Showing posts with label Things. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Things. Show all posts

Saturday, March 29, 2014

Top 10 things Putin said to Obama about Ukraine

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Top 10 things Putin said to Obama about Ukraine

Friday, March 28, 2014

5 Things To Ponder: Words Of Caution

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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5 Things To Ponder: Words Of Caution

Monday, March 17, 2014

GM recalls 1.5 million more vehicles, CEO says "terrible things happened"

DETROIT (Reuters) – General Motors Co announced new recalls of 1.5 million cars on Monday and in a virtually unprecedented public admission by a GM CEO, Mary Barra acknowledged the company fell short in catching faulty ignition switches linked to 12 deaths and last month’s recall of 1.6 million cars.


Reuters: Top News



GM recalls 1.5 million more vehicles, CEO says "terrible things happened"

GM recalls 1.5 million more vehicles, CEO says "terrible things happened"

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GM recalls 1.5 million more vehicles, CEO says "terrible things happened"

Thursday, March 13, 2014

25 things you may have forgotten about the internet

25 things you may have forgotten about the internet
http://feeds.theguardian.com/c/34708/f/663871/s/3825624c/sc/4/mf.gif

Happy belated birthday to the world wide web. To celebrate, here are 25 things you may have forgotten from your first forays online, as suggested by our readers













Technology news, comment and analysis | theguardian.com


Read more about 25 things you may have forgotten about the internet and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Saturday, February 15, 2014

‘Are You the One Harassing My Little Girl?’: That’s What a Father Asked Right Before Things Spun Out of Control



Dominic Conti Westlake HSTHE BLAZE - The family of a high school senior threatened a lawsuit Wednesday after their son — now ex-class president with a 4.4 GPA — was suspended over an altercation with a football player who allegedly sexually harassed the senior’s then-14-year-old sister, reported KCAL-TV in Los Angeles.


Dominic Conti, 17, was suspended from Westlake High School in Ventura County, Calif., for five days, stripped of his elected office, and banned from all extracurricular activities following the incident with the player at a football game last October 11.


“They way they treated me was someone that has brought, like, a firearm to school,” Conti said at Wednesday’s news conference.


The Conti family says it complained to the school administration about the player but nothing was done.


Read more at The Blaze.




Red Alert Politics



‘Are You the One Harassing My Little Girl?’: That’s What a Father Asked Right Before Things Spun Out of Control

Thursday, January 16, 2014

Justin Bieber Egging - 5 Things To Know


Justin Bieber Egging – 5 Things To Know. The police raided his house looking for drugs and the victims are asking for lots of money! ▻ http://bit.ly/ENTVSubs…
Video Rating: 4 / 5



Justin Bieber Egging - 5 Things To Know

Friday, December 27, 2013

10 Things You Didn"t Know About AllTime10s

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10 Things You Didn"t Know About AllTime10s

Thursday, December 26, 2013

10 Crazy Things More Likely Than Winning The Lottery

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10 Crazy Things More Likely Than Winning The Lottery

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

6 Things You Need To Know About The White House Panel’s NSA Recommendations

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6 Things You Need To Know About The White House Panel’s NSA Recommendations

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Quit Calling Things "Guilty Pleasures"

Quit Calling Things "Guilty Pleasures"
http://pixel.quantserve.com/pixel/p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif


(Newser) – If you want to feel guilty, fine. If you want to feel pleasure, more power to you. But if you want to toss around the phrase “guilty pleasure,” then Jennifer Szalai requests that you resist the urge. In a New Yorker essay about how much she hates the term, Szalai traces its popular emergence back to the culture wars of the 1990s and argues that it “exudes a false note, a mix of self-consciousness and self-congratulation.” Would you be telling the world about your “guilty pleasures” if you genuinely felt guilty about them?


The message you’re sending is more like this: “You’re most comfortable in the élite precincts of high art, but you’re not so much of a snob that you can’t be at one with the people,” writes Szalai. “So you confess your remorse whenever you deign to watch Scandal, implying that the rest of your time is spent reading Proust.” Enough already. “Forget the pretense and get over yourself.” Click for the full column.




Lifestyle from Newser




Read more about Quit Calling Things "Guilty Pleasures" and other interesting subjects concerning Living at TheDailyNewsReport.com

‘Tis the season…to attack all things Christian


Christmas is under attack! 


Atheist_billboard_against_ChristmasWe are witnessing God and his word under relentless attack, especially by secular humanists who are demanding the removal of God and his word from virtually every area of public life.  In its place, they insert their own religion of secular humanism, which treats man and his government as supreme in authority above God.  America has seen:


*  Secular universities such as Harvard, Yale, Princeton, etc. which were founded as Christian institutions become humanistic schools.


