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  • Replacing Stevens on Security

    by Deborah Pearlstein

    Cross-posted on Balkinization and Scotusblog

    Since Justice Stevens announced his intention to retire, discussions about what his departure will mean for the Court have regularly noted his military service in World War II. The justice enlisted the day before the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor (and has joked about how the enemy responded to the news immediately). There is little doubt that a Court without substantial military experience among its justices will be missing an important perspective on the unique role the U.S. military plays in American policy and society. Judges are ideally made wiser from their range of life experiences; a broader range of experience among the justices seems likely only to enhance the Court’s collective wisdom. In that respect alone, Justice Stevens’ absence from the Court will leave a gap.

    But Justice Stevens’ national security jurisprudence reflects a very particular kind of wisdom, drawn not only from his military service, but from a lifetime of attention to the persuasiveness of executive reason. As illustrated in a series of thoughtful histories in recent years (see here, here or here), the young John Stevens was likewise informed by his service immediately after the war as a law clerk at the Court to Justice Wiley Rutledge, who himself had struggled with the questions of executive power, individual rights, and national security that the Court has faced repeatedly in the years since September 11. Over his relatively short tenure on the Court, Rutledge seemed quickly to regret his early deference to a powerful President Roosevelt during World War II. With the majority in Hirabayashi v. United States (upholding a military curfew on Japanese-Americans living in certain “military areas” in California) and Korematsu v. United States (upholding the exclusion of Japanese-Americans from designated zones), Rutledge had reluctantly accepted the military assertion of wartime necessity. But the positions Rutledge took in these cases did not sit easily. As Rutledge later wrote to a colleague, “I have had more anguish over [Hirabayashi] than any I have decided, save possibly one death case” that he had encountered in the court of appeals. Indeed, Rutledge had written separately in concurrence in Hirabayashi, to emphasize that the Court’s acceptance of the military’s necessity justification here did not mean that such reasoning would invariably succeed, or that all such reasoning was beyond the power of the courts to review.

    By In re Yamashita (upholding the military commission trial of a Japanese general), issued the year before Justice Stevens took up work at the Court, Rutledge was writing in dissent, rejecting the Government’s position “that there is no law restrictive upon these proceedings other than whatever rules and regulations may be prescribed for their government by the executive authority or the military,” in favor of the view that the U.S. Constitution, statutes and treaties here – as elsewhere – apply. Exigencies could arise, Rutledge understood, but particularly where the Government response imposed a burden on individual rights, it was within the power of the courts to check the reasons for the response, in security matters as anywhere else. The capacity to evaluate reasons was not the Commander-in-Chief’s alone. Thus, when Justice Stevens took up the challenge to the legality of President Bush’s military commission system at Guantanamo Bay 60 years later in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, it was not surprising that it was Rutledge’s dissent the justice invoked.

    It is certainly possible writing from some remove to overstate the impact Rutledge’s evolving views in the 1940’s had on Justice Stevens’ thinking some 60 years later. Justice Stevens is, after all, also the author of Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council, the watershed administrative law decision typically understood to have cemented the importance of judicial deference to executive branch interpretations of statutory authority – a deference driven by the Court’s view of the Executive’s superior political accountability and expertise. Indeed, at first glance, it seems difficult to reconcile the Justice Stevens of Chevron – embracing judicial deference to the Executive – and the Justice Stevens of Hamdan – rejecting any notion of even modest deference to the Executive in interpreting the statutory Authorization for Use of Military Force and Uniform Code of Military Justice. One might argue the decisions are better read simply as a sign of the evolution of Justice Stevens’ own views during his long tenure on the bench.

