Showing posts with label Uses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Uses. Show all posts

Monday, March 24, 2014

Organizing for Action Uses Gadsden Flag to Push Obamacare

A pro-Obama group pushing Obamacare is using a rendition of the Gadsden flag, often used by tea party members, on a bumper sticker it is giving away.

The bumper sticker, put out by Organizing for Action, has a stethoscope in the shape of a rattlesnake, like the original flag, but instead of the phrase “Don’t Tread on Me” it says, “Don’t Tread on My Obamacare.”


“This is for everyone who’s tired of hearing the other side talk smack about healthcare reform that is helping millions of Americans get affordable, quality care,” Jon Carson, OFA executive director, said on Facebook.


“They’ve spent hundreds of millions to tear it down. We’ve worked hard to make sure they didn’t succeed,” he added. “If you’re like me, you’re pretty proud of that. Want to brag about it?”


The group is a spin-off from President Barack Obama’s 2012 presidential campaign, and it often works in support of the president’s agenda.


The group began a door-to-door Obamacare campaign in February to help increase enrollment in the new healthcare law.


The Gadsden flag was originally created during the American Revolution, and was inspired by a cartoon created by Benjamin Franklin in 1754 depicting a rattlesnake broken into 13 parts, with each part representing one of the colonies, with the phrase “Join, or Die.”


The Gadsden flag is commonly seen carried by tea party members at rallies across the country.


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Organizing for Action Uses Gadsden Flag to Push Obamacare

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Group says Myanmar army uses rape as weapon of war









FILE – In this Sept. 15, 2013 photo, a woman who claims she was raped by Myanmar security forces stands in her home in Ba Gong Nar village, Maungdaw, northern Rakhine state, Myanmar. Myanmar’s transition to democracy following five decades of brutal military rule has won widespread international praise, but rights’ groups say little has changed in resource-rich border areas, where the army continues to grapple with stubborn ethnic insurgencies. As in the past, the use of sexual violence against civilians is widespread and systematic, said Tin Tin Nyo, general secretary of the Women’s League of Burma. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe, File)






FILE – In this Sept. 15, 2013 photo, a woman who claims she was raped by Myanmar security forces stands in her home in Ba Gong Nar village, Maungdaw, northern Rakhine state, Myanmar. Myanmar’s transition to democracy following five decades of brutal military rule has won widespread international praise, but rights’ groups say little has changed in resource-rich border areas, where the army continues to grapple with stubborn ethnic insurgencies. As in the past, the use of sexual violence against civilians is widespread and systematic, said Tin Tin Nyo, general secretary of the Women’s League of Burma. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe, File)






(AP) — A soldier in full uniform saw the 7-year-old in her front yard soon after her parents left to tend to their rice paddies in Myanmar’s restive state of Shan. She said he ordered her inside the family’s bamboo hut.


“He hit me and told me to take off my clothes,” the girl told the tightly packed courtroom in a whisper, as her alleged assailant, Maung Win Htwe, looked on, stone-faced.


“Then … he raped me.”


Rights activists in Myanmar, also known as Burma, say the army continues to use rape as a weapon of war nearly three years after President Thein Sein’s nominally civilian government ended a half-century of brutal military rule. On Tuesday, the Women’s League of Burma released a report documenting more than 100 rapes, almost all in townships plagued by stubborn ethnic insurgencies.


Nearly half were brutal gang rapes, several of the victims were children, and 28 of the women were killed or died from their injuries, said Tin Tin Nyo, the league’s general secretary. She warned that there is little hope for change until the government amends Myanmar’s constitution, which gives the military the right to independently administer all its affairs.


Ye Htut, the government’s top spokesman, did not respond to phone, email and Facebook messages seeking comment.


The report said most of the attacks occurred in border areas, particularly in the states of Shan, where the 7-year-old lives, and Kachin. Perpetrators are rarely, if ever, punished.


Though it handed over formal control of the country, the army continues to heavily influence almost all facets of government, and holds a quarter of all seats in parliament.


Few prominent officials have criticized the military over sexual violence — not even opposition leader and Nobel Peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, who spent more than 15 years under house arrest under the former ruling junta.


Last month, at a press conference in the main city of Yangon, Suu Kyi was asked if she was concerned about the lack of accountability when it comes to the use of rape as a weapon of war. Instead of criticizing generals, she pointed out that insurgent groups also are responsible for sexual violence.


