Monday, November 28, 2011

The Rum Diary 2011


The Rum Diary (2011) DVD ENG DVDRip HQ 1 Link NO RAR
HD (High Definition)

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IMDB Rating: The Rum Diary (2011) - IMDb
Genre: Adventure | Drama
Run time: 110 mn
Language: English
Director: Bruce Robinson
Writers: Bruce Robinson (screenplay), Hunter S. Thompson (novel)
Stars: Amber Heard, Johnny Depp and Aaron Eckharts

Plot:
American journalist Paul Kemp takes on a freelance job in Puerto Rico for a local newspaper during the 1950s and struggles to find a balance between island culture and the ex-patriots who live there.

Official Trailer - 'The Rum Diary" HD - YouTube


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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/lern2play/~3/17x_CR-VyAU/123515-the-rum-diary-2011-a.html

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Iran threatens to hit Turkey if US, Israel attack

Members of the Iranian paramilitary Basij force, affiliated with the Revolutionary Guard, attend a rally in front of the former US Embassy in Tehran, Iran, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011. Militant Iranian students seized the embassy on Nov. 4, 1979, believing the embassy to be a center of plots against Iran, and then held 52 Americans hostage for 444 days. The US severed diplomatic ties in response, and the two countries have not had formal relations since. The men's headbands bear the names of Shiite saints, including Hussein.(AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)

Members of the Iranian paramilitary Basij force, affiliated with the Revolutionary Guard, attend a rally in front of the former US Embassy in Tehran, Iran, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011. Militant Iranian students seized the embassy on Nov. 4, 1979, believing the embassy to be a center of plots against Iran, and then held 52 Americans hostage for 444 days. The US severed diplomatic ties in response, and the two countries have not had formal relations since. The men's headbands bear the names of Shiite saints, including Hussein.(AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)

(AP) ? A senior commander of Iran's powerful Revolutionary Guard says the country will target NATO's missile defense shield in Turkey if the U.S. or Israel attacks the Islamic Republic.

Gen. Amir Ali Hajizadeh, the head of the Guards' aerospace division, is quoted by the semiofficial Mehr news agency as saying the warning is part of a new defense strategy to counter what it sees as an increase in threats from the U.S. and Israel.

He says Iran will now respond to threats with threats rather than a defensive position.

Tehran says NATO's early warning radar station in Turkey is meant to protect Israel against Iranian missile attacks if a war breaks out with Israel.

Turkey agreed to host the radar in September as part of NATO's missile defense system.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-11-26-ML-Iran/id-2ff8d4e158094b9b93ba6afc0cc02113

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Sunday, November 27, 2011

Embarrassing ignorance of smartphone technical terms

goo Ranking recently took a look at what smartphone-related terminology people are too embarrassed to display their ignorance by asking about.

Demographics

Between the 18th and 20th of October 2011 1,092 members of the goo Research online monitor group completed a private internet-based questionnaire. 52.3% of the sample were male, 11.2% in their teens, 16.2% in their twenties, 25.7% in their thirties, 25.8% in their forties, 11.5% in their fifties, and 9.5% aged sixty or older. Note that the score in the results refers to the relative number of votes for each option, not a percentage of the total sample.

This ranking implies that the higher the score, the less likely people are to know the term. I?d never heard about drawr (!NSFW!) before, but I don?t know if it really is that much of a topic of conversation. UPDATE: Oops, my mistake ? it was drawer, not drawr; that term?s made me embarrassed too!

I?m familiar with all the terms except for ?home app?; Google suggests that it?s some kind of replacement for the default Android shell.

Ranking result

Q: What smartphone technical terms are you too embarrassed to display your ignorance by asking about them? (Sample size=1,092)

Rank ? Score
1 Drawer 100
2 Flick input 97.0
3 Tethering 83.2
4 AR 81.0
5 Galakei 78.4
6 OAuth authentication 76.7
7 Pinch in, pinch out 74.1
8= Dock 71.1
8= UI 71.1
10 Widget 69.8
11 Dual core 63.4
12 Push notification 62.5
13 SIM free 56.9
14 Tap 55.2
15 3G 51.3
16 Bluetooth 48.7
17= Wi-fi 47.0
17= BlackBerry 47.0
19 Multitask 46.1
20 Home app 39.7
21 SMS, MMS 38.8
22 Live wallpaper 37.9
23 Multitouch 35.8
24 Lock screen 31.5
25 Android 31.0
Read more on: goo ranking,smartphone

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  • Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/WhatJapanThinks/~3/vn90RfaFa40/

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    NATO attack allegedly kills 24 Pakistani troops (AP)

    ISLAMABAD ? Pakistan has blocked vital supply routes for U.S.-led troops in Afghanistan and demanded Washington vacate a base used by American drones after coalition aircraft allegedly killed 24 Pakistani troops at two posts along a mountainous frontier that serves as a safe haven for militants.

    The incident Saturday was a major blow to American efforts to rebuild an already tattered alliance vital to winding down the 10-year-old Afghan war. Islamabad called the bloodshed in one of its tribal areas a "grave infringement" of the country's sovereignty, and it could make it even more difficult for the U.S. to enlist Pakistan's help in pushing Afghan insurgents to engage in peace talks.

    A NATO spokesman said it was likely that coalition airstrikes caused Pakistani casualties, but an investigation was being conducted to determine the details. If confirmed, it would be the deadliest friendly fire incident by NATO against Pakistani troops since the Afghan war began a decade ago.

    A prolonged closure of Pakistan's two Afghan border crossings to NATO supplies could cause serious problems for the coalition. The U.S., which is the largest member of the NATO force in Afghanistan, ships more than 30 percent of its non-lethal supplies through Pakistan. The coalition has alternative routes through Central Asia into northern Afghanistan, but they are costlier and less efficient.

    Pakistan temporarily closed one of its Afghan crossings to NATO supplies last year after U.S. helicopters accidentally killed two Pakistani soldiers. Suspected militants took advantage of the impasse to launch attacks against stranded or rerouted trucks carrying NATO supplies. The government reopened the border after about 10 days when the U.S. apologized. NATO said at the time the relatively short closure did not significantly affect its ability to keep its troops supplied.

    But the reported casualties are much greater this time, and the relationship between Pakistan and the U.S. has severely deteriorated over the last year, especially following the covert American raid that killed Osama bin Laden in a Pakistani garrison town in May. Islamabad was outraged that it wasn't told about the operation beforehand.

    The government announced it closed its border crossings to NATO in a statement issued after an emergency meeting of the Cabinet's defense committee chaired by Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani.

    It also said that within 15 days the U.S. must vacate Shamsi Air Base, which is located in southwestern Baluchistan province. The U.S. uses the base to service drones that target al-Qaida and Taliban militants in Pakistan's tribal region when they cannot return to their bases inside Afghanistan because of weather conditions or mechanical difficulty, said U.S. and Pakistani officials, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive strategic matters.

    The government also plans to review all diplomatic, military and intelligence cooperation with the U.S. and other NATO forces, according to the statement issued after the defense committee meeting.

    The White House said that senior U.S. civilian and military officials had expressed their condolences to their Pakistani counterparts.

