Yes. Silicon is the semiconductor material, and it is interesting because it is the platform material for the vast majority of electronics that are out there today. It's also interesting because even though it has only a very modest dissolution rate in water and biofluids, the way that we use it ? in ultra-thin sheets ? it will completely dissolve. The end product of that dissolution is silicic acid, which is a well-known nutritional supplement, so we think the prospects for long-term biocompatibility are very good.

What does magnesium replace in the circuit?

Copper or aluminum ? it is the conductor. Its conductivity is not quite as good as copper's, so you take a slight hit there, but it's water-soluble. It is also a common ingredient in multivitamin tablets, so it's another type of material that's good for circuits and probably not bad for the body.

And the silicon and magnesium components are embedded in the silk?

Yes. Our collaborators at Tufts University have figured out how to take silkworm cocoons, purify the material, and make coatings and packages out of it. Silk is water-soluble.

The other key aspect about it is that you can control its dissolution rate by controlling its degree of crystallinity. You can immerse it in water or biofluids for up to a year without completely dissolving it. So we can use it as a package to encapsulate the circuits.

What can these circuits do?

In our Science paper, we describe a device designed to mitigate the effects of surgical site infections. These turn out to be one of the leading causes of readmission into the hospital after a surgical procedure. A lot of bacteria these days are antibiotic-resistant, so it's more and more difficult to treat them with drugs. We would like to treat them with transient electronics in the form of a kind of applique that goes into the body at the site of the surgery just before the patient is sewn up. It heats the site of the surgery about 5 degrees centigrade ? a change in temperature that is sufficient to kill bacteria.

We control the silk properties in the package to last about two weeks. That turns out to be the most critical period of risk for a surgical site. After that point, in most cases the wound is healed, and the device is no longer needed. It just disappears completely into the body.

How does the device get power?

Wirelessly. The device has a special antenna built into it, and we can expose it to radio-frequency radiation from an external source through the skin. That energy can power the heater device.

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/latimes/news/science/~3/K2HYxI8k0wo/la-sci-biodegradable-electronics-20120929,0,6050161.story

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Saturday, September 29, 2012

Arthur Conan Doyle's whaling venture

The surgeon aboard the whaling vessel Hope was often covered in the blood of seals and other animals, his clothes frozen enough that he'd have to stand next to the ship's stove to thaw before undressing.

A first-time sailor, he wasn't supposed to take part in the clubbing of seals, but he did, and repeatedly fell into the frigid waters, nearly freezing to death.

A journal by the young man, written at age 20 in 1880, was published yesterday. ?The ?author? ?Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

Best known for creating the ingenious detective Sherlock Holmes, Doyle was first a surgeon, and went along on the whaling ship after a friend of his backed out, according to a review of the book by the Daily Mail.

  1. Science news from NBCNews.com

    1. Can a plug-in change your politics?

      Science editor Alan Boyle's blog: If your Web browser told you that your online reading habits leaned toward the conservative or liberal side of the political spectrum, would you seek out more diversity?

    2. 'Frozen Dead Guy' may move to Michigan
    3. Tired of killing, tribe resorts to old traditions
    4. China volcano shows signs of unrest

The journey was intense and bloody, and the sailors' job was to take as many seals and whales as possible. As noted by the Smithsonian, though, Doyle's journal of the trip isn't all blood and gore, and contains Doyle's neat prose and lovely illustrations of the ship and the terrain it explored in the Arctic Ocean. ?

The killing of whales was common at the time, although Doyle did write about his feelings of sympathy for the hunted animals. He also describes the beauty of the icy landscape and awe he felt upon seeing enormous humpback whales, which the sailors didn't hunt because they contained too little oil to make their capture worthwhile. Whale oil was valuable for its use in lamps, candle wax and other applications.

Doyle wrote about his experience in both fiction and nonfiction, which helped him first catch the eye of publishers. Although he completed medical school and briefly practiced as a surgeon, he soon realized his true talent lay in writing.

The account of his Arctic voyage is called "Dangerous Work: Diary of an Arctic Adventure" (British Library Publishing, 2012) and is available from the British Library Shop.

Reach Douglas Main at dmain@techmedianetwork.com. Follow him on Twitter @Douglas_Main.? Follow OurAmazingPlanet on Twitter@OAPlanet. We're also on Facebook? and Google+.

? 2012 OurAmazingPlanet. All rights reserved. More from OurAmazingPlanet.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49213861/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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How do American moms feel about working outside the home?


? 2:04:01 PM

How do American moms feel about working outside the home?

mom at home

?

Re-posted from the latest Family In America newsletter:

A recent survey hosted by ForbesWoman and TheBump.com attempts to capture how American women feel about the economy and working outside the home. It found that working moms are, in general, ?an unhappy lot,? further supporting the fact that men and women are not interchangeable cogs in the employment and domestic worlds.

Of the 1,000 women surveyed, 67% worked outside the home. The remaining 33% were stay-at-home moms. The majority of both groups agreed that staying at home with the children was a luxury few could afford. Most (69%) of working moms said their families needed the extra income. But the conflict between children and finances left all women feeling pressured: ? . . . more than half (52%) of the women surveyed say their partners or others sometimes make them feel that they aren?t devoting enough time to their child/children. And 44% of stay-at-home moms say their partner or others sometimes make them feel like they?re not pulling their own financial weight.

Neither sex, apparently, can decide whether family finances or the children should be women?s primary focus. Around 10 percent of stay-at-home moms wish they had remained in the office rather than leaving to have children. Overall, though, stay-at-home moms are more content with their lot: Almost half (47%) of working moms believed they would be happier at home, while only 19% of stay-at-home moms wanted to trade places with their working sisters.

The Family in America is a journal of public policy published online by The Howard Centre for Family, Religion and Society. Its current issue has a very interesting discussion of the much maligned 1950s.

?

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#SciAmBlogs Thursday - water on Mars, March of Progress, evil of books, Rinderpest extinction, green beard, ecological drones, dissolvable medical sensors, and more.


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Bora ZivkovicBora 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. Bora ZivkovicBora 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.

#SciAmBlogs Thursday ? water on Mars, March of Progress, evil of books, Rinderpest extinction, green beard, ecological drones, dissolvable medical sensors, and more.

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=bcc0abeac6e79e5020b3ec2b8f1c07df

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Friday, September 28, 2012

Did the butler do it? A Q&A on the Vatican trial

VATICAN CITY (AP) ? The Vatican has never seen anything like it.

