Saturday, December 31, 2011

Turkey acknowledges killing civilians in Iraq strike (Reuters)

ANKARA (Reuters) ? Turkish warplanes killed 35 civilian smugglers in northern Iraq after mistaking them for Kurdish militants, Ankara's ruling party said on Thursday, promising not to allow a cover-up of an incident that threatens to wreck relations with minority Kurds.

The attack, which Turkey's largest pro-Kurdish party called a "crime against humanity," sparked clashes between hundreds of stone-throwing protesters and police in Diyarbakir, the largest city in Turkey's restive, mainly-Kurdish southeast.

The incident threatens to spoil efforts to forge Turkish-Kurdish consensus for a planned new constitution expected to partly address the issue of rights for the Kurdish minority.

The Turkish military had said its warplanes launched air strikes overnight after drones spotted suspected rebels of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK). The military had denied there were civilians in the area.

But ruling AK Party spokesman Huseyin Celik said initial reports based on local government officials had found the victims were not militants and that most of the dead were cigarette smugglers under the age of 30.

"It has been determined from initial reports that these people were smugglers, not terrorists," Celik told a live news conference, calling the incident "saddening."

"If mistakes were made, if there were flaws and if there were shortcomings in the incident that took place, by no means will these be covered up."

In addition to demonstrations in Diyarbakir, there were smaller protests in Turkey's largest city Istanbul, where police fired tear gas and water cannon at pro-Kurdish demonstrators.

"We have 30 corpses, all of them are burned. The state knew that these people were smuggling in the region. This kind of incident is unacceptable. They were hit from the air," said Fehmi Yaman, mayor of Uludere in Sirnak province.

Television images showed a line of corpses covered by blankets on a barren hillside, with a crowd of people gathered around, some with their head in their hands and crying.

Donkeys carried corpses down the hillside to be loaded into vehicles and taken to hospital.

The pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) said party leaders were heading for the area and that it would hold demonstrations in Istanbul and elsewhere to protest.

"This is a massacre," BDP Deputy Chairwoman Gultan Kisanak told a news conference in Diyarbakir. "This country's warplanes bombed a group of 50 of its citizens to destroy them. This is a war crime and a crime against humanity."

With most Turks favoring a hardline military response against the PKK, the incident is unlikely to hurt the popularity of Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan, who won a third consecutive term in office in a June vote.

The Turkish military said it had learnt the PKK had sent many militants to the Sinat-Haftanin area, where the strikes occurred in northern Iraq, to retaliate after recent militant losses in clashes.

"It was established from unmanned aerial vehicle images that a group was within Iraq heading towards our border," it said.

"Given that the area in which the group was spotted is often used by terrorists and that it was moving towards our border at night, it was deemed necessary for our air force planes to attack and they struck the target at 2137-2224 (1937-2024 GMT)," it said.

"The place where the incident occurred is the Sinat-Haftanin area in northern Iraq where there is no civilian settlement and where the main camps of the separatist terrorist group are located," it said.

An investigation was in progress, it added, without referring to any deaths in the strikes.

CORPSES LOADED ONTO DONKEYS

Smuggling is an important source of income for locals in provinces along the Iraqi border, with many villagers involved in bringing fuel, cigarettes and other goods from Iraqi villages. PKK militants also cross the border in these areas.

"There were rumors that the PKK would cross through this region. Images were recorded of a crowd crossing last night, hence an operation was carried out," a Turkish security official said. "We could not have known whether these people were (PKK) group members or smugglers."

Security sources said those killed were carrying canisters of diesel on mules and their bodies were found on the Iraqi side of the border. They said the dead were from Uludere on the Turkish side of the border on a regular smuggling route.

The Firat news agency, which has close ties to the PKK, said that 17 people were still believed to be missing. It said those killed were aged around 17-20.

In northern Iraq, PKK spokesman Ahmet Deniz condemned the strike and said F-16 jets had bombed a group of around 50 people taking goods across the border and that 19 people were missing.

The PKK, regarded as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the European Union and the United States, launches attacks on Turkish forces in southeastern Turkey from hideouts inside the remote Iraqi mountains.

Turkish leaders vowed revenge in October with air and ground strikes after the PKK killed 24 Turkish soldiers in one of the deadliest attacks since the PKK took up arms in 1984 in a conflict in which more than 40,000 people have been killed.

(Writing by Ibon Villelabeitia and Daren Butler and Editing by Giles Elgood)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iraq/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111229/wl_nm/us_turkey_iraq_airstrike

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Apple iPhone Storage Dilemma Continues

By Diogo Neves - Thu Dec 29, 2:00 am

?A couple of days ago, our own @dani2xll wrote an amazing piece on her adventures to get a new iPhone 4S. I won?t spoil it for you so hit the link and read the full thing (it?s worth it). Ok, you done reading that? Let me carry on then.

I was reading that post and I was saying to my self every 2 sentences how true everything written there was, but since this is a subject that I had thought before I was compelled to analyse it a little deeper. So after thinking for a while I have to say that I disagree with her and that I also agree. I?ll explain myself: I totally agree that more often than not storage is overrated. This isn?t bluntly written there, but it is implied. People care too much about a number and end up wasting money buying storage that they won?t need. However I don?t think a 16GB or even a 32GB iPhone is enough for everyone.

#1 -- It is absolutely true that I won?t have enough battery to enjoy 64GB of content in one charge, but it?s still a lot easier to carry a little power plug and a cable and charge the iPhone when I can than carrying a computer so I can change that content on the go.

#2 -- I think that taking 8GB of music, a 5GB movie and around 10GB of apps on an iPhone is perfectly normal, so the user can choose what game to play or what music to listen to while out and about. I may not have enough battery to consume it all in one go, but at least I can choose what to watch and not have to decide the day before while trying to guess what I?ll want to do with my phone the next day.

