Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Larsen C Ice Shelf - this link is to the collapse of Larsen A and B

 
Posted by Picasa


the future (click on)

Past assessments of ice-shelf stability have been based primarily on mean annual temperature. The importance of melt ponds indicates that mean summer temperature is a better guide. How do other ice shelves fare under this new criteria? The next shelf to the south, the Larsen C, is very near the stability limit, and may start to recede in coming decades if the observed warming trend continues. Ted Scambos and Mark Fahnestock are hard at work developing new data sets to extend the analysis farther.


WHILE 'taking in' the information at the link, realize the delicacy of which 'ice formations' exist. They are some of the most hostile climates on the planet but they are in minority/'the extremes.' In minority, one should realize the delicacy at which these extremes exist.

To realize ALSO the importance of ice shelves in 'protecting' the Antacrtica Ice Mass 'proper' is to realize the 'stability' these delicate ecosystems survive and hence insure the survival of the biotic Earth.

The Larsen Ice Shelves collapse wasn't just a matter of your favorite ice skating pond melting for the season to return later. This is a huge demise of a very important ice formation that contributes to Earth's biotic nature.

Animation of the collapse of the Larsen B Ice Shelf

 
Posted by Picasa

Anchor ice of Cape Armitage off Ross Island in McMurdo Sound, Antarctica

 
Posted by Picasa

A lot of fuss about 'sea squirts.' Why?

 
Posted by Picasa


Because Sea Squirts are Tunicates. Tunicates are members of the Phylum Cordata (click on).

Phylum Cordata includes mammals including humans. So, in some ways, finding 'sea squirts' in the waters of the demised ice shelves of Antarctica is like finding a family member to humans.

Exotic animals - in Antarctica (click on)

Washington - Spindly orange sea stars, fan-finned ice fish and herds of roving sea cucumbers are among the exotic creatures spied off the Antarctic coast in an area formerly covered by ice, scientists have reported..

This is the first time explorers have been able to catalogue wildlife where two mammoth ice shelves used to extend for some 10 000 square kilometres over the Weddell Sea.

At least 5 000 years old, the ice shelves collapsed in two stages over the last dozen years. One crumbled 12 years ago and the other followed in 2002.

Global warming is seen as the culprit behind the ice shelves' demise, said Gauthier Chapelle of the Polar Foundation in Brussels.

"These kind of collapses are expected to happen more," he said. "What we're observing here is probably going to happen elsewhere around Antarctica."



ALSO REALIZE, the biotic environment these species thrived under is gone. The Larson Ice Shelves are destroyed by Human Induced Global Warming. That means these very species are endangered by the fact their supportive ecosystem is destroyed. One of the understandings of major USA legislation that seeks to protect them is The Endangered Species Act (click on).

Although I site the link here, does mean I endorse the link. The USA under Bush has been covertly undermining the authority of the acts for six years now and who knows what they may have done to them.

But, that say, realize this 'cornerstone' legislation REQUIRES identifying all species that face endangerment of extinction. Now, that the Larsen Ice Sheet has collapsed, along with it, collapses the ecosystem that supported these species. All the species now readily accessible to scientists have to be identified and protections rendered.

These species were in 'majority' known to scientists. They knew there was a lot of life under the ice. Anchor ice of Antarctica (which I will not above this entry.) carries alot of life within it and surrounding it. There is a phenomena knows as Ice Rafting (click on) which is clearly illustrated in this link; that would allow folks to understand that creatures living under the Larsen Ice Shelves also migrated. Not necessarily by 'intent' but by 'opportunity.' Many of these life forms could be found 'a drift' in the Falkland Islands and the islands surrounding Antarctica. Some of the species, I think it is about 25% are newly classified and are 'resident' to those waters below Larsen B.

So, although all these 'finds' are very, very interesting. The mission of the scientists are more a survival mission than one of fascination.

TO TAKE THIS ONE STEP FURTHER. "Stay tuned"

Huge polar study ready to begin (click on)

The largest polar research programme for 50 years gets under way this week.

International Polar Year (IPY) will see thousands of scientists, from more than 60 nations, working together on 220 projects at high latitudes.

Scientists hope to improve their understanding of how changes to the polar regions affect the planet.

IPY will be officially launched in Paris on 1 March, but the UK's programme, involving 65 institutions, was unveiled on Monday in London.

IPY actually runs for two years in order to allow equal coverage of both the Arctic and the Antarctic.

It is organised by the International Council for Science (ICSU) and the World Meteorological Organization (WMO).


THIS IS AS MUCH about 'documenting' than any aspect that is science. It might also be noted, there are certain 'molecules' ALREADY found in Antarctica waters that may prove to fight cancers. So this is no small venture.

