NewsDaily: Leaked Guantanamo files reveal detainee details: report A cache of classified U.S. military documents provides intelligence assessments on nearly all of the 779 people who been detained at the Guantanamo Bay prison in Cuba. Leaked Guantanamo files reveal detainee details: report | Oil … Oil leader delivers breaking news, oil news, oil prices, crude oil and gas. Business, market activity, video and all things world necessary news. Leaked Guantanamo files reveal detainee details: report (Reuters … Reuters – A cache of classified U.S. military documents provides intelligence assessments on nearly all of the 779 people who been detained at the Guantana… Leaked Guantanamo files reveal detainee details: report (Reuters … Leaked Guantanamo files reveal detainee details: report (Reuters). Reuters – A cache of classified U.S. military documents provides intelligence assessments on nearly all of the 779 people who been detained at the Guantanamo Bay prison … Leaked Guantanamo files reveal details | Hamsab.net – Explore … More than 700 leaked secret files on the Guantanamo detainees lay bare the inner workings of America s controversial prison camp in Cuba. The secret documents revealed that most of the 172 remaining priso… pipsteal says: Leaked Guantanamo files reveal detainee details: report: WASHINGTON (Forexbuffalo.com) – A cache of classified U.S. military documents…
Continue reading …Hmm. As I was just saying recently, imagine if we as a country defined national security as the health, well-being, education and gainful employment of our citizens, and not as the ability to deliver bombs on targets. I’m not surprised that someone else came to the same obvious conclusion — only that it’s two members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff saying so: On Friday, April 8, as members of the U.S. Congress engaged in a last-minute game of chicken over the federal budget, the Pentagon quietly issued a report that received little initial attention: “A National Strategic Narrative.” The report was issued under the pseudonym of “Mr. Y,” a takeoff on George Kennan’s 1946 “Long Telegram” from Moscow (published under the name “X” the following year in Foreign Affairs) that helped set containment as the cornerstone of U.S. strategy for dealing with the Soviet Union. The piece was written by two senior members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (CAPT Wayne Porter, USN and Col Mark “Puck” Mykleby) in a “personal” capacity, but it is clear that it would not have seen the light of day without a measure of official approval. Its findings are revelatory, and they deserve to be read and appreciated not only by every lawmaker in Congress, but by every American citizen. The narrative argues that the United States is fundamentally getting it wrong when it comes to setting its priorities, particularly with regard to the budget and how Americans as a nation use their resources more broadly. The report says Americans are overreacting to Islamic extremism, underinvesting in their youth, and failing to embrace the sense of competition and opportunity that made America a world power. The United States has been increasingly consumed by seeing the world through the lens of threat, while failing to understand that influence, competitiveness, and innovation are the key to advancing American interests in the modern world. Courageously, the authors make the case that America continues to rely far too heavily on its military as the primary tool for how it engages the world . Instead of simply pumping more and more dollars into defense, the narrative argues: By investing energy, talent, and dollars now in the education and training of young Americans — the scientists, statesmen, industrialists, farmers, inventors, educators, clergy, artists, service members, and parents, of tomorrow — we are truly investing in our ability to successfully compete in, and influence, the strategic environment of the future . Our first investment priority, then, is intellectual capital and a sustainable infrastructure of education, health and social services to provide for the continuing development and growth of America’s youth.
Continue reading …From an idea on Twitter to an online event: Wray village highlights rural broadband campaign and benefits of ‘symmetrical’ fast upload to digital future The ‘world’s first’ streaming of a village cricket match took its place in internet folklore today with thousands tuning in to the #twicket. Complete with an appearance from a 15 foot scarecrow and the issuing of yellow cards more usually associated with football, the cricket match from Wray in Lancashire was broadcast across as far afield as America and Australia. Organiser John Popham, who first came up with the plan to highlight the need for faster rural broadband provision just a few week ago, told me: “It worked better than my wildest expectations both in terms of viewers and the technology. The BBC even came along – I think they might be a bit worried!” At its height the match attracted more than 2,300 live viewers – and succeeded in making a local woman who stepped in to be commentator, Brenda Nickle, into an immediate online star with her observations about players as she sipped her Pimms. Popham now hopes to use other live events as part of the campaign to highlight the need for fast upload speeds to enable people to share content more easily. Almost all broadband provision in the UK is “asymmetric” – meaning that download speeds are far greater than upload speeds. Studies in Australia have found that symmetrical upload and download speeds leads to more creativity among users, while asymmetric connections creates a “consumer culture”. The UK government has repeatedly said that it wants the UK to be a leader in content creation, but there is little sign that it has taken in the importance of symmetric broadband in achieving this goal. Future events could well prove more difficult to achieve – Wray was chosen because, thanks to a network installed by Lancaster University, it is one of only three villages in the UK to have a symmetrical community network . “It’s going to be hard to live up to this, to do it again to this standard,” Popham said. The livestream was managed by Birmingham company Aquila which used basic camera equipment (two Sony Z1 cameras and and a DSR 350) with microphones on the boundary and at the commentary. There was also an audio only stream brovided by Radio Youthology with iPhone and Android apps. The hash tag #twicket started trending on Twitter shortly before the end of the match. Broadband Digital Britain Internet Digital Economy Act Sarah Hartley guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …April 25th: Radio pioneer Gugliemo Marconi born; America gets its name; American and Soviet troops meet on Elba river; Hubble Space Telescope deployed; Ella Fitzgerald born.