    This view seems to me to miss the value of what is in fact a rather consistent sensibility on the value of executive views. By the time Chevron came down, the Court had long recognized – as Justice Stevens reiterated in that decision – that executive views could help illuminate statutory meaning when the executive has special expertise in the face of a “regulatory scheme [that] is technical and complex,” when competing policy interests are at stake, and when it is clear the agency’s consideration of the matter had been “detailed and reasoned.” It was precisely the lack of such detail and reason in the President’s justification for pursuing military commissions at Guantanamo that troubled Justice Stevens in Hamdan. “Nothing in the record before us demonstrates that it would be impracticable to apply court-martial rules in this case…. [T]he only reason offered in support of that determination is the danger posed by international terrorism. Without for one moment underestimating that danger, it is not evident to us why it should require, in the case of Hamdan’s trial, any variance from the rules that govern courts-martial.” The Executive had presented no record or even detailed reason why it could not follow standard court martial procedures. Indeed, as briefing surrounding the case had made evident, the Executive had largely excluded from the design process those lawyers in the military who were actually expert in how one might conduct a military commission trial. Expertise and record evidence could be valuable indeed. Far less valuable was the mere assertion of Executive authority.

    Justice Stevens’ familiarity with the military and the important demands of national security perhaps made it possible for him to see what many have not – that there is nothing so extraordinary about the field of foreign relations per se that absolves the Executive of all need to be put to particular reason and compelling proof. It seems unlikely that the justice who takes his place will have Justice Stevens’ breadth of life experience in this regard. We will be fortunate if he or she nonetheless shares his insight.

  • Are the Tea Partiers Losing Steam?

    Are the Tea Partiers Losing Steam?
    It is hard to see how, in a nation tilting toward the "have-not" column, the Tea Party crowd’s placebo politics can sustain them as an enduring national political force.

    It is hard to see how, in a nation tilting toward the "have-not" column, the Tea Party crowd's placebo politics can sustain them as an enduring national political force.

    Is It Possible to Be Elitist in a Good Way? The Organizers of TED Would Like You to Think So
    With a $6,000 price tag, TED caters to an exclusive group of tastemakers and moguls … is it enough that anyone can watch videos from the conference for free?

    With a $6,000 price tag, TED caters to an exclusive group of tastemakers and moguls … is it enough that anyone can watch videos from the conference for free?

    Videos of Small Animals Being Crushed by Women in High Heels Are Protected Free Speech?
    The Supreme Court’s 8-1 ruling comes down to protecting the depiction of a gruesome act on 1st Amendment grounds, not the legality of the gruesome act itself.

    The Supreme Court's 8-1 ruling comes down to protecting the depiction of a gruesome act on 1st Amendment grounds, not the legality of the gruesome act itself.

    Alice Walker: Obama May Never Realize How Profound His Election Was for Black Southerners
    In a wide-ranging interview, Walker discusses Tibet and Palestine, womanism versus feminism, the election and presidency of Obama, and the "spiritual survival" of our society.

    In a wide-ranging interview, Walker discusses Tibet and Palestine, womanism versus feminism, the election and presidency of Obama, and the "spiritual survival" of our society.

    Moyers: Six Banks Control 60% of Gross National Product — Is the U.S. at the Mercy of an Unstoppable Oligarchy?
    Moyers and economists James Kwak and Simon Johnson wonder whether the financial powers are more profitable, and more resistant to regulation than ever.

    Moyers and economists James Kwak and Simon Johnson wonder whether the financial powers are more profitable, and more resistant to regulation than ever.

  • A Short Citizen’s Guide to Reforming Wall Street

    A Short Citizen’s Guide to Reforming Wall Street
    The real scandal isn’t the Street’s unlawful acts (i.e., Securities and Exchange Commission vs. Goldman Sachs) but legal acts that have reaped the Street a bonanza and nearly sunk the rest of us. It’s good we finally have an SEC…


    Wall StreetGoldman SachsBusinessInvestingLaw

    The Return of Book Club!
    I’m very happy to re-introduce regular book clubs to TPMCafe, one of my favorite features of the site. We’re kicking things off with a discussion on Supreme Power: Franklin Roosevelt vs. The Supreme Court by Jeff Shesol, a former…



    Franklin D. RooseveltSupreme Court of the United StatesUnited StatesJeff ShesolSupreme Court

    Mitch McConnell Gets it Wrong
    CANDY CROWLEY (CNN, Sunday): The president says you are being deceptive in describing this bill. MCCONNELL: Well, Candy … there is a bailout fund in the bill that was reported out of the Banking Committee, the partisan bill that came…



    Mitch McConnellWall StreetCNNCANDY CROWLEYSenate

  • Cheney: Telling Leahy to ?f*ck? himself was ‘sort of the best thing I ever did.?

