Thursday, June 28, 2012

The Advantages of a Home Based Internet Marketing Business

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The Advantages of a Home Based Internet Marketing Business the concept of a home based internet marketing business is very self-explanatory. It,s a business done online by a person who is physically located at home. It translates to earning money without leaving the comforts of one,s own abode. What are the advantages of doing this kind of business and how does it compare to other business opportunities and compared to working as an employee? Own Pace, Own Time One advantage of a home based internet marketing business is that you have absolute control over it since you do not work for anybody but yourself. You earn but not by having to follow orders from bosses and cram for company-set deadlines. This is a blessing to someone who likes to work at his own pace and time. This is also perfect for someone who does not wish to be responsible for the success or failure of other people (bosses and co-workers) since whatever is lost solely belongs to him. Auto-Pilot Mode

A home based internet marketing business usually does not require a person to hire other people. Aside from the fact that a home based internet marketer won,t need the extra hands since the business could be done alone, a home based internet marketing business goes on auto pilot once the barest minimum requirements and business essentials have been attained. If a home based online businessman needs professional and expert help, he could always outsource his need for skills through the numerous online freelancing portals for a reasonable price.Minimum Capital and Operation Costs If you were to start your own home based internet marketing business, you would of course need to make some investments. You would certainly need your own computer and an internet connection, too. Most likely though, you would not need to procure a new computer or procure a new internet connection since you would probably have both already. You might have to spend some money on an internet marketing training course, but this is not required if you already know the basics and the A B C s of marketing per se and internet marketing specifically. Setting up a home based internet marketing business also means that you don,t have to pay for office space and office equipments, and that you don,t have to pay another set of bills. Moreover, you save a lot of money in commuting or gas expenses. These translate to minimal operational costs. Great Potential R O I Internet marketing is a good business for two reasons: the high rate of internet business entry, and the increasing saturation of the internet marketplace. To you, this means that there is great demand for internet marketing services which is acknowledged to be one of the best ways of website promotion. Due to the high demand and the vastness of the internet market, you have a lot of income potential on a home based internet marketing business. In contrast, the capital and operating expenses required to set up and maintain the business are minimal. Great income potential and minimal expenses mean great potential return on your investment.

This entry was posted in Internet Marketing Ideas and tagged Advantages, Based, Business, Home, Internet, Marketing. Bookmark the permalink. Follow any comments here with the RSS feed for this post. Trackbacks are closed, but you can .

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How rare/common is it for foster parents to allow their foster kids to ...

after they age out?

Have you heard of any that help pay for college; walk a former foster daughter down the aisle; put them in their will.

I am just curious if this ever happens.

Best answer:

Answer by Randy B
One of the ladies who instructed on my intro course as a foster parent had about a half dozen children over the years that maxed out in while in her care. All but one of them remained a defacto part of the family to the point where she and her husband walked two of them down the isle when they eventually got married. The one that did not remain a close part of their family had other mental and medical issues and went to a long term adult care facility. Although he doesn?t recognize them any more, they still visit him and treat him as if he was the part of their family he would want to be if he was able to.

I?m not sure how rare it is but I would suspect that it does happen.

Add your own answer in the comments!

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Sunday, June 24, 2012

Young Somalis struggle to find peace in Canada

They are called the ciyaal baraf, or the children of the snow. The kids of a generation who fled blood-stained Somalia two decades ago.

More Related to this Story

Their parents sought refuge across the world in a mass exodus from civil war. Many settled in Canada, mostly in Toronto, where they raised their children, often in poverty. And, as the children came of age and branched out across the country, a new kind of grief emerged.

Since 2005, dozens of young men from Canada?s Somali community have been killed, most of them casualties along a cocaine-dusted corridor between the housing projects of Toronto and the oil patch in Alberta. Most cases remain unsolved.

The latest slaying was among the most brazen. Ahmed Hassan, a 24-year-old who?d been charged with dealing drugs in Alberta, was gunned down in Toronto?s Eaton Centre. His public death has nudged this grief into the spotlight and renewed calls from Somali community leaders for governments to help stop the bloodshed.

Ultimately, the shooting has forced the country to confront the vexing question of why so many of these young men who go west end up dead.

Western dream a nightmare

The Somali-Canadian community may be rooted in Toronto, but the source of its grief is in Alberta, where at least 23 young men have died in the past seven years.

There are about 3,000 Somalis who live in or near the oil-sands city of Fort McMurray. Their community is clustered in a series of low-rise apartments tucked between a grocery store, a mall and a graveyard. They come here dreaming of well-paying jobs, hoping to send money back home and end two decades of poverty. But many lack recognized skills and end up chronically underemployed, driving cabs or working as hotel housekeepers; or they?re unemployed, as is the case with more than 300 Somalis in Fort McMurray today.

?We?re called the lost generation,? explained Warsame Adam, a 29-year-old facility manager at the Fort McMurray mosque. ?We?re hit from every direction, Somalis. It?s like we don?t belong anywhere.?

Mr. Adam found meaningful work out west. Others, however, heeded a different, persistent call ? that of the drug trade.

?I don?t think anybody goes there saying, ?You know what, I?m going to go over there and become a drug dealer,? ? said Ali Abdullahi, who runs youth programs for Somalis in Toronto and knew at least one of the men killed in Alberta. ?It?s a lot of young men who go over there, look for work, and some of them may not have all the qualifications to find a job.?

But they still need to make money, said Hukun Hurur, a Somali leader in Fort McMurray. ?And then they turn to other things.?

Cocaine use thrives in Alberta?s oil patch, driven by those who did find well-paying jobs. In 2010, Fort McMurray RCMP laid five cocaine-trafficking charges for every marijuana charge.

It?s a brisk trade. High-level dealers can quickly gross $5,000 a day selling crack and cocaine, making $12-per-hour labour jobs seem laughable.

?We don?t get a job. So the only option is to get money, to sell drugs,? said one young Somali-Canadian in Fort McMurray, who calls himself M.J.

?There?s something wrong with this city,? he said.

Civil war

Most of these children of the snow can trace their roots to strife-torn Somalia. In 1991, armed opposition groups overthrew the ruling military government, thrusting the country into a brutal and protracted civil war.

As the conflict worsened, migrants poured into Toronto, along with other cities in the United States and Britain. Many arrived with limited English skills and few resources. In places like Toronto, where there was no existing Somali community to join, families were left to fend for themselves.

Rima Berns-McGown, a University of Toronto professor who has studied the Somali diaspora in Canada and Britain, said many parents who brought their children abroad were suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder ? yet another challenge for young families adapting to life on a new continent.

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Saturday, June 23, 2012

Claudia Maittlen-Harris: What To Put On Your Wedding DO NOT PLAY List

Every couple has their song. For couples in the movies it's usually a romantic song filled with love and meaning, but in real life, not so much. My fianc? and I have two such songs we consider "ours". Are either of the songs romantic? Not even close. One is Bob Seger's "We've Got Tonight" about two lonely, sad people who have nothing. The other is Tupac's "All About You" which discusses the rapper's exasperation with the women in the club and how everywhere he goes, he sees the same "hoes". One song is depressing and the other is misogynistic and crass. Knowing all of that, will I play them at our wedding? Hell to the yes. Why? Because both songs bring back great memories for us, and it's our wedding. We might do an instrumental version to sneak in one and wait until the end of the night to sneak in a radio-edited version of Tupac's song without our parents noticing, but we both agree that we want them played on our night. That's the thing with music. We can all hear the same song, but it can have a million different meanings to people. Everyone can tell you "Don't play the Chicken Dance song at your wedding!" But what if you and your guy danced like idiots to that song at a wedding, and it makes you both laugh at the memory? You can't explain that to all of your guests, but you can play what's important to you.

