Showing posts with label Joins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joins. Show all posts

Friday, March 14, 2014

3 Year Old Girl Joins MENSA

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3 Year Old Girl Joins MENSA

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Terri Schiavo"s Family Joins Fight for Teen on Life Support

A foundation started on behalf of Terri Schiavo, whose case sparked a national right-to-die debate, says it’s been secretly helping the family of of a 13-year-old brain dead California girl fight to keep her on life support.

The Terri Schiavo Life & Hope Network said in a statement it’s been involved in the case of Jahi McMath in “relative silence,” as her family searched for a long-term care facility to care for her.


McMath’s family says it found a facility in New York; doctors at Children’s Hospital Oakland assert there’s no hope for her recovery. She was declared brain dead after complications from a routine tonsillectomy Dec. 12.


“Together with our team of experts, Terri’s Network believes Jahi’s case is representative of a very deep problem within the U.S. healthcare system — particularly those issues surrounding the deaths of patients within the confines of hospital corporations, which have a vested financial interest in discontinuing life,” the foundation said.


Schiavo’s case sparked a national debate in the ’90s as doctors, lawyers and family members battled over whether to remove Schiavo’s feeding tube. She died in 2005, nearly two weeks after doctors removed the device.


In the foundation statement about McMath, Bobby Schindler, Terri Schiavo’s brother and executive director of the organization, noted: “Families and individuals must make themselves aware of what so-called ‘brain death’ is and what it is not. Every person needs to understand that medical accidents happen every day. Families and individuals must be more aware of the issue of accountability and patient rights.”


On Tuesday, a judge extended Jahi’s life support an hour before a federal court order keeping the hospital from unhooking her was set to expire. The deadline was extended to Jan. 7.


McMath family lawyer Christopher Dolan said Wednesday he’s fighting for a tracheostomy for Jahi.


“However, many surgeons and hospital administrators are on holiday making our goal difficult to reach,” he said in a statement posted on the foundations website.


“If Children’s Hospital Oakland would perform the procedure we could quickly move Jahi to a facility that provides innovative world-class treatments, of the type being given to Prime Minister Sharon in Israel.”


Dolan pleaded for a specialist to step forward “and give this mother the choice and this child a chance.”


Children’s Hospital Oakland declared last week it “does not believe that performing surgical procedures on the body of a deceased person is an appropriate medical practice,” ABC News reported.


Omari Sealey, Jahi’s uncle, said Wednesday the family still hopes to move her to another facility, CNN reported.


Related Story:



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Terri Schiavo"s Family Joins Fight for Teen on Life Support

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Lee Camp Joins Jimmy Dore for TYT Comedy

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Lee Camp Joins Jimmy Dore for TYT Comedy

Friday, November 22, 2013

Russian FM Lavrov joins Iran nuclear talks








Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, center, arrives for talks on Iran’s nuclear program in Geneva on Friday Nov. 22, 2013. The nuclear talks being held formally group six world powers with Iran. But the seven nations have convened only once since the current round of talks started Wednesday. I Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and top EU diplomat Catherine Ashton have met instead to try to find common language on a first-step deal. The two resumed their talks Friday. (AP Photo/Fabrice Coffrini,Pool)





Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, center, arrives for talks on Iran’s nuclear program in Geneva on Friday Nov. 22, 2013. The nuclear talks being held formally group six world powers with Iran. But the seven nations have convened only once since the current round of talks started Wednesday. I Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and top EU diplomat Catherine Ashton have met instead to try to find common language on a first-step deal. The two resumed their talks Friday. (AP Photo/Fabrice Coffrini,Pool)





EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, center, next to members of her delegation attends talks on Iran’s nuclear program in Geneva on Friday Nov. 22, 2013. The nuclear talks being held formally group six world powers with Iran. But the seven nations have convened only once since the current round of talks started Wednesday. Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and top EU diplomat Catherine Ashton have met instead to try to find common language on a first-step deal. The two resumed their talks Friday. (AP Photo/Fabrice Coffrini,Pool)





Sergei Ryabkov, Deputy Foreign Minister of the Russia, photographed near the Intercontinental Hotel where closed-door talks on Iran’s nuclear program are taking place in Geneva Switzerland, Thursday, Nov. 21, 2013. (AP Photo/Keystone,Martial Trezzini)





A general view shows participants before the start of three days of closed-door nuclear talks in Geneva, Switzerland, Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2013. (AP Photo/Keystone,Salvatore Di Nolfi)





EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs Catherine Ashton, right, and Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, arrive for a photo opportunity prior to the start of three days of closed-door nuclear talks in Geneva, Switzerland, Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2013. (AP Photo/Keystone,Salvatore Di Nolfi)













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GENEVA (AP) — Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov threw his weight behind nuclear talks with Iran, flying to Geneva Friday to join senior negotiators struggling to seal a deal that would see Tehran start to roll back its atomic activities in exchange for sanctions relief.


