Category: News

  • Autistic teen says he was beaten and arrested

    Via Prison Planet.com » Prison Planet

    Melanie Ruberti
    WTOC
    May 25, 2010

    A Wilmington Island family is upset, after they say four Tybee Island Police officers beat their autistic son.

    A broken tooth, scrapes and bruises and two puncture marks from Tasers are the only reminders Clifford Grevemberg has of his visit to Tybee Island Friday night.

    “They literally just beat the heck out of me,” he said.

    A beating 18-year-old Clifford and his brother, Dario Mariani, said happened after they left the annual Tybee Beach Bum Parade.

    They say they stopped to get food at the Rockhouse. Clifford is 18, but couldn’t go inside. Instead he sat on the curb. That’s when he said the trouble started.

    Autistic teen says he was beaten and arrested 150410banner7

  • The U.K. Will Be Crushed By A Deflationary Trap Worse Than Japan’s

    Sky Dive

    Roubini is predicting a British pound collapse caused by rampant U.K. inflation, and inflation is soaring right now.

    It’s all a head-fake, if Adam Posen of the U.K.’s Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee is right.

    He’s broadly bearish sort of like Roubini, but he actually expects the U.K. to fall into a deflationary trap similar to what befell Japan.

    Yet this ‘remake’ will be worse since the U.K. lacks many of Japan’s previous advantages.

    Telegraph:

    “The UK worryingly combines a couple of financial parallels to Japan with far less room for fiscal action to compensate for them than Japan had.”

    Britain faces an uncomfortable trio of obstacles, none of which faced Japan in the 1980s or 1990s. Unlike Japan, Britain has to sell a large proportion of its debt to overseas investors, who are more likely to exit the market if they become scared of Britain’s fiscal prospects. The UK also faces the challenge of having to boost a troubled manufacturing sector if it is to recover sufficiently. Unlike Japan, it does not have the luxury of having a worldwide market with a large and growing appetite for exports.

    Read more here >

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • BitTorrent Open-Sources µTP Hoping to Spur Adoption

    BitTorrent, as a technology, has a stigma about it, but it certainly transformed Internet traffic for the past years and plenty of companies and projects have been using it for more efficient distribution of large amounts of data. With the release of uTorrent 2.0, a lightweight BitTorrent client owned by BitTorrent Inc., the company, a new prot… (read more)

  • Tila Tequila Addicted To Prescription Painkillers: “I Don’t Want To Be Another Lindsay Lohan!”

    Tila Tequila is finally getting help the only way she knows how -– by going on a reality TV show.

    The trainwreck attention-seeker/compulsive fibber has signed up for the next season of VH1’s Celebrity Rehab, a fly-on-the-wall reality series that follows D to Z-grade “celebrities” on their path to recovery in a drug and alcohol rehabilitation clinic.

    We thought her only addiction was to attention (and she’s obviously not seeking treatment for that), but Tila claims she’s become dependent on prescription drugs in the months since the death of her fiancee Casey Johnson — who died of complications from diabetes last December.

    Tila — who previously starred on the MTV reality dating hit A Shot At Love — hopes that if she stays sober, VH1 will offer her a spinoff show about her new life.

    “I KNOW I am an EXTREMELY smart girl, and to run all these empires when I am not even 30 yet, is quite an accomplishment, however I finally admitted to myself that I cannot rely on taking prescription pills everyday for the rest of my life!” the former MySpace pin-up blogged on Monday. “I MUST not be another LINDSAY LOHAN where I just flush everything I worked so hard for down the toilet for nothing…”


  • Blog Post:The Chilling Facts

    I just about fell out of my chair when I heard about a new trend in using alternative or green sources of energy for data center cooling. Apparently, the good folks at HP recently released a research paper on the use of cattle waste as a source of power for cooling data centers.  No, seriously. The NY Times ran a story about the research paper and said that  “according to HP’s calculations, 10,000 cows could fuel a one-megawatt data center which would be the equivalent of a small computing center used by a bank.”

    Moo! A bit of fun with CFD and FloEFD. Image courtesy of Mentor Graphics.

    Moo! A bit of CFD fun with FloEFD. Image courtesy of Mentor Graphics.

    Now I don’t know if anyone is seriously thinking about using biogas at this stage but I do know that data center cooling is a hot (pardon the pun) topic. Up until a few years ago, data center cooling costs were not something organizations worried about. The cost was rolled up under facilities and as long as the data center got enough power and cooling no one really fussed about the cost. But then the cost of buying electricity shot up drastically and the rules of the game changed. As a result, IT managers realized that they needed to do something a bit more sophisticated than “shirt-sleeve” management.

