Showing posts with label Gets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gets. Show all posts

Monday, April 7, 2014

Designed for lone commuters, this three-wheeled car gets 84 mpg

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Designed for lone commuters, this three-wheeled car gets 84 mpg

Saturday, April 5, 2014

Mom gets 20 years in breast feeding overdose

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Mom gets 20 years in breast feeding overdose

Friday, March 28, 2014

California couple gets three years in jail in Qatar for death of adopted child

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California couple gets three years in jail in Qatar for death of adopted child

California couple gets three years in jail in Qatar for death of adopted child

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California couple gets three years in jail in Qatar for death of adopted child

Monday, March 24, 2014

VIDEO: The Crabster Deep Water Drone Gets Its Sea Legs

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VIDEO: The Crabster Deep Water Drone Gets Its Sea Legs

Friday, March 21, 2014

Half Ounce of Pot Gets Man 20 Years in Prison

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Half Ounce of Pot Gets Man 20 Years in Prison

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Protein May Hold Key to Who Gets Alzheimer’s, Study Finds

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It is one of the big scientific mysteries of Alzheimer’s disease: Why do some people whose brains accumulate the plaques and tangles so strongly associated with Alzheimer’s not develop the disease?


Now, a series of studies by Harvard scientists suggests a possible answer, one that could lead to new treatments if confirmed by other research.


The memory and thinking problems of Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias may be related to a failure in the brain’s stress response system, the new research suggests. If this system is working well, it can protect the brain from abnormal Alzheimer’s proteins; if it gets derailed, key areas of the brain start degenerating.


“This is an extremely important study,” said Li-Huei Tsai, director of the Picower institute for Learning and Memory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who was not involved in the research but wrote a commentary accompanying the study. “This is the first study that is really starting to provide a plausible pathway to explain why some people are more vulnerable to Alzheimer’s than other people.”


Photo


Amyloid plaques form in the brain of a patient with Alzheimer’s disease. Credit Yankner laboratory

The research, published on Wednesday in the journal Nature, focuses on a protein previously thought to act mostly in the brains of developing fetuses. The scientists found that the protein also appears to protect neurons in healthy older people from aging-related stresses. But in people with Alzheimer’s and other dementias, the protein is sharply depleted in key brain regions.


Experts said if other scientists can replicate and expand upon the findings, the role of the protein, called REST, could spur development of new drugs for dementia, which has so far been virtually impossible to treat. But they cautioned that much more needs to be determined, including whether the decline of REST is a cause, or an effect, of brain deterioration, and whether it is specific enough to neurological diseases that it could lead to effective therapies.


“You’re going to see a lot of papers now following up on it,” said Dr. Eric M. Reiman, executive director of the Banner Alzheimer’s Institute in Phoenix, who was not involved in the study. “While it’s a preliminary finding, it raises an avenue that hasn’t been considered before. And if this provides a handle on which to understand normal brain aging, that will be great too.”



REST, a gene regulator that switches off certain genes, is primarily known to keep fetal neurons in an immature state until they develop to perform brain functions, said Dr. Bruce A. Yankner, a professor of genetics at Harvard Medical School and the new study’s lead author. By the time babies are born, REST becomes inactive, he said, except in some areas outside the brain like the colon, where it seems to suppress cancer.


While investigating how different genes in the brain change as people age, Dr. Yankner’s team was startled to find that REST was the most active gene regulator in older brains.


“Why should a fetal gene be coming on in an aging brain?” he wondered. He hypothesized that it was because in aging, as in birth, brains encounter great stress, threatening neurons that cannot regenerate if harmed.


His team discovered that REST appears to switch off genes that promote cell death, protecting neurons from normal aging processes like energy decrease, inflammation and oxidative stress.



Analyzing brains from brain banks and dementia studies, the researchers found that brains of young adults aged 20 to 35 contained little REST, while healthy adults between the ages of 73 and 106 had a lot. REST levels grew the older people got, so long as they did not develop dementia, suggesting REST is related to longevity.


