Montag, 30. Mai 2011

The World from Berlin: Nuclear Phaseout Is an 'Historic Moment' - SPIEGEL ONLINE - News - International

http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,1518,765681,00.html
Angela Merkel's government has decided to phase out nuclear power by 2022, in a reversal of its previous policy. German commentators are split over the wisdom of the decision, with one newspaper comparing the move to the fall of the Berlin Wall and another saying it will harm future generations.



"This is nothing more and nothing less than a revolution in energy supply," said Chancellor Angela Merkel. It was September 2010, and she was referring to her government's newly minted energy strategy. That plan included extending the operating lives of Germany's 17 nuclear plants, which had been scheduled to go offline by 2021. All of this had been intended to help Germany meet its ambitious goals for reducing climate-killing CO2 emissions.

But on Monday, less than nine months later, the German government announced a new energy plan that could also be fairly described as a revolution -- even if it represents a 180-degree reversal of the administration's previous policy.


In marathon talks that went into the early hours of Monday, the government hammered out the details of its plans to phase out nuclear power. The new strategy foresees all Germany's reactors going offline by 2021 if possible and 2022 at the latest. Eight plants which are currently temporarily offline will be shut down immediately. The phaseout will be accompanied by a massive increase in the use of renewable energy, and the government intends to pass a law making it easier to construct the new energy infrastructure that will be needed.

Merkel's U-turn on nuclear power happened in the wake of the Fukushima disaster, with the chancellor quickly realizing the impact the accident would have on attitudes to nuclear power in Germany. A majority of Germans oppose atomic energy.

'Great Opportunity'

The government's new plan is broadly based on recommendations by an ethics commission that Merkel set up after Fukushima to study the future of nuclear energy in Germany. Critics claimed that the chancellor only set up the panel to lend legitimacy to her sudden about-turn on nuclear power, which was widely seen as an electioneering tactic ahead of a key state election.

The commission delivered its findings to the government on Sunday afternoon, recommending that Germany phase out nuclear power by 2021. The panel's final report was officially presented on Monday morning. The head of the commission, former United Nations Environment Program executive director and ex-German environment minister Klaus Töpfer, said that the transition to renewable energy presented a "great opportunity" for Germany to develop a sustainable economy. Speaking at the presentation of the report, Merkel said the government would use the commission's recommendations as a "guideline."

There is likely to be stiff opposition to the new nuclear roadmap. German manufacturers and energy companies have already criticized plans to phase out nuclear power, warning that Germany could face blackouts, and utilities have threatened to take legal action against a withdrawal. A spokesman for the energy giant RWE said that "all legal options" were on the table.

On Monday, Germany's main newspapers take a look at the ethics commission's proposals and the coming energy revolution.

The conservative Die Welt writes:

"The nuclear phaseout marks a creeping rejection of the economic model which has transformed Germany into one of the richest countries in the world in recent decades. ... What will the new energy age cost us Germans in terms of money and jobs? And are we completely indifferent to the risk of a major power outage? Just recently, the Federal Office of Civil Protection and Disaster Assistance warned that Germany is totally unprepared for a large-scale blackout."

"It is certainly true that our economic system can survive without nuclear power in the long term. But it is careless to carry out a phaseout under extreme time pressure, rushing it through with scant regard for how fast the economy can adapt. Energy is the lifeblood of industry, which in turn is the basis of our economy and our prosperity. A stable energy supply is taken for granted in Germany and is an enormously important locational advantage when attracting foreign investment. The mere impression that this supply is no longer 100 percent guaranteed would be enough to scare off investors."

"A look back at the oil crisis in the 1970s is enough to show how sensitive the energy issue is. This time, however, it would not be the whole world that has a problem, but only us Germans. The government should be careful not to risk creating a homemade energy crisis on the basis of politically expedient decisions."

The center-right Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung writes:

"The ethics commission had been given the task of 'reevaluating' the risks of nuclear energy. But by 'reevaluate,' what was meant was that the slightest possibility of a nuclear accident similar to the one in Fukushima -- no matter how unlikely -- was now to be classified as unacceptable. What is being ignored in the process is the fact that each form of energy is associated with incalculable risks."

"It took humanity a hundred years to realize the dangers that burning fossil fuels pose to the environment and to people's health. The harmful effects of an overhasty energy revolution will be mainly felt in economic and social terms -- and it is future generations that will be affected."

The center-left Süddeutsche Zeitung writes:

"The ethics commission has looked far beyond the nuclear phaseout itself. The group has focused less on shutting down reactors and more on the process that such a phaseout would trigger. After all, simply taking the nuclear plants offline is not enough by itself."

"In many areas, the experts have called for exactly those changes which an energy transition would require: renovating buildings (to make them more energy-efficient), the intelligent use of energy and the construction of new power lines. This transition, not the nuclear phaseout, is the real challenge for politics and society. The ethics commission has highlighted the opportunities that the transition holds for Germany as an industrial power, but it also shows the risks. If the switch goes wrong, the nuclear phaseout will turn out to be very, very expensive."

In an editorial titled "A Moment Like the Fall of the Berlin Wall," the left-leaning Die Tageszeitung writes:


"Usually one does not recognize historic moments if one is too close to them. It's a label that should be used sparingly in any case. But this is one: An industrialized country now has a roadmap for switching to a sustainable energy supply, moving beyond dangerous and expensive nuclear power and dirty coal. That has never happened before. It is a step in the right direction -- and the world is watching."