“This has to do with rule of law. And that has to do with politics, and the position of the army as it is in a particular political structure,” she said. “I think you are well aware of the fact that military armed groups which are not official armies also engage in sexual violence in conditions of conflict.”


Suu Kyi wants to run for president in next year’s elections, but the army has the power to block those ambitions, and she’s showing increasing reluctance to criticize.


The U.S. State Department said it was aware of the report, and urged the Myanmar government and military to investigate and prosecute all allegations of rape and sexual assault.


Spokeswoman Marie Harf said Wednesday that despite “tremendous progress” in Myanmar in the past three years, “significant challenges remain, including further improving the country’s overall human rights situation.”


Tin Tin Nyo said the cases her group was able to document are “just the tip of the iceberg.” She said the information gathered for the report comes almost exclusively from victims or witnesses dared to speak out, and that researchers were unable to reach some areas because of security concerns.


The league’s report, compiled by 12 member organizations spread across the country, said in most cases attacks were carried out by soldiers who were carrying weapons and dressed in uniform. They included officers — such as captains, commanders and majors — and at least one major general.


Many of the rapes were carried out in front of the woman’s husband or others, seemingly as a way to make communities too fearful to support ethnic militias.


“These crimes are more than random, isolated acts by rogue soldiers,” the report’s authors wrote. “Their widespread and systematic nature indicates a structural pattern: Rape is still used as an instrument of war and oppression.”


The government sees on-and-off conflicts along northern and eastern borders, where armed ethnic groups have long battled for greater autonomy, as one of the biggest obstacles to a planned nationwide cease-fire agreement. The region is home to several strategic development projects, including a gas pipeline that stretches to China’s Yunnan province.


The report said most cases never make it to court, and those that come before military tribunals usually result in immediate acquittals.


The alleged Nov. 11 attack on the 7-year-old is an exception. The soldier accused of raping her, Maung Win Htwe, was ordered to go to trial in a civilian court.


Lawyer Brang Di said the first witnesses appeared at Lashio District Court last week, including the girl, her parents and neighbors in a tiny Shan village near Thein Ni town.


Brang Di said authorities agreed to try Maung Win Htwe in a civilian court only after a loud public outcry. “We are trying our best to have a fair judgment,” he said.


____


Associated Press writer Matthew Pennington in Washington contributed to this report.


Associated Press



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Group says Myanmar army uses rape as weapon of war

Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Iron Maiden uses piracy numbers to plan "massive sellout" concert tours

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Iron Maiden uses piracy numbers to plan "massive sellout" concert tours

Friday, November 22, 2013

U.S. government rarely uses best cybersecurity steps: advisers




WASHINGTON Fri Nov 22, 2013 1:43pm EST



WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. government itself seldom follows the best cybersecurity practices and must drop its old operating systems and unsecured browsers as it tries to push the private sector to tighten its practices, technology advisers told President Barack Obama.


“The federal government rarely follows accepted best practices,” the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology said in a report released on Friday. “It needs to lead by example and accelerate its efforts to make routine cyberattacks more difficult by implementing best practices for its own systems.”


PCAST is a group of top U.S. scientists and engineers who make policy recommendations to the administration. William Press, computer science professor at the University of Texas at Austin, and Craig Mundie, senior adviser to the CEO at Microsoft Corp, comprised the cybersecurity working group.


The Obama administration this year stepped up its push for critical industries to bolster their cyber defenses, and Obama in February issued an executive order aimed at countering the lack of progress on cybersecurity legislation in Congress.


As part of the order, a non-regulatory federal standard-setting board last month released a draft of voluntary standards that companies can adopt, which it compiled through industry workshops.


But while the government urges the private sector to adopt such minimum standards, technology advisers say it must raise its own standards.


The advisers said the government should rely more on automatic updates of software, require better proof of identities of people, devices and software, and more widely use the Trusted Platform Module, an embedded security chip.


The advisers also said for swifter response to cyber threats, private companies should share more data among themselves and, “in appropriate circumstances” with the government. Press said the government should promote such private sector partnerships, but that sensitive information exchanged in these partnerships “should not be and would not be accessible to the government.”


The advisers steered the administration away from “government-mandated, static lists of security measures” and toward standards reached by industry consensus, but audited by third parties.


The report also pointed to Internet service providers as well-positioned to spur rapid improvements by, for instance, voluntarily alerting users when their devices are compromised.


