Saturday, December 15, 2007

What did Japanese researchers hope to prove when they created a mouse that is not afraid of cats?
That fear is genetically programmed and not the product of experience

What did Hugo Chávez claim was the reason for creating a new time zone for Venezuela?
To allow schoolchildren to arrive for lessons with more energy

What did Nicolas Sarkozy say after Gordon Brown failed to attend a ceremony at which all the other EU heads of government signed the Lisbon treaty?
We need Gordon

How did Fabio Capello welcome the first British journalist to track him down at his house in Lugano, Switzerland?
"You go outside my house"

What does Barney the White House dog want for Christmas?
To become a park ranger along with fellow presidential pet Miss Beazley

Dec 15 2007

  1. Amid growing frustration with United States over deadlocked negotiations at a United Nations conference on global warming, the European Union threatened Thursday to boycott separate talks proposed by the Bush administration in Hawaii next month. The escalating bitterness between the European Union and the United States came at a conference this week in Bali as former Vice President Al Gore told delegates in a speech that “My own country, the United States, is principally responsible for obstructing progress here in Bali.”
  2. The financial services giant Citigroup moved on Thursday to rescue seven affiliated investment funds that have been upended by the running crisis in housing-related debt. The decision, which reverses earlier statements made by bank executives and in regulatory filings, marks the biggest move yet by a bank to bail out ailing structured investment vehicles. Several European banks, including HSBC and Société Générale, have taken similar measures.
  3. A new Arizona law against employing illegal immigrants has shaken businesses, scared workers, delighted advocates of stricter immigration controls and added to tensions in a state split over who belongs here and who does not. And that is even before the law’s scheduled effective date, Jan. 1. The law is an example of the scores of state and municipal laws meant to address illegal immigration on the belief that the federal government has not done enough to thwart it. But the Arizona version is among the toughest and could test states’ ability to crack down on the countless businesses that have relied on illegal workers.
  4. At a moment when the shortage of low-income housing in the city is causing significant hardship, the federal government is beginning this week to tear down thousands of apartments in New Orleans four biggest public housing projects. Though local and federal housing officials say the storm-damaged projects were inhuman places to live and should not be rebuilt, some protesters accused the government of a darker motive behind the demolition plan. They contended that the government’s real aim was to keep the poor, mostly female, almost entirely black residents of public housing from returning to their city, to their homes.
  5. The Republican presidential candidates sought to embrace Hispanics in a Spanish-language debate Sunday, striving to mark common ground with a growing voter bloc while softening the anti-illegal immigration rhetoric that has marked past encounters. Univision, the Spanish language television network, and the University of Miami hosted the debate. Republicans have had trouble courting Hispanics, who have become an increasingly significant source of votes. A recent poll by the nonpartisan Pew Hispanic Center found Hispanic registered voters favor Democrats over Republicans by a margin of 57 percent to 23 percent, a wider gap than in July 2006.
  6. Thousands of fishermen, soldiers and volunteers struggled on Sunday to clean up an oil spill that has caused an environmental disaster in South Korea. It has blackened once scenic beaches, coated birds and oysters in sludge and driven away tourists with its stomach-churning stench. But the 7,000 people mobilized were too few to clean up the oil slick, which has been washing up since Saturday along a 12-mile-long shoreline of the nation’s west coast. Strong tides, which dragged the sludge before pushing it ashore again, hampered the cleanup operations by villagers, who complained of headaches and nausea from the stench.
  7. Facing the worst drought in a century and the prospect that climate change could yield long-term changes on the Colorado River, the lifeline for several Western states, federal officials have reached a new pact with the states on how to allocate water if the river runs short. State and federal officials praised the agreement as a landmark akin to the Colorado River Compact of 1922, which first outlined how much water the seven states served by the river — California, Nevada, Arizona, Colorado, Utah, New Mexico and Wyoming — would receive annually.
  8. The New JerseySenate voted Monday to make the state the first in the country to repeal the death penalty since 1976, when the United States Supreme Court set guidelines for the nation’s current system of capital punishment. For those opposed to capital punishment, New Jersey’s repeal would represent a victory that has eluded them in the modern history of the death penalty. Though legislatures across the country have tried to abolish capital punishment since 1976, none have succeeded. This year alone, the legislatures in Nebraska, Montana, Maryland and New Mexico have debated bills to repeal those states’ death penalties, but each measure failed, often by a slim margin.
  9. The state of Maine is seeking to reclaim one of the earliest copies of the Declaration of Independence from a collector who bought it at auction, citing a state statute that says a public document remains public until explicitly relinquished by the government. Maine officials say the state is not obligated to pay anything to get the document back. It is unclear whether the state’s statute regarding public documents will hold up in a Virginia court.Only two other copies are known to survive in Maine, and they are preserved in the State Archives and the State Museum.
  10. In the months since his convictions in July on fraud and obstruction of justice charges, Conrad M. Black, the fallen press baron who once presided over the world’s third-largest newspaper empire, was not above poking fun at himself as he waited to see how long he would spend in prison. He received his answer Monday as Judge Amy J. St. Eve of United States District Court sentenced Mr. Black to 6 1/2 years in prison on three fraud charges and one charge of obstruction of justice for removing 13 boxes of documents from the Toronto offices of his media company, Hollinger International, an infraction caught on videotape.
  11. Israeli troops accompanied by about a dozen tanks moved into southern Gaza on Tuesday, killing at least six Palestinians and wounding 12 others, a day before Israelis and Palestinians were due to hold their first talks on a comprehensive peace following the American-led conference in Anapolis. The Israelis went as far as two miles into Hamas-run Gaza, near the towns of Khan Yunis and Rafah, and engaged Palestinian gunmen along the border, according to Palestinian residents and spokesmen for the Israeli Army.
  12. Twin car bombs near United Nations offices and Algerian government building killed dozens of people Tuesday in what may have been the deadliest attack there in more than a decade. Two European diplomats in Algiers said that reports from rescue and medical workers led them to believe that 60 or more people had died. By Tuesday evening, 26 deaths had been confirmed by the Algerian Interior Ministry.
  13. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s policies were attacked Tuesday at Tehran’s major university in an unusual speech by his predecessor, who warned that political suppression, questionable economic policies and defiance on the nuclear issue were leading Iranians in the wrong direction. Mr. Khatami’s criticism of Mr. Ahmadinejad has long been known. But his public denunciation of Mr. Ahmadinejad’s policies was unusual because of its high visibility at a site of youthful dissent. Mr. Khatami condemned the political and social crackdown against activists since Mr. Ahmadinejad’s election and criticized the president’s plans for strengthening Iran’s economy, the ISNA news agency reported.
  14. At least 27 people died and 150 were wounded Wednesday when three car bombs ripped through a southern Iraqi city where the local authorities had recently taken over security responsibility from the British military and rival Shiite groups had been battling for control of oil and power. The triple bombing, in Amara, the capital of Maysan Province, was one of the deadliest attacks in Iraq in months and highlighted both the volatility of the south and the potential risks of turning over security to Iraqi forces in areas where tensions still run high. Iraqi security officials said that the blasts came in quick succession around 10 a.m., collapsing buildings, charring cars and filling hospital hallways with victims who barely knew what hit them. Police reports on the death toll ranged from 27 to 41.