#3 -- The cool thing about a flash memory upgrade (be it an SSD or a USB stick or the internal memory of these devices) is that the smallest upgrade you can is to double your storage and that is amazing value for money. Specially in this fast paced tech world it?s a good investment to keep the device a little more future proof. The typical contract is around 2/3 years and in that time who knows how the storage needs will grow? Maybe a new and better audio format comes along but it takes a lot more space, or maybe the apps will grow a lot bigger due to some new amazing feature that they all want to implement or maybe movies will be 6D and they?ll take 20GB. In all seriousness though, an upgrade is always an upgrade and one that, at least, doubles your storage and gives you peace of mind about the future is worth it if you can afford it.

#4 -- This is a no brainer. As much as we?d like to be different the fact is that we are all lazy! We are the species that invented televisions and then went back to the white board to invent something to control it from the couch! We invent stuff to remove the workload from our backs all the times. All of the great inventions are meant to save us from some work and it?s just as the world works in general. On this specific issue though we are lazy because we don?t want to go through the hassle of revising and choosing and changing the content on our phone just because the storage isn?t enough. We just don?t want to put with that. I?m a geek and I?m to lazy to do that. Again, if you can afford a bigger storage capacity it?s worth it!

To finish I?d like to add that I own a 16GB iPhone 4. I?m perfectly happy with those 16GB and I would change to 32GB if I had the chance, but I never really felt that I needed more storage. The bottom line is that I don?t think that you should decide the storage capacity of your next iPhone based on what it can play in one charge, but rather what it needs to be to hold everything you?d want to have in there. I for one save all the music I want in my phone, plus photos and videos and apps and I always sit with at least 4GB free so I?m fine with that, but if you have a 20GB big music library getting the 16GB iPhone might not be the smartest move. Check what you need and what you realistically need and go with that.

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Child care cuts force hard choices on parents

Sarah Comito rolls out of bed before dawn most days and slips quietly out of her house. Before her rambunctious toddler wakes up, she heads off to work as a waitress in an upscale weight-loss resort in Malibu.

The hour-long commute is exhausting, but the 33-year-old is thankful to make the trip when she remembers where she and her husband were four years ago: living in a tent in a nearby river bottom, strung out on methamphetamine.

Now Comito fears the progress they have made since then could be lost as California cuts her from a vital child care assistance program, more than doubling the cost of her son's day care to $600 a month. On a $10 hourly wage, she said she'd be better off quitting her job and staying home with her son while her husband works as a professional tree cutter. But if she stops working, they can't make rent.

"The only thing I can do is attempt to prepare for the worst," Comito said, while watching 3-year-old Matthew dart across the yard at the couple's working-class apartment complex in Oxnard.

For years, child care assistance programs offered low-income parents such as Comito a lifeline. But state legislatures dealing with multibillion dollar budget deficits during the recession have been targeting child care subsidies as one way to help balance their state budgets.

The cuts have come at just the time many parents need that help the most because full-time, well-paying jobs are in such short supply.

In the last fiscal year, combined state and federal funding for child care assistance fell by 2 percent to $12 billion, according to a 46-state analysis by the National Conference of State Legislatures. Federal stimulus money gave a temporary boost to the subsidies, but nearly all that money stopped in 2011.

At the same time, states reduced their general fund spending for child care programs by 7 percent during the current fiscal year, including a 25 percent decline in California, 30 percent in Hawaii and 10 percent in Michigan. In the fiscal year that ended June 30, 22 states reported declines in their budgets for child care subsidies, according to the state legislative group.

But providing child care assistance to low-income families, a central tenet of the country's 1996 welfare overhaul, is seen as critical to getting people back to work at a time when the country is struggling to reduce unemployment. The goal of the programs is to subsidize the cost of day care to help keep poor parents, many of them single mothers, working. Over time, the subsidy is scaled back as parents advance in the labor force and wean themselves off government assistance.

Some parents give up jobs and turn to the welfare system if they can't find affordable child care, but that isn't an option for those who have already used up their entitlements, said Danielle Ewen, a past director of child care and early education for the Center for Law and Social Policy.

"For those families, there is absolutely no safety net and we don't know what is happening to their kids, but it is absolutely scary to think," Ewen said. "It becomes a very desperate, horrible cycle for poor families who are doing everything they can possibly do to become self-sufficient."

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The cuts have taken different forms. Some states have lowered the income ceiling to determine child care eligibility. Others have capped the number of families that receive assistance ? and created endless waiting lists ? or slashed the reimbursement rate paid to day care providers who accept poor children.

Parents are coping in different ways. Some have asked their bosses to cut their wages so they continue to qualify for subsidized care. Others have scaled back hours to reduce the time their children are in day care. Some say they are thinking about quitting and going onto welfare.

Grace Dixon, a service manager for affordable housing in the eastern San Francisco Bay area city of Alameda, said she has paid as much as she can to day care providers for her 1-year-old daughter and 4-year-old son since she was cut off from assistance in July and saw her child care charges nearly triple to $1,500 a month.

"What do they want us to do ? not to work and to get on welfare? Would that be better? And then their taxes are paying for me to sit at home and be on the couch?" the 29-year-old college graduate asked.

Advocates say some parents will leave their children in dangerous, unsupervised settings when they feel they have no other choice.

"What you see are very stressed and desperate moms," said Helen Blank, director of leadership and public policy at the National Women's Law Center. "Some of them pay huge amounts for child care, and they can't afford to pay enough for food or they lose their house."

The scenario plays out differently in different states. In Michigan, the state reduced its budget for subsidized child care this year by lowering the reimbursement rate paid to day care providers.

Advocates say the change has made it tough for low-income parents to find day-care providers willing to take them.

"Some providers have no incentive to participate ? especially the high-quality providers," said Pat Sorensen, vice president for policy at Michigan's Children, an advocacy group.