"The interesting question is whether this government will take the ethic commission's recommendations to heart. From a political and economic perspective, the report gives it all the ammunition it needs to act. In terms of domestic politics, Angela Merkel cannot retreat now, given her sudden violent aversion to nuclear power. And the new direction also makes sense in terms of party politics: Only a business-oriented conservative government can pull off such a revolution, because the loudest opponents are within its own ranks. ... Only Merkel's center-right administration can phase out nuclear power without Germany descending into a crippling conflict."

-- David Gordon Smith

Sonntag, 29. Mai 2011

Cities with the Most Billionaires, 2011 - Yahoo! Real Estate

http://realestate.yahoo.com/promo/cities-with-the-most-billionaires-2011.html
When the U.S. economy was riding high for most of the 20th century, it would have been impossible to imagine a foreign city--especially one in a Communist country--with more of the planet's very richest than New York, home of old-money Wall Street. But that indeed is the case. Today Moscow is the city with the most billionaire residents in the world.

The Russian capital boasts 79 billionaires, a stunning increase of 21 in just one year. That more than edges out No. 2 New York, with 59 billionaires, and No. 3 London with 41. Other cities in the top 15 include such rising stars as Mumbai, Taipei, Sao Paolo and Istanbul. Los Angeles manages a tie for No. 8.

The combined fortunes of Moscow's billionaire population top $375 billion, more privately amassed wealth than in any other city in the world.



Despite New York's relegation to second place, the city remains a favored locale of billionaires, whose collective net worth is $221 billion. The Big Apple boasts some of the most expensive ZIP codes in the U.S., due in part to the real estate prices paid by billionaires in this city. Indeed, many Moscow residents own secondary homes in New York, including fertilizer and coal magnate Andrey Melnichenko, whose wife recently closed on a $12.2 million penthouse apartment. Even the world's richest man, Carlos Slim (home: Mexico City), snatched up a $44 million mansion on Central Park last year.

To compile our list, we tallied the primary residences of all 1,210 billionaires on the 2011 Forbes World's Billionaires list, our annual assessment of people sporting seven-figure or higher fortunes in U.S. dollars. We did not take secondary homes into account for this list.

In the U.S. we stuck strictly to city limits. For example, while a smattering of prominent media barons like Viacom founder Sumner Redstone and T.V. tycoon Haim Saban reside in Beverly Hills, they are not included in the pile of Los Angeles residents since Beverly Hills is its own city (although largely surrounded by Los Angeles).

Here are the the world's five top cities for billionaires:




No. 1: Moscow
Number of Billionaires: 79
Total combined wealth: $375.3 billion

Billionaires include: Russia's richest man, steel magnate Vladmimir Lisin; commodities investor and Chelsea soccer team owner Roman Abramovich; and venture capitalist and Facebook investor Yuri Milner.

No. 2: New York
Number of Billionaires: 59
Total combined wealth: $220.8 billion

Billionaires include: media mogul and current mayor Michael Bloomberg; fashion designer Ralph Lauren; and real estate developer-turned-reality T.V. celebrity Donald Trump.


No. 3: London
Number of Billionaires: 41
Total combined wealth: $164.3 billion

Billionaires include: Indian citizen Lakshmi Mittal, the world's sixth-richest man thanks to steel-maker ArcelorMittal; daredevil Virgin founder Richard Branson; and Philip & Christina Green, the married couple behind clothing company Topshop.


No. 4: Hong Kong
Number of Billionaires: 40
Total combined wealth: $176.8 billion

Billionaires include: Greater China's richest person, Hutchison Whampoa chairman Li Ka-shing; the Kwok family, the brothers behind Hong Kong's largest real estate developer, SHKP; and Angela Leong, the controversial heiress of Stanley Ho's casino empire.


No. 5: Istanbul
Number of Billionaires: 36
Total combined wealth: $60.5 billion

Billionaires include: Turkey's richest person, Mehmet Emin Karamehmet, chairman of mobile phone company Turkcell; Turkey's former richest, finance and retail scion, Husnu Ozyegin; and Macedonian-born Sarik Tara, founder of construction giant, ENKA.


Samstag, 28. Mai 2011

Egypt eases travel restrictions for Gaza travellers

http://www.montrealgazette.com/news/world/Egypt+eases+travel+restrictions+Gaza+travellers/4856786/story.html


RAFAH, Gaza Strip — Egypt eased travel restrictions for residents of Gaza on Saturday, eroding a blockade of the Palestinian territory imposed by Israel to isolate its Islamist Hamas rulers.

Egypt, which made peace with Israel in 1979 but whose interim military rulers want to improve relations with Palestinians, allowed nearly 300 Gazans to enter its territory at the Rafah crossing in the first hour after it opened.

Under new regulations Egypt announced on Wednesday, the Rafah crossing, Hamas-controlled Gaza's only window to the outside world, will operate six days a week instead of five and working hours will be extended by two hours a day.

"I believe this a unique move and positive development," said Ghazi Hamad, Islamist Hamas's deputy foreign minister.

Israel maintains a tight blockade of the Gaza Strip because Hamas refuses to recognize the Jewish state and calls for its destruction. Israeli officials have declined to comment on the opening of Gaza's only free exit point to the world.

Israel allows some goods to be imported into the Gaza Strip through land border crossings and lets out a small number Gazans, mainly for medical treatment.

Under Egypt's new travel guidelines, women, minors and men over 40 no longer require a visa to enter the country, meaning hundreds more passengers will be able to cross every day.

Previously, the terminal could cope with no more than 300 outgoing passengers per day and Hamad said that with streamlined co-ordination he expected the daily numbers to triple.

"We will co-operate with Egyptian brothers to make sure the new arrangements get implemented smoothly and accutately . . . We even hope that 1,000 people will be able to cross every day," Hamaad, who oversees work at the crossing, told Reuters.