Thursday, December 21, 2006

White house calls for larger military

- should they expand the size of its armed forces?
- battle against Islamic extremism?

"accurate reflection that this ideological war we are in is going to last for a while & that we're going to need a military that's capable of being able to sustain our efforts & help us achieve peace...."

what the fuck? "we are not winning, we 're not losing..."

Sunday, October 15, 2006

Security Council OKs N. Korea sanctions

International News

1. Security Council OKs N. Korea sanctions

- The U.N. Security Council voted unanimously on Saturday to impose punishing sanctions on North Korea including ship searches for banned weapons, calling Pyongyang's claimed nuclear test "a clear threat to international peace and security."
- North Korea immediately rejected the resolution, and its U.N. ambassador walked out of the council chamber after accusing its members of a "gangster-like" action which neglects the nuclear threat posed by the United States.

- The U.S.-sponsored resolution demands that the reclusive communist nation abandon its nuclear weapons program, and orders all countries to prevent North Korea from importing or exporting any material for weapons of mass destruction or ballistic missiles.
- It orders nations to freeze assets of people or businesses connected to these programs, and ban the individuals from traveling.
-
The resolution also calls on all countries to inspect cargo leaving and arriving in North Korea to prevent any illegal trafficking in unconventional weapons or ballistic missiles.
- The final draft was softened from language authorizing searches, but was still unacceptable to China — the North's closest ally and largest trading partner — which said it would not carry out any searches.

- U.S. Ambassador John Bolton said

North Korea's proclaimed test "poses one of the gravest threats to international peace and security that this council has ever had to confront."

- North Korea's U.N. Ambassador Pak Gil Yon countered by blaming the United States for forcing the country to conduct a test because of its "nuclear threat, sanctions and pressure."

