Health secretary sets out ‘national ambition’ to cut the equivalent of 16.9m cheeseburgers from Britons’ daily diet The nation needs to slash five billion calories from its daily diet – the equivalent of 16.9m cheeseburgers – according to the health secretary, Andrew Lansley. Faced with an obesity crisis that a succession of initiatives on exercise have failed to turn around, Lansley and the chief medical officer, Sally Davies, have issued a call to action on diet, urging people to act responsibly and reduce the food and drink they consume. Alcohol, they said, was part of the problem – responsible for 10% of our calorie intake. Lansley framed the new plan not as a strategy but as a “national ambition” in which, he said, the food and drink industry had a major part to play. As part of the responsibility deal with food and beverage companies , Lansley will be asking the industry to reduce the calories in their products. A 3% to 5% reduction in the calorie content in an average shopping basket would cut obesity without the consumer even noticing any change in the food they eat, experts say. “We have already seen how we can move further, faster, through the responsibility deal and I am now challenging business to help us make even greater progress,” said Lansley. “Reducing the number of calories we consume is essential.” Most people in the UK – 60% – are obese or overweight, and so are a third of children. Lansley believes the new “national ambition” – which he compared to Michelle Obama’s campaign in the US – can finally turn the figures around, and reverse the upward trend by 2020. He proposes to invest in the social marketing campaign Change 4 Life, which not long ago was facing cuts , and he will urge local authorities to do more. Obesity Health Health policy Andrew Lansley Public services policy Sarah Boseley guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Dennis Ritchie – Macabre – Vampire of Dusseldorf – Filmed 8/17/2011 HD Sick Drummer Magazine Issue 19 Sample – Fotis Benardo – Septic Flesh Dennis Ritchie – Macabre – The Black Knight – 8/17/2011 HD PhotoDivaLV says: RT @ artistxposure : RIP Dennis Ritchie , another whom without (C and Unix) the “internet” and even OSX wouldn’t exist today. Prayers to friends and family.
Continue reading …America’s armed forces have added some major tech to their arsenal lately, from smartphones for soldiers to giant surveillance blimps . And now, AAI has unveiled a new tool for battlefield commanders in the form of giant touchscreen tablet. Its screen is three feet by two feet and employs surveillance information to give those in charge an overhead view of a war zone that shows the position of both good guys and bad. Icons represent troops, air support, and spy drones, which are then deployed by tapping and dragging them on the touchscreen. Such input doesn’t actually control battlefield assets, but it does send orders to the appropriate personnel so they can be executed, and soldiers confirm receipt of the order via instant message. The company’s still trying to sell the system to the Army, but we’d imagine that such drag and drop warfare will appeal to Uncle Sam. Who knows, perhaps all those hours spent honing your Starcraft skills can soon be put to good use defending the country. Giant tablet lets commanders control war with the swipe of a finger originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 13 Oct 2011 08:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Seal Beach, Ca 10/12/11 9 people shot, Seal Beach, CA Hair Salon Shooting Leaves 6 Dead in Seal Beach, California Americas_Hope says: Re: Suspect who killed 6 in Seal Beach , CA has a Tea Party license plate In California you’re supposed to have licen… http://t.co/IPyxEW1N
Continue reading …The economic crunch is sprouting vacant lots across the nation—and some communities think that’s a good thing. Banks, encouraged by government officials, are changing the US landscape by bulldozing scores of foreclosed homes—at a cost of some $7,500 a pop—and donating them to communities, reports the…
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Erin Burnett, CNN’s new talking head, is incorporating a segment into her new show entitled “Strike Force,” where a bunch of business types with whom Burnett is quite comfortable come on and answer really, really tough questions regarding our bad economy and what they will do about it. 20 CEOs, investors and entrepreneurs that I picked to answer the tough questions about the economy this election season. I’m sure they’ll speak from the heart and get to the root causes of why we’re in this situation and how we can get out of it. Burnett is right that Americans on the left and the right are angry at Washington; but we’re fundamentally different in our view of governance. As for hating the bailout of the banks, liberals are angry for different reasons than conservatives. Many of us believed that there was a big problem in the global financial markets, but as my interview with Naomi Klein revealed , we wanted Obama to come up with his own bailout plan which would include tough measures installed so that Milton Friedman disaster