But in people with Alzheimer’s, mild cognitive impairment, frontotemporal dementia and Lewy body dementia, the brain areas affected by these diseases contained much less REST than healthy brains.


This was true only in people who actually had memory and thinking problems. People who remained cognitively healthy, but whose brains had the same accumulation of amyloid plaques and tau tangles as people with Alzheimer’s, had three times more REST than dementia sufferers.


REST levels dropped as symptoms worsened, so people with mild cognitive impairment had more REST than Alzheimer’s patients. And only key brain regions were affected. In Alzheimer’s, REST steeply declined in the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus, areas critical to learning, memory and planning. Other areas of the brain not involved in Alzheimer’s showed no REST drop-off.


It is not yet possible to analyze REST levels in the brains of living people, and several Alzheimer’s experts said that fact limited what the new research could prove.


John Hardy, an Alzheimer’s researcher at University College London, cautioned in an email that information from post-mortem brains cannot prove a decline in REST causes dementia because death may produce unrelated damage to brain cells.


To probe further, the team conducted what both Dr. Tsai and Dr. Reiman called a “tour de force” of research, examining REST in mice, roundworms and cells in the lab.


“We wanted to make sure the story was right,” Dr. Yankner said. “It was difficult to believe at first, to be honest with you.”


Especially persuasive was that mice genetically engineered to lack REST lost neurons as they aged in brain areas afflicted in Alzheimer’s.


Dr. Yankner said REST appears to work by traveling to a neuron’s nucleus when the brain is stressed. In dementia, though, REST somehow gets diverted, traveling with toxic dementia-related proteins to another part of the neuron where it is eventually destroyed.


Experts said the research, while intriguing, leaves many unanswered questions. Bradley Wise of the National Institute on Aging’s neuroscience division, which helped finance the studies, said REST’s role needs further clarification. “I don’t think you can really say if it’s a cause of Alzheimer’s or a consequence of Alzheimer’s” yet, he said.


Dr. Samuel Gandy, an Alzheimer’s researcher at Mount Sinai Medical Center, wondered if REST figured only in neurodegenerative diseases or in other diseases too, which could make it difficult to use REST to develop specific treatments or diagnostic tests for dementia.


“My ambivalence is, is this really a way that advances our understanding of the disease or does this just this just tell us this is even more complicated than we thought?” he said.


Dr. Yankner’s team is looking at REST in other neurological diseases, like Parkinson’s. He also has thoughts about a potential treatment, lithium, which he said appears to stimulate REST function, and is considered relatively safe.


But he and other experts said it was too early. “I would hesitate to start rushing into lithium treatment” unless rigorous studies show it can forestall dementia, said Dr. John Morris, an Alzheimer’s researcher at Washington University in St. Louis.


Still, Dr. Morris said, the REST research the team conducted so far is “very well done, and certainly helps support this idea that we’ve all tried to understand about why Alzheimer’s is age-associated and why, while amyloid is necessary for the development of Alzheimer’s disease, it certainly is not sufficient.” He added, “There have to be some other processes and triggers that result in Alzheimer’s.”


Correction: March 19, 2014

Because of an editing error, an earlier version of this article misstated the gender of Dr. Li-Huei Tsai. She is a woman.



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Protein May Hold Key to Who Gets Alzheimer’s, Study Finds

Saturday, March 8, 2014

($XXII) 22nd Century Groups Gets NYSE Approval, VIRTU is DMM

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($XXII) 22nd Century Groups Gets NYSE Approval, VIRTU is DMM

Bacon, Inflation, And "What Gets Measured Gets Managed"

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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Bacon, Inflation, And "What Gets Measured Gets Managed"

Monday, March 3, 2014

Great Wall graffiti gets free hand



Area in famous section set aside so tourists can leave their mark


Mutianyu, a famous section of the Great Wall, now has a designated area for graffiti to better protect it after media reported that many foreign tourists left their words on the old buildings.