To read PCAST’s report, see r.reuters.com/ryq84v


(Reporting by Alina Selyukh; Editing by Vicki Allen)






Reuters: Politics



U.S. government rarely uses best cybersecurity steps: advisers

Sunday, August 18, 2013

Whey Has More Uses Than You Think


Ready Nutrition – by Tess Pennington 


Why whey is considered a waste product I will never know. We get whey from cheese making, and while many throw it out, it has more uses than you think; including dietary uses.


Fresh whey can last 1 week if refrigerated, but can also be frozen in ice cube trays for future use.    


Benefits of Whey


1. Whey has a pleasant taste. The flavor of whey is similar to buttermilk and can be added to juice or milk to enhance the flavor if desired.
2. Whey has plenty of dietary uses. There is a reason why Little Miss Muffet ate her curds and whey. One cup of whey contains 1/6 of the potassium you need on a daily basis almost (as much as in a banana). This is another reason it functions well as a thirst quencher, particularly for athletes who have an increased need for potassium. And finally, it contains about 25% of the protein, and is virtually fat-free.
3. Vegetable fermenting and whey go hand in hand. Raw whey can be used for lacto-fermenting vegetables to add more nutrition to your diet. Fresh Kimchi and sauerkraut sounds delicious.
4. It’s great for pets and livestock! Household pets and livestock such as cows and chickens can also benefit from the gift of whey. An added perk is that it adds extra flavor to their feed.
5. Whey is a wonderful fertilizer for the garden. According to an article atwww.vicariouslyvintage.com, since whey is an acidic medium, it can be used as a soil conditioner. It is best used on acid loving plants such as berry bushes and tomatoes. However, because it is acidic, ensure that you dilute the whey with water. About a cup or 2 per gallon is sufficient. Repeat every 2-3 weeks.


Depending on the types of cheese that you make, two types of whey can emerge.


Acid Whey


This comes from cheeses where the pH is down around 4.6-4.8 or in cheeses where you use lemons, vinegar, citric acid, etc., to acidify the milk.


Uses Include:


  • Pour on acid loving plants or where the soil is too alkaline.

  • Add seasonings and use as a marinade for meat.

  • To assist in better digestion of beans and legumes, add a few tablespoons of it to the soaking water of your beans.

  • Cook your grains and cereals in it such as wheat berries, oatmeal or rice.

Sweet Whey


This type of whey comes from cheeses where bacterial cultures have been used and the whey has been drained at a pH of 5.2 or above. This includes all hard cheeses (cheddar, in particular), yogurt cheese, and most soft cheeses. This type of whey not only has vitamins, minerals and proteins, but also has beneficial bacteria (which aids digestion). It has a milder flavor than acid whey.


Sweet whey is used most for baking and can benefit your goods in two ways: it adds additional nutrition and the natural acidity makes a perfect dough conditioner. It reacts perfectly with baking soda to produce all the leavening (carbon dioxide bubbles) you need.  The reaction of baking soda with whey creates baked goods that are extremely light. Many cooks simply substitute whey for whatever liquid is required in the recipe.


Uses Include:


  • It may be used as a substitute for buttermilk in any recipe, especially pancakes, cornbread and scones.

  • It may be used as a substitute for the liquid in any bread recipe. (Some recommend using only ½ cup at first, but most of us end up replacing all the liquid with whey.) It may cause the bread to rise a little faster than usual and brown quicker, but the taste is wonderful.

  • Add to soup.

  • Add to bath water.

  • Freeze it in cubes and add it to smoothies for added nutrition.

  • Make ricotta cheese or farm cheese.

What ways have you used whey in your home or on the homestead?


http://readynutrition.com/resources/whey-has-more-uses-than-you-think_17082013/






Whey Has More Uses Than You Think

Sunday, August 4, 2013

Facebook censorship


Unusual facebook behaviour. This falls inline with my theory that facebook uses it’s social media to socially engineer and manipulate. I will ask if anybody …



Facebook censorship

Friday, July 19, 2013

Daimler CEO uses windfall gain to buy $1.5 million in stock


Dieter Zetsche, CEO of German carmaker Daimler, poses in a new Mercedes-Benz S-class car during a presentation in Hamburg, May 15, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Fabian Bimmer




Reuters: Business News



Daimler CEO uses windfall gain to buy $1.5 million in stock

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Study uses "martyr" posts to break down "foreign fighters" aiding Syrian rebels


Flashpoint Global Partners



Muhammad Yassin Jarrad, who was killed on Jan. 16 near Al-Suwayda, Syria, was the brother-in-law of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the late leader of al Qaeda in Iraq. His father, Yassin, also was a 2003 attack that killed Muhammad Bakr al-Hakim, one of
Iraq’s most prominent Shia Muslim leaders.