Pope Benedict XVI's trusted butler, who dressed the pontiff each morning, attended his daily Mass and helped serve him his meals, stands accused of stealing the pope's private correspondence and giving it to a journalist who wrote a blockbuster book about the secrets of one of the most secretive institutions in the world.

Paolo Gabriele, a 46-year-old father of three, goes on trial Saturday in the most sensational crime committed on Vatican territory since the 1998 double murder of the Swiss Guard commander and his wife. That case never came to trial because the suspect killed himself.

Gabriele, who was replaced after the scandal broke in May, is scheduled to face the three-judge Vatican tribunal, charged with aggravated theft and facing up to four years in prison if convicted. He has already confessed and asked to be pardoned by the pope ? something most Vatican watchers say is a given if he is convicted.

WHAT PAPERS WERE STOLEN?

According to prosecutors, Gabriele had an "enormous" stash of papal documents at his Vatican City apartment. After his May 24 arrest, he admitted he photocopied documents and gave them to Italian journalist Gianluigi Nuzzi, whose "His Holiness: The secret papers of Pope Benedict XVI" was published in May. The most damaging letter reproduced in the book was written by the former No. 2 Vatican administrator to the pope, in which he begged not to be transferred as punishment for exposing alleged corruption. The prelate, Monsignor Carlo Maria Vigano, is now the Vatican's U.S. ambassador.

WHY WAS IT LEAKED?

Nuzzi has said his source, code-named "Maria" in the book, wanted to shed light on the secrets of the church that were damaging it. Taken as a whole, the documents seemed aimed at discrediting Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, the Vatican secretary of state and Benedict's longtime trusted deputy. Bertone, 77, a canon lawyer and soccer enthusiast, has frequently been criticized for perceived shortcomings in running the Vatican.

DID THE BUTLER DO IT?

Prosecutors quoted Gabriele as saying he knew taking the documents was wrong, but that he felt the Holy Spirit was inspiring him to shed light on the problems he saw around him. "Seeing evil and corruption everywhere in the church ... I was sure that a shock, even a media one, would have been healthy to bring the Church back on the right track," Gabriele was quoted by prosecutors as saying during a June 5 interrogation. They quoted him as saying he never intended to hurt the church or Benedict.

IF HE CONFESSED, WHY BOTHER WITH A TRIAL?

In the U.S. legal system, a case such as this might result in a plea bargain. But the Vatican legal system doesn't provide for plea bargains, according to Giovanni Giacobbe, the prosecutor in the Vatican appeals court. He noted that confessions can be coerced or given up to protect someone else. Gabriele's confession must be corroborated by other evidence uncovered during the investigation in order for him to be convicted, he said. A co-defendant, Vatican computer expert Claudio Sciarpelletti, is charged with aiding and abetting Gabriele.

HOW DOES A VATICAN TRIAL WORK?

The hearing opens Saturday at 9:30 a.m. No oaths are taken ? as the Vatican legal system, like the Italian one on which it is based, assumes a suspect may lie for self-protection. The hearing is declared open and one of the judges reads the charges aloud against Gabriele. He doesn't enter a plea. The defense can make objections to the indictment. Both sides may enter their witness lists. Eventually, the presiding judge ? Giuseppe Dalla Torre, president of the Vatican City State tribunal ? questions Gabriele. Unlike the U.S. system, prosecutors don't question suspects directly and there is no cross-examination; the judge conducts the interrogations on behalf of both sides. Eventually, after all witnesses are heard, objections dealt with and evidence examined, the judges convene in their chambers and issue a ruling.

HOW LONG WILL IT TAKE?

There has never been a trial like this before in the Vatican tribunal, so there's no way to know how long it will take. Much depends on what, if any, objections are raised and how many witnesses are called. Hearings are usually only held on Saturdays, since the judges on the Vatican tribunal hold full-time jobs elsewhere.

WHAT'S THE TRIBUNAL LIKE?

The trial takes place in the small, austere courtroom inside a four-story, peach-colored palazzo inside Vatican City. A plaque near the entrance reads "Judicial Offices" and a carved stone papal seal frames the doorway. A metal detector greets visitors. The courtroom features rich wood paneling and gilded molding on the ceiling, and a small crucifix is centered behind the chairs of the three lay judges. Gabriele, assuming he attends, can sit at one of the tables facing the judges with his lawyer. The prosecutor has his own place at the other table. There is a small section for the public.

WHO CAN ATTEND A VATICAN TRIAL?

On paper, Vatican court proceedings are open to the public. But Giacobbe said those wishing to attend must petition the court, which then decides whether to grant permission. Gabriele, who was granted house arrest in July after spending nearly two months in a Vatican police unit, doesn't have to attend. For the media, eight journalists attend each session and report back to the Vatican press corps. No television, still cameras or audio recording is allowed and court transcripts aren't public.

HOW HAS THE POPE AND THE VATICAN REACTED?

The Vatican took the betrayal very seriously: Benedict appointed a commission of three cardinals to investigate alongside Vatican magistrates; they delivered their confidential report to the pope over the summer. Benedict addressed the scandal for the first time a week after Gabriele was arrested, saying "The events of recent days about the Curia and my collaborators have brought sadness in my heart." But in a nod to his confidence in Bertone, he added: "I want to renew my trust in and encouragement of my closest collaborators and all those who every day, with loyalty and a spirit of sacrifice and in silence, help me fulfill my ministry."

___

Follow Nicole Winfield at www.twitter.com/nwinfield

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/did-butler-q-vatican-trial-124817543.html

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Understanding the mindset of a tribalist | Zambia Daily Mail