    There are a lot of resources out there about why simulation can help IT managers rein in the challenge of data center cooling – for example, we’ve got a couple of on-demand presentations titled: CFD in the Data Center: It’s Not About the Hall and Learn How to Reduce your Data Center Running Costs. But if you’re interested in learning about how an organization has successfully leveraged simulation (and all the gory details) please join us for an upcoming presentation titled: The Chilling Facts in Data Center Design. The presentation will take place on June 16 and you can sign-up for it here. Now I know most of you are mechanical design engineers who don’t deal with data centers so I’d appreciate it if you were to spread the word about the presentation to your IT departments. Anyway, our guest presenter for this session is Stuart Walker who is the Worldwide Facilities Critical Infrastructure Manager at Mentor Graphics. Stuart (who is an IT guy as opposed to a CFD specialist), will give us all a behind-the-scenes look at how Mentor Graphics manages our data centers around the world. Having met Stuart in person recently, I have a new appreciation for what IT managers in a similar role do across the world. Besides, this is a great chance to meet with someone who not only understands the pains associated with managing data centers but can also share firsthand knowledge of how simulation has made his life a bit easier. I really hope you can join us — it’s going to be a good session.

    Until next time,
    Nazita

  • Fridge Creation: Cha Soba Noodles With Mango Apple Sausage and Garlic Shrimp

     
    Soba_sausageshrimp

    The other day I was feeling too lazy to leave the house, so it was one of those, “What can I make for dinner with whatever is in the fridge?”

    Cha-soba Fortunately, when mom and dad were here last month we did a Costco run and in the freezer I had a bazillion shrimp and mango chicken sausages. Okay, well not a bazillion, but when you buy stuff at Costco for one, the amount of food you get can feel ginormous. I’ll probably be eating that frozen shrimp until the end of the year.

    A shrimp scampi was sounding pretty good, and when I looked in the pantry, I didn’t have any pasta, but I had a package of organic Cha soba noodles infused with fresh green tea leaves. My friend @bmok likes to, what he calls, “bastardize” culinary traditions by combining things you’d not normally see but just might be good together.

    As you know, I’m totally into experimenting with ingredients, so I thought, why not make a scampi using soba noodles instead of a fettuccine, and then using the mango chicken sausage instead of bacon? I like to use bacon in my scampi dishes. It’s like East meets suburban Italian. Talk about melting pot ay!

    #triedsomethingnew_red2 I’m so glad I got creative because this dish was awesome, so this week it becomes my, “I tried something new” eats. Best yet, my concoction was easy to make!

    I used olive oil in this recipe instead of butter because I have the cow milk allergy. If I didn’t have the allergy, I’d totally be using slabs of creamy butter. I also use shaved manchego cheese because it’s made from sheep milk which I can eat and have recently become addicted to as seen in this golden beets with shaved manchego and pecans dish I made last week. If I could have cow, I’d try shaved asiago or gouda.

    Ingredients (serves 2):

    • 2 cups cooked soba noodles 
    • 12 large frozen pre-cooked shrimp (thawed)
    • 1 mango chicken sausage sliced into thin pieces
    • 4 cloves of diced garlic (use more if you want more garlicky taste)
    • fresh manchego cheese to shave on top
    • 3 tbsp olive oil
    • garlic salt and black pepper

    Let’s get cooking:

    • Cook the soba noodles according to the package, drain and set aside.
    • In a sauce pan, pour in 1 tbsp of olive oil, heat to medium, and then fry the mango sausage until brown on both sides. I fried the sausage slightly not too much just to give it a bit of a crunchy bacon like experience.
    • Add in the remaining 2 tbsp of olive oil into the pan, along with the garlic. Saute the garlic with the sausage for about a minute. I like the amount of olive oil on the dry side to help reduce fat content, but if you want a bit more of a wet scampi, then add one more tbsp of olive oil.
    • Toss in the shrimp and add in garlic salt and pepper to taste. I added just a tad bit more salt then I normally add because when you mix everything with the noodles the salt taste will calm down some. You can also wait until you mix the shrimp, sausage mixture with the noodles first, then taste, and determine if you need more salt or not. Better to start salt light than with too much.
    • You won’t need to cook the shrimp long because it’s already cooked. You just want to heat it up like a couple minutes. Continue to stir the sausage, shrimp, and garlic while cooking the shrimp.
    • Take the pan of the hot burner and put on a cool burner. Pour the soba noodles into the pan with the sausage, shrimp, and garlic. Mix everything well together.

    Plate the scampi, and then shave fresh manchego cheese on top. Enjoy!