Palestinians have hailed the Egyptian move as a manifestation of a new era in relations after the February removal in a pro-democracy uprising of Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak, who helped preserve the blockade and sided with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, Hamas's rival.

The blockade has compounded severe poverty in Gaza, a tiny densely populated coastal territory of 1.5 million people.

Israel has said it hopes Cairo will not heed Hamas demands to allow commercial goods through the crossing, saying it fears arms will then be smuggled into the territory and strengthen militants who have used underground tunnels to import weapons.

The Rafah crossing had operated sporadically since 2007 after Egypt closed it following Hamas's takeover of Gaza when it ousted forces loyal Abbas's Fatah faction. Hamas had won parliamentary elections in 2006 and seized Gaza a year later.

Last year, Mubarak's Egypt opened the crossing on a regular basis five days a week and allowed mainly students, those needing medical treatment, holders of visas to a third country and dual nationals out of Gaza.

With files from Ahmed El-Shemi in Rafah, Egypt
© Copyright (c) Royal City Record

Read more: http://www.montrealgazette.com/news/world/Egypt+eases+travel+restrictions+Gaza+travellers/4856786/story.html#ixzz1Ne9sDvzv

Donnerstag, 26. Mai 2011

A Portrait of Ratko Mladic: The Life of a Fugitive General

http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,765145,00.html
After years on the run, Ratko Mladic has been captured. The Bosnian Serb ex-general will be expected before the International Court of Justice on charges of brutal war crimes. But how did a keen military man become a hate-filled criminal?



Who is Ratko Mladic, the man who has finally been arrested and will now be turned over to the U.N. War Crimes Tribunal at The Hague? Charges against him include genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity during the Bosnian War from 1992 to 1995.

The 68-year-old former general and Chief of Staff for the Bosnian Serb army is probably the world's most notorious living mass murderer. During the almost two-year siege of Sarajevo he is said to have instructed snipers to shoot at civilians. But his most gruesome alleged crime is helping to organize the Srebrenica massacre, when some 8,000 Muslim men and boys were killed in an area under UN protection.


British politician David Owen called him a mass murderer; Serbian general Jovan Divjak said the word "human" did not apply to Mladic. The former US ambassador to Yugoslavia saw him as the Heinrich Himmler of his generation. For many Serbs he was undoubtedly a hero and one of the few Serbian leaders who didn't use the war for personal gain.

Dooming Sarajevo Residents to Death

He was born in March, 1942, in the village of Bozinovic, near Kalinovnik, some 50 kilometers south of Sarajevo. It was an idyllic region inhabited by poor farmers. A legend claimed that Hitler had been stationed nearby as a soldier, in a 19th-century ruin which the Austrians had used as a fort during World War I. Mladic's father Nedja was killed in 1945 by a member of the fascist Croatian Ustase, a group that sympathized with Hitler, but Mladic denied having anti-German feelings.

Former military comrades remember the young Mladic as a Bosnian "superman" who was good at swimming, diving, running, and marksmanship. As a staunch Communist, he achieved quick success in his Yugoslavian military career.

After Slovenia and Croatia seceded from the Yugoslavian federal state in 1991, the fighting started. After a battle at Knin he was ordered to lead insurgent Serbs in the Croatian region of Krajina. When then-Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic needed someone to execute his war policies in Bosnia, he chose Mladic, who was 49 at the time. In 1992 he became Chief of Staff for the Bosnian Serb army.

Before he took his official position, he marked the residents of Sarajevo out for death. He wanted to smite the Bosnian metropolis and hand it to the Serbs as a trophy of war. The brutal general bombed his way from victory to victory. By 1994 he had taken some 70 percent of Bosnian territory for the Serbs.

Today the International War Tribunal has hundreds of documents and witness reports that are said to prove that Mladic received not only his pay, but also his orders from the Serbian capital, Belgrade. During the events in Srebrenica he was allegedly in constant contact with Milosevic and the Chief of Staff for the Yugoslavian army, Momcilo Perisic. The attack on the UN protected zone was planned by both military leaders at Milosevic's command, according to The Hague. During the operation Milosevic was constantly updated about its progress.

Conflicts with Karadzic

According to tribunal documents, Mladic was personally present for at least one of the several mass executions during the massacre at Srebrenica, which saw a total of 8,000 people killed. Other executions reportedly followed 15 minutes after he drove away.

On several occasions he'd threatened to bomb Srebrenica into rubble and ashes if the Muslim population failed to surrender their weapons. It was a demand that would never be met. When the UN announced plans to beef up the number of peacekeepers it had in the so-called "safe haven," Mladic made a call for swift action. In a television interview held shortly before the enclave was attacked, he said the time had come to avenge a centuries-long Muslim occupation.

From the early days of the war, Mladic had been fierce enemies with Radovan Karadzic. During the war, Karadzic lived in Pale, a town southeast of Sarajevo. But since July 2008, he's been held at The Hague while standing trial himself. The photos showing the two happily playing chess together were staged for the public benefit and meant to shield the public from the reality. During the war, Karadzic made several attempts to replace his chief military commander, but all of them failed because of support Mladic enjoyed among the other generals.

For his part, Mladic noticeably felt like he was surrounded by traitors. While he wanted to crush the enemy, the political leadership in Pale agreed to peace initiatives and cease-fires that left his army "in agony," as he put it.

Yet another thing put the two suspected war criminals at odds: As Col. Milan Milutinovic, Mladic's former head public relations officer, remembers it, it was hard for the army to accept Karadzic's "witch cult." He says that Karadzic "always brought the fortune teller 'Baba Stane,' from Bejiline, with him to the front. She had to make incantations on fields and trees before the fighting started. Entire areas were marked off with crosses to draw a Serbian border."

