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Thursday, June 28, 2012
Celtra Revamps Its Mobile AdCreator With 70+ New Features
Oil Exploration Ramps Up in U.S. Arctic
Norway's exploratory drilling rig the Leiv Eiriksson is already in action in the Davis Strait, between Greenland and Canada. Image: S. Morgan/Alamy
From Nature magazine
A new round of exploratory oil drilling is due to begin in the Arctic this July. Oil companies are no doubt dreaming of a northern oil rush, while environmentalists face nightmares of devastating spills.
The oil giant Shell has been granted permission by the US government to drill two exploratory wells in the Beaufort Sea and three in the Chukchi Sea, both north of Alaska, this year ? between 15 July and late September. The project is finally coming to fruition after years spent fighting legal challenges. It will be the first oil-exploration programme to run in US Arctic waters since 2000, and could mark the start of the first offshore commercial drilling in the American north, although it would take another decade to establish production wells.
The US Geological Survey estimated in 2008 that the Arctic holds up to 90 billion barrels of oil ? 13% of the world?s technically recoverable supply. Exploration and production is already under way on the other side of the Arctic, off Norway and Russia, for example (see The great Arctic oil race begins). Many parts of the Arctic circle are becoming ever-more accessible thanks to improved technologies and a reduction in summer sea ice because of climate change.
In a previous round of US exploration in the 1980s and 1990s, oil companies drilled a handful of wells in the Chukchi Sea and dozens in the Beaufort ? but those wells didn?t prove economic enough to pursue. ?Speculation is that Shell has learned a lot and may be poised to hit the jackpot this time,? says environmental chemist Jeffrey Short of JWS Consulting in Juneau, Alaska.
However, many fear that offshore drilling in the challenging conditions of the north, and around sensitive and understudied ecological systems, could spell disaster. Some contend that Shell?s emergency-response plans have holes, and that even regular operations could disrupt species such as bowhead whales. ?Decisions need to be based on good science and a demonstrated ability to clean up a spill. Shell has met neither of those conditions,? says Michael LeVine, of the ocean-conservation organization Oceana in Juneau, Alaska. The US Bureau of Ocean Energy Management and the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement in Washington DC have approved Shell?s safety plans, but the company is still awaiting a final rubber stamp before work can begin.
Safety firstAfter the disastrous blowout of the Deepwater Horizon oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico in April 2010, US President Barack Obama temporarily suspended any Arctic oil exploration. After that suspension was lifted, there was still a high regulatory bar on applications. In their oil-spill-response plans, Shell had to prepare for a worst-case scenario nearly three times bigger than in their previous plans for drilling in the Beaufort Sea, map out the possible discharge over 30 days instead of 3 days, and identify the specific equipment that would be used to mop up such a spill. The company has also agreed to start a bowhead-whale-monitoring programme from 1 August, and to suspend drilling in the Beaufort from 25 August until after locals have finished their subsistence hunts.
The company says it has taken unprecedented steps to prevent a spill, as well as in preparation to clean one up, including having an extra cut-off on blowout protectors and putting capping equipment on a ship stationed between the two sites. ?It?s by no means a stretch to say Shell has set the bar extremely high for others to follow and we are proud of that,? says Shell Alaska spokesman Curtis Smith.
Wednesday, June 27, 2012
80 Teddy Ruxpin dolls transmit feelings from the Internet (VIDEO)
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Tuesday, June 26, 2012
Thread: Sharon's custom porch swing... - Family Woodworking
The seat slats aren't attached yet. I will finish them separately from the frame and then attach them. You can see the pre-drilled holes in the seat slats. I will screw the slats on with stainless steel screws, plug the holes with oak dowels and sand smooth. Then apply finish to the plugs.
Notice the only hardware that will be visible are the 4 stainless steel bow eyes. Even their mounting hardware is recessed and the holes plugged with glued oak plugs.
All the joints are mortise and pinned tenons except....the two middle seat supports which are trapped between the lower back rail and the front seat rail.
There are 15 vertical back slats but only 5 are glued. The middle slat and two at each end. Even with slow setting glue, to glue all 15 would be nearly impossible for this old guy to do solo.
If my count is correct there are 50 mortise and tenon joints in this swing. I learned to dearly appreciate my General International hollow-chisel mortiser, a sharp hollow-mortise chisel and a sharp bit!
It was quite the learning experience!
Shaughnessey Real Estate > Detached Homes ? Vancouver West ...
Shaughnessy Homes For Sale
The real estate and detached homes in the Shaughnessy neighborhood are?consisted mainly of single family homes on very large building lots. There are many heritage homes in Vancouver Shaughnessy that were built in the early 1900s ? especially homes in First Shaughnessy.
Shaughnessy is one of the most sought after neighborhoods in Metro Vancouver. Many of the Shaughnessy detached homes are selling at prices over $5.00 million. Over 50% of the Shaughnessy detached homes were built before or during World War II. When compared with other neighborhoods in Vancouver West, there were just about one-fifth of the homes that are build around that time.
The adoption of the 1981 First Shaughnessy Official Development Plan by-law, had resulted preservation of many of the historic homes.
There are strict rules on rebuilding designated heritage homes in Vancouver Shaughnessy. You can ?use the link here to?view detached homes for sale in Shaughnessy, Vancouver.
