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Dark Energy

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Dark Energy

Nobel Winner Perlmutter on value of UC Berkeley Half-Life 2 Chapter #13 1/1 Berkeley Prof. Saul Perlmutter’s Nobel Morning anilgs says: Physics Nobel Explainer: Why Is Expanding Universe Accelerating?: http://t.co/Tg16pGFN via @ AddThis

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Cole Hamels

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Cole Hamels

Philadelphia Phillies vs St. Louis Cardinals – Free MLB Pick of the Day 1 TEST : Cole Hamels VS Chipper Jones & Albert Pujols Tuesday MLB: National League Division Series Lexieydctj says: cole hamels ! The Journal Gazette, 600 W. Main St., Fort Wayne IN http://t.co/3rRPOQT7

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Afghanistan and Iraq wars not worth fighting, say a third of US veterans

Poll results pose dilemma for Obama administration as it tries to bolster support for continued presence in Iraq and Afghanistan One in three US veterans of the post-9/11 military believes the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan were not worth fighting, and a majority think that, after 10 years of combat, America should be focusing less on foreign affairs and more on domestic problems, according to an opinion poll. The findings pose a dilemma for the Obama administration and Congress as they struggle to reduce the huge budget deficit and reconsider defence priorities while trying to bolster public support for the continued presence in Iraq and Afghanistan. Nearly 4,500 US troops have been killed in Iraq and some 1,700 in Afghanistan. Combined war costs since the September 11 terrorist attacks have exceeded $1 trillion. The results of the survey, presented by the Washington-based Pew research centre on Wednesday, portray the war veterans as proud of their work, scarred by warfare and convinced that the American public has little understanding of the problems that wartime service has created for military members and their families. They were more likely than other Americans to call themselves Republicans, and to disapprove of Barack Obama’s performance as commander in chief. They also were more likely than previous generations of veterans to have no religious affiliation. Pew, a nonpartisan organisation that studies attitudes and trends, called the study the first of its kind. The results were based on two surveys conducted between late July and mid-September. One polled 1,853 veterans, including 712 who had served in the military after 9/11 but were no longer on active duty. Of the 712, 336 had served in Iraq or Afghanistan. The other survey questioned 2,003 adults who had not served in the military. Nearly half of post 9/11 veterans said deployments had strained their relationship with their spouses and a similar number reported problems with their children. However, some 60% said they and their families benefited financially from having served in a combat zone. Asked for a single word to describe their experiences, the veterans suggested: “rewarding”, “nightmare”, “eye opening” and “lousy”. There are about 98,000 US troops in Afghanistan, where the conflict began with a US-led invasion on 7 October 2001. Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign centred on a pledge to withdraw from Iraq and strengthen the military campaign in Afghanistan. He is on track to have US troops out of Iraq by the end of this year, and in July he announced that he would pull 10,000 troops out of Afghanistan this year and 23,000 more by next September. The Pew survey found that veterans were ambivalent about the net value of the wars, although they were generally positive about Afghanistan, which has been a more protracted but less deadly conflict for US forces. One in three veterans said neither war was worth the sacrifice; a view shared by 45% of the public polled. Some 50% of veterans said the campaign in Afghanistan had been worthwhile; 41% of civilians agreed. Among veterans, 44% said the war in Iraq was necessary; 36% of civilians shared that view. Of the former service members who were seriously wounded or knew someone who was killed or seriously wounded, 48% said the war in Iraq was worth fighting, compared with 36% of those with no personal exposure to casualties. Exposure to casualties had an even larger impact on attitudes toward the war in Afghanistan. Some 55% of those exposed to casualties said the military campaign in Afghanistan had been worth the cost to the US, whereas 40% of those who were not exposed to casualties held that view. Pew said its survey results found “isolationist inclinations” among the war veterans. About six in 10 said the US should pay less attention to problems overseas and instead concentrate on issues at home. In a survey it conducted earlier this year, a similar share of the public agreed. The results also reflected what many view as a troublesome cultural gap between the military and the public. Although numerous polls have shown that Americans hold troops in high regard, the respondents in the Pew research admitted to a lack of understanding of what military life entails. Only 27% of adult civilians said the public understood the problems facing those in uniform, while the proportion of veterans who said so was even lower at 21%. United States US military Obama administration US politics Iraq Afghanistan Middle East guardian.co.uk

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UK economic growth cut to 0.1% for April to June

