Showing posts with label Ever. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ever. Show all posts

Monday, March 31, 2014

7 Of The Worst Choices Ever Made While High


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7 Of The Worst Choices Ever Made While High

Someone once told me drugs are bad. I think it was a man dressed like a dog, or a cartoon rabbit or something. I’ve taken that lesson to heart and only do molly after promising this will be the last time. Every time.


While we’ve all heard hilarious tales of bath salts zombies and heroin-addled buggerists, those are lame and predictable and somewhat depressing drug hijinks. Don’t people do hilariously misguided things when they’re high anymore? Aren’t there any stories that could serve as awesome subplots in a carefree ’80s sex comedy? Yes! Read some hysterical stories on Cracked…





The FriskyThe Frisky



7 Of The Worst Choices Ever Made While High

Monday, March 24, 2014

Valerie Jarrett: Since Obamacare Passed, "We"ve Had Less Increase In Premiums Than Ever Before"





VALERIE JARRETT: What we’ve seen over the last four years since our healthcare plan was passed is we’ve had less increase in premiums than ever before in the last 50 years. And so, we are beginning to, as we say, reduce those costs and that is a big part of the Affordable Care Act is that we want to emphasize outcomes. Not just how many tests a physician orders, but how can we actually have patients, Americans be healthier. (Source: KCBS-TV)




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Valerie Jarrett: Since Obamacare Passed, "We"ve Had Less Increase In Premiums Than Ever Before"

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Have You Ever Been So Excited That You Ruined You Chances for Re-Election?

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Have You Ever Been So Excited That You Ruined You Chances for Re-Election?

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Tell Us: What’s The Best Meal You’ve Ever Eaten While Traveling?

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Tell Us: What’s The Best Meal You’ve Ever Eaten While Traveling?

Saturday, March 1, 2014

More Americans Than Ever Support Gay Marriage, Leaving Christian Right Behind



Even white evangelical Protestants are starting to shift their opinions.








In America today, it"s more normal to support gay marriage than not to.


That"s according to findings from the Public Religion Research Institute, a non-profit, nonpartisan research organization. By comparing results of a survey it conducted in 2013 with one it did a decade ago, PRRI found that today, over half of Americans support same-sex marriage, up from just 32% in 2003. Its findings are similar to those of the Pew Research Center, Gallup, and other poling organizations, which have all noted a significant increase in support for same-sex marriage in the past 10 years.


Certain groups stick out as being far less supportive than others. Only 39% of African Americans support same-sex marriage, compared with 53% of Hispanics and 53% of whites. There is a nine-point difference between men and women, with 57% of women in support, compared to 48% of men. Sixty-four percent of Democrats and 57% of independents support same-sex marriage, compared to only 34% of Republicans, a gap that has increased by 21 percent points in the last decade.  


But regardless of differences between groups, within groups, it"s becoming more popular to support same-sex matrimony, even among those who have been traditionally staunchly against it. Take white evangelical Protestants, who continue to be some of the least supportive: while only 27% support same-sex marriage today, that"s a significant increase from the 12% who supported it in 2003. Support for same-sex marriage is strongest among Millennials (people aged 18-33), with 69% in support, compared with only 37% of the Silent Generation (those aged 68 and older). The “generational tidal wave,” as PRRI CEO Robert Jones calls it, holds true across religious and political lines: for example, whereas only 34% of Republicans overall support same-sex marriage, half of Millennial Republicans support it. 


Personal connection and perception matter: knowing someone who"s gay, and thinking that sexuality is biologically determined, strongly influences whether an individual supports gay marriage. The difference is striking: while 63% of those who support same-sex marriage have a close friend or family member who identifies as gay or lesbian, only 36% of those who oppose do. More Americans have family and friends who are openly gay than ever before: 65% today, versus just 22% in 1993.


