Category: News

  • Blumenthal in the Nixon White House

    As the New York Times has reported, Connecticut Attorney General and Senate candidate Richard Blumenthal remained stateside during the Vietnam War thanks to five deferments he obtained, the last of which enabled him to take a job in the Nixon White House.

    During research for my book The Strong Man: John Mitchell and the Secrets of Watergate (Doubleday 2008), I uncovered some documents that showed Blumenthal, then a staff lawyer for Daniel Patrick Moynihan, a key domestic policy adviser to the president, had aroused the suspicions of Attorney General Mitchell.

    The year was 1969, and the country was wracked by divisions over the war.  A massive march on Washington was held over the long weekend of November 13-16.  The organizing group, the New Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam, or “New Mobe,” rallied upwards of 250,000 people to descend on the nation’s capital — then a record-shattering turnout for the first major antiwar protest against the Nixon administration.

    Despite pledges of nonviolence by New Mobe leaders, an ad hoc committee of Justice Department, Pentagon, and D.C. police officials reckoned otherwise.  “The potential for violence, with resulting injuries and possible deaths, as well as damage to real and personal property…is extremely high,” concluded the group’s internal report.

    Against this backdrop of political tension and the prospect of violence by radical groups — indeed, the Justice Department was attacked over the weekend, with windows smashed and the building defaced, amid plumes of tear gas unleashed by police — Attorney General Mitchell came to believe that the youthful Blumenthal, who was deputized to serve as a liaison to the New Mobe, was actually “taking orders” from Mobe leaders, “and in turn directing the District Police to do [the group’s bidding].”

    That was how Moynihan summarized Mitchell’s views to top Nixon aide John Ehrlichman, the declassified documents show.  Upon orders from the attorney general, Ehrlichman staffer Egil Krogh — later infamous as the head of the Plumbers, the covert group that conceived and executed the break-ins at the offices of Daniel Ellsberg’s psychiatrist and the Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Watergate complex — called Blumenthal on the telephone with stern orders.  Krogh instructed him to withdraw from all contact with the demonstrators; Blumenthal complied.

    The incident upset Moynihan, who complained to Ehrlichman that Attorney General Mitchell was “mistaken” about the young attorney.  “Dick was not taking orders from anyone, nor giving them to anyone,” Moynihan told Ehrlichman in a November 25, 1969 memorandum, previously unpublished.  “He was merely passing on to the mayor and deputy mayor information they requested he obtain.  This is at least Dick’s story, and I believe it….The trouble is that now, as last February, when the Washington Post began reporting a great (and non-existent) rift between me and Mitchell…the attorney general just seems to assume Blumenthal is the cause of trouble.”

    Moynihan finished the memo with a swipe at the attorney general, who before government service in the Nixon administration had been a leading municipal bond counsel on Wall Street: “It is time he acted a bit more lawyer-like, if you want my opinion.”

    Mitchell dropped the issue, and Blumenthal continued on Moynihan’s staff.  However the documents show that Blumenthal later hesitated to accept a job working for Donald Rumsfeld, then head of the Office of Economic Opportunity, because Blumenthal was “worried about the A.G.’s [attorney general’s] reaction (as yet unknown).”  That assessment was recorded in a January 1970 memo exchanged between two White House aides, Chester Finn and Kenneth Cole, on Ehrlichman’s staff.

  • Catching Up With TTXGP’s Founder, Azhar Hussain


    It’s been an exciting weekend at the Infineon Raceway watching the 2010 eGrandPrix, TTXGP. And, after all the bikes were on course, I had some time sit down and talk with Azhar Hussain about the TTXGP series and its importance.

    In the following conversation, Hussain talks about how combustion engines are moving towards electric and what kind of system we need to make EVs a lasting part of the equation.
    (more…)

  • Palm’s Directors of Development “Really Thrilled” about HP deal

    Palm’s Ben Galbraith and Dion Almaer, directors of developer relations at Palm, took some time near the end of the third episode of their Palm Developer Podcast Series to talk not only about the Palm Developer Day event, but also the announced HP acquisition.

    After a bit of silliness (hawking HP printers, ink and even paper), they both spoke extremely positively about what the HP deal might mean for the company and its developer community.

    Ben: “We couldn’t be more excited about the possibilities that this merger opens up for developers. We are…really thrilled about what’s possible here….“If the deal goes through, we will be with the largest technology company in the planet.”

    Dion: “webOS is this amazing but very young operating system, and now, with a parent like HP, if all of this goes through, we’ll have the runway to do amazing things. You guys have kind of gotten in in the ground floor, and I think where we take things from here, is going to be an amazing fantastic way.”

    While they also pointed out that, “thanks to the legal system being what it is,” they couldn’t say much more, they seemed genuinely enthusiastic about HP and its plans for Palm. (Dion’s offer at the end of the video, “Use webOS, get a free HP printer,” should probably not be taken seriously, though.)