  • Wegman’s Uses Green Fuel Cell Powered Pallet Trucks

    fuel cell powered forklift

    " … Wegmans, a supermarket chain … launched a fleet of 50 hydrogen fuel cell-powered pallet trucks using Air Products’ (NYSE: APD) … technology at its Pottsville, Pa. warehouse … the first commercial site in Pennsylvania … using hydrogen-powered material handling equipment."

    " … environmental benefits … Because hydrogen is the fuel source, heat and water are the only byproducts.  …"

    " …systems can be quickly refueled in less than five minutes, … Wegmans hopes to convert its entire lift truck fleet at the Pottsville facility to hydrogen fuel cells over the next few years. …"

    "… fuel cell-powered equipment provides consistent power strength during use and does not experience decreased performance or wear down as traditional lead-acid battery units do … fuel cell forklifts are not adversely impacted by temperature or by operating in coolers and freezers, … fuel cell equipment is more environmentally friendly because it does not involve lead-acid battery storage and disposal issues."

    Via:  Air Products and Chemicals  LINK

  • Arctic Sea Ice Decline Ahead of Record






    I threw in the link to a map and comparison map.  Everything is in place for the 2007 levels to be met although wind is supposed to have a lot to do with it all.
    The reality is that we have been and continuing to lose roughly the same amount of ice each year.  Because so much has now been destroyed the impact of each year is rapidly accelerating.
    I predicted now almost three years ago that the loss rate strongly supported a general wipe out by 2012.  I even made a bit of noise about it.  A couple of months later, someone over at NASA came out and said the same thing.  I suspected that they already knew as much and did not want to get caught out looking like idiots in four years.
    I actually predicted the present deteriation long before it became apparent that 2007 was going to be decisive year in ice loss.
    This story informs us just now rotten the ice presently is and just how little this winter’s weather affected the Arctic.
    My only surprise is over how few among the media or anyone else even understands what is happening.  Recall every scientist was calling for a loss of ice safely in the distant future and generally well outside the likely time lines of their career.   It was apparent that no one appreciated the trend lines except in the most simplistic terms conforming to linear assumptions in a clearly non linear process.
    At this point their worst expectations are turning out to be ridiculously conservative and obviously misleading.  The Arctic is opening up to global shipping and will now be open for perhaps four hundred years.
    I am been aggressive on this and my reasons are sound.  The warming that is hitting into the Arctic is ocean based and is part of a millennial cycle.  It will actually get much warmer before this is all done.
    Arctic sea ice heading for new record low
    Coverage at 2007 level now, and declining faster, making ice-free northern summers possible soon
           
    Bob Weber
    The Canadian PressPublished on Thursday, May. 20, 2010
    Arctic sea ice is on track to recede to a record low this year, suggesting that northern waters free of summer ice are coming faster than anyone thought.
    The latest satellite information shows ice coverage is equal to what it was in 2007, the lowest year on record, and is declining faster than it did that year.
    “Could we break another record this year? I think it’s quite possible,” said Mark Serreze of the National Snow and Ice Data Center in Boulder, Colo.
    “We are going to lose the summer sea-ice cover. We can’t go back.”
    In April, the centre published data showing that sea ice had almost recovered to the 20-year average. That ignited a flurry of interest on climate change skeptic blogs.
    But much of that ice was thin and new. The warmest April on record in the Arctic made short work of it.
    Ice cover has already fallen back to where it was in 2007 at this time of year and is disappearing at a faster pace than it did then. Dr. Serreze said winds, cloud cover or other weather conditions could slow the melt, but he points out that the decline is likely to speed up even more in June and July.
    “Will [thawing] this year be particularly fast?” he asked. “We don’t know. We really don’t know.”
    One of Canada‘s top sea-ice experts suggests things might even be worse than Dr. Serreze thinks. His data could be underestimating the collapse of summer ice cover, said David Barber of the University of Manitoba. Researchers can’t learn anything from satellite data about the state or thickness of the ice.
    “What we think is thick multiyear ice late in the summer is in fact not,” he said. “It’s heavily decayed first-year ice. When that stuff starts to reform in the fall, we think it’s multiyear ice, but it’s not.”
    Arctic explorers and scientific expeditions are finding more open water and untrustworthy ice ever, Prof. Barber said.
    He pointed out the Arctic continued to lose multiyear ice even in 2008 and 2009, when total ice coverage rebounded somewhat.
    True multiyear ice – the thick, hard stuff that stops ships – now comprises about 18 per cent of the Arctic ice pack. In 1981, when Prof. Barber first went north, that figure was 90 per cent.
    “This is all just part of a trajectory moving toward a seasonally ice-free Arctic,” he said. “That’s happening more quickly than we thought it would happen.”
    Once northern waters are clear in the summer, there will be little difference between navigating the Northwest Passage and the Gulf of St. Lawrence, he suggested.
    He recounts sailing through degraded ice in an icebreaker. The ship’s top speed in open water was 13.7 knots. Its speed through the decayed ice was 13 knots.
  • Taking Back the Money Power