*  The Bible removed from public schools.


*  Prayer and creation taken out of these same schools.


*  The Pledge of Allegiance and it’s phrase “one nation under God” removed from public schools.


*  Increased attacks on the U.S. motto “In God we trust” including our own president telling foreign nations that our motto is “E Pluribus Unum” and intentionally leaving out “Under God” when he quotes historical documents like the Declaration of Independence


*  The removal of the 10 Commandments displays from public places.


*  Attempts to force an acceptance of homosexual behavior and abortion upon Christian institutions (and even churches).


With these kind of anti-Christian attacks, did you really believe that even Christmas would be spared?  Today, conflicts surrounding Christmas include:  refusals to allow staff to say, “Merry Christmas” but “Happy Holidays” instead in government offices, public schools, stores, etc.; the forced removal of Nativity scenes from public places (and even from some private places); writing X-mas instead of Christmas; and even claims that Christmas was originally a pagan idea.


Yes, as the influence of secularists has grown, there has been an escalating war against Christmas.  Regardless, for me and my house, we will serve the Lord and


Continue to say and celebrate Christmas throughout this beautiful season!


Walt Fitzugh                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  Hanover, VA


Comments


comments




Fauquier Free Citizen



‘Tis the season…to attack all things Christian

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Puellae - The Truth About Chips and Other Things

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Puellae - The Truth About Chips and Other Things

Saturday, November 2, 2013

4 Things To Ponder This Weekend

Submitted by Lance Roberts of STA Wealth Management,


As we enter into the two final months of the year, it is also the beginning of the seasonally strong period for the stock market.  It has already been a phenomenal year for asset prices as the Federal Reserve"s ongoing liquidity programs have seemingly trumped every potential headwind imaginable from Washington scandals, potential invasions, government shutdowns and threats of default.  This leaves us with four things to ponder this weekend revolving around a central question:  "Does the Fed"s Q.E. programs actually work as intended and what are the potential consequences?"


1) Three Questions For Ben Bernanke (via ZeroHedge)


David Einhorn of Greenlight Capital turns his attention to Ben Bernanke with three primary questions:








"We maintain that excessively easy monetary policy is actually thwarting the recovery. But even if there is some trivial short-term benefit to QE, policy makers should be focusing on the longerterm perils of QE that are likely far more important. Here are some questions that come to mind:



How much does QE contribute to the growing inequality of wealth in this country and what are the risks this creates?



How much systemic risk does the Fed create by becoming what Warren Buffett termed "the greatest hedge fund in history"?



How might the Fed"s expanded balance sheet and its failure to even begin to "normalize" monetary policy four years into the recovery limit its flexibility to deal with the next recession or crisis?"



2) Heal Thy Economy Or Fuel The Next Crisis  (Project Syndicate)


Nouriel Roubini, a professor at NYU"s Stern School of Business, plays tag team with David Einhorn questioning the policies and programs of not only the Federal Reserve but of all global central banks.








"As below-trend GDP growth and high unemployment continue to afflict most advanced economies, their central banks have resorted to increasingly unconventional monetary policy. An alphabet soup of measures has been served up: ZIRP (zero-interest-rate policy); QE (quantitative easing, or purchases of government bonds to reduce long-term rates when short-term policy rates are zero); CE (credit easing, or purchases of private assets aimed at lowering the private sector"s cost of capital); and FG (forward guidance, or the commitment to maintain QE or ZIRP until, say, the unemployment rate reaches a certain target). Some have gone as far as proposing NIPR (negative-interest-rate policy).


And yet, through it all, growth rates have remained stubbornly low and unemployment rates unacceptably high, partly because the increase in money supply following QE has not led to credit creation to finance private consumption or investment. Instead, banks have hoarded the increase in the monetary base in the form of idle excess reserves. There is a credit crunch, as banks with insufficient capital do not want to lend to risky borrowers, while slow growth and high levels of household debt have also depressed credit demand.


As a result, all of this excess liquidity is flowing to the financial sector rather than the real economy. Near-zero policy rates encourage "carry trades" – debt-financed investment in higher-yielding risky assets such as longer-term government and private bonds, equities, commodities and currencies of countries with high interest rates. The result has been frothy financial markets that could eventually turn bubbly."



 Nouriel"s comments touch on a topic that has become much more "mainstream" as of late which questions whether asset prices have once again began to over inflate.


3) 5 Signs The Stock Market Is In A Bubble (CBS Moneywatch)


Larry Fink, CEO of giant money manager BlackRock, clearly thinks the market is frothy.








"We"ve seen real bubble-like markets again," he said at a panel discussion this week, according to theBloomberg news agency. "We"ve had a huge increase in the equity markets."