Notions of whether being gay is something you"re born with, or something you acquire through upbringing and environment, has also shifted in the last decade. In 2003, 38% of Americans thought a person"s sexuality was biologically determined. Today, 44% do. People"s views on the topic are positively correlated with their support for gay marriage, with 76% of those who believe it is biologically determined supporting same-sex marriage, compared with only 28% among those who believe it"s a learned trait.


“In a certain sense sexuality becomes less dangerous if it is fixed early,” explains Clyde Wilcox, professor of government at Georgetown University, who spoke at the launch of the report in Washington DC this week. “It"s not contagious, and it"s not anyone"s fault. You can"t discriminate because it"s not a choice.” Groups least supportive of same-sex nuptials—evangelicals, Republicans, African Americans—are less likely to think sexuality is biologically determined than those who are not, and less likely to have a close friend or family member who identifies as gay or lesbian.


Religious conservatives may be getting left behind as the country changes its mind. With the exception of Jews (83% of whom support gay marriage), religious people are far less likely to support gay marriage than those who are not. (Religiously unaffiliated people trail closely behind Jews in their support, followed by white mainline Protestants. Around 50% of white Catholics, Hispanic Catholics and Hispanic Protestants support gay marriage. Thirty-five percent of black Protestants do.) Americans also tend to view religions as not supportive of LGBT rights, a perception that may be hurting their cause. Survey findings demonstrate a significant drop in religious affiliation across America (22% are unaffiliated today, versus 8% in 2003), which may be in part linked to negative perceptions of religious" groups treatment of LGBT people.


“Nearly one-third of Millennials who left their childhood religion say unfavorable church teachings about or treatment of gay and lesbian people played a significant role in their decision to head for the exit,” says Jones. Fifty-eight percentof Americans, including 70% of Millennials, say that religious groups" stance on LGBT issues is alienating young people. Young people and those who identify as LGBT are far more likely to be religiously unaffiliated than the population at large. 


Jones says negative public perception of religious groupings on LGBT rights and a lag in support for gay marriage among worshippers may provoke change by religious institutions. “Can theology just take its cues from public opinion? Most theologians would have a problem with that position,” he says. “But what does it do when public opinion moves over here, and theology is over here?” 


While LGBT and their allies have reason to celebrate the national upsurge in support, PRRI notes that a large proportion of Americans, especially religious Americans, think that same-sex sexual relationships are immoral (although they may still support gay marriage), and that LGBT face some of the highest discrimination in the country. And even though there"s a national shift in attitudes on same-sex marriage, it still isn"t a priority for most Americans. Only 24% of Americans say same-sex marriage is a critical issue for them personally, with 25% saying it"s one of several important issues. Nearly 50% of Americans say that the issue is not that important to them personally, with same-sex marriage ranking below jobs and unemployment, healthcare, immigration, HIV/AIDS and abortion. 


Moreover, just because there"s increasing support for same-sex marriage, it doesn"t mean the US is becoming less conservative as a whole. “We"re not winning on guns. Sometimes Millennials are the most conservative on pro-choice. It"s not that these are changing attitudes on sexuality in general,” notes Wilcox. “Since 1992, the percentage of people who say that LGBT sex is always wrong has plummeted, but those who say that sex outside of marriage is always wrong went up.”


Nationally, Americans are more likely to consider themselves pro-life (48%) than pro-choice (45%), and more likely to identify as conservatives (38%) than liberals (23%). Wilcox suggests that while other issues remain polarized, the rise of LGBT people in pop culture helped to make the issue more palatable, which made it easier for people to come out to their family and friends. 


 

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More Americans Than Ever Support Gay Marriage, Leaving Christian Right Behind

Friday, February 14, 2014

NWS: Mid-Atlantic Storm 9th Biggest Ever Recorded...

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NWS: Mid-Atlantic Storm 9th Biggest Ever Recorded...