ByPROFESSOR KENNETH MWENDA
At the outset, I would like to acknowledge that any discussion on the concepts of ?tribe? and ?tribalism?, respectively, cannot escape the academic disciplines of anthropology and ethnology.
And closely-related to that are views from disciplines such as psychology and sociology. Now, it is not the purpose of this article to regurgitate the large volume of literature from these disciplines.
Suffice it to say, there are various theories that help to explain the strange phenomena of tribe and tribalism. However, my preferred definition of the term ?tribe? is derived from FreeDictionary.com. The said definition postulates that a tribe is a ?social division of a people, especially of a preliterate people, defined in terms of common descent, territory, culture, etc?.
Then, the term ?tribalism? is defined by FreeDictionary.com as ?a strong feeling of identity with, and loyalty to, one?s tribe or group?. These two definitions are sufficient for the purposes of our essay. But, then, how does the mind of a tribalist really work? I know you are all curious to hear what I am about to say.
For us to know fully well how the mind of a tribalist works, we first have to subject it to some serious psychiatric and psychological tests
Now, we are not psychologists or psychiatrists, but we can somehow help the psychologists and psychiatrists by teasing out some common and generic environmental factors that tend to influence the mind of a tribalist.
And what we are about to outline below are simply generic factors. We recognise, however, that to every general rule there can be some exception(s). And so, we are mindful that there can be some isolated exceptions to a number of the factors outlined below.
Further, some arguments may appear like they contradict each other, such as when we talk about poverty having a link to racial and tribal prejudices, on the one hand, and then education and wealth, on the other, failing to change the prejudicial mindset of some racists and tribalists.
Indeed, there will always be some incorrigible and stubbornly myopic folks out there. Although this article is primarily about tribalism, the issue of racism comes in only as a helpful comparative. So, here we go.
Rural upbringing
Akin to a higher likelihood of encountering racist views in places such as the US among some older white folks that grew up in the times of the civil rights movement, there is also a similar likelihood of encountering some tribalism among some older Africans that were raised in the African rural areas and villages.
Like racism, tribalism has strong connections and roots to rural life. In the US, for example, the southern States are rather notorious for such prejudices, in contrast to the more cosmopolitan urban areas.
In Africa, the same analogy applies when we are dealing with tribalism. The more rural a fella behaves, the more likely that he is going to have some tribal dispositions. But do not get me wrong. It is not everything about the rural areas that is bad. There are also many good things that emanate from the rural areas.
Further, tribalism and racism can be found in the urban areas as well, although they both tend to be inspired mainly by values of primitive levels of development as opposed to the scientific age of modernity
In general, tribalism and racism are both ?closed-minded? ways of looking at life, and they are both tied closely to superstitious and primitive modes of conceiving knowledge.
Hence, it is not surprising that, in some instances, acute forms of tribalism have led to civil wars, secessionist claims, cannibalism, witchcraft, sorcery and so forth. Tribalism is very unscientific and primitive.
Even education or church can?t change some tribalists
As they say, you can take some African to school but you cannot take the bush out of his or her head. The same analogy here applies to racism.
You can take some racist to school, but you can?t get the racism out of his or her head. It is not easy for a person with such prejudices to drop them just like that simply because he or she has gone to school.
You need more than a strong cleansing detergent to clean the prejudices out of their minds. Thus, you will find many educated people that are still racists and tribalists today. Some even have PhDs, and have done many great and admirable works.
Yet, they still struggle with the issue of racism or tribalism. Everything for them revolves around the issue of race or tribe. Even in the church, you will find some pastors who are racists or tribalists.
Distorted family values as part of their socialisation
Closely related to the issue of rural upbringing, some parents inculcate tribal values in their children by constantly pontificating stereotypes against certain tribes.
For example, it is not uncommon in Zambia for some parents to object to or discourage their daughter or son from marrying someone from a certain tribe. I will not go into details here because some readers might take it personal
But you all know what I am talking about, don?t you? (smile) So, if elders in the family or community are propagating tribal views, these views are likely to influence the young ones negatively.
Remember that some of these elders have the tribal and ?rural-upbringing? baggage even though they may appear to be affluent socialites in the urban areas.
Distorted forms of peer-pressure, role models and other related modes of socialisation
Do you know someone who is obsessed with, or constantly talking about, or hanging out mainly with folks that he or she went to school with in some remote rural part of Zambia many years ago? Such people find it hard to pick up new friends from other tribes along the way.
Even when such people have been to university, they still remain loyally close to their village acquaintances or childhood friends who they went with to high school or primary school in the village.Quite often, much of their communication is conducted in their native language even when others around them cannot understand the language that they are speaking.
At times, you might find that you are in a group of people, and you will all be talking in English, but as soon as one of the culpable chaps notices that someone else has joined the group, and that that newcomer speaks his or her native language, then the two of them will immediately switch to their native language, cutting everyone out of the conversation.
Such lack of decency and manners is common with people that are not well-cultivated. And you will find that such behaviours are commonplace in workplaces, schools and many other institutions.
For example, as soon as someone notices that your name reads as if you are from his or her tribe, they will be quick to reach out to you until they realise that you are not ?one of them?! Yes, my name is ?Mwenda?.? And it is found in almost all the ten (10) provinces of Zambia, as well as in many neighbouring countries, including Democratic Republic of Congo, Malawi, Angola, Tanzania, Kenya and Uganda. So, you can imagine how many times I have come across such inquisitions and prejudices.
But can tribalists cease to be tribalists when they are placed in a different environment such as when they are living abroad or when they are working in a different province in Zambia from that which they emanate from?
A common indication of tribal inclinations is where individuals from a particular country want to first identify people from their tribe before they can warm up to people from other tribes from their country. Such people would rather forge bonds with fellow tribesmates before they can think of the concept of the ?nation?.
For a tribalist, he or she has no sense of nationalism or national patriotism. His or her patriotism is parochial and limited to the tribe. And his or her closest friend or ally is often a fellow tribesmate. Tribalists only reach out to others outside their tribe when they are stranded, but, in turn, are reluctant to help people from other tribes.
And a tribalist is often not ready to learn or to speak a different language from his or her own (with the exception of colonial languages like English or French). Look, although I am Ushi, I speak Nyanja and Bemba fluently. And I have no difficulties speaking Nyanja with my Eastern friends.
I have told myself that I have to be flexible and adaptable. A tribalist, by contrast, is rigid and not flexible. His or her points of reference often oscillate back to the small shops and the unknown aristocrats in his or her native little hometown or home village.
And those are the kind of role models that a tribalist looks up to. It then makes it very hard to strike genuine friendship with such people. What to do now? That is where the psychologists, psychiatrists, anthropologists and ethnologists come in.

* The interpretations and conclusions expressed in this paper are entirely those of the author. They do not represent the views of any institution, person or body to which the author is affiliated. For feedback on the article, the author can be reached electronically at: KMwenda@yahoo.com

Source: http://www.daily-mail.co.zm/?p=15334

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Fitness of a Formula One Driver : The Health Guru

Posted on | September 28, 2012 | No Comments

Formula One Fitness

Do you consider a F1 driver an elite athlete?? Do you think they are more or less fitter than a long distance runner?

I guess that needing to drive some of the fastest cars in demanding conditions (both physical and mental) must need for them to train vigorously. Let?s take a look at what their body goes through:

The heart

Most?humans?have a resting heart rate of around 60 beats/minute, rising to around 150 during a run on the treadmill. An experiment using David Coulthard found he had a resting heart rate of 40 beats/minute, rising to 198 beats/minute during a two hour race.? That figure is approximately the same as a marathon runner when crossing the finishing line.? One of the reasons for this is that driving demands intense concentration, huge amounts of adrenalin?is being pumped through the body, the physical strain of travelling at speeds more than 300km per hour and experiencing g-forces of 3-4 around corners indeed makes the heart beat faster!

