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  • Disappearance Diary by Hideo Azuma, translated by Kumar Sivasubramanian and Elizabeth Tiernan

    “This manga has a positive outlook on life, and so it has been made with as much realism removed as possible.” Thus begins award-winning, prodigious Japanese manga artist Hideo Azuma’s tri-part reminiscences that capture three highly difficult periods of his life, indeed presented with so much “realism removed” as to provide plenty of giddy (and guilty) Schadenfreude entertainment.

    Azuma’s alter-ego is a squat, one-eyed-ish, comical character who miraculously survives two extended bouts of runaway homelessness and another of incarcerated alcoholism. His debilitating “depression, anxieties, and delusions …” cause him twice (in 1989 and again in1992) to quit all his manga assignments, leave home, and set up what must have been a miserable subsistence in the woods. But Azuma presents his dumpster-diving, liquor-searching, cigarette-butt gleaning days with a light, tongue-in-cheek attitude that never sinks to gloom and doom … even when his alter-ego decides suicide might be the best option of all.

    From his aimless vantage point during his second time out, Azuma notices, “Everyone’s working. Maybe I oughtta be, too,” and ends up getting a job with the gas company. His “blue-collar” stint leaves him in great physical shape after a year-plus of hard labor, but soon he’s had enough and quits that, too: “I had nothing to do [so] I went back to drawing manga.”

    Five years of a different kind of hard labor creating endless manga for others leaves Azuma a delusional alcoholic mess. His shockingly patient wife (she must be a saint!) finally rescues him from himself and commits him into a psychiatric hospital. His road to redemption – paved with IVs, arm and leg restraints, cyanide (a painful inhibitor against alcohol consumption), AA meetings, and an endless parade of wacky characters – eventually leads to the promise of true release. “Maybe another two months here,” he ponders on the final page. But he’s also planning ahead: “There are a lot of other things that happened and strange people I met here, but I’ll save that for next time … ” We’ll be waiting …

    Readers: Adult

    Published: 2008 (United Kingdom, United States)

  • Arctic permafrost leaking methane at record levels, figures show

    The Guardian reports that methane emission from Siberia are accelerating – Arctic permafrost leaking methane at record levels, figures show.

    Scientists have recorded a massive spike in the amount of a powerful greenhouse gas seeping from Arctic permafrost, in a discovery that highlights the risks of a dangerous climate tipping point.

    Experts say methane emissions from the Arctic have risen by almost one-third in just five years, and that sharply rising temperatures are to blame.

    The discovery follows a string of reports from the region in recent years that previously frozen boggy soils are melting and releasing methane in greater quantities. Such Arctic soils currently lock away billions of tonnes of methane, a far more potent greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide, leading some scientists to describe melting permafrost as a ticking time bomb that could overwhelm efforts to tackle climate change.

    They fear the warming caused by increased methane emissions will itself release yet more methane and lock the region into a destructive cycle that forces temperatures to rise faster than predicted.

    Paul Palmer, a scientist at Edinburgh University who worked on the new study, said: “High latitude wetlands are currently only a small source of methane but for these emissions to increase by a third in just five years is very significant. It shows that even a relatively small amount of warming can cause a large increase in the amount of methane emissions.”

    Global warming is occuring twice as fast in the Arctic than anywhere else on Earth. Some regions have already warmed by 2.5C, and temperatures there are projected to increase by more than 10C by 2100 if carbon emissions continue to rise at current rates.

    Palmer said: “This study does not show the Arctic has passed a tipping point, but it should open people’s eyes. It shows there is a positive feedback and that higher temperatures bring higher emissions and faster warming.”

    The change in the Arctic is enough to explain a recent increase in global methane levels in the atmosphere, he said. Global levels have risen steadily since 2007, after a decade or so holding steady.

    The new study, published in the journal Science, shows that methane emissions from the Arctic increased by 31% from 2003-07. The increase represents about 1m extra tonnes of methane each year. Palmer cautioned that the five-year increase was too short to call a definitive trend.

    The Guardian also has an article from George Monbiot on a “national outpouring of idiocy” in Britain in the wake of the recent cold snap – Britain’s cold snap does not prove climate science wrong.

    It’s as predictable a feature of the British winter as log fires and roasting chestnuts: a national outpouring of idiocy every time some snow falls.

    Here’s what Martyn Brown says in today’s Express:

    As one of the worst winters in 100 years grips the country, climate experts are still trying to claim the world is growing warmer.

    There’s a clue as to where he might have gone wrong in that sentence: “country” has a slightly different meaning to “world”. Buried at the bottom of the same article is the admission that ” … other areas including Alaska, Canada and the Mediterranean were warmer than usual.” But that didn’t stop Brown from using the occasion to note that “critics of the global warming lobby said the public were no longer prepared to be conned into believing that man-made emissions were adding to the problem.”

    The ability to distinguish trends from complex random events is one of the traits that separates humans from the rest of the animal kingdom. It is also the basis of all science; detecting patterns, distinguishing between signal and noise, and the means by which the laws of physics, chemistry and biology are determined. Now we are being asked to commit ourselves to the wilful stupidity of extrapolating a long-term trend from a single event.

    The Express would have us return to the days in which the future course of human affairs could be predicted by solar eclipses and the appearance of comets. It has clearly made a calculated decision in recent months that climate scepticism plays to its readership – and therefore shifts papers – just as the daily drip-feed of conspiracy theories about Princess Diana and Madeleine McCann has done in the past.

    Brown is by no means alone in his idiocy. On Sunday, the Telegraph and the Mail published almost identical articles; one by Christopher Booker, the other by his long-term collaborator, Richard North. Both claimed that the Met Office had predicted a mild winter, and that it had made this prediction because it has been “hijacked” by a group of fanatics – led first by its former chief executive Sir John Houghton, now by the current boss Robert Napier – who stand accused of seeking to to corrupt forecasts to make them conform to their theories on climate change.

    If this story were true, it would be huge: the UK’s official weather forecasting service is deliberately changing its forecasts to make them fit a political agenda. It would also be fantastically stupid, as forecasts can always be checked against delivery. Booker and North offer no evidence to support this humongous conspiracy theory, just a load of unrelated facts cobbled together in the usual fashion.


  • Evidence of dogs’ sixth-sense as K9 bolts before earthquake strikes American office block

    UK Daily Mail
    Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

    Animal instinct, pet owners swear by it. From cats
    sensing impending health problems like seizures, to dogs barking madly
    when unfamiliar footsteps appear on the garden path.

    Even as far back as 373BC, it is recorded that animals, including
    rats, snakes and weasels, deserted the Greek city of Helice in droves
    just days before a quake devastated the place.

    Those without that ’special bond’, though, remain sceptical. But doubters, prepare to be converted.

    CCTV footage has emerged of a news station office in North Carolina seconds before an eathquake struck on January 9.

    Popout

    Full article here

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  • Braun’s Sprint Debut, Driven by Sorenson and Vickers

    The first take of Braun Racing at this year’s Sprint Cup will be headed by former Ganassi and Richard Petty Motorsports racer Reed Sorenson, who will drive the Dollar General Toyota Camry in the five races for the team in 2010. He will share the car with Brian Vickers, now in his fourth consecutive season with Braun. Crew chief for the Dollar General team will be Trent Owens.

    I look forward to returning to Braun Racing and the No. 32 Dollar General car, Sorenson said. Braun Racing is a grea… (read more)

  • Divers kick off season

    The Stanford diving team, composed of four men and four women, looks to build on its success under veteran coach Dr. Rick Schavone. Several divers look to repeat as All-Americans this year. (Stanford Daily File Photo)

    The Stanford diving team, composed of four men and four women, looks to build on its success under veteran coach Dr. Rick Schavone. Several divers look to repeat as All-Americans this year. (Stanford Daily File Photo)

    Team begins play at Bruin Diving Invitational

    Often overlooked because of its small size, the Stanford diving team has been one of the nation’s premier programs for the past several years. The team fields eight divers — four men and four women. The team’s relatively low on-campus profile is attributable to both its size and the fact that many of its events take place at large tournaments off-campus rather than in dual meets.