Fink and many others are concerned about the impact of the Federal Reserve"s "quantitative easing" program, under which the central bank is buying $ 85 billion a month in government bonds and mortgage securities in hopes of stimulating economic growth. These assets have vastly expanded the Fed"s balance sheet, including recently. Since Sept. 4 alone, those balance sheets have increased 4.3 percent, while the S&P 500 has increased 4.9 percent.


In other words, investors are doubling down to capitalize on the cheap money that continues to flood the market."



The financial markets have long been seen as a gauge of future economic activity.   As the stock market rises the economy has also risen.  However, that has not been the case over the last several years with the economy stuck at a sub-par rate of growth.  Today, with the high degree of correlation between the Fed"s balance sheet and the financial markets, it is getting increasingly difficult to make the case that the markets are reflecting anything but themselves.


Fed-Balance-Sheet-VS-SP500-101613



4) Why The Fed Can"t Taper (Via Pragmatic Capitalist)


Fraces Coppola, proprietor of the Coppola Comment, recently discussed the issues behind the Fed"s inability to "taper" its current Q.E. program.








"Tapering is removing central bank support of asset prices. Unless not just the US economy but the GLOBAL economy is "on the up" at the time that tapering commences, the result of tapering will be a global fall in asset prices. That isn"t going to cause hyperinflation, as the Austrian school thinks, but it would cause a global recession.



I"m afraid it is not US fundamentals, but global fundamentals that will determine the Fed"s ability to taper. If the Fed tapers when the global economy is already in the doldrums, as it is at the moment, the recessionary rebound to the US economy would be considerable.



Because of the US dollar"s pre-eminence (and the pre-eminence of USTs, too – we don"t talk about that enough), the Fed is effectively the world"s central bank. It is high time that the US accepted that its monetary (and fiscal) policies must be driven by the needs of the global economy, not just the US. The "exorbitant privilege" is an exorbitant responsibility, too."



QE Doesn"t Do Much


As I discussed this past week the reality is that the Fed is now caught in a "liquidity trap."  If they begin to remove its liquidity support the markets, and the economy, roll over.  The results would like be quite devastating for investors.   However, continuing to push asset prices higher also will eventually end badly.  It is quite the conundrum for the Federal Reserve and for investors.


While the Federal Reserve continues to push its liquidity programs, the reality is that it does little for economic growth.  Nobel Prize winner Eugene Fama discussed with Rick Santelli how the only thing that really benefits from QE programs, other than asset prices, are the "expectations" of benefits on the economy.  He explains, in the following CNBC interview, that there is really no reason why QE programs would have much economic impact at all.




How we got here is one thing.  Apparently, getting out will be quite another.  John Hussman summed this all up well:








"In regard to what is demonstrably true, it can easily be shown that unemployment has a significant inverse relationship with real, after-inflation wage growth. This is the true Phillips Curve, but reflects a simple scarcity relationship between available labor and its real price, but this relationship can"t be manipulated to create jobs (see Will the Real Phillips Curve Please Stand Up). It"s also true that changes in stock prices are mildly correlated with subsequent reductions in the unemployment rate and higher GDP growth. But the effect sizes are strikingly weak. A 1% increase in stock prices correlates with a transitory increase of only 0.03-0.05% in subsequent GDP, and a decline of only about 0.02% in the unemployment rate. So to use the stock market as a policy instrument, the Fed would have to move the stock market about 70% above fair value just to get 2.8% in transitory GDP growth, and a 1.4% decline in the unemployment rate. Guess what? The Fed has done exactly that. The scale of present financial distortion is enormous, and further distortions rely on the permanent belief that there is actually a mechanistic link between monetary policy and stock prices.



We know very well the mechanisms and actual historical relationships between monetary policy and financial markets, and doubt that any amount of quantitative easing will prevent a market slaughter in any environment where investors find short-term liquidity desirable (QE only “works” to the extent that zero-interest liquidity is treated as an undesirable “hot potato”). Still, the novelty of quantitative easing, and the misattributed belief that monetary policy ended the banking crisis, has created financial distortions where perception-is-reality, at least for now. We believe that the modifier “for now” will prove no more durable than it was during the tech bubble or the housing bubble."



It is something to ponder over the weekend.







    





Zero Hedge



4 Things To Ponder This Weekend

Sunday, October 20, 2013

Seven Horrifying Things About the Chicken You Eat


Many people eat only chicken to avoid the health and environmental questions surrounding red meat. Yet the track record of US chicken may be worse.


Could there be anything worse for the chicken industry than this month’s outbreak of an antibiotic-resistant strain of salmonella that hospitalized 42 percent of everyone who got it—almost 300 in 18 states?