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

IT shops face ever greater mobile demands from users

IT shops face ever greater mobile demands from users
http://pixel.quantserve.com/pixel/p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif


Computerworld – Nearly two-thirds of mobile device users own three or more network-connected devices, according to an online survey of 5,000
people conducted in November in the U.S. and eight other countries ( download PDF).


That finding shows just how popular smartphones, tablets and other connected devices — including cars — have become in the
past two years. And it also shows the challenges facing IT shops that manage workers who now expect to have constant network
connections in the office and while on the road.


Aruba, a networking company, commissioned the online survey, which was done by Shape the Future. In the U.S., 1,133 people
responded.


“While everybody seems to be using mobile devices, the interest now is magnified with [62%] owning three or more connected
devices,” Manav Kurana, vice president of product and solutions marketing for Aruba, said in an interview.


Among younger mobile users, ages 18 to 35, the survey found that 70% preferred Wi-Fi over any other network connection, including
3G and 4G cellular. Overall, 57% preferred Wi-Fi.


The survey also found that users are becoming more tech savvy and want their cars, homes and even their clothes to be network-connected,
Kurana said.


The survey’s findings imply that companies need to make Wi-Fi more of a “utility like air and water everywhere because that’s
how people want to connect,” Kurana said.


He said the results also imply that IT shops can cut the cord on desk phones and need to create more self-service tools to
help workers maintain their devices on their own. That also means that IT shops need to simplify mobile device operations
at work, which could require finding alternatives to complex passwords used to authenticate devices when it is hard to type
in complex passwords on small virtual keyboards, Kurana said.


IT shops also need to know there are now more opportunities to interact with workers and visitors based on their location.
“Most people will give opt-in to give their location if there’s value in doing so,” Kurana said. “On the other hand, everybody
hates having their location known without their permission.”


In addition to the U.S., other countries in the survey included the UK, France, Spain, Germany, Sweden, South Africa, Saudi
Arabia and the UAE.


Matt Hamblen covers mobile and wireless, smartphones and other handhelds, and wireless networking for Computerworld. Follow Matt on Twitter
at @matthamblen or subscribe to Matt’s RSS feed. His email address is mhamblen@computerworld.com.


See more by Matt Hamblen on Computerworld.com.


Read more about mobile device management in Computerworld’s Mobile Device Management Topic Center.




Netflash




Read more about IT shops face ever greater mobile demands from users and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Friday, January 17, 2014

Greatest Anchorman News Camera Blooper Ever

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Greatest Anchorman News Camera Blooper Ever

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

No One is Ready. EVER.

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No One is Ready. EVER.

Saturday, January 11, 2014

Will America ever kick its smoking habit?


smoking




1 hour ago


UNITED STATES - CIRCA 1950s: Portrait of woman holding cigarettte. (Photo by George Marks/Retrofile/Getty Images)

George Marks / Getty Images


Cigarette companies are still allowed to advertise, but they must now label their products as deadly.



Smoking rates cut in half. Eight million lives saved. More than 800,000 fewer lung cancer deaths. Fifty years after the U.S. Surgeon General first warned about the dangers of smoking, the benefits of quitting have never been clearer.


Yet 18 percent of the population still smokes. Nearly 2,000 teenagers take up the habit every day and tobacco companies advertise candy-flavored tobacco products with impunity. Is it possible this is the best the United States will ever do?


Health experts are convinced it isn’t — and they point to maps that rank states and regions by smoking status as proof. A look at a county-by-county breakdown of who smokes and where makes it clear that there are opportunities to get smoking rates way down, they say.


Kentucky has the most smokers — more than 28 percent of the population smokes there, compared to just 11 percent in Utah, which has the lowest rates, and double the 14 percent in California. And when you overlay those smoking maps with details of rates of heart disease, stroke and cancer, it’s equally clear that there are still plenty of lives to be saved by trying.


How? 


“(With) taxes, strong smoke-free laws and fully funding state tobacco prevention programs,” says Dr. Mariell Jessup, president of the American Heart Association. “These measures can reduce the number of adult smokers to less than 10 percent of the population in 10 years.”