    In a sport measured chiefly by individual achievement, the Cardinal divers had some success last year. The men’s team sent two divers to last year’s NCAA Tournament, senior Dwight Dumais and junior Brent Eichenseer. Dumais was an All-American in both the one-meter and three-meter springboards, and Eichenseer exceeded expectations by winning All-American honors in platform diving.

    “It was the first time I was an All-American on both boards,” Dumais said. “I was seeded second in the one-meter finals. But diving is a sport of moments — I didn’t have the best of competitions and I ended eighth. College diving is so deep right now — if you don’t compete at your best, it’s tough to win.”

    Head coach Dr. Rick Schavone, who is entering his 32nd season as Stanford diving’s coach, said he was pleased with last year’s results.

    “The men had a very good meet. Brent was exceptionally good,” Schavone said. “He had a very good year and we hope to build on that.”

    The women’s team did not have as much success, however. Junior Meg Hostage was unable to finish strong at NCAAs, placing 25th and 27th in the one-meter and three-meter, respectively. Senior Carmen Stellar had relatively more success, placing 14th in the platform consolation finals.

    “Carmen was a walk-on, so to do that in her junior year was an amazing accomplishment,” Schavone said. “Stellar had a great year, but the women’s season was a disappointment overall.”

    For this season, the main focus is on getting Dumais, Eichenseer, Stellar and Hostage back to the NCAA Finals and improving on last year’s finishes. Given that all four have already been to the NCAAs at least once, chances are high that this goal will be accomplished.

    “We want to be in the top 16 for both men and women,” Schavone said.

    While the team trains together to build up camaraderie, diving is essentially an individual sport and each diver has personal goals for the end of the season. The two seniors are the most ambitious.

    “My goal is an individual NCAA title on the one or three-meter springboard. I don’t want to end my Stanford career without bringing home a title,” Dumais said. “Statistically, the one-meter springboard has been my best event — I have three All-Americans and have competed internationally. Right now, the three-meter is primarily my focus. That’s an Olympic event while the one-meter is not, so that’s where I’d like to have my success.”

    Stellar also has big expectations.

    “I’d love to final in all events at NCAAs,” she said. “I also want to get top-three finishes in all three events at the Pac-10 championships.”

    The Cardinal sophomores and freshmen don’t really come into this picture, but Schavone explained that the team’s approach is very long-term.

    “[The underclassmen] are just getting better,” he said. “They will keep improving and get to a level where they can replace the upperclassmen. It’s a four-year process.”

    Sophomore Mary-Beth Corbett also talked about this progression.

    “Being a diver is a four-year process. The emphasis in freshman and sophomore year is looking at the upperclassmen, learning and developing new skills. That’s what makes Stanford Diving different from other schools — the focus on the development program.”

    Corbett said her main goal for this year was to do well on her dives and continue improving.

    “I want to make a statement that I am going to be one of the top Stanford divers,” she said.

    The diving team faces its first competition of the winter season this weekend, when both the men and the women head to Los Angeles to compete in the Bruin Diving Invitational.

    “We have two factors working against us: the team went on a break and then they came back and trained really hard — we’re a little beat up right now. This is just an introductory level for the boys,” Schavone said. “It’s a test for the girls against the USC girls, who are the best in the conference — we can see where we are against them. It’s our first meet back — it’s just about getting our feet wet.”

    Stellar agreed, saying: “It’s an early meet, so I’m excited to get a look at the competition and see where I’m at.”

    “I simply want to test out how much I’ve been training and how much I’ve improved over the break,” Eichenseer added.

    The Bruin Diving Invitational will take place all day Saturday and Sunday.

  • Not as bad as they thought: Coral can recover from climate change damage

    Watts Up With That?
    Tuesday , January 12th, 2010

    From a University of Exeter press release, another inconvenient truth about our planet sure to be denounced by some who claim that global warming is irreparably damaging reef systems.

    Not as bad as they thought: Coral can recover from climate change damage parrotfish page

    A study by the University of Exeter provides the first evidence that
    coral reefs can recover from the devastating effects of climate change.
    Published Monday 11 January in the journal PLOS One, the
    research shows for the first time that coral reefs located in marine
    reserves can recover from the impacts of global warming.

    Scientists and environmentalists have warned that coral reefs may
    not be able to recover from the damage caused by climate change and
    that these unique environments could soon be lost forever. Now, this
    research adds weight to the argument that reducing levels of fishing is
    a viable way of protecting the world’s most delicate aquatic
    ecosystems.

    Increases in ocean surface water temperatures subject coral reefs to
    stresses that lead quickly to mass bleaching. The problem is
    intensified by ocean acidification, which is also caused by increased CO2. This decreases the ability of corals to produce calcium carbonate (chalk), which is the material that reefs are made of.

    Approximately 2% of the world’s coral reefs are located within
    marine reserves, areas of the sea that are protected against
    potentially-damaging human activity, like dredging and fishing.

    The researchers conducted surveys of ten sites inside and outside
    marine reserves of the Bahamas over 2.5 years. These reefs have been
    severely damaged by bleaching and then by hurricane Frances in the
    summer of 2004. At the beginning of the study, the reefs had an average
    of 7% coral cover. By the end of the project, coral cover in marine
    protected areas had increased by an average of 19%, while reefs in
    non-reserve sites showed no recovery.

    Professor Peter Mumby of the University of Exeter said: “Coral
    reefs are the largest living structures on Earth and are home to the
    highest biodiversity on the planet. As a result of climate change, the
    environment that has enabled coral reefs to thrive for hundreds of
    thousands of years is changing too quickly for reefs to adapt.

    “In order to protect reefs in the long-term we need radical action to reduce CO2
    emissions. However, our research shows that local action to reduce the
    effects of fishing can contribute meaningfully to the fate of reefs.
    The reserve allowed the number of parrotfishes to increase and because
    parrotfish eat seaweeds, the corals could grow freely without being
    swamped by weeds. As a result, reefs inside the park were showing
    recovery whereas those with more seaweed were not. This sort of
    evidence may help persuade governments to reduce the fishing of key
    herbivores like parrotfishes and help reefs cope with the inevitable
    threats posed by climate change”.

    ###

    Professor Mumby’s research was funded by National Environment
    Research Council (NERC) and the Khaled bin Sultan Living Oceans
    Foundation.

    Reef facts

    • A coral reef is made up of thin layers of calcium carbonate
      (limestone) secreted over thousands of years by billions of tiny soft
      bodied animals called coral polyps.
    • Coral reefs are the world’s most diverse marine ecosystems
      and are home to twenty-five percent of known marine species, including
      4,000 species of fish, 700 species of coral and thousands of other
      plants and animals.
    • Coral reefs have been on the planet for over 400 million years.
    • The largest coral reef is the Great Barrier Reef, which stretches
      along the northeast coast of Australia, from the northern tip of
      Queensland, to just north of Bundaberg. At 2,300km long, it is the
      largest natural feature on Earth.
    • Coral reefs occupy less than one quarter of one percent of the
      Earth’s marine environment, yet they are home to more than a
      quarter of all known fish species.
    • As well as supporting huge tourist industries, coral reefs protect shorelines from erosion and storm damage.

    To download high quality reef videos by Professor Peter Mumby: www.reefvid.org

    The main funding for the research came from Khaled bin Sultan Living
    Oceans Foundation and the Natural Environment Research Council.

    The Khaled bin Sultan Living Oceans Foundation (www.livingoceansfoundation.org)
    is dedicated to conservation and restoration of living oceans and
    pledges to champion their preservation through research, education and
    a commitment to Science Without Borders®.

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  • Mini: évolutions moteurs et peintures psychédéliques au programme

    La gamme Mini se refait une beauté pour 2010 avec de nouvelles peintures irisées très spéciales, et des moteurs en version Euro5.

