Showing posts with label Prompts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prompts. Show all posts

Friday, March 21, 2014

Whistleblower Prompts CSEC Investigation: Uncovers Misuse of Public Assets, Serious Ethics Breaches

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Whistleblower Prompts CSEC Investigation: Uncovers Misuse of Public Assets, Serious Ethics Breaches

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

VIDEO: ‘Obama Assassination’ Cartoon Prompts Secret Service Visit



posted on Feb, 24 2014 @ 08:20 PM




schuyler


alienreality
The pattern I see in these “threats to the president” are that our president is so corrupt, dishonest, and so pathetically morally and ethically bankrupt, that so many people are making these types of statements through various methods.. Says a lot about the current political state when so many people are doing these things.


Must be embarrassing to the president to be schooled so often that his actions are despised so much. And yet he continues on with the destruction of America.



The problem with this statement is that it reflects myopia and a lack of historical perspective. The same exact thing has been said in the past about nearly every president. In the campaign between John Adams (#2) and Thomas Jefferson (#3), for example, the rhetoric used would make present-day hyperbolic political campaigns seem tame and polite in comparison. You talk about the “destruction of America,” well, Lincoln actually succeeded, according to half the country at the time, and he was killed for it–after several unsuccessful attempts.


So threats are nothing new and it has nothing to do with the current incumbent. This is about the Presidency, not the President, but even so, he ought to be free of risk from crazed maniacs filled with hatred or who think killing someone famous will get them a date with Jody Foster. And, believe me, I am no fan of Obama or his policies. He’s a complete disaster, pure and simple, but I hope he and his successors live to a ripe old age.



My points were that people wouldn’t even be doing these things if the president wasn’t such a threat to everyone else. Just like Pol Pot was a threat to everyone else.
Our president shares a ton of similarities to the ousted Cambodian leader. Except he might not achieve as high a body count as Pol Pot, but time will tell.


I predict he will even get to live a life after his term expires, and live in luxury and free from any worry of accountability, just like the ousted Cambodian leader is doing right now.


Only a president can make himself “free from threat” by being an ethical and moral leader, and I think we all know that Obama isn’t going to ever be that..
So in my opinion, these things are happening because of his own actions. Are people nutz for threatening him still? Of course, but I am just pointing out the cause of it all. I am not saying I agree with it happening though..
I am just making these statements as an interested observer.


Add: And these threats have everything to do with the current incumbent, or are these people just targeting him randomly?
Again, I say I don’t agree with it, I am only seeing it happening..


edit on 24-2-2014 by alienreality because: add





AboveTopSecret.com New Topics In US Political Madness



VIDEO: ‘Obama Assassination’ Cartoon Prompts Secret Service Visit

Friday, February 7, 2014

Rise of Eurosceptics in Netherlands Prompts Serious Discussion of "Nexit"

Eurozone exit talk first started with “Grexit” (Greece exit). It progressed to “Spexit” (Spain exit), and now talk centers on “Nexit” (Netherlands exit).


Before anyone else claims the names, let me propose “Frexit” and “Fexit” (France exit) as well as “Sexit” a sexy sounding alternative for Spain Exit.


So far the “exit” scorecard remains on zero, but eventual exits are likely. No one can be assured of the timing or catalyst, but eurosceptcism is on the rise in a huge way.


Nexit?


In the Netherlands, opposition leader Geert Wilders outlines case for a Dutch ‘Nexit’ from the EU.

Geert Wilders, leader of the far-right Freedom Party (PVV) that is leading in Dutch polls for May’s European parliament elections, presented a study on Thursday that claims the Netherlands would be better off if it left the EU and he urged voters to support his call for “Nexit”.

The study, by the consultancy Capital Economics, claims the Dutch economy would quickly emerge from its sluggishness to brisk growth, generating billions of euros – or new Dutch guilders – in fresh revenues for debt-laden households.