    Like Ellen, I support this approach completely.  This maps out a lot of the fine detail and she is well into that in her own research.  This supports current initiatives in this direction in several States.
    The need to redistribute the powers of banking away from Wall Street could hardly be more apparent.  California today must go begging to New York to salvage a banking system and credit system ravaged by decisions made in New York.
    Even with a newly launched State bank, California will still be a long ways from been out of the woods.  Yet the tools and the reshaped political ecology brought about by such a change will shift momentum in the right direction.
    In fact, the capacity of the governor to influence the economy will be hugely strengthened for the better.
    Importantly, all stakeholders will face transparency regarding the decisions they influence and get direct feedback from other stakeholders.  This can only be healthy.
    Taking Back the Money Power: How Hidden Pools of Government Money Could Help Save the Economy
    By Ellen Brown
    For over a decade, accountant Walter Burien has been trying to rouse the public over what he contends is a massive conspiracy and cover-up, involving trillions of dollars squirreled away in funds maintained at every level of  government.  His numbers may be disputed, but these funds definitely exist, as evidenced by the Comprehensive Annual Financial Reports (CAFRs) required of every government agency.  If they don’t represent a concerted government conspiracy, what are they for?  And how can they be harnessed more efficiently to help allay the financial crises of state and local governments? 
    The Elusive CAFR Money
    Burien is a former commodity trading adviser who has spent many years peering into government books.  He notes that the government is composed of 54,000 different state, county, and local government entities, including school districts, public authorities, and the like; and that these entities all keep their financial assets in liquid investment funds, bond financing accounts and corporate stock portfolios. The only income that must be reported in government budgets is that from taxes, fines and fees; but the investments of government entities can be found in official annual reports (CAFRs), which must be filed with the federal government by local, county and state governments.  These annual reports show that virtually every U.S. city, county, and state has vast amounts of money stashed away in surplus funds.  Burien maintains that these slush funds have been kept concealed from taxpayers, even as taxes are being raised and citizens are being told to expect fewer government services. 
       
    Burien was originally alerted to this information by Lt. Col. Gerald Klatt, who evidently died in 2004 under mysterious circumstances, adding fuel to claims of conspiracy and cover-up.  Klatt was a an Air Force auditor and federal accountant, and it’s not impossible that he may have gotten too close to some military stash being used for nefarious ends.  But it is hard to envision how all the municipal governments hording their excess money in separate funds could be complicit in a massive government conspiracy.  Still, if that is not what is going on, why such an inefficient use of public monies?
    A Simpler Explanation
    I got a chance to ask that question in April, when I was invited to speak at a conference of Government Finance Officers in Missouri.  The friendly public servants at the conference explained that maintaining large “rainy day” funds is simply how local governments must operate.  Unlike private businesses, which have bank credit lines they can draw on if they miscalculate their expenses, local governments are required by law to balance their budgets; and if they come up short, public services and government payrolls may be frozen until the voters get around to approving a new bond issue.  This has actually happened, bringing local government to a standstill.  In emergencies, government officials can try to borrow short-term through “certificates of participation” or tax participation loans, but the interest rates are prohibitively high; and in today’s tight credit market, finding willing lenders is difficult. 
    To avoid those unpredictable contingencies, municipal governments will keep a cushion of from 20%  to 75% more than their budgets actually require.  This money is invested, but not necessarily lucratively.  One finance officer, for example, said that her city had just bid out $2 million as a 30-day certificate of deposit (CD) to two large banks at a meager annual interest of 0.11%.  It was a nice spread for the banks, which could leverage the money into loans at 6% or so; but it was a pretty sparse deal for the city.  
    Meanwhile, Back in California
    That was in Missouri, but the figures I was particularly interested were for my own state of California, which was struggling with a budget deficit of $26.3 billion as of April 2010.  Yet the State Treasurer’s website says that he manages a Pooled Money Investment Account (PMIA) tallying in at nearly $71 billion as of the same date, including a Local Agency Investment Fund (LAIF) of $24 billion.  Why isn’t this money being used toward the state’s deficit?  The Treasurer’s answer to this question, which he evidently gets frequently, is that legislation forbids it.  His website states:
    “Can the State borrow LAIF dollars to resolve the budget deficit?
    “No. California Government Code 16429.3 states that monies placed with the Treasurer for deposit in the LAIF by cities, counties, special districts, nonprofit corporations, or qualified quasi-governmental agencies shall not be subject to either of the following:

    “(a) Transfer or loan pursuant to Sections 16310, 16312, or 16313.
    “(b) Impoundment or seizure by any state official or state agency.”
    The non-LAIF money in the pool can’t be spent either.  It can be borrowed, but it has to be paid back.  When Governor Schwarzenegger tried to raid the Public Transportation Account for the state budget, the California Transit Association took him to court and won.  The Third District Court of Appeals ruled in June 2009 that diversions from the Public Transportation Account to fill non-transit holes in the General Fund violated a series of statutory and constitutional amendments enacted by voters via four statewide initiatives dating back to 1990. 
    In short, the use of these funds for the state budget has been blocked by the voters themselves.  Bond issues are approved for particular purposes.  When excess funds are collected, they are not handed over to the State toward next year’s budget.  They just sit idly in an earmarked fund, drawing a modest interest.
    What’s Wrong with This Picture?
    California’s budget problems have caused its credit rating to be downgraded to just above that of Greece, driving the state’s interest tab skyward.  In November 2009, the state sold 30-year taxable securities carrying an interest rate of 7.26%.  Yet California has never defaulted on its bonds.  Meanwhile, the too-big-to-fail banks, which would have defaulted on hundreds of billions of dollars of debt if they had not been bailed out by the states and their citizens, are able to borrow from each other at the extremely low federal funds rate, currently set at 0 to .25% (one quarter of one percent).  The banks are also paying the states quite minimal rates for the use of their public monies, and turning around and relending this money, leveraged many times over, to the states and their citizens at much higher rates.  That is assuming they lend at all, something they are increasingly reluctant to do, since speculating with the money is more lucrative, and investing it in federal securities is more secure. 
    Private banks clearly have the upper hand in this game.  Local governments have been forced to horde funds in very inefficient ways, building excessive reserves while slashing services, because they do not have the extensive credit lines available to the private banking system.  States cannot easily incur new debt without voter approval, a process that is cumbersome, time-consuming and uncertain.  Banks, on the other hand, need to keep only the slimmest of reserves, because they are backstopped by a central bank with the power to create all the reserves necessary for its member banks, as well as by Congress and the taxpayers themselves, who have been arm-twisted into repeated bailouts of the Wall Street behemoths.
    How the CAFR Money Could Be Used Without Spending It
    California, then, is in the anomalous position of being $26 billion in the red and plunging toward bankruptcy, while it has over $70 billion stashed away in an investment pool that it cannot touch.  Those are just the funds managed by the Treasurer.  According to California’s latest CAFR, the California Public Employees’ Retirement Fund (CalPERS) has total investments of $360 billion, including nearly $144 billion in “equity securities” and $37 billion in “private equity.”  See the State of California Comprehensive Annual Financial Report for the Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 2009, pages 83-84.
       