    –> Retrouvez toute l’actualité en continu de BMW & Mini, et de leurs modèles, sur le Fil News BMW/Mini.

    –> On commence donc par les évolutions des moteurs essence qui passent aux normes Euro 5 et en profitent pour gagner en prestations:

    -La Cooper S 1.6 Turbo gagne 9cv. et passe donc à 184, le couple passe à 240Nm. à 1600 tours (260 avec Overboost). Grâce à la distribution Valvetronic, la Mini Cooper S effectue désormais le 0/100 en 7 secondes, avec une vitesse mximale de 228 km/h. La conso mixte gagne 0,4 l./100 pour s’établir désormais à 5,8 l. Les émissions de CO² sont annoncées pour 136g./km.

    -La Cooper S Clubman de son côté annonce 7,5 secondes pour le 0/100, 227 km/h. maxi, 5,9 l. de conso moyenne et 137 g. de CO²/km.

    -Pour le Cabrio Cooper S: 7,3 secondes pour le 0/100, 225 km/h. maxi, 6,0 l./100 en moyenne et 139 g. de CO².

    -Les 3 versions reçoivent une boite 6 en série, et en option une séquentielle 6 rapports avec palettes au volant.

    -De son côté la Cooper 1.6 gagne également la distribution Valvetronic  et gagne 2 cv., soit désormais 122. Le couple passe à 122 Nm. à 4600 tours. Le 0/100 est annoncé en 9,3 secondes et la vitesse maxi passe à 203 km/h., avec une conso moyenne de 5,4 l. et des émissions de CO² de 127 g./km.

    -Pour les dérivés Cabrio et Clubman, ça donne désormais: 9,8 secondes au 0/100 dans les 2 cas, 198 km/h pour la Clubman et 201 pour le Cabrio, 5,5 l/100 pour la Clubman et 5,7 pour le Cabrio, ce dernier passe à 133 g. de CO²/km contre 129 pour la Clubman.

    –> Voici maintenant l’option « Rainbow », disponible à compter d’avril. 3 teintes irisées dénommées « Sunlight Metallic », « Asteroid Metallic » et « Nightlife Metallic » sont au programme. Le prix de l’option n’est pas encore précisé. Ce type de peintures à reflets a été essayé par Alfa romeo il y a une dizaine d’années sans grand succès, sous le nom de « Nuvola ». En cause, le prix très élevé et surtout les problèmes en cas de retouches! Souhaitons à Mini plus de succès…

    Nouveau: pour profiter facilement et rapidement des notifications de nouveautés sur le site, pensez à vous abonner via Twitter. Chaque modification, nouvel article ou nouvelle vidéo sur notre chaîne Youtube, fait l’objet d’un Tweet immédiat!

  • Reggie Fils-Aime: Wii users don’t care for Netflix HD

    We seriously have to question the sanity of some of these high-ranking corporate types. Reggie Fils-Aime, Nintendo of America boss and fearless orator, has joined Andy Rubin of Google in claiming that his customers do not require a feature so prevalent nowadays that it has become close to a basic standard. While the Xbox 360 and PS3 are capable of streaming full HD movies from Netflix at no extra cost, Reggie has stated his belief that “there really is no loss for the Wii consumer” because “the vast majority” of Netflix streaming content isn’t HD anyway. Reiterating his longstanding, but never adequately explained, hesitance toward HD, Reggie has also claimed that the 26 million Wii console owners out there have voted with their wallets and will be quite happy to continue putt-putting along at standard def. Skip past the break to see him speaking his heresy with a straight face.

    Continue reading Reggie Fils-Aime: Wii users don’t care for Netflix HD

    Reggie Fils-Aime: Wii users don’t care for Netflix HD originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 15 Jan 2010 03:54:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink Joystiq  |  sourceCNBC  | Email this | Comments

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  • Antarctic sea water shows ‘no sign’ of warming

    Watts Up With That?
    Tuesday , January 12th, 2010

    From the Australian:
    SEA water under an East Antarctic ice shelf showed no sign of higher
    temperatures despite fears of a thaw linked to global warming that
    could bring higher world ocean levels, first tests showed yesterday.

    Antarctic sea water shows ‘no sign’ of warming
    The drilling rig that was used – ironically it uses hot water to
    drill! Keith Makinson and Keith Nicholls from British Antarctic Survey
    hot water drilling the Filchner Ronne Ice-Shelf in a previous
    expedition. 

    Sensors lowered through three holes drilled in the Fimbul Ice Shelf
    showed the sea water is still around freezing and not at higher
    temperatures widely blamed for the break-up of 10 shelves on the
    Antarctic Peninsula, the most northerly part of the frozen continent in
    West Antarctica.

    Antarctic sea water shows ‘no sign’ of warming Antarktisk Fimbulisen Click for larger map 

    “The water under the ice shelf is very close to the freezing
    point,” Ole Anders Noest of the Norwegian Polar Institute wrote
    after drilling through the Fimbul, which is between 250m and 400m thick.

    “This situation seems to be stable, suggesting that the
    melting under the ice shelf does not increase,” he wrote of the
    first drilling cores. 

    The findings, a rare bit of good news after worrying signs in recent
    years of polar warming, adds a small bit to a puzzle about how
    Antarctica is responding to climate change, blamed largely on human use
    of fossil fuels.

    Antarctica holds enough water to raise world sea levels by 57m if it
    ever all melted, so even tiny changes are a risk for low-lying coasts
    or cities from Beijing to New York.

    Instruments attached to the cabel
    Ole Anders Nøst attaches temperature sensors to the cable as it
    is lowered into the borehole. Image: Lars Henrik Smedsrud 

    The Institute said the water under the Fimbul was about -2.05C.
    Salty water freezes at a slightly lower temperature than fresh water.

    And it was slightly icier than estimates in a regional model for
    Antarctica, head of the Norwegian Polar Institute’s Center for
    Ice, Climate and Ecosystems, Nalan Koc, said.

    “The important thing is that we are now in a position to monitor the water beneath the ice shelf.

    “If there is a warming in future we can tell.”

    She said data collected could go into a new report by the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, due in 2013-14.

    The last IPCC report, in 2007, did not include computer models for sea temperature around the Fimbul Ice Shelf.

    ========

    From the expedition web site: http://fimbul.npolar.no/en/news/current/Nye_data.html

    We observed a roughly 50 meter deep layer of water with temperatures
    very close to the freezing point, about -2.05 degrees, just beneath the
    ice shelf. The highest observed temperature was about -1.83 degrees
    close to the bottom. The temperatures are very similar to temperature
    data collected by elephant seals in 2008 and by British Antarctic
    Survey using an autosub below the ice shelf in 2005.

    We collected three profiles from the underside of the ice to the
    seabed at 653 meters below sealevel. No trace of the relatively warm
    deep water that upwells over the continental slope was found. It will
    be exciting to see if this is the situation all year round, says Ole
    Anders Nøst.

    For more on how the drilling was done, see this PDF of the method and equipment here

    More on the project here

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  • Nuevo aeropuerto para costa atlántica

    DESARROLLO.
    Panamá América. 15/01/2010

    En la localidad colonense de Coco Solo se edificará un aeropuerto internacional, mientras a lo largo de la costa atlántica de la provincia se construirá una carretera hasta Bocas del Toro, informó una fuente oficial.

    El ministro panameño de Comercio e Industrias, Roberto Henríquez, informó de que además del aeropuerto se impulsará la transformación de la Zona Procesadora de Davis al modelo de la Zona Libre de Colón, que la incorporaría a su operación.

    Además, este año se continuará la ampliación de los puertos de Cristóbal y Balboa (Pacífico) de la empresa Panama Port Company.

    Mencionó que ya el Presidente Ricardo Martinelli ordenó terminar de construir el tramo de la autopista Panamá-Colón desde los Cuatro Altos hasta la ciudad de Colón.