    Cheney: Telling Leahy to ?f*ck? himself was ‘sort of the best thing I ever did.?
    In 2004, then-Vice President Dick Cheney had a “frank exchange of views” with Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT) on the Senate floor over Cheney’s ties to Halliburton and President Bush’s judicial nominees. Cheney ended the argument by telling Leahy, “F*ck yourself.” Since then, Cheney has joked about the incident and claimed the Leahy “merited” it because […]

    cheneysquare.jpgIn 2004, then-Vice President Dick Cheney had a “frank exchange of views” with Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT) on the Senate floor over Cheney’s ties to Halliburton and President Bush’s judicial nominees. Cheney ended the argument by telling Leahy, “F*ck yourself.” Since then, Cheney has joked about the incident and claimed the Leahy “merited” it because he was “close” to kissing him. On Dennis Miller’s radio show today, Cheney suggested that his Leahy f-bomb was “the best thing” he had ever done:

    MILLER: By the way, my, I also want to thank you, on the list of things I feel I should thank you for, almost kicking Patrick Leahy’s ass. Thank you very much.

    CHENEY: Hehehehe.

    MILLER: I love that move. One of my favorite stories. Muttering that.

    CHENEY: You’d be surprised how many people liked that. That’s sort of the best thing I ever did.

    Listen here:

    Cheney is right that conservatives “liked” his expletive exchange with Leahy. Bill Kristol once said on Fox News that Cheney’s comments represented “a beautiful statement, really, of justice.”

    Franklin Graham affirms concerns of critics, appears on Fox to proselytize against Muslims.
    As ThinkProgress reported yesterday, groups like the Military Religious Freedom Foundation are protesting an upcoming speech by evangelist Franklin Graham, who will deliver a lecture on National Prayer Day at the Pentagon. The groups object to Graham’s speech because of his past history of hate speech against Muslims. This morning, Graham appeared on Fox and […]

    As ThinkProgress reported yesterday, groups like the Military Religious Freedom Foundation are protesting an upcoming speech by evangelist Franklin Graham, who will deliver a lecture on National Prayer Day at the Pentagon. The groups object to Graham’s speech because of his past history of hate speech against Muslims. This morning, Graham appeared on Fox and Friends to defend his upcoming appearance at the Pentagon. When asked about his views on Islam, Graham affirmed the concerns of critics, saying that he was speaking out “for those who are enslaved under Islam” and implored Muslims to convert to Christianity:

    GRAHAM: First of all, I want Muslims to know that I love them …. They don’t have to die in a car bomb they don’t have to die in some kind of a holy war to be accepted by God … But when you look at Islam, I love the people of Islam but the religion I do not agree with the religion at all and if you look at what the religion does to women and the women alone it is horrid. And so yes I speak out for women, I speak out for people who live under Islam, who are enslaved under Islam, and I want them to know they can be free by Jesus Christ and Jesus Christ alone.

    Watch it:

    Yesterday, a military spokesman said that it is considering withdrawing Graham’s invitation. Army Col. Tom Collins told the Associated Press that withdrawing the invitation is “on the table.” The Defense Department estimated that 3,409 Muslims actively served in the U.S. military as of April 2008.

  • Obama makes a strong case for financial reform

    Obama makes a strong case for financial reform
    NEW YORK — President Obama’s assertive stride into the debate on financial regulatory reform stands in marked contrast to the messy health-care battle that consumed most of the past year. It also represents a crucial part of a political strategy that — at least so far — appears to be moving a …

    Salt talks
    Barack Obama has to worry about Afghanistan, Iraq, a Supreme Court vacancy, mining safety, unemployment, Wall Street regulation, making his health-care law work and a few dozen other things.

    SEC divided on vote to file Goldman lawsuit
    Behind closed doors, the two Republican members of the Securities and Exchange Commission sharply questioned senior investigators last week about whether the evidence they had assembled was strong enough to file a fraud case against Goldman Sachs, according to current and former SEC officials fam…

    Obama plan to end much of Constellation program angers Republican senators
    NASA’s administrator faced sharp and often hostile criticism and questioning from Republican senators Thursday as he defended President Obama’s plan to dramatically change the agency’s human space exploration program.