    The White House statement said the officials expressed "our desire to work together to determine what took place, and our commitment to the U.S.-Pakistan partnership which advances our shared interests, including fighting terrorism in the region."

    The White House statement did not address Pakistan's decision to block supply routes for the war in Afghanistan or its demand that the U.S. vacate the drone base.

    The Pakistani army said Saturday that NATO helicopters and fighter jets carried out an "unprovoked" attack on two of its border posts in the Mohmand tribal area before dawn, killing 24 soldiers and wounding 13 others. The troops responded in self-defense "with all available weapons," an army statement said.

    Pakistan army chief Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani condemned the attack, calling it a "blatant and unacceptable act," according to the statement.

    A spokesman for NATO forces, Brig. Gen. Carsten Jacobson, said Afghan and coalition troops were operating in the border area of eastern Afghanistan when "a tactical situation" prompted them to call in close air support. It is "highly likely" that the airstrikes caused Pakistani casualties, he told BBC television.

    "My most sincere and personal heartfelt condolences go out to the families and loved ones of any members of Pakistan security forces who may have been killed or injured," Gen. John Allen, the top overall commander of U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan, said in a statement.

    The border issue is a major source of tension between Islamabad and Washington, which is committed to withdrawing its combat troops from Afghanistan by the end of 2014.

    Much of the violence in Afghanistan is carried out by insurgents who are based just across the border in Pakistan. Coalition forces are not allowed to cross the frontier to attack the militants. However, the militants sometimes fire artillery and rockets across the line, reportedly from locations close to Pakistani army posts.

    American officials have repeatedly accused Pakistani forces of supporting ? or turning a blind eye ? to militants using its territory for cross-border attacks. But militants based in Afghanistan have also been attacking Pakistan recently, prompting complaints from Islamabad.

    The two posts that were attacked Saturday were located about 1,000 feet (300 meters) apart on a mountain top and were set up recently to stop Pakistani Taliban militants holed up in Afghanistan from crossing the border and staging attacks, said local government and security officials.

    There was no militant activity in the area when the alleged NATO attack occurred, local officials said. Some of the soldiers were standing guard, while others were asleep, they said, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.

    Pakistan army spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas said map references of all of the force's border posts have been given to NATO several times.

    Pakistan's prime minister summoned U.S. Ambassador Cameron Munter to protest the alleged NATO strike, according to a Foreign Ministry statement. It said the attack was a "grave infringement of Pakistan's sovereignty" and could have serious repercussions on Pakistan's cooperation with NATO.

    Munter said in a statement that he regretted any Pakistani deaths and promised to work closely with Islamabad to investigate the incident.

    The U.S., Pakistan, and Afghan militaries have long wrestled with the technical difficulties of patrolling a border that in many places is disputed or poorly marked. Saturday's incident took place a day after a meeting between NATO's Gen. Allen and Pakistan army chief Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani in Islamabad to discuss border operations.

    The meeting tackled "coordination, communication and procedures ... aimed at enhancing border control on both sides," according to a statement from the Pakistani side.

    The U.S. helicopter attack that killed two Pakistani soldiers on Sept. 30 of last year took place south of Mohmand in the Kurram tribal area. A joint U.S.-Pakistan investigation found that Pakistani soldiers fired at the two U.S. helicopters prior to the attack, a move the investigation team said was likely meant to notify the aircraft of their presence after they passed into Pakistani airspace several times.

    A U.S. airstrike in June 2008 reportedly killed 11 Pakistani paramilitary troops during a clash between militants and coalition forces in the tribal region.

    ____

    Associated Press writers Anwarullah Khan in Khar, Pakistan, Riaz Khan in Peshawar, Pakistan, Matiullah Achakzai in Chaman and Deb Riechmann in Kabul, Afghanistan, contributed to this report.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111127/ap_on_re_as/as_pakistan

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    Saturday, November 26, 2011

    Pakistan demands US vacate air base

    The Pakistani government has demanded the United States vacate an air base within 15 days after blaming NATO air forces for the fatal attack on military outposts in northwest Pakistan.

    The government issued the demand Saturday after NATO helicopters and jet fighters allegedly attacked two Pakistan army posts along the Afghan border, killing up to 28 Pakistani soldiers and plunging U.S.-Pakistan relations deeper into crisis.

    Pakistan initially retaliated by shutting down vital NATO supply routes into Afghanistan, used for sending in nearly half of the alliance's shipments by land.

    The White House said senior U.S. civilian and military officials extended condolences to their Pakistani counterparts following the airstrike. The unidentified officials also expressed a desire to work with Pakistan to investigate the deaths.

    Islamabad outlined its latest demand in a statement it sent to reporters following an emergency defense committee meeting chaired by Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani.

    Shamsi Air Base is located in southwestern Baluchistan province. The U.S. is suspected of using the facility in the past to launch armed drones and observation aircraft to keep pressure on Taliban and al-Qaida militants in Pakistan's tribal region.

    In a statement sent earlier to reporters, the Pakistan military blamed NATO for Friday's attack in the Mohmand tribal area, saying helicopters "carried out unprovoked and indiscriminate firing."

    Masood Kasur, the governor of Pakistan's northwestern Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province, said the raid was "an attack on Pakistan's territorial sovereignty."

    Video: US-Pakistani relations severely damaged (on this page)

    "Such cross-border attacks cannot be tolerated any more. The government will take up this matter at the highest level and it will be investigated," he said.

    The attack comes as relations between the United States and Pakistan ? its ally in the war on militancy ? are already strained following the killing of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden by U.S. special forces in a secret raid on the Pakistani garrison town of Abbottabad in May.

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    "Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani has condemned in the strongest terms the NATO/ISAF attack on the Pakistani post," Pakistan foreign ministry spokeswoman Tehmina Janjua said in a statement.

    "On his direction, the matter is being taken (up) by the foreign ministry in the strongest terms with NATO and the U.S.," the spokesman said.

    'Cannot be tolerated'
    The powerful Chief of Army Staff, General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani, said in a statement issued by the Pakistani military that "all necessary steps be under taken for an effective response to this irresponsible act."

    Two military officials told Reuters that up to 28 troops had been killed and 11 wounded in the attack on the Salala checkpoint, about 1.5 miles from the Afghan border in the Baizai area of Mohmand, where Pakistani troops are fighting Taliban militants.

    Video: White House treads lightly around Pakistan situation (on this page)

    However, a Pakistan Army statement put the death toll at 24 with 13 injured. It said that Pakistan troops had "responded immediately in self defense to NATO/ISAF's aggression with all available weapons."

    The army statement said NATO helicopters and fighter aircraft were involved in the attack, which took place around 2 a.m. Saturday local time (4 p.m. Friday ET).

    The commander of NATO-led forces in Afghanistan, General John R. Allen, said he had offered his condolences to the family of any Pakistani soldiers who "may have been killed or injured" during an "incident" on the border.

    A spokesman for the force declined further comment on the nature of the "incident" and said an investigation was proceeding. It was not yet clear, he said, whether there had been deaths or injuries.

    The raid is the largest and most serious incident of its kind. A similar incident on Sept 30, 2009, which killed two Pakistani troops, led to the closure of one of NATO's supply routes through Pakistan for 10 days.