    También mencionó que a mediano plazo se tiene en proyecto una “costanera” o carretera desde Colón hasta la provincia de Bocas del Toro.

    Estos proyectos de inversión para la provincia están contemplados dentro del plan quinquenal de inversión por $13,595 millones que el gobierno publicó el pasado día 12 en la Gaceta Oficial.

    En el caso de Colón se destinará $622 millones.

    No creo que sea el mismo diseño que en la foto,,jejeje
    Saludos:)

  • Poll: Most Americans would trim liberties to be safer

    Steven Thomma
    McClatchy Newspapers
    Thursday, January 14th, 2010

    After a recent attempted terrorist attack set off a
    debate about full-body X-rays at airports, a new McClatchy-Ipsos poll
    finds that Americans lean more toward giving up some of their liberty
    in exchange for more safety.

    The survey found 51 percent of Americans agreeing that “it is
    necessary to give up some civil liberties in order to make the country
    safe from terrorism.”

    At the same time, 36 percent agreed that “some of the
    government’s proposals will go too far in restricting the
    public’s civil liberties.”

    The rest were undecided or said their opinions would depend on circumstances.

    Full article here

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  • All puppies to be microchipped according to new recommendations to Defra

    Laura Roberts
    London Telegraph
    Thursday, January 14, 2009

    Dog owners could be forced to register their pets following the
    latest recommendations made to Defra in a report commissioned by the
    Kennel Club.

    An independent inquiry into dog breeding recommended that all puppies be microchipped before they are sold on.

    Initially this should be done on a voluntary basis with the public
    advised only to buy dogs that are registered. However, the report will
    recommend that Defra amend the Animal Welfare Act and pass it into law.

    This would affect the 6 million households in Britain that have dogs, three quarters of which are pedigrees.

    Full story here.

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  • Chinese Operation Against Google Involved Accessing the Firm’s Internal Intercept Systems

    Cryptogon
    Thursday, January 14, 2009

    Via: Computer World:

    Drummond said that the hackers never got into Gmail accounts via
    the Google hack, but they did manage to get some “account
    information (such as the date the account was created) and subject
    line.”

    That’s because they apparently were able to access
    a system used to help Google comply with search warrants by providing
    data on Google users, said a source familiar with the situation, who
    spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak
    with the press. “Right before Christmas, it was, ‘Holy
    s***, this malware is accessing the internal intercept
    [systems],’” he said.

    That, in turn led to a Christmas Eve meeting led by Google
    co-founder Larry Page to assess the situation. Three weeks later, the
    company had decided that things were serious enough that it would risk
    walking away from the largest market of Internet users in the world.

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  • The Drug War vs. the Bill of Rights

    Anthony Gregory
    Campaign For Liberty
    Thursday, January 14th, 2010

    This is from Ludwig von Mises’s economic masterpiece, Human Action, written sixty years ago in 1949:

    The problems involved in direct government interference
    with consumption. . . concern the fundamental issues of human life and
    social organization. If it is true that government derives its
    authority from God and is entrusted by Providence to act as the
    guardian of the ignorant and stupid populace, then it is certainly its
    task to regiment every aspect of the subject’s conduct. The
    God-sent ruler knows better what is good for his wards than they do
    themselves. It is his duty to guard them against the harm they would
    inflict upon themselves if left alone.

    Self-styled “realistic” people fail to recognize the
    immense importance of the principles implied. They contend that they do
    not want to deal with the matter from what, they say, is a philosophic
    and academic point of view. Their approach is, they argue, exclusively
    guided by practical considerations. . . .

    However, the case is not so simple as that. Opium and morphine are
    certainly dangerous, habit-forming drugs. But once the principle is
    admitted that it is the duty of government to protect the individual
    against his own foolishness, no serious objections can be advanced
    against further encroachments. A good case could be made out in favor
    of the prohibition of alcohol and nicotine. And why limit the
    government’s benevolent providence to the protection of the
    individual’s body only? Is not the harm a man can inflict on his
    mind and soul even more disastrous than any bodily evils? Why not
    prevent him from reading bad books and seeing bad plays, from looking
    at bad paintings and statues and from hearing bad music? The mischief
    done by bad ideologies, surely, is much more pernicious, both for the
    individual and for the whole society, than that done by narcotic drugs.

    These fears are not merely imaginary specters terrifying secluded
    doctrinaires. It is a fact that no paternal government, whether ancient
    or modern, ever shrank from regimenting its subjects’ minds,
    beliefs, and opinions. If one abolishes man’s freedom to
    determine his own consumption, one takes all freedoms away. The
    naïve advocates of government interference with consumption delude
    themselves when they neglect what they disdainfully call the
    philosophical aspect of the problem. They unwittingly support the case
    of censorship, inquisition, religious intolerance, and the persecution
    of dissenters.

    Radicalism on the drug issue is often seen in terms of the politics
    of the 1960s and since, but twenty years before Woodstock, one of the
    most serious and significant thinkers ever to ponder the importance of
    human liberty said all this, going far beyond what most critics of drug
    policy would say today.

    But is Mises correct? Does he overstate his case? Is the abolition
    of the right to consume whatever someone wants really taking all his
    freedom away? And does drug prohibition really send us on the path to
    censorship and religious persecution?

    In America, our liberties our ostensibly protected by the U.S.
    Constitution and particularly the Bill of Rights. How much has the drug
    war compromised our Constitutional rights? Let us consider a countdown,
    starting with the Tenth Amendment and moving to First.

    The Tenth Amendment says “The powers not
    delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by
    it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the
    people.” This effectively means that if the Constitution does not
    grant the power to the federal government over something, then it is
    for the states and people to decide. Some people here would say this is
    the most important amendment. If the federal government obeyed it, the
    entire drug war as we know it would be impossible.

    In 1909, Hamilton Wright, U.S. official to the Shanghai Opium
    Commission, complained that the Constitution was “constantly
    getting in the way” of his drug war ambitions. Indeed, in
    domestic politics, there is no Constitutional authorization for a
    federal drug war whatever. Without a grant of power, the U.S.
    government is supposed to butt out.

    In 1914, Woodrow Wilson signed the Harrison Narcotic Act into law.
    There was no constitutional basis for this, but at least by the time
    alcohol prohibition came around, it was recognized that the federal
    government would need constitutional authority to ban liquor. They
    passed the 18th Amendment and repealed the disaster of alcohol
    prohibition with the 21st amendment.

    By 1937, however, there was no more such deference to Constitutional
    procedure. That year, Franklin Roosevelt signed the Marijuana Tax Act
    into law, effectively banning marijuana at the federal level. All the
    major federal drug laws since then had no Constitutional basis, and all
    of them seemed to come with general expansions of federal power. Just
    as Wilson’s ban on heroin and regulation of cocaine came during
    the activist Progressive Era and marijuana prohibition was part of
    FDR’s New Deal, the next major wave of federal drug law came in
    the 1960s, during the Great Society, and culminated in the 1970
    Controlled Substances Act just as Nixon was continuing LBJ’s
    policies of guns and butter.

    This relates to the medical marijuana debates since the 1990s. When
    states began allowing medicinal pot, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush
    both cracked down on their dispensaries, and many advocates of
    states’ rights decried this violation of federalism. A case went
    to the Supreme Court on 10th Amendment grounds and all the liberals on
    the court, all favoring a federal government with few limits on its
    power, upheld Bush’s raids. Three conservatives dissented,
    including Clarence Thomas, arguing that the federal government had no
    authority through the commerce clause to interfere with
    California’s medical marijuana policy.

    If Obama indeed stops the medical marijuana raids, it will probably
    not be because, as his spokesman says, he believes “that federal
    resources should not be used to circumvent state laws.” On
    general questions of policy, including the drug war, Obama and most
    liberals favor federal supremacy. If California goes through with
    legalizing marijuana outright, will Obama really do nothing about it?
    Will the administration actually find ways to crack down on medical
    marijuana while claiming the operations it’s targeting are not
    for medical use — as it has done before? Is it possible that
    Obama, not believing in the constitutional principles at stake, will
    accelerate other aspects of the drug war?