"The Democratic People's Republic of Korea is ready for talks, dialogue and confrontation," Pak said. "If the United States increases pressure upon the Democratic People's Republic of Korea persistently, the DPRK will continue to take physical countermeasures considering it as a declaration of war."

- North Korea has made similar threats in the past, and has also said it might conduct a second nuclear test in response to U.N. sanctions.
- The vote came after the United States, Britain and France overcame last-minute differences with Russia and China during what the Russian ambassador called "tense negotiations."

- The resolution demands North Korea eliminate all its nuclear weapons but expressly rules out military action against the country, a demand by the Russians and Chinese.
- Bolton warned Pyongyang, however, that if it continues pursuing nuclear weapons, the U.S. would seek further measures.

- imposed sanctions for the North's "flagrant disregard" of the council's appeal not to detonate a nuclear device and demanded that North Korea "not conduct any further nuclear test or launch of a ballistic missile."

"This action by the United Nations, which was swift and tough, says that we are united in our determination to see to it that the Korean peninsula is nuclear-weapons free," President Bush said.

- South Korea's Foreign Minister Ban Ki-moon, who was chosen on Friday to become the next U.N. secretary-general, said in an interview with The Associated Press that the council's resolution "sends a very strong, clear and unified message to North Korea."

"I hope that North Korea will comply with this resolution," he said. "I hope that all member states of the United Nations will fully implement this resolution."

- Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said Japan was considering additional sanctions against North Korea in line with the resolution, following its move Friday to ban trade with the North and close its ports to North Korean ships.

"We were able to send a strong message that the international community will not tolerate North Korea's owning nuclear weapons," Abe told reporters Sunday.

- In a measure aimed at North Korea's tiny elite, the resolution also bans the sale of luxury goods to the country.
- The North's reclusive leader, Kim Jong Il, is known for his love of cognac and lobster and collection of thousands of bottles of vintage French wine.

- China's U.N. Ambassador Wang Guangya said Beijing allowed the cargo provision to be included in what he called a "watered-down" resolution even though the government is opposed to it.

"China strongly urges the countries concerned to adopt a prudent and responsible attitude in this regard and refrain from taking any provocative steps that may intensify the tensions," he said.

Wang said he did not consider the North Korean ambassador's response the official reply from Pyongyang, which he awaits. "The important thing is not what they say here," Wang said.

The overriding issue, he said, is "how we work together for peace and security in the region."

- Russia's U.N. Ambassador Vitaly Churkin said Moscow got what it wanted — a strong resolution but one that is also aimed at "prevention of a further escalation of tension."

- North Korea's Pak told the Security Council that the nuclear test was not inconsistent with the country's goal of a denuclearized Korean peninsula.

"The DPRK clarified more than once that it would feel no need to possess even a single nuke when it is no longer exposed to the United States' threat, after it has dropped its hostile policy to the DPRK and confidence has been built between the two countries," he said.

"It is the contemporary equivalent of Nikita Khrushchev pounding his shoe on the desk," Bolton said, referring to the Soviet leader's legendary act of protest at the U.N. General Assembly in 1960.

- On Friday, U.S. officials said an air sampling after North Korea's claimed nuclear test detected radioactive debris consistent with an atomic explosion.
- However, the Bush administration and congressional officials said no final determination had been made about the nature of Monday's mystery-shrouded blast.
- The U.S. and other nations trying to persuade the North to give up its atomic program continued a flurry of high-level diplomatic visits, including a trip to Asia by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice meant to present a unified front to North Korea.

- The resolution invokes Chapter 7 of the U.N. Charter, which the U.S. views as a necessary because it makes economic and diplomatic sanctions mandatory.
- China and Russia normally object to the Chapter 7 provision because it carries the possibility of military enforcement.
- The Bush administration used the same provision to justify its invasion of Iraq, and Moscow and Beijing worry the U.S. might do the same eventually with North Korea — even though Bush has said the U.S. has no plans to attack.

__

Associated Press writers Ed Harris at the United Nations, Robert Burns and Anne Gearan in Washington, and Chisaki Watanabe in Tokyo contributed to this report.


Saturday, August 19, 2006

Asked about the attacks in an appearance in New York City, Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton said she had “deep regret that there’s any effort to politicize the war on terror,” but she did not actually name Mr. Lieberman or criticize Republicans directly.

“I think every American wants to successfully prosecute this war, to bring to justice those who would attack us and our friends and allies around the world,” she said. “I just think we have to be united as a country.”


