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Buck Execution Halted

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Duane Buck’s life has been spared, for now, without Texas Gov. Rick Perry habing to sit in the hot seat. The Texan had been scheduled to die by lethal injection yesterday, but the US Supreme Court decided to review his appeal, AP reports. Buck shot two people to death in…

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Facebook and Twitter user boom may not mean big profits, says ad boss

Sorrell warns of dangers of ‘over-monetising’ social networks Sir Martin Sorrell has cast doubt on the ability of social networks such as Facebook and Twitter to turn their huge user numbers into big profits. The chief executive of marketing services giant WPP was speaking after reports this week that Facebook has delayed its flotation until the end of next year , and an analyst’s claim that Mark Zuckerberg’s company had missed its revenue targets. “I have some fundamental doubts about the ability to monetise social platforms,” Sorrell told the Royal Television Society Cambridge Convention on Friday. “If you attempt to monetise it, it’s risky, there are question marks,” he said. “Facebook, Google+, Twitter … is a social interaction. We used to write letters to each other and now we correspond through Facebook and Twitter and other forms of communication. If you interrupt that with a message you may run into trouble. “Mark Zuckerberg tried two failed experiments – Beacon and one other – which were withdrawn in 24 hours after a revolution on Facebook.” Sorrell said influencing social networks was an “extremely powerful way of building brands, building trust and building reputation”, such as by users recommending products to each other. “But it is a dangerous territory if you try to over-monetise it,” he added. “I’m not sceptical about social media, I’m concerned about when you monetise it because by it’s nature it’s me talking to you electronically, digitally. If I’m talking to you and I send you a commercial message how do you feel about that? If i say ‘buy this’ or ‘do that’, it’s not the right context.” Sorrell said: “Somebody asked me whether I thought Facebook was worth $15bn and I said no. It just shows how stupid I am because it’s now being talked about at $100bn so what do I know?” The WPP chief executive also repeated his belief, first expressed in an interview last year, that governments may have to subsidise newspapers if they are to survive. “We have to try and think about how we preserve journalism other than people like [New York Times investor] Carlos Slim, like the Barclays, like Warren Buffett … subsidising it by buying them as trophy properties,” said Sorrell. “You have to find some way of ensuring that professional journalism particularly in newspapers is preserved,” he added. “There has to be some form of subsidy. You can’t rely on Warren Buffet or the Barclay brothers or the Scott Trust [the sole shareholder in Guardian parent company, Guardian Media Group] to preserve these institutions.” •

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Fox’s Megyn Kelly: Disapprove of Chaz Bono? You’re Pushing for Violence

Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly is going to earn an award from LGBT activists for getting vein-popping angry on The O’Reilly Factor Thursday that psychiatrist Dr. Keith Ablow would dare to suggest parents may want to flip the remote away from “transgender” activist Chaz Bono on ABC’s Dancing With the Stars on Monday. Who said Fox News was the right-wing channel? There was Kelly, insisting to O’Reilly that Dr. Ablow’s warning on Foxnews.com against Bono's show was going to lead to violence from American wackos at the McDonald’s.

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Ian Tomlinson death: trial date set for police officer

PC Simon Harwood’s manslaughter trial set for next October, three and a half years after newspaper vendor’s death The trial of the police officer accused over the death of Ian Tomlinson at the G20 protests in April 2009, has been set for October 2012. The date was set on Friday morning at Southwark crown court and means the trial will not take place until three-and-a-half years after Tomlinson died. PC Simon Harwood is charged with manslaughter over the death and was caught on video striking Tomlinson with his baton.Tomlinson, a 47-year-old newspaper seller, collapsed and died at the demonstration over the G20 summit, near the Bank of England on 1 April 2009, moments after being struck with a baton and pushed to the ground. Harwood was on duty as clashes broke out between demonstrators and police. He is currently suspended from duty. Tomlinson collapsed and later died. The criminal trial next year is scheduled to take place at the Old Bailey in central London. Crime Vikram Dodd guardian.co.uk

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Do we even need jobs?

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Everyone’s focused on jobs right now. But is the whole idea of a job passé? Not to most people — especially those who don’t have one. But “media theorist” Douglas Rushkoff thinks so. In this interview with the Wall Street Journal, he sets out his vision of what sounds like an economy based on subsistence

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Colorado Farm Says Listeria Found in Cantaloupe

A melon farm in Colorado has issued a recall of cantaloupe following a Listeria outbreak that has killed at least two people, sickened 22 and spread to several states. (Sept. 16)

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An Undercurrent of Extremism Runs Through the NRA’s Board of Directors

