Author: Serkadis

  • Marc Faber: 15% Fall Coming For Stocks

    Faber

    Surprise! Mr. BoomGloomDoom sees doom… or at least a 20% decline in equities.

    Bloomberg:

    Faber predicted at the beginning of March a 20 percent decrease if the index reached a new high. The S&P 500 has tumbled 11 percent since reaching 1,217.28 on April 23, the strongest level since the days after the September 2008 bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. Faber advised investors to buy U.S. stocks on March 9, 2009, when the index reached its lowest level since 1996.

    “The market became very overbought in mid-April,” Faber said in a Bloomberg Radio interview today with Tom Keene. “The S&P could still decline by another 10 percent, maybe 15 percent.”

    Read the whole thing >

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Swimming Lessons for Toddlers – Approved!

    American Academy of Pediatrics now agrees to enrolling children under the age of four to swimming lessons. Children below 1 year old were not recommended to still have the lessons since they still have motor or cognitive disabilities which poses them not to be ready for swimming classes. Just a few years ago, the group apalled the idea of letting the toddlers undergo swimming lessons as it gives the parents and their children a false sense of security.However, few studies showed that toddler would less likely drown if they had undergone swimming lessons. But still, the group does not also advice all children to undergo the classes.



    According to AAP report, drowning is the second-leading cause of death for children ages 1-19. “Children need to learn to swim,”said in the report. They recommended a multilayered safety approach since even children who have advanced swimming skills can still drown. They also state that parents must learn how to perform Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation also known as CPR. The policy also reiterates the importance of a four sided fence around a pool that can cut the drowning risk by half. And they also warned  against the use of inflatable swimming aids as these can easily lose air and “are not designed to keep swimmers safe”.

    Keep the children safe for the summer season as people choose to go swimming to cool down.

    Related posts:

    1. The Danger of Public Swimming Pools
    2. CDC recommendations in swimming pools and water parks
    3. Pesticides causes ADHD in Children: Parents Beware!

  • Videos: Tuned 2011 Ford Mustangs already in the 10’s

    Filed under: , , , ,

    2011 Ford Mustang GT modified by Evolution Performance – Click above to watch the video after the jump

    There’s no doubt that the 2011 Mustang GT is one of the most potent ponycars to ever come from Ford, but to the Mustang faithful, a big part of its legacy will be how it takes to the aftermarket. The new 5.0-liter V8 seems to be off to a good start, with at least two different modified 2011 Mustangs already achieving ten-second time slips at the dragstrip.

    The first to achieve the feat was JPC Racing, who had their 2011 Mustang out at the track within 24 hours of receiving the car. Using 4.56 gears, beefier upper and lower control arms, racing slicks and a 100 shot of nitrous, JPC’s ‘Stang nailed a best time of 10.96 seconds @ 125.75 mph. A short time later, the boys at Evolution Performance nailed a 10.88 @ 126.66 run using just 3.73 gears, a prototype cold air intake, Eaton Trutrac differential, D.O.T. approved racing tires and a 100 shot of nitrous.

    While the numbers themselves aren’t all that impressive, the simplicity of the modifications and the brief time in which they were developed surely are. We can’t wait to see what the various tuners around the country can do once they have time to develop more parts for the new Mustang. You can watch both of the runs in the videos posted after the jump.

    [Sources: Evolution Performance, StangTV]

    Continue reading Videos: Tuned 2011 Ford Mustangs already in the 10’s

    Videos: Tuned 2011 Ford Mustangs already in the 10’s originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 24 May 2010 12:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • DNA from millions of newborn babies is secretly stored on NHS database

    Via Prison Planet.com » Prison Planet

    Carol Driver
    UK Daily Mail
    May 24, 2010

    DNA taken from millions of newborn babies is quietly being stored by hospitals without proper parental consent.

    The blood samples, taken in heel-prick tests that check for serious conditions, can be accessed by police, coroners and medical researchers, Freedom of Information Act requests reveal.

