Good As You points us to more bigotry at yesterday’s anti-gay marriage rally on the steps of the Iowa capitol building. Subscribe to Joe.My.God. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Joe. My. God. Discovery Date : 16/03/2011 13:30 Number of articles : 5
Continue reading …Good As You points us to more bigotry at yesterday’s anti-gay marriage rally on the steps of the Iowa capitol building. Subscribe to Joe.My.God. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Joe. My. God. Discovery Date : 16/03/2011 13:30 Number of articles : 5
Continue reading …England 243 all out; West Indies 225 all out England win by 18 runs England are still alive in the World Cup, after a flurry of late wickets rescued victory from the jaws of defeat against West Indies at the MA Chindambaram Stadium in Chennai. Graeme Swann took two wickets in his final over and Suliemen Benn was then run out to decide the Group B match. Swann took three wickets in the innings and another spinner, James Tredwell, took four. England are not definitely through to the quarter-finals, but to deny them Bangladesh must beat South Africa and West Indies must take at least a point against India this weekend. Ramnaresh Sarwan and Andre Russell had seemed to be guiding West Indies home, with a seventh-wicket partnership of 72. Russell survived a contentious decision when he was caught by Jonathan Trott on the boundary, only for the England fielder to be adjudged, by the third umpire, to have brushed the boundary marker as he fell backwards. The batsman was thus awarded a six instead. Russell was eventually lbw to Tredwell for 49 and Benn then survived a close lbw call, on review, again off the bowling of Tredwell. Sarwan was the next man out, off the first ball of Swann’s final over, caught at short leg by Ian Bell. Kemar Roach joined Benn at the crease with 21 needed for victory off 41 balls – he was dismissed on his second delivery, caught by Chris Tremlett at mid-off. The leg-spinner Devandra Bishoo was last man in for West Indies, on his international debut. After Andrew Strauss won the toss and chose to bat, the captain and Trott got off to a flying start. But the scoring rate stagnated as wickets began to fall and it fell to a man playing his first World Cup match, Luke Wright, to salvage a competitive total in an innings that did not feature a half-century or a 50 stand. Bishoo and Russell shared seven wickets and Roach bowled economically. England appeared assured of a big total after they had raced to 94 for two from 15 overs. But they lost momentum and then wickets – four men falling for 30 runs at one stage. No fours came between the 21st and 35th overs, with the pace off the ball, and Bishoo took three for 34 by using the conditions well. Russell dismissed both openers, an unsuspecting Matt Prior bowled through the gate on the back foot and Strauss mis-pulling the medium-pacer to go to a very good running catch by Chris Gayle. Trott announced himself with six fours from his first nine balls and a total in excess of 250 was on. But Trott then went tamely, three runs short of a half-century, when he chipped a Bishoo leg-break straight to Gayle at mid-wicket. Bell played himself in, only to be done for pace by the first ball of Roach’s second spell. Then Eoin Morgan’s renowned innovation backfired with an unorthodox deflection into the wicketkeeper’s gloves off Bishoo. Ravi Bopara was the third batsman to be bowled by pace and a suspicion of low bounce but Wright batted with skill and sense. His seventh-wicket partner, Tredwell, went in a run-out mix-up and Wright eventually holed out on the slog-sweep in Bishoo’s final over. England knew they would need to get Gayle early. He was gone by the end of the seventh over, but the West Indies captain still did significant damage. Gayle smashed 18 in four blows from one Tremlett over, only to be trapped lbw pushing forward to Tredwell, giving the off-spinner his first one-day international wicket. Tredwell had a second when Prior got the bails off to stump Devon Smith down the leg-side. Darren Bravo was well caught at slip by Strauss to give Tredwell his third wicket. Bopara dismissed Darren Sammy and Devon Thomas and Swann trapped Kieron Pollard lbw. Cricket World Cup 2011 England cricket team West Indies Cricket Team Cricket guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …England 243 all out; West Indies 225 all out England win by 18 runs England are still alive in the World Cup, after a flurry of late wickets rescued victory from the jaws of defeat against West Indies at the MA Chindambaram Stadium in Chennai. Graeme Swann took two wickets in his final over and Suliemen Benn was then run out to decide the Group B match. Swann took three wickets in the innings and another spinner, James Tredwell, took four. England are not definitely through to the quarter-finals, but to deny them Bangladesh must beat South Africa and West Indies must take at least a point against India this weekend. Ramnaresh Sarwan and Andre Russell had seemed to be guiding West Indies home, with a seventh-wicket partnership of 72. Russell survived a contentious decision when he was caught by Jonathan Trott on the boundary, only for the England fielder to be adjudged, by the third umpire, to have brushed the boundary marker as he fell backwards. The batsman was thus awarded a six