Shaughnessey Detached homes for sale
There are at any one time close to 100 detached homes for sale in the Shaughnessey neighborhood. The lowest price homes in Shaughnessey start from $2,000,000, and the most expansive homes are priced over $15,000,000. Generally,?Shaughnessey?has average building lot size much larger than other neighborhoods in Vancouver West. The smallest lots in the Shaghnessey are between 6,000 to 7,000 sq ft. The larger lots in Shaughnessey are over 15,000 sq ft, and some of these lots are over 20,000 sq ft. View Shaughnessey detached homes for sale using this link.
Sales activities in Shaughnessey
Detached home sales in Shaughnessey average around 120 homes each year over the past 3 years. However, the real estate market for detached homes in Shaughnessey during the first 5 months of 2012 cooled off significantly as happened in other Vancouver West neighborhoods. The total number of Shaughnessey detached homes sold up to the end of May, 2012 was 35 homes.?View detached homes for sale in Shaughnessy, Vancouver.
As reported elsewhere, the housing market in hot areas in Vancouver West and Richmond are cooling. Home sales activities in Shaughnessey for the first 5 month of 2012 were much lower than the past 2 years. Along with the drop in sales activities, a slight drop in detached home prices was reported in the area.
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Wednesday, June 20, 2012
Oprah talks with 50 Cent about fatherhood | Spurlin Family Blog
50 Cent, arguably an influence on at least one or two of the younger Spurlin generations, appeared?on Oprah Winfrey?s show, Next Chapter, on OWN for an in-depth interview last night.
Oprah sat with the rapper and his grandmother, Beulah Jackson, at her home, and interviewed 50 Cent about fatherhood and his dream for his son, Marquise. She also spoke with Beulah who shared her grandson?s favorite meals, opined on his success, and revealed that she buys his albums but chooses not to listen to them. Among many topics, 50 and Oprah also discuss?his success and his efforts to feed the hungry.
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Syria says ready to evacuate besieged families
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Tornado at a Wedding
Video of the vows ? and then they notice the tornado in the distance.
Read the whole thing. Very sweet.
Via Gongol.
P.S. On the odd chance that anyone who knows the bride sees this repost, please tell the bride that she looked stunning (because we all know that brides in random wedding videos almost never look as good as she does).
Technorati Tags: tornado,weddingarizona debate enquirer national inquirer knicks vs heat ash wednesday kate walsh cnn debate
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Sand Springs Church Pastor: Child Does Not Have Bacterial Meningitis
News On 6
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Oklahoma?s Own NewsOn6.com is proud to provide Oklahomans with timely and relevant news and information, sharing the stories, pictures and loves of Oklahomans across our great state including Tulsa?s Own and Green Country?s Own.
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Male-Dominated 'Foreign Policy' Twitterati List Sparks Controversy
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Monday, June 18, 2012
Study improves understanding of surface molecules in controlling size of gold nanoparticles
Study improves understanding of surface molecules in controlling size of gold nanoparticles
Monday, June 18, 2012North Carolina State University researchers have shown that the "bulkiness" of molecules commonly used in the creation of gold nanoparticles actually dictates the size of the nanoparticles ? with larger so-called ligands resulting in smaller nanoparticles. The research team also found that each type of ligand produces nanoparticles in a particular array of discrete sizes.
"This work advances our understanding of nanoparticle formation, and gives us a new tool for controlling the size and characteristics of gold nanoparticles," says Dr. Joseph Tracy, an assistant professor of materials science and engineering at NC State and co-author of a paper describing the research. Gold nanoparticles are used in industrial chemical processes, as well as medical and electronics applications.
When creating gold nanoparticles, scientists often use organic molecules called ligands to facilitate the process. The ligands effectively bring gold atoms together in a solution to create the nanoparticles. In the process, ligands essentially line up side by side and surround the nanoparticles in all three dimensions.
The researchers wanted to see whether the bulkiness of the ligands affected nanoparticle size, and opted to assess three types of thiol ligands ? a family of ligands commonly used to synthesize gold nanoparticles. Specifically, the molecules bound to the gold nanoparticles are linear hexanethiolate (-SC6), cyclohexanethiolate (-SCy) and 1-adamantanethiolate (-SAd). Each of these ligands has a bulkier configuration than the last.
For example, picture each ligand as a slice of pie, with a gold atom attached to the pointed end. -SC6 looks like a very narrow slice of pie. -SCy is slightly larger, and -SAd is the largest of the three ? with the "crust" end of the pie wedge far wider than the pointed end.
The researchers found that the bulkiness of the ligands determined the size of the nanoparticles. Because fewer -SAd and -SCy ligands can line up next to each other in three dimensions, fewer gold atoms are brought together in the core. Therefore, the nanoparticles are smaller. -SC6, the least bulky of the thiolates, can create the largest nanoparticles.
"While we've shown that this is an effective means of controlling size in gold nanoparticles, we think it may have implications for other materials as well," says Peter Krommenhoek, a Ph.D. student at NC State and lead author of the paper. "That's something we're exploring."
But the researchers made another interesting finding as well.
When particularly small nanoparticles form, they tend to form at very specific sizes, called discrete sizes. For instance, some types of nanoparticles may consist of 25 or 28 atoms ? but never 26 or 27 atoms.
In this study, the researchers found that the bulkiness of the ligands also changed the discrete sizes of the nanoparticles. "This is interesting, in part, because each discrete size represents a different number of gold atoms and ligands," Tracy says, "which could influence the nanoparticle's chemical behavior. That question has yet to be addressed."