    Despite Government guidelines advising hospitals to destroy the DNA after five years, some facilities have kept them on file for more than 20 years – prompting fears that a covert database is being created.

    Campaigners claim the 32-page leaflets – explaining that newborns’ DNA will be stored – handed to new mothers, does not constitute consent for hospitals to carry out further research.

    Nor, they say, does it make clear the samples could be accessed by the police to identify people involved in crimes.

    And, although the DNA of each child is stored anonymously, The UK Newborn Screening Programme Centre, which oversees the use of samples, say they could be linked to hospital admissions and the child could be identified that way.

    Full article here

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  • Explanation of ‘Lost’ Series Finale

    Lost Finale bound to be complicated though there were some parts of the episode that were straightforward. The two and a half hour last episode brought closure on some big questions and to the story of the Oceanic 815 passengers. The episode gave touching flashes as the rest of them awakened to their island past. Jack, who was the last one to block his memories, arrived at Eloise Hawking’s old church and saw his father’s coffin. It was because Christian was really appearing to him.

    The episode was made in a way to bring the survivors back together after they died. Living together made them overcome their issues and problems in life and coming back together once more to finally move on for good in death. At the end Jack learns to let go as he welcomes the friendship and love that he usually rejected on the island. His sacrifices saved the island and they were finally together on the other side, ready to move on. There were no final twists about the island and its nature which was the only incidication that the new leadership of Ben and Hurley have led to a new golden age. The last episode brings evertything back to the season to explain six side-flashes where Oceanic flight lands at LAX and everyone goes about their happy way is a way of showing – people waiting for afterlife still hang out until they will be ready to “let go”.

    Related posts:

    1. Watch Lost Finale – How did Lost End?: Lost Finale Updates
    2. Lost has finally came to “The End”
    3. 24 Ways to Celebrate ‘24′ Finale

  • Study: Many Sunscreens May Be Accelerating Cancer

    Via Prison Planet.com » Sci Tech

    AOL News
    May 24, 2010

    Almost half of the 500 most popular sunscreen products may actually increase the speed at which malignant cells develop and spread skin cancer because they contain vitamin A or its derivatives, according to an evaluation of those products released today.

    AOL News also has learned through documents and interviews that the Food and Drug Administration has known of the potential danger for as long as a decade without alerting the public, which the FDA denies.

    The study was released with Memorial Day weekend approaching. Store shelves throughout the country are already crammed with tubes, jars, bottles and spray cans of sunscreen.

    The white goop, creams and ointments might prevent sunburn. But don’t count on them to keep the ultraviolet light from destroying your skin cells and causing tumors and lesions, according to researchers at Environmental Working Group.

    In their annual report to consumers on sunscreen, they say that only 39 of the 500 products they examined were considered safe and effective to use.

    Full article here

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  • John Hussman Ups Bet On Precious Metals, Says Market Showing Classic Symptoms Of Illness

    johnhussmanportrait.jpg

    In his latest weekly note, fund manager John Hussman introduces readers to what he calls “Aunt Minnies” of the market.

    Over the years, I’ve noted that certain subsets of market conditions – occurring together – are associated with very specific outcomes, such as oncoming recessions, abrupt market weakness, strength in precious metals, and so forth. Such indicator subsets, or Aunt Minnies, are essentially “signatures” that often have very specific implications. In medicine, an Aunt Minnie is a particular set of symptoms that is “pathognomonic” (distinctly characteristic) of a specific disease, even if each of the individual symptoms might be fairly common. Last week, we observed an Aunt Minnie featuring a collapse in market internals that has historically been associated with sharply negative market implications.

    Of the 3257 issues traded on the NYSE last week, 2955 declined and just 275 advanced. The S&P 500 has now abruptly erased nearly 8 months of progress. Moreover, we observed a “leadership reversal” with new 52-week lows flipping above the number of new 52-week highs. Our broader measures of market action deteriorated to a negative position as well. Historically, we can identify 19 instances in the past 50 years where the weekly data featured broadly negative internals, coupled with at least 3-to-1 negative breadth, and a leadership reversal. On average, the S&P 500 lost another 7% within the next 12 weeks (based on weekly closing data), widening to an average loss of nearly 20% within the next 12 months – often substantially more when the Aunt Minnie occurred with rich valuations and elevated bullish sentiment.