Also, raising the legal age to buy tobacco products to 21 would go a long way to stopping kids from ever getting addicted in the first place, the Heart Association, American Lung Association, American Cancer Society, Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids and other groups agree.


“We do it with booze yet we don’t do it with cigarettes, when cigarettes kill about 10 times more people than alcohol does,” says Dr. Michael Fiore of the University of Wisconsin’s Center for Tobacco Research and Intervention.


Smoking is often just another marker for social and economic disparities, Fiore adds. “Fewer than 10 percent of college graduates smoke,” Fiore points out. But 35 percent of people who never graduated from high school do.


“Two things will solve this issue over time and eliminate tobacco use. One is hard-hitting public policy. At the same time, we need the ready availability of treatments for smokers.”


A 50 year public health battle


It was Jan. 11, 1964 when then-Surgeon General Dr. Luther Terry held a news conference to announce that smoking causes cancer and probably heart disease, too. It was a time when close to half of Americans smoked — including Terry himself — and it set off a 50-year battle between regulators and the tobacco industry.


Cigarettes are no longer portrayed as glamorous, and stop-smoking campaigns have saved 8 million lives, a study published this week shows.

Vecchio / Getty Images


Cigarettes are no longer portrayed as glamorous, and stop-smoking campaigns have saved 8 million lives, a study published this week shows.



Since then, science has proven beyond any doubt that smoking causes most cases of lung cancer, most heart disease and lung disease as well as stroke and a range of cancers from breast to bladder. Researchers have proven that nicotine is one of the most addictive substances known, and that tobacco companies deliberately manipulate nicotine levels in their products to get people hooked on the first cigarette and keep them hooked for life.


In a study published this week in the Journal of the American Medical Association, Theodore Holford of the Yale School of Public Health and colleagues estimated that 17.7 million people died between 1964 and 2012 because of smoking. But they also calculated that tobacco control measures saved 8 million lives. And the average American lives two years longer than they otherwise would have, they said. Smoking rates have plummeted from 42 percent of the population in 1965 to 18 percent today.


Yet smoking still kills 1 in 5 Americans, or 440,000 people a year, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says. That includes more than 49,000 people who die from the effects of secondhand smoke.


And tobacco companies kept up the fight. When they failed to cast doubt on the health effects of smoking, they re-framed the issue as one of personal choice. When schools, cities and employers completely banned smoking on their premises, companies advertised cigarettes as stress-relievers and subtly encouraged smokers to feel like they were somehow edgy rebels instead of tobacco addicts.


Shaking a national addiction


Health experts say there are still ways to get smoking rates lower, even as policymakers grapple with new battles over e-cigarettes. One is to stop people from smoking in the first place, says Dr. James Perrin, president of the American Academy of Pediatrics.


“Eighty-eight percent or more of lifetime smokers start before they turn age 18,” he told NBC News. The adolescent brain is particularly susceptible to the addicting effects of nicotine, and just raising the legal age to buy tobacco to 21 would help get kids past the most vulnerable point, he says.


UNITED STATES - CIRCA 1950s: Couple talking over drinks. (Photo by George Marks/Retrofile/Getty Images)

George Marks / Getty Images


In the 1950s, smoking was considered glamorous. Research now shows it’s deadly.



Perrin joins other health experts in urging the Food and Drug Administration to take a firmer hand. “Four years ago, the U.S. stopped sales of candy-flavored cigarettes because they are particularly appealing to children,” Perrin said. Yet little cigars flavored like cotton candy, grape and even gummy bears remain on the market. Such products are not aimed at 40-year-olds, Perrin maintains.


Taxes also have been shown to reduce smoking rates. But they are nowhere as near as high as they should be, argues Dick Woodruff of the American Cancer Society’s Cancer Action Network. “Taxes work,” Woodruff told reporters. But federal taxes are just a dollar a pack. “It’s just ridiculous,” he says. “We need to overcome the anathema Congress has on taxes and revenues and educate them.”


