Home » Posts tagged with » breaking news (Page 1027)
Elegant Bike Storage Shelf From Knife & Saw

Images credit: Knife and Saw Designboom shows this bike shelf from Chris Brigham , a graphic designer gone 3D and now making furniture under the name Knife and Saw. . Living in San Francisco and visiting friends in New York, he “noticed that there is a void when it comes to elegant bike management.” He’s right; this would be perfect for LifeEdited . … Read the full story on TreeHugger

Continue reading …
The Week in Animal News: Singing Mice, Santa Swims with Sharks, and More (Slideshow)

Photo credit: Osaka University via Discovery News Mice that tweet like birds? Yes, they now exist in Japan. See how these new musical rodents could mean big advances in science, and then check out the rest of the week’s animal news: birds going extinct and other birds making a comeback, animals with strange noses, daring deer rescues, and more.

Continue reading …
The Week in Pictures: A Tiny RV, Public Peeing, and More (Slideshow)

A story on this tiny, tiny RV resonated with readers and was one of the most popular posts of the year in the car and transportation category. We also have gigantic smiling slides that make architecture fun again, malaria nets that save lives, and more in The Week in Pictures, our roundup of the best photos on TreeHugger this week. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

Continue reading …
Marsha Blackburn Accuses the FCC of Usurping the Power of Congress with Net Neutrality Ruling

Click here to view this media As Karoli already informed us about , the FCC passed some fairly milk toast regulations on Net Neutrality this week and as expected we got the usual freak out from the right wing. Think Progress has more on some of the reaction from conservatives here. Conservatives Freak Out Over Mild Net Neutrality Laws: ‘It’s Total Government Control Of The Internet’ They missed Rep. Marsha Blackburn’s carping on Sean Hannity’s show the other night where she basically repeated the same fear mongering she has posted on her Congressional web site. FCC Internet Grab a Christmas Nightmare : There’s no such thing as hospice for federal bureaucracies. No quiet corner where bureaus who have outlived their usefulness can go to bravely face the end. The undead need no such niceties; not when they can leap vampire-like upon the next great sector of American life and proceed to suck it dry in the name of “public interest”, “fair play”, or any other euphemistic glamour the Executive and Legislative branches can be lulled into. This may sound like a Halloween tale, but the FCC’s Christmas Week takeover of the Internet is the best example of President Reagan’s maxim that the nearest thing to eternal life on Earth is a federal program. Just four days before Christmas, the FCC will make its vampric leap from its traditional jurisdiction- the terrestrial radio and land line telephones that have fallen into disuse; onto the gifts piled neatly under our trees. The iPads and iPhones, Androids, Wiis, Webbooks, and WiFi will all feel the federal bite in a way they never have before. Today the FCC, in spite of Congressional opposition and public outrage, is expected to adopt “net neutrality” regulations over the Internet. They will impose thousands of pages of rules on the most prosperous, creative, and exciting sector of the American economy. They’ll do it- and then Congress will have to undo it. The FCC’s blind impulse to regulate before the new Congress can restrain them ignores a host of consequences that will prove ill for America’s Creative Economy. First, in detaching the Internet Service Providers (ISPs) from the Internet architecture they have built, the FCC is effectively nationalizing the web. The FCC does this in the name of “fairness”, “non-discrimination”, and “leveling the playing field”. The consequence will be a restriction of bandwidth for users and a deterioration of the online architecture that ISPs no longer have an interest in expanding or maintaining. The underserved communities in this country who don’t yet have access to broadband are now much less likely to get it. Second, the FCC’s hysterical reaction to the hypothetical problem of anti-competitive online behavior is also redundant. By asserting jurisdiction over the Internet as a communications platform, the FCC is shortsightedly ignoring the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) who already has sufficient rules in place to contain the bad behavior in the virtual marketplace the FCC seems so worried about. This sets up a real jurisdictional fight and points out what happens when the bureaucracy decides to create work for themselves, rather than wait for Congress to dictate to them. Finally, when the FCC moves to regulate the Internet, they focus on those issues they understand: bandwidth, spectrum, and to a lesser extent content. They ignore emerging issues of fair trade, property rights, privacy, and copyright. In my view a more comprehensive approach to the new Creative Economy and how it can be protected is the most appropriate. Such a comprehensive approach can only begin on Capitol Hill. The real issue here is not that the Federal Government lacks the authority to sensibly regulate the Internet. Nor, even, that the Internet is in desperate need of regulation- it isn’t. The issue is that the FCC is running out of useful things to occupy their time. There is a real bi-partisan consensus that Congress should act first to regulate the Internet (or not regulate as the case may be). Industry and creative content providers who were coerced into this deal by an over zealous FCC Chairman should take heart. Like the breaking of dawn, the new Congress will prove a swift antidote to the federal bloodsucker you found at your throat this Christmas. Yeah, that’s the ticket Marsha. It’s the federal government and the regulators that are the bloodsuckers, not the telecom companies that want to overcharge people for their Internet access or potentially censor sites they don’t agree with. I’m sure her campaign donors will be very pleased with this appearance. This is the crap we’re going to get to look forward to in the next two years… endless hearings on laws and policies that Republicans would have supported in the past before their party lost their damned mind since they’re corporate friendly and calling them “government takeovers” and “socialism” because Democrats passed them. Good grief these lying hacks make my head hurt.

Continue reading …
On the Street….Alden Cordovan, New York

With blue jeans, black jeans, grey flannels, or khakis, Alden cordovan shoes are so chic. The color is exquisite and the quality/durability is world famous. The difficulty is finding an Alden model that makes a good foot and has a toe that’s not too rounded. I had seen these wingtips before but I wasn’t really sold on them until I saw this gentleman looking so respectable in them.

Continue reading …
"Cows Do Not Belong in Fields" – UK Mega-Dairy Renews Application

Image credit: Compassion in World Farming When I reported on a planned 8,100 cow super-dairy in the UK , I noted that many dairy farmers were concerned that these industrial-scale operations would expose the public to the fact that even most smaller dairy farms in the country keep their cows indoors for 5 or 6 months of the year. Those concerns may be coming true, because as the mega-dairy resubmits its application, its owners are coming out in the open and stating their position – … Read the full story on TreeHugger

Continue reading …
Raw Video: 58-year-old Putin’s Black Belt Moves

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin on Wednesday showed that at 58 he is still in great physical shape, as he took to the tatami (judo mat) during a visit to a new sports centre in his hometown of Saint Petersburg. (Dec. 24)

Continue reading …

More than nine out of 10 Americans celebrate Christmas – even atheists, agnostics or believers in other faiths, according to surveys by LifeWay Research and USA TODAY/Gallup . They might be roasting chestnuts over an open fire, decking the halls with boughs of holly or trying to get the Chipmunks Christmas song out of their heads, but they are celebrating. read more

Continue reading …
ShowBiz Minute: Royals, Lohan, Reynolds

Critics slam royal wedding coin; Lohan spat to bring scrutiny to Betty Ford; Ryan Reynolds and Scarlett Johansson file for divorce. (Dec. 24)

Continue reading …