By Mike Brunker
Investigations Editor, NBC News


Foreign fighters who have flocked to Syria to join the fight to topple the regime of Bashar al-Assad are a “motley crew” whose motivations range from “pro-democratic revolutionary fervor to the most extreme sectarian and hardline Islamist viewpoints imaginable,” according to a report released Monday.


The first-of-its-kind analysis, by the security firm Flashpoint Partners and the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, broke down 280 “martyr” postings on jihadist websites, Facebook and Twittter marking the deaths of the foreign recruits. 


The report notes that social media have “provided a critical online bedrock for foreign fighters in Syria. … Each day on Facebook, new names of deceased foreign fighters are posted by rebel supporters who hope that their willingness to sacrifice will inspire others to follow in their footsteps.”



While Western governments have expressed concern that the foreign fighters are Sunni militants and terrorists bent on toppling Assad’s regime, controlled by members of his Shiite Alawite faction, the report paints a more nuanced picture of the foreign contingent, which it estimates likely make up 10 percent of less of the rebel military force.


 “The dominant nationalities among the Sunni fighters in our data sample are Libyans, Saudis, and Tunisians,” said Evan Kohlmann, a senior Flashpoint partner and NBC News terrorism consultant, who co-wrote the report. “While Libyans and Saudis played an outsized role in Iraq as well, the newfound flood of Tunisians to Syria may be an unintended negative consequence of the Arab Spring.”


Aaron Y. Zelin / Flashpoint Global Partners



Chart shows countries of origins for the 280 foreign fighters whose deaths were marked by online ‘martyr’ posts.




The numbers from the admittedly small sample of foreign fighters show that even within the radical elements, there is a broad range of participants.


 “A wide variety of international terrorist organizations have become deeply involved in Syria,” Kohlmann said. “In fact, based on our data, Sunni foreign fighters in Syria include former Hamas militants from Gaza, relatives of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi (the late leader of al Qaeda in Iraq) and leaders of Fatah al-Islam (a Lebanon-based radical Sunni group).


“What should be particularly worrying for Western governments is the fact that at least a third of the fighters in our sample were affiliated with the most extreme rebel faction, al Qaeda’s Jabhat al-Nusra — and that at least seven of the 280 dead fighters we analyzed were from Western countries, including France, Denmark, Australia, the U.K., and the United States.”


Just last week, a Michigan woman was reported killed while fighting with the rebels. The report also cites the case of Eric Harroun, a former U.S. soldier indicted in the U.S. in March after allegedly fighting in Syria with the al-Nusrah Front, an alias of al Qaeda in Iraq.


But the report, titled “Convoy of Martyrs in the Levant,” — a geographical term referring to the area bounded by the Mediterranean Sea and the Arabian Peninsula,  encompassing Cyprus, the Palestinian territories, Jordan, Israel, Lebanon and Syria – also found more moderate Muslim groups and pro-democracy factions in the rag-tag rebel army.



/



A look back at the conflict that has overtaken the country.




“Some of the foreign fighters have … been attached to different Free Syrian Army units or more mainstream Islamist factions like Liwa’ al-Ummah,” it said. “There has been a long list of cases of individuals who were involved in pro-democracy uprisings in Tunisia or Egypt, who then went to Libya to help in the fight against the Gadhhafi regime, and finally headed to Syria to finish off the Assad regime.”


The report, co-written by Aaron Zelin of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy and Laith al-Khouri of Flashpoint Partners, also noted that the Assad regime has relied on foreign fighters in the escalating conflict, “including fighters from recognized terrorist groups like Hezbollah and the PFLP (the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine).”


 “It is perhaps even arguable that, at present, there are actually more foreign nationals fighting on the side of the Assad regime than with the rebels,” it said.


The U.N. estimates that at least 70,000 people have been killed since the conflict broke out in April 2011.


More from Open Channel:


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Open Channel



Study uses "martyr" posts to break down "foreign fighters" aiding Syrian rebels

Friday, May 31, 2013

Gizmo Uses Lung Cells To Sniff Out Health Hazards In Urban Air


Cities like Houston are dotted with air-sniffing monitors that measure levels of benzene and other potentially unhealthy air pollutants. But those monitors can’t answer the question we care about most: Is the air safe?


That’s because there’s no simple relationship between toxic air pollutants and health risks. Researchers at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill are trying to get a leg up on that problem. They are building an instrument that uses human lung cells to measure health hazards in the air more directly.