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

 
Posted by Picasa


The heat is contained where it is supposed to be at the higher latitudes of Earth, away from Antarctica. There is some minor transfer connected to the 'hot air' of the Pacific Islands including Indonesia, but, the 'vortex' I mentioned might be there is proven to be off Antarctica. However, it is not a 'hot storm.' It is the air coming off the ice over a warmer ocean current 'mixing' with the 'hot air spot' of the Pacific Islands.

It's hopeful, but, not conclusive. This might be a temporary 'weather' event and not a Climate Shift back to neutral over the Antarctica Ice Continent.

Vigilance and continuing on the path of reversing carbon dioxide levels is always the 'best' and 'most moral' path anyone can follow.

This system is not currently contributing to the Northern Hemisphere turbulence as 'Sol' has it's most intense rays at these lower latitudes.
 


This is still the 'hot spot' of Earth. The heat however is a bit contained over these Pacific Islands in relation to the ice continent. The next satellite above will prove that the temperature shift over Antarctica is real.
Posted by Picasa

Click on to animate

 
Posted by Picasa


12 PM and 3 PM have been eliminated from the animated loop. There was a glitch last week at those times so it must be under repair.

With the northern traverse of the sun, the ice continent is cooling down quickly. Winds are picking up (click on). It would seem the winds are blasting in over East Antarctica driving the heat off the ice all the way to the Peninsula. As a result, the jet stream (click on) is impacted primarily offshore. Basically, as the higher heat is pushed off the ice cap there is turbulence over the ocean currents where there is more stable air. Vortices are more than likely the result.

The temperatures (click on) are demonstrating to take a severe turn toward frigid with the sudden movement of hot air off the ice. The coldest place today is Casey Airbase with a temperature of -84 C, while the nearest second is Vostok -62 C with humidity of 40%. The temperate areas are a few more in number, but, they are primarily freezing in their temperate nature. The warmest is Palmer Station at 2 C with 80% humidity.

This is moving into autumn and that is promising. Hopefully, the winter will prove to be very cold and 'ice forming' with lots of recharge.

The weather at Scott Base, Ross Ilsand, New Zealand, Antarctica (Crystal Ice Chime) is:

 
Posted by Picasa

Snowed in, doesn't mean doing nothing but sitting it out.

It's important to always have access to emergency community services. When snow is this extreme due to Human Induced Global Warming, with repeated snow storms that literally bury a house in feet of snow, the occupants and the greater community cannot lose sight of the fact that access to emergency services is vital.

There is no way of knowing what occupants of a house are going through without contact to the outside world. There might be communication by internet and telephone but that does not insure the well being of everyone inside when feet of snow cut off access.

While, snow can seem like a lot of fun and should be, there needs to be a 'presence of mind' to also realize it's dangers.
 
Posted by Picasa


February 24, 2007

Arendal, Norway

Photographer states :: Kim-Arne Karlsson in the door at groundfloor in Høyveien 29 in Arendal
 
Posted by Picasa


February 24, 2007

Arendal, Norway

Photographer states :: Between Høyveien 29 and the garage
 
Posted by Picasa


February 24, 2007

Arendal, Norway

Photographer states :: The Høyveien 34 in Arendal
 
Posted by Picasa


February 24, 2007

Arendal, Norway

Photographer states :: From the garden in Høyveien 29

The weather at Glacial Bay National Park (Crystal Ice Chime) is freezing.

Temperature :: 16 °F / -9 °C

Conditions :: Clear

Humidity :: 32%

Dew Point :: -9 °F / -23 °C

Wind :: 13 mph / 20 km/h / 5.7 m/s from the North

Wind Gust :: 17 mph / 28 km/h / 7.7 m/s

Pressure :: 29.90 in / 1012 hPa

Windchill :: 2 °F / -17 °C

Visibility :: 10.0 miles / 16.1 kilometers

UV :: 0 out of 16

Clouds :: Clear -

(Above Ground Level)

Sunday, February 25, 2007

Texas gives the world the shaft

 
Posted by Picasa



KINDLY NOTE 'THE EFFECTIVE DATE' - February 6, 2007. Coal Fired Plants? Huh?

These people are the saddest mess I have ever witnessed.

Why am I getting the feeling the 'desperate' are running for the highest office in the land rather than 'the best' leadership that can be found in the country. Desperation has nearly caused a Constitutional Crisis. Habeous Corpus is already on the chopping block and why? Because it is necessary for reasons of National Security? No. Because it is an agenda for the political fodder of the Republican Party.