    So, not surprisingly, he remains quite negative…

    On last week’s selloff, we did shift about 2% more of the Strategic Total Return Fund’s assets toward precious metals (now at a still very small 4% exposure), with about 4% of assets in utility shares, and about another 3% in foreign currencies. The bulk of the Fund’s assets, of course, are in Treasuries, with a duration of just under 4 years – primarily in straight, intermediate-term Treasury bonds. Most likely, we will have numerous opportunities to shift our investment positions to reflect a longer-term outcome of inflation and generally rising interest rates in the second half of this decade. For now, credit fears are likely to boost demand for default-free government liabilities, holding down inflation pressures and prompting (ultimately incorrectly) less eager demand for commodity-related securities.

    Contra Hussman’s view, here’s Deutsche Bank on why a groundwell of bullish data will send stocks higher >

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Climate change concern declines in poll

    Via Prison Planet.com » Sci Tech

    Owen Bowcott
    London Guardian
    May 24, 2010

    Popular concern about climate change has declined significantly, following this year’s harsh winter and rows over statistics on global warming, a survey has found.

    The numbers of those interested in where Britain’s electricity comes from have also slipped back, according to a survey commissioned by the energy company EDF, demonstrating what appears to be growing consumer complacency in an era of electric-powered gadgetry.

    At the same time resistance to building new nuclear power stations appears to be slackening. The results of the YouGov poll, based on a sample of 4,300 adults questioned during the week after the general election, show that interest in climate change fell from 80% of respondents in 2006, to 71% last year and now stands at only 62%. Only 80% say they are interested in where electrical power is made, down from 82% the previous year.

    Other recent polls have recorded a similar drop in public alarm about the imminence of climate-triggered disaster. The number of climate change agnostics – those unsure whether human activity is warming the planet – has risen from 25% in 2007 to 33% now.

    Full article here

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  • Secret US spaceplane spotted in orbit by hobbyists

    Via Prison Planet.com » Sci Tech

    Lewis Page
    The Register
    May 24, 2010

    Amateur astronomers believe they have located the X-37B US military unmanned spaceplane, which was launched into orbit on a classified mission a month ago.

    According to the authoritative skygazers’ site Heavens-Above, the X-37B is in an orbit angled up 40 degrees from the Equator, meaning that it passes regularly over all nations between southern Europe and South Africa and corresponding portions of south Asia, Australia, Latin America and much of the USA. The little spaceplane is at a height of approximately 400km above Earth.

    The X-37B is operated by the US Air Force and its mission, budget and other particulars are classified, or “black”. Nonetheless, various facts about the project are known as it began life as a NASA programme.

    The X-37B takes off inside a fairing atop a normal disposable launch stack, in this case an Atlas V from Cape Canaveral a month ago. It is much smaller than a space shuttle, but like the shuttle has delta-shaped wings which should offer similar “cross range” abilities during re-entry – that is the X-37B could potentially make a landing somewhere well off its orbital track.

    Full article here

    Secret US spaceplane spotted in orbit by hobbyists 260310banner2

  • Revealed: how Israel offered to sell South Africa nuclear weapons

    Via Prison Planet.com » World News

    Chris McGreal
    London Guardian
    May 24, 2010

    Secret South African documents reveal that Israel offered to sell nuclear warheads to the apartheid regime, providing the first official documentary evidence of the state’s possession of nuclear weapons.

    The “top secret” minutes of meetings between senior officials from the two countries in 1975 show that South Africa’s defence minister, PW Botha, asked for the warheads and Shimon Peres, then Israel’s defence minister and now its president, responded by offering them “in three sizes”. The two men also signed a broad-ranging agreement governing military ties between the two countries that included a clause declaring that “the very existence of this agreement” was to remain secret.