    This money cannot be spent, but it can be invested — and it can be invested not just in conservative federal securities but in equity, or stocks.  Rather than turning this hidden gold mine over to Wall Street banks to earn a very meager interest, California could leverage its excess funds itself, turning the money into much-needed low-interest credit for its own use.  How?  It could do this by owning its own bank.  
    Only one state currently does this — North Dakota.  North Dakota is also the only state projected to have a budget surplus by 2011.  It has not fallen into the Wall Street debt trap afflicting other states, because it has been able to generate its own credit
    through its own state-owned Bank of North Dakota (BND). 
    An investment in the State Bank of California would not be at risk unless the bank became insolvent, a highly unlikely result since the state has the power to tax.  In North Dakota, the BND is a dba of the state itself: it is set up as “the State of North Dakota doing business as the Bank of North Dakota.”  That means the bank cannot go bankrupt unless the state goes bankrupt. 
    The capital requirement for bank loans is a complicated matter, but it generally works out to be about 7%.  (According to Standard & Poor’s, the worldwide average risk-adjusted capital ratio stood at 6.7 per cent as of June 30, 2009; but for some major U.S. banks it was much lower: Citigroup’s was 2.1 per cent; Bank of America’s was 5.8 per cent.)  At 7%, $7 of capital can back $100 in loans.  Thus if $7 billion in CAFR funds were invested as capital in a California state development bank, the bank could generate $100 billion in loans. 
    This $100 billion credit line would allow California to finance its $26 billion deficit at very minimal interest rates, with $74 billion left over for infrastructure and other sorely needed projects.  Studies have shown that eliminating the interest burden can cut the cost of public projects in half.  The loans could be repaid from the profits generated by the projects themselves.  Public transportation, low-cost housing, alternative energy sources and the like all generate fees.  Meanwhile, the jobs created by these projects would produce additional taxes and stimulate the economy.  Commercial loans could also be made, generating interest income that would return to state coffers.
    Building a Deposit Base
    To start a bank requires not just capital but deposits.  Banks can create all the loans they can find creditworthy borrowers for, up to the limit of their capital base; but when the loans leave the bank as checks, the bank needs to replace the deposits taken from its reserve pool in order for the checks to clear.  Where would a state-owned bank get the deposits necessary for this purpose? 
    In North Dakota, all the state’s revenues are deposited in the BND by law.  Compare California, which has expected revenues for 2010-11 of $89 billion.  The Treasurer’s website reports that as of June 30, 2009, the state held over $18 billion on deposit as demand accounts and demand NOW accounts (basically demand accounts carrying a very small interest).  These deposits were held in seven commercial banks, most of them Wall Street banks: Bank of America, Union Bank, Bank of the West, U.S. Bank, Wells Fargo Bank, Westamerica Bank, and Citibank.  Besides these deposits, the $64 billion or so left in the Treasurer’s investment pool could be invested in State Bank of California CDs.  Again, most of the bank CDs in which these funds are now invested are Wall Street or foreign banks.  Many private depositors would no doubt choose to bank at the State Bank of California as well, keeping California’s money in California.  There is already a movement afoot to transfer funds out of Wall Street banks into local banks.   
    While the new state-owned bank is waiting to accumulate sufficient deposits to clear its outgoing checks, it can do what other startup banks do – borrow deposits from the interbank lending market at the very modest federal funds rate (0 to .25%). 
    To avoid hurting California’s local banks, any state monies held on deposit with local banks could remain there, since the State Bank of California should have plenty of potential deposits without these funds.  In North Dakota, local banks are not only not threatened by the BND but are actually served by it, since the BND partners with them, engaging in “participation loans” that help local banks with their capital requirements.
    Taking Back the Money Power
    We have too long delegated the power to create our money and our credit to private profiteers, who have plundered and exploited the privilege in ways that are increasingly being exposed in the media.  Wall Street may own Congress, but it does not yet own the states.  We can take the money power back at the state level, by setting up our own publicly-owned banks.  We can “spend” our money while conserving it, by leveraging it into the credit urgently needed to get the wheels of local production turning once again. 
    Ellen Brown developed her research skills as an attorney practicing civil litigation in Los Angeles. In Web of Debt, her latest of eleven books, she turns those skills to an analysis of the Federal Reserve and “the money trust.” She shows how this private cartel has usurped the power to create money from the people themselves, and how we the people can get it back. Her websites arewww.webofdebt.comwww.ellenbrown.com, and www.public-banking.com.
    Thanks to Carl Herman for discovering the CalPERS figures.
  • Rid The Internet of All Mentions of Justin Bieber, With A Firefox Add-On [Firefox Add-Ons]

    You just have to look at Twitter’s trending topics to see that the world has gone Justin Bieber-mad. I say world, I mean tweens and teens—who seem to be populating all channels with their underage spam. More »










    Add-onMozilla FirefoxTwitterFirefoxBrowsers

  • How Long Does The Average Marriage Last?

    The average length of a marriage has been steadily falling over the last twenty years. In 1980 couples could expect to be married for an average of 37 years; today the figure is just 24 years.

    Similarly, divorce rates have been climbing drastically. The UK now has one of the highest divorce rates in Europe, with two in five marriages not standing the test of time. Despite this, however, marriage is still by far the most popular choice amongst the British population: 95% of women and 90% of men will be married by the age of 50.

    Although the number of divorces continues to rise, the reasons seem to remain fairly steady. The primary reason given for the break-up of a marriage is an extra-marital affair, although last year’s figures from a survey of UK marital lawyers showed that family strains and abuse, both mental and physical, have risen drastically as the reason cited.

  • GM and its Chinese partners are expanding their minivan and pickup truck venture

    2010 Cadillac Escalade PickupThere are plans to expand the minivan and pickup truck segment of SAIC-GM-Wuling, boosting capacity by almost 50% by the end of 2012.

    SAIC-GM-Wuling, a tie-up between General Motors and Chinese partners (SAIC Motor Corp. and Liuzhou Wuling Automobile), revealed in a statement that this plan will add capacity of 210,000 units to an existing facility in the southern city of Liuzhou, which can produce 590,000 units each year. According further to the statement, expansion of the venture’s facility in the eastern city of Qingdao will begin very soon, raising the designed capacity from the current 300,000 units to 510,000 units by 2012. For now, the Chevrolet Spark is the only car made by the SAIC-GM-Wuling, which mainly produces Wuling-brand minivans and pickups. Yang Jie, general manager of the venture’s sales arm, said that the venture will soon announce plans to expand its portfolio to include a bigger sedan.