    U.S. regret
    The U.S. embassy in Islamabad also offered condolences. "I regret the loss of life of any Pakistani servicemen, and pledge that the United States will work closely with Pakistan to investigate this incident," ambassador Cameron Munter said in a statement.

    Colonel Gary Kolb, spokesman for the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force in Kabul, said the aircraft were taking part in a strike that was a coordinated effort with ISAF, Pakistani military and the Pakistani border authorities, NBC News reported.

    He said they had responded to small arms fire, according to NBC News. Asked to confirm that it was retaliatory, he said yes.

    Video: Pakistan blaming NATO for soldiers' deaths (on this page)

    ISAF was still determining the exact circumstances. "This has the highest priority to ensure that we get all the facts straight," Kolb said, NBC News reported.

    He noted that even if some of supply routes through Pakistan were closed, there were "contingencies built into the system" to deal with these types of disruptions.

    About 40 Pakistani army troops were stationed at the outpost, military sources said. Two officers were reported among the dead.

    A senior Pakistani military officer said efforts were under way to bring the bodies of the slain soldiers to Ghalanai, the headquarters of Mohmand tribal region.

    "The latest attack by NATO forces on our post will have serious repercussions as they without any reasons attacked on our post and killed soldiers asleep," he said, requesting anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the media.

    40 trucks halted
    NATO supply trucks and fuel tankers bound for Afghanistan were stopped at Jamrud town in the Khyber tribal region near the city of Peshawar hours after the raid, officials said.

    "We have halted the supplies and some 40 tankers and trucks have been returned from the check post in Jamrud," Mutahir Zeb, a senior government official, told Reuters.

    Another official said the supplies had been stopped for security reasons.

    "There is possibility of attacks on NATO supplies passing through the volatile Khyber tribal region, therefore we sent them back towards Peshawar to remain safe," he said.

    Much of the violence in Afghanistan against Afghan, NATO and U.S. troops is carried out by insurgents that are based just across the border in Pakistan.

    Coalition forces are not allowed to cross the frontier to attack the militants, which sometimes fire artillery and rockets across the line.

    American officials have repeatedly accused Pakistani forces of supporting ? or turning a blind eye ? to militants using its territory for cross-border attacks.

    The Afghanistan-Pakistan border is often poorly marked, and differs between maps by up to five miles in some places.

    Pakistan is a vital land route for 49 percent of NATO's supplies to its troops in Afghanistan, a NATO spokesman said.

    NATO apologized for that incident, which it said happened when NATO gunships mistook warning shots by the Pakistani forces for a militant attack.

    The attack is expected to further worsen U.S.-Pakistan relations, already at one of their lowest points in history, following a tumultuous year that saw the bin Laden raid, the jailing of a CIA contractor, and U.S. accusations that Pakistan backed a militant attack on the U.S. Embassy in Kabul.

    An increase in U.S. drone strikes on militants in the last few years has also irritated Islamabad, which says the campaign kills more Pakistani civilians in the border area than activists. Washington disputes that, but declines to discuss the drone campaign in detail.

    NBC News' Atia Abawi in Kabul, The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this story.

    Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45442885/ns/world_news-south_and_central_asia/

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    First-term senator fed up with Congress' gridlock (AP)

    WASHINGTON ? A first-term senator is complaining about congressional gridlock, saying lawmakers have "the blame game down to a science."

    West Virginia Democrat Joe Manchin says it's difficult to find constituents who think Congress is doing its job.

    Manchin tells CBS's "The Early Show" that he failed to get President Barack Obama to intervene directly with the debt-reduction supercommittee, which closed shop last week after failing to come up with an agreement to save $1.2 trillion over 10 years.

    Manchin says government leaders have to be more involved in such situations, "whether it's the president of the leaders of Congress." He says one possible way to surmount the current stalemate in Washington is to sacrifice an extension of payroll tax relief in exchange for commitments by lawmakers to overhaul the tax system.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/uscongress/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111125/ap_on_go_co/first_term_senator_gridlock

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    Search for Black Friday deals with TGI Black Friday for iPhone

    For some, Black Friday has arrived, and for others, it’s only hours away and TGI Black Friday for iPhone is here to add some order to such a chaotic day. This little app breaks down all the big deals by store (including the App Store), categories, and popularity and...


    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/wyFeaIQi_wA/story01.htm

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    Friday, November 25, 2011

    Turnstyle: What Does Occupy Movement Mean For Cal Business Students?

    By: Robyn Gee

    2011-11-24-sproul1.jpg
    Photo Credit: Denise Tejada/Turnstyle News
    UC Berkeley students hold a rally at Sproul Plaza days after police confront student demonstrators.

    What is it like being a professor of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) at the University of California Berkeley Haas School of Business when the Occupy movement takes the campus by storm?

    For one thing, it makes for some great teachable moments.

    Professor Kevin Sweeney, former executive of Patagonia, began talking about the Occupy movement with his class on Oct. 5, when protesters began camping out in San Francisco. But recently, they've had to look no further than the school's own backyard, with Occupy Cal protesters making Sproul Plaza their home base.

    From Sweeney's perspective, businesses and corporations should not be surprised at all by the Occupy movement if they are practicing corporate social responsibility. According to him, businesses should use NGOs and activists to read the tides of change. Sweeney likes to use a surfing analogy to prove his point.

    "When you surf, you reach a point in the wave where you either ride that wave or you just get hammered by it... You try to find the people there who know the break really well... and they can say, 'That bump out there, that's a big hairy wave, we'll get trapped by that one.'...You want to find NGO activists who can look out on the horizon and see which of those bumps are really going to be big waves... When you do that, you're not surprised by Occupy Wall Street. This is a wave you can't ignore," said Sweeney.

    And it has been hard to ignore the action on the UC Berkeley campus. Two weeks ago, protesters were met by UC police in riot gear. Several protesters were jabbed with batons as they attempted to block police from taking down tents that were erected on Sproul Plaza.

    Days later, Occupy Cal held a campus-wide strike. Many professors canceled class, and Professor Robert Reich, former U.S. Secretary of Labor in the Clinton administration, gave a lecture to thousands of students on the steps of Sproul Hall about the free speech movement.

    On that same day, an undergraduate student was allegedly brandishing a gun in the Haas Business School, and was shot and killed by campus police officers, making some business school students wonder if they were being targeted.

    There is no proven connection between Occupy Cal and the shooting, according to the Daily Cal. But according to Sweeney, his students made their own connections. One of his students shared with the class that she had heard business school students criticized for not being active or visible in the protests. "She found that upsetting, it bothered her... and then she had to be evacuated from a classroom because there had been a shooting, and she thought, 'My god, has it come to this?'" said Sweeney. He said she went to the Occupy Cal General Assembly that night and was impressed, and found that she identified with some of the movement's ideals.

    This student made a lasting impression on Sweeney's entire class, as she called for her fellow business students to check out the protests. Delanie Ricketts, an undergraduate in Sweeney's class said, "Actually it kind of halted the conversation. It was something that no one really could debate...Everyone supports higher education when you're at Cal. All students want to make sure that not more classes are being cut." Occupy Cal, like other efforts in the growing "Occupy Colleges" network, is leveraging the message of the skyrocketing cost of higher education to narrow their demands.