In North Carolina, officials have extended a waiting list for subsidized child care. The state reduced its funding for child care subsidies by 15 percent this year and has seen the list grow to 50,000 children this year, up from 27,000 children four years ago, according to the state Division of Child Development and Early Education.

"With this year's budget cuts, those numbers have just gone crazy," said Sheila Hoyle, executive director of the Southwestern Child Development Commission, which manages a 600 child-waiting list for seven western North Carolina counties.

The cuts to child care subsidies come as cash-strapped states pare back spending in many areas, including education and health services.

"We've been going in the right direction to raise the quality of our day care centers and early childhood education, and I think those programs are important. But you have to balance in your budget the money you have," said Nelson Dollar, a Republican state representative in North Carolina who is co-chairman of an appropriations committee.

For children, the cuts can mean the difference between a stable, educational child care experience and being shuttled among different providers, family and friends with little consistency.

When parents cannot find affordable care, they often leave children with a neighbor or friend even if they don't trust them. Or they might leave them at home with an older sibling.

"There's an impact on that child's development," said Bruce Liggett, executive director of Arizona's Child Care Association, which represents the state's licensed providers. "They're not learning as they would in a child care center and they're not going to get to kindergarten ready to learn."

It's hard to know how many children have been affected by the recent cuts and in what ways.

In Arizona, more than 48,000 children were covered by child care subsidies at the beginning of this year. Now, fewer than 29,000 are, Liggett said.

Many in Arizona are on a waiting list. Ann Herron, 25, said she signed up as soon as her son was born 2? years ago, but assistance is nowhere in sight.

A single mother, Herron said she can't afford to send her son to a day care center, so she has different friends watch him for minimal pay while she works as caregiver at a group home.

It's hard on her not knowing who will look after him a month from now. But the Phoenix woman said it's also hard on her son, who has little, if any, contact with other children.

"When he is around kids ? because he hasn't been around kids ? he acts crazy. He's hitting and stuff," Herron said. "It is just me and him."

Associated Press writers Jennifer Sinco Kelleher in Honolulu, Tim Martin in Lansing, Mich., and Gary Robertson in Raleigh, N.C., contributed to this report.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45819308/ns/health-childrens_health/

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A Guide to the American Federal Debt

A satirical short film taking a look at the national debt and how it applies to just one family. Starring Brian Stepanek & Eddie Jemison, Produced by Seth William Meier, DP/Edited by Craig Evans, 1st AC Brian Andrews, Sound Mixer Gus Salazar, Written and Directed by Brian Stepanek.

Source: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Li0no7O9zmE&feature=player_embedded

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Boom in Internet gambling ahead? US policy reversal clears the way.

The Justice Department has reversed a longtime view that online poker and lottery wagering are illegal. With the move, states are expected to engage in a high-stakes pursuit of new gambling-related tax revenues.

Cash-strapped states betting on new online poker and lottery revenues won a major victory with a recent Department of Justice announcement that it is reversing its interpretation of the federal 1961 Wire Act, clearing the way for a potential boom in online gambling.

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Until now, the Justice Department had held that the Wire Act makes even intrastate online gambling illegal. Its?new interpretation, written by Justice Department attorneys in response to requests for clarification from New York and Illinois, concluded that the law instead specifically outlaws such wagering on sports, not nonsports gambling within states or even across state borders.

"The ordinary meaning of the phrase 'sporting event or contest' does not encompass lotteries," wrote Assistant Attorney General Virginia Seitz. "Accordingly, we conclude that the proposed lotteries are not within the prohibitions of the Wire Act."

With global online gambling now worth an estimated $30 billion, and with online poker worth a potential $6 billion annually in the US, some are heralding the decision as a means for financially strapped states to leverage new revenue from legalized online gambling ? and stave off at least some cuts to bureaucracies, entitlements, and public employee pension systems.

But gambling critics see the move as another major crack in America's moral foundation, opening the way for states to become further dependent upon tax revenues gained from a form of recreation that hits hardest those who can least afford it. In that light, the new US stance may prompt Congress to enact laws aimed at helping to curb addiction and to prevent children from becoming involved in online gambling, even while allowing "casual" gamblers more options and opportunities to play. So far, Congress has folded on a handful of proposed Internet gambling measures.

"The United States Department of Justice has given the online gaming community a big, big present," writes I. Nelson Rose, a Whittier Law School professor who blogs at gamblingandthelaw.com. "My bet is that ? Congress will continue to do nothing, while Internet gambling explodes across the nation, made legal under state laws."

The US has outlawed online "real money" poker since 2006, and in April the Justice Department charged three major online operators with fraud and money laundering for disguising bets as every-day credit-card payments. In a letter accompanying its announcement on Friday, the Justice Department noted that the new interpretation of law "will not undermine the Department's efforts to prosecute organized criminal networks. The significant majority of our current and past prosecutions concerning Internet gambling involve cases where the gambling activity is part of a larger criminal scheme."?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/AjFPZeZUIhk/Boom-in-Internet-gambling-ahead-US-policy-reversal-clears-the-way

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Wives in ads, kids on the bus as GOP voting nears

Republican presidential candidate, former Mass. Gov. Mitt Romney and his wife Ann eat burritos at Dos Amigos Burritos while campaigning in Concord, N.H. Friday, Dec. 23, 2011. (AP Photo/Winslow Townson)

Republican presidential candidate, former Mass. Gov. Mitt Romney and his wife Ann eat burritos at Dos Amigos Burritos while campaigning in Concord, N.H. Friday, Dec. 23, 2011. (AP Photo/Winslow Townson)

Republican presidential candidate former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, and his wife Callista, shake hands with supporters during a campaign stop in Manchester, N.H., Wednesday Dec. 21, 2011. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) ? Mitt Romney's wife gushes about his silly side and devotion to their five sons and 16 grandchildren. Rick Santorum's college-age daughter opines online about missing the campus coffee shop and chats with friends about their Friday night plans. Jon Huntsman's daughters generate much-needed buzz for him with a joint Twitter account and online videos, including at least one that went viral.