    The discussion starts at about 44 minutes into the video, after the break!

    read more

  • Verizon Droid Incredible commercial finally shows the phone

    Verizon just released a new Droid Incredible commercial that actually shows off the phone. *gasp* Don’t worry, it’s only for a few seconds, the rest of the time it’s red lasers firing off in every direction and the ominous voice saying "you’ve never seen fast" before. This ad spot definitely builds off the previous commercial (and all the Droid commercials really) but does it hurt to show off the phone a little more? Not hurting sales one bit it seems.

    Thanks to everyone who sent this in!

  • Souder: ‘Committed to Preserving Traditional Marriage’

    From the department of irony…

    It turns out that Rep. Mark Souder (R-Ind.), who announced today that he’ll be resigning over news of an affair with a part-time staffer, is also one of the loudest proponents of family values on Capitol Hill. Here, for example, is the page on his (soon to be extinct) website where he vows his “fight to uphold the traditional values that undergird the strength of our nation.”

    The family plays a fundamental role in our society. Studies consistently demonstrate that it is best for a child to have a mother and father, and I am committed to preserving traditional marriage, the union of one man and one woman.

    The importance of Judeo-Christian values in America cannot be underestimated. Yet, in the public square, religion has been maligned by the courts to a point where children cannot pray in school and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit struck down the Pledge of Allegiance. I am committed to fighting the assault on American values.

    Along those lines, Souder spearheaded a 2006 report — “Abstinence and Its Critics” — designed to counter arguments from liberal Democrats that abstinence education is an unrealistic approach to reducing teen pregnancy and sexually transmitted disease.

    TPM has the money clip of Souder discussing the importance of abstinence with his mistress last year.

  • The 13 Most WTF Prescription Drug Side Effects

    Every drug has side effects, and we usually just ignore them. Hell, even your toothpaste has warnings and cautions about unintended effects — a laundry list of possible things that could go wrong. Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea. It seems like anything that comes in pill form could give you that. But some drugs…some drugs are scary. They can permanently change you. They can fuck up your life. They can give you man boobs. These are the worst of the worst.

    13. Antidepressants and Depression

    Coming at you straight from the halls of irony comes one of the most common side effects of antidepressants: depression. That’s right, they caused the very thing they were meant to cure you of. Like the rest of the internet, I don’t actually know what irony is, but I’m pretty sure this qualifies. Prozac was especially renowned for this, and young adults seem to be hit pretty hard. Lets face it, life’s shitty when you’re in High School. So your parents decide to make your already crappy existence even worse by sticking you on antidepressants, which just make you feel even worse. Plus, they make you fat. Yeah, that’s more or less the worst thing you can do to a 15 year old.

    12. Sex and Gambling

    ReQuip is a drug designed to help Alzheimer’s and Restless Leg Syndrome. More scientifically known as Ropinirole, it’s a non-ergoline dopamine agonist, and one of only two drugs that the FDA has okayed for dealing with RLS. However, one of the long, long list of side effects associated with the drug — including liver, kidney, eye and skin problems — is compulsive behavior. While on the drug, there’s a chance you’ll completely lose your ability to control your impulses. Not just any impulses, but specifically you’ll be hit with a major need to have crazy-ass sex, and go gambling. Which could lead one of two paths: dapper, baccarat playing, seducer — like James Bond. Or, skeezy pervert who lost all his money at the dog races. Guess which you’d be more likely to be stuck with? You don’t even have to have had issues with that in the past, and all of a sudden you’re blowing your mortgage on underage hookers and back-alley craps games. Thanks, GlaxoSmithKline!

    11. Hormonal Contraceptive

    Another of life’s horrible fucking ironies, which seems only to exist in order to make fun of us. The pill, the patch, the ring, the implant: they’re all effective ways of not getting up the duff while having sex. So, yay for you, you’re getting some! You’re in a happy, monogamous relationship, so you’re not worried about STIs! You both get checked out, are clean of all bugs, and you go on the pill! Time for some hot, hot bareback action! Not so fast, girly! Common side effects of hormonal contraceptives are: loss of sex drive, vaginal dryness, and weight gain. You don’t want to have sex; you can’t have sex; and you don’t feel sexy. Oh you pharmaceutical sons of bitches! That’s a bastard of a catch 22!

    10. Oily, Leaky Stool

    Alli and Olestra are the two evils here, for similar but separate reasons. Alli was billed as a miracle weight loss cure — you don’t absorb fat anymore! No fat absorbed, eat as many pizzas as you want, you overweight git! Olestra was marketed just as a fat replacement, it goes in food, and you get all that delicious oily goodness, but none gets absorbed by your body. Now kids, what happens to things we ingest that don’t get digested? That’s right, they come out the ass. Now, the anus is usually pretty good at stopping solids coming out, but when it’s pure oil? It’s not designed for that abuse. And so, you get uncontrollable anal leakage of oil that looks like grease off a cheap slice of pizza. When you lest expect it, oily shit will come leaking out your ass and into your underwear. Frankly, I’ll rather just absorb fat normally, thanks.