Yes. The government also announced that China has been cleared to process chickens for the US dinner plate and that all but one of arsenic compounds no one even knew they were eatinghave been removed from US poultry production. Thanks for that. Also this month, some food researchers have revealed the true recipe for chicken …just in time for Halloween.


Many people have decided to eat only chicken to avoid the health, environmental, worker and humane questions surrounding red meat. Yet the track record of US chicken in these areas is no better than red meat—and may be worse.


Here are some things you should really know about your chicken. 


1. Extreme Salmonella


Do you remember the joke “denial is not a river in Egypt”? Well “Heidelberg” is not a charismatic city in Germany when you’re talking about food. It is a monster version of salmonella, some strains of which are resistant to seven antibiotics, says Christopher Braden, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention division of foodborne diseases.


Thirteen percent of people affected by the current outbreak have salmonella septicemia, a serious, life-threatening, whole-body inflammation, says Braden. The contamination stems from  poor sanitary dressing practices, insanitary food contact surfaces, insanitary nonfood contact surfaces, and direct product contamination,” says the USDA. That about covers it. The California-based Foster Farms, believed to be the source of the outbreak, has had salmonella problems for a decade says Food Poisoning News. Nor has the government shut them down, even now.


Salmonella is a “naturally occurring bacteria,” says the USDA and hence allowed in food—but we are supposed to cook chicken and other products to at least 165°F to kill it and other microbial freeloaders. But Caroline Smith DeWaal of the Center for Science in the Public Interest disagrees with the government’s leniency. Salmonella strains like Heidelberg “are too hot for consumers to handle in their kitchens,” she told USA Today.


2. E. Coli


Just because chicken has salmonella doesn’t mean it doesn’t also have E. coli! Eighty-seven percent of chicken carcasses test positive for E. coli before they are sent to stores, reports SalonE. coli is considered more dangerous than salmonella by the USDA and was one of the reasons Russia banned 19 US poultry producers in 2008 (along with US arsenic residues). Antibiotic-resistant E. coli traces were found in samples of raw conventional chicken, chickens “raised without antibiotics” and kosher chicken purchased in New York City in April.


The highest E. coli incidence was, surprisingly, found in the kosher chicken. Last year, researchers writing in Emerging Infectious Diseasesreported that E. coli in chicken is genetically closer to human E. coli than E. coli in beef and pork samples and could put people at risk for urinary tract infections when they are exposed to it because of its similarity.


3. Arsenic


“What Was Arsenic Doing in Our Chicken, Anyway?” asked a Bloomberg article after the FDA reported the end of all but one poultry arsenic product this month, four years after the Center for Food Safety filed a petition. The agency announced that the Center’s petition to have the approvals of arsenic-containing poultry feed revoked had become “moot” after the “sponsors of those drugs requested that FDA withdraw the approvals for those products.” One of the four compounds, nitarsone, is still on the market while the FDA reviews its safety.


Why are birds fed arsenic? It has been approved in poultry feed for years to control parasites, promote weight gain and improve feed efficiency and “pigmentation.” A 2013 study in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives found detectable levels of arsenic in chicken from grocery stores in 10 American cities, including organic chickens.


Nor is arsenic the only unwanted chemical guest. Looking at feathers of factory farmed birds, researchers have also found evidence of caffeine and the active ingredients in Tylenol, Benadryl and Prozac reports the New York Times’Nicholas Kristof. The caffeine is supposed to keep chickens awake so they eat more, while Benadryl, Tylenol and Prozac are supposed to reduce their anxiety so their meat doesn’t get tough, says Kristof.


4. Antibiotics


Where do antibiotic-resistant salmonella and E. coli in chicken come from? Is that a trick question? More than 70 percent of US antibiotics go to livestock—more than 29 million pounds of antibiotics a year—which of course creates antibiotic resistance. The antibiotic-resistant pathogens aren’t just a risk to food, they’re a risk to farm workers. Ellen Silbergeld, professor of environmental health sciences at Johns Hopkins’ Bloomberg School of Public Health, found 63 percent of the chicken workers at one plant had been colonized by Campylobacter jejuni, a germ that is the second leading cause of gastrointestinal disease in the US. One hundred percent of people living near the plant but not working there who were tested had Campylobacter jejuni too.


In 2008, the USDA caught chicken giant Tyson Foods claiming “no antibiotics” in its ads and labels while brazenly using the human antibiotic gentamicin as “standard practice” in its chickens. Tyson has been charged with other scourges affecting Big Chicken, such as cruelty to animals, paying smugglers to transport illegal workers, and violating the Clean Water Act. Tyson was also investigated for bribing veterinarians in Mexico, but never charged.