As someone who used to work for a wedding caterer and has been a bridesmaid enough times to reach romantic comedy status, I think it's important to make your personal Do Not Playlist. Find a DJ you trust. We live in a world where it's okay to judge someone by their website (sorry, but it's true). But just in case you need a little guidance or a reminder of what makes something unplayable to you, here is my personal Do Not Playlist.

1. "Vogue" by Madonna
I'm not a fan of synchronized dancing in general, unless it's "The Twist," or "Shout." Most DJs know to leave the Macarena or the Chicken Dance off the list, but I will remind ours to exclude this Madonna classic. I just can't hear every woman sing "Greta Garbo and Monroe, Dietrich and DiMaggio" while doing dance moves from the early 90's again. I just can't.

2. "Don't Stop Believin'" by Journey
People are generally shocked when I say I don't want to hear this song. In fact, I made my fianc? promise when we got engaged that I didn't have to hear it on my wedding day. I don't begrudge others playing it, but not on our night. I was a bartender for years, and one of my shifts was a karaoke night. Hearing 'just a small town boy/living in a lonely world' loudly, drunkenly belted out endlessly while my clothes smell of Coors Light and Jagermeister is my memory of this song. Instead of inspiring me to never give up, it reminds me of drunk people, despair and a sea of screaming patrons. Luckily the canon of Journey allows me many other choices. "Separate Ways" anyone?

3. "I Gotta Feeling" by The Black Eyed Peas
After hearing it played at every sporting event, party, bar, wedding, and bar mitzvah for the last three years, I'm officially over this song. I feel like it's become the new "Celebration." I don't want to be a party pooper, but this song can be retired, at least at my wedding. I'd much rather hear Pink's "Raise Your Glass" anyway, and they have the same effect on a dance floor.

4. "I Will Survive" by Gloria Gaynor
I first heard this song when I saw "Priscilla: Queen of the Desert," and thought it was fabulous. So if you're a gay man in a fabulous headpiece with a matching outrageous costume, go for it. Unfortunately, it has become a drunken girl's dance floor anthem. Having been the drunk girl at a wedding before, I'd like to think I didn't need a song to make it that obvious. Not to mention the bad mojo you bring to a wedding by having multitudes of women singing about leaving a man.

5. "We Are Family" by Sister Sledge
My problems with this song are two-fold. I was in a sorority in college (don't judge too harshly) and this song was played at every event, rush party, Greek week, sporting event, video montage, etc. By the age of 19, I never needed to hear this song again. Then I went to a wedding in South America. Since about one quarter of the wedding guests were American and the rest were South American, the band only knew a handful of non-Spanish songs. That's totally fine, but they knew "We Are Family" and probably played it at least six times at the wedding. It was actually hilarious, but the song wears me out. I can't do it anymore, at least not when I'm paying the DJ.

6. "Cotton Eyed Joe" by Rednex
I imagine most people are with me on this one. This song -- a weird mix of white trash, hillbilly and roughneck all rolled into one -- couldn't be more obnoxious. While I proudly claim my Texas background, I don't need to see my family and friends with their thumbs hooked in their belt loops line-dancing to a song that resembles the Deliverance dueling banjo song.

7. "Brown Eyed Girl" by Van Morrison
Let me begin by saying I love Van Morrison. Sadly, "Brown Eyed Girl" always makes me think of the Julia Roberts' film "Sleeping With the Enemy." And memories of a movie where a woman marries a charming, successful man who is an abusive, homicidal maniac who tries to kill her are not exactly the thoughts I need on my wedding day. It doesn't matter how adorable Julia Roberts was, it's a do NOT play for me. However, Van Morrison's "Moondance," "Crazy Love," or "Sweet Thing" are welcome with open arms.

These are my suggestions. But it is your wedding so let your cheesy music flag fly if that makes you happy. When else will you get so much control over what the DJ plays?

?

Follow Claudia Maittlen-Harris on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ZerosB4TheOne

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You Need To Use A Qualified Property Broker When Buying ...

23 June 2012

Posted by Dennis under: Key West Commercial Real Estate .

When financing your commercial real estate properties, you want to ensure you have a top-notch attorney who will go over everything with you. If something goes south in your property adventures, then you want the best backing you up to keep your reputation sound and protect you from threats.

When you are negotiating to rent a commercial property, try to have the lease modified so there are few events that are considered to be defaulting on the lease. Your tenant will be less likely to default on the lease if you do this. That is not a situation you would want to encounter.

When selling commercial property, advertise locally and outside of your region. Many people only think locals will buy their property, and that?s a mistake. In fact, the interest level can expand far beyond the local scene as private investors expand their interest. These investors are searching for affordable property and may be interested in yours.

Unlike a home loan, you will need a higher percentage down payment for a commercial real estate loan. Seeking out the greatest lenders and putting your ear to the ground about investment possibilities is a great way to possibly qualify for a commercial loan.

Make sure you can spot a great deal, and act on it in a timely fashion. Professionals in real estate are able to recognize great deals. They?re so successful largely because they always keep an exit strategy in mind, and they aren?t afraid to step away from deals that have gone bad or lose their appeal. They also have an eye for repairs, are good at calculating risk, and they are good at knowing when their financial goals align with the properties in question.

It should now be apparent that you need to consider any commercial real estate transaction from multiple angles. Have the tips in this article in your mind so that you can make sure you receive a good deal, which is exactly what is needed for housing a business.

For more information about Key West Commercial Real Estate contact Gary Smith at http://www.keywestlifestyle.com

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Friday, June 22, 2012

Video shows Zimmerman's account of fatal fight

In this Feb. 27, 2012 image taken from a Sanford Police video posted on a website called gzlegalcase.com by George Zimmerman's defense team, Zimmerman speaks to investigators, (not shown) at the scene of Trayvon Martin's fatal shooting a day later giving police a blow-by-blow account of his fight with the teen. On the tape, Zimmerman did a reenactment of the scuffle with Martin in the moments before he shot the 17-year-old from Miami. (AP Photo/Sanford Police video via Zimmerman Defense Team)

In this Feb. 27, 2012 image taken from a Sanford Police video posted on a website called gzlegalcase.com by George Zimmerman's defense team, Zimmerman speaks to investigators, (not shown) at the scene of Trayvon Martin's fatal shooting a day later giving police a blow-by-blow account of his fight with the teen. On the tape, Zimmerman did a reenactment of the scuffle with Martin in the moments before he shot the 17-year-old from Miami. (AP Photo/Sanford Police video via Zimmerman Defense Team)

In this Feb. 27, 2012 image taken from a Sanford Police video posted on a website called gzlegalcase.com by George Zimmerman's defense team, Zimmerman speaks to investigators, (not shown) at the scene of Trayvon Martin's fatal shooting a day later giving police a blow-by-blow account of his fight with the teen. On the tape, Zimmerman did a reenactment of the scuffle with Martin in the moments before he shot the 17-year-old from Miami. (AP Photo/Sanford Police video via Zimmerman Defense Team)

In this Feb. 27, 2012 image taken from a Sanford Police video posted on a website called gzlegalcase.com by George Zimmerman's defense team, Zimmerman speaks to an unidentifed investigator at the scene of Trayvon Martin's fatal shooting a day later giving police a blow-by-blow account of his fight with the teen. On the tape, Zimmerman did a reenactment of the scuffle with Martin in the moments before he shot the 17-year-old from Miami. (AP Photo/Sanford Police video via Zimmerman Defense Team)