Lavrov arrived in Geneva as diplomats were struggling to find language acceptable to Iran and its six negotiating partners.


Iran’s claim to a right to produce nuclear fuel apparently is a key sticking point. Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and Catherine Ashton, the European Union’s top diplomat, have met repeatedly since Wednesday trying to resolve that and other differences.


Lavrov said on Wednesday that he could meet with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry this week, but didn’t say where. That increased speculation that Kerry could join him in Geneva, along with the foreign ministers of the four other countries negotiating with Iran.


The last round of talks between Iran and the six world powers ended Nov. 10 with no deal even after Kerry, Lavrov, the foreign ministers of Britain, France and Germany and a Chinese deputy foreign minister flew in and attempted to bridge differences.


Ashton is convening the negotiations, and protocol dictates that foreign ministers come only at her invitation.


Ashton’s spokesman Michael Mann said she did not issue any invitations this time. That suggested that a deal was not yet in the cards and that Lavrov was in Geneva at his own initiative.


Zarif and Ashton met briefly Friday for talks that Iran’s official IRNA news agency described as “complicated and tough.” It quoted Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi in Geneva as saying that Iran’s right to uranium enrichment must be part of any deal.


Iran says it is enriching only for reactor fuel, medical uses and research. But the technology can also produce nuclear warhead material.


Zarif last weekend indicated that Iran is ready to sign a deal that does not expressly state Iran’s right to enrich, raising hopes that a deal could be sealed at the current Geneva round.


On Wednesday, however, Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said his country would never compromise on “red lines.” Since then Tehran has reverted to its original line — that the six powers must recognize this activity as Iran’s right under the nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty despite strong opposition by Israel and within the U.S. Congress.


A senior Iranian negotiator said that the Iranian claim did not need to be explicitly recognized in any initial deal, despite Khamenei’s comment. He did suggest, however, that language on that point remained contentious, along with other differences. He demanded anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the diplomatic maneuvering.


Sanctions relief was also an issue.


The United States and its allies have signaled they are ready to ease some sanctions in return for a first-step deal that starts to put limits on Iran’s nuclear program. But they insist that the most severe penalties — on Tehran’s oil exports and banking sector — will remain until the two sides reach a comprehensive agreement to minimize Iran’s nuclear arms-making capacity.


Iran says it does not want such weapons and has indicated it’s ready to start rolling back its program but wants greater and faster sanctions relief than that being offered.


Several U.S. senators — both Democrat and Republican — have voiced displeasure with the parameters of the potential agreement, arguing that the U.S. and its partners are offering too much for something short of a full freeze on uranium enrichment.


Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said Thursday that he would support legislation to expand sanctions against Iran, though he said he also backs the negotiating effort. Reid said the threat of more sanctions was essential to get an acceptable deal.


Sen. Bob Corker, the Republicans’ top member on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, on Thursday proposed a bill outlining a final agreement, including an end to all Iranian enrichment activity, and seeking to restrict President Barack Obama’s capacity to ease sanctions.


___


Associated Press writer George Jahn contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Russian FM Lavrov joins Iran nuclear talks

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

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Wednesday, September 25, 2013

New Guard joins effort: Paul, Rubio, Lee...


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Sunday, September 8, 2013

Pryor joins Dem "no" vote on Syria

Mark Pryor is pictured. | AP Photo

Pryor joins a wide ideological spectrum of Democrats opposing the resolution. | AP Photo





Mark Pryor will not support President Barack Obama’s request for Congress to bless military action in Syria, contrasting the vulnerable Arkansas Democrat with his 2014 GOP Senate challenger Rep. Tom Cotton.


Pryor said Saturday that after lobbying from the administration and hearing input from his constituents he concluded that the White House has not made an effective case for the U.S. to intervene in the Syrian civil war.