    9. Gray Skin Syndrome

    There are at least two drugs in existence that can make you look like a movie-star from the ’40s. Amiodarone is an antiarrhythmic agent, so it’s used to help regulate your heartbeat. In some cases, it has the bewildering side effect of making your skin turn grey/blue. How freaking weird would that be? To have your skin gradually change color, to a hue no human should encounter? You know what’s worse? Chloramphenicol, and antibiotic sometimes given to newborns. How bad are its effects? The term for what happens is “Gray Baby Syndrome”. That’s right, your kid has had the saturation slider pulled all the way down, thanks to an antibiotic.

    8. Delayed Orgasm

    Another absolute horror associated with antidepressants — this time SSRIs. Of those on the drugs, somewhere between 35%-70% of them get hit with major issues with their sexual health. Officially listed as “decreased libido, delayed orgasm, anorgasmia, erectile dysfunction, and difficulties with arousal”, these problems can be major. Calling it “delayed orgasm” is putting a rather nice spin on it, because what actually happens? You can’t come. You can tug that thing till you wear the skin off. You can rub your coffee bean until you’ve chafed through an entire bottle of lube. You can fuck for 24 hours straight, while watching porn on 14 screens at once. Nothing. Nada. Zip. You just can’t come. Jeez, at least if you’re on cocaine and can’t get off, you’re still a stinking rich stock trader from the 80s; if you’re on SSRIs, there’s a pretty good change your life already sucks. And now you can’t orgasm.

    7. Permanent Eye Color Change

    Bimatoprost is a drug used to control glaucoma, with the side-effect of making your eyelashes grow longer. So Allergan had an idea. They took the glaucoma drug, and created the fake disease “inadequate eyelashes”, and market it as Latisse. Slap everywoman Brooke Shields on the ads, and you’ll have women flocking to buy a product to make their thin, anemic eyelashes grow into mighty branches. So as long as you keep pouring this gunk into your eyes, your lashes are long, but if you stop, they evaporate. But you know what effect is has that’s permanent? It’ll turn your iris brown. Say what? That’s right, if you have blue or green eyes, you might never see them again. Using Latisse causes irreversible pigment change in the eyes of some people, leaving them with brown eyes, regardless of their original color.

    6. Coffee Grounds Vomit

    Plavix is a drug to prevent your blood from clotting after a heart attack or stroke, so you’re already in a pretty serious position if you’re taking it. Naturally, as it stops your body from clotting bleeds properly, there are all sorts of horrific side effects, the most terrifying of which is “coughing up blood or vomit that looks like coffee grounds”. What happens, is that any minor bleeding in the stomach doesn’t heal properly, and that blood has to come out somewhere. So you either get “black, bloody, or tarry stools” or it comes out your mouth. Looking like coffee grounds. I’m sorry, if I’m coughing up coffee ground looking blood, I’m stopping whatever the hell you have me on. That’s freaking terrifying!

    5. Manboobs

    Oh man, you’re going bald? That sucks, why not go on Propecia? Then the ladies will love your flowing, sexy, full head of hair! Of course, using something that fucks with your hormones on such a fundamental level is bound to have some issues: testicular pain, abnormal sexual function, irreversible impotence and erectile dysfunction, gynecomastia…wait, what was that last one? Bitch tits. Moobs. Man boobs. Great big sweaty tits on your chest. Not sexy, not for anyone. Girls don’t like it, guys don’t like it. So, while you might have some more hair on your head, you have horrible sexual dysfunctions, and tits. Somehow, I don’t think that was worth the trade-off. But hey, that’s just me.

    4. Fucking Everything About Ambien

    Ambien is meant to help you get to sleep. But, if you hold out on going to bed, something interesting happens. There’s a scientific term for it, which is called “going fucking crazy”. Seriously, it will make you balls-to-the-wall insane. It’s so fucked up, that people have started doing it as a recreational drug. You hallucinate, call people you haven’t talked to for years, eat huge amounts of food, have crazy sex, sleep-walk, sleep-drive, and generally become a completely different person. It’s essentially a Jekyll and Hyde drug, leaving you with the cleanup, but none of the awesome memories. The internet is littered with stories about people taking Ambien, and calling all their ex-girlfriends, and holding complete conversations while under the drug. That’s scary, yo!

    3. Suicide

    Chantix is a drug designed to help you with a very specific problem — quitting smoking. Giving up the lung darts can require an iron will at the best of times, and a bit of pharmaceutical help is always appreciated. Except Chantix makes you want to kill yourself. Not just depression, because God knows there’s enough of that when you try and quit smoking. Chantix actually makes you want to off yourself. It puts suicidal ideas in your brain. According to the Institute for Safe Medication Practices, in Q4 2007, this drug was more responsible for reports of serious side effects than any other on the market. Woohoo, you’re number 1! Now, if only the people taking you didn’t want to get all up close and personal with the Grim Reaper.

    2. Brain Zaps

    So, after seeing the horrible side effects of anti-depressants on this list, you decide to quit the pills. After all, is life really that bad, that it’s worth the utter horrors that SSRIs reap on your body? Welcome to the worst fucking comedown ever. You think trying to quite heroin is bad? Dead babies and the shits have nothing on what SSRIs will put you through. It takes at least 10 days to push through the pain, and believe me, you will feel pain. Because you get the brain zaps. Imagine someone shoving a taser in your brain. Every 5 minutes. For two weeks. Now combine that with dizziness, sweating, nausea, insomnia, tremor, confusion, and vertigo, and you get an idea of what people go through coming off these drugs. You will crawl into a ball and want to die. You won’t be able to talk to anyone. You won’t be able to leave the house. Even the most basic task will be nigh on insurmountable. Fun, huh?