Training: To cope with the stress on the heart, F1 drivers would need to conduct intense cardiovascular exercise.

The neck

The total weight of a human head and a F1 helmet weigh approximately 6kg. When taking corners and experiencing about 4G-Force, the neck has to support 24kg.

Training:? Large elastic bands are used to simulate the demands of high G-Force. Drivers also incorporate resistance work into their exercise regime ? rowing and weight lifting.? But keeping in mind they need to avoid too much muscle hypertrophy in order to fit within the small driving cockpits.

Diet

Formula One drivers eat much like track and field athletes ? carefully regulating their carbohydrate and protein intake. In the lead up to a big race they?ll gorge on carbohydrates for energy.? Immediately before the race and sometimes throughout, drivers?drink huge amounts of water. Failure to do so could bring on dehydration through sweating.? The extreme heat found in a Formula One cockpit means drivers can sweat off up to 3 kg of their body weight during the course of a race.

Mental health

Formula One drivers don?t just take care of their bodies, they look after their mental health too. Many of the F1 Teams work with sports psychologists to ensure that a driver can exert unwavering mind control during a race. Methods include reviewing track maps, visualising a route and a perfect lap, in order for the driver to feel he has driven the course many times before he even arrives there.

Drivers also learn breathing techniques to stay calm at crucial moments, and techniques for shutting out the outside world ? a driver getting into a car surrounded by a medical team, technical staff and thousands of fans and members of the press may use the click of the seat belt as a trigger to block these distractions.

So now do you think that a F1 driver is an elite athlete?? I am certainly convinced.

Visit www.healthguru.sg for further nutrition and health tips.

Comments

Source: http://www.healthguru.sg/general/fitness-of-a-formula-one-driver/

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Mr. Sexy Back tries to bring Myspace back

FILE -- In a May 7, 2012 file photo Justin Timberlake arrives at the Metropolitan Museum of Art Costume Institute gala benefit, in New York. Myspace is trying to stage yet another comeback with the help of investor Justin Timberlake. (AP Photo/Charles Sykes)

FILE -- In a May 7, 2012 file photo Justin Timberlake arrives at the Metropolitan Museum of Art Costume Institute gala benefit, in New York. Myspace is trying to stage yet another comeback with the help of investor Justin Timberlake. (AP Photo/Charles Sykes)

(AP) ? "Who am I to say I want you back? When you were never mine to give away."

Those are the opening lines of a song that accompanies a "New Myspace" promotional video. The once-mighty social network is trying to stage yet another comeback with the help of Justin Timberlake. The new site, for which people can request an invitation, looks a bit like an entertainment-focused version of Pinterest, with a dash of Twitter and Facebook thrown in.

But Myspace has tried redesigns before, to no avail. Will it work this time?

"If you break my heart a second time, I might never be the same," continues the song, "Heartbeat," by the group JJAMZ.

From the sound if it, Myspace wants to win the hearts and minds of tech-savvy hipsters. Founded in 2003 and initially a fast-rising star, Myspace attracted mostly teenagers and twentysomethings, offering them a place to express themselves online. It peaked in 2008 with some 76 million U.S. visitors in October. The site lost its footing as the fun of customizing profile pages began to bore its users and the site's heavy use of banner advertisements slowed the speed at which pages loaded. At the same time, people were already migrating to Facebook, which counted users 35 and older among its fastest-growing demographic.

The company's new promotional video offers a 2-minute and 18-second peek into a slick, image-heavy site. The site's much cleaner look is a stark contrast to the old Myspace, which users often derided as messy and cluttered. Posted this week, the video promises that Myspace will start "totally from scratch," as if trying to shed its former self. It doesn't say when the new site will launch, only that it's "not ready quite yet."

The new Myspace will let users connect to the site with their Twitter or Facebook accounts, a sign that it won't be competing with those sites as a social networking service. Rather, Myspace will continue with its entertainment focus, as a place to play and discover music, add photos, videos and playlists and connect with artists.

Timberlake, who's featured prominently in the video, will likely play a big part of the MySpace revamp. The former 'N Sync pop star, with a group of other investors, bought MySpace last summer from News Corp. for $35 million, mostly in stock. That was quite a difference from the $580 million that News Corp. paid for the company in 2005, when it was still an Internet darling.

MySpace, of course, isn't Timberlake's first foray into social networking. He played Napster co-founder Sean Parker, a party animal and early Facebook adviser, in Aaron Sorkin's "The Social Network" in 2010.

In August this year, research firm comScore put Myspace's monthly unique visitors at 28 million, making it the 43rd most visited Web property in the U.S. It's behind the likes of not just Google, Facebook and Twitter but startups such as Tumblr, along with the reviews site Yelp and WebMD.

"The new design certainly looks beautiful and it could certainly spur a lot of initial interest," said Clark Fredericksen, spokesman for research firm eMarketer, which used to put out ad revenue estimates for MySpace but no longer does. "But there are going to be significant challenges for any company looking to enter the digital music space. You have a lot of entrenched players who are really successful."

Those players include Spotify, Pandora, Rdio, not to mention Apple Inc.'s iTunes.

There's also the mobile question. It's unclear from the video what plans the new MySpace has for mobile devices such as Android smartphones, iPhones and tablet computers. Fredricksen points out that cloud-based music ? streamed over an Internet connection ? is shifting toward the mobile platform primarily. We are all on the go with our music. MySpace is entering a crowded market here, too.

Representatives for Specific Media, which owns Myspace, did not return messages for comment Wednesday. Timberlake's publicist also did not return an email for comment. With only the slick demo and the poppy, bittersweet lyrics of the JJAMZ song to offer details about the "New Myspace", these lines stand out:

"Maybe I'm ashamed to want you back. Maybe I'm afraid, you'll never stay."

___

Online: https://new.myspace.com/play

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2012-09-26-Myspace-Comeback/id-eeb4e15d6776406aa5cb2c128bb705a3

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Find It, Fix It, Flip It, Or Keep It ? Real Estate Investors Workshop ...

West Hartford, CT - September 26, 2012 - (RealEstateRama) -- This 3-part workshop is designed for new and experienced invesors alike. This workshop will teach you the basics of investing in Connecticut real estate: wholesaling, rehabbing, selling quick...

