Sunday, February 17, 2013

White House Immigration Proposal Includes Pathway for Illegal ...

Feb 16, 2013 by JANET SHAN

White House Immigration Plan: ?President Obama?s immigration proposal would include allowing ?illegal immigrants to become legal permanent residents within eight years,? USA Today reports.

?The plan also would provide for more security funding and require business owners to check the immigration status of new hires within four years.?In addition, the nation?s 11 million illegal immigrants could apply for a newly created ?Lawful Prospective Immigrant? visa, under the bill being written by the White House.?The draft was obtained from an Obama administration official who said it was being distributed to various agencies. The official requested anonymity because he was not authorized to release the proposal publicly.?

[...]

?The draft also expands the E-Verify program that checks the immigration status of people seeking new jobs. Businesses with more than 1,000 employees must begin using the system within two years, businesses with more than 250 employees within three years and all businesses within four years.?The draft also requires the Government Accountability Office to study the program every year.?

One thing that was missing from the White House proposal is future legal immigration, specifically the guest worker program. It will be interesting to see how they approach this, since it is widely favored by many businesses.

This was cross-posted from The Hinterland Gazette.

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Source: http://themoderatevoice.com/176471/white-house-immigration-proposal-includes-pathway-for-illegal-immigrants-to-get-legal-permanent-status-in-8-years/

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Finding A Car Service That Will Work For Your Needs

Getting around an unfamiliar city for a special event or business meetings will be much easier if you hire a car service. If you are headed to city like this, then plan ahead and look for the best option for your needs. You will want good customer service, a comfortable vehicle, and a good price.

It is important when hiring a car service that you check into the background of possible drivers. You need to make sure that the individual transporting you has a good record and will not complicate your time with poor driving or not giving you the privacy that you need. You will want to see the company's policy on background checks to make sure everything looks good. Another aspect of this with customer service could include the vehicle arriving on time at your hotel for pick-up and being there to pick you up at the meeting place at the time appointed.

When you hire a car service, you should also consider your comfort. Make sure to find out what type of vehicle will be used for your needs, so that you will know what amenities will be available to you. If possible, you should try to look in the type of vehicle that you will be using. Make sure that the company does not allow smoking.

Affordability is another issue. Your business may be paying for it, but it is still a good idea to be frugal. If you are the business owner, then you might be more conscious of cost, but either way, it is always a good idea to make sure you get what you get for the best deal that you can find. To some people, that means spending hours looking for the best price. To others it might mean calling around for an hour or so and seeing what the best deal is that you can find.

After considering these areas, you might have a good idea of which company will be the best one to supply your car service while you are in the city at an event or business meeting. The worst that could happen really in the process is that you get to the airport and are picked up by an unpleasant company with uncomfortable vehicles. If this happens, you can call the company, cancel service, and ask the hotel where you are staying if they have any suggestions. To avoid being picked up by a disreputable company; you might consider calling the hotel from the start. They likely have numerous car service companies come through, and they may be able to give you some names into which you should look.

Source: http://www.articlesnatch.com/Article/Finding-A-Car-Service-That-Will-Work-For-Your-Needs/4438629

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Saturday, February 16, 2013

Police track elusive figure in soccer match-fixing

FILE - In this Monday, May 28, 2012 file photo Italian prosecutor Roberto Di Martino talks to the media during a press conference he held in Cremona, Northern Italy. Two years ago, a curious case landed on the desk of Italian prosecutor Roberto Di Martino in the town of Cremona. Five players on the local third-division club Cremonese fell ill after a match against Paganese. One of the sick players got into an auto accident and club management reported the mysterious circumstances to police. (AP Photo/Simone Spada, Lapresse)

FILE - In this Monday, May 28, 2012 file photo Italian prosecutor Roberto Di Martino talks to the media during a press conference he held in Cremona, Northern Italy. Two years ago, a curious case landed on the desk of Italian prosecutor Roberto Di Martino in the town of Cremona. Five players on the local third-division club Cremonese fell ill after a match against Paganese. One of the sick players got into an auto accident and club management reported the mysterious circumstances to police. (AP Photo/Simone Spada, Lapresse)

FILE - In this Sept. 26, 2011 file photo Chris Eaton, FIFA head of Security, addresses a press conference in Harare, Zimbawe. Soccer is falling under a cloud of suspicion as never before, sullied by a multibillion-dollar web of match-fixing that is staining increasingly larger parts of the world's most popular sport. "Football is in a disastrous state," said Chris Eaton, director of sport integrity at the International Centre for Sport Security (ICSS). "(The) fixing of matches for criminal gambling fraud purposes is absolutely endemic worldwide ... arrogantly happening daily.? (AP Photo/Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi, File)

(AP) ? At 5:45 a.m. on Nov. 4, 2011, when early risers would have been sipping espressos and buttering toast, a man dressed in black disembarked at Milan's Malpensa Airport after a 13-hour trip from Asia aboard a Singapore Airlines flight.

Italian court documents show he stayed in the country just 6 hours and 30 minutes, never left the airport, and then boarded a return flight to Singapore.

Why such a quick hop across the globe?

Italian authorities believe it was to deliver bribe money. They allege the suspected courier, who was under surveillance, delivered information and cash on behalf of a crime syndicate that fixes soccer matches.

___

EDITOR'S NOTE: This story is part of a six-month, multiformat AP examination of how organized crime is corrupting soccer through match-fixing.

___

Italy, a four-time World Cup-winning football power, has become so blighted by match-fixing that Premier Mario Monti has even suggested halting the professional game for two to three years to clean it up.

Italian prosecutors investigating dozens of league and cup games they say were fixed have followed a trail back to a figure who is thought to be in Singapore. In documents laying out their findings, prosecutors alleged that 48-year-old Tan Seet Eng is the boss of a crime syndicate that allegedly made millions betting on rigged Italian games between 2008 and late 2011, through bribing players, referees and club officials.

Italian authorities have issued an arrest warrant for Tan and list him as their No. 1 suspect, but they have been unable to take him into custody.

"Tan Seet Eng, nicknamed Dan, surfaces in all the European investigations examined, including the Italian one, so therefore he constitutes a common thread that links each criminal gang together," prosecutors stated in a 340-page court document detailing their investigation, which has been leaked to Italian news media. "He directs the aforementioned criminal gang."

Italian authorities have about 150 people under investigation, including Tan, but have yet to indict any of them, prosecutor Roberto Di Martino told The Associated Press last month. Italian arrest warrants cannot be served on Tan while he is in Asia.

Di Martino, who is leading the investigation from Cremona in northern Italy, said Tan will "almost certainly" go on trial in Italy, but likely in absentia. Italy has no extradition treaty with Singapore, but the Italian Justice Ministry said the Asian city-state could still send over a wanted suspect under "friendly terms" if it chooses. Di Martino said relations with Singapore authorities "have not been great. We had hoped for more."