In this Feb. 27, 2012 image taken from a Sanford Police video posted on a website called gzlegalcase.com by George Zimmerman's defense team, Zimmerman speaks to an unidentifed investigator at the scene of Trayvon Martin's fatal shooting a day later giving police a blow-by-blow account of his fight with the teen. On the tape, Zimmerman did a reenactment of the scuffle with Martin in the moments before he shot the 17-year-old from Miami. (AP Photo/Sanford Police video via Zimmerman Defense Team)

In this Feb. 27, 2012 image taken from a Sanford Police video posted on a website called gzlegalcase.com by George Zimmerman's defense team, Zimmerman, with a butterfly bandage on the back of his head, speaks to investigators, (not shown) at the scene of Trayvon Martin's fatal shooting a day later giving police a blow-by-blow account of his fight with the teen. On the tape, Zimmerman did a reenactment of the scuffle with Martin in the moments before he shot the 17-year-old from Miami. (AP Photo/Sanford Police video via Zimmerman Defense Team)

(AP) ? George Zimmerman appears believable when he re-enacts for police what he says led to the fatal shooting of Trayvon Martin, but some of his statements are questionable, lawyers who reviewed the footage Thursday said.

Even a detective who interrogates the neighborhood watch leader in an audio recording points out inconsistencies in his story, particularly Zimmerman's claim that Martin confronted him, punched him and slammed his head onto the ground when the teenager had no prior history of violence.

Detective Chris Sereno asks Zimmerman whether he was profiling Martin because he was black, a claim Martin's parents have made.

"You know you are going to come under a lot of scrutiny for this," Sereno said. "Had this person been white, would you have felt the same way?"

"Yes," said Zimmerman, who father is white and his mother Hispanic.

The video and audio tapes released by Zimmerman's attorney give Zimmerman's most detailed account yet of what led to the Feb. 26 shooting. They were released almost a week before Zimmerman's second bond hearing on a second-degree murder charge, and on the heels of unflattering telephone calls capturing Zimmerman and his wife talking in code about using money collected for a defense fund to pay credit cards.

Zimmerman claims he shot the unarmed 17-year-old Martin teen in self-defense, under Florida's "stand your ground" law.

Martin's parents have said Zimmerman was the aggressor. They said Martin was walking back from a convenience store through the gated community in Sanford when Zimmerman spotted Martin and started following him.

In the video (http://apne.ws/KWquJX ), Zimmerman said he grabbed his gun from a holster on his waist before Martin could get it, and shot Martin once in the chest as they fought on the ground outside townhomes in a gated community. After firing, Zimmerman said he thought he missed.

"He sat up and said, 'You got me. You got me, or something like that,'" Zimmerman said.

Zimmerman said Martin had been on top of him, slamming his head against the ground and smothering his mouth and nose with his hand and arm. The tape shows two butterfly bandages on the back of Zimmerman's head and another on his nose. There are red marks on the front of his head.

"It felt like my head was going to explode," he said.

Criminal defense lawyers who reviewed the video for The Associated Press and have no connection to the case said there were some parts that didn't add up.

"He came across as being straight-forward," attorney David Hill said. "I didn't see him being too slick on the details."

Hill said the video didn't show him to be the zealous "cop-wannabe" that Martin's parents have portrayed.

Zimmerman claims Martin confronted him after the neighborhood watch leader had given up searching for him and was walking back to his truck. But there doesn't appear to be a place to hide in the area where Zimmerman says Martin suddenly appeared, Hill pointed out.

Zimmerman's injuries also don't appear to be consistent with the severity of the attack he described, Hill said.

Attorney Blaine McChesney said he found parts of Zimmerman's re-enactment difficult to envision, such as his account of how he was able to reach for his gun with Martin on top of him. Zimmerman said he got on top of Martin after the shooting to restrain him.

"I also find it strange that Zimmerman would have attempted to use both his arms to hold Martin facedown, re-holstering his firearm, given those circumstances," McChesney said. "Once out from under Martin's alleged attack, it would have been more logical to hold Martin at gunpoint from a few feet away until police arrived."

In one of the audio recordings, Sereno tells Zimmerman three days after the shooting that Martin was a "good kid, mild-mannered kid."

Sereno tells Zimmerman that Martin, an athlete with an interest in aeronautics, was "a kid with a future, a kid with folks that care." The detective said Martin only had a bag of Skittles and an iced tea on him when he died.

"Not a goon," Sereno said.

He asked Zimmerman to explain why he doesn't have bruises on his body or broken ribs. The two dozen punches Zimmerman claims he took are "not quite consistent with your injuries," Sereno said.

Benjamin Crump, the attorney for Martin's parents, couldn't immediately be reached for comment Thursday. But appearing on CNN's "Piers Morgan Tonight," Crump said Zimmerman's credibility is the issue.

"Everybody's going to have to look at this for what it is," Crump said. "You've got objective evidence, and then you've got George Zimmerman's versions. You put them up against one another and we know that written statement that he did that night doesn't match up to that 911 tape.

"And there are other inconsistencies, and when we see the lie, we've got to call it out and say, there's his credibility again, and that's the important thing."

Zimmerman called police after spotting Martin walking around the neighborhood and the dispatcher told him not to follow the teen. For reasons that are still unclear, Zimmerman kept up his pursuit, even getting out of his truck. He lost sight of Martin and was walking back to his truck when Martin confronted him, Zimmerman said.

"Do you have a problem?" Zimmerman said, quoting Martin.

If Zimmerman's account his accurate, he has a viable "stand your ground" defense, McChesney said.

Zimmerman's attorney has the option of asking for a "stand your ground" hearing in which he will present Zimmerman's account to a judge and ask that the charge be dismissed without going to trial.

Zimmerman's second bond hearing will be June 29. His $150,000 bond was revoked earlier this month after prosecutors said Zimmerman and his wife, Shellie, misled the court about how much money they had available for bail. Shellie Zimmerman was charged last week with making a false statement.

Defense attorney Mark O'Mara said his client will be shown to have told the truth about the incident, even though the statement regarding the Zimmermans' finances was shown to be false.

"The attacks on Mr. Zimmerman's credibilities are going to pale in comparison to the undeniable, objective evidence," he said.

___

Associated Press writers Freida Frisaro, Kelli Kennedy, Laura Wides in Miami, Greg Schreier and Bernard McGhee in Atlanta and Brent Kallestad in Tallahassee contributed to this report.

Follow Mike Schneider on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/MikeSchneiderAP

Associated Press

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Israel to press visiting Putin on Iran

Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks at the economic forum in St. Petersburg, Russia, Thursday, June 21, 2012. Putin has appointed a presidential ombudsman vested with special powers to defend the rights of company owners and directors in an attempt by the Kremlin to attract foreign investment. Putin made the announcement at a major economic forum in St. Petersburg on Thursday.(AP Photo/RIA-Novosti, Alexei Nikolsky, Presidential Press Service)

Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks at the economic forum in St. Petersburg, Russia, Thursday, June 21, 2012. Putin has appointed a presidential ombudsman vested with special powers to defend the rights of company owners and directors in an attempt by the Kremlin to attract foreign investment. Putin made the announcement at a major economic forum in St. Petersburg on Thursday.(AP Photo/RIA-Novosti, Alexei Nikolsky, Presidential Press Service)

(AP) ? When Vladimir Putin visits Israel next week, the world may want to pay attention: The Iranian nuclear program will top the agenda ? and the steely Russian president, widely viewed as coddling the Iranians, may hold the key to avoiding a potential slide into another Middle East war.