Mr Wilders is one of a handful of populist leaders in the EU – including Marine Le Pen in France; Nigel Farage in Britain and Alexis Tsipras in Greece – whose sharp anti-Brussels rhetoric has helped push them into either first or second place in public opinion polls ahead of May’s Europe-wide vote.


The Netherlands is one of the founding members of the EU, and has long been seen as a core supporter of a more integrated Europe. Yet public opinion polls reveal growing support across the country for a renegotiation of powers with Brussels over a number of policy areas, including access to domestic welfare for other EU citizens.


Mark Rutte, Dutch prime minister, in June presented a list of 54 competencies that should remain with national governments rather than be given to the EU, a plan many in Brussels have viewed as the Liberal premier’s attempt to fend off the challenge from Mr Wilders.


“Nexit means that we no longer have to pay billions to Brussels and weak southern European countries,” added Mr Wilders. “We can save billions by liberating ourselves from EU regulations. We can end the mass immigration and stop paying welfare checks to, for instance, Romanians and Bulgarians.”


Mark Pragnell, one of the authors of Capital Economics’ report, said the Netherlands would be significantly richer if it left the EU and the single currency, despite a short period of volatility.


Capital Economics, a London-based economic research firm, has become a leading voice for eurozone break-up, last year winning a £250,000 prize from a British think-tank for its proposal on how to end the single currency.


What’s the Point?


Financial Times columnist Gideon Rachman asks What’s the point of calling for a Nexit?

Wilders is after the protest vote, and he will get it – just like Marine Le Pen’s National Front and the UK Independence Party of Nigel Farage. All three movements have an excellent chance of topping the polls or at least upsetting the political apple cart in their respective countries.

Here lies the significance of Wilders’s call for “Nexit” – or Dutch exit from the EU. As an economic argument, it does not stand up at all: the Netherlands is so deeply integrated into the eurozone and the EU single market that Nexit makes no more sense than “Brexit” for the UK or “Grexit” for Greece.


Bias, Irony, and One Size Fits All Silliness


One can stop reading right there understanding full well the extreme bias in what Rachman wrote. Given that Rachman is a columnist and not a news reporter, bias is to be expected.


But please note the extreme irony in his statement: Nexit makes no more sense than “Brexit” for the UK.


The fact of the matter is that “Brexit” happens to make perfect sense of the UK.


There is not going to be a two-speed EU with some countries in the Eurozone and others not. One is going to be either in or out. Sitting on the fence forever won’t happen. Neither French president Francois Hollande nor the UK liberals will allow that.


The moment the UK fully commits to the eurozone, all kinds of financial stupidities are bound to happen, including financial transaction taxes that are bound to cripple London. Moreover, the UK would be subject to the “one size fits Germany” interest rate policy of the EU.


A valid (albeit clearly out of context) interpretation of Rachman’s statement is as follows:”Nexit makes sense, because Brexit makes perfect sense“.


Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com


Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis



Rise of Eurosceptics in Netherlands Prompts Serious Discussion of "Nexit"

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Microsoft Xbox One prompts outrage after YouTube stealth-marketing stunt

Microsoft Xbox One prompts outrage after YouTube stealth-marketing stunt
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Undisclosed money paid to YouTubers featuring Xbox One in gaming videos prompts backlash. By Samuel Gibbs












Technology news, comment and analysis | theguardian.com


Read more about Microsoft Xbox One prompts outrage after YouTube stealth-marketing stunt and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Microsoft Xbox One prompts outrage after YouTube stealth-marketing stunt

Microsoft Xbox One prompts outrage after YouTube stealth-marketing stunt
http://feeds.theguardian.com/c/34708/f/663871/s/362cc4f7/sc/21/mf.gif

Undisclosed money paid to YouTubers featuring Xbox One in gaming videos prompts backlash. By Samuel Gibbs












Technology news, comment and analysis | theguardian.com


Read more about Microsoft Xbox One prompts outrage after YouTube stealth-marketing stunt and other interesting subjects concerning Internet Spying and Secrecy at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Microsoft Xbox One prompts outrage after YouTube stealth-marketing stunt