"At first we actually thought they could be brought to Italy, but that calculation was wrong," Di Martino said. "If Tan Seet Eng goes somewhere else, he could be extradited, as long as there's an extradition treaty with that country."

In Singapore, police spokeswoman Chu Guat Chiew said authorities there are reviewing the information submitted by the Italians before deciding what to do, adding: "So far, Dan Tan Seet Eng has not been charged with any offence in Singapore."

Police have questioned dozens of people in Italy, searched the homes of players and coaches, and descended on the Italian national squad's training camp early one morning in May 2012. But Di Martino said the investigation has turned up only limited information about Tan.

"We don't know much about him. We don't know if he's a legitimate businessman involved in illegal activity, or if he's involved in money laundering," Di Martino said. "We're only interested up until a certain point; then it's Singapore's problem."

Much of what European law enforcement authorities have learned about Tan comes from a former associate, Wilson Raj Perumal. A match fixer, also from Singapore, he was arrested in Finland in February 2011, convicted and sentenced to two years in prison for bribing Finnish league players. To Finnish police, Perumal portrayed the syndicate as a well-oiled and structured business, financed and led from Singapore.

The syndicate mainly places bets in China, Perumal said, according to a transcript of his May 18, 2011, police interview obtained by the AP. He said the group fixed "tens of matches around the world" ? in Europe, Africa, the Middle East and the Americas ? from 2008 to 2010. He estimated the group's total profits after expenses at "several millions of euros, maybe 5-6 million" ? $7 million-$8 million.

The syndicate leader decides which matches to fix and how much to wager, organizes the betting and the drops of bribe money, Perumal said in the transcript. He later identified that leader as Tan, according to the Italian court documents. Italian police traveled to Finland to interview Perumal, Di Martino told the AP. Perumal declined AP requests for an interview.

Perumal told the Finnish police that money was transported from Singapore in couriers' pockets or on their bodies. Italian prosecutors suspect the quick trip to Milan's airport was one such drop. The suspected courier's checked luggage weighed 9 kilograms in Singapore but 8 kilograms when he flew back. They said the suspected courier likely delivered "a sum of money hidden in some sort of container, which was destined to finance the organization's illicit activity."

AP could not contact Tan in Singapore. Five phone numbers identified as his by Italian prosecutors were disconnected. No one answered the door at an apartment the Italians listed as his address. Mail and flyers stuffed under the door and in the door frame suggested no one had been there for a while.

The New Paper in Singapore reported that it spoke to Tan in 2011.

"Why I'm suddenly described as a match-fixer I don't know. I'm innocent," it quoted him as saying. It quoted Tan as saying he was briefly involved in a business venture that Perumal started, "but I took my name out of the company after I smelled something fishy."

"Maybe that's why he had named me to investigators," he continued. "Anybody involved with Wilson gets bad luck. He has a criminal record. It's not good for Singaporeans to do business with him."

Perumal alleged to Italian investigators that Tan places syndicate wagers on fixed games using legal, Asia-based online betting sites ? he named three of them ? via intermediaries in China. In Shenzhen, a southern China city adjacent to Hong Kong, a 1 million euro wager on a game in Serie A, the top Italian league, can be placed this way in a couple of minutes, he told the Italians. That method matches those described by betting experts.

Investigators say such gambling operations hire workers to rapidly place thousands of small online bets ? maybe no more than $1,000 each ? on fixed games. The scattershot of small bets, rather than several large ones, can help hide fixes from monitoring companies in Europe that use computer software to look for unusual wagering.

"They employ kids and they employ people in Singapore and Malaysia to do that for them," said Chris Eaton, former head of security for FIFA, soccer's governing body. "They virtually have a sweatshop, if you like, of people with a large number of credit cards and laptop computers, and they punch those things when they are given the green light."

"Dan Tan comes with very good Oriental connections, meaning he's not running as a single financier. He has an organization behind him," said Eaton, now director of sport integrity at the International Centre for Sport Security, a Qatar-backed group funding efforts to research the extent of match-fixing and ways to combat it.

Eaton's successor as FIFA security director, Ralf Mutschke, said last year that the news media have overstated Tan's alleged role in match-fixing, and that he probably isn't "as involved as everyone is thinking" and has only "symbolic importance."

"But you give him a name, so everyone is talking about Dan Tan, and Dan Tan syndicates, and Dan Tan here and Dan Tan there," Mutschke said. "If we kill Dan Tan then you will have no match-fixing? No, I think it's not as easy as this."

___

Leicester reported from Paris. Justin Bergman in Singapore and AP Sports Writer Graham Dunbar in Zurich contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-02-15-The%20Dirty%20Game-The%20Money%20Man/id-241a5f66d741436b982a74c514d8d239

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This Stay-at-Home Mom Gave Obama a Tougher Interview Than 60 Minutes (Atlantic Politics Channel)

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Friday, February 15, 2013

How to Build Your Own Quantum Entanglement Experiment, Part 2 (of 2)

In my last post, I scrounged the parts for a very crude, but very cool, experiment you can do in your basement to demonstrate quantum entanglement. To my knowledge, it?s the cheapest and simplest such experiment ever done. It doesn?t give publishable results, but, to appropriate a line from Samuel Johnson, a homebrew entanglement experiment is ?like a dog?s walking on his hinder legs. It is not done well; but you are surprised to find it done at all.?

As a warm-up exercise, I sandwich my source of entangled photons?a disk of radioactive sodium-22?between my two Geiger counters (see diagram and photo below) and leave the system to run overnight, measuring how often the Geigers click at the same time. If gamma-ray photons are indeed emerging two by two in opposite directions, the coincidence rate should vary strongly when I change the alignment of the two Geigers. And that is what I see.

When the Geigers are pointing straight at each other, each clicks about 900 times per minute and both do so in unison about 4 times per minute. This is about 40% greater than the expected rate of accidental coincidences. There are various subtleties in separating accidental and genuine coincidence rates and in estimating statistical errors, but the signal I observe is something like 10 standard deviations above the noise. When I rotate one of the Geigers out of alignment, the coincidence rate drops precipitously. For a 25? angle, it only about 15% greater than the accidental rate, which is still statistically significant, if barely. For 45? and 90?, it is equal to the expected accidental rate. So I can tentatively conclude I?m seeing pairs of gammas?one or two of them per minute! This is no mean accomplishment given how crude the equipment is.

Just because the gammas emerge in pairs doesn?t mean they are entangled, though. To check for entanglement, I measure the photons? polarization with a technique called Compton polarimetry. A pair of aluminum cubes bought at OnlineMetals.com serve as gamma-ray prisms, scattering photons in directions that depend on their polarization. The two gammas produced by the annihilation of an antielectron and electron are linearly polarized at right angles to each other, so they should scatter off the aluminum in perpendicular directions.