  • 10 Things You Need To Know This Morning (GS, UAUA, CAL)

    Snooki

    Here’s what you need to know this morning:

    • The on-again, off-again Greek bailout is very much on again this morning as the country’s prime minister has gone to the IMF asking for assistance. Greek bonds have surged this morning, as the specter of default diminishes.
    • Goldman Sachs is under further scrutiny for its involvement in the Lloyds refinancing package in the UK last year. The company acted as both an underwriter and investor in the deal, and it allegedly made moves to improve its investment position before the deal closed.
    • The U.S. IPO market has returned to form, notching a day of issuance the size not seen since November 2007. Total sales thus far for this year are at $6 billion.
    • Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner is rallying G-20 leaders to the cause of a Chinese yuan revaluation, as he seeks support in the key currency dispute. Brazil, India, and the EU are already on Geithner’s side, as he heads into G-20 negotiations today.
    • Merger talks continue between Continental and United Airlines, as the two aviation behemoths head towards a stock-for-stock merger deal. The result of the merger would be a company worth $6.6 billion.
    • Internal debate within the Federal Reserve is pushing Fed Chair Ben Bernanke to take action against potential high inflation by raising rates. If opinions are moving in that direction, a rate hike could occur sooner.
    • Instability in Thailand persists this morning after last night’s grenade attack, allegedly thrown by protesters who back the former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra’s return to government. Riot police have confronted protesters today, but thus far there is no return to yesterday’s deadly violence.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Lindsay Lohan Suspected In Rolex Theft

    Lindsay Lohan has been named a suspect in the disappearance of a Rolex watch valued at more than $35,000. According to TMZ.com, investigators in Los Angeles have “photographic evidence” linking Lohan to the theft, which occured after one of her pals accidentally left the watch at Lindsay’s house earlier this year — and never got it back.

    Lindsay’s latest legal woe comes after The Lohan Family went on a Twitter rampage on Thursday after Michael showed up at the actress’ apartment with police officers for an ill-fated “intervention.”


  • Velocity Micro’s Cruz Tablet: Under $300 with Full Flash Support

    With the market for Android-based tablets slowly picking up steam, Velocity Micro, a high-performance custom computer producer out of Richmond, VA, is entering the fray.

    The Cruz tablet is billed as an affordable touchscreen e-reader and tablet. The Cruz will run Android 2.1 with what is presumably a custom browser capable of supporting Flash 10.1. Also, it appears that the Cruz, like its Archos brethren, will not have access to the Android Market. Owners of the Cruz will, however, have access to the Cruz Market, which is an open content portal.

    The Cruz sports a 7″ capacitive multitouch touchscreen, an 800MHz processor, and expandable storage via an SD card slot. There is no release date yet, but Velocity Micro promises that the Cruz is coming soon. Go to http://cruztablet.com/ for more information.

    Might We Suggest…


  • DOJ to appeal ruling finding National Day of Prayer unconstitutional

    [JURIST] The US Department of Justice (DOJ) announced Thursday that it will appeal last week’s ruling that the National Day of Prayer is an unconstitutional government endorsement of religion. The DOJ filed a notice of appeal Thursday with the US District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin, where last week Judge Barbara Crabb ruled that the day of prayer violates the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment because it is more than “acknowledgment” of religion, but rather government-backed encouragement that Americans engage in non-secular activity. Crabb granted summary judgment for the Freedom from Religion Foundation (FFRF), but the White House has said that President Barack Obama still intends to recognize the day of prayer on May 6.
    Last month, the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled that a teacher-led recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance in public schools does not violate the Constitution’s Establishment Clause. The court also upheld the use of the phrase “In God We Trust” on currency. In November, the US Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit ruled that a school district’s policy prohibiting the performance of religious holiday songs does not violate the Establishment Clause. Also that month, a judge for the US District Court for the District of South Carolina ruled that license plates produced by the state bearing a picture of a cross in front of a stained glass window and the words “I Believe” violate the Constitution.