With close ties to Iran and a vote on the U.N. Security Council, Russia could play a key role in the coming months in determining whether Israel decides to attack Iran's suspect nuclear program.

In Jerusalem, the commonly held view is that after years of dithering, the West has woken up to the threat from Iran ? but the reluctance of Russia and China to support a crippling regime of sanctions and pressure is emboldening the Iranians, decreasing the chances they will back down and increasing the chances for an attack of last resort.

"The message they (the Russians) will receive is that Israel can't tolerate a nuclear Iran. Of course we prefer a diplomatic solution, but we will use all means to protect Israel's survival," said Yacov Livne, head of the Russia desk at the Israeli Foreign Ministry.

"We expect Russia, as a member of the Security Council, to demonstrate responsibility and help to prevent the Iranian nuclear race," he said. "I think that will be the most important subject, the central subject here next week."

Israel sees Iran as its most dangerous foe because it is convinced that Iran's nuclear program is meant to build bombs and not produce energy, as Iran claims. The fears are compounded by Iran's frequent calls for Israel's destruction, support for anti-Israel militants and arsenal of ballistic missiles.

Officials here have fueled speculation about Israeli attack plans by contending that Iran's movement of nuclear facilities into heavily fortified, underground bunkers will soon make the program immune to airstrikes.

Putin can expect pressure to join the West in its crusade to halt the program.

Putin's calculations are complex. Resurgent Russia, trying to reassert itself in the world after a couple of lean decades, is not likely to abandon a trade partner and sometime ally; but his rhetoric suggests he may also want to placate the Israelis, as he has warned of "truly catastrophic" consequences should there be a military strike.

The United States and key European nations have also made clear they oppose an Israeli attack that would risk retaliation that could draw in other nations and further rattle the world economy.

Iran is under three sets of Security Council sanctions, which Israel has welcomed but also warned are not enough.

Efforts aimed at tougher U.N. sanctions have been opposed in the Security Council by Russia and China, but others are proceeding with new measures.

On July 1, the 27 nations of the European Union will stop importing Iranian oil. Other major importers such as Japan, India, and South Korea have all agreed under U.S. pressure to cut back on Iranian oil purchases.

Russia, which has plenty of its own oil, is not a factor in the oil sanctions, and it has also not participated in a Western-led effort to blackball Iran from international banking networks, with top officials in Moscow repeatedly objecting to "unilateral" actions against Tehran.

Putin's visit comes after the inconclusive end of another round of talks between Iran and world powers. The U.S., Russia, China, France, Britain and Germany have held three rounds of talks with Iran in recent months, yielding no breakthroughs in persuading Iran to rein in uranium enrichment. A new set of low-level negotiations has been set for July.

Israel accuses Iran of using the talks as cover to continue its pursuit of the bomb. Israel has been pressing for a halt to enrichment, while placing all the uranium Iran has already treated under international supervision. Iran has rejected those demands.

Iran says its nuclear program is purely for civilian purposes like medical research and power generation ? a claim met with skepticism in Israel and the West.

Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak has said repeatedly that Israel can wait a weeks but not years for negotiations to succeed.

Russia's role in the Iran standoff has been complex. Russia has benefited handsomely from the Iranian nuclear program, having built a $1 billion nuclear reactor in Bushehr.

At the same time, Russia continues to participate in the international dialogue with Iran. And bowing to U.S. and Israeli demands, Moscow has scrapped a deal to sell Iran long-range missiles that would have provided a powerful deterrent against an air attack.

"I don't think Russia is interested in a nuclear Iran. I think Russia has an interest in a stable Middle East where radical Islam does not rule," said Livne, the Foreign Ministry official.

No comment was available on the issue from Russian officials Thursday.

Russia plays a sophisticated game with Iran, said Meir Javedanfar, an Iranian-born analyst who lives in Israel. He said it's possible that the spectacle of Putin in Israel was designed to send a message to Tehran that it had better curb its nuclear ambitions.

"One of the reasons Putin is coming to Israel is to put pressure on the Iranians, to say, 'If you don't compromise, I will align myself more with the country that you consider to be your enemy,'" Javedanfar said.

Another subject sure to come up during the 24-hour visit is Russian arms sales to Syria, Israel's enemy to the north, which is in the midst of a violent uprising against President Bashar Assad that has been going on for 15 months.

Israel is worried that weapons in Syria will make their way to anti-Israel Hezbollah militants in neighboring Lebanon. Israel claimed Russian missiles sold to Syria made their way to Hezbollah during its 2006 war with the Israeli military.

Despite sometimes differing approaches, Israel and Russia enjoy generally friendly ties, and have deep economic and cultural relations bolstered by the more than 1 million immigrants from the former Soviet Union who live here.

Associated Press

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Pasta de Wakaru, Central Rama 9 ? Dining & Travel in Bangkok ...

The Grand Central Rama 9 has been opened for a while. This giant shopping mall successfully persuaded some new restaurants to join Central, one of them is Pasta de Wakaru, a food chain from Wakaru Holding in Singapore. Wakaru owns 4 brands ? Pasta de Wakaru, Wakarau Japanese Causal Dining, Wakaru de Gohan and Mr. Curry. It is expanding its business in Hong Kong, Indonesia, Singapore and Malaysia.

As suggested by its name (Wakaru which means harmonious and enjoyable), Wakaru aims to provide their diners an enjoyable dining experience at their restaurants. Not only do they decorate their restaurant a cozy and homey environment, they also try to let their diners to enjoy the original taste of Japan in cooking.

Being attracted by the brand, I tried at the Pasta de Wakaru in Grand Central Rama 9. Although Central Rama 9 is super big, you will not miss Pasta de Wakaru. Why? It?s their eye-catching store design.

I went there when it was newly opened and the intelligent me chose to sit by the window, that allowed me to have the view of Rachadapisek Road. It gave me a special relaxing mood to enjoy my meal while watching the tiny movement of the road.

The inner decor of the restaurant is simple. It?s bright and clean. With the natural sunlight penetrating from the windows, it made the whole lunch experience a lazy relaxing one.

At Pasta de Wakaru, they offer set lunch to choose. I ordered a set of eggplant spaghetti with pizza, fried clams, soup and salad, and an additional set of curry chicken rice. The spaghetti was quite good though the taste wasn?t extraordinarily unforgettable, it?s better than many other restaurants. However, I was rather disappointed with the fried clams because the clams were too small. They are so small that I ate 5 to 6 pieces at the same to so as to get the real taste of the clams. Although it?s full of the aroma of garlic, I really couldn?t tell the taste of the clams.

As for the cream soup, I still felt it wasn?t hot enough. Unlike many local Thai, they like the soup to serve lukewarm. For me, soup should be served hot because the heat can pass the aroma of soup to our nose first before we taste it. A hot soup can enrich the flavour in our mouth. It is the same reason why the Tom Yum Kung is salty when it is cold/ lukewarm.

As for the curry chicken rice, it was good. The curry was cooked thick enough but not too hot. It matched very well with the tender chicken. The rice was delicious Japanese rice ? chewy, soft and sweet!

One thing that I really like Pasta de Wakaru is the menu. It is soooooo extensive that you?ll take quite some time in choosing your dish. The menu is made so attractive that you will actually want to try every dish in it. The price is very reasonable and affordable as well!

If you pass Central Rama 9 and don?t know what to eat, Pasta de Wakaru could be one of the best choices.