Days away from voting in the Republican presidential race, the path to the nomination is quickly becoming a crowded family affair with spouses and offspring pitching in and doing far more than just smiling from the sidelines.

Ann Romney, Anita Perry and Callista Gingrich are starring in new TV ads for the husbands they've loyally campaigned for. Romney extols her husband's character and says "to me that makes a huge difference" in a candidate. Perry tells the "old-fashioned American story" of how she and her husband were high school sweethearts who had to wait until he was done flying airplanes around the world for the Air Force before they could marry. Callista Gingrich wishes the nation a Merry Christmas "from our family to yours" in Gingrich's new holiday-themed TV ad.

Candidate kids, including those born to Michele Bachmann and Ron Paul, are helping, too, acting as surrogates, strategists and, in some cases, sounding boards for parents competing for the right to challenge President Barack Obama next fall.

Such involvement can be a huge asset to the presidential hopefuls, typically in highlighting a politician's softer side.

But the relatives are hardly polished public speakers who agree with everything their loved one says or does, and their slip-ups, potential conflicts and backgrounds can have consequences for the candidates.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-12-25-Campaign-A%20Family%20Affair/id-70d06ed47c474a48bc07379e8d2d0410

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Health Tip: Use Medications Safely (HealthDay)

(HealthDay News) -- If your child isn't feeling well and needs an over-the-counter medication recommended by your pediatrician, the American Academy of Family Physicians offers these safety guidelines:

  • Make sure the medicine treats only your child's symptoms, nothing more.
  • Make sure any caregivers know the correct timing, dosage and type of medication your child needs.
  • Always read the medication's label and follow directions carefully.
  • Keep medications stored in their original packaging, so you can easily refer to instructions.
  • Never give cough and cold medication to a child younger than age 4 or aspirin to anyone younger than age 18.
  • Don't combine medications unless your child's pediatrician says it's OK to do so.
  • Don't give any adult medication to a child.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/health/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111224/hl_hsn/healthtipusemedicationssafely

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Governor touting jobs record

Gov. John Kasich knocked off rival Ted Strickland in 2010 by repeatedly hammering him on the loss of more than 400,000 jobs under his watch.

Now it's Kasich's turn to be judged on his jobs record.

Since employment counts were gathered in December 2010, Ohio has added an estimated 79,300 jobs, according to seasonally adjusted data from the Bureau of Labor Market Information.

Kasich, during a year-end press conference, spoke about a different number: 82,785. That's the number of jobs promised, created or retained through the JobsOhio effort.

"Eighty-three thousand jobs saved and created," Kasich said. "That makes me feel really good."

JobsOhio attempts were successful in 53 of Ohio's 88 counties, including Richland County. According to Kasich's office, the program here saved 75 Richland County jobs and retained 220 more with a total annual payment of $14.1 million.

But critics argue that much of JobsOhio's accomplishment was about not losing jobs rather than creating more, that the national recovery deserves some credit for the bounceback and that more progress could have been made had the governor been fully concentrating on jobs.

"He hasn't spent the past year focusing on job creation," said Seth Bringman, Ohio Democratic Party spokesman. "He's spent the past year attacking workers."

Kasich and Mark Kvamme, the jobs guru in his cabinet, contend they have righted the ship and job creation will be accelerating as the state's momentum builds.

There have been some good signs:

? JobsOhio reported 245 projects have yielded 21,099 new jobs and saved 61,686 others. These projects, the private agency claims, will generate or keep $4.8 billion in payroll in the state and $3.3 billion in investment.

? Income from job earnings in the last quarter were at its highest level since the end of 2008, according to inflation adjusted figures from the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis.

? Through September, Ohio had attracted $180 million in venture capital this year, according to PriceWaterhouseCooper's online MoneyTree Report. That's the most private investment during the first nine months of the year in the state since 2008 -- and well above the average for the preceding decade.

And troubling ones too:

? The U.S. Department of Labor Reports that initial unemployment claims spiked in Ohio more than usual during the first week of December because of layoffs in the construction and auto industries.

? The unemployment rate is something the administration has been publicizing since it dropped from 9 to 8.5 percent last month. However, the decrease is significantly aided by a drop in the labor force -- the number of people working or actively seeking work. The reduction likely comes from thousands who gave up their job searches at least temporarily.

? Through November, 62,025 Ohioans dropped off the unemployment rolls, not because they found a job but because they've exhausted all 99 weeks of jobless benefits, according to the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services.

Jobs philosophy

JobsOhio was the first Ohio House Bill proposed during Kasich's term and he and Kvamme spent much of his year-in-review press conference speaking about employment.

Kvamme told a story of how Ohio attracted Menards -- 350 jobs and $50 million in capital investment -- by working around existing highway weight restrictions to accommodate the company. Part of what JobsOhio has done, Kvamme said, is just to get government out of the way where necessary.

"One thing that was pretty clear to me from the beginning is that we do not create jobs, but we do a phenomenal job of impeding growth," he said.

That doesn't mean giving business everything it wants, administration members said.

Kasich denied tax incentives for Chiquita, he said, because the return on investment wouldn't have been realized for a decade. He called a deal like that "corporate welfare." The company announced its leaving its long-time headquarters in Cincinnati for Charlotte.

Kvamme said the state will come out positive on taxes collected from JobsOhio's incentive deals in the first year and those deals will push revenues up to $2.8 billion in 10 years.

Even Ohio's losses were victories, they said. Getting companies to take a good long look at Ohio -- as Calisolar did before choosing Mississippi over Richland County, or as Sears did before opting to stay home in Illinois -- is a sign of progress, the governor said.

"We didn't get Sears, but we certainly got everybody's attention," Kasich said.