  • YouTube Quietly Adds Movie and TV Show Rentals From 99 Cents [YouTube]

    After tinkering with movie rentals in January, YouTube’s added a bunch of movies and TV episodes you actually want to see. We’re not just talking art-house Sundance Film Festival flicks—now, you can get a bit of manga too. More »







  • New in the App Catalog for 22 April 2010

    App CatalogIf you found yourself disappointed by the general lack of newness in the app drop we covered yesterday morning, then brace yourself – that disappointment is about to be wiped off the face of the planet. For a few minutes, at least. The App Catalog hath redeemed itself, with more than a dozen new apps and dozens more updates. It’s a veritable appapalooza! Of course, there’s the usual raft of cruft, but every application stores has to deal with that. So long as we get plenty of useful stuff alongside it, we’ve got no reason to be complaining. Did we get useful? Well, I’m not going to tell you until you jump past the break and take a peak at the list of new.

    read more

  • End Game in Greece

    Following yesterday’s announcement that the budget deficit was higher than expected, Greece has rapidly been progressing towards the denouement.  Greek debt yields started rising “almost vertically” yesterday, and rumor has it that no one will sell default insurance on the stuff.  As yields dipped into the double digits, BusinessWeek noted that they were approaching “Pakistan levels“–i.e. the kinds of yields we see on Pakistani debt, which got an IMF bailout in 2008.

    There is no longer any realistic possibility that Greece will be able to soothe debt markets with the mere possibility of assistance, bringing its interest payments down to a level where the country can reasonably (or even maniacally) hope to austerity-package its way out of this crisis.  Given that Greece has a big chunk of debt to roll over in May (and an even bigger chunk to roll over by the end of 2011), the writing was on the wall.  This morning, Greece formally announced that it would be tapping the European aid package put together over the last month, as well as any IMF assistance package, which is expected to be finalized next week.  
    Markets are pricing in the expectation of at least some debt restructuring, and well they might.  The loan packages will abate any liquidity problems that Greece is having, but they won’t fix the structural solvency problem–and even a pretty austere austerity package is going to make distressingly modest inroads.  With the kind of debt-to-GDP ratio Greece is sporting–about 110%–it will take either years of misery, or some smokin’ economic growth, to really get that debt load under control unless the investors take some kind of haircut.  Unfortunately, the kind of austerity that Greece is facing tends to depress economic output, not spur it to new heights.  And the country’s money supply is lashed to a European Central Bank primarily concerned with setting inflation-busting interest rates for the nation’s healthier eurobrethren.  
    So these are some grim times for Greece.  On the other hand, some of the initiatives–particularly some of the corruption-fighting and transparency moves–may herald a serious and permanent improvement in Greek economic and political institutions–which in turn might mean stronger, more stable growth later.  It’s always darkest just before dawn.





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  • L.A. Judge Predicts Chaos As Budget Cuts Force Courtrooms To Close

    Los Angeles

    Budget cuts are great news if you’re criminal in L.A.:

    AP:

    The Los Angeles court system has already closed 17 courtrooms and another 50 will be shut down come September unless something is done to find more money. The judge who presides over the system predicts chaos and an unprecedented logjam of civil and family law cases in the worst-case scenario.

    The crisis results from the financially troubled state’s decision to slash $393 million from state trial courts in the budget this year. The state also decided to close all California courthouses on the third Wednesday of every month.

    What has emerged is a hobbled court system that is struggling to serve the public.

    Custody hearings, divorce proceedings, small-claims disputes, juvenile dependency matters and civil lawsuits have been delayed amid the courtroom shutdowns in Los Angeles. Drivers who choose to fight traffic tickets now have to wait up to nine months to get a trial started.

    Complex civil lawsuits, those typically involving feuding businesses, could really feel the hit. It now takes an average of 16 months for such cases to get resolved, but court officials expect the cuts to bog down these civil matters to the point that they take an average of four years to finish.

    “On any given day, 100,000 people go in and out of our courthouses,” said Superior Court Judge Charles W. McCoy Jr., who presides over the Los Angeles system. “That’s a Rose Bowl full of people.”

    While this doesn’t mean criminals will go scot-free, it does mean that it will take far longer to try people in court. It also will effectively increase the cost of litigating against someone. Obviously there are a lot of dumb cases that should never make it to court, but at the same time there are a lot of legitimate ones too.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Creating a Virtual 3-D World: Inside PhotoCity from UW and Cornell

    PhotoCity, a UW and Cornell imaging project
    Rachel Tompa wrote:

    Zoran Popovic, a computer scientist at the University of Washington, is constructing 3-D virtual recreations of real life. First step, the UW campus; next, the whole world.