    But admittedly, the business school is in somewhat of a bubble. Ricketts said, "Haas is perceived as this outside community because it's one of those majors that you have to be accepted into. You can't just declare... Just business itself is something you don't think about when you think of liberal, hippie Berkeley."

    Jesse Bussell, an undergraduate business major also in Sweeney's class, said, "We are a fairly small major. We only have about a couple hundred students, and all of our classes are [at Haas], so we are physically separated from the rest of the school," he said. He says that separation sometimes creates a lack of connection with what's happening in the world, including the Occupy movement. He says his peers are mostly looking to go into what he calls the "ABC's" -- accounting, banking, and consulting, and many spent the fall immersed in their search for internships or jobs.

    He's become more socially aware over the past few years, but admits that money is important to him because he grew up in a "fairly poor family." He said, "The main reason I'm here is to have a better job, and be really successful...and make enough money that I can be really secure."

    Bussell has had discussions with friends about whether it makes sense for the Occupy protests to be happening at Cal. "We didn't want things to be out of control or unnecessary so that it interrupts studying," said Bussell, especially since finals are coming up in a few weeks. They've also debated whether the protests on campus can embody the same struggle as the protests on Wall Street and in downtown Oakland because "there are just large amounts of social inequality in these places."

    Ricketts sees it differently. She finds students, even business students, more engaged because protesters are widening the message. "I saw many stickers on backpacks in my business class, 'Help Defend Public Education.' I think that's something that they can identify with in the movement, even if it's not related to the concerns about big business."

    Sweeney agrees. "If I look at the business school, I think our students are actually there. I think our faculty isn't... It's almost like (the Occupy movement is) surprising to the business faculty as opposed to the business students."

    Sweeney says he's seen a shift in his students' mentality over the years. "The students today are utterly different from students I had 10 years ago... They have a more subtle and sophisticated understanding of what the pressures are facing businesses... There's a lot less cliche, a lot less labeling of corporations... They're really cynical about companies that say they're doing green stuff, and they really want proof -- and they know what proof looks like," said Sweeney.

    Ricketts is a good example of the changing profile of students taking business classes. She sees the Occupy movement as a job opportunity for her -- she can see herself consulting with large businesses helping them become more socially responsible. She sees business as part of the solution, not the problem. "Business has a ton of capital, a ton of power, and to be able to link that with these issues is something that's exciting and interesting and can be really helpful."

    Originally published on Turnstylenews.com, a digital information service surfacing emerging stories in news, entertainment, art and culture; powered by award-winning journalists.

    Go to Turnstylenews.com | Follow us on Twitter | Like us on Facebook | Follow us on Tumblr

    ?

    Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/turnstyle/what-does-occupy-movement_b_1111265.html

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    Ex-CEO wants Olympus to come clean on scandal (AP)

    TOKYO ? Olympus Corp.'s former CEO expressed confidence Thursday that justice would be served as Japanese investigators probe the cover-up of massive investment losses at the company that has become one of Japan's biggest financial scandals.

    But Michael Woodford, 51, who met with Japanese prosecutors, police and financial authorities earlier in the day, acknowledged the investigation into the huge accounting irregularities that date back decades at Olympus will likely take a long time.

    He also told reporters he was prepared to return to lead the Tokyo-based camera and medical equipment company with a new "dream team" of directors.

    Woodford was fired as CEO last month after questioning dubious accounting at Olympus, but he remains on the board and can only be removed by shareholders.

    He said he plans to confront the Olympus board Friday. He already has spoken with the Tokyo District Public Prosecutors Office, the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department and the Securities and Exchange Surveillance Commission.

    Woodford said Japan cannot evade getting to the bottom of the scandal, because he had gone so public, the scandal has the attention of the international media, and U.S. and British authorities are also investigating.

    "This story will be different," he said. "Olympus may be the way this country changes, maybe a bit for the better."

    He was speaking at a panel at a Tokyo hall sponsored by The Economist magazine and answered questions from other reporters and guests.

    Under intense pressure, Olympus has admitted that a $687 million payment to an obscure Wall Street firm for financial advice and expensive acquisitions were used to cover up investment losses dating to the 1990s.

    The board abruptly ousted Woodford for questioning the deals and payment. At the time, Olympus said Woodford was sacked because his management style was incompatible with the company's culture.

    The scandal has cast a harsh light on Japanese corporate governance, which has been repeatedly criticized as falling behind global standards.

    Recent media reports have pointed to possible ties between Tokyo-based Olympus and organized crime, but an outside panel created by Olympus to investigate its accounting has said it has so far found no evidence of such ties.

    Woodford was a 30-year employee at Olympus and had led its European business. He said the dubious investments were handled by headquarters in Japan.

    Japanese corporate practices, such as cross shareholding, in which friendly companies hold shares in each other, worked to silence opposition, he said.

    If accepted back as head of Olympus, Woodford promised change, picking the American model of corporate transparency and governance.

    "I would make sure my company was exemplary," he said.

    But he refused comment on another legal case of a Japanese whistleblower, in which a Japanese court ruled against the company and for the Olympus employee. In that case, Olympus is appealing to the Supreme Court a ruling that the company penalized the worker unfairly.

    Woodford went public with his concerns after his sacking, and has become a hero among circles hopeful for better corporate governance in Japan.

    Tsuyoshi Kikukawa resigned as president on Oct. 26 and was replaced by Shuichi Takayama. The company blamed the accounting scheme on Kikukawa, former executive vice president Hisashi Mori and ex-auditor Hideo Yamada.

    Olympus announced late Thursday it officially accepted the resignation of the three from the company board, saying they have "sincerely" cooperated in the investigation so far and are expected to do so without the titles. That means the three men won't attend Friday's board meeting.

    Prosecutors are questioning the executives, according to Kyodo news agency.

    Takayama, the new president, said in a statement that "We, the current management, are prepared to resign our post as soon as we see Olympus taking the road to recovery." Takayama, however, said he is not leaving immediately because his task is to tackle the crisis and get over "mounting problems."

    The company must fully investigate the scandal and change its management system to one that is socially acceptable, he said.

    "Any attempt of self-protection among the management is not acceptable," Takayama said, adding that he planned to present reform plans at the next shareholders' meeting.

    Olympus risks being delisted from the Tokyo Stock Exchange unless it can rectify past filings with regulators by reporting revised earnings by Dec. 14.

    The company's shares lost four-fifths of their value after the scandal erupted in mid-October but have since recovered on optimism that Olympus will avoid removal.

    The issue gained 17 percent Thursday, its maximum gain allowed for a single day, to finish at 1,019 yen.

    The Tokyo Stock Exchange was closed Wednesday for a national holiday. Olympus shares had surged Tuesday after the panel said it had found no evidence of links to organized crime.

    The practice of hiding investment losses through funny bookkeeping and paper companies has surfaced before in Japan, especially in the 1990s, when mergers and acquisitions became a way for companies to survive in the depressed economy that followed the bursting of Japan's real estate bubble.

    Such scandals have previously ensnared other major names in Japan Inc., such as Yamaichi Securities Co., which went bankrupt in 1997, and cosmetics maker Kanebo, which was forced to undergo a government-backed bailout in 2005.