Monday, May 22, 2006

Ask the Whitehouse!

http://www.whitehouse.gov/ask/question.html

The Whitehouse is currently providing a platform for u asking questions concerning several policies. A good chance for us to criticize for their past, current and future actions.

This time we can ask Brett McGurk for policies concerning Iraq, in which people are mostly concerned about.

Here is some of his background: Brett McGurk served as Associate General Counsel to the Coalition Provisional Authority in Baghdad from January to June 2004, before serving as a legal advisor to the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad, where he finished his service in October 2004. While in Baghdad, McGurk helped structure the legal framework for nationwide elections and participated in the negotiation of Iraq's interim constitution.

He now serves in the White House as a Director for Iraq in the National Security Council, handling a policy portfolio that includes the national political process, rule of law coordination, elections, and constitutional matters.

Before joining the NSC, McGurk practiced appellate litigation at Kirkland & Ellis LLP, and was an adjunct professor of law at the University of Virginia, teaching a course on the international law of post-conflict transitions.

McGurk is a former Supreme Court law clerk, serving with the late Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist for the Supreme Court's 2001-2002 Term. He also served as a law clerk on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit with Judge Dennis Jacobs, and on the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York with Judge Gerard E. Lynch.

McGurk is a graduate of Columbia University School of Law, and the University of Connecticut.

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

Srebrenica, a city without fears

One of the UN's greatest disasters...
(1) Srebrenica massacre
(2) 1994 Genocide in Rwanda

Srebrenica (
Cyrillic: Сребреница) is a town and municipality in the east of Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Republika Srpska entity. Srebrenica is a small mountain town, its main industry being salt mining and a nearby spa.In the 1931 population census, the district had an absolute Orthodox Serb majority 50.5%.

In the 1991
census, the municipality of Srebrenica had 37,213 residents: 27,118 Bosnians (72.9%), 9,381 Serbs (25.2%), 372 Yugoslavs (1%), 40 Croats (0.1%), and 302 others (0.8%). The town of Srebrenica itself had 5,754 residents: 64% Bosniaks, 29% Serbs, 5.3% Yugoslavs, 1% others, 0.7% Croats.Before 1992, there was a metal factory in the town, and lead, zinc, and gold mines nearby. The town's name (Srebrenica) means "silver mine".During the War in Bosnia (1992-1995), the town became a Bosniak enclave surrounded by the Bosnian Serbs, and a safe area guarded by a small Dutch army unit operating under the UN mandate for the United Nations Protection Force (UNPROFOR).

In July 1995, the town was captured by the
Bosnian Serb Army who deported the population of over 20,000 people. Srebrenica's surroundings became the site of the Srebrenica massacre, where approximately eight thousand Bosniak men and boys were executed by the Bosnian Serb Army.July 11, 2005 marked the 10th anniversary of the Srebrenica massacre. Many of the military persons responsible have been indicted by the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, with some already serving prison terms. Other ranking military parties as well as responsible political figures are still at large.

Saturday, October 22, 2005

Syria v Lebanon

The UN report implicating Syria in the killing of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri has elicited a mixed response in newspapers across the Arab world.

As we can see below, the mass media truely reflects the country's stance on the issue, as well as the allies of the countries.

Saudi Arabia sees this issue as neutral. Syria is defending herself while Lebanon is attacking Syria. Saudi Arabia remains neutral.

Interesting finding? read source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4367042.stm

Syria's media:
* All laws in the world regard a suspect as innocent until proven guilty; therefore, on what ground is Mehlis incriminating Syria if he himself says that what he has in his hands is only 'conjecture?'

* Despite all Syria's cooperation with the investigation committee, the report alleged that Syria's cooperation was neither sufficient nor substantial... this just shows preconceived opinions and prefabricated accusations against Syria.

Lebanon's media:
* The report... makes mixed but powerful political and legal statements, which spell trouble for Syria and the wider debilitating tradition of security-run Arab regimes...
The most important question... is whether indigenous Arab political and legal forces will be able to harness the credibility, power and courage to continue challenging and taming the modern Arab security state, now that the combination of mass Lebanese citizen activism and legitimate international intervention have paved the way for this historic possibility.


Saudi Arabia's media:
* The Lebanese and Syrian governments should combine their efforts to study the report and cooperate, in order to find the true criminals and bring them to justice as soon as possible, as this is something in the interest of both countries.

Sudan's media:
* There is no doubt that Syria will face hard times in the near future, and tension will also spread in Lebanon... There is no other way out for Syria but to stick... to what the report stated, that is, all those mentioned in the report will remain innocent until proven guilty.

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