Continue reading …Drive-thru fast food makes sense, but drive-thru funerals? The Week rounds up five of the weirdest drive-thru options found around America: Funerals : The owner of a mortuary in Compton, Calif., explains : “You can come by after work, you don’t need to deal with parking, you can sign the book outside,…
Continue reading …Click here to view this media I can’t help wondering why Franklin Graham isn’t preaching an Easter Sunday revival instead of showing up on Christiane Amanpour’s show to make political statements, or to be more accurate, pronouncements. Some pronouncements, however, should not be allowed to stand unchallenged, and the following is one of them. AMANPOUR: We in this country and around the world are living in very dire times right now. Dire financial times, economic crisis, the gap between rich and poor is growing, not only here, but all over the world. What can the church do to fill that gap and to step into that gap? GRAHAM: Christiane, a hundred years ago, the safety net, the social safety net in the country was provided by the church. If you didn’t have a job, you’d go to your local church and ask the pastor if he know somebody that could hire him. If you were hungry, you went to the local church and told them, “I can’t feed my family.” And the church would help you. And that’s not being done. But the government took that. And took it away from the church. And they had more money to give and more programs to give, and pretty soon, the churches just backed off. And as a result, now you have generation after generation of pastors in churches that have not done that. And you would have to teach them again how to do it. Well, Reverend Graham, that is somewhat true but mostly not , because of course, churches rely upon the gifts of their congregation. Churches, like everyone else, suffered the effects. Many had debt obligations on their church buildings and were forced into default as offerings fell away, causing them to have to close the doors entirely. The depression had a devastating effect on the Churches as well as on the nation. In the optimistic flush of the ‘20’s many congregations had built new edifices far too large and expensive. When the depression hit, they found themselves unable to pay. Most carried their huge debts; a few rejected their obligation, thus bringing shame on the Christian Church. Colleges and publishing houses, missionary enterprises, and the social work of the Churches were all hard hit by the depression. Many an institution of the Church lost its endowment in the financial crash and had to close or had to drastically cut back its activities. In 2008, everything old is new again . The 20th annual study by Empty Tomb Inc. reaffirmed a “long-term turning inward of congregations” exhibited by a dwindling share of church donations spent on benevolence and evangelism. It also found a dip in money given to churches during the 2008 recession, even while donations to religious organizations overall increased. enlarge But of course, there were reasons why those offering plates were a little emptier, and not just because of massive unemployment. While there was some resurgence of piety among the lower classes (which manifested itself in an increase in the strength of religious fundamentalism during this decade) most middle and upper class individuals, remained unmoved even though they too may have suffered from the Depression. This cover plainly represents how the upper classes during the 1930′s continued to pay little attention to religion during this decade. The tip of a hat by the dead rich gentleman being rushed up to heaven shows the only tacit attention which such individuals, often caught up in the business world, paid to matters of religion. It’s no different today. Giving is carefully structured and often targeted. Giving by wealthy conservatives to religious organizations tends to be oriented toward overseas missions, even in desperate financial times here. For those who do focus giving toward religious organizations, it tends to be of an amount that isn’t even close to what’s needed to help people on the streets. Graham rewrites history in this segment to leave viewers with the impression that churches were handling everything just fine until FDR’s government came and snatched that responsibility away. They weren’t. In Colleen McDannell’s book Picturing Faith: photography and the Great Depression , two paragraphs in chapter 5 give a look inside the evangelical churches serving the poor: “I’ve had two dark rainy days on which it was impossible to work outside so, I did a pretty complete story on the City Mission, community chest financed and operated by a Baptist minister who is quite a little stinker.” John Vachon was photographing in Iowa, and in April 1940 he was in Dubuque. “It really breaks my heart to hear this little Baptist say, ‘all right men, upstairs to bed’ after the hymns had been sung,” he wrote to Stryker. “They go up, fumigate their clothes, take showers, and go to bed about 8:30.” The only Catholic to work for the Historical Section, and probably the only photographer who went ot church every Sunday as a child, Vachon did not take the evangelical tone of the charity very seriously. “The first night I sat through the services and raised my hand on the third call that yes I wanted to be saved. I never realized before what a lousy situation it is to have ‘charity’ operate this way. ” The “lousy situation,” however, was interesting enough to prompt Vachon to return one more day. “I am going back once more to get shots of children coming to get pails of the stew that’s left over,” he explained to his boss. A few days later, Stryker dashed off a letter in support of his young clerk. “The City Mission story sounds good. I hope your pictures portray the real character of the Baptist minister. I know the type. Will save my comments about them until you get back.” This is the church of Franklin Graham. The authoritarian, evangelical church that calls for conditions upon the charity he extols as being stolen from the church. My point here is not to say that all churches are failures. Not at all. Many are working toward social justice and a more fair, just, compassionate America . But Franklin Graham’s vision is one where we are pushed back to the days of horses, buggies, tent revivals and a government who does not exist to serve the people governed.