Microsoft Xbox One prompts outrage after YouTube stealth-marketing stunt
http://feeds.theguardian.com/c/34708/f/663871/s/362cc4f7/sc/21/mf.gif

Undisclosed money paid to YouTubers featuring Xbox One in gaming videos prompts backlash. By Samuel Gibbs












Technology news, comment and analysis | theguardian.com


Read more about Microsoft Xbox One prompts outrage after YouTube stealth-marketing stunt and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Duggan shooting prompts camera move






























Mark Duggan’s aunt Carole, speaking outside court: “He was executed”



Firearms officers are to wear video cameras in an attempt to be “more open” following the death of Mark Duggan, the Met Police Commissioner has said.


Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe admitted the force must “do more to build trust” after a jury found the 29-year-old was lawfully killed.


Mr Duggan was shot dead by police in August 2011 in Tottenham, north London.


Sir Bernard will meet community leaders in Haringey to discuss how “confidence” in the Met can be improved.


The family of Mr Duggan reacted with anger after the jury concluded by a majority of eight to two that he was lawfully killed by officers.



‘Lost a friend’

Following the conclusion of the inquest at the Royal Courts of Justice on Wednesday, his aunt Carole Duggan said he had been “executed”.


Sir Bernard said: “I want to express my sympathy to Mark Duggan’s family. They’ve lost a son and brother and their friends have lost a friend.









Sir Bernard Hogan Howe: “We need to do more to build trust”



“That’s a terrible event for everybody and they’ve had to wait a long time for this verdict.


“I hope that everybody’s able to accept the verdict of the jury. It’s a jury of ordinary Londoners who have come to a verdict which we all have to accept.


“I do acknowledge that we need to do more to build trust with the people of London, and there are things that we need to learn from this event.


“First of all, I want our officers to be able to be more open when it comes to the investigations that follow these events.


“In pursuance of that we’re going to ask them to wear video cameras, so that we can record this type of incident, and I’m going to meet many people from across London, leaders from the Haringey community, to see what we need to do to work together to improve the confidence in the Met for those members of society who may feel that this has damaged their confidence in any way.”



‘Vigorous review’

The jury of seven women and three men was asked to answer five questions over Mr Duggan’s death.


The panel concluded he did not have a gun when he was shot by officers who surrounded a minicab he was travelling in.


But the jury said it was more likely than not that Mr Duggan had thrown a gun from the vehicle just before he was killed. The weapon was found about 20ft (6m) away from the scene.


The Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) is currently conducting an investigation into his death.


The Duggan’s family lawyer Marcia Willis Stewart said after the inquest: “We can’t believe this was the outcome. He had no gun in his hand, yet he was shot, he was murdered.


“To us, that is unlawful killing.”


She added the family would seek a meeting with the IPCC, their MP David Lammy, and MP Keith Vaz, in order to ensure the IPCC carries out “a vigorous review”.


Deborah Coles, from the charity Inquest, said Mr Duggan’s family were considering whether to apply for the decision to be judicially reviewed.


After Mr Duggan was shot, rioting spread across London and other parts of England in what became some of the worst disturbances in decades.



What’s your reaction to the inquest jury’s conclusion? Do you live in Tottenham? Send us your comments using the form below.





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Duggan shooting prompts camera move

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Midwest heat wave prompts early school dismissals







Five year-old Grace Kennedy cools off from the heat in a water fountain in Stinson Park in Omaha, Neb., Monday, Aug. 26, 2013. An unusual, late-summer heat wave enveloped much of the Midwest on Monday, putting schools and sports events on hold. Some schools in Iowa, Nebraska, Wisconsin, the Dakotas and Illinois let out early as temperatures crept toward the mid-90s, and beyond in some places. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik)