    [via autonews – sub. required]

    Source: Car news, Car reviews, Spy shots

  • GP de Turquía 2010, agenda del evento

    Una semana más, vuelve toda la emoción de la competición en la Fórmula 1. Este próximo fin de semana, toda la atención estará centrada en el GP de Turquía 2010. La carrera que tendrá lugar en el circuito de Istambul Park podrá poner un punto de inflexión al campeonato ya que todas las escuderías presentarán una gran cantidad de novedades, además, los tres lideres del campeonato sólo tienen 3 puntos de diferencia asi que los nervios y emoción estarán asegurados.

    Por otra parte, esta parada del campeonato esta caracterizada por la escasa asistencia del público, lo cual no resta importancia a este gran premio. Como siempre, os dejo con la programación del evento que podremos ver por televisión y en caso de que no vuelva a ocurrir ningún problema (crucemos los dedos) en directo desde VelocidadLímite:

    Viernes, 28 de Mayo

    • 09.00 h. Entrenamientos libres 1
    • 13.00 h. Entrenamientos libres 2

    Sábado, 29 de Mayo

    • 10.00 h. Entrenamientos libres 3
    • 13.00 h. Sesión de clasificación

    Domingo, 30 de Mayo

    • 12.30 h. Previo
    • 14.00 h. Carrera GP de Turquía

    Related posts:

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  • Aussie Dollar Setting Up For A Fresh Dive

    The Australian dollar has been falling over the last few hours, but now just hit a new air-pocket:

    Chart

    On a longer-term chart, it looks as if it’s just cratering. It probably has something to do with the fact that the futures market is predicting an interest rate cut, despite the fact that Australia led the global rate-hike cycle since last year.

    Chart

    (Charts via Finviz)

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Honda is on track losing U.S. market share, says sales boss John Mendel

    2010 Honda Civic HybridHonda was expected to benefit from the troubles that Toyota had been getting into lately. But instead, Honda has lost market share while those that had gained include Ford, Chevrolet, Nissan and Hyundai.

    Honda’s executives in Japan are understandably bothered by this but American Honda sales boss John Mendel says that he isn’t excessively worried. Mendel cited that American Honda, which includes Acura, has kept its retail share in 2010 and has actually been steadily climbing. Mendel asserted that Honda won’t revise its conservative strategy for the opportunity to widen its market share. Continued after the jump!

    He explained that the share increases are correlated to “events where people count on Honda,” which he believes is considered by its consumers as a “safe harbor.” R.L. Polk’s figures indicate that American Honda retail share, including Acura, has been increasing marginally in February and March.

    But Mendel clarified that these numbers only refer to segments where Honda competes while segments such as full-sized pickups and SUVs are excluded. Actually, TrueCar of Santa Monica, Calif., found that American Honda’s retail share held steady in March when all segments were taken into account. Nevertheless, the plunge in overall market share is alarming.

    From 9.9%, the Honda brand fell in the first four months of 2009 to 9.4% this year. The 2010 figures show a sharp increase in many carmakers’ fleet sales, a segment that Honda doesn’t participate in. Cross-shopping information gathered by TrueCar and Compete Automotive indicate that Ford, Hyundai and Kia all performed better than Honda at attracting Toyota’s customers.

    [via autonews – sub. required]

    Source: Car news, Car reviews, Spy shots

  • Google Launches New Course-Scheduling System

    Last week was a big one for Google fans in higher education. Google Wave opened its doors, and Google Voice now lets students get calls forwarded from their old numbers to their new phones.

    Google made one more announcement last week—about a new course-scheduling system, CloudCourse—that could potentially have implications for higher education.  CloudCourse is integrated with Google Calendar and allows users to schedule classes, look up user profiles, and sync the service’s data with internal university systems. CloudCourse was built entirely on Google’s App Engine, which allows users to build and host Web apps. Google hopes that CloudCourse can serve as an example of how to use the App Engine.

    [Source: Chronicle of Higher Education]

  • The CW “Hellcats” Trailer

    High School Musical alum Ashley Tisdale has joined the cast of the forthcoming CW pilot Hellcats in the role of a fiesty cheerleader.

    The project centers on Marti (Aly Michalka), a college girl from the wrong side of the tracks who, after losing her scholarship because of budget cutbacks and her childlike mother (Gail O’Grady), joins the Hellcats, the college’s competitive cheerleading team. Ashley will play Sierra, captain of the Hellcats.

    Hellcats premieres on The CW this fall.