###
The paper, "Bulky Adamantanethiolate and Cyclohexanethiolate Ligands Favor Smaller Gold Nanoparticles with Altered Discrete Sizes," is published online in ACS Nano.
North Carolina State University: http://www.ncsu.edu
Thanks to North Carolina State University for this article.
This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.
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Germany advances after 2-1 win over Denmark
LVIV, Ukraine (AP) ? Germany advanced to the European Championship quarterfinals without playing brilliantly.
They didn't have to.
After grinding out its third straight win with a 2-1 victory against Denmark on Sunday, Germany finished on top of a group that didn't end up being as dangerous as it looked on paper.
World Cup finalist the Netherlands was a major disappointment, losing all three Group B matches. Cristiano Ronaldo found his form just in the nick of time to take Portugal to the quarterfinals as runner-up to Germany.
And Denmark just wasn't up to the task of repeating its upset from 20 years ago, when it stunned Germany to win the European Championship.
"I think we had the game well under control," Germany coach Joachim Loew said. "We had a lot of possession and I was sure that we would score and advance."
Germany next faces Euro 2004 champion Greece on Friday in Gdansk in a clash with significance beyond football, bringing together the two main protagonists ? and occasional foes ? in Europe's financial crisis.
If Germany and defending champion Spain keep winning, they will meet in the final on July 1.
Lukas Podolski opened the scoring for Germany in the 19th minute and Lars Bender slotted home the winner in the 80th after Michael Krohn-Dehli had equalized for Denmark in the first half.
"It's absolutely a day of joy," Bender said. "I'll be thinking back to this day a long, long time. We have a positive spirit in the team."
Germany played without flair, but controlled possession and were never really challenged by the Danes, who go home after stunning the Netherlands in the first match but losing to Portugal in the second.
Seizing the initiative from the kickoff, the Germans came close twice before Podolski, playing his 100th international match, scored his first goal of the tournament.
Mario Gomez set him up with a deft backheel touch following Thomas Mueller's low cross from the right flank.
"It was a special occasion to mark my 100th cap with a goal," Podolski said. "But the most important thing is that we are through to the knockout stage."
He was the seventh player to reach that milestone for Germany or West Germany.
Denmark replied just five minutes later with Krohn-Dehli heading in the equalizer from a set piece that stunned the German defense. A corner found Nicklas Bendtner who headed the ball into the area where Krohn-Dehli nodded home his second goal at Euro 2012.
"We should have gone ahead by two or three goals in the first half, but Denmark scored virtually out of nowhere," said.
Jakob Poulsen missed a chance to put Denmark in the driver's seat at the start of the second half when his shot grazed the outside of German goalkeeper Manuel Neuer's right post.
After that scare, the Germans were firmly in charge and denied Denmark any real chance of getting back into the game.
The Danes were already looking tired when Bender, replacing suspended right back Jerome Boateng, picked up a pass from Mesut Oezil and made it 2-1.
Coach Morten Olsen said the Spanish referee missed a penalty call when Bendtner was pulled down in the area but praised the Germans, saying they deserved to win the game and the group.
He dismissed suggestions his team should have tried to push back the Germans more boldly in the second half.
"They are dynamic and they are fast, so you need to watch out and not play too naively," Olsen said.
It was the first competitive match between the two countries since the 1992 European Championship final, when the Danes stunned the Germans with a 2-0 win to become champions.
Hoping for another upset, Olsen changed his lineup by moving playmaker Christian Eriksen to the right flank, replacing injured winger Dennis Rommedahl in a five-man midfield.
But the move had little effect as Philipp Lahm effectively closed down the talented 20-year-old, who leaves Euro 2012 without fulfilling expectations of an international breakthrough.
"We can be satisfied with our effort but not with the result," Denmark midfielder William Kvist said.
"I think we proved that we can play against the big teams. We won (against the Netherlands) and we didn't lose big. We showed that we can play against the best."
____
Lineups:
Denmark: Stephan Andersen, Lars Jacobsen, Simon Kjaer, Daniel Agger, Simon Poulsen, William Kvist, Christian Eriksen, Jakob Poulsen (Tobias Mikkelsen, 82), Niki Zimling (Christian Poulsen, 78), Michael Krohn-Dehli, Nicklas Bendtner.
Germany: Manuel Neuer, Lars Bender, Mats Hummels, Holger Badstuber, Philipp Lahm, Thomas Mueller (Toni Kroos, 84), Sami Khedira, Bastian Schweinsteiger, Mesut Oezil, Lukas Podolski (Andre Schuerrle, 64) Mario Gomez (Miroslav Klose, 74).