5. Chicken Yuckets


No one has ever thought chicken nuggets were actually good for you. Last year, the Daily Mail reported a girl who lived on only McDonald’s Chicken McNuggets collapsed and was diagnosed with anemia and inflamed veins on her tongue. Now, some researchers writing in the American Journal of Medicine have revealed new facts about the mystery meat. Some nuggets that were examined were a mix of fat, blood vessels and nervesincluding cells that line the skin and internal organsOther nuggets were mostly fat, cartilage andbonewith only 40 percent muscle meat.


A few years ago, CNN revealed that Chicken McNuggets in the US contain an anti-foaming agent called dimethylpolysiloxane found in Silly Putty and the petroleum-based preservative tBHQ also called tertiary butylhydroquinone. After the American Journal of Medicine article, Mother Jones’ Tom Philpott asked Tyson about the wholesomeness of its Fun Nuggets. Tyson referred him to the National Chicken Council, which said, “Chicken nuggets are an excellent source of protein, especially for kids who might be picky eaters.”


6. Chicken From China


Put the words “food” and “China” together and many people think of the 1,950 cats and 2,200 dogs who perished from China-produced pet food a few years ago and the Asian melamine milk scandals that plague Asian countries. Still the takeover of Smithfield Foods by Shuanghui, the biggest takeover of a US company, shows our food future is being shaped by China—and chicken is no exception.


Many missed the announcement that the Obama administration has approved chicken processed in China to be sold in the US without a country-of-origin label. The chickens will be raised and slaughtered in USDA-approved US or Canada operations, but sent to China for processing (which is called “labor-intensive”) and sent back to the US. The savings in farming out the labor is apparently greater than the cost of shipping the chickensboth to and from China—though no one is talking about the carbon footprint. Nor is anyone talking about how the chickens will be preserved during their overseas voyages and how old they will be when they finally get to the dinner table.


No USDA officials will be onsite at the Chinese chicken processing plants which will, instead, “self-verify” their quality as plants are increasingly doing here. The National Chicken Council says the processed chicken will have “increased inspection upon entry into the United States” and that substandard exporters will be disqualified. Whew.


7. Cruelty to Animals


Chemicals, cost cutting and outsourcing labor take a toll on the birds whose lives and deaths are increasingly inhumane. Chickens were once slaughtered at 14 weeks when they weighed about two pounds but by 2001, they were being slaughtered at seven weeks when they weighed between four and six pounds Today they are even bigger and their lives shorter. In fact, chickens are now grown so quickly, if humans grew as fast, we’d weigh 349 pounds by our second birthday. As a result, chickens have constant bone disease, live in chronic pain and perish from eerie, factory-farm related diseases.


“Good birds on their sides or breasts, scattered in a random fashion in the pen also usually are considered to be dead from flip-over,” says Poultry News. “Diagnosis is supported by the full GI tract (particularly the full intestine); the large, pale liver; the large, normal bursa; the contracted ventricles and dilated, blood-filled atria; the lung congestion and edema; and the lack of pathological lesions.”


Assembly lines move so fast in today’s chicken slaughterhouses, poultry workers, the government and even the chicken industry admit that the birds break their own bones in struggling to escape the uncaring death that the pursuit of cheap meat forces on them.




Truthout Stories



Seven Horrifying Things About the Chicken You Eat

Sox Vs. Cards: 5 Things To Know About The World Series

Sox Vs. Cards: 5 Things To Know About The World Series
http://isbigbrotherwatchingyou.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/b598f__p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif


The Boston Red Sox clinched the American League pennant last night during a 5-2 win over the Detroit Tigers in game 6 of the American League Championship Series.


That means the World Series matchup is set: It’ll be the Red Sox vs. the St. Louis Cardinals beginning Wednesday in Boston.


With that, here are five things you should know about the upcoming championship series:


— The Sox have redeemed themselves this year. Last season, they ended in last place with only 69 wins; this season, they clinched the American League East with 97 wins, tying with the Cards for the best season in baseball.


— This will be the first time since the Braves and Yankees played in 1999 that league win leaders will face off in the World Series.


MLB.com reports that the Cards and Sox have met in the world Series on four previous occasions — in 1934, 1946, 1967 and 2004. The first three meetings went to game seven and all three ended with a Cardinals win.


As the AP reports, the 2004 series marked the third Series visit for the Sox during the past decade. They steamrolled St. Louis in a four-game sweep and won their first championship since 1918. That said, the two teams have not played each other since 2008.


— The Cardinals are a formidable — and surprising — organization. They have captured four pennants in 10 years and won the World Series in 2006 and 2011, as well as 10 other times in their history. The New York Times reports that it would be easy to say the Cards are the Yankees of the National League. But, they managed their wins without the kind of stars the Yankees have. In fact, the Cardinals “develop names that most have never heard of.” So keep an eye out for Carlos Martinez, the 22-year-old reliever who throws 99 mph fast-balls and had never played anything above Double-A baseball before this season.