  • General Ocean Warming Confirmed

    There is nothing more wonderful in science than data that is creditable.  This confirms that over the past two decades or so, that the ocean is storing more heat that breakeven.  It does not tell us why and it could have more to do with a switch over in the global current system than say the sun itself which is not obviously warmer.
    Of course we merely may not be able to measure the obvious.  All I know for sure is that any given hypothesis has its champions and detractors and no consensus exists.
    Obviously if there is simply more heat been stored in the ocean perhaps reflecting a slower movement rate for some obscure reason or perhaps a lower volume rate, then an obvious consequence is a larger injection of warmer water into the Arctic and we have at least clarified what is going on there.
    Since the bronze age found surface temperatures in the Atlantic as much as two degrees warmer we also know that this process is unlikely to be temporary.
    So why is the ocean warming?  Or perhaps more accurately, why is more sunlight been absorbed than what we have previously understood or have we have we simply missed important information?
    Perhaps the Antarctic is presently not consuming as much heat as in the past.  That is the mechanism that I think able to make the necessary shifts we have been seeing.  If the Antarctic simply does not draw warm surface water in or alternately not push a lot of cold water out then we have the necessary influence that could shift over the centuries and act like a switch by abruptly dumping a lot of deep cold water into the rest of the ocean once every thousand years or so.
    Yet present warming appears to be reflecting a strengthening that is superior to what has preceded it.  Since we know that a two degree is in fact possible in the north Atlantic this is evidence conforming to a restoration of the warm climate of the known warm eras.
    Integrating it all is still some ways off.
    New Study Finds Ocean Warmed Significantly Since 1993
    The international science team analyzed nine different estimates of heat content in the upper ocean, based on ocean temperature data from a global array of more than 3,200 Argo free-floating profiling floats and longer data records from expendable bathythermographs dropped from ships. Image credit: International Argo Project
    by Staff Writers

    Washington DC (SPX) May 21, 2010

    The upper layer of Earth’s ocean has warmed since 1993, indicating a strong climatechange signal, according to a new international study co-authored by oceanographer Josh Willis of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. The energy stored is enough to power nearly 500 100-watt light bulbs for each of the roughly 6.7 billion people on the planet.

    “We are seeing the global ocean store more heat than it gives off,” said John Lyman, an oceanographer at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Joint Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Research, who led the study that analyzed nine different estimates of heat content in the upper ocean from 1993 to 2008.

    The team combined the estimates to assess the size and certainty of growing heat storage in the ocean. Their findings will be published in the May 20 edition of the journal Nature. The scientists are from NASA, NOAA, the Met Office Hadley Centre in the United Kingdom, the University of Hamburg in Germany and the Meteorological Research Institute in Japan.

    “The ocean is the biggest reservoir for heat in the climate system,” said Willis. “So as the planet warms, we’re finding that 80 to 90 percent of the increased heat ends up in the ocean.”

    A warming ocean is a direct cause of global sea level rise, since seawater expands and takes up more space as it heats up. The scientists say that this expansion accounts for about one-third to one-half of global sea level rise.

    Combining multiple estimates of heat in the upper ocean – from the surface to about 610 meters (2,000 feet) down – the team found a strong multi-year warming trend throughout the world’s ocean.

    According to measurements by an array of autonomous free-floating ocean floats called Argo, as well as by earlier devices called expendable bathythermographs, or XBTs, that were dropped from ships to obtain temperature data, ocean heat content has increased over the last 16 years.

    The team notes that there are still some uncertainties and some biases.

    “The XBT data give us vital information about past changes in the ocean, but they are not as accurate as the more recent Argo data,” said Gregory Johnson, an oceanographer at NOAA’s Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory. “However, our analysis of these data gives us confidence that on average, the ocean has warmed over the past decade and a half, signaling a climate imbalance.”

    Data from the array of Argo floats – deployed by NOAA and other U.S. and international partners – greatly reduce the uncertainties in estimates of ocean heat content over the past several years, the team said. There are now more than 3,200 Argo floats distributed throughout the world’s ocean sending back information via satellite on temperature, salinity, currents and other ocean properties.
  • AWCollector.com: The ultimate Web site for enthusiasts and their dreams:

    Have you been to AW’s newest Web site? It’s called AWCollector.com, and it’s the best source of classic-car news, auction information and vintage lifestyle events on the Web.

    Going to a concours? Go to our site first to see the best cars. Going to an auction? We’ll have info on what you might want to buy.

    And of course, many of your favorite features from the popular CarLife section of AW are also available at AWCollector.com.

    Simply click here to start your classic-car experience: www.autoweek.com/section/collector

    For more


    1962 Ferrari 250 GT SWB Berlinetta

    Source: Car news, reviews and auto show stories