Here?s where the physics gets spooky. Each individual photon scatters in a random direction, yet the random direction one photon takes is related to the random direction its partner does. The gammas act in synchrony. How can they do that, if they?re truly random? Einstein concluded that the photons either are not truly random or are acting on each other at a distance.

In a first attempt to observe this effect, I sandwich the sodium-22 disk in between the two cubes and put a Geiger on one face of each cube (see photo below). I start by pointing the Geigers in the same direction and letting them sit overnight to count the coincidences. In the morning, I move one Geiger to a different face of its cube, so that the two detectors are now perpendicular to the other, and leave the system to run all day. I continue cycling through different ways to align the detectors either parallel or perpendicular to each other. Entanglement should betray itself as an asymmetry in the coincidence rate.

And indeed that?s what I see. About one coincidence occurs per minute on average, and the rate is consistently greater when the Geigers are perpendicular. It looks like entanglement in action!

A wise graduate student would hesitate to show this result to his or her faculty advisor, though. The perpendicular rate stands a couple of standard deviations above the expected accidental-coincidence rate, but the parallel rate swims in the noise. So the asymmetry might well be a fluke of statistics or a subtle bias in the setup.

To improve on the experiment, I need to beat down the accidental rate?in particular, the rate caused by gammas traveling straight from the sodium to the Geiger counter rather than scattering off the aluminum. I enclose the radioactive sodium in a so-called collimator: a lead storage canister in which I drilled a 1/2-inch hole at either end. A couple of hundred gammas per minute leak out through each hole, forming a pair of gamma-ray beams. The lead squelches off-axis radiation by a factor of about four.

With the collimator, the coincidence rate drops by a factor of 10, but now exceeds the predicted accidental rate for both orientations. The perpendicular rate is the higher of the two, again as the Compton-polarimetry theory predicts for entangled photons.

This still isn?t anything to call the Nobel committee about. At best, it implies the detection of one entangled pair of photons every 20 minutes, and with such a meager trickle, who knows what subtle bias might be operating. What was iffy for the pioneering Bleuler and Bradt experiment can only be more so for my apparatus. Then again, all I?m seeking is a suggestive demonstration, not a research-grade system.

A possible next step would be to special-order a stronger sodium-22 source, which would bring the particle rates in my experiment up to the level of Bleuler and Bradt?s, at the price of posing a greater radiation hazard. Another idea would be to try scatterers besides aluminum cubes. Beyond that, however, I think you exhaust the el-cheapo options and have to dig deeper into your wallet, starting with replacing the Geigers counters with scintillation counters, as Wu and Shaknov used. These are more efficient at picking up radiation; create shorter electrical pulses for each particle they detect, which reduces the probability of accidental coincidences; and measure particle energy, which would help to sift out annihilation-produced photons. But such instruments are pricier and fussier.

A useful guide to further refinements is Leonard Kaskay?s Ph.D. dissertation from 1972. A student of Wu, Kasday systematically went through the possible sources of error: multiple scattering, geometric misalignment, unwanted photons, and more. He was able to achieve enough precision to show that the gammas violated a mathematical inequality derived by theorist John S. Bell, confirming that he was seeing spooky action at a distance rather than some mundane effect.

These kinds of experiments are notoriously tricky, so please share your thoughts and advice?not to mention your attempts to reproduce! Wait till your friends hear that you?re an amateur quantum physicist in your spare time.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=2be677b0372e5b96c52355fa82b474b2

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Does Kim Kardashian Deserve A-list Treatment?

Kim Kardashian is one of the most popular celebrities in the world, but is she truly considered A-list? 

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/does-kim-kardashian-deserve-list-treatment/1-a-521929?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Adoes-kim-kardashian-deserve-list-treatment-521929

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Adele Denies Chris Brown Grammy Showdown

'Chris Brown and I were complimenting each other,' Adele tweets.
By Gil Kaufman


Adele and Chris Brown at the 55th Grammy Awards
Photo: Getty Images

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1701903/adele-chris-brown-grammy-picture.jhtml

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The Right?s ?Liberal Media Bias? Crutch (OliverWillisLikeKryptoniteToStupid)

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Thursday, February 14, 2013

Report: 46 Congressmen still in student debt

Many congressmen, the people we are trusting to pull our country out of debt, are still in debt themselves.

According to a new report by the Center for Responsive Politics, 46 Congressmen- five senators and 41 House members- are still paying off student loans. Altogether, Congress owes somewhere between $1.8 million and $4.3 million in student loans. CRP explained it couldn?t calculate the exact amount,?because members of Congress are allowed to report debts in ranges.?

The lawmaker in the most debt is Rep. Raul Ruiz (D-CA) who owes between $115,001 and $300,000 in student loans.
While at least 13 of the congressmen listed loans for their children?s education, many are still paying off loans for their own education.

This student debt problem is only getting worse. In 2008, only 30 congressmen were paying student loans between $970,000 and $2.4 million in total. Congressmen aren?t alone: the national student loan debt has almost?breached?$1 trillion, even beating out credit card debt.

This should terrify young people who are graduating from college in thousands of dollars in debt. If our leaders can?t even pay off their debt, how can we?

Our own commander-in-chief didn?t finish paying off his student loans until 2004.

Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL), who just recently paid off his student loans from law school, addressed the student debt problem in the GOP response to the State of the Union Tuesday night.

?When I finished school, I owed over $100,000 dollars in student loans, a debt I paid off just a few months ago,? Rubio said. ?Today, many graduates face massive student loans. We must give students more information on the costs and benefits of the student loans they?re taking out.?

Last year, Congress voted to extend keeping interest rates low for federal student loans for another year, and on June 30 they will have to decide whether to renew it again.

Republican Congressmen have demanded Obama find a long-term solution to this growing student debt problem rather than rely on this quick fix.

The GOP actually wants to put an end to the federal direct student loan program altogether and is promoting for-profit universities as a more attractive option.

Source: http://redalertpolitics.com/2013/02/14/report-46-congressmen-still-in-student-debt/

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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Air Canada joins war on human physiology

What Air Canada has just inflicted on its passengers with new tight fit seating for long haul economy passengers isn?t wrong, or unusual. But in a stand out airline when it came to courtesy and comfort, it is a crying shame.

It is always sad to see a carrier with a great reputation for courteous and comfortable service like Air Canada set about screwing its economy passengers into even smaller seats.

To see the full horror of the situation you need to go to Australian Business Traveller and study the graphics.

There is a very awkward contest in play in the Air Canada decision, and that of many other carriers.