    The documents, uncovered by an American academic, Sasha Polakow-Suransky, in research for a book on the close relationship between the two countries, provide evidence that Israel has nuclear weapons despite its policy of “ambiguity” in neither confirming nor denying their existence.

    The Israeli authorities tried to stop South Africa’s post-apartheid government declassifying the documents at Polakow-Suransky’s request and the revelations will be an embarrassment, particularly as this week’s nuclear non-proliferation talks in New York focus on the Middle East.

    Full article here

    Revealed: how Israel offered to sell South Africa nuclear weapons 150410banner1

  • ABC News Attempts to Align Climate Change Skeptics with White Supremacists

    Via Prison Planet.com » Commentary

    Jeff Poor
    Newsbusters
    May 24, 2010

    At first, Michael Mann, a Penn State professor and a central figure in the Climategate scandal, but best known for his discredited “hockey stick graph” didn’t like being mocked in a YouTube video. Now Mann is alleging he’s a victim of hate groups. 

    On ABC’s May 23 “World News Sunday,” a segment from anchor Dan Harris alleged that threatening e-mails Mann received were part of a “spike” in violence aimed at the global warming alarmist community.

    “The ongoing oil spill crisis in the Gulf is keeping the debate over climate and energy very much in the headlines and that debate is becoming increasingly venomous with many prominent scientists now saying that they are being severely harassed,” Harris said.

    Curiously Harris makes no mention of the real violence in the form of eco-terrorism that has come from the environmental left or Greenpeace repeatedly targeting the Competitive Enterprise Institute’s Chris Horner, by stealing his garbage on a weekly basis, as his Web site points out. Instead, this “severe harassment” ABC warned about were e-mails from fringe Internet elements sent to Mann.

    Read more: http://newsbusters.org/blogs/jeff-poor/2010/05/24/hit-job-abc-news-attempts-align-climate-change-white-supremacists#ixzz0orRWiEc5

    ABC News Attempts to Align Climate Change Skeptics with White Supremacists 150410banner1

  • Dr Andrew Wakefield struck off medical register

    Via Prison Planet.com » Prison Planet

    Raf Sanchez, David Rose
    London Times
    May 24, 2010

    Andrew Wakefield, the doctor who triggered the MMR vaccine scare, has been struck off the medical register.

    After nearly three years of formal investigation by the General Medical Council (GMC), Dr Wakefield has been found guilty of serious professional misconduct over “unethical” research that sparked unfounded fears that the vaccine was linked to bowel disease and autism.

    Parents were today advised that it was “never too late” to give their children the triple vaccine to protect against measles, mumps and rubella, as the case drew to a close.

    The decision marks the culmination of the longest medical misconduct hearing in the GMC’s 150-year history, which has been going on since July 2007.

    Full article here

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  • Worldwide Child Deathrates Drop

    According to a recently published report, world death rates for children under 5 have dropped significantly between 1970 and 2010.  The study, which included data from over 187 countries, sounds encouraging, but it seems that child mortality is still not a thing of the past; it is expected that, worldwide, 7.7 million children will die this year.  On the other hand, as bleak as this sounds, it is still an improvement from 1990’s figure of 11.9 million.

    It would seem that, on average, world death rates have dropped by 2 percent a year since 1990; and even in areas where the average American would expect to hear about the worst child death rates, such as Latin America, North Africa, and the Middle East, there have been declines as much as 6 percent a year.

    Health experts have stated that the reason behind the drop could be vaccines, Aids medicines, better pneumonia and diarrhea treatments, vitamin A supplements, more education for women, or bug nets for beds to prevent malaria.  In short, the consensus among experts seems to be that the global efforts to help save children have started to pay off not only better, but also faster than was expected.