“The Administration must prove a compelling national security interest, clearly define a mission that has a definitive end-state, and then build a true coalition of allies that would actively participate in any action we take,” Pryor said. “I do not believe these criteria have been met, and I cannot support military action against Syria at this time.”


The two-term senator is facing perhaps the toughest upper-chamber reelection campaign in his battle against the hawkish Cotton, a freshman who supports a military reaction to the alleged use of chemical weapons by Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad’s regime.


(PHOTOS: Syria: Where politicians stand)


Cotton is among the few House Republicans to publicly back Obama’s proposed action in Syria, citing the need to uphold an “international taboo” on chemical weapon use, reassure allies in the Middle East such as Israel and Jordan and uphold U.S. credibility overseas.


“Put simply, our core national-security interests are at stake,” Cotton said this week. “I share concerns that the president won’t execute a strategically sound military campaign. Nevertheless, I believe that U.S. inaction would still be a worse outcome for our national-security interests.”


Pryor joins a wide ideological spectrum of Democrats opposing the resolution that includes Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Chris Murphy of Connecticut, Brian Schatz of Hawaii and Tom Udall of New Mexico. The Senate is expected to begin voting on the limited military strike on Wednesday.


John Bresnahan contributed to this report.




POLITICO – Congress



Pryor joins Dem "no" vote on Syria

Pryor joins Dem "no" vote on Syria

Mark Pryor is pictured. | AP Photo

Pryor joins a wide ideological spectrum of Democrats opposing the resolution. | AP Photo





Mark Pryor will not support President Barack Obama’s request for Congress to bless military action in Syria, contrasting the vulnerable Arkansas Democrat with his 2014 GOP Senate challenger Rep. Tom Cotton.


Pryor said Saturday that after lobbying from the administration and hearing input from his constituents he concluded that the White House has not made an effective case for the U.S. to intervene in the Syrian civil war.







“The Administration must prove a compelling national security interest, clearly define a mission that has a definitive end-state, and then build a true coalition of allies that would actively participate in any action we take,” Pryor said. “I do not believe these criteria have been met, and I cannot support military action against Syria at this time.”


The two-term senator is facing perhaps the toughest upper-chamber reelection campaign in his battle against the hawkish Cotton, a freshman who supports a military reaction to the alleged use of chemical weapons by Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad’s regime.


(PHOTOS: Syria: Where politicians stand)


Cotton is among the few House Republicans to publicly back Obama’s proposed action in Syria, citing the need to uphold an “international taboo” on chemical weapon use, reassure allies in the Middle East such as Israel and Jordan and uphold U.S. credibility overseas.


“Put simply, our core national-security interests are at stake,” Cotton said this week. “I share concerns that the president won’t execute a strategically sound military campaign. Nevertheless, I believe that U.S. inaction would still be a worse outcome for our national-security interests.”


Pryor joins a wide ideological spectrum of Democrats opposing the resolution that includes Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Chris Murphy of Connecticut, Brian Schatz of Hawaii and Tom Udall of New Mexico. The Senate is expected to begin voting on the limited military strike on Wednesday.


John Bresnahan contributed to this report.




POLITICO – Congress



Pryor joins Dem "no" vote on Syria

Pryor joins Dem "no" vote on Syria

Mark Pryor is pictured. | AP Photo

Pryor joins a wide ideological spectrum of Democrats opposing the resolution. | AP Photo





Mark Pryor will not support President Barack Obama’s request for Congress to bless military action in Syria, contrasting the vulnerable Arkansas Democrat with his 2014 GOP Senate challenger Rep. Tom Cotton.


Pryor said Saturday that after lobbying from the administration and hearing input from his constituents he concluded that the White House has not made an effective case for the U.S. to intervene in the Syrian civil war.







“The Administration must prove a compelling national security interest, clearly define a mission that has a definitive end-state, and then build a true coalition of allies that would actively participate in any action we take,” Pryor said. “I do not believe these criteria have been met, and I cannot support military action against Syria at this time.”


The two-term senator is facing perhaps the toughest upper-chamber reelection campaign in his battle against the hawkish Cotton, a freshman who supports a military reaction to the alleged use of chemical weapons by Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad’s regime.


(PHOTOS: Syria: Where politicians stand)


Cotton is among the few House Republicans to publicly back Obama’s proposed action in Syria, citing the need to uphold an “international taboo” on chemical weapon use, reassure allies in the Middle East such as Israel and Jordan and uphold U.S. credibility overseas.