Full article: Find It, Fix It, Flip It, Or Keep It ? Real Estate Investors Workshop ...

Tagged as: investment property, real estate investing, workshop

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  • Lee & Associates Names Jon Savoy Advisory Board Member
    Torrance, CA - September 24, 2012 - (RealEstateRama) -- Lee & Associates, one of the nation?s largest commercial brokerage firms, has announced the members of its 2012, 2013-2014 advisory board. Comprised of seven individuals elected from the pool of presidents and managing partners, the advisory board is responsible for setting policy and shaping Lee?s strategic direction
  • HGA Moves to Expanded Offices in San Francisco
    Torrance, CA - September 18, 2012 - (RealEstateRama) -- HGA Architects and Engineers (HGA) has relocated to expanded offices in San Francisco to accommodate its growing practice serving healthcare, higher education and cultural clients. HGA?s San Fra...
  • NLCHP Program: Children and Youth
    WASHINGTON, D.C. - September 6, 2012 - (RealEstateRama) -- Families with young children now account for 40% of the nation's homeless population and in the course of the year, more than 1.3 million children are homeless. At the Law Center, we aim to end family homelessness in America.

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Source: http://states.realestaterama.com/2012/09/26/find-it-fix-it-flip-it-or-keep-it-%E2%80%93-real-estate-investors-workshop-ID021270.html

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Thursday, September 27, 2012

Top 5 Strangest Meteorites You Can Buy

On Oct. 14, pieces of asteroids, the moon and Mars that have landed on Earth go up for sale in a public auction in Manhattan.

These meteorites may have originated in space, but many create tantalizing tales ? or hint at future calamity ? when they collide with Earth. From the more than 125 meteorite pieces and related material going up for sale at Heritage Auctions, here are five with the strangest space-rock stories.

The only known fatality

On the evening of Oct. 15, 1972, farmhands in Trujillo, Venezuela, heard a sonic boom. The next morning, a large rock was found alongside a dead cow with a crushed neck and clavicle. Years later, scientists confirmed the rock, which in the meantime had served as a doorstop, was a meteorite, according to the catalog description of New York City's Heritage Auctions for a partial slice of the Valera meteorite. [See Photos of Meteorites for Sale]

This is the only known meteorite responsible for a fatality, at least to date.

"It is going to happen, and it's going to be a very sad day. It is inevitable that people will be killed by a meteorite," said Darryl Pitt, the meteorite consultant for the auction. He added that when he speaks to children, this is the first thing they ask about. He said he tells them to "worry about the things they have control over."

The only asteroid tracked to Earth

The potential for a devastating impact from an asteroid or comet is real, and astronomers are keeping an eye out for this type of threat.

On Oct. 6, 2008, Richard Kowalski, at the Catalina Sky Survey, spotted a new asteroid, dubbed 2008 TC3, on a collision course with Earth. For the first time, astronomers around the world tracked the asteroid's approach for the day before it hit Earth. The asteroid exploded upon entering Earth's atmosphere, and as predicted, it fell in the Nubian Desert of Northern Sudan, where 35 pounds (15.9 kilograms) of meteorites were eventually found.

Much of its mass is believed to have been vaporized or to have disintegrated when it hit Earth's atmosphere. It was renamed Almahata Sitta, Arabic for "station six," a railroad stop on the line to Khartoum near where the meteorites were found, according to the auction catalog description. [Top 10 Ways to Destroy Earth]

An 'accident' with a Chevy

Almost 20 years ago, on Oct. 9, 1992, video cameras at Friday night football games in the northeastern United States caught the fiery descent of a meteorite that would end its fall by punching through the trunk of a red Chevy Malibu parked in Peekskill, N.Y. The owner of the car, 18-year-old Michelle Knapp, sold the car within a week for 25 times the $400 she paid for it when buying it from her grandmother, according to the catalog.?

Not only are two pieces of this meteorite for sale, collectors also have a chance to purchase the original title to the Malibu and the bulb from the rear tail light, which exploded when the car's trunk was punctured by the meteorite.

Chained to Earth

In 1492, a stone fell from the sky outside the walled city of Ensisheim, located in the Alsatian region of France, preceded by "a great thunder clap, then a long noise that was heard far around," the auction catalog quotes a 16th-century document. The stone's descent was seen as a sign from God; the extraterrestrial origin of meteorites would not be accepted for another 300 years. The Ensisheim meteorite was brought into the city and chained up in church to keep it Earth-bound. It is Europe's oldest preserved meteorite.

Hopes for a cure

On Aug. 14, 1992, residents of the Nigerian city of Mbale heard a loud explosion that became a rumbling, accompanied by a white smoke trail in the sky. Then rocks rained down, pelting an area of about 1.9 by 4.3 miles (3 by 7 kilometers). One small meteorite even struck a young boy after ricocheting off a banana tree. Because the region was being ravaged by AIDS, Mbale residents believed the meteorite shower brought a cure from God, and they ground up the stones into a paste that was eaten or applied topically, the auction catalog recounts.

Within several months, 426 stones weighting 238 pounds (108 kilograms) had been recovered from this large meteorite shower.

The auction, held by Heritage Auctions, is scheduled to take place on Sunday, Oct. 14, at the Fletcher-Sinclair Mansion at 2 East 79th Street in Manhattan.

Follow LiveScienceon Twitter@livescience. We're also on Facebook?& Google+.

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

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/top-5-strangest-meteorites-buy-134343249.html

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Honey Boo Boo worries she's too 'chunky'

TLC

Alana "Honey Boo Boo" Thompson.

By Us Weekly

Alana "Honey Boo Boo" Thompson has long wowed audiences during her time as a pageant princess on TLC's "Toddlers & Tiaras," but on Wednesday's season finale of her spinoff, "Here Comes Honey Boo Boo," the precocious 7-year-old had to be coaxed to even get on stage.

"Mama, I think I'm a little chunky today," Honey Boo Boo moaned at Georgia's Miss Sparkle and Shine Pageant as June Shannon and other handlers helped suit her up in her new pink frock. "You have to stay away from those chicken nuggets," her mother replied, as both worried that the velcro keeping Honey Boo Boo's ill-fitting dress together would come apart on stage.

PHOTOS: Celebrity beauty queens

Reasoned one of Honey Boo Boo's sisters prior to her performance: "Alana's not your average pageant person. Most of the girls are like twigs. She's more of a log... or a boulder."