States add their own taxes, and Kentucky, the state with the highest smoking rates, adds just 60 cents a pack, while New York adds $ 4.35 a pack and Massachusetts $ 3.50. Studies show that the people most likely to smoke are also the most sensitive to price.


Experts also argue that states aren’t spending these tax revenues properly in helping people to stop smoking. They’re also not using a big pot of money called the Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement from a giant lawsuit settled in 1998 between the attorneys general of 46 states and the four biggest tobacco companies. It provides $ 206 billion over 25 years — that’s more than $ 175 million a year per state, or more than $ 8 billion a year for all the states. Yet states spent just $ 640 million on tobacco control efforts in 2010.


Warning: Danger inside the pack 


Tobacco companies have fought and lobbied against every measure. But anti-tobacco activists marked a victory on Friday. Tobacco companies and the federal government reached an agreement on a series of “corrective statements” the companies must publish. It comes from a 2006 ruling in which Washington, D.C., federal district judge Gladys Kessler ruled that the cigarette companies conspired for decades to conceal the dangers of smoking.


Under the agreement with the Justice Department , each of the companies must publish full-page ads in the Sunday editions of 35 newspapers and on the newspapers’ websites, as well as air prime-time TV spots on NBC, CBS or ABC five times per week for a year. They’ve been fighting over the wording, says Vince Willmore of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids. “The companies have appealed every step of the way,” he said.


These ads must say, for instance: 


  • “Smoking kills, on average, 1,200 Americans. Every day.”

  • “Philip Morris USA, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco, Lorillard, and Altria intentionally designed cigarettes to make them more addictive.”

  • “When you smoke, the nicotine actually changes the brain — that’s why quitting is so hard.”

The companies also must publish the statements on their own websites and affix them to a certain number of cigarette packs three times per year for two years.


Something else — doctors need to nag their patients more, says Fiore. “I would never dream of letting a patient with high blood pressure leave my office without treating it,” Fiore said. “But every day in America, millions of Americans go in and out of a physician’s office and their smoking is not treated.”


· Follow NBCNewsHealth on Facebook and on Twitter 


· Follow Maggie Fox on Facebook and on Twitter






Will America ever kick its smoking habit?

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

The Greatest Political Damage Control Ever



Political candidates live in a storm of controversy. When a candidate’s character comes under fire during a campaign, how they respond can make the differenc…
Video Rating: 5 / 5



The Greatest Political Damage Control Ever

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Worst Interview Ever?!


“It’s got plenty of competition but this may just be the single most cringe-worthy, embarrassing interview on Fox News. At least in recent memory. Fox News a…



Worst Interview Ever?!

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Police Kill Man in Iceland FOR FIRST TIME EVER!

At Not Just The News, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Not Just The News and how it is used.


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  • Google, as a third party vendor, uses cookies to serve ads on Not Just The News.

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Police Kill Man in Iceland FOR FIRST TIME EVER!

Sunday, December 8, 2013

Mary Matalin Smacks Down MSNBC’s Dyson: ‘Will You Ever Get Tired of Beating Up On Darth Vader?’


Noel Sheppard

There was a really delicious exchange on ABC’s This Week Sunday that conservatives across the fruited plain will greatly enjoy.


After hate-spewing MSNBC contributor Michael Eric Dyson bashed former Vice President Dick Cheney for once wanting Nelson Mandela put on a terrorist list, Matalin shot back, “When will you ever get tired of beating up on Darth Vader” (video follows with transcript and commentary):


MICHAEL ERIC DYSON, MSNBC CONTRIBUTOR: I’m the same generation as President Obama, and taking a stand against apartheid both in the university community and more broadly in terms of, you know, dealing with the disinvestment strategies, but also challenging Ronald Reagan’s engagement approach. I think conservatives get a little bit of amnesia here when they forget that Dick Cheney wanted to put him on the terrorist list and insisted he stay there, that Ronald Reagan resisted – he said on the one hand that Nelson Mandela should be released, but he depended upon a white supremacist government to reform itself from within. I think Nelson Mandela challenged that. Also, though, he challenged people on the left as well.


GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS, HOST: Amnesia, Mary?


MARY MATALIN: When will you ever get tired of beating up on Darth Vader who said Nelson Mandela is a good man? As we’ve seen in your earlier segment, it was a complicated situation. The ANC was a terrorist organization at one point. He has since said wonderful things about Nelson Mandela.



Actually Mary, much like former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin, Cheney is a frequent target of the haters on MSNBC.


As such, as long as Phil Griffin is running this farce of a so-called “news network,” there’s little likelihood Dyson and his fellow character assassins will stop attacking the former vice president.


Yet Dyson’s appearance on This Week raises another issue. Given the shame that has been foisted on MSNBC with the high profile departures of Alec Baldwin and Martin Bashir, why would Stephanopoulos invite one of their other despicable flamethrowers on his program?


Somebody clearly wasn’t thinking about those optics.




NewsBusters – Exposing Liberal Media Bias



Mary Matalin Smacks Down MSNBC’s Dyson: ‘Will You Ever Get Tired of Beating Up On Darth Vader?’

Highest Radiation Level Ever, Lethal In 20 Minutes, Recorded Outside Fukushima Reactor

Highest Radiation Level Ever, Lethal In 20 Minutes, Recorded Outside Fukushima Reactor
http://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/images/user5/imageroot/2013/12/NHK%20clip.jpg


Zero Hedge
December 8, 2013


With all the excitement about Japan’s soaring stock market (if plunging wages), crashing non-digital currency (leading to soaring energy prices), recent passage of an arbitrary secrecy bill (“Designed by Kafka & Inspired By Hitler“), and ongoing territorial spat with China, it is almost as if the Abe administration is desperately doing everything in its power, including some of the most ridiculous decisions taken by a government in recent history, to hide some key development behind the scenes. Such as this one perhaps: NHK reported today that TEPCO said radiation levels are extremely high in an area near a ventilation pipe at the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. TEPCO found radiation of 25 sieverts an hour on a duct, which connects reactor buildings and the 120-meter-tall ventilation pipe.


Putting this number in context the estimated radiation level is the highest ever detected outside reactor buildings. People exposed to this level of radiation would die within 20 minutes.


The exhaust pipe in question was used to release radioactive gases following the outbreak of the accident 2 years ago.


TEPCO says radioactive substances could remain inside the pipes. Given TEPCO’s safety record, they could also leak outside of the pipes. And given the company’s “credibility” the world would be sure to learn about this… anywhere between 2 and 3 years after the fact.


In the meantime, we urge Japan to follow the bouncing, and so pleasantly distracting, Topix and Nikkei 225 balls, while sticking its head in the glow in the dark sand and completely ignore the radioactive monster in the closet.


From NHK:


Highest Radiation Level Ever, Lethal In 20 Minutes, Recorded Outside Fukushima Reactor NHK%20clip

  • A d v e r t i s e m e n t


… Which reminds us: on Thursday the following headline hit the Bloomberg tape:


  • FUKUSHIMA RADIATION TO REACH U.S. COAST AT SAFE LEVEL: NRC

We are sure it is nothing, and the NRC is telling the truth.