Continue reading …“A lot more Americans are going to learn to speak Spanish, and I think that's a fine thing.” So said Newsweek's Eleanor Clift Friday in the middle of a “McLaughlin Group” program devoted in its entirety to looking at how America is responding to a growing Hispanic population as well as an ongoing economic expansion in Latin America (video follows with transcript and commentary): JOHN MCLAUGHLIN, HOST: Will the growing Hispanic population assimilate as readily into the American melting pot as earlier immigrant waves like the Irish and the Italians did? Yes or no? PAT BUCHANAN: Took the Irish almost a hundred years to do it, John. I think that it's going to be more slowly because the culture… MCLAUGHLIN: You do? BUCHANAN: …much more different. Yes I do. MCLAUGHLIN: Even though the United States today is multiracial? BUCHANAN: The United States, people are moving into enclaves, John, by race and ethnicity, all over this country. MCLAUGHLIN: “Irish need not apply” was the sign in the window when this date nation was dominantly what, UK settled? BUCHANAN: No, this was dominantly British, in this country. MCLAUGHLIN: Dominantly British, right. But it’s not dominantly British. BUCHANAN: But it took, John, it took generations before the Irish were fully assimilated. MCLAUGHLIN: Because of the setting into which they came! This setting today is different. BUCHANAN: John, take a look… MCLAUGHLIN: It's multicultural! It's multilingual. BUCHANAN: It is not. John, look, you got a multicultural… MCLAUGHLIN: Eleanor. BUCHANAN: Go ahead. ELEANOR CLIFT: I don't think the wave of the future is racial and ethnic enclaves in this country. I think people are and will assimilate, but I also think a lot more Americans are going to learn to speak Spanish, and I think that's a fine thing. Interesting debate between Buchanan and McLaughlin that likely could be easily argued from both sides. We are indeed a more multicultural nation than we were in the 19th century when waves of immigrants came from Ireland. However, one could make the case that the illegality of so many of the Hispanic immigrants in the country today creates a larger hurdle for their assimilation. Even so, Clift's addition to the conversation was a rather typical liberal view concerning Americans learning to speak Spanish implying that it's the citizenry's responsibility to aid immigrant assimilation by becoming more like them. In previous centuries, it was the immigrant's job to learn English in order to facility his or her acculturation. Unfortunately, in recent decades, this concept has been tossed aside not just here but in Europe as well where countries are mandating cultural changes to avoid conflict with an expanding Muslim population. More and more it's the natives that are required to assimilate rather than the new arrivals. Makes you wonder what America looks like when it's all over.
Continue reading …The sexual trafficking of girls “is more similar in America and Cambodia than we would like to admit,” writes Nicholas Kristof in the New York Times . Teen prostitution is “one of our country’s biggest human rights problems.” These teenagers are victims, not criminals, and the system is failing them badly….
Continue reading …Quick searches of Twitter and Google reveal a flurry of recent Gmail hackings, and the Guardian reports that they might be rooted in the Gawker database breach last December. Once hacked, victims’ accounts send out spam e-mails that make it appear that the sender has been mugged. If you try to respond to one of these, your message will go to a dummy address. The spam message are tweaked so that the victim won’t get your response if you hit reply all. Sophos’s Graham Cluley told the Guardian, “Our suspicion is that this is a Gawker-related incident. We know that people were using the same password for multiple sites and then others were trying to use the passwords against those accounts.” You might remember that Twitter was hit hard by an acai berry spam attack following the breach. Slate’s Farhad Manjoo writes, “A password is the only thing separating your e-mail, banking information, and social networks from a bad guy,” and unfortunately, a complex password with letters, numbers and symbols just won’t cut it anymore. Adding an additional layer of authentication — like the key fobs required by many companies for security — cuts down on the potential harm of a stolen password. It might seem like a lot of work, but a thief who has gained access to your Gmail account also has control over your calendars, Google Docs, Gchat, YouTube account and, of course, years of your personal email. Read on for five essential tips for protecting and backing up your Gmail account.
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