    The Tenth Amendment alone invalidates the federal drug war, and so too does the next one down.

    The Ninth Amendment says “The enumeration in
    the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or
    disparage others retained by the people.”

    This means that just because a personal right is not specifically
    mentioned does not mean the federal government can infringe upon it.
    Certainly the rights to use and sell drugs are being attacked in this
    very way.

    And in moral terms, this is what the drug war means. It is the
    denial of self-ownership. Someone who can’t decide what to put in
    himself does not own himself. The logic of the drug war is that the
    government owns you.

    We look at all the rights trampled in the name of the drug war and
    we see how all rights are connected. People are denied the right to
    self-medicate and take the treatment they desire. Not just in regard to
    illegal drugs either, but those that are regulated.

    The Food and Drug Administration is tied at the hip to the Drug
    Enforcement Administration. The pharmaceutical interests who control
    federal prescription drug policy have a stake in maintaining a control
    on what drugs people can do. The FDA, by keeping life-saving drugs off
    the market, has forced tens and tens of thousand Americans to die
    prematurely. Mary Ruwart puts the number in the millions.

    What would amuse me if it were not tragic is that so many liberals
    defend the FDA even as they question the drug war. But if you have a
    right to do drugs to get high, you surely also have a right to do any
    drug that you think might save your life. Medical freedom in its true
    sense is totally impossible without drug freedom.

    Because of the drug war, the right to travel is impeded, and the
    right to have and transfer money. Laws against money laundering —
    itself a victimless crime — have sprung up almost entirely
    because of the drug war. And anyone who believes that the right to
    practice free enterprise is important and guaranteed by the Ninth
    Amendment must necessarily oppose the drug war, which violates free
    market principles in a million ways.

    Next on our list is the Eighth Amendment, which guarantees that
    “Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines
    imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.”

    Well surely any punishment is cruel for a victimless crime.
    Conservatives might say this is a liberal reading of the Amendment. But
    at the time the Bill of Rights was adopted, prisons as we know them
    hardly existed, and the notion of imprisoning someone for ten years for
    growing hemp, on which the Constitution was drafted, would have been
    seen as quite cruel and quite unusual. In the 1970s and 1980s, Congress
    passed mandatory minimum laws which reduce the discretion of judges in
    handing out sentences — almost all such federally determined
    sentences are for drugs or guns.

    The average sentence in federal prison for drug trafficking is
    longer than for sexual abuse. The burgeoning prison state is one of the
    most horrifying features of modern American history, with the drug war
    playing a huge part. About one in four or five Americans prisoners are
    there for non-violent drug offenses — acts that were totally
    legal in the nineteenth century. Before Reagan stepped up the drug war,
    there were half a million Americans in prison or jail, and another 1.5
    million on parole or probation. There are now more than two million
    behind bars and seven million total in the correctional system. Prisons
    grew by 500 percent from 1982 to 2000 in my state of California.

    One out of four or five prisoners are there for drugs alone. And for
    their non-crime, they are sentenced to a personal totalitarianism: Gang
    violence, an alarming frequency of prison rape, beatings and sometimes
    death. Americans by the hundreds of thousands who have never raised a
    finger against anyone are in constant fear of being abused and turned
    into slaves by their cellmates. How any American can think this is in
    any way consistent with civilized society boggles the mind.

    Bail is often ridiculously high for drug war victims — $1
    million or more. The advent of asset forfeiture — whereby the
    government confiscates your property and essentially accuses it of
    being guilty of a civil offense — has become an effective way to
    circumvent the “excessive fines” clause.

    What about the Seventh Amendment? It reads: “In suits at
    common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars,
    the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a
    jury, shall be otherwise reexamined in any Court of the United States,
    than according to the rules of the common law.”

    I mentioned civil asset forfeiture. It is important to recognize
    that there is no criminal hearing for the vast majority of forfeiture
    victims. The property is seized through civil litigation. But since the
    property itself, and not the owner, is on trial, the Bill of Rights
    offers no protection. There’s no right to a trial. If a person
    wants to reclaim his confiscated property, he must ask for a trial. If
    the court rules that the property be returned, the government can ask
    for another one, or merely make return of the property contingent upon
    the victim paying tens of thousands of dollars in fines.

    You might be a charter pilot who has his plane taken as part of a
    drug investigation, and be unable to pay the six grand to get your
    plane back after being bankrupted by the legal system. This happened to
    Billy Munnerlyn in the early 1990s. You could be the wrong color or
    have the wrong amount of cash on you and lose it all to confiscators
    who get to keep a cut of what they steal.

    One point of the Seventh Amendment was to protect the rights of
    Americans to sue government officials for wrongdoing, and have a fair
    trial — not the type of mock trial the Founders saw used by the
    British Crown to let their officials off easy. The drug war has turned
    this entire idea on its head. Now the government can just take your
    property without charging you and all you can do is hope that it lets
    you make your case in a fixed sham proceeding that you are innocent.

    The Sixth Amendment reads, “In all criminal prosecutions, the
    accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an
    impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have
    been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained
    by law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation;
    to be confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory
    process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to have the
    Assistance of Counsel for his defense.”

    For standard crimes like murder, theft, rape and the like, it is
    perhaps possible to have trials reasonably available to every suspect.
    But there are simply too many drug offenders for this and no victims to
    serve as reliable witnesses. So the standard of evidence has been
    lowered to the point where the mere existence of enough cash and a
    cop’s say-so is enough to convict.

    What’s more, defense attorneys are often burdened with a
    hundred clients at once, so they must prioritize and leave those who
    are fated to only a year in prison to lesser hearings. Some judges have
    even refused to assign public defenders in drug cases.

    A dangerous alternative to the trial system is the “drug
    court,” wrongly touted by some reformers, including the Obama
    administration. In Obama and Biden’s “Blueprint for
    Change” they propose to “Expand Use of Drug Courts”
    to “give first-time, non-violent offenders a chance to serve
    their sentence, where appropriate, in the type of drug rehabilitation
    programs that have proven to work better than a prison term in changing
    bad behavior.”

    But as Morris Hoffman, a state trial judge in Denver and an adjunct
    professor of law at the University of Colorado, warned at the USA Today
    blog in October last year:

    [It’s] not just that drug courts don’t work, or
    don’t work well. They have the perverse effect of sending more
    drug defendants to prison, because their poor treatment results get
    swamped by an increase in the number of drug arrests. By virtue of a
    phenomenon social scientists call “net-widening,” the very
    existence of drug courts stimulates drug arrests.

    Police are no longer arresting criminals, they are trolling for
    patients. Denver’s drug arrests almost tripled in the two years
    after we began our drug court. At the end of those two years, we were
    sending almost twice the number of drug defendants to prison than we
    did before drug court.

    Attempting to win the drug war, even in a more progressive sense, is
    thus no substitute for abandoning it altogether. The only change I can
    believe we’ll see under Obama is more erosion of the Sixth
    Amendment.

    We’re just getting started. The Fifth Amendment states:
    “No person shall be. . . subject for the same offense to be twice
    put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal
    case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty,
    or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be
    taken for public use, without just compensation.”

    Mandatory drug testing can be seen as self-incrimination, as soon as
    the results are used in criminal prosecution. Civil asset forfeiture
    has allowed for the deprivation of life and liberty without due
    process, and also for the effective phenomenon of double jeopardy, as
    people are punished both in the civil and criminal systems.

    The Psychotropic Substances Act of 1978 expanded the use of
    forfeiture to include any property connected to the drug crime in any
    manner. An early 1990s study estimated that 80% of people who lost
    their property to civil asset forfeiture were never charged with a
    crime.