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Summit lets Obama, Putin size up the competition
FILE - In this July 7, 2009 file photo, President Barack Obama shakes hands with then-Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin in Moscow. With global anxiety rising, President Barack Obama is searching for bolder, swifter signals from Europe that it will contain its fiscal mess and keep it from torpedoing the U.S. economy and his re-election chances along with it. Yet as he prepares to plunge into summit talks with the other world leaders, Obama is down to the power of persuasion and little else. (AP Photo/Haraz N. Ghanbari, File)
FILE - In this July 7, 2009 file photo, President Barack Obama shakes hands with then-Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin in Moscow. With global anxiety rising, President Barack Obama is searching for bolder, swifter signals from Europe that it will contain its fiscal mess and keep it from torpedoing the U.S. economy and his re-election chances along with it. Yet as he prepares to plunge into summit talks with the other world leaders, Obama is down to the power of persuasion and little else. (AP Photo/Haraz N. Ghanbari, File)
Russian President Vladimir Putin chairs a meeting with the military top brass while visiting a military airbase in the city of Korenovsk, about 1200 kilometers (750 miles) south of Moscow, Thursday, June 14, 2012. President Vladimir Putin says Russia needs a new strategic bomber and will develop it despite high costs. Speaking Thursday at a meeting with the military top brass after visiting a base in southern Russia, Putin said the project would be expensive and technologically challenging. He added that the job needs to be done despite high costs, according to Russian news agencies. (AP Photo/RIA-Novosti, Mikhail Klimentyev, Presidential Press Service)
Russian President Vladimir Putin attaches a Russian military medal to an air regiment banner during an award ceremony at a military airbase in the city of Korenovsk, about 1200 kilometers (750 miles) south of Moscow, Thursday, June 14, 2012. President Vladimir Putin says Russia needs a new strategic bomber and will develop it despite high costs. Speaking Thursday at a meeting with the military top brass after visiting a base in southern Russia, Putin said the project would be expensive and technologically challenging. He added that the job needs to be done despite high costs, according to Russian news agencies. (AP Photo/RIA-Novosti, Mikhail Klimentyev, Presidential Press Service)
Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a signing ceremony of an agreement between state-controlled Russian oil company Rosneft and Exxon Mobil corporation at the Black Sea port of Tuapse, southern Russia, Friday, June 15, 2012. (AP Photo/RIA-Novosti, Mikhail Klimentyev, Presidential Press Service)
SAN JOSE DEL CABO, Mexico (AP) ? President Barack Obama and Russian President Vladimir Putin need one another, an uncomfortable truth for the superpower leader facing a tough re-election and the newly elected Russian leader who is deeply suspicious of the United States.
The two men will use their meeting Monday, the first since Putin returned to Russia's top job, to claim leverage. Much of the rest of the Group of 20 economic meeting will be devoted to the European fiscal crisis and the fate of Greece as a part of the euro zone.
"I expect that it will be a candid discussion, it will get down to business," White House deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes said ahead of the lengthy morning meeting between Obama and Putin.
"We'll be able to sustain cooperation in some areas, we'll have differences in other areas, and we'll work to try to bridge those differences."
The G-20 gathering is a natural forum for sideline discussions of the urgent crisis in Syria as well as diplomatic efforts to head off a confrontation with Iran. Russia is a linchpin in world efforts to resolve both crises, and to U.S. goals for the smooth shutdown of the war in Afghanistan. In the longer term, Obama wants Russia's continued cooperation in nuclear disarmament and nonproliferation.
Obama made a special project of Russia in his first term and arguably needs Moscow's help even more if he wins a second one. He is trying to avoid a distracting public spat with Russia during this election year, as suggested by an overheard remark to outgoing Russian President Dmitry Medvedev in March. Obama told Medvedev he would have more flexibility to answer Russian complaints about a U.S.-built missile defense shield in Europe after the November election.
Things got off to a rocky start with Putin, when Obama pointedly withheld a customary congratulatory phone call to Putin until days after his May election. Putin appeared to snub Obama by skipping the smaller and weightier Group of Eight meeting that Obama hosted later that month at Camp David, and a planned Oval Office welcome for the new Russian leader.
The rescheduled Obama-Putin meeting comes the same day as Moscow hosts an international negotiating session with Iran. Russia has gone along with U.N. Security Council efforts to tighten some penalties against Iran because of questions about its nuclear weapons ambitions, but has blocked the harshest punishments. Still, the United States needs Russia's participation to lend legitimacy to the argument that Iran faces broad international condemnation. Iran usually paints the dispute over its nuclear program as a confrontation with the U.S. and its ally Israel.
Brutal attacks on anti-government protesters in Syria and the threat of civil war in the Mideast nation pose the most immediate crisis.
Diplomatic hopes have rested on Washington and Moscow agreeing on a transition plan that would end the four-decade Assad family rule. Russia, as Syria's longtime ally and trading partner, is seen as the best broker for a deal that could give Assad political refuge. So far, Moscow has said no.
Pressure increased on Russia over the weekend, when the United Nations suspended its unarmed monitoring mission in Syria out of concern for the monitors' safety. The move was widely interpreted as a challenge to Russia to intervene with Syrian President Bashar Assad to preserve a U.N. role Moscow sees as a brake on any armed foreign intervention.
The United States has refused to arm anti-Assad rebels in part to avoid a proxy fight in which Iran and Russia and others arm one side and the U.S. and Sunni Arab states arm the other. Opposition groups estimate 14,000 people have died in violence that the U.S. fears is sliding into civil war.
Putin's campaign included some of the strongest anti-American rhetoric from Moscow in a decade and he openly accused Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton of inciting protests against him. The Obama administration mostly tried to shrug it off, but Putin's return to the presidency makes it more likely that any help Russia provides in Syria, Iran or other matters will come at a cost.
U.S. strategy has favored flattery that may overstate Russia's influence, especially on Syria, and efforts to highlight areas where U.S. and Russian goals align.
Russia's membership in numerous world bodies and its veto power at the U.N. Security Council give it leverage beyond its economic or military power. Obama holds far greater power and both leaders know it, but Putin can be a spoiler and irritant.