Bringman said Kasich is riding months of falling unemployment that started under Strickland's watch. He cited Kasich's rebuke of the auto industry bailout, his rejection of high-speed rail federal funds and, most often, the fight over collective bargaining rights.

Kasich maintained that Senate Bill 5, or Issue 2 as it was known on the ballot, was crafted with an eye toward creating a more business-friendly environment. The argument goes that by limiting unions, local and state governments could stop the upward trajectory of salaries and benefits for personnel.

Bringman said Ohioans thought they were getting a different approach for job growth.

"Voters resoundingly rejected the direction in which the governor is taking our state and sent a message that he should do what he promised and focus on creating jobs," Bringman said.

Source: http://mansfieldnewsjournal.com/article/20111225/NEWS01/112250308/1002/rss01

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Chicago Pride Parade Compromise Reached

Posted by: Bridgette P. LaVictoire on December 22, 2011.

While Cardinal Frances George has been out there calling gays the new KKK, a compromise was reached between the organizers of the Gay Pride Parade in Chicago and Our Lady of Mount Carmel Roman Catholic Church. The procession route will still go in front of the parish, but the parade will start later.

The parade had been set to start at 10am in order to address concerns about drunken and unruly crowds along the route, and concerns about safety for adjacent neighborhoods with regards to emergency vehicles. These changes were made a few months ago, and three weeks ago, the pastor at Mount Carmel objected because the parade would force the church to close on that Sunday morning because of inaccessibility. Hee wanted his parishioners to contact Mayor Rahm Emanuel to try and get the time or route changed.

Alderman Thomas Tunney and Richard Pfeiffer announced that the parade would now start at noon in this statement:

?We met with representatives from Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church last week to hear the parish?s concerns about the proposed changes to the 2012 Gay Pride Parade. We discussed moving the start time back to 12:00 Noon to help accommodate Sunday services along the parade route. After consulting with the various City departments, we believe this is an agreeable compromise to help keep the parade safe and manageable while respecting the diversity of our neighborhood.?

Cardinal George continues to maintain his bigotry and will not back down from his statement despite this development. Let?s face it, you can?t Torquamada anything?as Mel Brooks once quipped.

Via ABC

?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/blogspot/WCZf/~3/B-MW_zTE79Y/

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Reggie Fil-Aime Of Nintendo Talks Facebook Gaming And Free-to ...

Social games aren't video games, in a sense. They don't really offer that experience. Reggie is correct in saying they don't really evolve. What's going to keep me playing a social game? Nothing. They're cool for a day, then you play for another day because your friends are, and then they quit, and you move on. Doing the same thing repeatedly for very little payoff isn't fun. Having to pay money, or wait hours, to progress, also isn't fun. When I can sit down, sink hours into a social game, and actually feel like coming back the next day, I'll know they're on the right track.

The only games I've really put time into, are the ones that are building off older games. Tetris is fun. Words with Friends was all right. Bejeweled is entertaining. I have yet to find an original facebook game that can really hold my attention. Knights of the Crystal or whatever it is, was fun for awhile, but it's so fundamentally flawed that I had trouble going back to it, and only did so because a friend of mine played.

F2P falls into the same hole. The game isn't free. Developers don't make money on free. Their primary goal is to shoe-horn as many possible ways for you spend money on this free game as possible. Then they worry about how fun, or how playable the title is. That just doesn't fly. Some of these games might kill some time, but they'll never hold a candle to their P2P brothers.

On a side note, Guild Wars 2 doesn't look good. Okay, it looks decent, but it's F2P (pay to own) and it shows. I saw a trailer and it was clearly lower quality than other games releasing in it's time frame. And yet, for a F2P title, it looked decent. I feel like there shouldn't be that distinction. Give me something I can enjoy, without having to constantly remind myself it's 'free'.

Source: http://www.gameinformer.com/b/news/archive/2011/12/23/reggie-fil-aime-of-nintendo-talks-facebook-gaming-and-free-to-play.aspx

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Asian stocks lower after US, Europe fall (AP)

BEIJING ? Global stocks were mixed Thursday after investors were rattled by the European Central Bank's huge loan to bolster the continent's banks.

Asian markets fell, breaking a two-day rally. Tokyo's main index declined 0.8 percent to 8,395.16 and China's benchmark lost 0.2 percent to 2,186.3. Taipei was flat, while Hong Kong and Sydney were down.

In early European trading, Germany's DAX rose 1.3 percent to 5,866.85 and France's CAC 40 gained 1.1 percent to 3,062.51. Britain's FTSE 100 rose 1.1 percent to 5,449.03.

The Asian declines came after stocks plunged early this week on anxiety over the death of North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, then rallied on positive U.S. construction data and a strong Spanish government debt auction.

"We're seeing the markets fall on their own weight here in Asia, with no one looking to step in and buy," said Chris Weston, an institutional dealer for Australia's IG Markets.

Investors were spooked by the huge size of the ECB's euro489 billion ($639 billion) loan Wednesay to 523 banks ? its biggest credit infusion to date as authorities try to steady a financial system under pressure from Europe's debt crisis.

The loan will help to ensure banks have enough money to lend next year but cannot address the underlying problem of government debts.

"It alleviates some of the symptoms. But it's not going to change the situation long-term," said Weston.

In China, textile and securities companies led declines.

Investors are hoping Beijing eases curbs on bank lending and real estate sales to revive slowing economic growth. But analysts expect no immediate changes.

"If expectations of an easier monetary policy do not materialize, the market will remain unstable, but even if some loosening does emerge, the room for gains is still quite limited," said Liu Kan, an analyst at Guoyuan Securities in Shanghai.

Elsewhere in Asia, Sydney's S&P/ASX 200 shed 1.2 percent to 4,090.8 while Seoul's Kospi was down 0.1 percent to 1,847.49 and Singapore declined 0.3 percent to 2,664.90. Taipei's Taiex closed unchanged at 6,966.35.