    ___

    Follow Yuri Kageyama on Twitter at http://twitter.com/yurikageyama

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111124/ap_on_bi_ge/as_japan_olympus

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    Thursday, November 24, 2011

    Court restores federal protections for Yellowstone grizzly bears

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    Source: http://www.labspaces.net/115416/Court_restores_federal_protections_for_Yellowstone_grizzly_bears

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    Build the Lego Ornament That Can Do the Kessel Run in 12 Parsecs [Lego]

    Placing this Lego Millennium Falcon ornament on your tree will certainly guarantee that you'll have the coolest tannenbaum in town. Oh, and if your Wookie knocks it down, you can quickly rebuild it. Why do you think they called him Chewie? More »


    Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/DQ6y34VfBqA/build-the-lego-ornament-that-can-do-the-kessel-run-in-12-parsecs

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    Wednesday, November 23, 2011

    Molecules to Medicine: Pharma Trumps HIPAA?

    This past week, I was jolted out of my chair by news that a Pfizer-led group plans to buy access to patient data in hospitals. My initial reaction was anger, on a variety of levels: as a researcher, as one who is increasingly wary of the reach of huge corporations, and as an individual.

    Actually, it is not just Pfizer doing this?a new consortium called the Partnership to Advance Clinical Electronic Research (PACeR), includes Merck, Roche, Johnson & Johnson, Bayer, Hoffman-La Roche, Quintiles, and Oracle. Their pitch sounds very reasonable, with a noble goal of speeding clinical research and bringing new medicines to market. The focus of the article describing this initiative in Business Week aptly described the business advantages: Delays in drug development are estimated to cost $1 million per day. More rapid enrollment and clinical trial completion will increase the time a drug remains on patent?read, profitable?for the pharmaceutical sponsor. It also helps the sponsor company remain more competitive compared to its rivals. And hospitals stand to earn $75 million annually in exchange for patient data. What could possibly go wrong?

    There is only one little thing standing between the companies and patient data?concerns about the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, or HIPAA, which includes onerous privacy protections for patients. I suppose that HIPAA has value, at least in its good intent to protect patient privacy, and its boost to job security for medical records clerks, accountants, attorneys, and the cottage industry of trying to explain the rules. Otherwise, I have yet to see the value and, as a physician and clinical researcher, I have had only negative experiences with it.

    Background: HIPAA and HITECH

    HIPAA, for the uninitiated, prevents disclosure of Protected Health Information (PHI) which is defined as ?information that can be linked to a particular person (i.e., is person-identifiable) that arises in the course of providing a health care service.? ?Individually identifiable health information? is information, including demographic data, that relates to:

    • the individual?s past, present or future physical or mental health or condition,
    • the provision of health care to the individual, or
    • the past, present, or future payment for the provision of health care to the individual,

    and that identifies the individual or for which there is a reasonable basis to believe it can be used to identify the individual.Individually identifiable health information includes many common identifiers (e.g., name, address, phone number, birth date, Social Security Number, medical record number). If you have health insurance, you immediately waive all of these privacies in order to file any claim. Ironically, it seems health insurers are the most likely to abuse personal health information by asking intrusive questions and denying claims or care.

    Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act (HITECH Act) is part of The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA, also known as the ?stimulus package?), that provided $10 billion for ?scientific research and facilities? through September 2010. One of the specified intents of the HITECH Act was to facilitate health outcomes and clinical research. Healthcare providers are being pushed into using electronic medical records. Medicare reimbursements to providers will increase significantly if there is ?meaningful use? of the electronic medical records (EMRs), defined as data used for health purposes (e.g., public health, quality reporting, or research), and decrease if there is not ?meaningful use.?

    It seemed like a good idea?

    Electronic medical records do have advantages for research, particularly for timely recognition of adverse events that might otherwise remain undetected in postmarketing surveillance. An example is using EMRs to identify patients with genetic mutations that are associated with specific serious adverse events.

    As PACeR recognized, EMRs have the particularly promising potential to help identify and recruit study participants. Inclusion and exclusion criteria are becoming increasingly restrictive, resulting in expected accrual rates of less than one patient per month on many trials for even common illnesses. However, lab data can be successfully and efficiently used to screen large numbers of prospective patients. For example, University of South Carolina researchers screened 7,296,708 lab results from 69,288 patients, identifying 70 potential candidates who met automated criteria, 3 of whom ultimately participated in the trial. Since current research regulations preclude a third party from alerting an investigator about a potential study volunteer without that patient?s advance consent, however, the researchers developed a compliant but convoluted work-around with the IRB?similar to the process PACeR is trialing now. At USC, if the lab identified a potential subject, the ordering physician was notified of the patient?s potential eligibility. Then the ordering physician had to decide whether to make the effort to contact the patient to obtain permission to contact the clinical trial staff and then to follow through.

    Screening health information is also particularly promising at sites that conduct multiple trials because it can alert investigators to multiple opportunities and guide patients to the most appropriate study. One solution to the various obstacles is to incorporate alerts about possible clinical trials into the EMR used at the time of a patient?s encounter with a physician. While still cumbersome, this method has the advantage of reminding physicians about trials while minimizing the additional work for them. It also overcomes HIPAA concerns because the physicians communicate directly with their patients.

    But then reality sets in?EMRs

    Electronic medical records may be a boon for hospital reimbursement and administrators, but appears to be a nightmare for physicians and patients. In my experience:

    1. They are very cumbersome and time-consuming to complete, adding at least an hour per day to documentation; this is time taken away from patient care.
    2. The documentation is focused on trivia needed for billing and coding rather than for patient care.
    3. This elaborate documentation clutters up charts and notes, making it difficult to find the important details about the patient?s condition.
    4. The physical layout of many EMR screens and systems seriously interferes with patient-physician communication and building a trusting relationship. Eye contact is minimized as the health care worker?s attention is instead focused on squinting at a screen.
    5. EMRs also destroy MD/RN communication. It is no longer necessary for the MD to actually walk over to the patient room and hear?relevant?information from the RN. This used to be essential. Then again, RNs are now less often at the bedside; they are too busy charting at a computer terminal.
    6. There is a significant increase in repetitive use injuries among health care workers using poorly designed EMR work stations.

    However, EMRs also pose unique problems for research. Privacy issues have received the greatest attention. These affect researchers? ability to review records, recruit patients, and monitor study participants. Confusion also results from the different consent requirements of different groups and because the standard consent clause that allows the sponsor?s representatives to review the records does not meet the HIPAA rule?s requirements.

    EMRs also pose problems for research monitors, both because the monitors have limited access to data stored electronically and because of problems verifying that the data have not been altered. The electronic date and time stamped audit trails are important here. While log-on names and passwords are not supposed to be shared, this is probably commonly done during monitoring visits since there is no other practical way of getting timely access to read-only records for auditing.

    It gets worse with HIPAA and research?the Unintended Consequences

    HIPAA requirements are extremely difficult to understand and subject to misinterpretation, and mistakes carry the chilling spectre of disproportionately high penalties. Even the feds understood the need to be able to identify potential subjects in order to do research, so they put in a carve-out, allowing ?waiver of authorization? with the IRB?s approval. (Full details are available in the Code of Federal Regulations Title 45?Public Welfare).