Milutinovic tells a story about how the sudden appearance of Croatian soldiers set a column of Serbian soldiers to flight. He says that, after the defeat, Karadzic attributed it to the fact that "this area had not been marked off by Serbian crosses."

Conflicts with Milosevic

With time, Mladic's military worries would increase. The areas controlled by Serbs in Bosnia eventually had borders roughly 1,600 kilometers (1,000 miles) long. It was getting more and more difficult to secure them -- they were short of weapons as well as soldiers. Young men fled from the Republika Srpska by boat over the Drina River to Serbia because they didn't want to become cannon fodder in an increasingly more senseless war.

There are conflicting accounts about Mladic's relationship with Milosevic toward the end of the war. Ljubodrag Stojadinovic, a military analyst who spent 25 years as an officer in the Yugoslavian army and often accompanied Mladic, claims that Milosevic had numerous conflicts with Mladic. In July 1994, he apparently even threatened to have him shot. One of these conversations was apparently recorded by Serbia's intelligence agency. In the tape, Milosevic is reportedly enraged at the general and orders him to come to Belgrade immediately. After a short time, Mladic says, "If you have something to say, you come here. But stop giving me instructions from your cabinet." And reportedly slams down the phone.

Mladic, in the end, had to be removed from his position by force. Even 11 months after the peace accord signed by Serbs, Croats and Bosnians in December 1995, Mladic refused to relinquish command of the military to Biljana Plavsic, who succeeded Karadzic as the political leader of the Bosnian Serbs. The conflict eventually led police officials to destroy the lines of communication between Mladic's headquarters in Han Pijesak and the military units scattered around the country.

Even so, Mladic continued to serve in the Serbian army in Belgrade. It wasn't until 2001 -- six years after the War Crimes Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia laid its charges -- that he was finally forced to retire by Vojislav Kostunica, Serbia's president at the time.

Wishing Death on His Pursuers

The international community wanted to force the surrender of Mladic using threats, financial sanctions, and delays in the normalization of relations with the EU. But there was no one serious in Belgrade to negotiate with. The Serbs seemed to look wherever Mladic was certain not to be. That, at least, is how former Deputy Prime Minister Miroljub Labus describes it. An arrogant Mladic predicted in an interview with the magazine "NIN" in March 1996 that he would be "expensive" to catch. The warning applied not just to his pursuers, but to anyone privy to his whereabouts.


Officials in Serbia consistently tried to throw the international community off the general's trail using bait-and-switch maneuvers. Once they said he'd flown to Moscow. Serbian media later speculated that Mladic was in a position to demand €10 million as payment for his family in case he was handed over. But the Montenegrin paper monitor argued that he threatened, in case of arrest, to talk about Serbia's role in the Croatian and Bosnian wars. Then there was the suicide rumor: Mladic once claimed he always carried a poison pill. A onetime officer from his army also repeated what he said was a concrete command from his former boss: If Mladic ever found himself in a position where suicide would be impossible, his companions were to find him and finish him off.

So far, at least, things have worked out differently.

Mittwoch, 25. Mai 2011

Christine Lagarde launches campaign to become first female IMF leader | World news | The Guardian

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/may/25/christine-lagarde-campaign-imf-leader
The French finance minister, Christine Lagarde, has launched her bid to become the next head of the International Monetary Fund following the resignation of Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who is facing charges of sexual assault.

If she is successful she will become the first woman to head the organisation, known as "the world's banker", since its inception in 1945.

Lagarde, who has the backing of Britain, Germany, France and the European Union, said she came to the decision to throw her hat in the ring to become the IMF's new managing director after "mature reflection" and having consulted with the French president, Nicolas Sarkozy.

"If I'm elected I'll bring all my expertise as a lawyer, a minister, a manager and a woman [to the job]," she said at a press conference in Paris on Wednesday.

Although Lagarde has emerged as a front-runner for the influential post, which has historically been held by a European, IMF directors from Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa (Brics) said the unwritten convention of appointing a managing director from Europe was "obsolete" and undermined the legitimacy of the fund.

The Brics group called for a "truly transparent, merit-based and competitive process".

Lagarde is also facing a possible legal investigation into the payment of €285m of taxpayers' money to controversial businessman Bernard Tapie, a supporter of Sarkozy, to settle a long-running legal dispute.

Strauss-Kahn, 62, stood down last week after he was arrested in New York on 14 May and indicted on seven charges of sexual assault on a hotel housekeeper, including attempted rape. He denies the charges and has been released on bail.

Admirers of the 55-year-old Lagarde, a former national synchronised swimming champion, have described her as a "rock star" of the financial world. She earned praise at home and abroad for her handling of the economic crisis in Europe and for her no-nonsense, straight-talking approach.

Having worked as a lawyer in the US for 25 years she speaks impeccable English. She earned the nickname L'Américaine among her compatriots for suggesting the French needed to stop their "obsessive thinking", roll up their shirtsleeves and "get to work" to pull the country out of the financial doldrums.

Kenneth Rogoff, a former IMF chief economist who is now professor at Harvard University, said of her: "She is enormously impressive, politically astute and a strong personality." He told the New York Times: "At meetings all over the world, she is treated practically like a rock star."

Sarkozy is reported to be planning to seek Barack Obama's support for Lagarde when the leaders meet at the G8 economic summit in the French seaside town of Deauville on Thursday and Friday. America has by far the biggest say, with 16.74% of the votes, followed by Japan with 6.01%, Germany 5.87%, and the UK and France with 4.85%. Other member countries have less than 4%.