Later, once Honey Boo Boo summoned her internal "chicken nugget power" and took the stage to show off her new dress -- and false teeth "flipper" -- all her pre-show worry was forgotten. "Once she gets into pageant mode she becomes a different child," Shannon beamed from the audience, where she sat alongside her daughters, partner Mike "Sugar Bear" Thompson and his brother, Lee, whom Honey Boo Boo dubbed "Uncle Poodle."

VIDEO: Eww! June takes a bath in her own sweat on the show's finale

Though she missed out on the pageant's Ultimate Grand Supreme title, Honey Boo Boo was awarded the People's Choice prize -- and was surprised with a visit from her beloved former pet pig, Glitzy! "I'm the people's favorite! I think I did my best ever!" Honey Boo Boo said after her win, confirming that "(she's) the Grand Supreme of my family!"

Honey Boo Boo's family welcomed a new addition on Wednesday's finale, when her sister, Anna (aka "Chickadee") finally gave birth to baby Kaitlyn. "I'm so excited I'm about to piss all over myself," Honey Boo Boo said before Anna brought her new baby home. Honey Boo Boo's eloquent first impression of her niece: "Baby Kaitlyn is so tiny...? I poop bigger!"

VIDEO: Honey Boo Boo says she wants "thousands" of her own kids

Though Sugar Bear reasoned that one of baby Kaitlyn's hands -- that has two thumbs -- reminded him of a "Swiss army knife," his daughter Honey Boo Boo looked on the bright side. "I wish I had an extra finger, then I could grab more cheese balls!" she said.?

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Source: http://theclicker.today.com/_news/2012/09/27/14125308-here-comes-honey-boo-boo-tyke-worries-shes-too-chunky-for-pageant?lite

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Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Human brains develop wiring slowly, differing from chimpanzees

ScienceDaily (Sep. 25, 2012) ? Research comparing brain development in humans and our closest nonhuman primate relatives, chimpanzees, reveals how quickly myelin in the cerebral cortex grows, shedding light on the evolution of human cognitive development and the vulnerability of humans to psychiatric disorders. Myelin is the fatty insulation surrounding axon connections of the brain.

Recent research by Chet Sherwood, associate professor of anthropology in Columbian College of Arts and Sciences, along with Daniel Miller, a former GW graduate student, and other colleagues, reveals this key difference in brain development between human and chimpanzee. The findings were recently published in the September 24th edition Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

In the article, Dr. Sherwood and co-authors write that the development of myelin from birth to adulthood in humans is protracted in comparison to chimpanzees. In humans, myelin develops slowly during childhood, followed by a delayed period of maturity beyond adolescence and into early adulthood. In contrast, in chimpanzees, the development of myelin already starts at a relatively more mature level at birth and ceases development long before puberty.

?These observations indicate that a marked delay in the development schedule of the human neocortex may play an important role in the growth of connections that contribute to our species-specific cognitive abilities,? wrote Dr. Sherwood and co-authors.

The developmental timing of myelination is important because it establishes connectivity among parts of the growing brain, which is essential to higher-order cognitive functions, such as decision-making and emotional regulation. These cognitive functions are known to mature relatively late in humans, after the time of adolescence. Also, this period of persistent myelin development during early adulthood in humans is a time of particular vulnerability to neuropsychiatric diseases, including schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and depression.

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  1. D. J. Miller, T. Duka, C. D. Stimpson, S. J. Schapiro, W. B. Baze, M. J. McArthur, A. J. Fobbs, A. M. M. Sousa, N. Sestan, D. E. Wildman, L. Lipovich, C. W. Kuzawa, P. R. Hof, C. C. Sherwood. Prolonged myelination in human neocortical evolution. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2012; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1117943109

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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/most_popular/~3/F8qJbuAS8yc/120925142645.htm

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Israelis shrug at Netanyahu's warnings on Iran

Even as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu presses the US for ?red lines? on Iran?s nuclear development and Iran ramps up its rhetoric, Israelis don?t seem to be expecting a war with Iran anytime soon ? and are not frantically preparing for one.

Yes, Iran is a dangerous regime, most say. But even as some get new gas masks and repair their bomb shelters, more than half say they think Mr. Netanyahu's statements about launching an Israeli strike on Iran are a bluff intended to pressure the US to do the job instead.

And even if Netanyahu were serious about going it alone, Israelis express a high degree of confidence in Israel?s ability to defend itself.

?We have been following the Iran issue for quite a long time and ? [Israelis] actually seem to be pretty relaxed about it and I suppose that, following their answers, this is because they don?t really think it?s going to happen,? says public opinion expert Tamar Hermann, who co-edits a monthly poll known as the Peace Index. ?They see it as a chess game by which Netanyahu is trying to achieve certain advantages in the international arena.?

RELATED ? Bomb Iran? Why 5 top Israeli figures don't want to do it

There are other theories about why Israelis seem relatively calm about the Iran threat: They?ve long since accepted that they live in a dangerous neighborhood; they have confidence in the state?s ability to defend itself and protect its civilians; they don?t think Iran will strike anyway; and, for the more religious, they are looking to the same God that delivered their people from enemies who sought their destruction in the past, from Goliath to Haman.

RELATED: Netanyahu gives Obama the book of Esther. Biblical parable for nuclear Iran?

?First of all, I trust God. Secondly, we have very clever people, very good intelligence,? and a strong military, says Moshe Guy, a Tel Aviv resident visiting the Western Wall in Jerusalem?s Old City. ?I?m not afraid ? I?m much more afraid about the conflict between Jews in Israel ? between religious and non-religious.? I see that Judaism is moving toward [being] fanatic, and fanatic is very bad.?

Indeed, other concerns seem to be more top of mind for Israelis, including the high cost of living, rising social tensions, and even a possible earthquake.

US SUPPORT STILL TRUMPS ALL

Earlier this year, a survey conducted by the Institute for National Security Studies (INSS) at Tel Aviv University found that only 18 percent of Israelis believed that Iran would attack Israel with nuclear weapons. Even if Iran were to launch a nuclear attack, almost 2 in 3 Israelis believe that Israel can handle such an strike, according to the survey, which will be published in December.

But Israelis were more confident in their country's ability to deal with all but one of the other threats posed by the survey ? including war with Arab countries, sustained terrorism, and a chemical or biological weapons attack, according to INSS data shared with the Monitor.

The only thing Israelis are more worried about in terms of national security is a drop in US support of Israel.

?All the studies we?ve done over the past 25 years show that the Israeli public ? puts great, great, great emphasis between Israel and US and views strong bonds ? as a major factor in Israel?s national security,? says Yehuda Ben Meir, co-director of INSS?s National Security and Public Opinion Project. ?Since it?s been made very clear that the US is more than strongly opposed to a unilateral Israeli independent attack at this time ? [Israelis] don?t want it.?