instead. Russell was eventually lbw to Tredwell for 49 and Benn then survived a close lbw call, on review, again off the bowling of Tredwell. Sarwan was the next man out, off the first ball of Swann’s final over, caught at short leg by Ian Bell. Kemar Roach joined Benn at the crease with 21 needed for victory off 41 balls – he was dismissed on his second delivery, caught by Chris Tremlett at mid-off. The leg-spinner Devandra Bishoo was last man in for West Indies, on his international debut. After Andrew Strauss won the toss and chose to bat, the captain and Trott got off to a flying start. But the scoring rate stagnated as wickets began to fall and it fell to a man playing his first World Cup match, Luke Wright, to salvage a competitive total in an innings that did not feature a half-century or a 50 stand. Bishoo and Russell shared seven wickets and Roach bowled economically. England appeared assured of a big total after they had raced to 94 for two from 15 overs. But they lost momentum and then wickets – four men falling for 30 runs at one stage. No fours came between the 21st and 35th overs, with the pace off the ball, and Bishoo took three for 34 by using the conditions well. Russell dismissed both openers, an unsuspecting Matt Prior bowled through the gate on the back foot and Strauss mis-pulling the medium-pacer to go to a very good running catch by Chris Gayle. Trott announced himself with six fours from his first nine balls and a total in excess of 250 was on. But Trott then went tamely, three runs short of a half-century, when he chipped a Bishoo leg-break straight to Gayle at mid-wicket. Bell played himself in, only to be done for pace by the first ball of Roach’s second spell. Then Eoin Morgan’s renowned innovation backfired with an unorthodox deflection into the wicketkeeper’s gloves off Bishoo. Ravi Bopara was the third batsman to be bowled by pace and a suspicion of low bounce but Wright batted with skill and sense. His seventh-wicket partner, Tredwell, went in a run-out mix-up and Wright eventually holed out on the slog-sweep in Bishoo’s final over. England knew they would need to get Gayle early. He was gone by the end of the seventh over, but the West Indies captain still did significant damage. Gayle smashed 18 in four blows from one Tremlett over, only to be trapped lbw pushing forward to Tredwell, giving the off-spinner his first one-day international wicket. Tredwell had a second when Prior got the bails off to stump Devon Smith down the leg-side. Darren Bravo was well caught at slip by Strauss to give Tredwell his third wicket. Bopara dismissed Darren Sammy and Devon Thomas and Swann trapped Kieron Pollard lbw. Cricket World Cup 2011 England cricket team West Indies Cricket Team Cricket guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Six were arrested in Harare and accused of plotting against their country by watching Egypt and Tunisia uprising videos Six Zimbabweans accused of treason for watching videos of the uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia have been granted bail after a judge said he had seen “no iota” of evidence against them. The six were arrested in Harare on 19 February with 40 other activists, students and trade unionists who were later freed due to the weak case against them. They were all attending a discussion led by the former opposition lawmaker Munyaradzi Gwisai about the north African revolutions and what they might mean for Zimbabwe. Prosecutors claimed that the group was plotting to overthrow Robert Mugabe. But on Wednesday high court judge Samuel Kudya described the evidence against the six, including Gwisai, as unsubstantiated. “I see no iota of evidence that any Zimbabwean ever contemplated any Tunisian or Egyptian revolution,” he said. The six were granted bail of Z$2,000 after Kudya rejected the prosecution’s argument that they would abscond. But he ordered the accused to report to the police three times a week. No trial date has been set. At an earlier court ruling, the accused had complained of being beaten by the police with sticks and iron bars. Defence lawyers argued that their clients were merely debating African politics and democracy at the time of the arrest. The tumult in the Arab states of north Africa has shown little sign of spreading south of the Sahara, though it has clearly put some of the continent’s longest-serving leaders on edge. In Cameroon, where Paul Biya has been president for 28 years, the government banned a Twitter text messaging service last week. During the Ugandan elections last month, which saw Yoweri Museveni extended his 25-year presidency, authorities ordered mobile phone companies to block messages referring to the Egyptian or Tunisian uprisings. In the case of Mugabe, 87, who has ruled Zimbabwe for 31 years – longer than the deposed leaders in Egypt or Tunisia – the heavier-handed response was little surprise. Over the past decade he has used the police to violently suppress any opposition. A brutal campaign of torture and intimidation by the security forces helped him cling on to power in 2008 after he lost the first round of the presidential election. His challenger, Morgan Tsvangirai, reluctantly agreed to enter a power-sharing government in order to help end a socio-economic crisis. But the coalition remains fragile, with Mugabe appearing determined to force Tsvangirai’s