We are in danger of losing the benevolent nature of Earth. I guess if I had a whole lot of coal mines that no longer produced coal I would come up with a 'scare' tactic that would bring 'the wealthy genteel' to the forefront of reason.

But, to believe that alone only postpones the inevitable. The USA needs to radify Kyoto Protocol and set very tough carbon dioxide emission standards for the entire country. It is literally upto the USA to stop and reverse Human Induced Global Warming. We need to set those standards SPECIFICALLY for the continental USA as well as Alaska and Hawaii.

Preventing higher levels of carbon dioxide in other burgeoning economies is also the right thing to do, but, not exclusively the way to define the reduction in these emissions by the USA.

Absolutely not.

By providing advanced technology and alternative energies to other countries it only inappropriately displaces the contribution of the USA. Some of these countries don't have carbon dioxide emissions to control, yet. The exception is China, but, the population alone and it's new consumerism makes any effort blunted. By building these facilities the USA can displace it's own responsibilty for it's ESCALATING emissions. The USA has to bring it's OWN emissions to 1990 levels or less. We need to do this now.

Legislation to control this type of environmental abuse has to take place at the federal level and soon. To allow it to be defined as an 'election issue' is to postpone it's resolve forever. Time is of the essence and the USA is grossly negligent in it's responsibilty to Earth and our own well being.



Texas Abandoned Mine Land Reclamation Plan (Click on title of entry for link. Thank you.)

AGENCY: Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, Interior.
ACTION: Final rule; approval of amendment.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

SUMMARY: We, the Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement
(OSM), are approving an amendment to the Texas abandoned mine land
reclamation plan (Texas plan) under the Surface Mining Control and
Reclamation Act of 1977 (SMCRA or the Act). The Railroad Commission of
Texas (RCT or Commission) proposed to assume responsibility of the
abandoned mine land reclamation (AML) emergency program in Texas. The
Commission also proposed to revise the Texas plan by updating portions
to reflect its current practices and by removing references to its old
regulations (Texas Coal Mining Regulations (TCMR)) and replacing them
with references to its recodified regulations (16 Texas Administrative
Code (TAC)).

DATES: Effective Date: February 6, 2007.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Michael C. Wolfrom, Director, Tulsa
Field Office. Telephone: (918) 581-6430. E-mail address:
mwolfrom@osmre.gov.

Knock it off !!!

 
Posted by Picasa


February 25, 2007

1430 z

GOES East Water Vapor Satellite (click on the above link for 12 hour loop)

The severe storms today across the USA are not caused exclusively by the current vortex over the country. It is 'accelerated' by the votex over the Atlantic. It is the North Atlantic Vortex that is causing the severity of this weather system to cause such devastation.



Two sided storm: midwest snow, southern tornadoes (click on)

WZZM 13/AP


Created: 2/25/2007 6:20:44 AM
Updated: 2/25/2007 7:56:51 AM


DENVER (AP) - The same winter storm that is affecting West Michigan today moved swiftly across the country Saturday, dumping more than a foot of snow on the Upper Midwest.

The National Weather Service says between 15 and 18 inches have fallen on parts of Minnesota and Wisconsin.

At least seven traffic deaths in Wisconsin are blamed on the weather. Thousands of people are without power in Iowa, Oklahoma and Nebraska.

The search is resuming Sunday morning in southern Arkansas for an undetermined number of people unaccounted for following yesterday's storms and tornadoes.

National Guard troops have been called in to help with the cleanup. At least 27 people were hurt amid heavy destruction in the town of Dumas, southeast of Little Rock.

The storms cut power, demolished businesses, flipped mobile homes and tossed cars into trees. People who were in a McDonald's took shelter in a walk-in freezer. A hospital passed out sandwiches to people waiting to be treated.

The mayor of Dumas says damage to the town's commercial and industrial district is so severe a lot of people are going to be out of work for a long time.

Officials in Colorado closed about 200 miles of Interstate 70 due to snow and slippery pavement. Whiteout conditions caused a 35-car pileup outside Denver.

More than 250 flights have been canceled at Chicago's two airports.



Storm rages across state, spawning tornadoes (click on)
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
JACKSON - A church in Indianola was nearly cut in half Saturday evening as a fierce storm swept across the state, spawning tornadoes, causing more than 9,000 power outages and leaving some structures heavily damaged.

The Sunflower County Sheriff's Office said a church on Highway 49 in Indianola had major water damage after its roof and some bricks were blown off. In the same town, a house's carport was ripped off, as high winds and tornadoes moved across the area.

The Washington County Sheriff's Office had reports of power outages after a tornado touched down in the county near the Arkansas border.