European markets fell Wednesday and on Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was off 0.5 percent. The broader S&P 500 index fell 0.6 percent, led by an 11 percent decline for Oracle Corp., which said it was struggling to close deals, reinforcing worries business and the government may cut technology spending.

European officials says banks need to raise euro115 billion ($150 billion) in new capital but investors are leery of putting more money into them. It would be politically unpopular for governments to do it and their finances are stressed as well.

Benchmark crude for February delivery was up 57 cents at $99.27 in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

The euro was up about 0.6 percent at $1.3106. The dollar was little changed at 78.05 yen.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111222/ap_on_bi_ge/world_markets

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Male Spiders Let Mates Eat Them for Kids' Sake (LiveScience.com)

The unkind act of butchering and eating your mate after sex, typified by the female black-widow spider and praying mantis, may make for healthier babies, new research suggests.

The researchers found that a male orb-web spider makes the ultimate evolutionary sacrifice: giving his life for the health of his offspring.

Sexual cannibalism is the act of one partner eating the other after sex. In the orb-web spider Argiope bruennichi, the female tries to grab and wrap up the male at the onset of mating so she can snack on him during sex. In the lab, only about 30 percent of the males survive their first mating, but by letting the female gnaw on them, the males prolong the sex act, making it more likely they will inseminate their partner.

Of these survivors, half go on to find a second mate, while the others try again for the same female. Due to the male's anatomy, two copulations is the limit. (When you are facing a life without sex, is it really worth it to go on?)

"Two main hypotheses explain the evolution of sexual cannibalism," study researcher Klaas Welke, of the University of Hamburg in Germany, told LiveScience in an email. The males might be offering themselves up "to gain access to mating opportunities and to prolong their mating duration." Or, Welke said, it could be a "paternal investment into their own offspring, and they provide females with nutrients."

In the case of the orb-web spider, males tend to be much smaller than their mates; in this species, they're only one-tenth as heavy, and researchers weren't sure how much nutritional benefit the females can gain from such pipsqueak partners.

To see if eating their mates gave female spiders a nutritional advantage, the researchers divided the female orb-web spiders of their laboratory collection into three groups, allowing them to mate with one, two or three males. Half of each group of females also was allowed to eat their mates, while in the other instances, the researchers reached in and saved the male from his partner's clutches.

They then analyzed each female's eggs and resulting offspring. They counted and weighed the eggs and monitored how many offspring survived simulated cold-weather scenarios ? about 46 degrees Fahrenheit (8 degrees Celsius) ? and a 20-week stint of starvation.

The researchers thought that perhaps the nutritional bonus from multiple mates and meals would have an impact on females. It didn't. "We were surprised, because we had expected that any effect of male consumption would increase with every additional male consumed," Welke said.

What they did see, however, was that any cannibalism led to healthier offspring that survived better and had bigger eggs.

"Our findings suggest a paternal investment of males into their offspring," Welke said. "Sexual cannibalism may increase male reproductive success and may be very beneficial in a species with a high paternity insurance and a low rate of polyandry as found in Argiope bruennichi."

The study is published in the January 2012 issue of the journal Animal Behaviour.

You can follow LiveScience staff writer Jennifer Welsh on Twitter @microbelover. Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter @livescience and on Facebook.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/science/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20111223/sc_livescience/malespidersletmateseatthemforkidssake

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Young Jeezy: The Real Is Back [36 Min Street DVD]

YOUNG JEEZY – THE REAL IS BACK DVD from J-STAR Multimedia on Vimeo.

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Staying Facebook Friends Depends on Real-Life Connections


Staying Facebook Friends Depends on Real-Life Connections

By Lorien Crow | Wed Dec 21, 2011 4:04 pm

Facebook users add and delete friends largely based on real-life relationships, a new study finds, as social networkers begin to cultivate more intimate connections.

NM Incite, a Nielsen McKinsey company, surveyed nearly 2,000 social media users about how they pick Facebook connections. Users responded that knowing someone in real-life and sharing mutual friends on Facebook were the top reasons they added connections to their social media profiles, while not knowing someone made it much easier to delete them.

Amid privacy concerns, spam attacks, and a growing number of legal cases where Facebook statuses are fair game, many social networkers have become wary of online acquaintances who they don't know well. Some users are choosing to narrow their inner circles to a more intimate collection of true friends.

Facebook began with Mark Zuckerberg's dream of connecting the world, but that dream may have become a little too real. Nearly a billion people across the world use Facebook, making the site a prime target for hackers and criminals hoping to filch personal information.

Facebook is also the top Internet advertising seller in the U.S, and questions about how much user data is shared with advertisers continue to plague the social networking site.

The social networking site also made headlines recently when a Connecticut court allowed a user's Facebook statuses and comments to be used against her by opposing counsel in a divorce case, sending a message to other users that their profiles were not as private as previously thought.

Due to the mounting risks, many users who signed up with Facebook to share their photos and life moments with others are now fearful of doing so among an ever-widening circle of friends, leading them to delete anyone who isn't part of their close inner circle.

Some are even fleeing Facebook for new social networking site Google+, which allows users to create separate friend networks to keep work connections private from personal and other connections.

The NM study also found that making offensive comments, trying to sell people stuff, being overtly political, and making depressing comments can also get users booted from Facebook friends' lists.

Facebook probably won't suffer too greatly from a few deleted friends here and there, and the trend toward smaller friendship circles is likely part of the site's evolution as it continues to be a cultural mainstay. But the site may want to take note of their users' growing list of concerns in the future, or risk being "unfriended" themselves.




ITTO: Smartphones Help Combat Holiday Boredom Wed Dec 21, 2011 3:54 pm | By
The holidays can be slow for travelers bogged down with flight delays, or workers limping to the new year, but smartphones are offering seasonal diversions to entertain and add holiday cheer.