“Put simply, our core national-security interests are at stake,” Cotton said this week. “I share concerns that the president won’t execute a strategically sound military campaign. Nevertheless, I believe that U.S. inaction would still be a worse outcome for our national-security interests.”


Pryor joins a wide ideological spectrum of Democrats opposing the resolution that includes Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Chris Murphy of Connecticut, Brian Schatz of Hawaii and Tom Udall of New Mexico. The Senate is expected to begin voting on the limited military strike on Wednesday.


John Bresnahan contributed to this report.




POLITICO – Congress



Pryor joins Dem "no" vote on Syria

Friday, July 19, 2013

Sgt. Biggs Joins Infowars to Investigate Hastings Cover-Up



Alex welcomes Staff Sergeant Joe Biggs to the broadcast. Biggs makes new revelations regarding the death of his late friend and former Rolling Stone contribu…
Video Rating: 4 / 5



Sgt. Biggs Joins Infowars to Investigate Hastings Cover-Up

Sunday, June 30, 2013

Capping recovery from war, Croatia joins a troubled EU

ZAGREB (Reuters) – Two decades since fighting itself free of Yugoslavia, Croatia becomes the 28th member of the European Union at midnight on Sunday against a backdrop of economic woes in the Adriatic republic and the bloc it is joining.



Reuters: Top News



Capping recovery from war, Croatia joins a troubled EU

Capping recovery from war, Croatia joins a troubled EU


Croatia

Croatia’s Prime Minister Zoran Milanovic arrives at a European Union leaders summit in Brussels June 27, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Yves Herman






ZAGREB | Sun Jun 30, 2013 6:16am EDT



ZAGREB (Reuters) – Croatia becomes the 28th member of the European Union at midnight on Sunday, a milestone capping the Adriatic republic’s recovery from war but tinged with anxiety over its economy and the state of the bloc it joins.


EU flags fluttered from a stage in Zagreb’s central square ahead of the evening’s festivities, but there have been few signs of the gushing welcome that marked past expansions to ex-communist Eastern Europe.


Croatia joins the bloc just over two decades after declaring independence from federal Yugoslavia, the trigger for four years of war in which some 20,000 people died.


Facing a fifth year of recession and record unemployment of 21 percent, few Croatians are in the mood to party.


The EU is also deeply troubled by its own economic woes, which have created internal divisions and undermined public support for the union.


“Just look what’s happening in Greece and Spain! Is this where we’re headed?” asked pensioner Pavao Brkanovic. “You need illusions to be joyful, but the illusions have long gone,” he said at a Zagreb market.


President Ivo Josipovic told Croatia’s Nova TV on Saturday journalists from EU countries had repeatedly asked him why Zagreb wanted to join the bloc.


“My counter question was: ‘You come from the EU. Is your country preparing to leave the bloc?’ They would invariably reply: ‘Of course not.’ Well, there you go, that’s why we are joining, because we also believe the EU has a future,” he said.


The country of 4.4 million people, blessed with a coastline that attracts 10 million tourists each year, is one of seven that emerged from the ashes of Yugoslavia during a decade of war in the 1990s.


MERKEL NO-SHOW


Slovenia was first to join the EU, in 2004, but Serbia, Bosnia, Macedonia, Montenegro and Kosovo are still years away.


To get to this point, Croatia has gone through seven years of tortuous and often unpopular EU-guided reform.


It has handed over more than a dozen Croatian and Bosnian Croat military and political leaders charged with war crimes to the United Nations tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in The Hague.


It has sold shipyards, steeped in history and tradition but deeply indebted, and launched a high-profile fight against corruption that saw former prime minister Ivo Sanader jailed.


Some EU capitals remain concerned at the level of graft and organized crime. Croatia open-border Schengen zone.


The spirit of the occasion took another knock when German Chancellor Angela Merkel, the bloc’s most powerful leader, pulled out of the accession ceremony, saying she was too busy.


Croatian media linked the move to a row over a former Croatian secret service operative wanted in Germany, though a spokesman for Merkel denied this.


Instead, Merkel urged Croatia to press on with reforms.


“There are many more steps to take, especially in the area of legal security and fighting corruption,” she said in a weekly podcast.