Great Wall graffiti gets free hand 

Visitors take in the sights at Mutianyu, a famous section of the Great Wall. A special area of the wall has been established for graffiti to better protect the heritage site after media reported that many foreign tourists had carved words on the old buildings. Photo by Chen Yehua / Xinhua 


Mutianyu, one of the best-preserved parts of the Great Wall, is located in Huairou district, 70 km northeast of central Beijing.


This section of the Great Wall has frequently been the target of graffiti in English and other languages, according to a statement from the district’s publicity department on Sunday.


In fact, more foreign languages appear than Chinese, a report published by Beijing Evening News said on Friday. The No 5 Fighting Tower building is a popular spot for leaving graffiti, with most of it in English, the report said.


For many foreign tourists, Mutianyu is their first choice for seeing the Great Wall in Beijing.


As a key national cultural relics site, Mutianyu attracts many tourists every year, with 40 percent from foreign countries, according to the publicity department.


For years, the administration office of Mutianyu had arranged routine patrol teams to discourage tourists from graffiti writing. Anti-graffiti placards were also added.


Meanwhile, the cultural relics protection department was ordered to restore the defaced buildings.


Yet graffiti has remained a problem in Mutianyu, administrators said.


To solve it, they established a free graffiti zone for tourists in the No 14 Fighting Tower building. “As many tourists like to carve words on buildings, we will develop the graffiti writing area as a new scenic spot of Mutianyu,” said a director of the administration office.


The office said it plans to set up two more areas, in fighting towers No 5 and No 10 for tourists to carve or write their names in the future.


An electronic graffiti board is also being considered, it said.


The new policy gives visitors inclined to improperly leave their names an approved place to do so, which will better protect the ancient buildings of Mutianyu in the long run, said a publicity official, surnamed Wen, of Huairou district.


Xu Fan, a member of the panel of tourism experts of the World Tourism Organization, said that designating an area for graffiti was acceptable. But she questioned the plan to add more such areas and said an electric board for graffiti writing was a better choice.


Signage is also good, Xu said: “In current areas where tourists carve words spontaneously, the administrators should also set up signs to guide people to the newly established graffiti writing area.”






Great Wall graffiti gets free hand

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Hated textbook gets Reagan’s dark side half right



Conservative student group Turning Point USA caused a stir last week by posting pages online from a textbook used at the University of South Carolina. The book calls Ronald Reagan “sexist” and says conservatives “take a basically pessimistic view of human nature” — one in which “people are conceived of as being corrupt.”


Several avowed conservatives balked not just at the negative portrayal of Reagan but also at the idea that the conservative persuasion contains a measure of pessimism. On this point, the textbook is right and they are wrong.


Russell Kirk was the man credited by William F. Buckley for the very existence of an American conservatism. To Kirk, human fallenness was an essential pillar of conservative thought. He called Original Sin the one empirically verifiable dogma.


“Human nature suffers irremediably from certain grave faults,” Kirk wrote. “To seek for utopia is to end in disaster, the conservative says: we are not made for perfect things.”


This sentiment is shared by the Apostle Paul, who wrote that human beings are “by nature children of wrath,” and by John Adams, who warned us to distrust government because “there is danger from all men.”


If conservatives are offended by this idea, they have forgotten their own inheritance. The conservative intellectual tradition has been challenging progressive assumptions since Edmund Burke assailed the tyranny of Jacobin France.


fl_s0010_reagan
If conservatism’s answers have been forgotten, then conservatives are doomed merely to attack or water down progressivism without offering a coherent worldview of their own.


Granted, the textbook was discussing the cheerful Ronald Reagan. Yet it correctly specifies a “pessimistic view of human nature,” not of all reality.


Reagan was a temperamentally happy man, but he took a grave view of the appropriate things: the dangers posed by the Soviet Union abroad and by big government at home. It’s precisely because Reagan recognized these evils that he was able to fight them.


A dark view of the human condition is often necessary to yield the brightest results. Imagine you are trying to dissuade a delusional person from leaping off a tall building. The crazed man insists that he can fly. Though your view that he cannot fly would save him from death, his take is clearly more optimistic.