    1. Death

    The big one. The be all and end all of side effects. Once this one hits, there’s no going back. That’s right: death. The funny thing is, it’s a surprisingly common side effect. Not that you’ll ever get it, but I’m pretty sure if you go rifling through your medicine cabinet, you’ll find at least one drug that has that tucked away in the “side effects” section, in tiny, tiny print. Adderall, Tamiflu, Celebrex, Gardasil, Accutane, and Botox. They’re all out to get you. Thankfully, this worst possible side effect is rare enough, that if there was ever a major risk from it, a product would never reach the market. We hope. FDA, don’t fuck it up.


  • ZetaKey, a new webkit browser for Windows Mobile now available

    Zetakey_Browser_Screenshot1-20100518 You you are still mourning RIM’s purchase of Torch Mobile, cry no more, as a new webkit-based browser for Windows Mobile has just become available.

    See a video of the software in action and the download links after the break:

    Zetakey’s free browser promises:

    • Fast, High performance Webkit-based Full HTML Browser
    • Compliance with latest Internet standards, such as HTML, CSS
    • Support stylus touch or finger touch screen
    • Configurable and customisable for specific purpose browser
    • FLASH-LITE support

    Read more at Zetakey here.


  • What Do a Newfoundland Dog and Tiger Woods Have in Common? | Discoblog

    To answer that question, don’t go comparing their personality traits (the Newfie: famously loyal and sweet, Tiger Woods: um, no comment). Instead, look to the knees. Newfoundland dogs are prone to cruciate ligament disease, the same knee disorder that has troubled Woods and many other professional athletes–the disease makes dogs and humans more prone to ligament ruptures. Now, researchers at Liverpool University are asking Newfie owners to send in DNA samples from their pets so they can search for genetic factors that predispose dogs to the condition. According to lead researcher Arabella Baird, the study could have two benefits. If researchers determine which genes put dogs at risk of the condition, they can help breeders create healthier lines of dogs by preventing matings between dogs with the key genes. But the study may also help medical researchers find the comparable genes in humans, The Guardian reports:
    Baird added: “The disease in humans tends to occur when stress is put on the ligament, but there have been some preliminary findings that suggest there is a genetic component that could predispose humans to the condition…. Our project will be looking at many genes and the results of our study in dogs will be comparative to …


  • Mark Souder Affair With His Staffer Results In Resignation

    mark souderIt seems that Indiana congressman Mark Souder can’t take the pressure anymore when his affair with with one of his staffer was revealed. After an official statement, he confirmed that he will resign his seat.

    “It is with great regret I announce that I am resigning from the U.S. House of Representatives as well as resigning as the Republican nominee for Congress in this fall’s election,” said Souder.

    “I sinned against God, my wife and my family by having a mutual relationship with a part time member of my staff,” added Souder. “I am so shamed to have hurt those I love.”

    He previously survived a challenge that was not taken easily after a car dealer named Bob Thomas has spent great amounts of his own money on the race. Mark Souder though took the lead and won with less than 50 percent of the vote.

    Now the question is who will be replacing him on the ballot? Its possible that this whole thing can result in special elections according to state law.

    Its surprising how affairs can change peoples lives, so lets learn out of his experience and try to discern first before acting.

    No related posts.

  • Judge Orders School To Alert Students, Parents To Webcam Photos Taken

    As the details of more extensive webcam spying by the Lower Merion school district has broken (originally, the school suggested it had only taken webcam images 42 times, but the details noted 58,000 photos were taken — a bit of a difference. Now a magistrate judge has ordered the school district to alert students and parents who were in those photos of their existence, and allow the students to see the images — though not to get copies of them. The students will actually have the right to view the images without their parents and to exclude “sensitive” photos from being seen by their parents.

    Of course, one thing that hasn’t been answered yet is how widely this sort of software is used in other schools. When the Lower Merion story broke, we pointed to a PBS Fronline episode where an IT guy proudly showed off similar technology, joking about his ability to secretly spy on kids. This clearly isn’t something that was just used in a single school. You have to wonder if other schools are deleting evidence now… or realizing they should be telling their students about what kind of photos they’ve been storing of students.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Virginia Scientists Fight Back Against Harrassment and Abuse | The Intersection

    See here and here. The Union of Concerned Scientists has organized a statement from 800 researchers in Virginia defending Michael Mann and denouncing Ken Cuccinelli’s tactics and investigation. Key quote: “In the interests of the people of Virginia, we urge you to halt this burdensome and entirely unwarranted investigation.” Now if only the University of Virgina would lend its heft to the cause…


  • Land Rover LRX, fotos espía

    Pocas noticias hemos conocido sobre este nuevo SUV desde que fuera confirmado que iva a ser un vehículo de producción. Hoy os presento unas nuevas fotos espía del nuevo Land Rover LRX. Este todoterreno de tres puertas tendrá un aspecto muy deportivo y será el que dará acceso a la gama de Land Rover.