For some Croatians the merits of accession were undeniable, despite the lukewarm mood.


“I know many people in Croatia are very skeptical but I think EU entry is the best thing that could have happened and it’s an injustice we should have waited since 1990,” said Zeljko Kastelan, a businessman whose hotels employ 70 people.


“What we need to do now is work hard to make up for the lost time,” he said.


(Additional reporting by Annika Breidthardt in Berlin; Editing by Matt Robinson and Andrew Heavens)





Reuters: Top News



Capping recovery from war, Croatia joins a troubled EU

Friday, June 7, 2013

AdMob Founder Omar Hamoui Joins Sequoia Capital


AdMob founder Omar Hamoui is joining Sequoia Capital, we’ve learned. Sequoia confirmed that Hamoui is joining the firm as an investment partner and will be starting in a few weeks.


Hamoui’s mobile ad platform AdMob was sold to Google in 2009 for $ 750 million, and Sequoia Capital was one of the first investors in the platform, back when AdMob was a one-man team with Hamoui. After Hamoui left Google, he started the incubator Churn Labs (with which Sequoia partnered, as well) along with AdMob’s first engineer, Mike Rowehl.


Churn Labs spawned a number of startups, including polling company Maybe (acqui-hired by LinkedIn) comic-book reader for the iPad Emanata, and mobile advertising startup Metaresolver (acquired by Millennial Media). He’s also made personal angel investments in Gigwalk, Card.io (acquired by PayPal), and Pocket Gems, among others.


Hamoui explains that he still wanted to be involved with building companies as opposed to taking the traditional VC route after he left Google, which is why he started Churn Labs. But as an angel investor he wasn’t able to really take a meaningful role in the day-to-day work of a startup, and joining a VC firm made sense, especially the firm that originally backed him as a fledgling entrepreneur at AdMob.


“Sequoia is trying to not only build enduring companies, but they really put founder first,” Hamoui tells us. “The firm is in the background but they are part of the grind and put a tremendous amount of work in to help founders build great companies.”


Hamoui recalls when AdMob was considering an offer from Google in 2009, Sequoia and the firm’s lead VC on the deal, Jim Goetz, was the loudest voice against the acquisition. The firm believed that AdMob could be a bigger, even potentially public company. “In retrospect, I think Jim and Sequoia were right to not want to sell,” he adds.


“The last time Omar resided at Sequoia he incubated AdMob. We’re excited to see how he can help founders now that he’ll be sticking around,” said Goetz in a statement.


In terms of what ideas Hamoui is interested in investing in, he says there isn’t a defined focus on what types of companies he’ll be evaluating, but he does still think there is opportunity in mobile ads technology. He’s also bullish on technologies that are changing the real-world economy, and Internet of things, such as companies like Nest, Airbnb and Uber.


Although Hamoui himself has been a serial entrepreneur and angel investor, he maintains that he will still be learning a tremendous amount from Sequoia’s partners. “I want to find and defend things that aren’t huge yet, that people will say will never work, and help bring that to the world,” he says. “Sequoia did this for AdMob, and I want to do this for other entrepreneurs.”




TechCrunch



AdMob Founder Omar Hamoui Joins Sequoia Capital

Thursday, May 30, 2013

Trickle Down Works: UBS Joins Federal Reserve In Hiking Banker Salaries By 9%

A week ago we reported that despite making 50% less money for the Treasury in the first quarter, the hedge fund formerly known as the Federal Reserve was generous enough to hike the salaries of its employees by a (true inflation indexed?) 11.7%. It appears the workers of the Fed’s Markets Group are not the only ones who can barely make ends meet: next up – investment banks, and specifically UBS, which as Bloomberg just reported has hiked the salaries of its bankers by 9%.



And since banks always do compensation decisions in tandem, expect every other bank to hike wages appropriately to avoid “disgruntlement.”


The good news – trickle down works.


The bad news – it is only working for those for whom trickle down has always worked (courtesy of the Cantillon Effect and the fact that Wall Street has owned the nation since the advent of the Fed), and for those who have zero urgent need of that marginal dollar increase.


But maybe, some time during QEternity^infinity, the same trickling will finally spill over into the broader economy and the much desired wage inflation will finally reach Main Street.


We wouldn’t hold our breath.





    


Zero Hedge



Trickle Down Works: UBS Joins Federal Reserve In Hiking Banker Salaries By 9%