"President Putin clearly is somebody who can articulate where he has differences with the United States, but we can also articulate where we have differences with Russia," Rhodes said. "And I think our assessment is that being candid with one another and clear with one another is in the best interest of the relationship. So because the relationship between the United States and Russia is in our interest, it's in Russia's interest, but also it's in the interest of the world community, because when we can work together on issues, again, it opens up the door to much better progress, whether you're talking about nonproliferation and nuclear security, whether you're talking about resolving regional tensions as in Syrian, or whether you're talking about the global economy."
The White House tried to soften the blow of Clinton's accusation days before the G-20 meeting that Russia was equipping the Syrian government with attack helicopters that could bused against civilians. She later acknowledged they were only helicopters already owned by Syria that had been sent back to Russia for repairs, but Russia was already annoyed.
Russia insists that any arms it supplies to Syria are not being used to quell anti-government dissent that began more than a year ago, and has rebuffed efforts to impose an international arms embargo. Russia and Syria have a longstanding military relationship and Syria hosts Russia's only naval base on the Mediterranean Sea.
White House press secretary Jay Carney brushed aside questions last week about whether the U.S. might yank support for Russia's membership in World Trade Organization if Russia refuses to help on Syria. He underscored that the U.S. supports that core Russian goal, which will be a centerpiece of the talks.
"Putin is in a petulant sort of mood," said Russia scholar Mark N. Katz of George Mason University. "He's got all these grievances about American foreign policy and he's looking for us to satisfy him, and I don't think we're going to do that. No amount of bonhomie or talking nicely is going to fix that."
The Pew Research Center's newly released global public opinion survey gives Putin job approval ratings Obama can only dream of. About 72 percent of Russians have a favorable opinion of Putin, and a majority put more faith in a strong leader than in a democratic form of government. Nearly three-quarters of those polled said Russia deserves greater respect from other countries.
Despite that footing, tens of thousands of protesters thronged Moscow streets this past week in the first mass protest against Putin since he returned to the presidency in May. His tactics in cracking down on political opponents will make it difficult for Obama to play down longstanding U.S. complaints about human rights abuses that infuriate Russian leaders. The Kremlin ordered the detention and interrogation of at least one activist and searches of others' homes last week.
Putin's own return to the presidency was far more certain than Obama's re-election chances. Despite their differences, Putin probably would prefer a second Obama term to a Mitt Romney presidency, Katz said, not least because the Republican challenger has called Russia the chief strategic enemy of the United States.
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Sunday, June 17, 2012
Michael Radou Moussou: The Unmotivated Electorate
Greece is a Democracy, not a Republic. That makes it the only state in the world in which supreme power is held by the elected representatives of the people, without being a Republic. Although the difference is minor, it is essential. In a Republic, the people are king. In a Democracy, it's the 'demos' -- the bodies of people that form the various communities that constitute the 'kratos' -- state -- which guarantees the unity of the nation.
According to the Constitution, Greeks decide over their lordship only on two levels: national and local.
On a national level, the prime minister draws the main lines of state policy. He also decides to thrust his power and authority upon whomever he chooses. Offices are allocated in principle to party members. Occasionally a ministry may be assigned to a personality of exceptional skills such as a technocrat, for instance. All elected members of parliament have to move to Athens, where the seat of the government lies, in order to partake in the national administration, distancing themselves from their constituency.
On the local government level, the mayor of a town acts in the same way as the prime minister. (In fact, tenure of this office for the cities of Athens and Salonika is considered a stepping stone in the ladder of power.) Yet on the tighter community level, elected officials in these local councils remain in direct contact with their constituency, sharing its interests and grief. They try to adapt their course of action according to the needs of the inhabitants and to advise both City Hall and Parliament. Unfortunately, they often go unheard.
The general election of June 17 is like no other election in the history of our country.
For the past 38 years, ever since the restoration of Democracy following a seven-year long military government, the Greek electorate has been polarized into two political factions, representing on one hand the center-right (headed by the New Democracy party -- symbolized by the color blue) and on the other the center-left (the socialists, led by PASOK -- green). They have been alternating to power with a third force (the Communist Party -- red). All other parties were considered negligible. This polarization dug deep, dividing trenches in society and leaving very little room for crossovers. Athens, for instance, was partitioned into "blue" and "green" districts with an occasional "red" neighborhood, making it easy for a politician to target supporters during a national election campaign. In fact, general elections were always considered as periods of heightened emotions, during which people were invited to vent their frustration and enthusiasm. Politicians would give speeches in squares filled with supporters and would debate each other in shouting matches on live TV. Kiosks were set up by parties in every square, posters splattered all over the walls of the city, leaflets would cover the pavements, while loudspeakers bellowed political jingles. And in order to let off steam, people would heat-up outdoor caf?s with political discussions and arguments.
This year's election is very different. In Athens, a large number of stores have closed down even in prime areas, office buildings lie vacant and graffiti is now covering walls. The marks of the economic crisis are way too visible to be ignored. In my 18 months into office at the community of Central Athens, the city has been faced with the increasing lack of funds that goes hand-in-hand with the curtailing of services. In fact, we are constantly trying to restructure our means in order to minimize the collateral damage and the inevitable breakdown in infrastructure. For instance, a pavement is restored only when considered dangerous, and one becomes more lenient in allowing a business to start in order to help the ailing economy.