    HIPAA, the ill-considered privacy rule, has had several unintended consequences (beyond the nuisance factor), the most serious of which is its negative impact on research. While those of us in the trenches immediately and directly felt the burden, a report from the Association of Academic Health Centers (AAHC), The HIPAA Privacy Rule: Lacks Patient Benefit, Impedes Research Growth,?affirms our suspicions about its chilling effect on research.

    Let me share my own experiences with HIPAA and research. I already knew that HIPAA really hurt the numbers of volunteer referrals from my local hospital. For example, even when the Institutional Review Board (IRB) provided a ?carve-out? allowing us to be alerted about potential patients for a sepsis study, many hospital staff members had knee-jerk ?we can?t tell you anything? reactions, fearing for their jobs. Some staff fomented misunderstandings about HIPAA seemingly deliberately, as one way of derailing a study. Mostly, HIPAA caused rampant confusion that cost us a number of potential patients, which is especially painful given that qualified candidates were as rare as hen?s teeth?as they often were for the studies I generally got asked to do, with an expected participant accrual of 1-2 per month.

    This past summer, I went to India to volunteer at a hospital and to try and help them with their self-identified problem with tuberculosis. There was considerable debate as to whether or not IRB approval was necessary?my infectious disease colleagues felt it was not, as it was part of a public health initiative and the ?research? was no different than that conducted every day in public health departments. The social science types at the U.S. university I was working with all insisted we obtain IRB approval, a time-consuming and, in some settings, expensive process. (Many IRBs levy an administrative charge of $1-2,000 per study). And the folks in India could have cared less, nor did they understand the fuss, as there is next to no patient privacy in their crowded facility, nor was it culturally relevant. All they wanted was help caring for their patients.

    As mentioned above, an Association of Academic Health Centers (AAHC) study confirms these subjective findings, that the HIPAA rules are unclear and are subject to misinterpretation. Many researchers don?t understand a waiver of authorization can be provided by the IRB. As the AAHC?notes in HIPAA Creating Barriers to Research and Discovery, ?The fear of regulatory punishment is driving IRB, Privacy Officer and Organizational decision-making in clinical research.? The fear of liability dissuades many other parties from supporting research and distracts everyone from the goal of helping to develop new treatments. In addition, valuable personnel time and money are wasted on the unnecessary and excessive new administrative burdens.

    Another example of HIPAA regulators run amok was that of the Office for Human Research Protections (OHRP). The OHRP recently extended privacy rules to ?research? done as part of infection control and quality improvement activities. In an irrational and counterproductive move, it closed down research at Johns Hopkins University and a network of hospitals throughout Michigan regarding the use and efficacy of a checklist in reducing life-threatening hospital-acquired infections. The data from each hospital were deidentified before being sent to Hopkins for analysis, yet the OHRP ruled that individual consents were required. See an excellent and scathing review by Dr. Atul Gawande for details.

    Studies have demonstrated the dramatic reduction in recruitment rates for research since HIPAA was introduced. One University of Pittsburgh study cited by the AAHC showed recruitment was slashed by more than 50 percent after HIPAA. Similarly, a University of Michigan study showed volunteer consents dropped from 96 percent to 34 percent after HIPAA. An American Society of Clinical Oncology paper report that a ?reliance on consent impedes valuable research?sometimes causes physicians and entire hospitals to opt out of research.? Sometimes it seems the only beneficiaries of HIPAA are insurers, from whom we ironically have no privacy. The AAHC report concludes, ?Finally, the patient whom HIPAA is designed to protect does not appear to recognize, understand, or care about this complex law as it applies to research.?

    There was an interesting review of the HIPAA complaints that were related to clinical research between 2003 and 2007. Of the 32,487 privacy complaints to the Department of Health and Human Services during this period, guess how many were related to clinical research? A whopping 17! Intriguingly, the author also extrapolates that, if obtaining a HIPAA consent takes 5 minutes, and a research site?s time is postulated as $60/hour, this translates to at least $10 million dollars per year spent just to obtain this cumbersome, and often misunderstood, authorization.

    A report from the prestigious Institute of Medicine, Beyond the HIPAA Privacy Rule: Enhancing Privacy, Improving Health Through Research,?further expounds on HIPAA?s unintended interference with research and gives several recommendations, concluding that the Common Rule?s (Federal policy, codified in the Code of Federal Regulations 45 CFR part 46) human research protections be applied to interventional clinical research and that there be new federal oversight of the information-based research.

    Problems with PACeR

    Access to all this patient data would be extraordinarily helpful to companies to enable them to identify sites for research and even specific patients to target. The initial trial of this model begins this month in 13 hospital systems in New York, working in collaboration with PACeR.

    Now since this identifying data can?t legally be shared with drug companies, PACeR has come up with a nifty work around, similar to that at the University of South Carolina, but on a much larger scale. PACeR will pay hospitals to be an intermediary. For between $50,000 and $200,000 per query, hospitals will search their database of medical records to identify patients who fit a particular protocol and give the company information about who the patient?s doctor is?without the specific PHI. The physician would then contact their patient and get consent to release any PHI.

    This type of procedure for contacting patients is a cumbersome and time-consuming one for the physician in the trenches. In my setting, it would be unworkable for a variety of reasons, including the uncompensated time of the primary physician, the hassle factor, and the narrow time window for enrollment on trials for acute infections. In addition, many physicians are not familiar with either the needs of research or the benefits to their patients. This would put a large administrative burden on the physician?s practice, both in playing the middleman, and since there are also logs of release of PHI that must be maintained. Add this to the pressure already on physicians to be ?productive? and see patients quickly in a brief encounter. It seems the only ones profiting under the PACeR model are the corporations?certainly there is no direct benefit to the patient. This seems akin to the exploitation of patients like Henrietta Lacks, done without either consent or compensation.

    Of broader concern is, of course, mistrust over industry?s access to vast amounts of health data. Although this would be deidentified, there have been too many reports in the news of breaches of security, exposing large amounts of private health information on the internet.

    Another source of my mistrust is the June Supreme Court decision in Sorrell v IMS Health, in which the Supremes, ?by a 6-3 vote struck down a Vermont law that barred pharmacies, drug makers and others from buying or selling prescription records from patients for marketing purposes. Vermont?s physicians had sought passage of the law, arguing that their prescriptions were intended for private use of patients and should not become a marketing tool.? So much for patient privacy.

    One of my other concerns is that PACeR appears to tilt the playing field towards a few giant pharmaceutical companies. As an individual researcher, I am frustrated that, because of HIPAA, I can no longer access data I need to recruit patients in a timely fashion. And, lacking industry?s deep pockets, I have neither the clout nor funds to buy this access. Nor can I even do chart reviews to describe patient outcomes. Frankly, rather than have this type of industry-hospital consortium, I would rather see HIPAA revamped to allow better access to all to data for research, if the data is held in a secure manner. Living in a small rural community, I?m not sure that I would even require IRB approval (cumbersome and costly) for things like record reviews of patients with a particular condition or public health issues. One other alternative to consider would be having all patients be offered a release on hospital admission or on an office visit, to indicate if their data would be accessible to researchers, with the appropriate privacy safeguards. This would be important, as now many potential volunteers are lost, especially on acute care studies, due to time constraints in the enrollment criteria.