When the Wright Brothers did succeed in flying, it was only because they were not so optimistic as to think they could do so by flapping their arms.


Arguments over gun rights usually involve two scenarios: the home invasion and the tyrannical government. In both cases, the progressive position rests upon an optimistic view of human nature.


Last year, an Oregon woman dialed 911 as a man was breaking into her home to sexually assault her. Because there were no police in the area, the dispatcher offered her some interesting advice: “You know, obviously, if he comes inside the residence and assaults you, can you ask him to go away?”


This statement might sound disastrously naïve, but it was really only the logical, though absurd, conclusion of an argument that liberals routinely make.


Likewise, progressives dismiss as absurd any suggestion that the U.S. government could, even a hundred years into the future, become tyrannical enough to warrant armed resistance.


The left’s trust in government is so unshakeable that this was true even when George W. Bush was president. As they warned of creeping fascism, they still wanted people to give up their guns.


Edmund Burke
Edmund Burke


Such faith in the goodness of democracy is historically absurd. In Edmund Burke’s words, “in a democracy, the majority… is capable of exercising the most cruel oppressions upon the minority.”


If conservatives were to rediscover their roots, they could counter the loony left on both counts. Self-defense is paramount if people are “by nature children of wrath.” Democracy is fallible if “there is danger from all men.”


Science adds heft to the conservative position here. We now know, for instance, that testosterone acts to reduce empathy.


Burke likely would have agreed with the controversial textbook’s assessment. He said “there is no safety for honest men but by believing all possible evil of evil men.”


We have good reason to channel Burke today. If Americans come to see government and its goals as susceptible to human imperfection, then conservatism will win handily. If that’s pessimism, we need more pessimism.



New textbook trashes Reagan and conservatives






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Hated textbook gets Reagan’s dark side half right

Pittsburgh ex-chief gets 18 months in federal pen



PITTSBURGH (AP) — The city’s former police chief was sentenced to 18 months in prison for conspiring to create an unauthorized slush fund, with a federal judge saying she was sending a message that the seriousness of his crimes outweighed his supporters’ calls for leniency.


Nathan Harper, 61, also was ordered to repay $ 31,986 that he took from the fund for himself, including meals and drink tabs at various restaurants and bars.


Harper resigned a year ago, a few weeks before he was indicted on conspiracy to commit theft and failing to file tax returns between 2008 and 2011, when much of the money was misappropriated.


Harper never denied wrongdoing, though his attorneys have argued the chief established the trust fund on orders from someone they’ve refused to name. Eight family members and friends testified to his character Tuesday, each of them asking the judge to keep Harper out of prison because of his otherwise spotless record and gentle demeanor.


Even Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert Cessar, who argued for the prison term, told the judge he admired Harper from their work on various law enforcement projects.


“If I were not here as an assistant U.S. attorney, I may well have been one of those people writing letters of support for Mr. Harper,” Cessar said, referencing more than 30 letters received by the court.


But U.S. District Judge Cathy Bissoon said a “slap on the wrist” would “send a dangerous message to the public.” She added, “Unfortunately, no amount of kind words can erase the seriousness of his crimes and the breach of public trust.”


Her sentence left the courtroom in stunned silence, and Harper’s wife, Cynthia, and other relatives in tears.


The sentencing marked a striking fall for Harper, whose rise from motorcycle cop to chief was nearly as remarkable. Harper joined the department in 1977 and was appointed chief in 2006 by the recently departed mayor, Luke Ravenstahl.


Ravenstahl abruptly dropped his re-election bid in March — three weeks before Harper was indicted — saying speculation about the investigation had become too much of a burden for him and his family.


Defense attorney Robert Leight told The Associated Press that Harper maintains Ravenstahl was involved in the slush fund, but he stopped short of naming Ravenstahl as the official who ordered Harper to create it.


“We’ll let the U.S. attorney’s office address that,” Leight said.


U.S. Attorney David Hickton planned a news conference later Tuesday.