Five year-old Grace Kennedy cools off from the heat in a water fountain in Stinson Park in Omaha, Neb., Monday, Aug. 26, 2013. An unusual, late-summer heat wave enveloped much of the Midwest on Monday, putting schools and sports events on hold. Some schools in Iowa, Nebraska, Wisconsin, the Dakotas and Illinois let out early as temperatures crept toward the mid-90s, and beyond in some places. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik)





Art Buckneberg waters his tomatoes and zinnias under the hot afternoon sun at his home in Sioux Falls, S.D., Monday, Aug. 26, 2013. Heat indices are expected to reach between 95 to 105 through Tuesday, according to the National Weather Service. (AP Photo/Argus Leader, Joe Ahlquist) NO SALES





Reece Riebel, 13, of Lewiston, Minn., swings on a rope swing over Airport Lake while swimming Monday, Aug. 26, 2013, in Winona, Minn. Temperatures on Monday are forecast to approach a record 98 in the Twin Cities, but the humidity will make it feel like 100 to 110 across much of southern Minnesota. An excessive heat warning remains in effect for the region through Tuesday. (AP Photo/Winona Daily News, Andrew Link)





Hunter Bailey, top, and Cassidy Cyert hang on a rope swing over Airport Lake while swimming Monday, Aug. 26, 2013, in Winona, Minn. Temperatures on Monday are forecast to approach a record 98 in the Twin Cities, but the humidity will make it feel like 100 to 110 across much of southern Minnesota. An excessive heat warning remains in effect for the region through Tuesday. (AP Photo/Winona Daily News, Andrew Link)













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LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — An unusual, late-summer heat wave has enveloped much of the Midwest, putting schools and sports events on hold.


Schools in Iowa, Nebraska, Wisconsin, the Dakotas and Illinois let out early on Monday as temperatures crept toward the mid-90s — beyond in some places. After-school sports practices and evening games were canceled in St. Paul, Minn., and misting stations were keeping people cool at the Minnesota State Fair, where about 90 fairgoers had been treated for heat-related illnesses over the weekend.


The heat wave is supposed to last through much of the week, the National Weather Service said. Heat of this magnitude is unusual for this time of year, but not unprecedented. In Des Moines, Iowa, for instance, temperatures on Aug. 26 have reached at least 100 degrees at least six times since 1881.


School districts took precautions, not wanting to put students and teachers in sweaty — and possibly dangerous — situations.


In central Iowa, Marshalltown Community School District administrators canceled afternoon preschool classes on Monday and Tuesday and were planning to release other students two hours early. Parts of all 10 of district buildings have air conditioning, but some rooms aren’t connected.


“The buildings can heat up pretty fast, especially when you have kids in there,” district spokesman Jason Staker said. “It’s not a good environment for students or teachers.”


Five elementary schools in Fargo, North Dakota, canceled classes through Wednesday because the buildings weren’t fully air-conditioned. Temperatures inside them on Sunday ranged from 85 degrees to 90 degrees, Fargo Schools Superintendent Jeff Schatz said.


In South Dakota, the Sioux Falls School District continued with classes as scheduled, but spokeswoman DeeAnn Konrad said teachers kept window blinds closed and turned off lights in classrooms. The district was also prepared to move students into cooler rooms at nearby churches and a Christian school, she said.


School administrators in the western Nebraska town of Alliance decided to send students home early after local forecasters predicted temperatures in excess of 90 degrees. Some classes in the 1,600-student district are held on the third floor, and temperatures rise when students fill the room.


“It can get uncomfortable even when the temperatures are in the upper 80s,” superintendent Troy Unzicker said.


Minneapolis students had to go to school all day, but administrators canceled after-school activities and distributed 750 cases of water to schools. Officials also sent industrial fans to the 18 buildings that lack air conditioning, district spokeswoman Rachel Hicks said. Parents were advised to dress their kids in light clothing, while staffers watched for any symptoms of heat-related illnesses.


In Des Moines, organizers of a downtown farmers market set for Wednesday postponed the event out concern over the extreme heat


The Iowa Department of Public Health issued a statewide advisory for vulnerable populations, including young children and the elderly. In some cases, the heat can become so extreme that sweating isn’t enough for people to lower their body temperatures, Dr. Patricia Quinlisk said.