capitalism would not keep hold on our economy. We wanted accountability and hearings to get to the root causes of the crisis, prosecutions when necessary and reform Wall Street regulations so that banks and the financial sector could no longer destroy the world with greed. Once Glass Steagall was destroyed by the Gramm–Leach–Bliley Act , (Wikipedia is being hacked on this issue ) banks were able to start gambling away our money and grow too big to fail. Back in the old days of the movie It’s a Wonderful Life , bankers were portrayed as the enemy of the common man. Scheming executives found loopholes to steal farms and homes away from families. After the Great Depression, regulations placed in by the government caused banks to lose some of their power and they weren’t scorned nearly as often. Burnett proclaims on her show quite loudly that banks are the good guys in all of this because they employ so many people and we need them to create jobs so we should root for them. I guess she forgot all the corruption during the foreclosure frauds banks carried out. Burnett: Well, Wall Street protests are growing. New York, Los Angeles, Seattle, San Francisco, Albuquerque — you’re looking at shots of all of them now. There is something here reminiscent of the early days of the Tea Party, which actually shares some things in common with the Wall Street occupiers. They’re both grassroots organizations, from the ground up. They’re both angry at Washington. And while most participants are sincere, there is hate in both groups. Most important, while they’re on opposite sides of American politics, they agree on something huge. They both hate the bailout of the banks and share animosity to the banks in general, which we think is a sign of a real issue because banks should be great for America, never mind what we do without ATMs and places to store our money. Banks mean jobs. Banks in America–and there are more than 7,000 of them–employ almost 1.8 million Americans, more than America’s largest private employer, Walmart. Banks employ so many people that one bank’s lay-off can skew the jobs report for the entire nation. I’m talking about Bank of America, which laid off 30,000 employees in September, almost a third of the nation’s total planned job cuts for the month, so we should be rooting for the banks. The problem is they make it really hard when they lash out at Washington’s new rules by slapping fees on consumers. And I mean there is a tsunami of fees. Citibank hiking fees today again, set to charge $20 a month for accounts between six and $15,000. Bank of America and Sun Trust, $5 debit card fees, JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo testing $3 debit card fees. Well, I asked Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner about this last night. [Geithner quotes] BURNETT: The banks say Washington reforms have hurt them so much that the fees are the only way to make money. But that is not true. Take Bank of America. They are planning to put a $5 monthly fee on debit cards. And analysts who ran the numbers today for us tell us they will make 13 percent more money on that than they did before the regulations and that’s just debit fees. Bank of America is also launching $9 monthly fees on some checking accounts. Wow. In this particular point she is correct: Fees are ridiculous. Good for her. In response to her, Strike Force guest City National CEO Russell Goldsmith says he won’t raise his bank’s fees like BofA so please, love him . However, he’s very upset at Durbin’s law, which limits the fees consumers pay to banks for nothing at all , which Citi employed as much as Bank of America. Good thing he had plenty of airtime to bitch and moan about it. And what’s his solution to make Americans feel better? BURNETT: And what can the banks do, in general? Because I mean we’re looking at the fees here specifically, which I have a real issue with because they’re saying they just make up what they’re, you know, what they’re losing on the regulation and clearly when you look at the numbers, at least in the case we gave specifically, it doesn’t appear to be the case at all, but on top of that you have just in general it feels like an animosity and a tone-deaf nature especially when you’re looking around the country at people who are frustrated and angry at the banks. What should your industry do right now? Is this a time where you should have all of the big bank CEOs stand up and talk to the protesters or do something to say we’re patriotic and want to bill this country, too? GOLDSMITH: Well, I think you know I’m here talking to you, trying to explain that at City National we’re not doing what some of these big guys are doing. Unfortunately this inappropriate law, this price fixing got passed in the middle of the night. There are no facts and nobody knows what the facts are, and the banks obviously can’t sit down as a group and agree on pricing. Wow, the ego on this guy. When she asked how he could act patriotically, he basically said that “I appeared on your show, Erin. Doesn’t that count?” And he wonders why there’s so much anger directed at these banks and their suits. What a jackass.