This is the contest between the upsizing of humans as a result of better nutrition and health care, which is running kneecaps first into ever decreasing seat sizes determined by the algorithms managements apply to the available revenue per unit of distance, which comes from dividing operating costs per hour of an airliner by the number of seats that can be legally crammed into it.

The really awesomely bad news in this is that the legal load limits of most international airliners, as determined by emergency evacuation criteria that have to be met for type certification to be granted, are rarely approached by even the most uncomfortable configurations now flying, such as the 377 seats in an AirAsiaX A330, which could theoretically fly with 440 even tinier seats and minimised lavatories and galleys.

And there are other factors. The days of airlines being able to make most of their money out of premium fares seem to be drawing shorter. On the one hand the rise of affordable discretionary air travel, which has been facilitated by the cost reductions of higher density airliners as well as growth in average spending power, has been proportionately greater than the increase in business travel activity.

Multiply the seats at premium fares in many airline configurations and compare the total revenue available to that of the economy seats on the same flight and it is usually the case that the flight, if full, would make most of its money from the back of the plane than the front, or the upper level, depending on the airliner in question.

And business travel no longer necessarily means a business class seat. If often means an economy class seat at a higher than discount fare which allows for better timed flights and more flexible ticketing conditions, and if one is indulged, something better than a biscuit or mystery protein object served up in a self wrap garbage bag.

This rise of the hard nosed approach to business travel by many government departments and corporations around the world has worked against anything resembling comfortable travel as airlines succumb to the pack-em-in tendency, including into pseudo business class confinements like those flown on intra-European routes by so called full service carriers.

Price is king in corporate as well as discretionary travel, and especially so in so called managed travel accounts, where a large enterprise, such as major retailer or bank, will do its best to screw the airline back when it comes to trading its custom for price.

There are many voices in this situation that pontificate about cheapskates getting what they pay for. Sometimes those voices are right. But sometimes airlines exploit that situation to downgrade the flying experience but not the fare, citing cost pressures, but also exaggerating them, since they can say whatever they like and keep the nitty gritty figures to themselves as commercial-in-confidence.

Air Canada?s reduction of seat pitch in long haul economy in a 777? to within 5cms of what is legal in a Ryanair 737-800 is painful when comparing a typical seven to 15 hour sector on its network with a 60-150 minute flight on an intra-European flight.

But Air Canada isn?t alone. And in the brutal economics of airline operations in general, it probably isn?t wrong. It is just a crying shame.

Source: http://blogs.crikey.com.au/planetalking/2013/02/13/air-canada-joins-war-on-human-physiology/

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Latin America would like a Latin pope, odds slim

MEXICO CITY (AP) ? Latin America is home to the world's largest Roman Catholic population, but hopes that the next pope will come from the region appear faint, experts said Monday.

The predominance of Europeans on the College of Cardinals means that the odds are stacked against a Latin American pope, even though the names of a number of high-ranking churchmen from the region have been bandied about, analysts said. The 118-member college, with 62 European members and only 19 from Latin America, will elect a successor for Pope Benedict XVI, who announced Monday he will resign due to age.

Still, hope springs eternal.

"Since Latin America is a fortress for Christianity during these rough times, it would be healthy for us to get a Latin American pope," said Fernando Reyes, 57, a professional violinist, who prays daily at the La Merced church in Santiago, Chile.

Crossing himself before leaving the church, Reyes noted, "I would be proud. We've had Italian, Polish, German. It's time for a Latin American."

Brazilian Cardinals Joao Braz de Aviz, a 65-year-old who has earned praise as head of the Vatican's office for religious congregations, and Odilo Pedro Scherer, the 63-year-old archbishop of Sao Paulo, have been mentioned as possibilities.

Other Latin Americans posited as possible popes include Argentina's Leonardo Sandri and Jorge Mario Bergoglio, the Archbishop of Buenos Aires. Sandri is head of the Vatican's office for Eastern rite churches. He earned fame as the "voice" of Pope John Paul II when the pontiff lost the ability to speak because of his Parkinson's disease.

Also mentioned in 2005, when Benedict was chosen, was Honduran Archbishop Oscar Andres Rodriguez Maradiaga.

But it is unclear whether any one of them could gain traction.

"To see the possibilities for a Latin American pope, you have to look at the makeup of the College of Cardinals," said Bernardo Barranco, an expert at Mexico's Center for Religious Studies. "From the get-go, I see it as difficult for a Latin American ... because the college has not only been "re-Europeanized," it has also been "re-Italianized."

While some see Latin America's estimated 40 percent of the world's 1.2-billion Catholic population as a bulwark of the faith, the church is also facing challenges in the region from evangelical churches.

In Mexico, the percentage of the population who identify themselves as Catholics dropped from over 90 percent in the 1980s to 84 percent in 2010, the latest year for which data is available.

In Brazil, home to a number of charismatic or evangelical churches, the drop has been even more precipitous, from 84 percent in 1995 to 68 percent in 2010.

"In numerical terms, Latin America is majority Catholic, in broad terms, but these aren't the best times for the church," said Barranco. "On the contrary, it is going through a severe crisis the like of which it has never seen before."

Still, some see Latin America's still-large Catholic population as a decisive force.

"It would be a central argument for electing a Latin American pope, because the future of the church is in the Southern Hemisphere," said R. Andrew Chesnut, a professor of Religious Studies at the Virginia Commonwealth University. "I am not going to make any predictions, but I think there will be a contingent of European cardinals who would support an African or Latin American candidate."

For Rosita Mejia, 44, who has sold religious items for 25 years outside the La Merced church, the next pope's country of origin is less important than his vigor, energy and proximity to the people, none of which were distinguishing characteristics of Benedict VXI.

"In five years, only one person has asked me for a Benedict prayer card. In comparison hundreds of people have asked for John Paul II," Benedict's more charismatic predecessor, she said. "I would like for the next pope to be younger, and have more time to travel the world, and perhaps come to Chile like John Paul did."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/latin-america-latin-pope-odds-slim-000337269.html

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US plan aimed at keeping China out of US networks

(AP) ? The White House cybersecurity executive order, to be unveiled Wednesday by President Barack Obama's top security officials, will be the most comprehensive plan yet for confronting electronic attacks on America's computer networks, or at least a good-faith effort amid an alarming tide in industrial espionage in the past year that experts blame mostly on China.

The strategy is expected to urge businesses to enforce tougher standards to protect online commerce and direct U.S. intelligence agencies to share even classified threat data with companies considered vital to the U.S. economy, such as transportation and banking.

While symbolic, the plan leaves practical questions unanswered: Should a business be required to tell the government if it's been hacked and U.S. interests are at stake? Can you sue your bank or water treatment facility if those companies don't take reasonable steps to protect you? And if a private company's systems are breached, should the government swoop in to stop the attacks ? and pick up the tab?