“Especially when the humidity is high, sweat will not evaporate as quickly, preventing the body from releasing heat quickly,” she said.


__


Associated Press writer Steve Karnowski in Minneapolis contributed to this report.


Associated Press




U.S. Headlines



Midwest heat wave prompts early school dismissals

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Sunday, August 11, 2013

A Down syndrome "cure" prompts soul-searching


Down syndrome



1 hour ago


Jawanda Mast helps her daughter Rachel, 14, write thank you notes at their home in Olathe, KS, on Aug. 6, 2013. Rachel has Downs Syndrome.

Chuck Frank / Getty Images for NBC News


Jawanda Mast helps her daughter Rachel, 14, write thank you notes at their home in Olathe, Kansas. Rachel has Down syndrome.



In the 14 years since her daughter, Rachel, was born with Down syndrome, Jawanda Mast has always been clear that she’d change the condition if she could.


“I couldn’t love her more, but I would give almost anything to take away that extra chromosome,” the Olathe, Kansas, mom wrote on her blog. “While I may know she’s perfect, the world doesn’t.”


But when Massachusetts scientists announced recently that they’ve found a way to silence the chromosome that causes trisomy 21, also known as Down syndrome, it rocked Mast – and the rest of the disability community.


“It’s so hard to imagine you could actually do that,” Mast told NBC News. “Yes, I would take away the challenges, I would take away the health risks. But now I also stop and say, ‘Oh my goodness, how would that impact the rest of her?’”


Hailed as a “cure in a Petri dish,” the research by scientists at the University of Massachusetts Medical School is the first to find that it may be possible to switch off the genetic material responsible for the condition that causes cognitive delays, heart defects, higher cancer risk and shortened lifespans.


The development is expected to help create new treatments for problems caused by Down syndrome — but it also raises the prospect of eliminating the condition entirely. 


Since it became public last month, the breakthrough has sparked a firestorm of reaction among parents, advocates, ethicists and people with the condition, said Dr. Brian Skotko, a medical geneticist and co-director of the Down Syndrome Program at Massachusetts General Hospital.


“This research really launches a million questions,” Skotko said.


At left, Rachel Mast, 14, in training with other students at her middle school to become student ambassadors to incoming sixth graders on Aug. 6, 2013...

Chuck Frank / Getty Images for NBC News


At left, Rachel Mast, 14, is training with other students at her middle school to become student ambassadors to incoming sixth-graders.



On one hand, almost everyone agrees there’s a need for treatments to help the 250,000 people in the U.S. living with Down syndrome, including the nearly 7,000 babies born with it each year.


On the other hand, it’s unclear what costs there may be to shutting down the mechanism that creates people who offer lessons in patience, kindness — and what it means to be human.


“If Down syndrome were completely cured, the world would lose something from the absence of that culture,” said Skotko, who has a sister with the condition. “There is something positive that people with Down syndrome contribute to the world.”


Brian Long of Boulder, Colo., is the father a 19-year-old son with Down syndrome. He welcomes the research, which could lead to treatments to boost Connor’s intellectual abilities and speaking skills and prevent disease. But he also wonders how tinkering with chromosomes could alter the essence of his son.


“So much of Down syndrome does impact the personality and character of the person,” said Long, 54. “In Connor’s example, we’ve known him for 19 years. We don’t want a wholesale change.”


Advocates like Julie Cevallos, vice president of marketing for the National Down Syndrome Society, emphasize that the research is still early.


“When you go as far as a ‘cure,’ that’s when folks step back and go: ‘We’re not looking for a cure. We’re looking to help and support people with Down syndrome live healthy and productive lives,’” said Cevallos, mother of a 5-year-old with the condition.


David Egan, a 35-year-old Vienna, Va., man with Down syndrome, said he applauds the progress in part because it might help with some of the social stigma that comes with the disorder. He has friends who’ve been made fun of because of their disability, who have a hard time coping with the condition. 