Continue reading …Time magazine offered its “Ten Questions” interview to Chicago Mayor (and former Obama chief of staff) Rahm Emanuel, but Time's Belinda Luscombe largely stuck to light, airy questions like when the mayor talked of getting ideas on his swim, she asked, “Are you a Speedo or board-shorts kind of guy?” She also asked if he gets more sleep now, which kid was the favorite in his house growing up, and “Do you miss Oprah?” Somehow, there wasn't space in Time for questions about Obama scandals like Solyndra or Fast and Furious, and when it briefly turned serious about national policy, Time pestered from the left about how Emanuel wasted that economic crisis he talked about: TIME: A new book [assume Ron Suskind] says the Obama Administration has done that thing you said you should never do, which is to let the economic crisis go to waste … EMANUEL: First of all, remember what my quote is: “Never allow a good crisis to go to waste—because it's the opportunity to do the big things you've avoided …” TIME: … like reforming Wall Street? EMANUEL: Now wait a second. Let's go through it. The stress tests forced the banks to finally raise their private capital. That was seizing the moment of that crisis to fix something. Now, there's a lot of warts in it. Turn the page. Look at Europe today. They had a financial problem two years ago. They put it under the rug, and now we are all dealing with that. From there, Luscombe returned to “Do you miss Oprah?” Typically, Time is basically awarding Emanuel a page of the magazine while they organize a joint liberal intellectual venture. Earlier, Time revealed their “Ideas Week” plan while Emanuel sells himself as Chicago's centrist sage: EMANUEL: We've got to put more police on the street, get kids and guns and drugs off the street, so there's a level of public safety. I've got to strengthen not only K through 12 but our community colleges so we have a trained and educated workforce. We're the first school system that has top-to-bottom—from corporate suite down to the classroom—performance pay. Principals now have performance pay. TIME: Law and order, performance pay for teachers—are you sure you're a Democrat? EMANUEL: I'll take any idea—left, center or right—as long as we're moving forward, not sideways or backward. TIME: In fact, one of your initiatives is to start a Chicago Ideas Week (TIME is a co-partner) with Brad Keywell from Groupon. Where do you get your ideas? That led to the swimsuit question.
Continue reading …PCC’s new chairman is Conservative peer, and former MP, with experience in regulatory affairs Lord Hunt of Wirral, who served in government under Margaret Thatcher and John Major, has been named as the next chairman of the Press Complaints Commission (PCC). The 69-year-old Conservative peer and former MP will take over from Baroness Buscombe on 17 October. Hunt is also a lawyer specialising in regulatory affairs, with political links and specialist expertise deemed attractive for the £170,000 a year job. Lord Hunt signalled that his chairmanship would not just amount to business as usual. He said that he hoped to lead “wholesale regeneration and renewal of the system of independent self-regulation of the press”. Critics have argued that the PCC is a better mediator rather than an effective regulator. He added: “There is a real appetite for change, however, and it is my intention to drive forward the creation of a reinvigorated and respected standards body, funded by the industry but operationally independent from both the industry and the state.” Interviews were held by the Press Standards Board of Finance, which is chaired by Lord Black of Brentwood, the former spokesman for Michael Howard when he was leader of the Conservative party – who now works for the publishers of the Daily and Sunday Telegraph. Lord Black said: “David Hunt’s wide-ranging experience in politics, in the law and in regulation and above all his unshakeable commitment to the principles of press freedom and self-regulation make him the ideal person to lead the process of renewal and regeneration which is now essential.” David Hunt was a member of the Thatcher and Major cabinets for five years from 1990, as Welsh secretary, then employment secretary and finally chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster, where he co-ordinated government policy. He stepped down in 1995 and lost his Wirral West seat in 1997. He rejoined the Conservative front bench to shadow Lord Mandelson in the upper house, but did not get a government appointment when the coalition was formed, and returned to legal practice. • To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 3353 2000. If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly “for publication”. • To get the latest media news to your desktop or mobile, follow MediaGuardian on Twitter and Facebook Press Complaints Commission Newspapers & magazines Press freedom National newspapers Newspapers Dan Sabbagh guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …PCC’s new chairman