Ravenstahl and his attorney, who didn’t immediately return a message left by The Associated Press, have repeatedly denied wrongdoing. Authorities have not charged Ravenstahl, though the former mayor has acknowledged his police bodyguards had credit cards linked to the unauthorized accounts for which Harper was prosecuted.


In pleading guilty in October, Harper acknowledged diverting more than $ 70,000 in fees the city collected from businesses that hired police officers to work off-duty security details into two unauthorized credit union accounts. Harper then spent nearly half the money for his own benefit.


The accounts enabled Harper and others in the police bureau to spend money that could not be traced the same way normally budgeted police funds would have been.


“I made a mistake that has been devastating and that has tarnished the law enforcement community. I’m a broken man,” Harper told Bissoon, later adding, “I will carry this to my grave.”


Harper, surrounded by friends and family, declined to comment as he left court. He can report to prison within a few weeks.


Bissoon chastised the ex-chief for using the fund “like a personal ATM.”


“I believe that deep down in your heart you are still a lawman,” Bissoon told Harper, explaining her sentence. “You are a lawman who may not like what happened today, but I think you understand what happened today, and why.”


(Copyright 2014 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)







Pittsburgh ex-chief gets 18 months in federal pen

Saturday, February 22, 2014

Hot Reporter Gets Soaked News Blooper

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Hot Reporter Gets Soaked News Blooper

‘Six Californias’ initiative to split up most populous US state gets green light

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‘Six Californias’ initiative to split up most populous US state gets green light

Thursday, February 13, 2014

3,000 euro Google search: French blogger gets fined for re-posting indexed govt files

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3,000 euro Google search: French blogger gets fined for re-posting indexed govt files

Monday, February 10, 2014

Obamacare Gets Big Help From Big Business

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Obamacare Gets Big Help From Big Business

Sunday, February 9, 2014

Nonbeliever PAC Gets Into the Midterm Game



Back in November, when podiatrist Lee Rogers was being interviewed as a potential endorsee by the Freethought Equality Fund PAC, the California congressional candidate was surprised by what he learned about the fledgling political action committee.


Rogers didn’t expect the organization, which was formed to promote the interests of the  non-believing electorate, to be focused on issues related to education and non-discrimination.


“They were not really concerned with things that you would typically think an atheist group being concerned with, like ‘In God We Trust’ on money.  I think one of them even said that they care more about what’s backing our money than what is on it,” Rogers said in an interview with RealClearPolitics. “They were really very pragmatic about the issues that they wanted to support in Washington.”


The Freethought PAC has filed its first wave of contributions through the Federal Election Commission. The total is paltry — just $ 6,100 — but the organization has, ahem, faith that it can one day make good on its website motto of  “electing secular leaders, defending secular America.”


What that motto means, in practical terms, is focusing on “any issues that come up where religious groups are trying to intrude their beliefs on policy,” the PAC’s coordinator, Bishop McNeill, told RCP. “Whether it be for women’s reproductive issues, same-sex marriage issues, issues dealing with scientific integrity.”


The beneficiaries of the PAC’s modest largess are all Democrats and all but one are incumbents: Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, Reps. Jared Polis (Colo.), Rush Holt (N.J.), Bobby Scott (Va.) and Rogers.


“We do look at the demographics of the districts and a whole lot of criteria before making our decision,” McNeill said about the contributions — and the endorsements that accompany them.  “We’re not just trying to pick winners per se, but we do look at all the information given to us to make a solid decision and to find the most credible candidates.”


Warren is the Freethought PAC’s lone financial recipient holding office at a statewide level. She is also, among the federal candidates, the only one not facing an election this year. Warren has, however, been mentioned as a potential candidate for the 2016 Democratic presidential nomination. (The FEC filing states the Freethought disbursement of $ 1,000 to Warren is for the 2018 primary.)


Rogers, who is seeking the Democratic nomination in California’s 25th District,  told RCP that the PAC donated additional money to his campaign after the filing. That brings FEF’s contribution to $ 5,000, the maximum allowed by law.