Pasta de Wakaru
Address: Central Plaza Grand Rama 9, 7th Floor, Bangkok, Thailand

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Thursday, June 21, 2012

Video: Obama invokes executive privilege, Holder held in contempt

Kenny Chesney pushes at boundaries of country

Whimsical humor, literary ambitions, confessional albums. None of those are anything we associate with most country artists. But all those qualities can be found in the music of Kenny Chesney, whose fifteenth studio album, ?Welcome to the Fishbowl,? dropped on Tuesday.

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Belkin's WeMo home automation gear up for pre-order, iOS current control for under $100

Belkin's WeMo home automation gear up for pre-order, iOS current control for under $100

Been quietly pining for Belkin's couch potato home automation solutions? Well, the wait is (almost) over, as the company has finally put its WeMo Switch and Motion products up for pre-order. You can reserve yours through Belkin or Amazon, with the Switch costing $49.99 and the Motion / Switch bundle setting you back a neat $99.99. Apple likes it enough to add the gear to its home-friendly repertoire in-store on the 26th, while other retailers, Verizon included, will be stocking them shortly afterwards. Rig the Switch up to your WiFi at home and you can control the flow of juice from its outlet via the WeMo iOS app (sorry, no Android love). Add in the motion detector and you can set rules for power control based on proximity triggers. Interestingly, Belkin also reports IFTTT integration, meaning the devices can be used for a lot more than the simple on / off remote commands and scheduling we originally thought. For those with iDevices, the free WeMo app is available now, not that it's particularly useful just yet. Need Mo? Check out the official PR and a promotional vid after the break.

Continue reading Belkin's WeMo home automation gear up for pre-order, iOS current control for under $100

Belkin's WeMo home automation gear up for pre-order, iOS current control for under $100 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Jun 2012 20:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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US probes Afghan tax on companies doing rebuilding

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'Lake Vacations' Tops North America's 2012 Most Popular Summer ...

MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., June 20, 2012 /NEWS.GNOM.ES-iReach/ ? ResortsandLodges.com, a leading Resort and Lodge destination travel website, is releasing it?s Top North America travel trends for summer 2012. Hundreds of thousands of Google keyword search combinations brought travelers to ResortsandLodges.com in May, consuming more than 2.2 Million pages of travel content. ?ResortsandLodges.com has analyzed this data to determine the most popular North American travel trends for summer 2012.

(Photo: http://photos.NEWS.GNOM.ES.com/prnh/20120620/CG28233)

?It?s definitely interesting to see how travel changes from year to year. ?In the several years leading up to 2012, we saw most travelers searching by budget related keywords, sometimes sacrificing quality and multiple activities for cheaper prices ?because of the recession. ?This year, we?ve definitely seen a shift towards value driven keywords and packaging. ?People always want a good deal; however, they want to experience multiple activities while at a resort or in a resort destination. ?With so many great destinations offering deals, travelers are taking time to consider multiple options and are ultimately going with what they really want to get from their vacation rather than the cheapest option.? said Ryan Bailey, President of ResortsandLodges.com.

Each year ResortsandLodges.com continues to help millions of travelers plan their summer trips with a wide variety of expert and user generated content, including: ?Top 10 lists, travel guides, social travel recommendations and over 800 destination and property videos.

What?s Hot:?Top 5 Most Popular Summer 2012 Travel Trends on ResortsandLodges.com

1. ?Lake Vacations

Total Searches in May 2012: 230,714
Popular destination: Lake of the Ozarks

2. ?All Inclusive Vacations

Total Searches in May 2012: ? 227,848
Popular destination: Florida Keys

3. ?Family Trips

Total Searches in May 2012: 188,915
Popular destination: Myrtle Beach

4. ?Beach Vacations

Total Searches in May 2012: 177,933
Popular destination: Panama City Beach

5. ?Spa Getaways

Total Searches in May 2012: 131,000
Popular Destination: West Virginia

Honorable Mention:

Cabin Rentals ? 91,209 searches
Romantic Getaways ? 60,154 searches
Golf Trips ? 39,304 searches

To Plan your summer travels visit?www.resortsandlodges.com

About ResortsandLodges.com

ResortsandLodges.com? is the most comprehensive online resource for resort and lodge vacations worldwide, serving more than ten million leisure, group and corporate travelers each year. The site provides travelers direct access to original content, colorful photography and high-quality video for resorts, lodges, hotels, motels, inns, bed and breakfasts, ranches, vacation rentals and more. Our easy to use visual maps and filters allow Users to quickly find the information they are looking for when researching, planning and booking their resort and lodge vacations. Founded in 1998, we were one of the first major leisure travel directories established on the Internet. Over the years we have received many awards and accolades for our Web design, outstanding usability, fast page loading speeds, and skillful information display. Most recently, ResortsandLodges.com? won the WebAward for excellence in Web site design and development from the Web Marketing Association (WMA). We were chosen from among 2,400 entries from more than 40 countries during the WMA?s annual WebAward competition.

Media Contact: Nic Regis TravelNet Solutions, 651-757-4933, nregis@travelnetsolutions.com

News distributed by PR Newswire iReach: https://ireach.NEWS.GNOM.ES.com

SOURCE TravelNet Solutions

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Samsung Galaxy S III: Not So Human After All [REVIEW]

There are Android phones, there are Android superphones, and then there's the Samsung Galaxy S III. Samsung's Galaxy phones are no longer just hot new mobile devices -- they've become a force of nature. Just like the iPhone, users can expect a new Samsung Galaxy every year, and then must decide whether or not to upgrade.

[More from Mashable: 8 Apps You Don?t Want To Miss]

The first Galaxy arrived in 2010. Prior to it, the "hero" Android device was the Motorola Droid, but the Galaxy set a new standard with its bright screen, slim form and wide availability. The Samsung Galaxy S II came the following year, taking the line a step further with a better processor, improved camera and extremely thin design. Thanks to the S II, Samsung became the top Android phone maker in the world.

With the S III, Samsung hopes to keep its winning streak going. It's doing a lot more than just hoping, however, stuffing a goodie bag of new "human" features (a catchphrase of Samsung's) into the phone that are so far only available on this device. Samsung appears to have awakened to how influential its Galaxy phones are: The Galaxy S III won't just be the flagship of its mobile division -- it'll be the company's top product, period.

[More from Mashable: Smart Car Seat Alerts Parents of Danger [VIDEO]]

There are a number of things the Galaxy S III does that no other phone can do -- yet. For starters, the front-facing camera will track your eyes and keep the screen from timing out if you're still looking at it. You can also wake up the phone using just your voice. There's also a "groupcasting" feature for sharing pics and presentations with other phones -- as long as those phones are also Samsung Galaxy S IIIs.

Those are just a few of the features exclusive to this phone, and it's mainly because of the hardware, which packs many cutting-edge features into a surprisingly lightweight design. Although the 4.8-inch screen on the Galaxy S III is much bigger than the iPhone 4S's 3.5-incher, the S III is both slimmer and lighter. That's thanks in part to the plastic back, which may feel slightly cheaper than glass or metal but helps keep the weight way down.


First Impressions


Turning on the Galaxy S III for the first time, I saw no fewer than than five branding screens -- three for Samsung, one for the Galaxy S III itself and one for AT&T. Mercifully, bootup is fairly fast, about 30 seconds (by comparison, my iPhone 4S takes about 36 seconds to get going). The phone prompts you to restore your Google/Android account if you have one, quickly downloading your apps and setting up Gmail.

Even though the phone has a big screen, it feels friendly to the hand. It's just short of being too big, which is what I'd consider the Samsung Galaxy Note. Samsung likes to point out that the phone is almost nothing but curves -- there's barely a straight edge anywhere. While that sounds weird, it's actually very comfortable to hold and I always felt I had a solid grip on it.