    Viendo estas primeras imágenes, podemos afirmar que este modelo de pruebas es casi igual al prototipo que fué presentado en el año 2007 en el Salón de Detroit. Practicamente, la única diferencia destacable se encuentra en el paragolpes delantero y en las llantas que son un poco más pequeñas.

    Por otra parte, también debemos recordar que este será el primer modelo de Land Rover que se ofrecerá con tracción delantera que se podrá equipar de manera opcional a una tracción total. Sobre la motorización aun no concemos ningún detalle aunque se espera que inicie su comercialización a lo largo de este mismo año.

    Related posts:

    1. Land Rover LRX, fotos espía
    2. Land Rover LRX disponible en el 2010
    3. Land Rover Discovery 4 S Snow Edition
  • Video: Audi A1 “The Next Big Thing” episode 3 released

    Audi A1 "The Next Big Thing" Episode 3

    As promised Audi has released episode 3 of “The Next Big Thing” series. In the third episode, John (Justin Timberlake) and Toni (Dania Ramirez) find themselves in an old warehouse where people are betting on fights. John and Toni find the person they are looking for but get themselves into trouble again.

    You can watch episode one here and episode two here.

    Click here for more news on the Audi A1.

    Refresher: The 2011 Audi A1 will go on sale in Europe later this year with prices starting around 16,000 euros ($22,062 USD). Power will come from a lineup of 4-cylinder engines, which consists of two TDI diesels and two TFSI gasoline units with output ranging from 84-hp to 122-hp. Mated to a 7-speed S tronic transmission, fuel-economy will range from 44 mpg and 62 mpg.

    2011 Audi A1:

    Audi A1 “The next big thing” movie 3 of 6:

    2011 Audi A1:

    – By: Kap Shah


  • El Seat Leon abrirá el fuego para los modelos híbridos por parte de Seat

    leontwindrive.jpg

    Seat no se podía quedar atrás, siendo una de las marcas satélite de Volkswagen. Los alemanes han confiado un grupo motor híbrido a Seat, motor que se han apresurado a montar en un Seat Leon que ya está siendo probado por los ingenieros de Martorell. Este movimiento, se corresponde con la presentación del Golf Blue-e-Motion y el Leon sería el primer híbrido de la marca española.

    El modelo híbrido del Leon ya hace meses que está circulando por Martorell, con fecha de lanzamiento para el año 2012. Pero la versión futura probablemente haga uso del motor eléctrico que incorporaba el IBE Concept, de hecho lo único que se aprovechará de aquel concepto eléctrico presentado en Ginebra.

    Pero a pesar de que el futuro Leon no será igual que el IBE Concept, la próxima generación híbrida hará uso de algunos toques de diseño propios de aquel concepto. El León híbrido contará también con variantes de tres y cinco puertas, así como también un modelo Estate. Tantas variantes distintas, impulsarán aún más la cantidad de unidades que se construirán en Martorell, ampliando la capacidad de producción de la fábrica y llevándola casi a su plena capacidad. Además, Seat sumará a la planta de Martorell la construcción de su propia versión del Volkswagen Up!, probablemente el modelo eléctrico.

    A pesar de que todo pinta bien en Seat, hay modelos que permanecerán en el congelador, como el Tribu, mientras otros modelos serán suspendidos por ahora. La marca española tendría la posibilidad de diseñar un coche deportivo, según las directivas de Volkswagen, pero la baja demanda en la misma España por este tipo de modelos lo hacen improbable.

    Vía | Autocar



  • Electronic Medical Records and (LONG) ID Notes

    cat-and-dog2

    When it comes to writing consult notes, it often seems as if we ID specialists have a blatant form of obsessive-compulsive disorder. Every detail is fair game — travel history, dietary habits, all sorts of seemingly trivial exposures, and of course microbiologic data stretching back to the Cretaceous period.

    I’ll never forget receiving sign-out from the graduating first-year ID fellow when I started my fellowship.  It included a photocopy of a consult note she had written the day before on a woman with fever after gallbladder surgery.

    In five pages of meticulously-detailed prose, there was this memorable item from the Social History:

    Two pets at home:  a dog (Rusty) and cat (Cleo); both are healthy.

    Good news for Rusty and Cleo!  But what could this possibly have to do with post-operative fever after gall bladder surgery?  Even if you allow that perhaps she was suffering from some bizarre post-cholecystectomy zoonosis (if there is such a thing), why was it necessary to cite the pets’ names?

    Electronic medical records have, if anything, made matters even worse for the detail-obsessed.  The ability to cut and paste endless reams of data into a note is irresistible to most ID docs.

    It leads to a bizarre paradox where the more information in the note, often the less useful it is — a phenomenon expertly dissected over here on the always-interesting KevinMD blog.  Says guest writer Jaan Sidorov:

    [A doctor] had received a copy of a lengthy consultant-physician’s documentation involving one of his patients and was astonished by the blob of past data, prior notes, test results, excerpts, quotes, interpretations and correspondence that had been replicated word-for-word in the course of “seeing” his patient. The terse portions describing what the patient actually said, what the consulting doctor actually examined and what the diagnosis and plan were were inconspicuously buried toward the end of the EHR document.