    Related posts:

    1. Can A Camera Help To Slash Cancer Of The Colon ? Study :
    2. Interest rates to rise in the U.S.
    3. Updates on Greek Financial Crisis: Euro Slides

  • BP’s ‘Top Kill’ Could End The Disastrous Spill Tomorrow

    Via Prison Planet.com » Commentary

    Vincent Fernando, CFA
    Business Insider
    May 24, 2010

    BP’s (BP) chief operating officer announced on Friday that the company could deploy its ‘top kill’ solution to the Macondo oil leak as soon as tomorrow (Tuesday).

    The company will pump special drilling mud to the leaking well’s blowout preventer, followed by cement aimed at sealing the well and stopping the flow of oil. According to Rigzone, while this technique is well established in the industry, this will be the first time it is done at a depth of 5,000 feet, which can present unique challenges.

    BP will be an interesting stock to watch this week based on the potential for success. The stock kept falling through last week, showing little expected enthusiasm about this latest repair attempt priced-in.

    Chart

    There’s also a lot of good things happening for BP, despite the horrible situation in the gulf.

    BPs Top Kill Could End The Disastrous Spill Tomorrow 100210banner1

    Rigzone:

    BP brought seven major projects onstream in 2009, including three projects that came online ahead of schedule. In the GOM, BP ramped up production at Thunder Horse to more than 300,000 boe/d. Thunder Horse is now the largest single producing field in the GOM, bumping up GOM production from 240,000 boe/d in 2007 to more than 400,000 boe/d in 2009.BP also started production at Dorado and King South in May 2009, and Atlantis Phase 2 in Q4 2009.

    BP reported two major projects started up in Q1 2010. The major participated in the start-up of Great White in the GOM. The field came online in late March 2010… BP also started production onshore Canada. The Noel project started exporting and selling gas earlier this year.

    Chart

    See the full company-specific analysis for BP at Rigzone here, then check out how the trade is open for both BP and Transocean (RIG) here.

    Keep checking here for updates on how BP’s top kill goes >

    Note: The author does not own securities related to BP or RIG, but investors he speaks or works with may.

    Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/bp-could-end-the-spill-today-2010-5#ixzz0orERyIJS

  • UK plans rapid withdrawal from Afghanistan

    Via Prison Planet.com » World News

    AFP
    May 24, 2010

    Senior British officials, including new Foreign Secretary William Hague, arrived in Afghanistan Saturday with a warning that Britain wants to withdraw its troops as soon as possible.

    Hague, Defense Secretary Liam Fox and International Development Secretary Andrew Mitchell are set to meet President Hamid Karzai in their first visit to the country since a new coalition government took power in London this month.

    Hague described Afghanistan — where around 10,000 British troops are helping fight a Taliban-led insurgency well into its ninth year — as “our most urgent priority” in comments released from London as the party touched down.

    In an interview with The Times newspaper before arriving in Kabul, Fox made clear the visit would focus on speeding up the withdrawal of British troops from Afghanistan, and that no new troops would be deployed.

    Full article here

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  • Rand Is Right

    Via Prison Planet.com » Commentary

    Sound Politics
    May 24, 2010

    When Rand Paul says it is unconstitutional for the federal government to prohibit private businesses from discriminating based on race, he’s right, arguably (which I will get to in a moment).

    But when he says it is not, in this day and age, necessary for government to prevent segregation of private businesses, he’s undeniably right.

    There is no conceivable reality where we’d see such significant racial, sexual, ethnic, religious, or “gender identity” discrimination in this country that would result in rampant segregation or loss of significant opportunities for minorities. It just isn’t rational. Overwhelmingly, the people of this country are aghast at such discriminatory practices, which means businesses overwhelmignly won’t do it, both because businesses are (usually) run by those same people, and because their customers are also those same people.

    To say we need government for this purpose is, quite simply, denying this obvious and unassailable reality of life in America in 2010.

    As to the constitutional question, we can disagree about the legitimacy of it. We cannot disagree, however, that Paul’s view is well-founded in the text and history of the Constitution. My personal view — having been born well after the Civil Rights Act was passed — is that perhaps, at the time, the constitutional right to freedom of association, and the right of states to make their own laws on such matters, were worth bending due to the centuries of government-sponsored institutional discrimination that had left a whole race of people significantly disadvantaged throughout nearly all facets of society.