As an object, though, this phone is closer to the iPhone than any other Android phone I've seen, mainly because it has a physical home button beneath the screen. Most Android phones I've used typically have have a row of touch buttons along the bottom, partly as a way to differentiate from iPhones. The appearance of a home button is kind of a bold move considering the patent skirmishes between Apple and Samsung (time will tell if it means anything in that conflict.)


Camera Capabilities


After setup, I went straight for the camera. Today, a phone's camera matters more than almost any other feature or app, for obvious reasons. I absolutely love the camera in HTC's One phones, since it includes a burst mode and instant saving to the cloud. I was excited to see how the Galaxy S III -- which has similar features -- would compare.

I wasn't disappointed. The Galaxy S III's camera has a very capable burst mode, capturing three pics per second, which was just enough to get a couple of great shots of my two-year-old son throwing a Frisbee in a perfect action stance. You can also enable a "best shot" mode, which automatically picks the best of the burst, deleting the rest, but its judgment is often not great (thankfully, you can override its choice).

One of the great features of the Galaxy S III is auto-tagging of photos. After you snap a pic of someone, a yellow box appears around any faces, prompting you to tag away. Then the next time you shoot any of those people, the face-recognition software goes to work, suggesting tags for faces it recognizes.

The feature is, quite frankly, an awesome idea, but it's rendered moot because it doesn't work in the one place you really want it to: Facebook. The tags don't translate to the network, although Samsung says it's working on the issue and a software update should fix this eventually. In the meantime, you'll have to settle for convenience of getting the people you tag suggested when you select to share via email.

Saving photos to the cloud is pretty simple these days and the S III points you toward three very capable options: Dropbox, which recently made automatic uploads even easier on phones, Google+, which is just as easy and unlimited (although picture resolution has a ceiling of five megapixels, with anything higher down-rezzed), and Samsung's own AllShare service, which uses the SugarSync app for storage.

Dropbox would be my preferred path, but it's annoying that you can't change the folder your pics are uploaded to or how your photos are listed. I have hundreds of photos in my Camera Uploads folder and once a pic is uploaded it becomes a needle-in-a-haystack situation to find it. Google+ is a much more elegant solution, but sharing is limited to that network. And SugarSync's ability to organize photos appears to be the digital equivalent of tossing a bunch of pics in a shoebox and shaking hard.

Finally, I would prefer a dedicated shutter button -- even a virtual one -- to instantly switch to the camera even when the phone's locked. As it is, you'll need to get by your lock screen to launch the camera before you can start snapping -- not good when you need to be nimble.


Galactic Features


"Unique" is an often overused and misused word, but it's no exaggeration to say the Samsung Galaxy S III has some features that qualify for the label. One that I was very excited to try out is its voice wake-up function, where you can bring the phone out of the lock screen just by speaking to it.

In reality, it's not as awesome as Samsung makes it out to be. Once enabled, the feature lets you awaken the Samsung by saying "Hi, Galaxy," or a custom phrase. I thought it might let you wake it up from sleep mode, but it only starts listening once you push the home or power button. And then it only works when you haven't locked your screen with a PIN code. Lame. It feels like no one really thought through the usefulness of the feature and how it might affect security.

Potentially more useful is Smart Stay, which uses the front-facing camera on the phone to check if your eyes are looking at the screen. If they are, it'll hold off on timing out the screen.

Again, great idea -- in theory. But it never worked for me. After enabling the feature, I tried reading in the web browser, using various apps and even the home screen, but the display would always time out no matter how hard I stared. Removing my glasses helped a little, but not much (and it had the side effect of rendering reading impossible).

At first I thought it was a software bug, but the Smart Stay "eye" icon was right there, indicating the feature was enabled. Hopefully a software update will eventually make the feature useful, but right now it's not ready for prime time -- you're better off disabling it and just increasing the timeout duration.

There's also S Voice, Samsung's Siri clone. Like Siri, you can ask it basic questions like the weather or if sushi places are nearby. After using it for a few minutes, it became clear to me why Samsung chose to downplay the feature. If you veer at all away from the most basic functions, you can expect to hear "Network error. Please try again," over and over. At least Siri, as limited as she is, is much less cold.


Wireless Wonders


The Samsung Galaxy S III delivers much better on its promises when applying its myriad wireless abilities. With Wi-Fi Direct and near-field communication (NFC) on board -- and a 1.4GHz quad-core processor to help push things along -- the GSIII can perform tricks most other phones can't.

The best example is S Beam. With NFC and S Beam enabled on your phone and your friend's, all you need to do is hold both phones up to each other to transfer files. Well, hold them up and tap the screen. NFC establishes the connection and Wi-Fi handles the rest. Transfer photos, videos, pdfs -- whatever you want. One catch: Both phones have to be Samsung Galaxy S IIIs.

That catch actually comes up again and again. The camera actually has an extremely cool function called Share Shot. Enable it, and your Galaxy S III will automatically share all the photos you take with phones on the same Wi-Fi network -- creating kind of a group photo pool, great for parties. But of course all those phones need to be GSIIIs.

Less useful is the Group Cast function, which lets you broadcast a slideshow or presentation to other phones on the same Wi-Fi network. It's sort of like sharing, except you can draw on the photos or slides, and everybody receiving the broadcast will see your scribbles in real time. The execution is clumsy, done through Samsung's AllShare app, and it amounts to little more than a party trick. But, again, everybody has to have a Galaxy S III.

Finally, there are those fun TecTiles, which let you create little NFC time bombs, just waiting for a phone to hover over them to reveal your secret message or special prompt (full details here) ADD LINK. These actually have some great creative potential, and for once, other phones can apply -- phones with NFC, anyway.


Connections and Misfires


Let's talk connectivity. The Verizon, AT&T and Sprint versions of the Galaxy S III all boast high-speed LTE connections, though in the case of Sprint the network hasn't yet been turned on. For T-Mobile, you get its very respectable HSPA+ 42 network.

In practice, that means the other three carriers will give you a faster connection than the T-Mobile version. Here at the Mashable offices, we got up to 30 megabits per second downstream on our AT&T GSIII, though speed dropped to about 13 Mbps when we weren't standing by a window. For the T-Mobile version, speeds varied between 4-14 Mbps, though windows didn't seem to matter as much.

One thing you'll notice after using the Galaxy S III for a while -- this sucker gets warm. Chalk it up to all the radios and that robust processor, but a phone hasn't surprised me with this level of heat since the original iPhone.

All that hardware working overtime also takes a toll on the battery. In the few short days I was using the GSIII, I was continually plugging it in for extra juice, though I did leave many of the non-essential features -- like NFC, Wi-Fi Direct and the voice wake-up -- enabled.

Samsung, however, provides a Power Saving mode that actually doesn't disable any features and instead saves watts by subtly adjusting colors, frame rates and brightness while also limiting the maximum CPU speed. I barely noticed the changes and would recommend leaving it enabled when not using any "higher" functions, such as when playing games.

I have other quibbles with the Galaxy S III: First, the default alert noise (the "whistle") is probably the most irritating tone I've ever heard from a phone (easily changed, but still). The plethora of Samsung-branded bloatware and widgets you get out of the box feel pushy and annoying. And the method of taking a screenshot -- sliding your palm across the screen -- is terrible.

But I've got to give Samsung props for replicating one of my favorite features of iOS -- being able to tap the top of the screen to scroll to the very top of a list. On the GSIII, you instead double-tap the top of the phone itself (the accelerometer detects the movement). It only works in Mail, but it's a start.