    And you know what’s most maddening?  Under the current “guidelines” for coding and billing, there are true incentives — both financial and regulatory — to write this kind of text-heavy note, one heavily infused with templates and boilerplate language.  The more complexity the better!

    Here’s a proposal:  the goal of a consult note should be concise documentation of what you think, and why, then what you’re recommending, and why.

    I’m sure Rusty and Cleo would agree.

  • Clinton: We’re Ready to Move Forward With Iran Sanctions at the United Nations

    Laura Rozen reports that Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton doesn’t think the new Iran-Turkey uranium enrichment deal will derail the U.S.’s efforts at securing consensus in the United Nations Security Council for Iran sanctions:

    “We have reached agreement on a strong draft with the cooperation of both Russia and China,” Clinton told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee today.

    “We plan to circulate that draft resolution to the entire Security Council today,” Clinton said. “I think this announcement is as convincing an answer to the efforts undertaken in Tehran over the last few days as any we could provide.

    Could be bluster, or it could be that Clinton has a whip count.

  • LG Windows Phone 7 Slider spotted in the wild

    Before yesterday the Windows Phone 7 rumor mill seemed to have slowed down to an underwhelming churn, but with yesterday’s news of the leaked WP7 ROM uncovered by XDA-Developers and what we have in store for you today, it looks like things are starting to pick back up.  SlashGear (via UK site TracyandMatt) has uncovered a photo of an LG WP7 phone that is said to have been taken by a French Microsoft employee and shared on Flickr.

    If you’re thinking this phone looks familiar, you’d be right.  It appears to be the Chassis 2 LG QWERTY Slider that we were first introduced to by Aaron Woodman, Director of Consumer Experiences for Microsoft’s mobile division, on the Engadget Show this past March.  Though the slider is not engaged, it’s a dead ringer for the aforementioned prototype and I’d be surprised to hear otherwise.

    The device is expected to be sporting the following specs:

    • 1Ghz Snapdragon processor (at a minimum)
    • Capacitive touchscreen
    • 8GB Memory (onboard?)
    • GPS
    • Accelerometer
    • Digital compass
    • light and proximity sensors
    • 5MP Camera w/ flash
    • Required buttons: back, Windows, search

    Getting hungry for Windows Phone 7?  let us know below!

    Via SlashGear

     


  • The Salahis Want An Apology From The White House

    There’s nothing quite like starting the day off with a good laugh. For those of you who woke up on the wrong side of the bed this morning, this item should be good for a few chuckles….

    Washington couple Michaele and Tareq Salahi — the infamous White House Party Crashers who were summoned to testify before a Congressional committee after bogarting their way into The Obamas’ State Dinner last November — say they’ve been the victims of death threats and other malacious acts since the fiasco made national headlines last winter and they’re still waiting for an apology from The Obama Administration.

    “It would be nice if somebody apologized to us,” Tareq Salahi, along with his wife Michaele, told RadarOnline.com in a new interview. “I would certainly not treat anyone this way that comes to my house, even if there was a question about an invitation, or there was some miscommunication… I would still welcome anyone and be gracious.”

    You broke into the President’s house and you think you’re owed an apology? These people should be thanking Jesus or Buddha — or whoever they pray to — that they aren’t trading pussy for Hot Pockets in the pokey right now. Delusional much?

    The Salahis will appear on Bravo’s upcoming reality soap The Real Housewives of DC, premiering next year.


  • TechUniversity: iChat 101

    iChat allows you to chat with friends, share files, share your screen and more. We’ll walk you through everything you need to know to get up and running.

    In this TechUniversity iChat 101 screencast (subscription required), I’ll show you the in’s and out’s of the app and how to get up and running chatting, adding friends, sharing your screen and more.

    Topics covered:

    • Adding a screen name
    • Adding buddies
    • Text chatting
    • Video chatting
    • Screen sharing

    View full iChat 101 screencast on TechUniversity (subscription required)

    Screencast Sample



    Alcatel-Lucent NextGen Communications Spotlight — Learn More »

  • Commentary: White House Misadventures in Coal Ash Rule

    Unified Agenda Developments behind the scenes of a new EPA proposal to regulate coal ash undermine several core tenets of the Obama presidency, conflict with pledges to reform the way government works, and expose the flaws in a regulatory process that too often does not do enough for the public.

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    On May 3, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released a proposed rule that would, for the first time, regulate the disposal of coal ash. Calls for regulation of coal ash, a byproduct of coal combustion that can contain arsenic, lead, chromium, and other heavy metals, began in earnest after an impoundment in Kingston, TN, failed, releasing 5.4 million cubic yards of coal ash. Reports have linked exposure to the toxic components in coal ash to cancer and other health problems.