    Building on a previous program called Photo Tourism that pieces together photos culled from Flickr into virtual 3-D models, PhotoCity is a “capture the flag”-esque game that recreates sections of campuses or city blocks, or, eventually, entire cities from user-generated photos (see reconstructed image, above right).

    Photo Tourism was created by Popovic, UW professor Steve Seitz, and former UW graduate student Noah Snavely (now an assistant professor at Cornell University), and in 2006 was licensed to Microsoft. But that program was limited, Popovic said: While they could easily build a 3-D version of the Coliseum based on tourist photos deposited in Flickr, they were never going to get a usable model of the building next to the Coliseum, for example.

    Popovic is interested in what he calls “serious games,” computer games that rely on volunteer user input to solve problems too difficult for computational power alone. Usually, players are motivated to help solve a problem by the lure of some kind of online competition. But recreating 3-D versions of city blocks or whole cities adds another layer of challenge—the game has to be compelling enough not only to get people to sit down and play it on their computers, but to take extra digital pictures for the sole purpose of expanding the 3-D world. “It occurred to me that one big problem is that you have to step away from the computer,” Popovic said. “So we wanted to know, is it possible to form a game framework where people go out and do stuff in the real world, instead of just sitting in front of their computers?”

    To motivate people to take more pictures for the models, the group created the PhotoCity game, which can be played on a computer or iPhone. A Google Maps image shows the playing field (so far, game locations include the UW and Cornell campuses, and neighborhoods in Seattle, New York, Boston, Chicago, Santa Barbara, Portland, Washington DC, and Moscow), and “flags” pop up at various points on the rough facade. Players then win these flags by taking enough pictures of that site—say, the northwest corner of UW’s Odegaard library—and then uploading them to the PhotoCity site. Win enough flags and you’ll eventually be the “owner” of the whole building. Other players can steal flags away by taking even more pictures.

    Zoran Popovic

    The researchers launched the game at the end of March by announcing a competition between UW and Cornell, to see which school’s team could get the most photos of their campus by April 20, but soon other locations were added. Any user can “seed” a new playing field. The cross-country competition is now over, but results are still being analyzed, Popovic said, and the teams are planning a second round to start up April 30.

    Popovic (left) is happy with how the game has progressed, but his group’s eventual goal is loftier: to recreate entire cities and, eventually, the world in 3-D from digital pictures. “If you can build a 3-D replica of your world, you can all of a sudden have all different kinds of games in that world,” Popovic said. “The idea is to make a game where the actual world itself is built, and people can actually become avatars and walk around and do …Next Page »

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  • Tut gets extreme makeover









    Andreas F. Voegelin

    Click for slideshow: A coffinette that contained Tutankhamun’s mummified
    liver is exquisitely crafted, even though the container is only 4 inches (11
    centimeters) wide and 16 inches (39.5 centimeters) long. Click on the picture to
    see the full coffinette and other artifacts from New York’s King Tut exhibition.




    King Tutankhamun’s treasures have been on the road for a long, long time: Over the past five years, precious artifacts have been criss-crossing America, heading over to London, then back to Egypt, then back to America. Everywhere those artifacts have gone, museumgoers have gone crazy over the boy-king, just as they did during a traveling Tut exhibit in the 1970s. (Remember Steve Martin’s classic Tut tribute, circa 1978?)


    Tut mania continues to reigns supreme, especially now that the big tour has reached New York City, its last U.S. stop.


    “A different generation of Tut mania is everywhere,” Zahi Hawass, secretary general of Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquities, observed during a walkthrough of the “King Tut NYC” exhibition in midtown Manhattan.


    But the Tut of today – or at least the image that Hawass and other experts have of the “golden boy” from 3,300 years ago – is not the Tut of 30 years ago, or even five years ago. High-tech studies of the mummy have led to an extreme makeover in the story that’s told by the golden treasures.