The Power of III


In its campaign for the Galaxy S III, Samsung says it's a phone "designed for humans." Putting aside the absurd obviousness of that statement for a minute, Samsung wants to believe this powerful phone will be instantly intuitive to users, ready to bring them whatever they desire, with features that just "get" them. In Samsung's vision, the GSIII is Iron Man's Jarvis in the palm your hand.

That's not the Samsung Galaxy S III I met, but instead it was something potentially more interesting. Although the phone's more novel functions aren't that polished -- at least it has them. Wireless technologies like NFC, Wi-Fi Direct and LTE are the future of mobile, and you get the sense Samsung is just scratching the surface. Also, guess which phone doesn't have of those (hint: it rhymes with "my phone").

So instead of Jarvis, we instead get Wall-E: A sometimes clumsy mechanical pal who means well and works hard, but doesn't always get things right. However, even though he doesn't have all the answers, he's got the gear and the moxie to survive in an uncertain future. Unlike Wall-E, though, with the Samsung Galaxy S III in your hand, you won't be getting left behind.

Samsung Galaxy S III

The Samsung Galaxy S III is the most anticipated Android phone of the year. It's a powerful phone, with a quad-core processor and a bevy of wireless technologies, but some of its more forward-looking features need polish.

Click here to view this gallery.

This story originally published on Mashable here.

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GOP senators won't say if Obama plan is amnesty

WASHINGTON (AP) ? When it comes to President Barack Obama's new immigration policy, Senate Republicans are quite sure they don't like it. They just don't want to say if it amounts to amnesty, at least not yet, while they await guidance on the politically charged issue from presidential candidate Mitt Romney.

"If it leads to citizenship as a reward for some kind of illegal entry, I think it could be argued" to be amnesty, said Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, who normally is one of Obama's most plainspoken critics.

Sen. Saxby Chambliss of Georgia said the president's announcement last Friday could be called "amnesty light," if not the real thing.

"It all depends on how you define 'amnesty,' and I'm not going to get into that debate," added Arizona Sen. Jon Kyl, second-ranking party leader and another frequent critic of Obama.

"I wouldn't use the A-word to describe this. ... That's a word that gets used a lot," said Sen. John Cornyn. The Texas lawmaker is in charge of the party's efforts to win control of the Senate this fall and has seen internal divisions develop since Obama's announcement between his party's establishment and lawmakers and candidates more aligned with the tea party.

These days, at least, amnesty is most often used by Republicans wanting to accuse Democrats of being soft on illegal immigration, much of which involves Hispanics who make their way across the border from Mexico.

In his announcement, Obama said the government will no longer seek to deport illegal immigrants under the age of 30 who were brought to the United States before they turned 16 and have been in the country for at least five continuous years. They also must have no criminal history and either have graduated from a U.S. high school, have earned a GED diploma or certificate or have served in the military.

"Let's be clear, this is not amnesty, this is not immunity, this is not a path to citizenship, this is not a permanent fix," Obama said from the White House Rose Garden. "This is the right thing to do." Administration officials said about 800,000 individuals could be affected.

While the White House and Democrats in Congress say the president's action was modeled on the DREAM Act, that measure includes a path to citizenship, a critical political distinction.

Romney, who has vowed to veto the DREAM Act, has recently softened his rhetoric on immigration as he works to cut into Obama's support among Hispanic voters. So far, he has not said whether he supports or opposes what the president did.

McConnell and others said they want to hear what the former Massachusetts governor is going to say on the subject in a speech later this week. Romney is "the leader of our party" at least until the November election and perhaps well afterwards, McConnell said.

While they sidestepped the question of amnesty, McConnell and several other Republicans sent Obama a letter seeking an explanation of his authority to bypass Congress on the policy switch. The request, announced by Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, also asked precisely how the new policy would work, and whether federal funds will be used to implement it.

Whatever Romney says, Republicans aligned with the tea party are more outspoken than the party's establishment on the issue.

"This is amnesty," Sen. Jim DeMint of South Carolina, a favorite of tea party Republicans, said last week in a quick reaction to Obama's announcement.

"Congressman (Jeff) Flake and President Obama, advocates for amnesty," Wil Cardon alleged in one emailed statement, issued as part of his uphill battle for the GOP nomination to the Senate in Arizona.

Andrew Wilder, a campaign spokesman for Flake, said the congressman "does not support giving amnesty to illegal immigrants, and he never has."

Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, one of the party's more outspoken lawmakers in the immigration issue, has announced he intends to file suit challenging Obama's authority to bypass Congress and change the policy on his own.

Also in the House, Rep. Ben Quayle, R-Ariz., has introduced legislation to block Obama from implementing his own policy. In some regards, his state serves as a microcosm of the broader debate inside the party.

In addition to Kyl's comments, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., told reporters during the day he neither wanted to "repeal it or not repeal" what Obama announced.

Like many other Republicans, McCain said Obama was now doing "something that he said he didn't have constitutional authority to do a year ago." Also like other members of his party, he said the president's announcement had complicated efforts to work out a comprehensive solution to a vexing problem.

House Speaker John Boehner told reporters that because the economy is so weak, Obama has "turned to the politics of envy and division, which I don't think the American people are going to accept."

Boehner said Obama's announcement "puts everyone in a difficult position," including young illegal immigrants who "from no fault of their own" are in the United States, as well as lawmakers seeking legislation to tackle more than just the problem of younger illegal immigrants brought to the United States as children.

Democrats have applauded Obama's announcement, many of them adding that he acted after Republicans refused to permit a more wide-ranging immigration measure advance in Congress.

___

Associated Press writer Laurie Kellman contributed to this report.

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Monday, June 18, 2012

Blasts hit northern Nigeria churches

By msnbc.com news services

A least two explosions shook the town of Zaria in northern Nigeria's Kaduna state on Sunday, the emergency services said, and at least one of them was at a church, a security official said.?

Reuters reported two explosions, while The Associated Press quoted a Nigerian official as saying that a third explosion had rocked the area. There was no explanation for the different accounts but such discrepancies are common in the immediate aftermath of such events.


Islamist sect Boko Haram has often attacked church services in Nigeria, split roughly evenly between Christians and Muslims.?

Witness: Attack on Christians in Nigeria kills at least 15

Boko Haram, which has become increasingly radicalised and meshed with other Islamist groups in the region, including al-Qaida's north African wing, is the leading security threat to Nigeria, Africa's top oil producer and a member of OPEC.?

Regular attacks on Sunday church services are usually claimed by the sect, which says it is fighting to reinstate an ancient Islamic caliphate that would adhere to strict sharia (Islamic law).?

US warns of attacks on Westerners in Nigeria

Islamist militants attacked two churches in Nigeria last Sunday, spraying the congregation of one with bullets, killing at least one person, and blowing up a car in a suicide bombing at the other, wounding 41.?

The Islamists' leader, Abubakar Shekau, has justified attacks on Christians as revenge for killings of Muslims in Nigeria's volatile "Middle Belt", where the largely Christian south and mostly Muslim north meet.?

Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Friday, June 15, 2012

Carbon footprints of goods made in China and implications for American industrial areas

? Passing of Elinor Ostrom (1933?2012) | Main | Call for Papers: AALS Sections on Property and Natural Resources/Energy Law to Host Joint Program ?

June 14, 2012

Carbon footprints of goods made in China and implications for American industrial areas

I recently came across several studies that answer a long-running question of mine:? what is the carbon footprint of goods traveling from China to that big box store down the road?? The answer also?planted a more perplexing question:? could it be possible that the carbon footprint of goods in China, if built and assembled in China (or some other distant country)?and shipped in?a particular eco-sensitive way, could be less than goods "made in the USA"?