    I can’t make that judgment one way or another, but I can see the arguments on both sides. Living in 2010 and not in 1964, I lean toward liberty rather than government control, but I can’t judge the 1964 mindset.

    But again, we no longer live in such a time where — government or not — any group of people is significantly disadvantaged due to their race, religion, ethnicity, gender, or “gender identity.” That simply doesn’t exist anymore. That’s not to say discrimination doesn’t happen: of course it does. But no group is significantly disadvantaged because of what little discrimination remains in our society.

    Rand Is Right 100210banner1

    Some people might say “that’s easy for you to say, a middle class protestant white male.” Shrug. I am a conservative Christian in an industry largely controlled by atheists, agnostics, and liberals. I live on the West Coast, which many project to be majority Hispanic within my lifetime, and certainly within the lifetime of my first- and second-generation descendants. If this were about ME ME ME, I’d probably be putting all the protections for ME in place that I could.

    I simply believe in liberty, and that any restrictions on liberty must be backed up by a damned good reason; and that furthermore, when we add or continue restrictions without a damned good reason, we set precedents that endanger other liberties. We see this in the Civil Rights Act itself: we gave up the right to discriminate based on certain categories, and this has justified taking away our right to discriminate based on other things, like — in Washington — “expressions” of “gender identity.” The violations of our liberty in Social Security and Medicare and growing wheat have led to justifying Obama’s health insurance mandate. And so on.

    I won’t insult anyone’s intelligence by trying to prove that the views I am expressing are not racist. Only a moron — like Cokie Roberts, on This Week today — could possibly think these views are racist. George Will, however, is not a moron, but he’s still wrong: on the same program he expressed the view that we reasonably gave up one right (the right to discriminate in some personal affairs) for another (the right to not be discriminated against).

    Setting aside that this doesn’t make much sense on the face of it (taking away my actual right to give someone else a “right” that isn’t an actual right isn’t a reasonable tradeoff), if we think this is reasonable, then it can be used to justify almost any government theft of our rights. Imagine if in 1964 we outlawed “hate speech,” and then Rand Paul in 2010 said we should allow people to say hateful things. Surely we’d have just as many people today complaining about Paul, saying how racist it is for him to suggest such a thing, and how our right to say hateful things was replaced with a right to not have hateful things said about us.

    Then again, to many liberals, hate speech laws are a good thing. This boggles my mind, but so do many things that many of them believe.

    Again, I can’t say whether we were right or wrong in 1964. But certainly it’s wrong now, simply because it is a patently unnecessary restriction on liberty. That said, there’s no point in trying to repeal this particular blue law. It’s not going away any time soon — though we can hope — and for most people, it doesn’t cause us any problems (except for the lucky few who are wrongly prosecuted for false claims of discrimination). That’s why many blue laws stay on the books: most people don’t care enough to try to get rid of them.

  • 2011 Audi A8 to offer factory-installed hotspot for wireless internet

    2011 Audi A8Audi announced today that the 2011 A8 flagship sedan will be the first car in the world to offer an optional factory-installed WLAN hotspot for wireless Internet access.

    This means that passengers will be capable to access the Internet through the car’s integrated WLAN module and via UMTS and use up to eight devices such as laptops, Apple iPads or netbooks. How does it work? It is quite simple, as the driver only needs to insert a a data-capable SIM card into the Bluetooth online car phone. Alternatively, the internet connection can be established via Bluetooth by using a compatible mobile phone with a SIM Access Profile.

    2011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A82011 Audi A8

    Source: Car news, Car reviews, Spy shots

  • Zappos Admits Pricing Mistake Cost It $1.6 Million; But Is Upfront About Taking The Hit Itself

    For many years we’ve seen stories of companies making pricing mistakes at e-commerce stores. The news of those mistakes tends to spread very quickly, with lots of people piling on to order something for way less than it cost. Inevitably, the company realizes the mistake, and usually contacts everyone who ordered to let them know the order won’t be fulfilled because it was a mistake. I actually have no problem with this, though some people think it’s horribly evil. Either way, what seems to almost always happen is that the negative publicity that follows leads the company to change its mind and honor the original price. Sometimes, it actually takes a lawsuit to make that happen.