To work on the instrument, researchers here cook up their own dirty air in a greenhouse on top of a campus building. Professor Harvey Jeffries leads us up a steep ladder and into the greenhouse, which is made of clear Teflon film.


“So it’s filled with clean air to begin with, but we can create any kind of atmosphere in here that simulates any place on the earth — or any place in Los Angeles,” Jeffries says. “We can try diesel cars, or we can try diesel trucks.”





Harvey Jeffries, in a greenhouse on the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, campus that can simulate the atmosphere of any location on Earth.



Richard Harris/NPR

Harvey Jeffries, in a greenhouse on the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, campus that can simulate the atmosphere of any location on Earth.



Harvey Jeffries, in a greenhouse on the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, campus that can simulate the atmosphere of any location on Earth.


Richard Harris/NPR



Pipes draw exhaust from tailpipes right up to this chamber. You wouldn’t want to inhale the gases right out of a tailpipe, of course. But breathing exhaust from the air turns out to be even worse.


“If you put the same material in here and cook it in the sun for a day, it becomes anything from five to 12 times more toxic,” Jeffries says.


He suspects that sunlight triggers these particles to soak up nasty chemicals in the air. The particles, which might start out as a puff of carbon in diesel exhaust, get transformed into little packages that deliver chemicals deep into lung tissue when you inhale.


Unfortunately, health officials don’t take that sort of synergy into account. Jeffries says they assume a particle is a particle is a particle.


“If you don’t do this kind of chemistry, you miss what’s really going on in the atmosphere,” he says.


The air from here gets piped into a laboratory directly below. Jeffries’ collaborator, Will Vizuete, says this research is challenging the conventional wisdom about particles and health. It’s not simply how much of the stuff you breathe in that counts.


“Not all particles are created equal. Some particles happen to be more toxic than other particles,” Vizuete says.


And Jeffries concurs: “The health effects for particle exposure in New York are different from health effects for particle exposures in South Carolina and in the desert or in California.”


The effects depend on what happened to that particle while it was circulating in the sunny air. And that’s where the new instrument comes in.


In a lab directly underneath the rooftop “greenhouse,” Vizuete and Jeffries show off a machine that sucks in air from the chamber above. The air blows across samples of human lung cells, which grow in small indentations in the instrument. If the air is toxic, the cells send out hormone-like distress signals that scientists can measure. The worse the air, the more “Help! Help!” signals the cells send out.


“The advantage of using a biological sensor is it says ‘I’m being harmed. I don’t care if you don’t know what’s causing me harm, I’m being harmed,’ ” Jeffries says. “That means it draws attention, it makes you do the work and do a better job of figuring out what’s going on.”


And it tells you, whatever’s going on — watch out for that air.


Jeffries and Vizuete see this approach as an important departure from the way air is tested today. Current tests measure chemicals in the air and then infer health risks based on some simple assumptions. Vizuete says the goal here is to build devices like this, and sell them to scientists who can put them up all around cities, to monitor the air for actual biological hazards.





This devices uses lung cell to checks the air smog components the hurt human health.



Richard Harris/NPR

This devices uses lung cell to checks the air smog components the hurt human health.



This devices uses lung cell to checks the air smog components the hurt human health.


Richard Harris/NPR



Hardware is actually being built in the building’s basement. This school of public health has an unusual facility: a fully equipped machine shop, full of lathes and other digitally-driven shop tools.


On the day of our visit, the first prototype was still under construction. Eventually they hope to put the parts together into a plastic frame about the size of a paperback book.


Of course this being a university, not a factory, the instrument is only being developed here.


“So right now, the hope is to maybe get two — or hopefully five — of these out of this shop, and then immediately find another kind of tech shop to produce these at a large scale,” Vizuete says. Chapel Hill has small tech companies that could easily do this work. The human lung cells are already commercially available.


The instrument isn’t as simple to operate as the current chemical “sniffers,” though — technicians must collect samples from the devices by hand. Those samples then get analyzed in a lab.


Vizuete has started a company, called Biodeptronics, to mass-produce these instruments. And he’s hoping that they’ll be for sale later this year. The first customers would be academics who are interested in learning more about air pollution. But Vizuete’s vision is that someday these biological sensors will get scattered around cities. Instead of simply telling us what chemicals are in the air, they might tell us something about the actual health risks.




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Gizmo Uses Lung Cells To Sniff Out Health Hazards In Urban Air