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Read more about Sox Vs. Cards: 5 Things To Know About The World Series and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Janet Yellen: 5 Things You Need to Know About the Next Fed Chair

1. She Would Be the First Woman to Head the Federal Reserve



In the bank’s 100 years of existence, she would be the first female chairperson. She would be the second woman ever to run the central bank of a developed state, after Elvira Nabiullina in Russia.




PolicyMic



Janet Yellen: 5 Things You Need to Know About the Next Fed Chair

Janet Yellen: 5 Things You Need to Know About the Next Fed Chair

1. She Would Be the First Woman to Head the Federal Reserve



In the bank’s 100 years of existence, she would be the first female chairperson. She would be the second woman ever to run the central bank of a developed state, after Elvira Nabiullina in Russia.




PolicyMic



Janet Yellen: 5 Things You Need to Know About the Next Fed Chair

Saturday, September 28, 2013

The Six Things That Will Determine Obama"s Success With Iran



Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani takes questions from journalists past a bouquet of flowers at a news conference in New York on September 27, 2013. (Reuters)

A historic phone call Friday between the presidents of the United States and Iran could mark the end of 34 years of enmity.


Or it could be another missed opportunity.


In the weeks ahead, clear signs will emerge whether a diplomatic breakthrough is possible. Here are several key areas that could determine success or failure:


Enrichment in Iran?


Throughout his New York “charm offensive,” Iranian President Hassan Rouhani made one demand clear: Tehran will rebuff any agreement that does not allow it to enrich some uranium.


As my longtime friend, and former colleague, Scott Peterson noted in the Christian Science Monitor, Rouhani has insisted that the Iranians will not budge on this issue.


“There’s nothing we seek to hide,” Rouhani said at a meeting with American media editors, according to Peterson. “Forty countries are doing enrichment. We want nothing less, nothing more.”


Analysts argue that if Rouhani agreed to no enrichment inside Iran, it would be domestic political suicide for him. The country’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and Rouhani himself, have repeatedly vowed that Iran will not dismantle its entire program.


“Zero enrichment is not a viable endgame,” said Karim Sadjadpour, an Iran expert at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.


Israeli officials, meanwhile,  have long demanded that Iran permanently halt all uranium enrichment. They warn that enriching uranium  for civilian uses creates an opportunity for illicit weapons-grade enrichment.


In his  speech to the United Nations Tuesday, President Barack Obama signaled that he may be willing to compromise. “We respect the right of the Iranian people to access peaceful nuclear energy,” Obama said.


Watch for signs of a compromise where Washington accepts limited enrichment inside Iran in exchange for comprehensive inspections.


If not, the talks will quickly unravel.


Regime change?


Obama must win support from Congress for striking a nuclear deal with Tehran. Under any agreement, Iran will expect American sanctions to ease, which would require a vote in Congress.


Skeptics argue that the Iran’s theocratic regime cannot be trusted under any circumstance and Washington’s goal should be regime change. The economic sanctions that have proved so devastating to Iran’s economy, they argue, should remain in place until its government collapses.


In his speech at the United Nations, Obama flatly disagreed. “We are not seeking regime change,” he said.


Can Obama convince most members of Congress to support a deal?


Assad?


American officials are clearly seeking Iran’s help with easing President Bashar al-Assad out of power in Syria. Washington is probably not asking for much – most likely Iranian support for an Assad-less, Allawite-dominated transitional government that will look much like the current regime. As jihadists gain strength in the Syrian opposition, the United States has less interest in the collapse of the Syrian government and army.


But Assad’s continued military strength would also suggest that Iran has little incentive to compromise on Syria. Tehran’s policy of supplying Assad with weapons, Iranian advisers and Hezbollah fighters has been working.


If the Iranians refuse to part ways with Assad, the Obama administration may be less willing to compromise on enrichment.


A false start in Geneva?


On October 15, the “P5+1″ — the five permanent U.N. Security Council members (United States, Russia, Britain, France, China) plus Germany — are again set to meet with Iranian officials in Geneva. The fact that Iran quickly agreed to the logistics of this next round of talks was unusual. In the past, determining the time and location has itself taken weeks.


Rouhani said on Friday that Iran would present a plan in Geneva to resolve the decade-long nuclear dispute. If more vague proposals and delaying tactics emerge, expect momentum to slow radically.


Speed?


For Rouhani, and to a lesser extent, Obama, speed is of the essence. Both leaders face stiff challenges from their right on any potential nuclear deal.


Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said in New York that Iran was interested in reaching an agreement — and implementing it — within one year. Rouhani and Obama must produce a credible deal within six to nine months.


If not, both leaders can expect to be accused of capitulation by their critics.


Israel?


On Monday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will meet with President Obama in Washington. Any shift in Netanyahu’s deeply skeptical comments about Rouhani could be a sign that Iran is offering a more substantive proposal in private.


In the end, any breakthrough will depend on the exact restrictions Iran would accept on its nuclear program — none of which emerged in Rouhani’s New York public-relations blitz. Sadjadpour, the Iran expert, said major concessions could win limited Israeli support.


“If Obama can negotiate a deal in which Iran has meaningfully capped its production and stockpile of enriched uranium,” Sadjadpour said, “as well as agreed to far greater transparency — still a big if — I suspect the Israelis will reluctantly acquiesce.”


Watch closely. Those “ifs” will be answered in the weeks ahead. Then Rouhani’s New York trip — and phone conversation with Obama — will emerge as either historic or empty.



This article also appears at Reuters.com, an Atlantic partner site.






    








Master Feed : The Atlantic



The Six Things That Will Determine Obama"s Success With Iran

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Behind the Burrito: 5 Things Chipotle"s Ads Don"t Tell You

Chipotle Mexican Grill, the popular burrito chain that has more than 1,500 restaurants worldwide, hit the advertising jackpot earlier this month when it released a Pixar-style commercialthat went viral and turned the restaurant into an overnight poster child for sustainable food. The advertisement, set to a mournful Fiona Apple song, depicts an animated scarecrow discovering the truth about factory farms—and then deciding to start his own  farm instead (the scarecrow’s farm is apparently vegetarian, because the animals magically disappear.)


The restaurant chain has pushed hard to separate its image from McDonald’s, a former investor in the company, and revamp itself as a sustainable-food choice for Americans who are against global warming and antibiotics, and in favor of fresh, locally-sourced food. In its advertisements, the company throws around the word “natural” a lot—but unlike “organic,” that doesn’t have an actual USDA definition. So how well does Chipotle actually stack up? In an email, Chris Arnold, a spokesman for Chipotle, tells Mother Jones that, “Chipotle is probably more transparent about the ingredients we use than any other national restaurant company. We have never professed to being perfect. Rather, the commitment we have made is to constant improvement, and we are always working to find better, more sustainable sources for all of the ingredients we use.”


Here are five questions raised in Chipotle advertisements:


1. Does Chipotle support genetically modified organisms (GMOs)?



One of the main characters in Chipotle’s scarecrow video is a creepy bird that flies around the factory farm and appears to be some kind of hybrid between a crow and a robot. In another scene, bird-robots are pumping mysterious chemicals into a chicken, inflating it like a beach ball. The video clearly implies that messing with Mother Nature is bad news—and Chipotle doesn’t do it. Arnold says that “the film is about a host of issues in agriculture and industrial food production—the overuse of antibiotics, harsh crowding of animals, and the high degree to which so much food is processed. But there are no GMO references, either literal or symbolic.”


According to its website, most of Chipotle’s products contain Genetically Modified Organisms (GMO), which accelerate the pesticides arms race and have not been adequately tested for long-term health effects. Chipotle has taken the laudable step of publicly backing GMO labeling and aiming to “eliminate GMOs from Chipotle’s ingredients”—but the restaurant isn’t there yet. According to Chipotle’s website, all soy bean oil and corn products contain GMOs. That doesn’t sound so bad, except that Chipotle chicken, steak, fajita vegetables, rice, tortilla chips and tortillas all contain one or both of these items (Restaurants in the New York metropolitan area are an exception; they don’t use soy bean oil.) Additionally, Arnold tells Mother Jones that the feed given to cows and pigs “very well could be GMO, given the prevalence of GMO crops in this country. Non-GMO feed is not part of our protocol.”