To be sure, a substantial cohort ? as high as 40 percent, according to some polls ? still supports an Israeli strike. But a strong majority ? 61 percent, according to the Peace Index ? only want a joint US-Israel strike.

That said, Israelis don?t necessarily trust the US. Some 70 percent said they did not have full confidence in US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta?s promise this summer that the US will prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon, according to the July edition of Professor Hermann?s Peace Index.

?We cannot trust America,? says Mr. Guy of Tel Aviv, criticizing Netanyahu for pressuring the US to support an Israeli strike or launch its own. ?Why speak about it, [why] make so much noise? They will not do it. We must do it.?

IS AN EARTHQUAKE MORE LIKELY THAN A NUCLEAR ATTACK?

This weekend, the deputy commander of Iran?s Revolutionary Guards said that an Israeli strike would ?provide a historic opportunity for the Islamic Revolution to wipe [Israel] off the face of the earth,? adding that an infantry battalion would be able to ?break Israel?s back? within a day.

It?s sound bites like that which always spur a flurry of calls and website traffic for Dani Avram, the owner of an Israeli bomb shelter company called Ani Mugan (?I am protected?).

?Every time there?s the right news ? you see a big increase of people that want to fix their home shelters,? says Mr. Avram, who says that usually such calls drop off after a few days. ?But now, it?s many more people and a longer period of time.?

Traffic to his company website has increased at least sixfold, he estimates, and calls have risen from a few dozen a day to a few hundred. Even on weekends and recent holidays, traffic has been similar to a normal business day, he says.

Part of it may be an improved awareness among citizens about how to brace for attack, thanks in part to a more organized campaign by the government.

?It?s not the same as [before the 1991] Gulf War ? now we feel more secure because now we feel better prepared,? says Dan, a Modiin resident visiting Jerusalem?s Old City who declined to give his last name.

DISTRIBUTING GAS MASKS

But his wife, Ilanit, says she is worried ? though she admits she has yet to get a gas mask for their third child, an infant.

The Home Front Command, set up in the wake of the Gulf War, began a nationwide campaign in 2010 to distribute gas masks to protect citizens in the event of biological or chemical warfare. Since then, they have distributed more than 4 million of the so-called ?protection kits,? but only about half of Israelis currently have one, according to the Israel Defense Forces (IDF).

The country has also helped prepare citizens by organizing nationwide civil defense drills every spring or early summer since the 2006 Lebanon war, when Hezbollah sent a flood of rockets over Israel?s northern border. But this year?s drill, which is set to include NATO and the United Nations, will be held in October and doesn?t have anything to do with missiles or other possible retaliatory attacks from Iran.

Normally, the drills include the sounding of a siren, the distribution of messages via SMS, and requests for civilians to go to a designated secure place as they would in an emergency. Local governments are also involved in emergency response simulations.

Instead, the focus this year will be preparing for an earthquake. The last destructive earthquake in Israel occurred in 1927, and with major quakes occurring every 80-90 years on average, some say the country is due for another.

?I know it?s much more sexy to talk about Iran, but an earthquake is much more likely statistically,? says Nissan Zehevi, spokesman for the Home Front Defense Minister. But, he adds, ?We?re ready for any scenario.?

In the meantime, says Hermann, Israelis don?t seem to be batting an eye ? noting among other things the recent uptick in home sales lately.

?Normally people do not invest in real estate when they think that their new homes are going to be destroyed by missiles from Iran,? she says.

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/israelis-shrug-netanyahus-urgent-warnings-iran-131629186.html

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Video: Automatic building mapping could help emergency responders

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

MIT researchers have built a wearable sensor system that automatically creates a digital map of the environment through which the wearer is moving. The prototype system, described in a paper slated for the Intelligent Robots and Systems conference in Portugal next month, is envisioned as a tool to help emergency responders coordinate disaster response.

In experiments conducted on the MIT campus, a graduate student wearing the sensor system wandered the halls, and the sensors wirelessly relayed data to a laptop in a distant conference room. Observers in the conference room were able to track the student's progress on a map that sprang into being as he moved.

Connected to the array of sensors is a handheld pushbutton device that the wearer can use to annotate the map. In the prototype system, depressing the button simply designates a particular location as a point of interest. But the researchers envision that emergency responders could use a similar system to add voice or text tags to the map ? indicating, say, structural damage or a toxic spill.

"The operational scenario that was envisioned for this was a hazmat situation where people are suited up with the full suit, and they go in and explore an environment," says Maurice Fallon, a research scientist in MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, and lead author on the new paper. "The current approach would be to textually summarize what they had seen afterward ? 'I went into this room on the left, I saw this, I went into the next room,' and so on. We want to try to automate that."

Fallon is joined on the paper by professors John Leonard and Seth Teller, of, respectively, the departments of Mechanical Engineering and of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS), and EECS grad students Hordur Johannsson and Jonathan Brookshire.

Shaky aim

The new work builds on previous research on systems that enable robots to map their environments. But adapting the system so that a human could wear it required a number of modifications.

One of the sensors that the system uses is a laser rangefinder, which sweeps a laser beam around a 270-degree arc and measures the time that it takes the light pulses to return. If the rangefinder is level, it can provide very accurate information about the distance of the nearest walls, but a walking human jostles it much more than a rolling robot does. Similarly, sensors in a robot's wheels can provide accurate information about its physical orientation and the distances it covers, but that's missing with humans. And as emergency workers responding to a disaster might have to move among several floors of a building, the system also has to recognize changes in altitude, so it doesn't inadvertently overlay the map of one floor with information about a different one.

So in addition to the rangefinder, the researchers also equipped their sensor platform with a cluster of accelerometers and gyroscopes, a camera, and, in one group of experiments, a barometer (changes in air pressure proved to be a surprisingly good indicator of floor transitions). The gyroscopes could infer when the rangefinder was tilted ? information the mapping algorithms could use in interpreting its readings ? and the accelerometers provided some information about the wearer's velocity and very good information about changes in altitude.

Adjudicating the data from all the other sensors is the camera. Every few meters, the camera takes a snapshot of its surroundings, and software extracts a couple of hundred visual features from the image ? particular patterns of color, or contours, or inferred three-dimensional shapes. Each batch of features is associated with a particular location on the map.

Seeing is believing

If the person wearing the sensors returns to an area that he or she has previously visited, the system's location estimate could be off: For instance, its compensation for the tilt of the rangefinder might not have been perfect, and a wall now looks several feet farther away than it did, or its inference of position from accelerometer data could be off. In such cases, a fresh snapshot and a comparison of the visual features with those already stored can help correct its location estimate.