Click here to view this media [Note: This is the first in a series of posts I'll be doing this fall in conjunction with the fine folks at Media Matters -- where this will be cross-posted -- exploring issues related to right-wing extremism and gun-rights advocacy. See the note at the end. -- DN] Those of us who grew up around the NRA are all too familiar with one of the more striking facets of the organization’s relentless fearmongering, its paranoid style: namely, it not only traffics in wild and groundless conspiracy theories about “gun grabbers” and Bircherite “New World Order” takeover schemes, but it forms deep associations with the very extremists whose far-right worldview fosters such paranoia. The most recent example of this has been the way the NRA’s fearmongering about President Obama has fostered real violence from right-wing extremists. The reason for this kind of extremism is in fact a top-down phenomenon: increasingly, the people running the NRA are themselves deeply extremist. The folks at the Educational Fund to Stop Gun Violence have put together a directory of the NRA’s board titled Meet the NRA Directors . It’s a fascinating site, one that well rewards scrolling through and reading. In addition to what you’d expect — a lot of ties to the arms manufacturers who funnel much of the money that is the NRA’s lifeblood — there is also, predictably, a deep undercurrent of right-wing extremism. The most striking example of this is Robert K. Brown, the longtime publisher of Soldier of Fortune magazine. As David Holthouse has explored in some detail already, Brown’s magazine was for years the monthly Bible of the “militia” movement in the 1990s, one of the movement’s more prominent promoters. The magazine not only promoted the concept of militias but offered advice on how to form them and urged participants to prepare for persecution from the New World Order. The ties to violent extremists run deeper, in fact: Soldier of Fortune distributed copies of a newsletter called The Resister during the 1990s. The Resister was published by Steven Barry, then a member of the Army’s Special Forces and leader of the unsanctioned Special Forces Underground organization. The newsletter initially drew inspiration from the controversial siege at Ruby Ridge. The content of the newsletter evidenced a “white Christian militia mentality,” according to Michael Reynolds from the Southern Poverty Law Center, containing racist and anti-Semitic content while also exploring “New World Order” conspiracy theories. When Timothy McVeigh was arrested for the Oklahoma City Bombing, in his possession was a Soldier of Fortune -distributed copy of The Resister . Also on Brown’s record: an array of crimes (largely would-be contract killers) associated with the magazine, as well Brown’s associations with right-wing death squads operating in Central America in the 1980s. As it happens, one of the writers for Brown’s magazine — indeed, he penned one of the first Soldier of Fortune pieces promoting militias in 1994, titled “Join A Militia — Break The Law?”

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Brazil: Nearly 43,000 Kids Under 14 Married According To Census

RIO DE JANEIRO — Census figures from 2010 show that nearly 43,000 children under 14 years of age are living with a partner in Brazil in defiance of laws forbidding these unions. Brazil’s penal code prohibits marriage with children under 14 and defines sex with them as statutory rape. Helen Sanches is president of the Brazilian Association of Judges, Prosecutors and Public Defenders in Juvenile Court. She was quoted by the Estado de Sao Paulo newspaper Tuesday as saying that it’s not uncommon for families to ask the court for permission to marry off a daughter younger than 14. She says many are unaware that it is against the law. The states in which these unions are most common have the country’s lowest per-capita income.

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On Thursday's Daily Show on Comedy Central, Kristen Schaal played the part of “senior women's issues correspondent” to inject humor into the clash between Republican presidential candidates Michele Bachmann and Rick Perry over the Texas governor's support for mandating HPV vaccinations to prevent girls from contracting cervical cancer later in life. As she weighed which candidate would be best for women, citing Bachmann's opposition to forcing girls to get the vaccine, Schaal cracked that Bachmann only supports a “woman's right to choose” if the choice is to get cancer. Below is a transcript of the relevant portion of the Thursday, September 15, Daily Show with Jon Stewart: KRISTEN SCHAAL, SENIOR WOMEN'S ISSUES CORRESPONDENT: Well, Jon, now I'm torn. On one hand, Governor Perry is taking care of Texas vaginas, but he did it with a government mandate to force it on young girls. It's like he's trying to turn Texas into some kind of poo nanny state. Michele Bachmann, on the other hand, is arguing for a woman's right to choose, but only if that chioce is getting cancer. The truth is, neither is the strong pro-”vag” candidate women are looking for. But you know who I feel the worst for? The children. JON STEWART: Because they'll be more likely to get cervical cancer? SCHAAL: Well, that, but also because they'll never get to play with my Michele Bachmann Big Mouth Billie Vagina. CLIP OF VAGINA SINGING: Take me to the clinic, take me to the clinic!

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Chuck Testa

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Chuck Testa

Testa’s Tuesday Tip – Measuring a Bear Skull Testa’s Tuesday Tip – Skull Capping Testa’s Tuesday Tip – Skinning out a Bear Head codinghorror says: Note: Chuck Testa does not taxidermize pets. http://t.co/2Cv6aCwG

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