MDC party into quitting, which would force early elections. Last week police arrested energy minister Elton Mangoma, a co-founder of the MDC, for alleged corruption. Mangoma was freed on bail on Tuesday, with the judge saying there was no evidence he had personally gained from a deal to import petrol from South Africa. Zimbabwe Robert Mugabe Protest Tunisia Egypt Middle East Xan Rice guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Six were arrested in Harare and accused of plotting against their country by watching Egypt and Tunisia uprising videos Six Zimbabweans accused of treason for watching videos of the uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia have been granted bail after a judge said he had seen “no iota” of evidence against them. The six were arrested in Harare on 19 February with 40 other activists, students and trade unionists who were later freed due to the weak case against them. They were all attending a discussion led by the former opposition lawmaker Munyaradzi Gwisai about the north African revolutions and what they might mean for Zimbabwe. Prosecutors claimed that the group was plotting to overthrow Robert Mugabe. But on Wednesday high court judge Samuel Kudya described the evidence against the six, including Gwisai, as unsubstantiated. “I see no iota of evidence that any Zimbabwean ever contemplated any Tunisian or Egyptian revolution,” he said. The six were granted bail of Z$2,000 after Kudya rejected the prosecution’s argument that they would abscond. But he ordered the accused to report to the police three times a week. No trial date has been set. At an earlier court ruling, the accused had complained of being beaten by the police with sticks and iron bars. Defence lawyers argued that their clients were merely debating African politics and democracy at the time of the arrest. The tumult in the Arab states of north Africa has shown little sign of spreading south of the Sahara, though it has clearly put some of the continent’s longest-serving leaders on edge. In Cameroon, where Paul Biya has been president for 28 years, the government banned a Twitter text messaging service last week. During the Ugandan elections last month, which saw Yoweri Museveni extended his 25-year presidency, authorities ordered mobile phone companies to block messages referring to the Egyptian or Tunisian uprisings. In the case of Mugabe, 87, who has ruled Zimbabwe for 31 years – longer than the deposed leaders in Egypt or Tunisia – the heavier-handed response was little surprise. Over the past decade he has used the police to violently suppress any opposition. A brutal campaign of torture and intimidation by the security forces helped him cling on to power in 2008 after he lost the first round of the presidential election. His challenger, Morgan Tsvangirai, reluctantly agreed to enter a power-sharing government in order to help end a socio-economic crisis. But the coalition remains fragile, with Mugabe appearing determined to force Tsvangirai’s MDC party into quitting, which would force early elections. Last week police arrested energy minister Elton Mangoma, a co-founder of the MDC, for alleged corruption. Mangoma was freed on bail on Tuesday, with the judge saying there was no evidence he had personally gained from a deal to import petrol from South Africa. Zimbabwe Robert Mugabe Protest Tunisia Egypt Middle East Xan Rice guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Been wondering when BMW’s all-electric i3 city car would turn up on video ever since its bigger, sportier counterpart did its thing last week ? Well, here’s your answer. The folks from GMotors recently managed to catch the pint-sized car doing a bit of drifting at the same cold weather test location in Sweden that the i8 was spotted at, and it certainly looks like the 150 horsepower vehicle could be a fun little car to drive. Unfortunately, it doesn’t look like you’ll be able to take one for a spin yourself anytime soon, as it’s not expected to go on sale until 2013 (at a cost of around $40,000). Head on past the break for the video. Continue reading BMW’s all-electric i3 city car gets captured on video BMW’s all-electric i3 city car gets captured on video originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 Mar 2011 11:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …What do St. Patrick’s Day and government spending have in common? Well, until we had anything to say about it, not much. As our friend Seamus eagerly displays, years of overspending have left us drunk with debt. And just as drinking more is the last thing you should do when you’re inebriated, spending more is Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Big Government Discovery Date : 17/03/2011 14:49 Number of articles : 4
Continue reading …It’s a good thing that the Natalie Portman/Ashton Kutcher take on emotionally-uncomplicated sex, No Strings Attached, came out in January, because it wouldn’t have stood a chance next to the Mila Kunis/Justin Timberlake competitor Friends with Benefits. Maybe it’s the fact that it has the more blunt, self-assured title. The … More » Post from: Crushable New ‘Friends with Benefits’ Trailer Continues… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Crushable Discovery Date : 16/03/2011 22:25 Number of articles : 5
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