    We often hear of money being confiscated for drug residue, which can
    be found on over 90% of the cash in circulation. We hear of people
    losing their homes, cars, boats and businesses because of the presence
    of marijuana seeds. The drive to get loot, some of which police get to
    personally keep, has even led to some deaths, as was the case with
    Donald Scott, a California rancher gunned down because bureaucrats
    wanted to seize his land on which they claimed they found some seeds.
    Michael Bradbury, the Ventura County DA, said that the police raid was
    “motivated at least in part, by a desire to seize and forfeit the
    ranch for the government… [The] search warrant became Donald
    Scott’s death warrant.”

    I shouldn’t even have to discuss how the Fourth Amendment has been compromised.

    “The right of the people to be secure in their persons,
    houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and
    seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon
    probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly
    describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be
    seized.”

    Where to begin? Warrants have become a mere bureaucratic
    technicality, rubberstamped or often neglected altogether in the
    pursuit of drug offenders. No-knock raids have become a commonplace in
    modern American life. 92-year-old women are murdered and have drugs
    planted on them. Men who shoot no-knock invaders are sentenced to
    death, and if they’re lucky, have their sentences reduced to life
    — this happened to Cory Maye in Mississippi. Children are shot in
    the back. Family pets are killed by laughing officers as they break
    into homes searching for drugs.

    With a real crime, it is often possible to have an “Oath or
    affirmation” backing the warrant, which can actually
    “describe the persons or things to be seized.” In a murder
    case, a warrant can describe a bloody knife. Drug war warrants are
    typically too vague to pass constitutional muster. Mere suspicion that
    some law is being broken is often enough.

    The courts have ruled that if the government tries to arrest you
    when you’re in public, and you escape into your home, they can
    now search the home without a warrant. As for automobiles, drug war
    roadblocks have erased the Fourth Amendment concerning cars, which are
    now treated as the property of the state.

    The Supreme Court recently ruled that police may prevent people from
    entering their own homes while the police apply for a warrant. These
    abuses are often glorified on television as the necessary implements to
    catch vicious criminals, but they originated with, and are principally
    used for, the war on drugs.

    Americans tend to look at the Third Amendment as an anachronism.
    “No Soldier shall, in time of peace be quartered in any house,
    without the consent of the Owner, nor in time of war, but in a manner
    to be prescribed by law.” Surely this hasn’t been touched
    by prohibition, has it?

    Even by a very narrow reading, I believe it has. In one instance, in
    1997, 40 members of the Army National Guard moved into the Las Palmas
    Housing Project in Puerto Rico to search for drugs. Years later, there
    were hundreds there.

    More broadly, the entire spirit of the Third Amendment has been
    trounced. The point of the amendment was to prevent the abuses seen
    with the British Quartering Act, to protect Americans from having to
    quarter soldiers — to support them, even financially —
    except at wartime when and through legal means. But all around us, we
    have seen the police militarized in the name of the drug war.

    Some conservatives objected when Bush modified the insurrection act
    and amassed more presidential power to call up the National Guard on
    his own say-so. But this trend began before 9/11. In a hearing on the
    drug war in 1994, then Congressman Chuck Schumer said, “The
    National Guard is a powerful, ready-made fighting force. Redefining its
    role in the post Cold War era presents exciting possibilities in the
    war against crime.”

    Also troubling have been the attempts to weaken Posse Comitatus,
    which since Reconstruction has forbade the use of the military in
    civilian law enforcement. But before the war on terrorism, there was
    the drug-war loophole. In the 1980s, Posse Comitatus was amended to
    allow for military-police cooperation in drug interdiction. Whereas the
    military was understood to be inappropriate for the enforcement of
    federal civil rights during Reconstruction, it was supposedly okay for
    the drug war. This precedent culminated in the largest massacre of
    American civilians by their own government since Wounded Knee.

    Why was the military involved in Waco sixteen years ago? Because the
    government decided to treat their upcoming publicity-stunt raid as a
    drug measure. They claimed the Branch Davidians had a meth lab.
    That’s how they got the warrant and military involved.
    That’s how they got the military weapons. It was only later that
    the excuse shifted to child abuse or illegal gun ownership.

    Which brings us to the Second Amendment. One of the terrible
    tragedies of our time is that more people do not understand the
    connection between the drug war and gun rights.

    As soon as violating people’s rights to find drugs became
    excusable, the crusade against private gun ownership got a big boost.
    Both concern the ownership of inanimate objects. As wars on possession
    crimes, both government crusades rely on the same kinds of dirty
    tactics, the punishment of minor offenders with disproportionately long
    sentences as a deterrent, the erosion of due process, privacy and the
    rights of the accused.

    The relationship between the drug war and violent crime has been
    documented. The spike in violent crime following prohibition has
    traditionally led to more severe enforcement of gun laws. Both gun
    control and the drug war lead to violent black markets, and thus more
    state power in a spiraling vicious cycle of mutual reinforcement.

    It was, after all, the bootlegging gangs that emerged out of alcohol
    prohibition that served as the inspiration for the first major federal
    gun law: The National Firearms Act of 1934. A year after the Marijuana
    Tax Act of 1937, the Federal Firearms Act of 1938 passed on a similarly
    used an abusive interpretation of the Commerce Clause.

    Moreover, just as with terrorism, the two issues became linked in
    law enforcement. Federal law mandates additional penalties if drug
    dealers are caught in mere possession of a firearm. Nobody wants to
    stick up for the rights of drug dealers to keep and bear arms. But so
    long as they are violating no one’s rights, they should be left
    in peace. There are many legitimate reasons, from a moral perspective,
    that a dealer would want to defend himself.

    Many non-violent drug convicts are automatically denied the right to
    bear arms. This is a serious and grave attack on the human rights of
    drug convicts who have already paid a debt to society that they
    didn’t even owe.

    The lesson is clear: If you want your right to self-defense protected, you must oppose drug prohibition.

    Last but not least is the First Amendment, which states
    “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of
    religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the
    freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people
    peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of
    grievances.”

    For years, politicians have wanted to censor us, using the drug war
    as an excuse. Probably the most notable example was Senators Feinstein
    and Hatch’s proposed Methamphetamine Anti-Proliferation Act,
    which in its original language would have outlawed speech that
    advocated drug use or production and cracked down on websites that
    merely linked to sites that sold drug paraphernalia. Then there is the
    more general chilling effect of students being harassed in public
    schools for outwardly advocating drug use or legalization.

    Here in New Hampshire, Ian Freeman has been threatened with criminal penalties for the act of advocating drug possession.

    As for religious liberty, American Indians have long used
    hallucinogens as religious rites, and have risked penalties under
    federal law for the peaceful exercise of religion. This brings us to a
    fundamental incompatibility between the First Amendment and the drug
    war.

    Under the American Indian Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1994,
    American Indians can use peyote because it is part of their religion.
    But if something is peaceful, anyone should be allowed to do it,
    whether it is recognized by the government as religious or not. For
    peyote users to be jailed because they do not believe in its spiritual
    dimension is a de facto official government endorsement and granted
    privilege for some religious groups. If it can conceivably be allowed
    for the religious, it must constitutionally be allowed to everyone. Yet
    for peyote users to be jailed despite their religion is a violation of
    their religious liberty. The only way to reconcile religious liberty
    with federal drug law is to abolish it altogether.

    Thus we see that Ludwig von Mises was hardly off the mark. The
    entire Bill of Rights has been shredded in the drug war. In
    Constitutional terms, “If one abolishes man’s freedom to
    determine his own consumption,” one does indeed “take all
    freedoms away.” With even the precious First Amendment battered,
    Mises was right that the drug warriors “unwittingly support the
    case of censorship, inquisition, religious intolerance, and the
    persecution of dissenters.”

    The alternative, say the drug warriors, would be worse. They persist
    in their claims that we are utopians and unrealistic. But it is their
    vision of a drug-free America that is unrealistic. America’s
    prisons are constantly monitored and prisoners have very little of what
    we would call civil liberty, yet drugs flow throughout the system.
    America itself could become one big drug prison and their vision would
    be no closer to being obtained.