The process has exposed how difficult and complex the issue is, turning the long-awaited executive order into a bureaucratic scramble aimed at showing countries like China and Iran that the U.S. takes seriously the protection of consumer secrets. It's been an intensive effort by White House staff and industry lobbyists wary of government intervention but fearful about their bottom line.

"I think in general it means (the U.S.) will advance the case of cybersecurity, and that's important," said Paul Smocer, the head of the technology policy division at The Financial Services Roundtable, a powerful lobbying group that represents the nation's biggest banks. "How much teeth versus how much gum there is, we'll see."

The cyberthreat to the U.S. has been heavily debated since the 1990s, when much of American commerce shifted online and critical systems began to rely increasingly on networked computers. Security experts began to warn of looming disaster, including threats that terrorists could cut off a city's water supply or shut down electricity. But what's emerged in recent years, according to cyber experts, is the constant pilfering of America's intellectual property by U.S. competitors.

"We have, as the U.S. government, set up lawn chairs, told the burglars where the silver is in the bottom drawer, and opened up the case of beer and watched them do it," Rep. Mike Rogers, the Republican chairman of the House intelligence committee, told CBS' "Face the Nation" this week.

The U.S. has been preparing a new intelligence estimate that details cyber espionage as a growing economic problem. One official told the Associated Press last week that the estimate was expected to cite more directly a role by the Chinese government and favor aggressive action against the Chinese government. The official was not authorized to discuss the classified report and spoke only on condition of anonymity.

Richard Clarke, a former White House cybersecurity adviser during the Clinton administration, said that executive orders and intelligence estimates aside, the U.S. in 15 years of debate on the subject still hasn't answered the very practical questions of who exactly is in charge of stopping a cyberattack on commercial networks and at what point the government should deploy its own resources.

___

Associated Press writer Lolita C. Baldor contributed to this report.

___

Follow Anne Flaherty on Twitter at https://twitter.com/AnneKFlaherty

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-02-12-Cybersecurity/id-b8ff4e468b1b4021b6ebc14ff6659ee6

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Brighton Local Guide To Supermarkets

Brighton is a splendid looking town which is located along the southern part of the British coastline. It lies in the county city of Sussex and was previously home to a small fishing village, but has grown to become one of the most visited tourist destinations in the world. The city of Brighton is just a few hours away from London which enables travelers and locals to come and spend a few days here. There are many places and attractions that make this city appealing to the people who visit here and, if you take a vacation here, there are several activities that you can take part in to keep busy. One of the main reasons why so many people visit Brighton is the large number of shopping options the city has to offer to tourists and locals. One of the criteria that separates the shopping in Brighton from that in other cities is that it has a large number of independent stores and boutiques. You will find small scale designer stores all over the town and, no matter which part of Brighton you may be staying in, you will never be far away from a shopping centre. Mentioned below are some of the best shopping places Brighton has to offer. This Brighton Local guide outlines the best supermarkets for food shopping in the city.

Tesco Express

The Tesco Express is located at 5 Jubilee Street in Brighton. It is one of the largest supermarket chains across United Kingdom and, here, travelers and locals can find everything that is needed under one roof.

99p Stores

The 99p stores are located at 27-31 London Road in Brighton. These are interesting specialty stores, as they offer all items for below one pound. It is a fabulous experience to shop here.

Taj the Grocer

The Taj Grocer is situated on Western Road in the city of Brighton. This grocery store is known for having some of the best organic produce and vegetables in town and, as an added bonus, is also open late into the night.

Marks & Spencer Simply Food

The Marks and Spencer chain of stores and supermarkets has been famous in London for years, and it has now spread to almost all major parts of the world. This chain of food supply stores aims at selling the best ingredients and vegetables that can be made available easily. It is located at Brighton Station on Queens Road.

Waitrose

The Waitrose is located at 130-134 Western Road in Brighton, and this supermarket is one of the finest grocery shopping centers in Brighton. It has everything that one would need under the sun, for both shopping and cooking.

Cost Cutter

Cost Cutter is another great chain of supermarkets, and this one in particular specializes in cold cuts and meats. They have the best quality of sausages, ham, bacon and salami. They are located at 6 Pelham Terrace in Brighton.

The above mentioned supermarkets are the best according to this Brighton local guide. A trip here will have you fascinated with the huge variety of items that they have, and knowledge of the best places to purchase food items for cooking and creating meals is ideal for longer vacations, as well as for those who live in the city. Supermarkets such as Tesco, Cost Cutter and Marks and Spencer Simply Food, among the others listed, are the best in Brighton.

Source: http://www.articlesnatch.com/Article/Brighton-Local-Guide-To-Supermarkets/4431937

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UVU golf: Dart tied for 10th at Thunderbird Invite

ST. GEORGE ? Utah Valley University golfer Michael Dart was two-over par through four holes Monday in the opening round of the SUU Pat Hicks Thunderbird Invitational but shot two-under on his final 14 holes to finish at even par.

Dart sits in a tie for 10th heading into Tuesday's final round at the par-72, 6,879-yard Sunbrook Golf Club.

Dart shot a 34 on the front nine and 38 on the back in recording the even-par 72. Teammate Corey Eccles is tied for 19th after shooting a two-over 74 (37-37).

As a team, the Wolverines are in sixth place, one shot behind Utah State and Denver and seven shots back of second-place Seattle.

College of Charleston leads the tournament at 286.

"With the winter we've had we are still knocking off a lot of rust," UVU men's golf coach Chris Curran said. "Even though we are in sixth, we are still within striking distance of a very solid finish."

Behind Dart and Eccles, Mason Casper (76) is tied for 36th, while Brayden Eriksen (77) and Stratton Schulz (80) are tied for 50th and 72nd, respectively.

Four players are tied for first after shooting opening-round 70s, while five others are tied for fifth after shooting 71s.

Jay Hinton is a sports information assistant at Utah Valley University.

Source: http://www.deseretnews.com/article/865572918/UVU-golf-Dart-tied-for-10th-at-Thunderbird-Invite.html

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Big Brother, Big Data and The Forked Path Revisited

The technological ecosystem in which political power operates tends to mark out the possibility space for what kinds of political arrangements, good and bad, exist within that space. Orwell?s Oceania and its sister tyrannies were imagined in what was the age of big, centralized media. Here the Party had under its control not only the older printing press, having the ability to craft and doctor, at will, anything created using print from newspapers, to government documents, to novels. It also controlled the newer mediums of radio and film, and, as Orwell imagined, would twist those technologies around backwards to serve as spying machines aimed at everyone.