“I’m not saying to shut it down completely,” said Egan, who has worked for 17 years in the distribution department at Booz Allen Hamilton, the technology consulting firm. “I would say just to understand more about it.” 


But ethicists fear that genetic manipulation could spell the end of the disorder – and of people who have it.


“We now see very few persons with the symptoms of polio or the scars of smallpox,” said Art Caplan, head of medical ethics at New York University Langone Medical Center. “The same fate, despite the protests of some, awaits Down syndrome and other genetic diseases if engineering genes creates cures.”


That strong reaction surprised Jeanne Lawrence, the professor of cell and developmental biology who led the research. People may misunderstand the scope and promise of her work, she said.


It likely wouldn’t be possible to “cure” Down syndrome, because the condition occurs at conception, she said. 


“Even looking forward really far, I don’t see how we could fundamentally change a person who has trisomy 21 to silence all the chromosomes in their body,” said Lawrence.


Instead, it might be possible to target specific conditions: Perhaps there will be a way to treat congenital heart disease early in children with Down syndrome or to stave off Alzheimer’s disease in adults, she added.


No question, the research is an advance in the understanding of Down syndrome, which occurs when people are born with three copies of chromosome 21, instead of the normal two copies.


(Humans are typically born with 23 pairs of chromosomes, including one pair of sex chromosomes, for a total of 46 in each cell. People with Down syndrome have 47 chromosomes in each cell.)


The researchers discovered that a gene called XIST — which normally turns off one of the two copies of the X chromosome in female mammals, including humans — could be inserted into the extra copy of chromosome 21 in lab cultures.


Using skin cells from a person with Down syndrome, they created pluripotent stem cells, which can form a range of different body cell types. When they inserted the XIST gene, they found that it effectively silenced the extra chromosome.


When they compared brain cells with and without the XIST gene, they found that those in which the extra chromosome had been suppressed grew more quickly and were better able to form progenitors of other brain cells, Lawrence said.


“That’s kind of useful right away,” she told NBC News. “There hasn’t been a good way to understand what’s wrong with these cells.”


But her work was never targeted to eliminate the condition, Lawrence added. 


“I guess that we always thought that we were developing therapies to help children with Down syndrome. We never thought for a moment we would aid in the eradication of it,” Lawrence said.


Rachel Mast, 14, plays with her dog, Dora at home in Olathe, KS, Aug. 6, 2013. Rachel has Downs Syndrome.

Chuck Frank / Getty Images for NBC News


Rachel plays with her dog, Dora, at home. The lively middle-schooler has dreams of teaching kindergarten and living in a pink house, her mother says.



That’s a relief to geneticists like Skotko. He worries about the demographics of the disorder, which has been altered from an estimate of 400,000 people with Down syndrome in the U.S. to 250,000, according to new research by Dr. Edward R.B. McCabe, chief medical officer at the March of Dimes. 


The number of babies born with Down syndrome has been rising in the past decade, McCabe found. But research suggests that about 74 percent of women who receive a prenatal diagnosis of Down syndrome end their pregnancies. And — in a country where women are delaying childbirth — there are not nearly as many Down syndrome births as there could have been.


“What if fewer babies with Down syndrome are being born and Down syndrome starts to inch closer to being a rare condition?” said Skotko.


The promise of new drug therapies and treatments may help, he says, giving hope to families expecting Down syndrome babies and to those with older children – and adults.


Still, Jawanda Mast says she’s certain the questions raised by the new research will be debated for years in public meetings and in private conversations.


“It’s an interesting thing because Rachel’s whole life, there’s been this discussion: ‘If you could take it away, would you?’” she said. “I think, ethically, we’re just taking the cap off the bottle.”


JoNel Aleccia is a senior health reporter with NBC News. Reach her on Twitter at @JoNel_Aleccia or send her an email. 






A Down syndrome "cure" prompts soul-searching