Daily we hear stories of people defaulting on their loans, of demoralized professionals whose salaries have undergone cuts, of younger professional forced to move back to their family homes. Unemployment has climbed nationwide to over one million, a staggering figure for a country of about 10 million. In the children's day-care stations (where low-income parents leave their children for the day in order to go to work) the struggle to keep them open has been an uphill battle. Yet, the most horrific side-effect of this economic downturn are the undernourished children. More and more school directors are contacting us, asking us whether our soup kitchens could provide meals for starving children. Faced with a humanitarian crisis, on top of the notorious inflexibility of the public sector, we explained to our underpaid staff the gravity of the situation, only to see them rise to the challenge.
With such a bleak picture, it comes as no surprise that the electorate reserved a punitive vote to the existing political system. The first round of general elections that took place on May 6th gave no mandate to anyone. In fact, it was as if the people demanded from all parties involved to collaborate in a government of national unity to deal with the financial woes of the country. The politicians decided to ignore this and go for a second round, in the hopes of obtaining a clear mandate.
As the days went by it became clear that the electorate was not willing to give a majority to a single party. In an effort to rally the people, fear and anger were mobilized
Anger centers around SYRIZA (a group of 13 small, left-wing political parties loosely bound together in a coalition of post-modern communism, stretching from liberal to radical). SYRIZA, which has grown to a now minor political force, is the great winner of the election. It has risen into second position and is headed by Alexis Tsipras, a young man of small stature with a formidable drive and a huge ambition. Franklin Delano Roosevelt as his idol, Tsipras preaches with a messianic zeal to restore the cut-down wages back to their former heights, to give the unemployed back their jobs, to punish the banking system for having open-handedly given mortgages to the ones that can no longer pay their installments, and to drive a stick into the heart of all evil by cancelling the memorandum. The young, the unemployed, and the employees of the huge public sector, who fear losing their jobs, have joined his ranks. Where Tsipras is going to find the funding to materialize his ambitious plans for social reform and how is he going to negotiate with the leaders of Europe for better terms, once he denounces the memorandum, well, that bridge will be crossed when Mr. Tsipras comes to it.
Fear motivates the supporters of the right-wing party of New Democracy, headed by Harvard alumn Antonis Samaras. A controversial figure, Mr. Samaras violently denounced the first 'memorandum,' drafted by the European Union to reduce Greek public debt. He endorsed the second 'memorandum,' however, about a year later. In this camp, they preach fear of the economic crisis, fear of abandoning the euro and going back to a national currency and above all, fear of Tsipras.
The other supporter of this trend is also the big looser of this election: the socialist former government. PASOK was the great success story of the last 38 years of Greek politics (rising from nothingness and ruling the country for more than two thirds of the period) came tumbling down denounced as the architect of the 'memorandum'
Anger and fear being the two motivational forces of the Greek electorate, are not promising signs for a creative administration. In fact, Greeks are now resigned to choose between the lesser of two evils. On one hand, the evil that is familiar and has been already tested, the side effects of which brought the country to its present state. On the other, the evil that leads through uncharted territories with unimaginable consequences if things go wrong.
For the past two years, Greeks have been under a constant pressure. They not only feel desperate by the decrease of their standards of living, but also humiliated by the derogatory treatment of their fellow Europeans. Yet no candidate in the Greek election seems to be addressing the one ingredient that could make a great difference in this deterioration: the sense of honor deeply engrained in every Greek. Handled correctly, such an acknowledgement could make an immense difference, not only in the life of every Greek, but also in the restructuring of their country.
Michael Radou Moussou is an elected councilor in the Municipality of Athens.
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Obama's deportation stay late for some immigrants
In this photo taken June 15, 2012, Yannick Grijalba, 18, from Guatemala, poses for pictures during an interview with The Associated Press in Guatemala City. Grijalba was deported from the US on Wednesday, June 13. President Barack Obama announced last week his decision to allow hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants under 30 with high school degrees and no criminal history a chance to stay and work in the country. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)
In this photo taken June 15, 2012, Yannick Grijalba, 18, from Guatemala, poses for pictures during an interview with The Associated Press in Guatemala City. Grijalba was deported from the US on Wednesday, June 13. President Barack Obama announced last week his decision to allow hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants under 30 with high school degrees and no criminal history a chance to stay and work in the country. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)
In this photo taken June 15, 2012, Yannick Grijalba, 18, from Guatemala, poses for pictures during an interview with The Associated Press in Guatemala City. Grijalba was deported from the US on Wednesday, June 13. President Barack Obama announced last week his decision to allow hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants under 30 with high school degrees and no criminal history a chance to stay and work in the country. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)
Nahuel Tedesco poses for pictures during an interview with The Associated Press in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Saturday, June 16, 2012. Tedesco was deported from the US in May, 2010. President Barack Obama announced last week his decision to allow hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants under 30 with high school degrees and no criminal history a chance to stay and work in the country. (AP Photo/Eduardo Di Baia)
Nahuel Tedesco poses for pictures during an interview with The Associated Press in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Saturday, June 16, 2012. Tedesco was deported from the US in May, 2010. President Barack Obama announced last week his decision to allow hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants under 30 with high school degrees and no criminal history a chance to stay and work in the country. (AP Photo/Eduardo Di Baia)
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (AP) ? Marlon Roberto Cortes was stocking shelves in the frozen food section of a suburban Boston supermarket when he was summoned to the back office.
An immigration officer was waiting for him and asked to see his ID, which he didn't have. The 20-year-old Honduran was told there was an order to deport him, and agents handcuffed and hauled him to a holding center. He was sent back to his native country in March without being able to say goodbye to his family.