This week witnessed yet another examples of the distortions caused by the 9/11 Wars on the ideals that underlie the American system of government and the ballooning of the powers and reach of the national security state. ?In a 16 page Justice Department memo obtained by the NBC News reporter, Michael Isikoff, legal justifications were outlined for the extra-judicial killings of American citizens deemed to pose a ?significant threat? to the United States. The problem here is who gets to define what such a threat is. The absence of any independent judicial process outside of the executive branch that can determine whether the rights of an American citizen can be stripped, including the condition of being considered innocent before being proved guilty amounts to an enormous increase in executive power that will likely survive the Obama Administration. This is not really news in that we already knew that extra-judicial killings (in the case of one known suspect, Anwar al-Awlaki,?at least) had already taken place. What was not known was just how sweeping, permanent, and without clear legal boundaries these claims of an executive right to kill American citizens absent the proof of guilt actually were. Now we know.

This would be disturbing information if it stood alone by itself, but it does not stand alone.?What we have seen since the the attacks on 9/11 is the spread of similar disturbing trends which have only been accelerated by technological changes such as the growth of Big-Data and robotics. Given the news, I thought it might be a good idea to reblog a post I had written back in September where I tried to detail these developments. What follows is a largely unedited version of that original post.

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The technological ecosystem in which political power operates tends to mark out the possibility space for what kinds of political arrangements, good and bad, exist within that space. Orwell?s Oceania and its sister tyrannies were imagined in what was the age of big, centralized media. Here the Party had under its control not only the older printing press, having the ability to craft and doctor, at will, anything created using print from newspapers, to government documents, to novels. It also controlled the newer mediums of radio and film, and, as Orwell imagined, would twist those technologies around backwards to serve as spying machines aimed at everyone.

The questions, to my knowledge, Orwell never asked was what was the Party to do with all that data? How was it to store, sift through, make sense of, or locate locate actual threats within it the ?yottabytes of information that would be gathered by recording almost every conversation, filming or viewing almost every movement, of its citizens lives? In other words, the Party would have ran into the problem of Big Data. Many of Orwellian developments since 9/11 have come in the form of the state trying to ride the wave of the Big Data tsunami unleashed with the rise of the internet, an attempt create it?s own form of electronic panopticon.

In their book?Top Secret America: The Rise of the New American Security State, Dana Priest, and ,William Arkin, of the Washington Post present a frightening picture of the surveillance and covert state that has mushroomed in the United States since 9/11. A vast network of endeavors which has grown to dwarf, in terms of cummulative numbers of programs and operations, similar efforts, during the unarguably much more dangerous Cold War. (TS 12)

Theirs? is not so much a vision of an America of dark security services controlled behind the scenes by a sinister figure like J. Edgar Hoover, as it is one of complexity gone wild. Priest and Arkin paint a picture of Top Secret America as a vast data sucking machine, vacuuming up every morsel of information with the intention of correctly ?connecting the dots?, (150) in the hopes of preventing another tragedy like 9/11.

So much money was poured into intelligence gathering after 9/11, in so many different organizations, that no one, not the President, nor the Director of the CIA, nor any other official has a full grasp of what is going on. The security state, like the rest of the American government, has become reliant on private contractors who rake in stupendous profits. The same corruption that can be found elsewhere in Washington is found here. Employees of the government and the private sector spin round and round in a revolving door between the Washington connections brought by participation in political establishment followed by big-time money in the ballooning world of private security and intelligence. Priest quotes one American intelligence official ?who had the balls to describe the insectous relationship between government and private security firms as ?a self-licking ice cream cone?. (TS 198)

The flood of money that inundated the intelligence field in after ?9/11 has created what Priest and Arkin call an ?alternative geography? companies doing covert work for the government that exist in huge complexes, some of which are large enough to contain their very own ?cities?- shopping centers, athletic facilities, and the like. To these are added mammoth government run complexes some known and others unknown.

Our modern day Winston Smiths, who work for such public and private intelligence services, are tasked not with the mind numbing work of doctoring history, but with the equally superfluous job of repackaging the very same information that had been produced by another individual in another organization public or private each with little hope that they would know that the other was working on the same damned thing. All of this would be a mere tragic waste of public money that could be better invested in other things, but it goes beyond that by threatening the very freedoms that these efforts are meant to protect.

Perhaps the pinnacle of the government?s Orwellian version of a Google FaceBook mashup is the gargantuan supercomputer data center in Bluffdale Nevada built and run by the premier spy agency in the age of the internet- the National Security Administration or NSA. As described by James Bamford for?Wired Magazine:

In the process?and for the first time since Watergate and the other scandals of the Nixon administration?the NSA has turned its surveillance apparatus on the US and its citizens. It has established listening posts throughout the nation to collect and sift through billions of email messages and phone calls, whether they originate within the country or overseas. It has created a supercomputer of almost unimaginable speed to look for patterns and unscramble codes. Finally, the agency has begun building a place to store all the trillions of words and thoughts and whispers captured in its electronic net.

It had been thought that domestic spying by the NSA, under a super-secret program with the Carl Saganesque name, Stellar Wind, had ended during the G.W. Bush administration, but if the whistleblower, William Binney, interviewed in this?chilling piece?by Laura Poitras of the New York Times, is to be believed, the certainly unconstitutional program remains very much in existence.

The bizarre thing about this program is just how wasteful it is. After all, don?t private companies, such as FaceBook and Google not already possess the very same kinds of data trails that would be provided by such obviously unconstitutional efforts like those at Bluffdale? Why doesn?t the US government just subpoena internet and telecommunications companies who already track almost everything we do for commercial purposes? The US government, of course, has already tried to turn the internet into a tool of intelligence gathering, most notably, with the stalled?Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Intelligence Act, or CISPA?, and perhaps it is building Bluffdale in anticipation that such legislation will fail, that however it is changed might not be to its liking, or because it doesn?t want to be bothered with the need to obtain warrants or with constitutional niceties such as our protection against unreasonable search and seizure.

If such behemoth surveillance instruments fulfill the role of the telescreens and hidden microphones in Orwell?s 1984, then the role the only group in the novel whose name actually reflects what it is- The Spies ? children who watch their parents for unorthodox behavior and turn them in, is taken today by the American public itself. In post 9/11 America it is, local law enforcement, neighbors, and passersby who are asked to ?report suspicious activity?. People who actually do report suspicious activity have their observations and photographs recorded in an ominous sounding data base that Orwell himself might have named called The Guardian. (TS 144)

As Priest writes:

Guardian stores the profiles of tens of thousands of Americans and legal residents who are not accused of any crime. Most are not even suspected of one. What they have done is appear, to a town sheriff, a traffic cop, or even a neighbor to be acting suspiciously?. (TS 145)

Such information is reported to, and initially investigated by, the personnel in another sort of data collector- the ?fusion centers? which had been created in every state after 9/11.These fusion centers are often located in rural states whose employees have literally nothing to do. They tend to be staffed by persons without intelligence backgrounds, and who instead hailed from law enforcement, because those with even the bare minimum of foreign intelligence experience were sucked up by the behemoth intelligence organizations, both private and public, that have spread like mould around Washington D.C.