    So on the one hand, we have the push from the government and insurers to have electronic medical records and health outcomes research (HITECH Act), the Sentinel Initiative for postmarketing surveillance of electronic medical records for adverse events, and Medicare reimbursements linked to ?meaningful use? (i.e., providing data) of the EMR. On the other hand, we have the specter of HIPAA and more draconian penalties for breaches of personal privacy. Now we have industry making deals with hospital systems to buy data. While I have misgivings about this approach, there needs to be better access to medical records for research, given appropriate safeguards regarding privacy and permissions for reuse. We need to find a way to boost the current dismal participation rate in clinical trials?less than 5 percent?if we will succeed with medical research in the U.S.

    With the growing consensus gathered from clinical researchers, reviews of patient complaints, surveys of academicians and now the imprimatur of the nation?s leading scientists that HIPAA is not only failing to provide any protection for clinical research subjects but is increasing research costs and probably reducing participation, we can only hope that reason will prevail, and the HIPAA rules will be eliminated for clinical research.

    Cartoons: from Rogue Medic

    Previously in this series:

    Molecules to Medicine: Clinical Trials for Beginners
    Molecules to Medicine: From Test-Tube to Medicine Chest
    Lilly?s Shocker, or the Post-Marketing Blues

    Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=017697ddaa5f31390b5e25064ba3ceb1

    ed reed teresa giudice red ribbon week much ado about nothing sean hayes ndamukong suh ndamukong suh

    Congress' next fights over jobless aid, tax breaks

    Supercommittee member, Senate Finance Committee Chairman Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., walks with reporters as he departs the Capitol Hill office of Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., after meeting with other Supercommittee members as time for action by the deficit reduction panel grows short, Monday, Nov. 21, 2011, on Capitol Hill in Washington. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

    Supercommittee member, Senate Finance Committee Chairman Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., walks with reporters as he departs the Capitol Hill office of Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., after meeting with other Supercommittee members as time for action by the deficit reduction panel grows short, Monday, Nov. 21, 2011, on Capitol Hill in Washington. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

    (AP) ? Congress' failed deficit-cutting supercommittee has faded away, but the pressure on lawmakers to quickly confront a stack of expensive economic issues is only growing.

    Before leaving town for Christmas and New Year's, lawmakers face decisions on whether to renew payroll tax cuts that have meant an average of nearly $1,000 for more than 120 million families this year. Congress also must determine whether to extend unemployment benefits for millions of long-term jobless Americans.

    Without action, both expire Jan. 1.

    Also on the list: Whether to prevent a 27 percent cut in Medicare reimbursements to doctors that occurs on New Year's Day. And oh, yes ? figuring out how to avoid an embarrassing mid-December government shutdown, something that has become a frequent exercise in today's bitterly divided Congress.

    Protecting the payroll tax cuts, jobless benefits and doctors' payments could cost $200 billion or more. But faced with a limp economy, the huge federal debt, next year's presidential and congressional elections, and the supercommittee's finger-pointing, partisan breakdown, clashes over each are inevitable.

    "Right now people are so mad and suffering so much from fiscal fatigue that it's really hard to say what they want," Steve Bell, a longtime Senate Republican budget aide who studies economic policy at the moderate Bipartisan Policy Institute, said of lawmakers.

    There had been some hope of including language dealing with the payroll tax, jobless benefits and Medicare payments to doctors in whatever debt-cutting proposal the supercommittee produced.

    That would have improved their chances of approval because Congress was to consider the debt panel's package under special expedited procedures. Without that protection, the fate of the payroll tax, unemployment and Medicare proposals is more clouded, with battles expected over the size of each and how ? if at all ? to pay for them.

    "There at least would have been some sugar for everybody's taste buds" if the proposals were part of a supercommittee package, said Joseph Minarik, a former Democratic congressional aide and now research director for the nonpartisan, business-led Committee for Economic Development.

    Helping the chances for eventual enactment of the three proposals is a consensus among many economists that each initiative helps the economy by pumping billions of dollars into it.

    The action is likely to start in the Democratic-led Senate, where leaders are expected to force a vote on a proposal to extend the payroll tax cut. The proposed extension would be paid for by boosting levies on people earning $1 million or more per year ? making it certain to fail but providing Democrats with a vote they hope to use against GOP candidates next year.

    "Tell them, 'Don't be a Grinch,'" Obama told a cheering crowd in Manchester, N.H., on Tuesday, saying that's the message they should send Congress. "Don't vote to raise taxes on working Americans during the holidays."

    In response, House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, used a written statement to note that in September, Republicans told Obama "that we stand ready to have an honest and fruitful discussion with him regarding the payroll tax extension, and that invitation stands."

    In a deal with Obama last year, Congress cut the 6.2 percent payroll tax ? which helps finance Social Security ? to 4.2 percent for this year. That has saved 121 million families an average $934 this year, according to the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center.

    Obama has proposed cutting it to 3.2 percent next year at a cost of $179 billion, plus adding another $69 billion in payroll tax breaks for employers. With Republicans and some Democrats wary of the national debt ? which surpassed $15 trillion last week ? the price tag well could shrink.

    Meanwhile, Democrats also want to renew unemployment benefits that provide people with up to 99 weeks of coverage before the extra benefits expire Jan. 1. Without the added coverage, benefits ? which average under $300 a week ? would last a maximum of 26 weeks.

    Without action, more than 2 million people would lose unemployment coverage by mid-February, according to the Labor Department. It would cost an estimated $45 billion to renew the extra benefits for a year.

    Preventing the cut in Medicare payments to doctors is estimated to cost more than $20 billion next year. It is considered a near certainty that Congress will address it because of the clout that Medicare and doctors have with lawmakers.

    Within minutes of Monday's announcement that the supercommittee had failed, the American Medical Association was warning that the 27 percent cut would "force many physicians to limit the number of Medicare and TRICARE patients they can care for in their practices."

    TRICARE is the military's health program.

    House leaders don't plan to bring the jobless benefits, payroll tax or Medicare reimbursement measures to the chamber's floor next week.

    Congress is also far behind on nine crucial spending bills, covering everything from the Pentagon to environmental programs. Three spending bills have been completed.

    Most government agencies are functioning on temporary authority that expires Dec. 16. If the remaining nine spending bills are not finished by then, lawmakers will have to vote to keep them open or face an angry public that polls show already has undisguised contempt for Congress.

    To speed the work, the remaining nine measures might be wrapped into one massive package exceeding $800 billion ? a price tag sure to appall tea party lawmakers, making passage complicated.

    Two other items are virtually certain to wait until next year because the full impact of congressional inaction would not be felt for months or longer.

    Without action, more than 20 million additional families would see their 2012 tax bills grow because they would have to pay the alternative minimum tax, a program initially designed to ensure that wealthy people don't completely escape tax obligations. A one-year fix would cost $90 billion.