2. Do Chipotle pigs, chickens, and cows frolic in big grassy fields?



The scarecrow ad wasn’t the first time Chipotle has pushed the message that its animals frolic in fields (to pop music.) In 2011, it released the animated commercial above, set to a Coldplay song. Arnold, the Chipotle spokesman, says “I think the way we portray our suppliers is very consistent with how they operate in reality” and that Chipotle uses “a number of naturally raised meat suppliers.” Pork suppliers that fall under “naturally raised meat” are Niman Ranch Pork Company and Du Breton, both of which Chipotle sources from (you can see a Chipotle video with the founder of Niman Ranch here.) Niman Ranch’s website says the farm takes many admirable steps to ensure its pigs are ethically raised, such as giving them a 100% vegetarian diet, veterinarian care, and allowing sows to have 64 square feet to share with their young. But the image in the commercial, that all the pigs are hanging out in a pasture, might not be accurate. Pigs at Niman Ranch aren’t required to have outdoor access. They can be housed in hoop buildings with sunlight, instead. “Growing and finishing hogs”—the kind that you eat—are only required to have 8 to 18 square feet of space each, depending on weight, if they are housed in a structure that permits outdoor access. In cases where pigs are housed in hoop buildings, they only get 5 to 14 square feet. Access to to pasture or fields is “recommended” but not required. Drew Calvert, Niman Ranch’s director of communications, tells Mother Jones that “We cannot speak to Chipotle’s advertising, claims or videos” and “the number of farmers who raise hogs for Niman Ranch fluctuates, but a majority of the farmers raise animals outdoors.”


The New Yorker also reports that some of Chipotle’s beef is bought from Meyer Natural Foods, which finishes feeding cows in feedlots—so the beef isn’t 100 percent grass-fed (Arnold said over the phone that most of Chipotle’s beef is “raised on pasture” but not 100-percent grass fed.) Meyer’s website doesn’t list a requirement for square-feet of space for cattle, instead it says its farms must meet the more subjective, “adequate space for comfort” standard (Meyer did not immediately respond to request for comment.) Arnold also noted that “Chickens are raised in chicken houses, but with more space per bird than conventionally raised chicken [in factory farms.]“


3. Are most Chipotle ingredients locally sourced?



This clever billboard implies that if Chipotle were to talk about all of its “locally sourced” ingredients, it wouldn’t fit on a snappy advertisement (again, “natural” has no federally regulated definition and can mean virtually anything.) Chipotle’s definition for “locally sourced” means that an ingredient was grown no more than 350 miles from a restaurant—which is 50 miles closer than the USDA recommendation—a worthy goal. But right now, the only locally sourced ingredients at Chipotle are onions, avocados, peppers, tomatoes, jalapenos, and cilantro—all of which are mixed with non-local items to produce the items you see on the menu. And all of which could probably fit on a billboard, with plenty of room. Arnold, the Chipotle spokesman, says using “local” in its advertisements is not misleading, because “When we advertise programs like this (whether our local produce program or our naturally raised meat program), we do it only when those things are available. Unfortunately, we can’t get local produce year-round.” He does note that Chipotle will have used more than 15 million pounds of local produce this year.


4. Does Chipotle ever use animals that are given antibiotics ?




Factory farms use antibiotics on animals to promote growth, even in the face of terrible health conditions. The resulting “super bugs” can even have harmful effects on humans—for example, women have started getting urinary tract infections that are resistant to antibiotics, a problem that is being attributed to chicken factory farming. Steve Ells, Chipotle founder, chairman and co-CEO, said in a statement in August that, “We decided to start serving meat from animals that have never been given antibiotics or added hormones more than a decade ago… And we continue to be committed to the elimination of antibiotics that are used to promote growth in livestock being raised in confinement operations.” Right now, Chipotle allows animals that are sick to be given antibiotics, but they are not permitted to return to Chipotle’s supply and are instead sold as conventional meat. Ells said the company is “willing to consider” allowing animals to rejoin after they’ve been treated with antibiotics. Only about 80 percent of Chipotle beef is raised without antibiotics (or growth hormones) because of supply shortages—the rest is sourced from conventional farms, although Chipotle tries to notify customers when that is the case.


5. Is most Chipotle food organic?



 


Chipotle regularly brags about its organic cilantro, its cotton products, and how it’s doing more than the rest of the industry to promote organic food. And that may be true—but organic pickings at Chipotle are still slim (Arnold, the Chipotle spokesman, says “Twitter is somewhat limited for communications like that because of the 140-character limit, but I don’t think they ever imply that our food is ‘organic.’”) According to Chipotle’s website, the only organic items—unlike the word “natural”, organic has a strict USDA definition—are beans, oregano, avocado and cilantro, and potentially jalapenos and rice. And judging by Chipotle’s Twitter account, Chipotle isn’t revealing on its website that ingredients, like beans, labeled “organic” are not entirely organic. (Arnold argues, “We are quite careful in labeling these things so our customers know what we have and where.”)



So if you’re headed off to lunch after reading this article, and you want to eat organic, avoid GMOs, and get food that’s locally sourced—your best best is to go to a grocery store, read the labels very carefully, and make a sandwich. But if that’s not an option, you’re far better off going to Chipotle than McDonalds, where if you order a burger—literally just a bun, meat and Big Mac sauce—you’re eating more than 60 ingredients. Good luck, America.


 


 


 


 



Politics | Mother Jones



Behind the Burrito: 5 Things Chipotle"s Ads Don"t Tell You