    EPA proposed two options for regulating coal ash under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA). The first proposal would list coal ash as a hazardous waste under subtitle C of RCRA, requiring federal monitoring and control of coal ash’s handling, transportation, disposal, and any potential reuse. (Coal ash can be recycled into other products, including cement and wallboard. Subtitle C regulation would continue to allow beneficial reuse, EPA says.) The other proposal would regulate coal ash under subtitle D, which has typically been used to control solid wastes such as household garbage. Under the subtitle D option, EPA would have little authority over coal ash management.

    Environmentalists see a clear choice between the two options. The subtitle D option "treats this hazardous waste as if it were not loaded with high levels of arsenic and other toxic metals," Scott Slesinger, legislative director for the Natural Resources Defense Council, said in a statement. "We expect EPA to choose the option that adequately protects the public, particularly our precious groundwater, and treats this hazardous waste as a hazardous waste."

    Just days after unveiling its proposed rule, EPA released other documents showing significant changes that were made to the proposal while under review at the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA). (See sidebar at right.) EPA’s original plans, prepared in 2009, did not include the subtitle D option.

    One document, made available in EPA’s online rulemaking docket at Regulations.gov, shows all the edits that were made during the OIRA review. Large tracts of text were moved or deleted and hundreds of new paragraphs added. The document shows changes made at any time during the six-month review with no indication of when the edits were made or who made them.

    Observers have assumed a cause-and-effect relationship: the proposal was changed while under OIRA review – OIRA must have made the changes. Of course, it is possible that EPA changed its mind in light of some new evidence or upon greater reflection, but that scenario is only plausible if EPA’s original draft was flawed or haphazardly crafted. Both EPA and OIRA have kept quiet about what happened during the review, but OIRA maintains that agencies remain in control of all decisions during the review process. However, neither EPA nor OIRA has offered any new factual evidence that would have led to the inclusion of the subtitle D option.

    The original draft, sent to OIRA on Oct. 16, 2009, included language asking for public comment on possible subtitle D regulation. It did not, however, go so far as to include the subtitle D option as a co-proposal and clearly showed that EPA’s first preference was to regulate coal ash under subtitle C.

    In the past, OIRA has said its review process – in which the office circulates throughout the executive branch drafts of agencies’ proposed and final rules before they are released to the public and makes edits or suggestions it deems appropriate – improves rules. The argument in favor of OIRA review says that the additional perspectives offered by OIRA and other agencies make rules more efficient and more defensible – legally, scientifically, or otherwise. OIRA maintains the same is true with the coal ash rule.

    Yet from the perspective of many in the environmental and public health community, the coal ash proposal represents all that is wrong with the rulemaking process. The proposal came out worse, meaning the draft may lead to a less protective rule even before the public comment process begins. Even if some other agency or some other corner of the White House made the changes, both OIRA and EPA need to accept responsibility. OIRA Administrator Cass Sunstein has been part of President Obama’s team of officials attempting to bring more openness and accountability to government, but, for the coal ash rule, his office failed to live up to this administration’s lofty expectations.

    The rule was not without controversy; unquestionably, powerful corporate interests opposed the focus on regulating coal ash under subtitle C. During the pre-public OIRA review, opposition to subtitle C regulation came from far and wide within the federal government, the documents also show. The Departments of Energy, Interior, Transportation, and Agriculture (USDA) all encouraged EPA to avoid designating coal ash a hazardous waste under subtitle C. The departments fear a hazardous designation will limit the amount of coal ash that can be beneficially reused, despite EPA’s attempt to carve out reuse in the proposed rule. Some, including USDA, objected to the stigma that the hazardous designation carries. The Agricultural Research Service asked, "What farmer would want to apply ‘hazardous waste’ to his fields?"

    The White House Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) also opposed subtitle C regulation, the document shows. Despite being an environmental office, CEQ cited economic concerns as a reason to avoid the hazardous designation.

    In a truly perverse turn of events, OIRA allowed the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) to comment on the pre-public proposal. TVA, a government-owned corporation that was created by Congress as a public works program during the Great Depression, is the owner of the Kingston Fossil Plant responsible for the 2008 coal ash spill. Not surprisingly, TVA also opposed subtitle C regulation.

    It’s almost as though the process is designed to create less protective rules. An agency spends months, sometimes years, writing regulations consistent with statute and responsive to some public need, only to be second-guessed by those without the substantive or technical expertise possessed by the agency that proposed the rule. It’s like replacing all the plumbing in your brand-new house after the walls are painted and the carpets installed – and your plumber is actually an electrician!

    EPA’s coal ash rulemaking illustrates exactly how the public can get snookered in OIRA’s process. Issues were debated, alterations were made, and tones were set during a process that completely shuts out the public.

    What’s so wrong with edits made during an OIRA review? That’s a valid question, especially in this instance, when a second regulatory option was added for the public to comment on. It’s not as though EPA’s original idea was supplanted by a weaker version; it was supplemented by another option. And in the face of political pressure from corporate interests, this seems like a reasonable compromise, especially since EPA still has to write the final rule.

    However, the way the second option was added, and the impetus for its addition, should worry the public. In an opaque process that only Washington insiders can possibly access, changes were made, or at least encouraged, to an environmental protection rule that seem to weaken the overall regulation. Years of similar activity have left the public distrustful of its government’s ability to make decisions in the public interest, and even if the Obama administration’s motives in the coal ash case are pure, the controversy only feeds into a culture of mistrust born of years of decisions made in secret.

