Older adults whose eating patterns center around high-fat dairy foods or sweets and desserts have a 40% higher 10-year death rate than those who mainly eat healthy foods.
Continue reading …Let’s be real: it should come as little surprise that Sammy — a company with multiple Android phones on Verizon already — would be joining LG , Motorola , and HTC in prepping a new model for its LTE network . Sure enough, Gizmodo has scored an alleged shot of said phone, showing Froyo (Android 2.2.1, to be specific) along with a front-facing camera and a model number of SCH-i520; it’s said to feature TouchWiz (as most non- Nexus S Android phones from Samsung tend to do) and, fortunately, lacks the Bing integration that Verizon’s been pushing on its low- and midrange smartphones lately. Given the company’s iffy track record on getting Froyo deployed in a timely manner to the Galaxy S line , we’re not sure how we’d feel about buying a new Froyo model when Gingerbread’s now available — especially with all these other LTE models that Verizon’s going to have on top — but options are good, we suppose. Samsung LTE phone with front-facing camera headed to Verizon? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 22 Dec 2010 17:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …The Washington Post’s Dana Priest has another phone book’s worth of terrifying revelations about our national security/police/prison state. One that really chills given the FBI’s track record is the “vast repository” the Bureau is building that “stores the profiles of tens of thousands of Americans and legal residents who are not accused of any crime. What they have done is appear to be acting suspiciously to a town sheriff, a traffic cop or even a neighbor.” The Washington Post: At the same time that the FBI is expanding its West Virginia database, it is building a vast repository controlled by people who work in a top-secret vault on the fourth floor of the J. Edgar Hoover FBI Building in Washington. This one stores the profiles of tens of thousands of Americans and legal residents who are not accused of any crime. What they have done is appear to be acting suspiciously to a town sheriff, a traffic cop or even a neighbor. If the new Nationwide Suspicious Activity Reporting Initiative, or SAR, works as intended, the Guardian database may someday hold files forwarded by all police departments across the country in America’s continuing search for terrorists within its borders. The effectiveness of this database depends, in fact, on collecting the identities of people who are not known criminals or terrorists – and on being able to quickly compile in-depth profiles of them. Read more Related Entries December 22, 2010 CIA Launches W.T.F. December 21, 2010 Foreign Policy Review Suggests a Losing Effort
Continue reading …A construction worker who was on probation for felony drunken driving when he ran a red light and killed Angels rookie pitcher Nick Adenhart and two others was sentenced Wednesday to 51 years to life in prison. (Dec. 22)
Continue reading …We’re not quite sure what’s prompted all the hilarious names today, but the CIA has now formed a new group with an acronym of the likes we haven’t seen since the days of Nixon’s CREEP (or the Committee to Reelect the President). The WikiLeaks Task Force — yeah, WTF — has been charged with assessing the impact of the leaked cables on the agency’s foreign relationships and operations, and it seems that the acronym has unsurprisingly already become the normal parlance at HQ. No word if the CIA is planning on holding a WTF BBQ to mark the occasion. CIA’s WTF to investigate impact of WikiLeaks originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 22 Dec 2010 17:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Zoe Dunning, a retired US Navy commander who continued to serve after declaring she was gay, describes standing next to President Obama as he signed the repeal of the military’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy Wednesday. (Dec. 22).
Continue reading …Click here to view this media At least one Fox News host is willing to hold Republicans accountable for blocking a bill that would provide health benefits to 9/11 first responders. Fox News’ Shepard Smith called out Republicans by name Monday, placing individual responsibility for their successful filibuster of the bill and refusals to come on his show to talk about it. While Smith noted that they blocked the bill “in lockstep.” “We called a lot of Republicans today, who are in office at the moment,” he said. “These are the one who told us no: Sens. Alexander, Barrasso, Cornyn, Crapo, DeMint, Grassley, Kyl, McConnell, Sessions, Baucus, Gregg, and Inhofe.” In addition, Sens. Bunning, Coburn, Ensign, Graham, Hatch, and McCain failed to respond to his request at all. “I’m not really surprised, but what is your take? Why does no one want to talk about this?” Smith asked former Republican Gov. of New York George Pataki. “I can’t tell you why they didn’t come on and talk about it but I do believe that it’s important that the Senate act and I hope they act before they break,” Pataki said. House Resolution 847, the James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act of 2010, would provide $7 billion in benefits to workers that responded to the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. Many of those workers are now experiencing health problems such as cancer, heart disease and respiratory disease. For his part, Smith seems to be the exception at Fox News, where only one other personality has gotten angry about the 9/11 first responders bill — but he neglected to mention that Republicans were the reason for its failure. “Shame, embarrassment, outrage, anger, all are proper reactions to the conduct of our Senators, who will now find one excuse after another to explain away the fact that they have turned their back on American heroes,” Peter Johnson Jr. said last week. “Heroes whose only sin was to expect nothing for their service and were then promised the world by politicians who couldn’t take enough pictures with them.” While other mainstream media outlets have yet to cover 9/11 responders during their nightly news coverage of the lame duck session, Comedy Central’s Jon Stewart devoted his final show of the year to the subject. Stewart noted that the only network that fully covered the topic was Al-Jazeera. “Our networks were scooped with a sympathetic Zadroga Bill story by the same network Osama bin Laden sends his mix-tapes to!” he exclaimed. “This is insane!” ——————————————————————————————————————————– Edit: Today Shep Smith called out Tom Coburn (R-OK) for vowing to block the bill until the next session, for no real reason other than personal pique. SHEPARD SMITH: He is the man who is vowing to slow this down or block it, so that the necessary funding for the illnesses of the first responders who made it to Ground Zero to try to save lives on the day that America changed — remember? This is the Senator who is vowing to block it so that it doesn’t make it through. Sen. Tom Coburn, Republican of Oklahoma.
Continue reading …Time's Joe Klein, ABC's Christiane Amanpour, and CBS's Lesley Stahl were just three journalists to see an outrageously baised quote of theirs land in the Best of Notable Quotables 2010 . A panel of 46 radio talk show hosts, magazine editors, columnists, editorial writers, and expert media observers chose the winners, and our news analysts introduce them and a few others in this highlight lowlight reel put together by Media Research Center video producer Bob Parks: read more
Continue reading …Image: Screenshot via ColaLife ColaLife has a simple but smart idea: use the distribution networks already established for Coca Cola drinks, which are available in the most remote parts of the world, to get “social products” like oral rehydration salts to these same areas. Coke is available in the areas, but the simplest of medicines usually aren’t, and rural populations have devastatingly high mortality rates from very treatable things like diarrhea. … Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Iranian economy in trouble? Tehran’s recent subsidy cuts in face of UN sanctions putting extra burden on struggling Iranian economy, top opposition leaders say; Iran battles recession, unemployment over 30%
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