This article was posted: Sunday, December 8, 2013 at 7:30 am









Prison Planet.com




Read more about Highest Radiation Level Ever, Lethal In 20 Minutes, Recorded Outside Fukushima Reactor and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Ron Paul"s Greatest Debate Performance Ever (10-18-2011)



In the CNN Debate in Vegas on October 18, 2011, Ron Paul delivered what is arguably his greatest debate performance ever. This video features all of his resp…



Ron Paul"s Greatest Debate Performance Ever (10-18-2011)

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Scariest UFO Documentary Ever! - Conspiritus Remake by Xendrius - Proper / Full Version

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Scariest UFO Documentary Ever! - Conspiritus Remake by Xendrius - Proper / Full Version

Friday, October 11, 2013

Guantanamo Bay Lawsuit Shows Gitmo"s Still As Secretive As Ever

guantanamo, bay, lawsuit, shows, gitmos, still, as, secretive, as, ever,

Guantanamo Bay Lawsuit Shows Gitmo’s Still As Secretive As Ever
© AP




The detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba has long been a secretive base, whetherit be  Colonel Nathan Jessup covering up murder in A Few Good Men or President Obama’s administration refusing to answer questions regarding Camp 7 to a Miami Herald reporter.


The Herald’s Carol Rosenberg has been covering the Guantanamo Bay detention facility since it opened in 2002, and is currently suing the the Pentagon under the Freedom of Information Act over the refusal to disclose how much it Camp 7 cost to build and to operate. Camp 7 is where 16 of the high-value detainees, including alleged 9/11 conspirators, are being held. According to the lawsuit, all other construction and operating costs have been revealed for the rest of the camp. The Pentagon claims that the information is classified and that it would cause an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy, despite releasing it for all other areas.


If the president and the Pentagon are serious about transparency at the detention center than it must finish releasing the documents on the operational and construction costs for Camp 7. If the detention facility is going to remain open then it has to be transparent. Any number published regarding the housing of alleged 9/11 conspirators could be justified by the president’s team, and those who support the facility on the right. The refusal to reveal this information when it has been revealed in all other contexts is confusing, especially considering the ease by which this policy could be justified by both sides of the aisle supporting the continuation of the detainment policy. Hopefully Rosenberg’s lawsuit is successful so that at least we understand more about this facility that has gained such a negative reputation.




PolicyMic



Guantanamo Bay Lawsuit Shows Gitmo"s Still As Secretive As Ever

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

The Best Critique of Alternative Medicine Ever


130904_TWO_StormMinchin



There’s nothing like reading about the history of disease to make you appreciate modern times. Until just a century or two ago, most people died horribly of contagious diseases we barely remember the names of today. Our world is full of life-saving luxuries: We turn on a tap and clean water comes out. Our diets are so rich and varied that almost nobody suffers from rickets or scurvy. We live in airy, spacious homes that aren’t clouded with the coughs of consumptives—and when we share a bed with someone, it’s due to desire rather than overcrowding.




It is in the nature of luxuries to eventually be taken for granted, and some of the greatest underappreciated luxuries are public health and modern medicine. Thanks to massive vaccination drives, almost no children in the developed world die of measles or mumps. And because these diseases are now so rare, anti-vaccination activists have the luxury of indulging in conspiracy theories. Many of us would have died already if it weren’t for routine medical interventions; we are on our second or third lives. And because death is so much more distant than in the past, some people have a romanticized notion of our place in the natural world. We used to be more in harmony with nature, the thinking goes, and our bodies naturally know how to heal themselves. I have a hard time following the logic—something about auras and herbs and energy fields? It’s utter nonsense, of course—what’s natural is to serve as a host and vector for deadly parasitic microbes.




Tim Minchin, an Australian singer, songwriter, poet, comedian, and all-around genius, has the best response I’ve ever seen to people who prefer alternative medicine to modern medicine. His “Storm” is funny, educational, and cathartic. If you’ve been buttonholed by someone who wants to tell you all about an “alternative,” “natural,” “superior” health care regimen, this film is for you.




Written and performed by Tim Minchin (@timminchin). Directed by DC Turner (@dcturner). Produced by Tracy King (@tkingdoll). See more at www.stormmovie.net.




Read the rest of Laura Helmuth’s series on longevity.




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The Best Critique of Alternative Medicine Ever