The prototype of the sensor platform consists of a handful of devices attached to a sheet of hard plastic about the size of an iPad, which is worn on the chest like a backward backpack. The only sensor whose volume can't be reduced significantly is the rangefinder, so in principle, the whole system could be shrunk to about the size of a coffee mug.

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Massachusetts Institute of Technology: http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice

Thanks to Massachusetts Institute of Technology for this article.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/123807/Video__Automatic_building_mapping_could_help_emergency_responders

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Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Argentine leader challenges critics in US

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) ? President Cristina Fernandez is on a US tour this week with a message for critics on Wall Street and in Washington who say Argentina is headed for economic disaster by refusing to play by the rules of the global financial system: good riddance to the rules.

Her government has racked up a long list of unpaid IOUs while helping the country recover from its humiliating, world-record debt default a decade ago, but Fernandez argues Argentina's economic rebound has been possible precisely because its leaders have stood up to foreign pressures and put their people first.

Argentines used to be "dazzled by the North," she said last month while inaugurating an expanded highway, one of many infrastructure projects she said would have been impossible had her government done as outsiders demand.

"They hadn't noticed that the rich countries don't want partners or friends; they just want employees and subordinates. And we're not going to be anybody's employees or subordinates. We are a free country, with dignity and national pride."

Fernandez was meeting with billionaire George Soros and Egypt's new president Mohamed Morsi on Monday, but was skipping a dinner that President Barack Obama is hosting for his fellow leaders at the Waldorf Hotel, planning instead to visit an Evita Peron exhibit at the Argentine consulate.

As Fernandez addresses the United Nations Tuesday and then takes questions at Georgetown and Harvard later in the week, she's sure to insist, as she has often in the past, that her forceful management of the economy has made factories rebound, jobs more secure, society more egalitarian and the future brighter than it has been in years.

Fernandez says corporations no longer tell Argentine presidents what to do, and instead must heel to a government that puts the people's needs first. Natural resources are once again sovereign, and Argentina is freer than ever from international debt obligations.

A far different picture is presented by Argentina's many critics in the U.S. and Europe. In the past few days alone, Moody's Investors Service downgraded the country's risk rating, potentially increasing borrowing costs for anyone doing business with Argentina, and the International Monetary Fund chief drew a firm line Monday against Argentina's widely disbelieved economic data. The government's INDEC statistics agency has magically kept inflation below 1 percent monthly for the last 29 months, even as consumers struggle with price hikes two or three times bigger.

"This is the last yellow card we show them," Christine Lagarde said Monday, giving Argentina until Dec. 17 to publish accurate inflation and growth numbers, or face unspecified sanctions. "I hope we can avoid the red card, but if the statistics aren't corrected, if they don't comply with the rules, then all the players are equal. It doesn't matter how well they play football."

Obama's trade negotiators and diplomats have lost patience, removing trade preferences over her refusal to pay more than 100 court judgments to U.S. businesses. Her government also has ignored World Bank arbitrators, stiffed the Paris Club lenders and brushed off the European Union's threats of sanctions for expropriating Grupo Repsol's $10.5 billion stake in Argentina's oil company without any compensation.

"These legal questions continue to raise red flags to investors that the Argentine government does not respect the rule of law," University of Houston energy analyst Michael Economides concluded Thursday in a scathing report that accused Fernandez of "populist thuggery."

Argentina appears to have reached "a tipping point in a downward economic spiral," he warned, advising the government to quickly "show investors it is willing to play by the rules" and then finance the exploitation of its vast oil and gas reserves by taking on more foreign debt.

Fernandez anticipated such criticism in her highway speech, recalling that her late husband and predecessor, President Nestor Kirchner, "dared to tell the IMF to go to hell."

"That's what they're never going to forgive: that Argentines have been able to demonstrate, contrary to all the theories of despondency, of fear, of unpatriotic feelings of those who didn't believe in Argentina . that they could do what's necessary so that Argentines would live better," she said.

"They still keep punishing us, because we're a bad example; we're the example that it's possible to build a country without an outside tutor. We're the example that a country can vote for a president and the one who decides is this president."

Most Argentines are without a doubt living better than they were a decade ago, when the economy was in ruins, but years of rapid growth have lurched to a halt this year. Even the INDEC on Friday reported zero GDP growth in the second quarter, and a 15 percent plunge in domestic investment. Private analysts have presented still more grim numbers, and accused Fernandez of pushing Argentina into a recession.

Support for her government's performance has plummeted, from 64 percent last October to 35 percent last month according to Management & Fit. The Buenos Aires consulting firm's survey of 2,259 people had an error margin of 2.2 percentage points.

Then again, analysts have been predicting Argentina's imminent collapse for years, and Fernandez shows no signs of reversing course.

Her attitude could be tested during a meeting Thursday with Exxon Mobil Corp. CEO Rex W. Tillerson to discuss new joint ventures. Economides is one of many energy analysts who say that absent full compensation for Repsol, no other major company will commit the billions of dollars over many years that will be necessary to fully exploit Argentina's massive shale oil and gas reserves.

Fernandez has had ever-fewer checks on her power since she was re-elected by a 54-percent landslide last October. Her allies firmly control congress, keep the courts in check and have silenced government auditors who might otherwise challenge her administration. Inconvenient data can be ignored or buried: National crime figures haven't been released since 2008.

Since Kirchner's death nearly two years ago, Fernandez, 59, has made so many major decisions within a small circle of advisers that Argentines joke about living in a "dedocracy," after "dedo," Spanish for finger. They say nothing happens without her touch.

A $6 billion welfare program she created by decree has since more than doubled in cost and scope without so much as a congressional hearing. The private pension funds she nationalized brought in vast pools of money that she has spent at her discretion. She recently redirected treasury and pension funds to housing loans for the poorest Argentines at rates so low that the principal will be seriously eroded by inflation.

Fernandez has been popular in part because all this spending has kept the economy moving. Rounds of salary increases of 25 percent or more have enabled the working poor to keep up with inflation, and child welfare payments have kept the slums from exploding.

But middle-class and elite Argentines who see their wealth under attack have been increasingly gloomy now that her government has made it impossible to legally trade pesos for dollars. The measures are aimed at cracking down on tax-evasion and maintaining the country's cash reserves, but they have also spooked investors and failed to stem capital flight, which INDEC said totaled $1.2 billion in the last quarter alone.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/argentine-leader-challenges-critics-us-150413699.html

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