Chinese Hackers Attack Department of Commerce Wed Dec 21, 2011 3:42 pm | By
Chinese hackers infiltrated the U.S. Department of Commerce, heightening tensions between Beijing and Washington, and underscoring the emergence of cyber-warfare in international relations.



Facebook Tackles Conflicts With Love Wed Dec 21, 2011 3:42 pm | By
Facebook is supporting a broad initiative to address conflict resolution on the site, emphasizing compassion as a value in the community it aims to foster.



Apple, Google Developing Wearable Gadgets Wed Dec 21, 2011 3:13 pm | By
Apple and Google are working on wearable computers that communicate with smartphones, bringing futuristic gadgets closer to reality.



LightSquared Demands Resolution to GPS Impasse Wed Dec 21, 2011 2:54 pm | By
LightSquared wants a ruling confirming its rights to license spectrum, filing a petition in hopes of forcing the government to come to a decision on its plans.

Source: http://www.mobiledia.com/news/121702.html

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Congress takes up payroll tax after GOP retreat

(CBS/AP)?

WASHINGTON - Capping a full retreat by House GOP leaders, Congress will convene Friday in hopes of approving a stopgap measure renewing payroll tax cuts for every worker and unemployment benefits for millions ? despite serious opposition among some tea party Republicans.

Friday's unusual session, if all goes according to plan, will send a bill to President Obama to become law for two months and put off until January a fight over how to pay for the 2 percentage point tax cut, extend jobless benefits averaging around $300 a week and prevent doctors from absorbing a big cut in Medicare payments.

Those goals had been embraced by virtually every lawmaker in the House and Senate, but had been derailed in a quarrel over demands by House Republicans for immediate negotiations on a long-term extension bill. Senate leaders of both parties had tried to barter such an agreement among themselves a week ago but failed, instead agreeing upon a 60-day measure to buy time for talks next year.

The decision by House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, to cave in to the Senate came after days of criticism from Obama and Democrats. But perhaps more tellingly, GOP stalwarts like strategist Karl Rove and the Wall St. Journal editorial board warned that if the tax cuts were allowed to expire, Republicans would take a political beating that would harm efforts to unseat Obama next year.

Friday's House and Senate sessions are remarkable. Both chambers have recessed for the holidays but leaders in both parties are trying to pass the short-term agreement under debate rules that would allow any individual member of Congress to derail the pact, at least for a time.

House tax deal vote needs unanimous consent

"Every single one of them would have to sign off on it," explains CBS News congressional correspondent Nancy Cordes. "That's a tall order, because there are many House Republicans who, as you can imagine, are very angry, who feel they caved too quickly. If any one of them objects they'll have to come back and vote next week."

The developments were a clear win for Obama. The payroll tax cut was the centerpiece of his three-month, campaign-style drive for jobs legislation that seems to have contributed to an uptick in his poll numbers ? and taken a toll on those of congressional Republicans.

Obama, Republicans and congressional Democrats all said they preferred a one-year extension but the politics of achieving the goal, particularly the spending cuts and new fees required to pay for it, eluded them. All pledged to start working on that in January.

"There remain important differences between the parties on how to implement these policies, and it is critical that we protect middle-class families from a tax increase while we work them out," Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said.

House GOP arguments about the legislative process and what the "uncertainty" of a two-month extension would mean for businesses were unpersuasive, and Obama was clearly on the offensive.

"Has this place become so dysfunctional that even when we agree to things, we can't do it?" Obama said. "Enough is enough."

The top Senate Republican, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, was a driving force behind Thursday's agreement, imploring Boehner to accept the deal that McConnell and Reid had struck last week and passed with overwhelming support in both parties.

Meanwhile, tea party-backed House Republicans began to abandon their leadership.

"I don't think that my constituents should have a tax increase because of Washington's dysfunction," freshman Rep. Sean Duffy, R-Wis., said.

If the cuts had expired as scheduled, 160 million workers would have seen a tax increase of $20 a week for an average worker earning about $50,000 a year. And up to 2 million people without jobs for six months would start losing unemployment benefits averaging $300 a week. Doctors would have seen a 27 percent cut in their Medicare payments, the product of an archaic 1997 cut that Congress has been unable to fix.

Even though GOP leaders like House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., promised that the two sides could quickly iron out their differences, the truth is that it'll take intense talks to figure out both the spending cuts and fee increases required to finance the measure.

Just hours before he announced the breakthrough, Boehner had made the case for a yearlong extension. But on a brief late afternoon conference call, he informed his colleagues it was time to yield.

"He said that as your leader, you've in effect asked me to make decisions easy and difficult, and I'm making my decision right now," said Rep. Jack Kingston, R-Ga., paraphrasing Boehner's comments.

Kingston said the conference call lasted just minutes and Boehner did not give anyone time to respond.

There was still carping among tea party freshmen upset that GOP leaders had yielded.

"Even though there is plenty of evidence this is a bad deal for America ... the House has caved yet again to the president and Senate Democrats," Rep. Tim Huelskamp, R-Kan., said. "We were sent here with a clear set of instructions from the American people to put an end to business as usual in Washington, yet here we are being asked to sign off on yet another gimmick."

Almost forgotten in the firestorm is that McConnell and Boehner had extracted a major victory last week, winning a provision that would require Obama to make a swift decision on whether to approve construction of the Keystone XL oil pipeline, which would bring Canadian oil to the U.S. and create thousands of construction jobs. To block the pipeline, Obama would have to declare that is not in the nation's interest.

Obama wanted to put the decision off until after the 2012 election.

House Republicans did win one concession in addition to a promise that Senate Democrats would name negotiators on the one-year House measure: a provision to ease concerns that the 60-day extension would be hard for payroll processing companies to implement.