On Wednesday the US treasury secretary, Timothy Geithner, said Lagarde and the Mexican candidate for the post, Agustin Carstens, were both "credible" figures to lead the IMF, but added he wanted the candidate with the broadest support.

The debt crisis in European countries, including Greece, Portugal and Ireland, has made the IMF's role overseeing the global financial system – and lending money to struggling nations – even more crucial.

Lagarde said she would not focus exclusively on Europe. "No zone has been spared by the financial crisis," she said, adding that she would "serve the fund, not as a European, not as a French person or minister, but as someone at the service of the fund and its members".

A decision on whether an inquiry will be held into the Tapie affair will be made in Paris on 10 June, but Lagarde said she had "total confidence" and would maintain her candidacy even if an investigation is launched. "I have always acted in the interests of the state and in absolute respect of the law," she said.

The IMF's 24-member executive board, representing the 187 member countries, is expected to name a new managing director by the end of June.

If appointed, Lagarde said she would also bring a woman's touch to the male-dominated corridors of the IMF headquarters in Washington.

In a recent television interview, the French minister expressed the view that men, left to themselves, will usually make a mess of things, a view she reiterated in a newspaper interview. "In gender-dominated environments, men have a tendency to show how hairy chested they are, compared with the man who's sitting next to them … I honestly think that there should never be too much testosterone in one room."

Dienstag, 24. Mai 2011

Rats Multiply - Israel Ad for Peace Two-State Solution

http://cosmicrat.multiply.com/links/item/217/Israel_Ad_for_Peace_Two-State_Solution
Barack Obama said nothing new when he expressed a hope for a peace agreement based on 1967 borders, but suddenly it seems Israel as originally created is no longer good enough for Netanyahu.
Not all Israelis agree with him.

Freitag, 20. Mai 2011

NHS budget squeeze to blame for longer waiting times, say doctors | Society | The Guardian


http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2011/may/19/nhs-hospital-waiting-times-longer
Latest performance data reveal number of English patients waiting more than 18 weeks has risen by 26% in last year.

New NHS performance data reveal that the number of people in England who are being forced to wait more than 18 weeks has risen by 26% in the last year, while the number who had to wait longer than six months has shot up by 43%.

In March this year, 34,639 people, or 11% of the total, waited more than that time to receive inpatient treatment, compared with 27,534, or 8.3%, in March 2010 – an increase of 26% – Department of Health statistics show.

Similarly, in March this year some 11,243 patients who underwent treatment had waited for more than six months, compared with 7,841 in the same month in 2010 – a 43% rise.

Montag, 16. Mai 2011

uuworld.org : legislation, homophobia endanger ugandan uus (SLG)


http://www.uuworld.org/news/articles/183473.shtml?utm_source=n
It's not just LGBT people who are at risk in Uganda; allies, including open, affirming, and welcoming religions, and political dissenters are at risk. One Unitarian Universalist minister has already had to flee the country temporarily. The reason he is in danger? He "promoted homosexuality" and let his church be used for gay "recruitment"--by standing on the side of human dignity and supporting LGBT people instead of closing the doors against them.

If anyone reading this thinks being gay is a choice, maybe it's time to consider who would choose discrimination, violence, humiliation , being cast out and outlawed, and even death. To repeat an excellent question recently asked, just how many more gay people does God have to make before we admit that He wants them around?

For those in the U.S. who haven't been following this story, this is not some isolated, "over there" story about Uganda. Political and religious leaders have played an active role in this hideous story. We who elected the politicians who helped make this happen are responsible.

I figure that last bit doesn't really apply to those not in the U.S.; is anyone else quite as prone to thinking things "over there" aren't relevant and don't matter?

Core of reactor 1 melted 16 hours after quake | The Japan Times Online

http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20110516a1.html
Monday, May 16, 2011

Core of reactor 1 melted 16 hours after quake
New analysis shows damage to fuel rods was surprisingly quick
Kyodo

The meltdown at reactor No. 1 in Fukushima happened more quickly than feared, Tokyo Electric Power Co. said Sunday in a new analysis.

The core of the heavily damaged reactor at the Fukushima No. 1 power plant is believed to have melted 16 hours after the March 11 mega-quake and tsunami rocked the complex in northeastern Japan.

Preliminary analysis shows that No. 1 had already entered a critical state by 6:50 a.m. on March 12, with most of its fuel having melted and fallen to the bottom of the pressure vessel, the plant operator said. Tepco released data Thursday showing some of the fuel rods had melted.

The reactor automatically halted operations immediately after the 2:46 p.m. quake, but the water level in the reactor dropped and the temperature began rising at around 6 p.m. The damage to the fuel rods had begun by 7:30 p.m., with most of them having melted by 6:50 a.m. the following day, the utility said.

While the utility had planned to bring the nation's worst nuclear accident under control in around six to nine months from mid-April, it now has no choice but to abandon a plan to flood the containment vessel of reactor 1 because holes have been created by the melted fuel, an adviser to Prime Minister Naoto Kan said earlier Sunday.

Nevertheless, Goshi Hosono, the top official tasked with handling the nuclear crisis, told TV programs the government had yet to revise the timetable for bringing the crisis to an end.

Asked about initial plans to completely submerge the 4-meter-tall fuel rods by entombing the vessel in water, Hosono said, "We should not cause the (radioactive) water to flow into the sea by taking such a measure."

Hosono said the government will instead consider ways to decontaminate the water being used to cool the fuel so that it can be recirculated instead of letting it flood the facility.