He links the initial support he received from the PAC to its opposition to incumbent Howard P. “Buck” McKeon, whom Rogers was slated to challenge until the Republican congressman announced his retirement last month. Rogers said FEF took issue with McKeon — the powerful chairman of the House Armed Services Committee — for opposing efforts to allow humanist chaplains to counsel military members who are atheists.


Among the other FEF endorsees, Rep. Scott (now serving his 11th term in Congress) said in an email that as “a strong supporter of the Free Exercise and Establishment Clauses enshrined in the First Amendment, I was honored to be among the first members of Congress endorsed by the new Freethought and Equality Fund.”
The other recipients of  FEF contributions did not immediately respond to RCP’s requests for comment.


The PAC debuted last September as the brainchild of the Center for Humanist Activism, the lobbying arm of the American Humanist Association. According to its website, the latter was founded in 1941 and now has over 20,000 members and supporters.


Of the PAC’s current stable of endorsees, a group that extends beyond the donation recipients cited above, the sole openly professed nonbeliever is Arizona state Rep. Juan Mendez, who identifies as a secular humanist. (He revealed his principles on the issue in the Arizona House of Representatives, where he asked fellow lawmakers not to bow their heads — and invoked Carl Sagan — as he led the daily invocation.)


“I hope today marks the beginning of a new era in which Arizona’s nonbelievers can feel as welcome and valued here as believers,” Mendez reportedly said afterward.


Some faith advocates are skeptical of the success the political action committee will have in the long run.


“I think that they will be a drop in the bucket along with many other liberal-left PACs,” Faith and Freedom Coalition senior adviser Gary Marx told RCP. “It’s going to take a whole lot of finances for them to break through and move into the conversation with the likes of Moveon.org and the trial lawyers and the unions.”


But the recent financial contributions are only a part of what Freethought hopes to do this election year.


McNeill said there are currently 12 candidates for Congress who have identified themselves as nonbelievers, answered questionnaires from the PAC and talked with the organization.  (He declined to name them — an announcement will be forthcoming — but did divulge that all are seeking the Democratic nomination in their districts.) Freethought will “endorse and or highlight these candidates and commend them for their courage to be out and open about their lack of belief,” McNeill said.


He added that the next goal of the operation is to have more politicians publicly disclose their nonbelief.


“If we can get them to come out as a group, I think that would be the best course of action,” McNeill said. “Obviously, I think individually it’s going to be harder because it’ll still be easy for people to single out one individual.”
Explaining FEF’s emphasis on electing nonbelievers to office, he cited an oft-repeated statistic that 20 percent of Americans do not identify with any religion.


“Unfortunately, that number is not represented in Congress,” McNeill said. “It is important to have diversity in office.”


According to Lauren Youngblood, spokesperson for the pro-separation of church and state Secular Coalition of America, there are 31 current members of Congress who have privately confided their nonbelief to the organization.


That there are nonbelievers who keep those sentiments to themselves isn’t surprising. After all, the U.S. remains a religious country overall: Gallup reports that 87 percent of Americans believe in a deity. Add in the coming midterms, and the issue isn’t likely to be one that many officeholders (or wannabes) would want to make an issue of.


“I like to say it must be an election year because politicians are attending church,” Ethics and Public Policy Center Vice President Michael Cromartie told RCP. “The American people can discern whether or not a candidate is sincere about their faith.”


Youngblood argued that a candidate’s nonbelief should be a “non-issue.”


“It really shouldn’t matter whether you’re a Christian or an atheist or a Buddhist,” she asserted. “What should matter is that you base your laws, your legislation or your support for legislation on reason and science and logic.”


Rogers agrees.


Pointing to his belief in the First Amendment and “the principle of separation between church and state,” the California candidate said he does not publicly reveal his religious affiliation. If elected to Congress, he said he would continue non-identification.


“I think that too many people are using their religion to force their beliefs on others,” Rogers said. “I’ve told people I’m not going to use any of my own personal religious beliefs to try to force policy on anyone else.”