Cortes missed by three months President Barack Obama's decision last week to allow hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants no older than 30 with high school degrees and no criminal history a chance to stay and work in the country. The president has said that as many as 800,000 young illegal immigrants living in the U.S. could benefit from the change.
From Guatemala to Argentina, recently deported young people who had dreamed of becoming U.S. citizens reacted to Friday's announcement with a mix of frustration and sadness, but also relief that siblings left behind might now be able to stay without fear of deportation.
"I am a person who studied and I wish I could aspire to far greater things," said Cortes. "I'm sad."
"The country in which I could have had the chance to get ahead is the United States," he added. "I did everything I had to do to get that and I don't understand why they wouldn't let me ... I feel more American than Honduran."
Yannick Grijalba, an 18-year-old Guatemalan with fluent English who was deported on Wednesday after living 11 years in Northern California, was equally frustrated.
"When I was watching the news today and heard, I just couldn't believe it," he said last week in Guatemala City. "I had to turn the TV off."
It's unclear how many deported immigrants just missed their chance like Cortes because there are no statistics that classify them by age or education. The United States deported 390,000 people in 2010, the last recorded year. But one can spot the young and recently deported on Latin America's streets, where they sometimes fumble with their Spanish and have trouble fitting in.
To Cortes, it was like being thrown a life preserver too late and he says his future looks bleak.
On his first day back in Tegucigalpa, the young man with braces and hair gelled straight back had to wake up before 5 a.m. to work with his grandparents selling baleadas, wheat tortillas stuffed with beans and meat, outside a hospital.
He said he has been stopped a couple of times by men on the streets of Honduras, which has a gang problem and among the world's highest homicide rates. "I don't even know the words, the rules and the signals they make," he said. "I am afraid to be on the streets alone. And if someone says I am a gringo, it is very dangerous for me because they will think I have money and will assault me."
Cortes noted that he graduated from a Chelsea, Massachusetts high school and would have met all the criteria of the new U.S. policy, which says that the immigrant must have been brought to the U.S. before they turned 16, be no older than 30 and have been in the country for at least five continuous years.
Now back in Honduras, Cortes calls his mother's cellphone every week or so to talk with her and her younger sister in the U.S, and tries to keep in touch with them and others on Facebook.
"I keep up with all of my high school friends through Facebook," said Cortes. "We miss each other very much. I don't know if we are ever going to see each other again."
In Grijalba's case, his family flew from Guatemala to New York City with tourist visas in 2000.
The family later moved to Fairfield, California where Grijalba became an honor-roll student and competed on the wrestling team at a local high school. Halfway through his junior year, he got into a fist fight with a boy from school over a girl. It led to an assault charge in juvenile court.
Maibe Casalins, a Miami-based immigration attorney, said that someone like Grijalba could still qualify because juvenile records are not considered a criminal conviction under immigration laws. U.S. immigration courts give wide leeway to prosecutors and agents in determining whether an individual has the right to stay.
Grijalba kept on studying at the juvenile detention center and was hoping to graduate so he could go to a community college and earn a degree as a mechanic. Like some of the other deported young Latin Americans, Grijalba believes that the chance for a good education is among the most important things he has lost.
"I would then get a job, save and go on to a university and study architecture," Grijalba said of his earlier plans.
Instead, immigration officers deported him weeks before he finished his classes.
Jobless and with no money, Grijalba is now back in Guatemala City, a place he barely recognizes, living downtown with an aunt, two uncles and a cousin.
"Everything is just really different here," he said. "My uncle took me around the city and everything here looks rundown with cracks on the walls and the dogs are so skinny."
"There are also guards with shotguns everywhere," he added. "Yesterday I had to go get Guatemalan documents, there were even guys with shotguns there. You just don't see that in a DMV in California," said Grijalba, referring to the Department of Motor Vehicles.
Grijalba was noticeably awkward in what is now a foreign country for him from the moment he stepped off the plane at a Guatemalan Air Force base. As the other deportees scrambled off the aircraft, Grijalba had the measured saunter of a high school kid in his baggy pants and Air Jordans as pre-recorded marimba music blasted from airport speakers. Foreign Ministry officials then gave him and the other deportees their first meal back home: a bread roll and a paste of refried black beans, along with a juice box and a speech about how they will always be welcome in their native Guatemala.
Grijalba said he can't pursue a college degree in the country of his birth because he needs to work. His best bet, he said, is to apply for a job at a call center because English is his main language.
In Argentina, 22-year-old Nahuel Tedesco wishes Obama's decision would have come two years ago when he was studying in Florida.
His family came to the United States after Argentina defaulted on its debt and its currency devaluated in late 2001 and early 2002. The economic crisis caused a spike in violent crime and Tedesco's father lost his job with postal service, so the family decided it was time to leave.
They settled in Miami, where his father and his brother worked in construction and restaurants, and his mother earned money as a nanny. Nahuel was 12.
"It was a great time. Those were the best years of my life," Tedesco said.
His other family members were all deported back to Argentina in 2009. Enrolled at Miami Dade College, Tedesco chose to stay and continue with his classes.
But months later, Tedesco received a notice from immigration officials ordering him to appear in court for deportation proceedings. He was only able to extend his stay a couple of weeks longer to complete his degree in computer software engineering before leaving the country in May 2010.
"I would have liked for things to have turned out differently, for the benefits to have been implemented earlier," he said.