    …(read more)

  • “Biggest Loser” Trainer Jillian Michaels Will Adopt To Save Figure

    Too fit for kids? Jillain Michaels doesn’t want babies stretching out her well-toned tummy.

    The Biggest Loser trainer doesn’t want to ruin her super-fit figure by getting pregnant, so she’s planning to adopt kids instead. Jillian was overweight as a child and after winning the battle with obesity she doesn’t want to risk undoing all that hard work by gaining weight with a pregnancy.

    “I’m going to adopt,” the 36-year-old told Women’s Health Magazine this month. “I can’t handle doing that to my body. Also, when you rescue something, it’s like rescuing a part of yourself.”

    At least she’s honest. However, Jillian’s remarks has attracted widespread criticism within in the health industry, with some experts accusing her of passing on dangerous ideas to other women about the “health risks” of pregnancy. Meanwhile, others have praised the fitness guru for wanting to open her heart to a child in need — no matter what her reasons.


  • ICC prosecutor requests non-cooperation ruling against Sudan

    [JURIST] Chief prosecutor for the International Criminal Court (ICC) Luis Moreno Ocampo has asked judges to report Sudan to the UN Security Council for failing to comply with arrest warrants for two government officials. Ocampo filed the request Monday for a finding of non-cooperation pursuant to Article 87 of the Rome Statute for the government’s refusal to arrest Humanitarian Affairs Minister Ahmed Harun and Janjaweed militia leader Ali Kushayb. The request stated that Sudan has a binding legal obligation to fully cooperate with the court, as mandated by UN Security Counsel Resolution 1593, and has repeatedly refused to do so since the warrants were issued in 2007. The request went on to say “o the contrary, the continues to commit crimes, promotes and protects the persons sought by the Court; and harasses all persons who are considered to be in favor of justice.” Sudan, which is not a permanent member of the ICC, refuses to recognize the court’s jurisdiction, stating that “the International Criminal Court has no place in this crisis at all.” Harun and Kushayb are wanted for 51 counts of crimes against humanity and war crimes.
    Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir has also eluded a warrant issued last year for his arrest. Last month, the president of the ICC said that Bashir will eventually face justice in The Hague. Speaking in London before the UK House of Commons, Judge Sang-Hyun Song addressed controversy surrounding the ICC arrest warrant issued one year ago stating that “judges cannot and will not take political considerations into account.”Responding to questions, Song went on to compare the al-Bashir warrant with the successful surrender of Slobodan Milosevic and Charles Taylor to the international criminal tribunals.

  • The BioSoil Demonstration Project: first findings

    The BioSoil project is the single largest soil and biodiversity monitoring exercise implemented at an EU scale so far

    Thanks to the success of the BioSoil Demonstration Project, JRC scientists have concluded that large scale monitoring of soil conditions and biodiversity in forests is achievable. This goes part way towards fulfilling the main aims of the project: to provide harmonised soil and biodiversity data EU-wide, to evaluate the methodology of European soil and forest biodiversity monitoring programmes, and to provide a baseline to assess future trends in the soil condition and biodiversity of forests in the EU.

    Soil characterisation data are essential to discover how an ecosystem works. Within the Forest Focus Biosoil project, participant countries have increased the range of forest monitoring activities (on atmospheric pollution and forest fires) by intensifying surveys on soil characteristics and forest biodiversity indicators.

  • Doubts Persist in Coal County That Washington Will Act

    President Obama

    President Obama calls for stricter mining regulations in the Rose Garden of the White House on April 15. (EPA/ZUMApress.com)

    Beckley, W.Va. — “It’s unfortunate, but every mine safety law we have on the books today was written in the blood of coal miners.”

    Image by: Matt Mahurin

    Image by: Matt Mahurin

    So said Rep. Nick Rahall, Democrat of West Virginia, just hours after an underground blast in his district killed 29 coal miners earlier this month. It’s a sentiment uttered frequently in coal country, and it’s tragically relevant again as policymakers in both Washington and Charleston are vowing to prevent the next disaster with new laws, regulations and enforcement tactics designed to improve mine safety.

    On the ground in Southern West Virginia, however, many doubts persist — with good reason. For more than four decades, members of the proud mining community here have watched from afar as Congress installed a series of sweeping new oversights and precautions in the wake of some horrific mining accident, only to have another come down the pike a few years later. In short, they’ve seen this picture before, and they don’t like how it ends.