is Conservative peer, and former MP, with experience in regulatory affairs Lord Hunt of Wirral, who served in government under Margaret Thatcher and John Major, has been named as the next chairman of the Press Complaints Commission (PCC). The 69-year-old Conservative peer and former MP will take over from Baroness Buscombe on 17 October. Hunt is also a lawyer specialising in regulatory affairs, with political links and specialist expertise deemed attractive for the £170,000 a year job. Lord Hunt signalled that his chairmanship would not just amount to business as usual. He said that he hoped to lead “wholesale regeneration and renewal of the system of independent self-regulation of the press”. Critics have argued that the PCC is a better mediator rather than an effective regulator. He added: “There is a real appetite for change, however, and it is my intention to drive forward the creation of a reinvigorated and respected standards body, funded by the industry but operationally independent from both the industry and the state.” Interviews were held by the Press Standards Board of Finance, which is chaired by Lord Black of Brentwood, the former spokesman for Michael Howard when he was leader of the Conservative party – who now works for the publishers of the Daily and Sunday Telegraph. Lord Black said: “David Hunt’s wide-ranging experience in politics, in the law and in regulation and above all his unshakeable commitment to the principles of press freedom and self-regulation make him the ideal person to lead the process of renewal and regeneration which is now essential.” David Hunt was a member of the Thatcher and Major cabinets for five years from 1990, as Welsh secretary, then employment secretary and finally chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster, where he co-ordinated government policy. He stepped down in 1995 and lost his Wirral West seat in 1997. He rejoined the Conservative front bench to shadow Lord Mandelson in the upper house, but did not get a government appointment when the coalition was formed, and returned to legal practice. • To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 3353 2000. If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly “for publication”. • To get the latest media news to your desktop or mobile, follow MediaGuardian on Twitter and Facebook Press Complaints Commission Newspapers & magazines Press freedom National newspapers Newspapers Dan Sabbagh guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …PCC’s new chairman is Conservative peer, and former MP, with experience in regulatory affairs Lord Hunt of Wirral, who served in government under Margaret Thatcher and John Major, has been named as the next chairman of the Press Complaints Commission (PCC). The 69-year-old Conservative peer and former MP will take over from Baroness Buscombe on 17 October. Hunt is also a lawyer specialising in regulatory affairs, with political links and specialist expertise deemed attractive for the £170,000 a year job. Lord Hunt signalled that his chairmanship would not just amount to business as usual. He said that he hoped to lead “wholesale regeneration and renewal of the system of independent self-regulation of the press”. Critics have argued that the PCC is a better mediator rather than an effective regulator. He added: “There is a real appetite for change, however, and it is my intention to drive forward the creation of a reinvigorated and respected standards body, funded by the industry but operationally independent from both the industry and the state.” Interviews were held by the Press Standards Board of Finance, which is chaired by Lord Black of Brentwood, the former spokesman for Michael Howard when he was leader of the Conservative party – who now works for the publishers of the Daily and Sunday Telegraph. Lord Black said: “David Hunt’s wide-ranging experience in politics, in the law and in regulation and above all his unshakeable commitment to the principles of press freedom and self-regulation make him the ideal person to lead the process of renewal and regeneration which is now essential.” David Hunt was a member of the Thatcher and Major cabinets for five years from 1990, as Welsh secretary, then employment secretary and finally chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster, where he co-ordinated government policy. He stepped down in 1995 and lost his Wirral West seat in 1997. He rejoined the Conservative front bench to shadow Lord Mandelson in the upper house, but did not get a government appointment when the coalition was formed, and returned to legal practice. • To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 3353 2000. If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly “for publication”. • To get the latest media news to your desktop or mobile, follow MediaGuardian on Twitter and Facebook Press Complaints Commission Newspapers & magazines Press freedom National newspapers Newspapers Dan Sabbagh guardian.co.uk
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