Back in Buenos Aires, Tedesco said it was difficult to adapt to a place where he hadn't lived since he was 12. He worked at a call center where he was eventually laid off after it closed. "It took me several months to realize what was going on," he said.
Like Tedesco and other recently deported immigrants who spent much of their childhood in the United States, Stephany Ramirez also sought work at a call center because of her English skills.
Although she had lived in San Diego since the sixth grade, Ramirez voluntarily returned to Mexico last year and settled in Tijuana to earn some money. She said she was tired of living with the fear of deportation and didn't qualify for financial aid to pay for tuition at an American college.
Still, she'd hoped to return to San Diego later to rejoin her family and continue her education. "It's extremely hard to be here by myself," Ramirez said.
If Ramirez had stayed north of the border she could have benefited from the new rules, but because she wasn't in the United States when Obama made the announcement on Friday she no longer qualifies.
"It would have been a lot easier to continue my studies and be with my family," she said.
A disappointed Ramirez however said she was happy that her younger sister, 18-year-old Montserrat Ramirez, stayed in San Diego and may benefit from the new policy.
"I am happy there is some hope for her," she said.
In Honduras, Cortes said he was confused when he heard the news last week about the new U.S. policy. He initially thought he could go back to the U.S. and apply, but was then told that was not the case.
His sadness was tempered, however, by relief that his younger sister and others could benefit from the new policy.
"They don't have to go through the ordeal I have," he said. "It could have saved me."
____
Associated Press writers Alberto Arce reported from Tegucigalpa, Honduras, and Adriana Gomez Licon from Mexico City. AP writer Romina Ruiz-Goiriena contributed to this report from Guatemala City.
___
Adriana Gomez Licon is on Twitter?http://twitter.com/agomezlicon
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Father's Day: Top Five Worst Movie Dads And Why We Love Them
In honor of Father's Day, we name our favorite 'worst' dads in film, from Mrs. Doubtfire to Darth Vader.
By Kevin P. Sullivan
Robin Williams in "Mrs. Doubtfire"
Photo:
The movies have given us some of the best and worst fathers in the history of pop culture. A deadbeat dad can spark the action for an entire film, and a good one can inspire the lesson you're supposed to take home from a movie.
But some dads are just so wonderfully misguided, so hilariously unfit for their role that we can't help but love them. So in honor of Father's Day, here is our rundown of some of our favorite best worst dads in film history.
Odin - "Thor"
Sure, he's the All Father, dad to Thor, and pretty terrible stepfather to Loki, but when he's really needed, what does he do? He goes into his "Odinsleep." Earth was on the brink of destruction thanks to Loki's treacherous ways, and Odin's solution is to take a nap? Granted he wakes up just in time to save Thor from falling off of the destroyed Bifröst, but we could have avoided a lot of this if he had just stayed awake a little longer.
Mrs. Doubtfire - "Mrs. Doubtfire"
There are few things that prove a man's dedication to his children like disguising himself as an elderly English woman and posing as their nanny. Also, there are fewer things that are as creepy. Robin Williams helped sell the whole notion as something that is sweet and endearing rather than a serious case of child endangerment, but the second you take a step back to think about it, the scenario seems less cutesy.
Darth Vader - "Star Wars"
Anakin Skywalker is ultimately a victim of the dark side, but you still kind of have to blame him for how long it took him to realize that he was the bad guy. The Emperor literally had to electrocute Vader's own son in front of him to get him to snap out of it. He does get some bonus points for tossing the dude down the bottomless pit.
Randy Marsh - "South Park"
There aren't many redeeming qualities to Stan's dad, Randy. He drinks, frequently ends up in his underwear and is terrible at playing "Wheel of Fortune." But there is no other fictional father that has worked his way into our hearts by being so thoroughly terrible. If you think that Randy has no right to be as bad of a dad as he is, we have this to say to you: "I thought this was America."
Engineers - "Prometheus"
(Spoilers Ahead ...)
The ripped pale guys from "Prometheus" may have created all of us by drinking the black goo and falling into a waterfall, but then what? They tried to destroy us, and they didn't even have the decency to explain why. We'll hold out more definitive judgments for a second viewing or maybe a sequel, but for now, they're kind of deadbeats.
Who's your favorite "worst" dad? Tell us in the comments! For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.
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Saturday, June 16, 2012
Microsoft explains Windows 8's Mail app, promises more changes to come
It's not often that the folks in Redmond get to debut a new operating system as big as Windows 8, so we can't really blame them for going on at length about every feature of it. The latest to get the in-depth treatment on the Building Windows 8 blog is the Mail app, which has already gone through some fairly big changes since the Consumer Preview and is apparently set to receive even more before the final release. As Microsoft's Jeremy Epling explains in the post, central to the latest version is a three-pane view that's designed to take advantage of the 16:9 ratio Windows 8 is optimized for, and make the best use of all the space afforded by the full-screen "window" -- the latest release is now able to display 14 messages at a time at the standard 1366 x 768 resolution, for instance, as opposed to just 8.5 in the Consumer Preview version. It's also, of course, deeply integrated into Windows 8 itself, even taking advantage of a new networking APIs to detect if you're on a metered network and only download the first first 20KB of each message body if that's the case. Unfortunately, Epling didn't divulge much about those promised future changes, noting only that there are "many more features on the way." In the meantime, you can find out more than you may have wanted to know about Mail in its current state at the link below.
Microsoft explains Windows 8's Mail app, promises more changes to come originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 15 Jun 2012 17:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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