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  • CHIHUAHUA | UACH campus 2 | Universiada 2010 | Distribuidor vial UACH

    UACH Campus II

    Bueno hablando con varios foristas habíamos comentado la propuesta de abrir un tema acerca del Campus 2 de la UACH.

    Este proyecto ya tiene varios años que inició, y si mal no recuerdo fue en el año 2002 cuando abre sus puertas el Campus 2 mediante la Facultad de Contaduría y Administración, iniciando así la migración de algunas facultades más (como la de Ingeniería y Químicas, más recientemente)

    Actualmente están en construcción las facultades del área de la salud

    Próximamente iniciará la construcción de la Facultad de Educación Física y Ciencias del Deporte, con motivo de la celebración este año de la Universiada Nacional

    Espero ir complementando un poco más la información del tema, ya que casi no encontré registros acerca de la construcción, por lo pronto les dejo imágenes lo más actualizadas posibles

    ———-

    UACH

    Nuevo Campus Universitario
    El nuevo Campus Universitario se encuentra ubicado en un terreno de doscientas hectáreas en la zona norte de la ciudad, hacia la cual se registra el mayor crecimiento de la mancha urbana, frente al Complejo Industrial Chihuahua y en la confluencia del Periférico de la Juventud y la Carretera Panamericana.

    El proyecto Integral del Nuevo Campus Universitario está distribuido en una superficie total de 200 hectáreas de las que 100 serán ocupadas por edificios, 32 para áreas deportivas, 17 de circuitos viales y 50 a reservas territoriales. Con estas nuevas edificaciones del Nuevo Campus se podrán atender en un largo plazo a más de 30 mil estudiantes.

    ANTECEDENTES
    La formalización jurídica de los terrenos de lo que ahora es el NUEVO CAMPUS UNIVERSITARIO se inició a partir de la expropiación de las 200 has. de terreno. Este evento tuvo lugar hace 12 años, el 24 de septiembre de 1984. Se otorgó copia certificada de inscripción del suelo expropiado en el Registro Público de la Propiedad el 1o. de octubre de 1990.

    Siguiendo los estándares marcados por la Asociación Nacional de Universidades e Instituciones de Educación Superior (ANUIES) se procedió a realizar el proyecto arquitectónico y de planta del Nuevo Campus. Del total del terreno el proyecto utiliza 133 Has. más 17 Has. que ocupa el circuito vial y que será patrimonio de la Ciudad de Chihuahua. La diferencia de 50 Has. quedó disponible para reservas territoriales.

    En agosto de 1996 se inició la primera etapa de las obras de urbanización, que incluyeron el Circuito Vial Universitario.

    A la fecha, las modernas instalaciones del Nuevo Campus alojan a las facultades de Contaduría y Administración e Ingeniería; así como también al flamante Estadio Olímpico de la Universidad y la Glorieta de los Universitarios Ilustres.

    Sacado de la Página de la UACH
    www.uach.mx

    FCA

    En esta imagen se observan (de izquierda a derecha) un poco de la Biblioteca, el Edificio de Licenciaturas así como el Edificio de Laboratorios; un poco más al frente y abajo está el Edificio de Seminarios

    Edificio de Posgrado

    Edificio de Licenciaturas

    Facultad de Ingeniería
    Aulas (Foto tomada de Panoramio, jesus1122)

    Facultad de Ciencias Químicas
    Aulas (Foto tomada de Panoramio, alcon34)

    Edificio de laboratorios

    Centro desarrollo de Software

    Facultad de Medicina (en construcción); recordemos que la construcción del Hospital fue cancelado ya hace algunos meses

    Lo que será la entrada

    Creo este edificio será la biblioteca

    ——————-

    Universiada, en construcción o afinación de detalles

    Estadio Olímpico Universitario (Foto tomada de Panoramio, emonkyo2)

    Vista Norte-Sur del interior del EOU

    Una de las mejoras al exterior del EOU, colocación de pinos y piedra roja

    Uno de los campos de Softbol localizados a un costado del EOU
    [IMG]http://img685
    .imageshack.us/img685/9962/dsc07832v.jpg[/IMG]

    Cancha de Tenis, hay 2 construidas

    Corredor Universitario
    Monumento a los Chihuahuenses Ilustres

    Una de las esculturas localizadas en el Corredor Universitario

    ——————-

    En lo que respecta al Distribuidor Vial UACH, hay que mencionar que actualmente está en construcción la segunda etapa, en las imágenes verán lo que ya está construido y lo que falta

    Antes del inicio de la segunda etapa (foto tomada de Panoramio, JK9511); orientación Norte-Sur

    El proyecto actual

    Imagen de cómo va la construcción al día de hoy, al fondo se puede ver parte de lo que será el nuevo puente, el cual es el que presenta una línea amarilla en la imagen anterior

    Puerta del Sol (Foto tomada de Panoramio, escultorsebastian)

    —-

    La mayoría de las fotos son mías, a excepción de las que menciono. Una disculpa por los tonos oscuros, lo que sucede es que son tomadas en días nublados así como ya casi cercana la noche

  • Google row: China warns internet companies to help ‘guide’ opinion

    Peter Foster and Malcolm Moore
    London Telegraph
    Thursday, January 14th, 2010

    Internet companies in China must co-operate with the
    government in “guiding” opinion on the internet, a senior
    Chinese government spokesman has warned, as the US internet giant
    Google remained in negotiations over its threat to pull out of the
    world’s biggest internet market.

    The statement from China’s State Council
    Information Office, or cabinet, confirmed China’s commitment to
    controlling the web following Google’s ultimatum that it must be
    allowed to operate free from censorship.

    Although not mentioning Google by name, Wang Chen, the cabinet
    spokesman, said internet companies had a “major
    responsibility” to help the Chinese government maintain
    “social stability and harmony” by “guiding public
    opinion correctly”.

    China justifies its draconian censorship laws on the grounds that it
    is protecting juveniles from pornography, but its ruling Communist
    Party also blocks access to any information that it considers might
    destabilise its position as the country’s sole rulers.

    Full article here

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  • New Airport Body Scans Don’t Detect All Weapons

    John Hamilton
    NPR
    Wednesday, January 13, 2009

    The Obama administration’s plan to protect air travelers from
    terrorists is counting on a technology that is powerful but imperfect,
    experts say.

    The plan will place hundreds of full-body scanners in airports
    around the country. These scanners use a technology called backscatter
    X-ray to create images that can reveal weapons or explosives hidden
    beneath a person’s clothing.

    But they don’t detect everything, and they won’t be in every airport.

    Other experts, though, say backscatter scanners would probably miss a weapon or explosive concealed in a body cavity.

    And that apparent weakness has provided an opportunity for an
    Indiana company called Nesch LLC, which is developing another low-dose
    X-ray device that can find contraband where other scanners can’t.

    This machine is called DEXI, for Diffraction Enhanced X-Ray Imaging.

    “To my knowledge it’s the only one that very reliably
    can detect the presence of such substances, explosives or illegal
    substances that are hidden inside of a human body,” says Ivan
    Nesch, the company’s president and CEO.

    Full story here.

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  • Police fight cellphone recordings

    Daniel Rowinski
    Boston Globe
    Wednesday , January 13th, 2010

    Simon Glik, a lawyer, was walking down Tremont Street
    in Boston when he saw three police officers struggling to extract a
    plastic bag from a teenager’s mouth. Thinking their force seemed
    excessive for a drug arrest, Glik pulled out his cellphone and began
    recording.

    Within minutes, Glik said, he was in handcuffs.

    “One of the officers asked me whether my phone had audio
    recording capabilities,’’ Glik, 33, said recently of the
    incident, which took place in October 2007. Glik acknowledged that it
    did, and then, he said, “my phone was seized, and I was
    arrested.’’

    The charge? Illegal electronic surveillance.