• ONS halves its GDP estimate for Q2 • 2008-9 recession deeper than thought • Business groups lobbying for more QE • But services sector bounced in September • Economics blog: fresh UK double-dip fears The UK economy barely grew in the second quarter as consumers cut spending, compounding more downbeat news from the eurozone and fuelling fears that Britain could soon slip back into recession . Official data also showed the 2008-2009 recession was deeper than orginally thought. Revising previous numbers, the Office for National Statistics halved its GDP estimate for April to June this year to just 0.1%, suggesting the economy had already ground to a halt before the European debt crisis escalated in the summer. Household spending dropped 0.8%, its sharpest decline since the depths of the recession at the start of 2009. With a bleak European outlook the Bank of England is expected to step in soon with another £50bn in electronic money to shore up the economy. But after separate news this morning that Britain’s dominant services sector defied market expectations and enjoyed a mild pick-up last month, the decision over whether to extend quantitative easing (QE) right away is likely to be finely balanced. Growth across the UK services sector – which accounts for more than 70% of the UK economy – quickened in September recovering from a sharp slowdown in August, according to a monthly survey of purchasing managers conducted by Markit and the Chartered Institute of Purchasing & Supply. The seasonally adjusted index, which measures activity across the sector, rose to 52.9 in September from 51.1 in August. Economists had been predicting a reading of 50.5, barely clear of the 50-point mark that separates expansion from contraction. But companies remain deeply worried about spending cuts and the general economic outlook with business confidence at it lowest since early 2009 when Britain was mired in recession. Meanwhile, similar surveys in the eurozone this morning showed deeper woes. Italy’s services sector shrunk at its sharpest pace for more than two years in September while Germany’s service industries have slipped into contraction territory for the first time since July 2009. The BoE’s monetary policy committee meets Wednesday and Thursday but analysts say it may wait until next month when it has its latest economics forecasts to hand to launch more QE. “We believe it is only a matter of time before we see more QE,” said James Knightley at ING Financial Markets. “We favour November as the announcement point … given close proximity to the Fed and ECB policy meetings and the Cannes G20 summit. Being seen to act in some kind of coordinated fashion may also give the stimulus “more bang for its buck” rather than going it alone currently in what are very volatile markets and a mixed environment for data.” The services survey is closely watched given the services sector dominates the UK economy, with businesses ranging from hairdressers to insurers. Commenting on the details of the PMI survey, Chris Williamson, chief economist at Markit said the headline reading “masks the fact that all is not well in the UK services economy.” “Growth of new business will need to pick up in the coming months to prevent a downturn in both business activity and employment in the final quarter of 2011. Companies are already reluctant to take on extra staff, with employment more or less stagnating in September, as worries about the economic outlook at home and abroad intensified.” With the threat of a double-dip recession worrying their members, some of Britain’s biggest business lobby groups have urged the MPC to step in with more QE, which involves the bank buying government bonds from banks to boost their finances and improve lending rates. Policymakers with have to weigh growth concerns against persistently high inflation, but several members of the committee have indictaed in recent speeches that more QE will come soon. Economic growth (GDP) Economics Services sector Recession Quantitative easing Bank of England European debt crisis Katie Allen guardian.co.uk

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Poll: 1 in 3 Vets Say Afghan, Iraq Wars Mistakes

A new poll shows one in three US veterans of the post-Sept. 11 military believes the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan were not worth fighting, and a majority think that after 10 years of combat America should be focusing more on its own problems. (Oct. 5)

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First Person: Utoya Survivor Recalls Massacre

Adrian Pracon, 21, a survivor of the July massacre on Utoya Island by self-confessed mass killer Anders Behring Breivik, remembers the shooting rampage. Pracon had laid still pretending to be dead after he was shot in the shoulder. (Oct. 5)

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GOP Candidates to Boycott Univision Following Claim It Tried to ‘Extort’ Marco Rubio

Five Republican presidential candidates are boycotting a proposed debate sponsored by Univision for allegedly trying to “extort” Florida GOP senator Marco Rubio into doing an interview with the Spanish-language network. Michele Bachmann, Herman Cain, Jon Huntsman,

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Arduino-powered lighting system infuses your LED with some Ambilight-like pizazz (video)

Why spend your hard-earned money on one of Philips’ Ambilight displays when you can just make your own, using some Arduino-based wizardry and a little bit of elbow grease? Fortunately, Minty Boost creator ladyada is here to help. All you’ll need is a strand of digital RGB LED pixels, a five-volt DC power supply (along with a female power adapter), any USB-equipped Arduino micro-controller and, of course, the appropriate Processing programming environment. You can find the full how-to at the source link below, but the results are pretty impressive — a capture-based sketch system that’s compatible with just about any media player. See it for yourself in the video after the break. [Thanks, Phil] Continue reading Arduino-powered lighting system infuses your LED with some Ambilight-like pizazz (video) Arduino-powered lighting system infuses your LED with some Ambilight-like pizazz (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 05 Oct 2011 06:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Adrian Beltre

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Adrian Beltre

Rangers are heading to the ALCS for the second year in a row!!! Texas Rangers @ Tampa Bay Rays Game 4 Adrian Beltre Homerun 2nd Inning MLB Camera Man Fail tmo2188 says: @ 1053RAGE @ gavindawson @ armenontheair Adrian beltre = baseball boner # rangers #playoffs

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Iraq denies immunity for remaining US troops

Nouri al-Maliki, the Iraqi prime minister, has

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