Into this vacuum of largely non-existent threats came ?consultants? such as Montijo Walid Shoebat, who lectured fusion center staff on the fantastical plot of Muslims to establish Sharia Law in the United States. (TS 271-272). A story as wild as the concocted boogeymen of Goldstein and the Brotherhood in Orwell?s dystopia.

It isn?t only Mosques, or Islamic groups that find themselves spied upon by overeager local law enforcement and sometimes highly unprofessional private intelligence firms. Completely non-violent, political groups, such as ones in my native Pennsylvania, have become the target of ?investigations?. In 2009 the private intelligence firm the Institute for Terrorism Research and Response compiled reports for state officials on a wide range of peaceful political groups that included: ?The Pennsylvania Tea Party Patriots Coalition, the Libertarian Movement, anti-war protesters, animal-rights groups, and an environmentalist dressed up as Santa Claus and handing out coal-filled stockings? (TS 146). A list that is just about politically broad enough to piss everybody off.

Like the fusion centers, or as part of them, data rich crime centers such as the Memphis Real Time Crime Center are popping up all over the United States. Local police officers now suck up streams of data about the environments in which they operate and are able to pull that data together to identify suspects- now by scanning licence plates, but soon enough, as in Arizona, where the Maricopa County Sheriff?s office was creating up to 9,000 biometric, digital profiles a month (TS 131) by scanning human faces from a distance.

Sometimes crime centers used the information gathered for massive sweeps arresting over a thousand people at a clip. The result was an overloaded justice and prison system that couldn?t handle the caseload (TS 144), and no doubt, as was the case in territories occupied by the US military, an even more alienated and angry local population.

From one perspective Big Data would seem to make torture more not less likely as all information that can be gathered from suspects, whatever their station, becomes important in a way it wasn?t before, a piece in a gigantic, electronic puzzle. Yet, technological developments outside of Big Data, appear to point in the direction away from torture as a way of gathering information.

?Controlled torture?, the phrase burns in my mouth, has always been the consequence of the unbridgeable space between human minds. Torture attempts to break through the wall of privacy we possess as individuals through physical and mental coercion. Big Data, whether of the commercial or security variety, hates privacy because it gums up the capacity to gather more and more information for Big Data to become what so it desires- Even Bigger Data. The dilemma for the state, or in the case of the Inquisition, the organization, is that once the green light has been given to human sadism it is almost impossible to control it. Torture, or the knowledge of torture inflicted on loved ones, breeds more and more enemies.

Torture?s ham fisted and outwardly brutal methods today are going hopelessly out of fashion. They are the equivalent of rifling through someone?s trash or breaking into their house to obtain useful information about them. Much better to have them tell you what you need to know because they ?like? you.

In that vein, Priest describes some of the new interrogation technologies being developed by the government and private security technology firms. One such technology is an ?interrogation booth? that contain avatars with characteristics (such as an older Hispanic woman) that have been psychologically studied to produce more accurate answers from those questioned. There are ideas to replace the booth with a tiny projector mounted on a soldier?s or policeman?s helmet to produce the needed avatar at a moments notice. There was also a ?lie detecting beam? that could tell- from a distance- whether someone was lying by measuring miniscule changes on a person?s skin. (TS 169) But if security services demand transparency from those it seeks to control they offer up no such transparency themselves. This is the case not only in the notoriously secretive nature of the security state, but also in the way the US government itself explains and seeks support for its policies in the outside world.

Orwell, was deeply interested in the abuse of language, and I think here too, the actions of the American government would give him much to chew on. Ever since the disaster of the war in Iraq, American officials have been obsessed with the idea of ?soft-power?. The fallacy that resistance to American policy was a matter of ?bad messaging? rather than the policy itself. Sadly, this messaging was often something far from truthful and often fell under what the government termed? Influence operations? which, according to Priest:

Influence operations, as the name suggests, are aimed at secretly influencing or manipulating the opinions of foreign audiences, either on an actual battlefield- such as during a feint in a tactical battle- or within civilian populations, such as undermining support for an existing government of terrorist group (TS 59)

Another great technological development over the past decade has been the revolution in robotics, which like Big Data is brought to us by the ever expanding information processing powers of computers, the product of Moore?s Law.

Since 9/11?multiple forms of robots?have been perfected, developed, and deployed by the military, intelligence services and private contractors only the most discussed and controversial of which have been flying drones.?It is with these and other tools of covert warfare, such as drones, and in his quite sweeping understanding and application of executive power that President Obama has been even more Orwellian than his predecessor.

Obama may have ended the torture of prisoners captured by American soldiers and intelligence officials, and he certainly showed courage and foresight in his assassination of Osama Bin Laden, a fact by which the world can breathe a sigh of relief. The problem is that he has allowed, indeed propelled, the expansion of the instruments of American foreign policy that are largely hidden from the purview and control of the democratic public. In addition to the surveillance issues above, he has put forward a sweeping and quite dangerous interpretation of executive power in the forms of indefinite detention without trial?found in the NDAA,?engaged in the extrajudicial killings of American citizens, and asserted the prerogative, questionable under both the constitution and international law, to launch attacks, both covert and overt, on countries with which the United States is not officially at war.

In the words of Conor Friedersdorf of the Atlantic writing on the unprecedented expansion of executive power under the Obama administration and comparing these very real and troubling developments to the paranoid delusions of right-wing nuts, who seem more concerned with the fantastical conspiracy theories such as the?Social Security Administration buying hollow-point bullets:

? the fact that the executive branch is literally spying on American citizens, putting them on secret kill lists, and invoking the state secrets privilege to hide their actions doesn?t even merit a mention. ?(by the right-wing).

Perhaps surprisingly, the technologies created in the last generation seem tailor made for the new types of covert war the US is now choosing to fight. This can perhaps best be seen in the ongoing?covert war against Iran?which has used not only drones but brand new forms of weapons such the Stuxnet Worm.

The questions posed to us by the militarized versions of Big Data, new media, Robotics, and spyware/computer viruses are the same as those these phenomena pose in the civilian world:?Big Data; does it actually provide us with a useful map of reality, or instead drown us in mostly useless information? In analog to the question of profitability in the economic sphere: does Big Data actually make us safer? New Media, how is the truth to survive in a world where seemingly any organization or person can create their own version of reality. Doesn?t the lack of transparency by corporations or the government give rise to all sorts of conspiracy theories in such an atmosphere, and isn?t it ultimately futile, and liable to backfire, for corporations and governments to try to shape all these newly enabled voices to its liking through spin and propaganda? Robotics; in analog to the question of what it portends to the world of work, what is it doing to the world of war? Is Robotics making us safer or giving us a false sense of security and control? Is it engendering an over-readiness to take risks because we have abstracted away the very human consequences of our actions- at least in terms of the risks to our own soldiers. In terms of spyware and computer viruses: how open should our systems remain given their vulnerabilities to those who would use this openness for ill ends?