The issue of goods transportation and carbon footprints seems to me one of the most important, but potentially counter-intuitive, aspects of land use policy.? Independent of economic concerns, which?of course is a huge issue of its own,?we might presume that a?consumer good "made in the USA" has a lower carbon?footprint than one made in China.? But what if the "American" good is?made from parts manufacturers around the world and simply assembled in the United States?? For instance, just 40% of the Ford Focus in made in the USA, and just 15% of that car is made in Mexico, with the remainder coming from non-North American parts suppliers.? Most "American" cars are really smorgasbords of parts suppliers shipped from the world over to a factory in the US.? At the very least, that provides factory assemply jobs for US workers.? But if we just consider the environmental impact for a minute, would?the?carbon footprints of those cars?be lower if all?the parts were made in one place in?China, assembled in China,?and then those cars were shipped to?their US destinations?

While I can't answer that question directly, a really interesting November, 2011 paper, Moving Containers Efficiently with Less Impact: Modeling and Decision-Support Architecture for Clean Port Technologies, by Josh Newell and Mansour Rahimi at USC's School of Policy Planning and Development, traces the important steps in answering carbon footprint issues in the supply chain.? In particular, Chapter 2 in the report models the emissions from real container shipments of an undisclosed toy manufacturer from manufacturing destinations in China to various retail destinations across the US.

The report noted that there were three main contributors to carbon footprints, each of which were?potential variables:?

The first is the land contribution, which is partitioned into China and United States segments, and is further partitioned into truck and rail segments. The second contribution comes from the sea, which is portioned into cruising speed, and slow speed segments. The third contribution comes from port operations for loading and unloading containers.

In general, the report concluded:

For the average container shipped from China to various U.S. destination zip codes, a carbon footprint of 2,821 kilograms per container per trip was determined. Transport by container ship is the most efficient in terms of CO2 burned per mile. So it is possible for a container to travel a greater distance, yet have a smaller carbon footprint than one that uses land transportation (train/truck) for a greater portion of the distance.

So there you have it:? 2,821 kilograms per container on average.? And the further?the?container goes?by ship, the lower the CO2 emissions.??A similar NRDC study studying retail apparel?shipments from China to Denver compared air to ship transit and?concluded:

[T]he truck-air-truck pathway emits over 5 times more soot (particulates) and 35 times more greenhouse gases than rail-ship-rail, sending an additional 99 tonnes [sic] of greenhouse gases into the air. On the ocean leg alone, a retailer would reduce GHG emissions by 99% sending cargo by ship instead of plane. Using this method, a retailer could send 101 full containers by ship and still emit fewer GHGs than one container sent by plane.

So ships are cleaner than air transit, too.? And what if we could make ship transit cleaner, with greener fuels and such?

All of this brings me back to my?new question.? If ship transport is relatively green (and we could likely make it greener), and we can run ships all around the world and ship things in containers for relatively low costs, would it be better from a carbon emissions perspective to build all the parts?near an?assembly site for?a product in China and ship it here, or build parts around the world and assemble it in the US?? This presumes, of course, that we cannot convince manufacturers to both build the parts and assemble them in the US, which seems to be an industrial model that has gone the way of the dodo bird for economic reasons.?

The implications seem vast to me for our industrial areas, both for how we conceive of them in economic and environmental terms in this global age.? If the shipping container has changed the economics of manufacturing (anyone interested in this must read Marc Levinson's excellent?The Box: How the Shipping Container Made the World Smaller and the World Economy Bigger), might it also change the environmental aspects of manufacturing, too?? And if so, what?might this mean for?our city's industrial areas, and in particular, how we contemplate their environmental footprints?? I'd be curious if anyone has studied this particular issue.?

Stephen R. Miller

June 14, 2012 in Clean Energy, Climate, Economic Development, Oil & Gas | Permalink

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Monday, June 11, 2012

Chrono iPhone Case Straps you in for a Secure Grip

Trying to design a better iPhone case ranks right up there with designing a better mouse trap. Everyone thinks they can do it, but only a rare few have. Most iPhone cases bore me because they all look relatively similar and have nothing that makes them stand out from all the other cases on the [...]

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Thursday, June 7, 2012

How vampire spiders spot victims

"Vampire" jumping spiders from East Africa identify their mosquito victims by their antennae, research has revealed.

A team led by scientists from the University of Canterbury in New Zealand studied the "unique" arachnids.

They used model "Frankenstein mosquitoes" and 3D animation to investigate the spiders' diet.

Results showed that spiders could see minute differences in body and antennae appearance when choosing their prey.

"The thing that really amazed me is that I couldn't actually see the difference [in antennae] when I was looking at the screen", said Dr Ximena Nelson from the University of Canterbury.

Evarcha culicovora spiders live in Kenya and are part of the jumping spider family (Salticidae), which is best known for agile movement and incredible vision.

Continue reading the main story

Jumping spider facts

  • Jumping spiders (Salticidae) are the largest family of spiders with over 5,000 described species
  • They are widely distributed across the world, even living on Mount Everest
  • Their incredible vision relies on eight eyes: two "primary" eyes which are large and forward-facing and six "secondary" eyes which give them highly sensitive peripheral vision
  • They are excellent hunters and can leap distances of up to 50 times their body length to catch prey
  • They often chase or stalk their prey before pouncing, using the two large eyes to precisely judge distances

However, this "vampire spider" is unique because it feeds indirectly on vertebrate blood by catching mosquitoes (particularly Anopheles - a malaria-carrying mosquito) that have recently fed on blood.

Male mosquitoes do not drink blood, so they are less nutritionally beneficial than females, which often have blood in their abdomens.

Observations that the spiders' diet was particularly high in blood-filled female mosquitoes made Dr Nelson question how the spiders picked them out from the array of similarly-sized insects available to eat.

"Obviously, blood-fed females have an engorged red abdomen and the other difference that comes to mind between [mosquito] males and females is the antennae," Dr Nelson said.

Male mosquitoes have feathery-looking antennae, used primarily to detect the females' scent, whereas female antennae are far less elaborate.

The scientists were able to test their theory that antennae shape is an important factor in spider meal choice by using a mixture of male and female body parts to create hybrid mosquitoes.

These intricate Frankenstein insects were a combination of the corpses of large, blood-fed females with male heads, slender male corpses with female heads, and every other possible combination.

The spiders preferred an intact blood-engorged female corpse over anything else, suggesting that the presence of blood is a primary factor when choosing their prey.

However, when making a choice between a Frankenstein female (female head and thorax of one fused to the blood-engorged abdomen of another female) and a hybrid with a male head and thorax on a blood-engorged female abdomen, the spiders usually selected the hybrid with female antennae, even though both have large, red abdomens filled with blood.

Dr Nelson used further 3D animation tests where simulations of blood-engorged mosquito bodies with either male or female antennae were shown to the spiders.

These tests used visual cues alone and three quarters of the adult spiders pounced on the virtual prey with female antennae.

This showed they were not simply picking Anopheles mosquitoes for their large, red, blood-filled abdomens but the spiders were also making a choice based on the appearance of the antennae.

This prey-preference behaviour is innate in Evarcha culicovora and juvenile spiders tested showed similar results, suggesting there may be some sort of unlearnt search image template that the spiders use.

Dr Nelson is now keen to understand the way in which Evarcha culicovora processes the visual information to discover if the spiders assess prey characteristics simultaneously, or whether they use some sort of check list to tick off key factors before executing a hunting jump.

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