    Full article here

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  • The fight against full-body scanners at airports

    David G. Savage
    L.A. Times
    Wednesday, January 13, 2009

    from Washington – The government has promised more and better
    security at airports following the near-disaster on Christmas Day, but
    privacy advocates are not prepared to accept the use of full-body
    scanners as the routine screening system.

    “We don’t need to look at naked 8-year-olds and
    grandmothers to secure airplanes,” Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah)
    said last week. “I think it’s a false argument to say we
    have to give up all of our personal privacy in order to have
    security.”

    After each major terrorism incident, the balance between privacy and
    security tilts in favor of greater security. But in the last decade,
    privacy advocates have been surprisingly successful in blocking or
    stalling government plans to search in more ways and in more places.

    A conservative freshman in the House, Chaffetz won a large
    bipartisan majority last year for an amendment to oppose the
    government’s use of body-image scanners as the primary screening
    system for air travelers. He was joined by the American Civil Liberties
    Union, which said the scanners were the equivalent of a “virtual
    strip search.”

    The pro-privacy stand does not follow the traditional ideological
    lines; Republicans and Democrats have joined together on the issue now
    and in the past.

    Advocates of increased security are frustrated.

    Full story here.

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  • Does the Government Own the Whole Economy?

    Robert Murphy
    Campaign For Liberty
    Wednesday , January 13th, 2010

    In a recent New York Times op-ed,
    economist Robert Shiller (coproducer of the famous housing-price index)
    recommended that the US government begin to sell claims on fractions of
    Gross Domestic Product. Besides the practical problems with his
    proposal, it rests on the premise that the US government owns the
    entire economy. It will be instructive to parse Shiller’s column
    to see just how badly his collectivist thinking misleads him.

    Shiller’s Proposal

    To set the context, let’s quote liberally from Shiller’s piece:

    Corporations raise money by issuing both debt and
    equity, the latter giving investors an implicit share in future
    profits. Governments should do something like this, too, and not just
    rely on debt.

    Borrowing a concept from corporate finance, governments could sell a
    new type of security that commits them to paying shares in national
    “profit,” as measured by gross domestic product….

    Such securities might help assuage doubts that governments can
    sustain the deficit spending required to keep sagging economies
    stimulated and protected from the threat of a truly serious recession.
    In a recent pair of papers, my Canadian colleague Mark Kamstra at York
    University and I have proposed a solution. We’d like our
    countries to issue securities that we call “trills,” short
    for trillionths.

    Let me explain: Each trill would represent one-trillionth of the
    country’s G.D.P. And each would pay in perpetuity, and in
    domestic currency, a quarterly dividend equal to a trillionth of the
    nation’s quarterly nominal G.D.P.

    If substantial markets could be established for them, trills would
    be a major new source of government funding. Trills would be issued
    with the full faith and credit of the respective governments. That
    means investors could trust that governments would pay out shares of
    G.D.P. as promised, or buy back the trills at market prices….

    The United States government is highly unlikely to default on its
    debt, but even this remote possibility would be virtually eliminated by
    trills, because the government’s dividend burden would
    automatically decline in tough times, when G.D.P. declined.

    Shiller’s article is problematic for several reasons, which I outline below.

    GDP Isn’t Analogous to Corporate Profits

    Right off the bat, a major problem with Shiller’s motivation
    for his proposal is that GDP isn’t really analogous to corporate
    profits. If we insist on looking at the country as one giant
    corporation, then GDP would be more analogous to total sales, not net income.[1] Indeed, the reason they call it Gross Domestic Product — as opposed to Net Domestic Product
    — is that the GDP calculation doesn’t subtract out the
    depreciation needed to produce the year’s total output. If a
    corporation produces $1 million in final goods for its customers, but
    wears out $100,000 worth of machinery to do so, its profits (net
    income) are at most $900,000. Yet the GDP calculation for a
    country’s economy does not care how much machinery was worn out
    in producing the finished goods and services going into the figure.

    For a country dependent on nonrenewable resources such as oil fields
    or diamond mines, the linking of GDP with “national profit”
    is especially flawed. If a corporation buys a field estimated to hold a
    certain number of barrels of oil, it would be bad accounting for them
    to then book subsequent oil sales as pure income. If the corporation
    extracts the oil at a faster rate, for example, there will be less oil
    available for sale in the future. The extra revenues (from selling more
    barrels today) overstates net income for the period, because the market
    value of the field falls as more barrels are removed.

    Yet even though a corporation would make an adjustment in its
    bookkeeping to account for the declining value of its natural assets,[2]
    standard GDP accounting doesn’t do so. If Saudi Arabia increases
    its pumping, its GDP goes up by the full amount of the extra sales.
    This is another illustration of the fact that Shiller’s analogy
    between GDP and corporate profits (or net income) is misleading and
    hence probably not something he should be writing in op-eds for the lay
    public.

    Selling Shares in USA Inc.?

    Besides my pedantic quibbling over the definition of GDP, the more
    fundamental flaw with Shiller’s analogy is that the government
    doesn’t own the economy. By contrasting corporate debt with
    equity, and arguing that selling “trills” would reduce the
    federal government’s risky reliance on issuing Treasury debt,
    Shiller gives the clear impression that the US government controls all
    the resources in the economy; thus, it has the ability to sell shares
    in “USA Inc.”

    Obviously this isn’t right. Beyond contributing to the
    dangerous myth that all wealth in the economy starts by default in the
    hands of the government — so that a tax cut is viewed as a
    “giveaway to the rich” for example — Shiller’s
    arguments are weak because GDP and tax receipts are not tightly
    connected in the same way that corporate dividends and corporate
    profits are tightly connected.

    For example, if the government eliminated the corporate and personal
    income taxes altogether, total tax receipts would probably drop
    sharply. (Revenues from tariffs and other sources would go way up, but
    surely wouldn’t fully offset the fall.) Yet scrapping these two
    taxes would cause GDP to skyrocket. If the government had followed
    Shiller’s advice beforehand, and thus investors were holding
    millions of trills, the federal government would then have to default
    on the trill contracts. Barring the printing press, the only way the
    government could avoid reneging on the trills would be to order the
    Treasury to issue more debt in order to make its contractually
    obligated “dividend payments” to its
    “shareholders.”

    To grasp just how awry Shiller’s analogy is, try a different
    one: Suppose an electric utility having a monopoly for a certain city
    wants to build a new power plant there. Rather than issue new bonds to
    raise the necessary funds, the utility sells legally binding claims
    that carry the following rule: At the end of every year, the holder of
    each claim is entitled to receive a $1 payment from the electric
    company for every $1 million in sales that all businesses in
    the city reported on their taxes the previous year. The theory is that
    if business is booming (high sales) in the city, then the demand for
    electricity should boom as well; therefore the utility will be raking
    in lots of revenues, making it easy to meet their payment obligations.
    Now, regardless of whether we think this funding plan is wise or
    foolish, would anybody describe these odd securities as shares of stock in the utility company?

    Conclusion

    Shiller and his colleagues have written formal academic papers on
    these matters, and I am sure that the mathematics are correct given the
    modeling assumptions. But for all the reasons cited above, the proposal
    to tie government payments to GDP figures is dubious both in terms of
    theory and practice.

    If Shiller really wants assets that are analogous to corporate stock
    (as opposed to bonds), it would make much more sense for the government
    to sell securities entitling the buyer to a percentage of tax receipts,
    not a percentage of GDP. Besides making for a better analog to
    corporate stocks, this approach would also provide a healthy incentive
    by making massive tax cuts less “costly” to the government.
    Shiller’s proposal, in contrast, gives the government a perverse
    incentive to raise tax receipts while strangling GDP. Isn’t the
    government doing a great job of that already?

    Notes

    [1]
    If we were looking at an economy such as Japan’s, which imported
    a large quantity of raw materials in order to produce its measured
    output, then GDP might be more analogous to corporate profits. But in
    general GDP is closer in spirit to revenues.

    [2] In this context the term would be depletion rather than depreciation.

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