Hosono made the remarks after Tepco discovered a pool of water more than 4 meters deep and exceeding 3,000 tons in the basement of reactor No. 1. This suggests that the water, which is likely highly radioactive, is seeping through the holes after being injected into the reactor core.

From there, it is probably leaking from either the containment vessel or the suppression pool, which enclose the pressure vessel, and into the piping.

In a related revelation concerning a major mixup after the six-reactor complex lost power, Tepco and other sources said the same day that the utility had assembled 69 power supply vehicles at the plant by March 12 but that these proved virtually useless.

The inability to use the vehicles delayed the damage control work at the plant, significantly worsening the emergency.

Tepco earlier said it had tried to connect the vehicles to power-receiving equipment needed to operate the water pumps intended to cool down the reactors. But this failed because the equipment was submerged in seawater from the tsunami, which posed the risk that the equipment would short out.

Tepco's account conflicts with the one detailed by the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency, which mentioned the first arrival of such a vehicle on the evening of March 11 but stopped mentioning it the following day, as the focus of attention had shifted to the need to release radioactive steam to relieve pressure that had built up inside the containment vessel of reactor 1.

The different versions of the story given by Tepco and the agency might come to a head as investigations progress to determine why efforts to immediately contain the crisis failed

Donnerstag, 12. Mai 2011

Europe moves to end passport-free travel in migrant row | World news | The Guardian

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/may/12/europe-to-end-passport-free-travel


http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/may/12/europe-to-end-passport-free-travel


guardian.co.uk home


Europe moves to end passport-free travel in migrant row


European interior ministers agree to 'radical revision' of Schengen amid fears of a flood of migrants from north Africa



Denmark border controls


Danish police check a coach at the Danish-German border Photograph: Claus Fisker L/EPA



European nations moved to reverse decades of unfettered travel across the continent when a majority of EU governments agreed the need to reinstate national passport controls amid fears of a flood of immigrants fleeing the upheaval in north Africa.

In a serious blow to one of the cornerstones of a united, integrated Europe, EU interior ministers embarked on a radical revision of the passport-free travel regime known as the Schengen system to allow the 26 participating governments to restore border controls.


They also agreed to combat immigration by pressing for "readmission accords" with countries in the Middle East and north Africa to send refugees back to where they came from.


The policy shift was pushed by France and Italy, who have been feuding and panicking in recent weeks over a small influx of refugees from Tunisia. But 15 of the 22 EU states which had signed up to Schengen supported the move, with only four resisting, according to officials and diplomats present.


The issue will be discussed at a summit of EU prime ministers and presidents next month. But the "reforms" of the Schengen system also need to go through the European parliament, where there is likely to be strong resistance to empowering national governments to reinstate controls.


The border-free region embraces more than 400m people in 22 EU countries, as well as Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Iceland. It extends from Portugal to Russia's borders on the Baltic, and from Reykjavik to Turkey's border with Greece.


The move to curb freedom of travel came as the extreme nationalist right, which is increasingly influencing policy across Europe, chalked up a notable victory in Denmark, which announced it would unilaterally re-erect controls on its borders with Germany and Sweden.


The centre-right minority government in Copenhagen capitulated to the fiercely anti-immigrant nationalists of the Danish People's party to secure parliamentary backing for long-term budget, welfare and retirement policies. "I have worked hard for this," said Pia Kjaersgaard, the far-right leader.


Despite the 'fortress Europe' mood gripping EU leaders, the Danish decision stunned many because it was taken just hours before an emergency EU meeting devoted to immigration and the Schengen regime.


The German government complained that the open border should not be "sacrificed for domestic political reasons".


The European commission said it would scrutinise the decision to see if it complied with the Schengen rules. There were calls in the European parliament for Denmark to be kicked out of the Schengen regime. But the Danish government promised that border and customs checks would not extend to passport controls, and that this remained compliant with Schengen.


Denmark already has the tightest anti-immigration laws in Europe. The government there said a permanent return to national controls was aimed at combating cross-border crime.


The sudden shift in Denmark, as well as the new curbs on freedom of movement, highlighted how a resurgent Europhobic far right across the EU is translating success at the ballot box into policy victories.


Italy's anti-immigrant campaign is headed by the interior minister Robert Maroni, of the xenophobic Northern League in the Berlusconi coalition. The campaign in France is seen as an attempt by President Nicolas Sarkozy to dilute the growing appeal of Marine Le Pen, the new leader of the extreme Front National.


The minority centre-right coalition in the Netherlands, as in Denmark, is propped up by tacit support from the Muslim-baiting Freedom party led by Geert Wilders.


The robust nationalism, most recently evident in Finland, is fuelling demands for the repatriation of powers from Brussels, a trend likely to be welcomed by David Cameron and the Tories.


"The problem is all about trust. How do we get out of this without bringing down the system?" said one EU ambassador. "The challenges get bigger every day and the question is whether all this can be kept under control."


The policy shift has also been triggered by acute nervousness about the impact of the Arab spring. "There are hundreds of thousands on the shores of north Africa. Something extraordinary could happen any day," said a senior EU diplomat. "If Gaddafi uses this weapon, he can create a lot of problems for Europe."


The Guardian revealed this week that the Gaddafi regime is allowing thousands of sub-Saharan African migrants on to overcrowded, unseaworthy ships in an apparently calculated attempt to use migration to pressure Nato and the EU countries against backing Libya's rebels.


While a consensus has emerged among EU governments on rowing back on Schengen, the European commission maintained that national passport and border controls could only be reintroduced "as a last resort", temporarily in extreme circumstances.


The commission's emphasis paves the way for a power struggle in the weeks and months ahead over who should police the Schengen rules and decide whether and why a country may suspend the open-borders regime.