    However, this weekend, it looks like Zappos had a pretty massive pricing glitch on its sister site 6pm.com. It lasted a few hours. But what’s different this time is that once Zappos fixed things, it immediately decided that it would still honor the wrong prices, even though the mistakes would end up costing the company (now owned by Amazon) $1.6 million. Now, between Amazon and Zappos, the two companies have a ton of money, and continue making a lot of money every day. But, no matter what, a $1.6 million pricing error is still a big deal. Big enough that you would think that the company could potentially withstand any sort of PR hit to trying to not honor those prices (perhaps offering up some sort of gift certificate or benefit to those impacted, instead). However, for a company that bases its entire reputation on bending over backwards to make customers happy, it appears they quickly decided that it was best for their overall reputation to just eat the $1.6 million, and keep (or even boost) that customer service reputation.

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  • Doctor Pays For Blood Samples At Son’s Birthday Party, Is Struck Off The Medical Register

    An MMR doctor has recently been struck off the medical board for what has been called “multiple separate instances of serious professional misconduct”.  Among these instances of misconduct on the part of the then Britain-based doctor included the paying of £5 to children for blood samples at his son’s birthday party.



    Andrew Wakefield, the doctor in question, released a study in 1998 that suggested a link between MMR vaccinations (a vaccination for measles, the mumps, and rubella) and autism.  At the time this had caused a large drop in vaccinations, and likewise a large rise in measles cases.  Later, Wakefield’s results were discredited.  However, a recent case against Wakefield did  not attack the doctor’s results, but rather his research methods.  Furthermore, it has also been rumored that Wakefield concealed the fact that he was paid to advise solicitors on behalf of parents concerned over their children and the MMRs.

    All in all, Wakefield was found guilty of more than 30 charges related to professional misconduct.  According to a  representative of the panel in charge of the sanctioning, “The panel concluded that it is the only sanction that is appropriate to protect patients and is in the wider public interest, including the maintenance of public trust and confidence in the profession, and is proportionate to the serious and wide-ranging findings made against him.”

    Related posts:

    1. Dr. Wakefield Found Guilty Because of Professional Misconduct Over Research
    2. Spanking leads to more aggresive children
    3. Effects of Low Quality Child Care Lasts Into Adolescence

  • First Drive: 2011 Bentley Mulsanne is modern luxury with a strong sense of history

    Filed under: , , , ,

    2011 Bentley Mulsanne – click above for high-res image gallery

    Contrary to what you might expect, successfully keeping tradition alive in the automotive world isn’t just about periodically mining one’s stylistic back catalog or simply refusing to change altogether. To convincingly abide by the spirit of one’s history without running the risk of extinction, or worse – self-parody – requires stealthy innovation, and to do so is a decidedly tricky undertaking.

    Just ask Bentley. The British automaker has a long history of artfully highlighting its considerable heritage, from the exploits of the fabulous Bentley Boys to the timeless craftsmanship employed in its interiors. And despite the upright look of its new flagship, the 2011 Mulsanne, much thought and effort has been exerted into making what is actually a very modern proposition seem… traditional. Accomplishing this in an authentic and timeless manner is particularly important for an automaker like Bentley. Given the rather lengthy model lifecycles that small-volume manufacturers are often forced to adopt, it’s crucial to nail the entire package the first time. Follow the jump to see if they’ve managed the feat.

    Photos by Chris Paukert / Copyright (C)2009 Weblogs, Inc.

    Continue reading First Drive: 2011 Bentley Mulsanne is modern luxury with a strong sense of history

    First Drive: 2011 Bentley Mulsanne is modern luxury with a strong sense of history originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 24 May 2010 11:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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