At the very least, in terms of Big.Data, we should have grave doubts. The kind of FaceBook from hell the government has created didn?t seem all that capable of actually pulling information together into a coherent much less accurate picture. Much like their less technologically enabled counterparts who missed the collapse of the Eastern Bloc and fall of the Soviet Union, the new internet enabled security services missed the world shaking event of the Arab Spring.

The problem with all of these technologies, I think, is that they are methods for treating the symptoms of a diseased society, rather than the disease itself. But first let me take a detour through Orwell vision of the future of capitalist, liberal democracy seen from his vantage point in the 1940s.

Orwell, and this is especially clear in his essay?The Lion and the Unicorn, believed the world was poised between two stark alternatives: the Socialist one, which he defined in terms of social justice, political liberty, equal rights, and global solidarity, and a Fascist or Bolshevist one, characterized by the increasingly brutal actions of the state in the name of caste, both domestically and internationally.

He wrote:

Because the time has come when one can predict the future in terms of an ?either?or?. Either we turn this war into a revolutionary war (I do not say that our policy will be EXACTLY what I have indicated above?merely that it will be along those general lines) or we lose it, and much more besides. Quite soon it will be possible to say definitely that our feet are set upon one path or the other. But at any rate it is certain that with our present social structure we cannot win. Our real forces, physical, moral or intellectual, cannot be mobilised.

It is almost impossible for those of us in the West who have been raised to believe that capitalist liberal democracy is the end of the line in terms of political evolution to remember that within the lifetimes of people still with us (such as my grandmother who tends her garden now in the same way she did in the 1940?s) this whole system seemed to have been swept up into the dustbin of history and that the future lie elsewhere.

What the brilliance of Orwell missed, the penetrating insight of Aldous Huxley in his Brave New World caught: that a sufficiently prosperous society would lull it?s citizens to sleep, and in doing so rob them both of the desire for revolutionary change and their very freedom.

As I have argued elsewhere, Huxley?s prescience may depend on the kind of economic growth and general prosperity that was the norm after the Second World War. What worries me is that if the pessimists are proven correct, if we are in for an era of resource scarcity, and population pressures, stagnant economies, and chronic unemployment that Huxley?s dystopia will give way to a more brutal Orwellian one.

This is why we need to push back against the Orwellian features that have crept upon us since 9/11. The fact is we are almost unaware that we building the architecture for something truly dystopian and should pause to think before it is too late.

To return to the question of whether the new technologies help or hurt here: It is almost undeniable that all of the technological wonders that have emerged since 9/11 are good at treating the symptoms of social breakdown, both abroad and at home. They allow us to kill or capture persons who would harm largely innocent Americans, or catch violent or predatory criminals in our own country, state, and neighborhood. Where they fail is in getting to the actual root of the disease itself.

American would much better serve ?its foreign policy interest were it to better align itself with the public opinion of the outside world insofar as we were able to maintain our long term interests and continue to guarantee the safety of our allies. Much better than the kind of ?information operation? supported by the US government to portray a corrupt, and now deposed, autocrat like Yemen?s ?Abdullah Saleh as ?an anti-corruption activist?, would be actual assistance by the US and other advanced countries in?. I duknow? fighting corruption. Much better Western support for education and health in the Islamic world that the kinds of interference in the internal political development of post-revolutionary Islamic societies driven by geopolitical interest and practiced by the likes of?Iran?and?Saudi Arabia.

This same logic applies inside the United States as well. It is time to radically roll back the Orwellian advances that have occurred since 9/11. The dangers of the war on terrorism were always that they would become like Orwell?s ?continuous warfare?, and would perpetually exist in spite, rather than because of the level of threat. We are in danger of investing so much in our security architecture, bloated to a scale that dwarfs enemies, which we have blown up in our own imaginations into monstrous shadows, that we are failing to invest in the parts of our society that will actually keep us safe and prosperous over the long-term.

In Orwell?s Oceania, the poor, the ?proles? were largely ignored by the surveillance state.?There is a danger here that with the movement of what were once advanced technologies into the hands of local law enforcement: drones, robots, biometric scanners, super-fast data crunching computers, geo-location technologies- that domestically we will move even further in the direction of treating the symptoms of social decay, rather than dealing with the underlying conditions that propel it.

The fact of the matter is that the very equality, ?the early paradise?, a product of democratic socialism and technology, Orwell thought was at our fingertips has retreated farther and farther from us. The reasons for this are multiple; To name just a few:?financial???concentration,??automation, the end of??low hanging fruit??and their consequent high growth rates brought by industrialization,the?crisis of complexity?and the problem of ever more marginal returns. This retreat, if it lasts, would likely tip the balance from Huxley?s stupification by consumption to Orwell?s more brutal dystopia initiated by terrified elites attempting to keep a lid on things.

In a state of fear and panic we have blanketed the world with a sphere of surveillance, propaganda and covert violence at which Big Brother himself would be proud. This is shameful, and threatens not only to undermine our very real freedom, but to usher in a horribly dystopian world with some resemblance to the one outlined in Orwell?s dark imaginings. We must return to the other path.

Source: http://ieet.org/index.php/IEET/more/searle20130211

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Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Lacey Lions American Youth Football and Cheer Open Registration ...

Monday, February 11, 2013

Video: What lies ahead for the budget battle

A Second Take on Meeting the Press: From an up-close look at Rachel Maddow's sneakers to an in-depth look at Jon Krakauer's latest book ? it's all fair game in our "Meet the Press: Take Two" web extra. Log on Sundays to see David Gregory's post-show conversations with leading newsmakers, authors and roundtable guests. Videos are available on-demand by 12 p.m. ET on Sundays.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/id/3032608/vp/50761082#50761082

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Angel Asylum

Angel Asylum

A psychiatric hospital that specializes in curing mythical creatures of mental diseases.

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This topic is an Out Of Character part of the roleplay, ?Angel Asylum?. Anything posted here will also show up there.

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Forum for completely Out of Character (OOC) discussion, based around whatever is happening In Character (IC). Discuss plans, storylines, and events; Recruit for your roleplaying game, or find a GM for your playergroup.
This is the auto-generated OOC topic for the roleplay "Angel Asylum"

You may edit this first post as you see fit.

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DarkAngelGal
Member for 0 years



This sounds pretty interesting I might make a Nurse owo or a patient depending

In darkest night's when your afraid. Scared and frightened with no blade.
Close your eyes and il be there. To light the night and open air.
So hold me close and I won't fail. And through this night we shall prevail.

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CookieCupcake
Member for 1 years



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