At Thursday's meeting, Germany insisted the powers had to rest with national governments and that the European commission would be bypassed. It was supported by France, Austria, and the Czech Republic.


Cecilia Malmstrom, the commissioner for home affairs – who calls the borders-free zone a "beautiful achievement" – argued that the powers should be vested in Brussels.


Sandor Pinder, the Hungarian interior minister, who chaired the meeting, warned that individual countries should not be allowed to act alone in deciding to restore border controls. "That could trigger a chain reaction and shatter confidence," he said.




Many Minds, Many Masters

Rating:
Category:Books
Genre: Health, Mind & Body
Author:Dr Brian Weiss, MD
I’ve just finished reading, in one extended session, Dr Brian Weiss’ “celebrated” book, "Many Lives, Many Masters". This reading in one session wasn’t because the book was so unputdownable; it was because I was afraid that if I quit reading it, I couldn’t force myself to get back to it. It was that kind of book.

This isn’t really a review, per se, of the book so much as a discussion of the mechanics of writing it, because normally I wouldn’t bothering reviewing it. However, given that it’s apparently a “life-changing” work, and that it seriously requires debunking, I thought it incumbent upon me to do my bit.

So, what is it about? I’ll quote from the back cover blurb: “Psychiatrist Dr Brian Weiss had been working with Catherine, a young patient, for eighteen months. Catherine was suffering from recurring nightmares and chronic anxiety attacks. When his traditional methods of therapy failed, Dr Weiss turned to hypnosis and was astonished and sceptical when Catherine began recalling past-life traumas which seemed to hold the key to her problems.

“Dr Weiss’ scepticism was eroded when Catherine began to channel messages from ‘the space between lives’, which contained remarkable revelations about his own life. Acting as a channel for information from highly evolved spirit entities called the Masters, Catherine revealed many secrets of life and death.”

To put it more bluntly, it’s a book that purports to discuss the so-called “phenomenon” of reincarnation, and then extends it to include elements of spiritualism, all dressed up with the formidable psychiatric credentials of the author, which he never fails to bring to your attention (more on that in a moment).

Now, I’d better say this right away: on the question of reincarnation, you can’t call me a sceptic. You can call me a complete and utter disbeliever, for reasons I’ve gone into so many times in the past that I have no desire to repeat them here. Therefore I have, let’s say, a bias. But, for the purpose of this discussion, let me approach the book with as open a mind as I can manage.

Basically, the story goes like this: “Catherine” (which is not her real name) is a small town girl who works as a lab technician in the same hospital where Weiss is a psychiatrist. She’s involved in an unhappy affair with a married man, and is going through a mentally traumatic phase, including fears of enclosed places, choking and water. You know, like millions of other disturbed individuals in stressful situations? And, apparently, nobody could help her until another doctor, “Edward”, forced her to come to Weiss. “Edward” apparently thought it the right thing to do.

After eighteen months of therapy, “Catherine” apparently worked through her personal life history, including the experience of being molested by her father at the age of three, but hadn’t got any improvement at all. And then Weiss decided to try hypnosis on her, to get her back beyond the third year, to get at even earlier roots of her problems. And instead of remembering her first pacifier or something, she began recalling a past life...3500 years or so ago.

And over the next months, apparently, “Catherine” (under hypnosis) began remembering more and more details of past lives, including as far back as “a cave” and as recent as the Second World War, where she was a German pilot flying a four engine bomber. And as she waited in between lives, mysterious “Masters” spoke through her mouth and delivered preachy homilies to Weiss about himself and his purpose on earth.

Let get the biggest problem out of the way first: I have no particular reason to believe Weiss is not lying. I see that he has made quite a name for himself from this book, and several subsequent books on the same topic, and is apparently now quite a celebrity. However, all this is on the basis of a series of reported conversations with a woman whose real name we do not know, with no basis for deciding whether she actually exists or existed, let alone whether the conversations occurred as related. Of the two other people named to have had anything to do with “Catherine”, one, “Edward”, died even before the hypnosis treatment began, while the other was Weiss’ wife and surely not a disinterested witness.

I’m not saying Weiss is lying, but I am very far from assuming without independent proof that he is speaking the truth.

Next;

Hypnosis, as I discovered with only a cursory internet search, is unreliable as a memory search tool*, and people with a high degree of suggestivity can easily be led into repeating information knowingly or unknowingly fed them by the hypnotist. If you read the book, it’s hard to avoid noticing the fact that Weiss was “leading the witness” as the courts say, suggesting answers which “Catherine” almost always meekly confirmed and enhanced, paving the way for Weiss to ask even more leading questions. In fact Weiss admits as much, but explains it away as “Catherine’s” child-like responses which forced him to ask specific questions in order to get answers. I am less than convinced.

Still less am I convinced by “Catherine’s” recollections. For instance, she remembers her life in ancient Greece, in circa 1536 BC...which she recalls, under hypnosis and living that life, as 1536 BC. I doubt the ancient Greeks had means of telling the future and of predicting the change in eras and dating systems. (On a side note, the Greeks of 1536 BC apparently wrote on paper as well!)

One of the most damaging things about “Catherine’s” recollections is that they cannot be pinned down historically. She reports being a “servant” or a “sailor” or a “raider” and sometimes drops a date or two, but never, ever, provides any verifiable detail; not even a single, solitary surname. In fact, her “recollections” seem to be extremely shallow; little better than something any averagely well-read person can remember from a few TV documentaries or school history lessons on how people lived. Weiss repeatedly tells us that he knows – he knows – that she isn’t making up any of this because she’s “simple” and “couldn’t have known anything about this because she wasn’t interested in it.” I’m not particularly interested in pelota, or panning for gold, but I could tell you something of them if you asked me to; and I’m sure you all have knowledge about things you aren’t mostly interested in. It happens to everyone. If “Catherine” isn’t capable of this, she must be a remarkably intellectually crippled woman...and yet she is a woman who apparently can predict the winners of horse races and has suddenly become a highly competent psychic after the hypnosis begins.