RealClearPolitics – Articles



Nonbeliever PAC Gets Into the Midterm Game

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

The Obamacare Security Nightmare: It Gets Worse


Fraudsters on the inside, hackers on the outside. Here we are, stuck in the middle with the security nightmare called Obamacare. Can it get any worse? Yes, it can.


After the spectacular website crashes during last fall’s federal health insurance exchange rollout, enrollees will soon wish the entire system had stayed down and dead. “404 Error” messages and convicted felon Obamacare navigators may be the least of our health care tech problems now. The latest? U.S. intelligence agencies notified the Department of Health and Human Services last week that the Healthcare.gov infrastructure could be infected with malicious code.


Who’s responsible? Washington Free Beacon national security reporter Bill Gertz writes that U.S. officials have “warned that programmers in Belarus, a former Soviet republic closely allied with Russia, were suspected” of possible sabotage. A government tech bureaucrat in the Belarusian regime bragged last summer on Russian radio that HHS is “one of our clients” and that “we are helping Obama complete his insurance reform.”


Gulp. When an authoritarian minion from the country known as “Europe’s last dictatorship” boasts about “helping” the Obama White House, be afraid. One of our intel people spelled it out for Gertz: “The U.S. Affordable Care Act software was written in part in Belarus by software developers under state control, and that makes the software a potential target for cyber attacks.”


No kidding. The friends of Vladimir Putin are not our friends. If you’ve been paying attention, you know that Belarus and other Eastern European hacking gangs have been at the center of several recent international cybercrimes. These aren’t merely schemes to steal credit card numbers or vandalize websites with annoying graffiti. They’re acts of espionage and sabotage — like using malware in a phishing scheme aimed at White House employees to gather military intelligence and pilfer sensitive government documents.


It’s not just the federal health care system’s problem. Former Obamacare website contractor CGI still holds dozens of contracts with other federal agencies and state governments worth billions of dollars — and wide access to health and financial data. In my state of Colorado, for example, CGI has a $ 78 million contract to “modernize, host and manage” the state’s financial system. Have they checked to see whether Belarus hackers are standing by?


For their part, Obamacare officials are making their usual “don’t worry about it, the problem’s under control” noises. But we already know the problem is far out of control. Last month, GOP oversight hearings exposed persistent failures by Obamacare overseers to fix security lapses.


Former most-wanted cybercriminal Kevin Mitnick concluded in a letter to Capitol Hill: “It’s shameful the team that built the Healthcare.gov site implemented minimal, if any, security best practices to mitigate the significant risk of a system compromise.” If the latest warnings from our intel agencies are any indication, it appears that Obamacare Keystone Kops didn’t just leave out security protections, but also may have allowed foreign programmers to write in cyber-traps.


David Kennedy, head of computer security consulting firm TrustedSec LLC and a former cybersecurity official with the National Security Agency and the U.S. Marine Corps, warned that “Healthcare.gov is not secure today” and said nothing had changed since he gave Congress that assessment three months before. Among the vulnerabilities that the Obama administration still hasn’t fixed:


–TrustedSec “identified the ability to enumerate user information (first, last, email, user id, profile, etc.) through one of the sub-sites that directly integrates into the healthcare.gov website.”


–”Tens of thousands of user-based data appears to be vulnerable on the specified website and has not been addressed. There are a number of other exposures that have been reported privately that continue to expose users of the healthcare.gov website.”


–Another exposure identified is “the ability to perform an open redirect.” In fact, “there are multiple open redirects still vulnerable on the healthcare.gov website and supporting sub-sites.” What this means is that “an attacker can send a targeted email to an individual that has signed up for healthcare.gov or is looking to and have it appear valid and legitimate and originate from the healthcare.gov website.” These can open avenues so that victims click on links “redirecting to a malicious website that hacks the computer and takes complete control over it.”


Out: “Got Covered?” In: “Got Hacked?” 




RealClearPolitics – Articles



The Obamacare Security Nightmare: It Gets Worse

Saturday, January 18, 2014

Man’s pickup burns half-hour after he gets GM recall notice

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Man’s pickup burns half-hour after he gets GM recall notice