    The time that elapsed during OIRA’s review impacts the public as well. The coal ash proposal’s review lasted more than six months. According to longstanding policy, OIRA reviews are to be completed within 90 days. If the rulemaking agency agrees, OIRA may extend the rule once by 30 days, for a total of 120 days. OIRA reviewed the coal ash rule for 200 days. By comparison, the public’s opportunity to comment in the formal process is only expected to last 90 days.

    Ultimately, EPA will be free to finalize a rule fully protective of public health and the environment. Nothing occurring during the OIRA review, or even the public comment process, can force EPA to choose a certain option.

    The changes can, however, alter the debate. The addition of a second, weaker regulatory option tilts the proposed rule away from public and environmental protection. Advocates at groups like the Natural Resources Defense Council, Earthjustice, and Ohio Citizen Action have a steeper hill to climb in making their case that coal ash ought to be regulated as hazardous waste. Opponents of the regulation now have a decided advantage.

    Moreover, since these decisions are made in a black box, without transparency, what is to stop the same interests that changed the draft proposed rule from altering the final rule?

    All of these issues are symptomatic of a faulty process that has survived for decades because those who operate it see too many risks to their power to reform it. On Jan. 30, 2009, President Obama issued a memo asking the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for recommendations on a new executive order to replace the order that currently governs the OIRA review process (E.O. 12866, signed in 1993). OMB then asked the public for its views. More than 170 groups and individuals submitted comments.

    OMB Watch and others called for an end to the myopic, rule-by-rule review OIRA currently engages in and instead encouraged the office to transform itself into a facilitator and a resource for agencies. Since the public comment period ended, Obama administration officials have given no indication as to the status of the recommendations or the replacement order. OIRA and others seem content to continue to operate the same old process.

    While the process has remained the same, the regulatory landscape has changed in other ways. One of the starkest changes witnessed during the Obama administration has been in personnel, specifically, agency heads. Top agency posts are no longer filled with people who come through a revolving door, regulating the same interests they had been employed by for years. Strong and dedicated leaders like EPA’s Jackson have shown a willingness to make tough and sometimes unpopular choices when they believe the public’s interest would be well served.

    The coal ash rulemaking has been an uncharacteristic turn of events for Jackson. After moving aggressively in the face of great anti-regulatory and industry pressure on issues like climate change and smog emissions, Jackson allowed the proposed coal ash rule to be co-opted by OIRA’s review process.

    That begs the question of whether other officials in the White House were involved, officials with more clout than Cass Sunstein or even Lisa Jackson. Coal ash regulation is one element in a complex suite of legislative and regulatory issues the Obama administration faces in trying to reform energy policy in the United States. One of the Obama administration’s top priorities, climate change legislation, is bound to be an important consideration in any related decision making.

    We may never know the answer because the OIRA review process offers little transparency. EPA is one of the few agencies to provide detailed information on the review of its rules. While disclosure of the changes made is helpful in promoting accountability, too many questions are left unanswered when OIRA and agencies fail to disclose who made what changes and for what reasons.

    Determining the reasons for the changes made to EPA’s coal ash proposal, and assigning motive more broadly, is nearly impossible. Was the White House overly sensitive to the reactions of industry-friendly congressional Democrats whose support is necessary on climate change legislation? Was it a philosophical shift at the urging of Cass Sunstein, or was it something else entirely?

    Many have pointed to industry’s potential influence on the coal ash rulemaking. While the rule was under review, OIRA and EPA met with outside stakeholders on at least 43 different occasions. 30 of those meetings were with representatives of a variety of industries opposed to or fearful of coal ash regulation. These included electric utilities, chemical companies, and many whose businesses rely on the beneficial reuse of coal ash. (The remaining meetings were with environmental groups and citizen advocates.)

    Even if the changes to EPA’s coal ash proposal were made completely independent of industry opposition, the appearance of impropriety can be just as damaging, both to the administration’s credibility and public confidence. President Obama came into office pledging to stem the influence of special interest lobbyists and has taken steps toward that end. The coal ash rulemaking is a blemish on an otherwise positive record.

    The OIRA review process clearly does not always comport with some of President Obama’s stated goals and priorities. It is time for Cass Sunstein and OIRA to come to this realization and urge Obama to recommit himself to regulatory reform. In the case of coal ash, if the rule is not legally or scientifically defensible, let the public see that debate through the notice and comment period. If other agencies have additional evidence about why the original EPA draft was unacceptable to them, that evidence and feedback should be part of the public record, not provided behind closed doors in what looks to the public like some cloak-and-dagger maneuver designed to evade accountability. Instead of providing an open and accountable exchange of data and ideas that would benefit all stakeholders, the current process makes it possible for special interests to influence a rule long before the public even has an opportunity to comment.

    Let’s keep an eye on how the final rule is developed. If it runs counter to scientific information about the health dangers of coal ash and the substance remains unregulated under subtitle C, the public loses – and the Obama administration should be held accountable.