    Several dozen tax breaks for businesses, including a large one for corporate research and development, expire on Jan. 1. Renewal could cost more than $30 billion.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Andrew Taylor contributed to this report.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-11-22-US-Debt-Supercommittee-Leftovers/id-863ea10549ea41bf89d959223134abcf

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    Tuesday, November 22, 2011

    What Happened to the Tea Party? (Prospect)

    Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

    Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/164742986?client_source=feed&format=rss

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    More police departments look to tune public out

    Scanner hobbyist Rick Hansen holds his scanner/Ham radio device at his home Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011, in Silver Spring, Md. In an effort to restrict access to their internal communications police departments around the nation are moving to encrypt them. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

    Scanner hobbyist Rick Hansen holds his scanner/Ham radio device at his home Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011, in Silver Spring, Md. In an effort to restrict access to their internal communications police departments around the nation are moving to encrypt them. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

    Scanner hobbyist Rick Hansen holds his scanner/Ham radio device at his home Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011, in Silver Spring, Md. In an effort to restrict access to their internal communications police departments around the nation are moving to encrypt them. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

    Scanner hobbyist Rick Hansen holds his scanner/Ham radio device at his home Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011, in Silver Spring, Md. In an effort to restrict access to their internal communications police departments around the nation are moving to encrypt them. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

    Scanner hobbyist Rick Hansen holds his scanner/Ham radio device at his home Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011, in Silver Spring, Md. In an effort to restrict access to their internal communications police departments around the nation are moving to encrypt them. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

    WASHINGTON (AP) ? Police departments around the country are working to shield their radio communications from the public as cheap, user-friendly technology has made it easy for anyone to use handheld devices to keep tabs on officers responding to crimes.

    The practice of encryption has grown more common from Florida to New York and west to California, with law enforcement officials saying they want to keep criminals from using officers' internal chatter to evade them. But journalists and neighborhood watchdogs say open communications ensure that the public receives information that can be vital to their safety as quickly as possible.

    D.C. police moved to join the trend this fall after what Chief Cathy Lanier said were several incidents involving criminals and smartphones. Carjackers operating on Capitol Hill were believed to have been listening to emergency communications because they were only captured once police stopped broadcasting over the radio, she said. And drug dealers at a laundromat fled the building after a sergeant used open airwaves to direct other units there ? suggesting, she said, that they too were listening in.

    "Whereas listeners used to be tied to stationary scanners, new technology has allowed people ? and especially criminals ? to listen to police communications on a smartphone from anywhere," Lanier testified at a D.C. Council committee hearing this month. "When a potential criminal can evade capture and learn, 'There's an app for that,' it's time to change our practices."

    The transition has put police departments at odds with the news media, who say their newsgathering is impeded when they can't use scanners to monitor developing crimes and disasters. Journalists and scanner hobbyists argue that police departments already have the capability to communicate securely and should be able to adjust to the times without reverting to full encryption. And they say alert scanner listeners have even helped police solve crimes.

    "If the police need to share sensitive information among themselves, they know how to do it," Phil Metlin, news director of WTTG-TV, in Washington, said at the council hearing. "Special encrypted channels have been around for a long time; so have cellphones."

    It's impossible to quantify the scope of the problem or to determine if the threat from scanners is as legitimate as police maintain ? or merely a speculative fear. It's certainly not a new concern ? after all, hobbyists have for years used scanners to track the activities of their local police department from their kitchen table.

    David Schoenberger, a stay-at-home dad from Fredericksburg, Va., and scanner hobbyist, said he understands Lanier's concerns ? to a point.

    "I think they do need to encrypt the sensitive talk groups, like the vice and narcotics, but I disagree strongly with encrypting the routine dispatch and patrol talk groups. I don't think that's right," he said. "I think the public has a right to monitor them and find out what's going on around them. They pay the salaries and everything."

    There's no doubt that it's increasingly easy to listen in on police radios.

    One iPhone app, Scanner 911, offers on its website the chance to "listen in while police, fire and EMS crews work day & night." Apple's iTunes' store advertises several similar apps. One promises to keep users abreast of crime in their communities.

    Though iPhones don't directly pick up police signals, users can listen to nearly real-time audio from police dispatch channels through streaming services, said Matthew Blaze, director of the Distributed Systems Laboratory at the University of Pennsylvania and a researcher of security and privacy in computing and communications systems.

    The shift to encryption has occurred as departments replace old-fashioned analog radios with digital equipment that sends the voice signal over the air as a stream of bits and then reconstructs it into high-quality audio. Encrypted communication is generally only heard by listeners with an encryption key. Others might hear silence or garbled talk, depending on the receiver's technology.

    The cost of encryption varies.

    The Nassau County, N.Y., police department is in the final stages of a roughly $50 million emergency communications upgrade that includes encryption and interoperability with other law enforcement agencies in the region, said Inspector Edmund Horace. Once the old system is taken down, Horace said, "You would not be able to discern what's being said on the air unless you had the proper equipment."

    The Orange County, Fla., sheriff's office expects to be encrypted within months. Several police departments in the county are already encrypted, and more will follow suit to keep officers safe, said Bryan Rintoul, director of emergency communications for the sheriff's office.

    In California, the Santa Monica police has been fully encrypted for the past two years and, before that, used a digital radio system that could be monitored with expensive equipment, said spokesman Sgt. Richard Lewis.

    Still, full encryption is cumbersome, difficult to manage and relatively rare, especially among big-city police departments who'd naturally have a harder time keeping track of who has access to the encryption key, Blaze said.

    The more individuals or neighboring police agencies with access, the greater the risk that the secrecy of the system could be compromised and the harder it becomes to ensure that everyone who needs access has it, Blaze said.

    Relatively few local police departments are actually encrypted, Blaze said, though some cities have modern radio systems for dispatch that are difficult to monitor on inexpensive equipment. The systems can, however, be intercepted with higher-end scanners.

    "I would not be surprised if a lot of departments that do it would switch back to non-encryption. The practical difficulties of trying to maintain an encrypted system at scale start to become apparent," he said.

    Some departments have studied full encryption but decided against it, including police in Greenwich, Conn.

    "Because we've always retained the ability to encrypt traffic on a case-by-case basis when we need to, in a community like Greenwich, I think the transparency we achieve by allowing people to listen to our radio communications certainly outweighs any security concern we have," said Capt. Mark Kordick.

    And some departments have tried to compromise. The Jacksonville, Fla., sheriff's office leased radios to the media, allowing them to listen to encrypted patrol channels. That practice ended last summer out of concern about maintaining the confidentiality of radio transmissions, said spokeswoman Lauri-Ellen Smith.

    In D.C., Lanier says the department is stepping up efforts to advise the public of developing crimes through Facebook, Twitter and an email alert system. Officers will use an unencrypted channel starting next month to alert the public to traffic delays, said spokeswoman Gwendolyn Crump. But the chief has refused to give radios to media organizations, which continue to assail the encryption.

    "What about the truly terrifying crimes?" Metlin, the news director, asked at the hearing. "What if, God forbid, there is another act of terrorism here? It is our jobs to inform the public in times of emergency."

    Rick Hansen says he's been listening to police communications since he was an adolescent and says efforts to shut them make government less transparent. The Silver Spring, Md., man says sensitive information could be kept off the airwaves on a selective basis.

    "Yes, it's a concern ? and it's something that can be addressed through proper procedures and processes as opposed to turning out the lights on everybody," he said

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2011-11-20-Encrypted%20Police%20Communications/id-9ffc0552e2284b1eac493a778ddcf062

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