Source: http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~r/CBSNewsGamecore/~3/L_MqMLVKBDA/

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Harrison Ford and Chadwick Boseman will star in an upcoming movie about Jackie Robinson

"Ball Tribe is a community for sports fans and bloggers to discover, share, and vote on the best sports news of the day from anywhere on the web. Meet other sports fans and bloggers, help eachother out through voting and linking to eachothers submissions, and work together to ensure that only the best of the best gets promoted to the Ball Tribe front page daily."

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Source: http://www.balltribe.com/MLB/harrison-ford-and-chadwick-boseman-will-star-in-an-upcoming-movie-about-jackie-robinson/

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FIFA Soccer 12

Every video-gaming soccer fan worldwide looks forward to the release of EA Sports' annual update to its FIFA Soccer title. Fortunately, the faithful who make the pilgrimage this year to their local game dealer won't be disappointed. Thanks to new features designed to make game play even more realistic and increased options for online play, FIFA Soccer 12 ($59.99 direct) is the best soccer video game yet. I tested the PS3 version, but it's also available for, Xbox, PC, PSP, PS Vita, 3DS, Mac OS, and iOS.

Defense, Impacts, and Dribbling

The biggest change to the game play from previous versions that players will notice is FIFA Soccer 12's new 'Tactical Defending' system. In fact, seasoned players will likely need some time to adjust, as the new system requires more skill to successfully tackle an opponent. Defenders need to spend more time jockeying for position and containing opposition players instead of immediately going in for an easy tackle. The upside is that defense is much more realistic; you feel more like you're an active participant when you're playing defense.

Other game play changes in FIFA Soccer 12 are a little more subtle. Interactions between players are now governed by the new Impact Engine, which makes player collisions follow real world physics more closely than they did in the past. As the player models are often quite small, however, the effect is not always immediately noticeable when playing. Still, as you spend more playing the new FIFA, you notice that there is more variety to the ways players interact. The Impact Engine also occasionally backfires and produces hilarious results, although I've not witnessed anything like the extreme examples you will find posted on the Web.

Also improved this year is the Precision Dribbling system, which allows you greater control on the ball in tight situations. This is primarily for advanced FIFA players, as it requires quick reflexes to master. Additionally there is Pro Player Intelligence, which is reported as making AI-controlled players behave more like their real world counterparts. Admittedly, it's difficult to tell from a quick observation how much of a difference this makes. A player like Lionel Messi will score a goal against you regardless!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/JAYDJaIXkug/0,2817,2397693,00.asp

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Japan releases 40-year nuke plant cleanup plan (AP)

TOKYO ? Japan's government said Wednesday that it could take 40 years to clean up and fully decommission a nuclear plant that went into meltdown after it was struck by a huge tsunami.

Nuclear crisis minister Goshi Hosono suggested that the timetable was ambitious, acknowledging that decommissioning three reactors with severely melted fuel plus spent fuel rods at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant was an "unprecedented project," and that the process was not "totally foreseeable."

"But we must do it even though we may face difficulties along the way," Hosono told a news conference.

Under a detailed roadmap approved earlier Wednesday following consultation with experts and nuclear regulators, plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co. will start removing spent fuel rods within two to three years from their pools located on the top floor of each of their reactor buildings.

After that is completed, TEPCO will start removing the melted fuel, most of which is believed to have fallen to the bottom of the core or even down to the bottom of the larger, beaker-shaped containment vessel, a process that is expected to begin in 10 years and completed 25 years from now. The location and conditions of the melted fuel is not exactly known.

That's more than twice as long as it took to remove the fuel from the Unit 2 reactor at Three Mile Island that suffered a partial meltdown in 1979.

Trade Minister Yukio Edano promised that authorities would ensure safety at the plant. He also vowed to pay attention to the concerns of tens of thousands of residents displaced when the plant was knocked out by Japan's March 11 earthquake and tsunami, spawning the world's worst nuclear crisis since the Chernobyl accident in 1986.

"We must not allow the work toward decommissioning to cause any new risks or delay the return of the residents to their homes," he said.

Completely decommissioning the plant would require five to 10 more years after the fuel debris removal, making the entire process up to 40 years, according to the roadmap.

The roadmap for Fukushima is twice as long the time set aside to decommission the Tokai Power Station, the country's first commercial reactor that stopped operation in 1998.

The process still requires the development of robots and technology that can do much of the work remotely because of extremely high radiation levels inside the reactor buildings. Officials say they are aiming to have such robots by 2013 and start decontaminating the reactor buildings in 2014.

The operator and the government would also have to ensure a stable supply of workers and save them from exceeding exposure limits while keeping the long process going.

They also have to figure out ways to access each containment vessel and assess the extent of damage, as well as locate holes and cracks through which cooling water is leaking and flooding the area.

The decades-long process also would place an enormous financial burden on TEPCO. The ministers said that the total cost estimate cannot be provided immediately, but promised that there will be no delay because of financial reasons.

Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda announced last Friday that the plant has achieved "cold shutdown conditions," meaning the plant had been brought to stability in the nine months since the accident.

The announcement officially paves the way for a new phase that will eventually allow some evacuees back to less-contaminated areas currently off limits.

Experts say the plant 140 miles (230 kilometers) northeast of Tokyo is running with makeshift equipment and remains vulnerable to cold weather and earthquakes.

Another problem is huge volume of radioactive waste and debris that will come out of the plant during its dismantling process. Officials said they have not decided what to do with them and that part is not covered by the 40-year roadmap.

"We still need to discuss what to do with the waste, including development of such technology," said Koichi Noda, a trade ministry official in charge of nuclear accident cleanup.

The two ministers acknowledged that they may not be even around to see the decommissioning process through the end.

"I will take responsibility as a person and get involved in this as long as I live," Edano said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/weather/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111221/ap_on_re_as/as_japan_nuclear_crisis

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