Oh, and while I am on the subject, I noticed that in one of her lives, "Catherine" was a black woman born around 1867, and died in her sixties; which would date her death to somewhere about 1930. However, she was also a German pilot, named Eric, with a wife and child, killed in 1945 at the latest; and who was a pilot on a cargo aircraft even before the war began. I didn't see any attempt by Weiss to explain this chronological aberration. Maybe he didn't notice it.

Another highly suspicious thing about the whole recollection thing is the fact that Weiss admits trying to push “Catherine” to recollect her death, skipping the memories of her life (which would give us a few details, perhaps) in order to get to the “messages of the Masters” which are apparently relayed by the hypnotised “Catherine” from between the worlds, and are meant for Weiss, and for Weiss alone. These messages are almost entirely pop spiritualism; they talk about how we are here for a purpose, which is to “learn” (what, I don’t know) and that we have lived countless lives and have countless more to come. Given even the Earth has a measurable age, and will be destroyed by the Sun at a predictable time from now, I don’t know what the “countless” is all about – and I find it highly interesting that Weiss, with all his formidable credentials, doesn’t think to pose this question.

But that’s hardly surprising when you take a look at Weiss’ technique. It’s cyclical and predictable. First, he claims “Catherine” made certain statements. Then, he claims that these statements prove reincarnation exists. And then, before his reader hopefully takes the time to begin thinking about what he has said, he follows it up with a recital of his qualifications and his experience in various universities. The obvious idea is to bulldoze doubts under the weight of his degrees. His effort to market the idea is blatantly clear.

Of course, the fear of death is a compelling force. Any “study” that purports to show that death isn’t really an end will immediately find a ready market, even if said study doesn’t stand up to scrutiny. The popularity of near-death-experience books alone should be proof of this, but Weiss goes a long step further than merely life after death. Not only does he claim that people are reincarnated; he claims that groups of people are reincarnated, over and over again, together. Weiss himself appears as a wild old sage in ancient Greece, and “Edward”, too, over and over again.

Not only will you be born again, but your friends and lovers will live again with you.

Now, is or is that not a marketable premise?

After reading the book, I still don’t know if reincarnation exists. I do, however, know that this isn’t reincarnation I’m reading about in Weiss’ book.

It’s a gimmick, a hoax.


* http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9415925

Mittwoch, 11. Mai 2011

Princess Beatrice To Auction Royal Wedding Hat For Charity

http://www.accesshollywood.com/princess-beatrice-to-auction-headline-grabbing-royal-wedding-hat-for-charity_article_47872

http://www.accesshollywood.com/princess-beatrice-to-auction-headline-grabbing-royal-wedding-hat-for-charity_article_47872

Princess Beatrice To Auction Royal Wedding Hat For Charity

LOS ANGELES, Calif. --

If you’ve found yourself lying awake at night wondering how to get your pretty little paws on Princess Beatrice’s outrageous Royal Wedding headpiece, take a deep breath and prepare yourself — the wait is over!

The 22-year-old royal’s whimsical blush-colored Philip Treacy creation – which she proudly donned at Prince William and Catherine Middleton’s April 29 wedding — will soon be available for purchase, Beatrice’s mother, Duchess Sarah Ferguson, said.

”[Beatrice] is putting it up on eBay to auction it for UNICEF and for Children in Crisis,” the duchess revealed during an interview on “The Oprah Winfrey Show,” which aired on Wednesday.

Designs by famed milliner Treacy – who also created Sarah Jessica Parker’s awe-inspiring topper for the “Sex and The City” movie premiere — can cost upwards of $3,300, according to People.

 

Sonntag, 8. Mai 2011

CHARLES: SO WHO ELECTED HIM PRINCE?

http://www.bobpark.org/

































































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Friday, May 6, 2011


CHARLES: SO WHO ELECTED HIM PRINCE?


I was still recovering from a serious overdose of royals when I learned that the Prince of Wales was in Washington, DC this week to promote sustainable farming. Back in the UK, the Daily Mail charged Prince Charles with secretly lobbying ministers for homeopathic medicines on the NHS. The NHS spends millions of pounds each year on alternative medicine at a time when its restricting proven lifesaving drugs for those with cancer. The most popular cold medication in the world is Oscillococcinum; the active ingredient is Anas Barbariae Hepatis et Cordis Extractum (extract of liver and heart of the Barbary duck) 200CK HPUS. The 200CK means the solution has been diluted 1 part in 100, shaken, and repeated sequentially 200 times. HPUS means the medication is listed in the Homeopathic Pharmacopeia of the United States, and prepared according to 1938 federal guidelines. That the ignorant and antiquated law sanctioning homeopathy is still on the books is a national disgrace. The dilution is totally meaningless; somewhere around number 30 of the 200 sequential dilutions, the dilution limit will be reached. That is, not a single molecule of the so- called "active ingredient" remains. Millions of people all over the world reach for this non-medicine every time they sneeze. The French company, Boiron, that makes Oscillococcinum should be locked and its officers put on trial. In terms of "sustainability," all this makes perfect sense. The world will not run out of Oscillococcinum.



Bob Park can be reached via email at whatsnew@bobpark.org

THE UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND

Opinions are the author's and are not necessarily shared by the University, but they should be.