Home » Posts tagged with » breaking news (Page 590)
First Person: Group to Preserve Historic Ship

A troubled historic ocean liner is finally getting an answer to its distress call. The nonprofit SS United States Conservancy said Tuesday it has taken ownership of the famous cruise ship from Norwegian Cruise Lines and its parent for $3 million. (Feb. 1)

Continue reading …

The Internet—and Facebook in particular—is making it hard to break up and stay broken up, a new survey suggests. Nearly 60% of people stay Facebook friends with their exes after the split, and 74% admit to Googling them, the New York Post reports. One-third say they’ve had sex…

Continue reading …
Punxsutawney Preps for Groundhog Reveal

On the day before Groundhog Day in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, the AP’s Lee Powell found all kinds of groundhogs, from live ones to sweet ones. (Feb. 1)

Continue reading …
Australia evacuates coastal cities as cyclone nears

Tweet – Australia evacuated thousands of people from its northeast coast on Tuesday as a cyclone rivalling Hurricane Katrina bore down on tourism towns and rural communities, with officials saying it could even threaten areas deep inland that were ruined by floods last month. Mines, rail lines and coal…

Continue reading …
Egypt protests: Tahrir Square – video

Protesters in Cairo’s Tahrir Square continue to demonstrate their opposition to President Hosni Mubarak, prior to his announcement that he will stand down at the next election

Continue reading …

A modern-day attempt to resolve a criminal case from way back did not succeed—despite the involvement of a Supreme Court justice. Anthony Kennedy presided over a mock trial of Hamlet at the University of Southern California, reports AP . It was a sort of legal master class—noted Los Angeles…

Continue reading …
Smart Grid by 2030: The Energy and Carbon We Could Save

You’ve probably heard plenty about the nation’s incipient smart grid — that futuristic-sounding thing that would transform our current one-way grid into yes, a smarter, two-way system that would better allow utilities to match supply to demand. Clean tech and energy efficiency advocates have been calling for its implementation for years. But how much energy and carbon emissions could it save? GOOD has a nifty infographic that answers exactly that. Check it out…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

Continue reading …
Dish Network offers $1 billion to buy a bankrupt satellite/antenna company for reasons only it knows

Dish Network has agreed to buy DBSD, a company currently in Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection that’s reportedly working on a system to tie together satellite and ground-based antenna communication for wireless phone and internet service, pending approval by the FCC. Dish pegs the purchase price at approximately $1,000,000,000 (subject to certain adjustments) including the interest on DBSD’s debts. Exactly what its plans for the company are remain a mystery, as The Hollywood Reporter quotes mystified analysts like Craig Moffett suggesting theories including wireless internet service, mobile TV, or an integrated satellite/phone/TV bundle to compete with cable operators. SpaceNews.com has the most extensive breakdown, from Dish’s initial $45 million investment back in 2009, to the recent FCC decision on a similar hybrid service from LightSquared that may have caused DBSD’s spectrum & technology to suddenly become much more valuable. Whatever it is, they considered it worth writing an awful large check for, although we can’t help but wonder if they couldn’t have broken some of that money off to deal with this whole TiVo issue . Continue reading Dish Network offers $1 billion to buy a bankrupt satellite/antenna company for reasons only it knows Dish Network offers $1 billion to buy a bankrupt satellite/antenna company for reasons only it knows originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Feb 2011 19:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Continue reading …
Oops! NPR Mangles Planned Parenthood Sting Story, Is Forced to Correct

The pro-life group Live Action has posted an expose that should be deeply embarrassing to Planned Parenthood. In a visit taped on January 11, an office manager at a Planned Parenthood clinic in Perth Amboy, New Jersey greets a man and woman posing as a pimp and a prostitute by carefully explaining they want “as little information as possible” as they offer their contraceptive and abortion services, even as this pimp described bringing in underage girls as illegal aliens to be his sex workers. At NPR's blog The Two-Way, reporter Eyder Peralta picked this up and promptly mangled the facts. The headline was “Group Behind ACORN Undercover Videos Sets Up Planned Parenthood 'Sting.'” Yes, “sting” may be what you call it when liberal journalists take a hidden camera to expose malfeasance, but if the videographers are pro-life, the word goes into quotes. Peralta began: “The same group that went undercover at ACORN offices back in 2009 is now going after Planned Parenthood.” Wrong. NPR was forced to correct: “An earlier version of this post stated Live Action was associated with James O'Keefe. They are not, and O'Keefe was not a part of this undercover video.” But Live Action is still upset at the new headline: “Conservative Group Sets Up Planned Parenthood 'Sting.'” They claim the label is wrong : This title is still false as we have never identified ourselves as a “conservative” group. We are not conservative or liberal. Just because polls show that more conservatives are pro-life than liberals does not make our pro-life organization conservative. That is illogical. We are simply pro-life. So NPR, please stop arrogantly imposing your labels upon us. Political reporters may find it natural to assign pro-life activists to the right, but not only are there pro-life Democrats and even pro-life socialists — there's the problem that political reporters almost never describe “abortion rights” groups as liberals. In a 1998 study of newspaper labeling, MRC found about pro-lifers were described as “conservative” or some variant of it in 47 percent of stories, while abortion advocates were identified as “liberal” in 2.8 percent of stories.

Continue reading …

In this Washington Post op-ed ridiculously titled ” Egypt protests show George W. Bush was right about freedom in the Arab world ,” Elliot Abrams attempts to show how GWB’s democracy agenda forecast the desire for the Arab peoples of the Middle Eastern nations to be free. He says: The three decades Hosni Mubarak and his cronies have already had in power leave Egypt with no reliable mechanisms for a transition to democratic rule. Egypt will have some of the same problems as Tunisia, where there are no strong democratic parties and where the demands of the people for rapid change may outstrip the new government’s ability to achieve it. This is also certain to be true in Yemen, where a weak central government has spent all its energies and most of its resources simply staying in power. All these developments seem to come as a surprise to the Obama administration, which dismissed Bush’s “freedom agenda” as overly ideological and meant essentially to defend the invasion of Iraq. But as Bush’s support for the Cedar Revolution in Lebanon and for a democratic Palestinian state showed, he was defending self-government, not the use of force. Consider what Bush said in that 2003 speech, which marked the 20th anniversary of the National Endowment for Democracy, an institution established by President Ronald Reagan precisely to support the expansion of freedom. “Sixty years of Western nations excusing and accommodating the lack of freedom in the Middle East did nothing to make us safe – because in the long run, stability cannot be purchased at the expense of liberty,” Bush said. “As long as the Middle East remains a place where freedom does not flourish, it will remain a place of stagnation, resentment and violence ready for export.” Now I’m no foreign policy expert, but I’m thinking that GWB was meaning to use this phrase in the context of his preventive invasion of Iraq, to justify the burning, looted buildings and mass chaos that he left in the wake of that unnecessary violence. As Greg Sargent points out , the sad thing about neocons claiming credit for the unrest in Tunisia and Egypt is how they think that the model for democracy requires using foreign military intervention as a prerequisite. Yes, if only Elliot Abrams had been in charge of developing foreign policy in the Middle East so that democracy and freedom could “reign” across the region. Oh, wait. HE WAS . While neocons want to somehow take credit for understanding the Middle East , the current conflict is more indicative of the failures of US foreign policy than any successful understanding. Considering that Abrams was heavily involved in the Iran-Contra scandal,

Continue reading …