    Bill Price, a native of West Virginia’s coal country who now organizes for the Sierra Club on coal issues, summarized the trend tersely: “Somebody has to die first.”

    The history backs his claim. The Farmington, W.Va., blast of 1968, for example, led to a 1969 overhaul of mining safety measures. A series of fatal Appalachian accidents in the 1970s catalyzed the mining reforms of 1977. Two back-to-back coal disasters in West Virginia in 2006 cleared the way for passage of the MINER Act later that year. And now, in the wake of this month’s deadly blast at the Upper Big Branch Mine in Raleigh County, policymakers — both state and federal — have reacted with investigations, promises of tighter regulations, and vows of “Never Again.”

    “We have the resources,” fumed Sen. Robert Byrd (D-W.Va.). “These tragedies, on this scale, should no longer be happening.”

    That they are happening, many West Virginians argue, owes to a series of factors that have conspired, often with tragic effect.

    • Lax Oversight: Mine-safety advocates have been arguing for years that the ties between many regulators — state and federal — and the companies they’re overseeing have grown too close, allowing the companies to skirt safety rules as inspectors look away. Lawrence Richmond, 85, a World War II vet who worked in the mines of Southern West Virginia for 34 years, said this week that that trend, though hardly recent, should change.”A lot of those inspectors overlooked things in order to keep mines operating,” Richmond said. “So if they run into some coal company that’s not obeying the laws, then it’s gonna have to be shut down, and the state’s gonna have to enforce it. That’s all there is to it.”
    • Disregard for the Rules: Ostensibly, mine inspections are considered “surprise” events because the regulators often arrive to the gates unannounced. But miners have testified that there’s still plenty of time to clean the place up before those inspectors get underground.”We would know the minute they [inspectors] would come on the hill. We’d know the minute they’d get ready to come underground. We’d know what section they were going to,” one Massey deep miner said recently. “And that would give the people up on the section time to get their ventilation right, to try to get into what they should be doing all along, and stay in compliance with the laws.”
    • Media Indifference: Although nearly half of the nation’s electricity is generated by coal, there remains an odd sense — both among the general public and Capitol Hill lawmakers — that mining safety is somehow an issue local to coal-producing regions. Indeed, although Raleigh County was swamped with reporters in the immediate wake of the Upper Big Branch blast — and many will surely be covering President Obama’s visit to Beckley Sunday to remember the deceased — the story faded from the front pages after all the miners were found.”You guys just disappeared,” Jerry Massie, field representative for the United Mine Workers of America’s District 29 branch in Beckley, told a reporter this week.
    • Sheer power of the Coal Industry: Coal companies — no fans of tighter safety measures — hold tremendous sway over West Virginia’s lawmakers, who have accepted hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign cash from the industry over the years. Critics say that it’s no coincidence that those same lawmakers have a long history of protecting the companies from tighter regulations.”This state is bought and sold by the coal companies,” said Chuck Nelson, a former Massey miner who’s since become an environmental activist with the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition.
    • Poorly Targeted Reforms: Because congressional mining reforms have most often arrived in reaction to specific accidents, they’ve tended to target specific problems while ignoring others. For example, the 2006 MINER Act, which focused heavily on new requirements for keeping trapped miners alive after blasts, has been criticized for not doing enough to prevent those blasts to begin with.”There was nothing that come out of that MINER Act in 2006 that helped these [UBB] miners,” said Denny Tyler, an electrician who has contracted with Massey and now runs an anti-mountaintop removal website. “Nothing.”

    This month’s tragedy has altered some of these powerful dynamics, at least temporarily. Indeed, West Virginia Gov. Joe Manchin (D), a former coal broker with a long history of defending the industry, called recently for the state’s mines to cease production for a day in order to examine their safety measures.

    “In a deep mine explosion, there’s no way to protect anybody in the mine. All you can do is prevent it from happening,” Manchin (D) said last week. “What we’re trying to do is, in their honor, re-evaluate everything we do and the practices we use to make it safe.

    “Not one person should have to work in unsafe conditions,” he added. “Everyone should expect to go home at night.”