In Issaquena County a tree limb fell on the roof of a house.

No injuries were reported in any of the incidents.

According to WLBT, Entergy confirmed about 9,630 customers across the state lost power Saturday night. The news station said some of those customers may not get power back until late Sunday.

Satan resides in Texas and it feels good to say it.

 


Oil

Coal

Despots

Cattle Feedlots

Methane

Childhood Respiratory Disease to daunts the amount in the rest of the nation

Illegal immigrants and the abuse of their labor force

You name it and Texas produces it. Every dispicable form of economic exploitation with complete disregard for human dignity and well being. Whoever thought anyone would object to a woman's longevity with protects from crevical cancer. Where does it stop?

Texas houses the dregdes of American society. If any one society needs to examine it's own citizens, the USA needs to take pity on those in Texas still trying to 'have their way' and 'have it all.' They started a war for profit with complete disregard for human life.

If you think the 'Godly' of Texas aren't capable of such monsterous plans masked by the political rhetoric of the Bible Belt, you are sadly mistaken. The 'back room' hubris is interesting.

Always patriotic.

Always religiously righteous.

Always making the 'tough' decisions, that lead to THE EASY WAY OUT.

What would it take to melt the Arctic Ocean for the oil beneath it?

 
Posted by Picasa


A whole HELL of a lot of carbon dioxide.

Agreed? It's happening though, isn't it? Who cared? The current President? The current Vice President?

No.

The countries that signed Kyoto Protocol were the first to step to the challenge of stopping and reversing the ravages of consumerism that would prove to destroy Earth's biotic benevolence.

Now.

I ask again.

What would a bunch of wealthy men from Texas want with so many coal fired power plants?

Longevity in providing GOOD service to the people of that state or a larger picture goal of not only profiteering the remainder of the Texas coal WHILE melting down an entire planet's ice cap in reaching for the oil that lie in abundance beneath it?

The people involved in this venture are highly immoral and desperate people with very short term goals of profit.


TXU to Curtail Coal Plants to Smooth Approval of Planned Buyout (click out)

By Edward Klump

Feb. 25 (Bloomberg) -- TXU Corp., the biggest power producer in Texas, will curtail plans for coal-fired generators to win support from environmentalists for a proposed $44 billion buyout by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. and Texas Pacific Group.

Dallas-based TXU has agreed to cancel eight of the 11 coal units it has planned and to support mandatory U.S. limits on power-plant pollution that contributes to global warming, said a statement from the Natural Resources Defense Council. The company will devote $400 million to cutting power demand in Texas, pleasing environmental groups that favor conservation.

``The new owners don't want to be your grandfather's power company,'' said David G. Hawkins, director of the environmental group's Climate Center. They will ``turn instead to cleaner sources of energy,'' he said yesterday in a phone interview.

The Western USA has very little coal compared to the Eastern USA

As of the year 2000, Texas had approximate 14% of the coal in the USA. That continued to fall off and Texas actually had a NEGATIVE contribution to the coal total in the USA.

So, what's up in Texas with all these coal fired plants?

Energy?

Nope.

Try again.

Irresponsible Citizenship

 
Posted by Picasa


There just isn't that much coal in Texas. So, what's this lame excuse for a utility venture and what is the goal that most Texans will appreciate?
 


It's Sunday Morning
Posted by Picasa

"Highway Robbery" by Dillinger Escape Plan

You'd never imagine us bringing a loaded gun to the ballroom this party's about to kick off tonight is the wrong night the devil's own are only starting up the first round of the fight so hang on tight dear mother the needle is jabbing the womb draw back and release this child of disease this mob is a riot the outlaw youth are only emptying the first round of the night 'cause everything's not alright I suppose you thought you had our hands behind our backs wool over our eyes now your pulse is in my palm and you stand hands to mouth wearing your disguise it's pretty apparent this boy is a curse the christ of the moment so blow him away hey come on and take the new number if you're next in line then kid I got a really big fucking surprise there won't be a next time

Saturday, February 24, 2007

Morning Papers - It's Origins

 
Posted by Picasa


The Rooster
 

Current webcam from Scott Base, Antarctica.

Very overcast, reducing the light available to the camera.
Posted by Picasa
 
Posted by Picasa
 
Posted by Picasa


Tracking the 'way in' for the heat transfer system to Antarctica
 
Posted by Picasa



The last heat assault on Antarctica for this season.

When the USA returns dignity to it's foreign policy, the world will follow

 
Posted by Picasa



Destitute and desperate flooding to Chad
5:00AM Saturday February 24, 2007
By Steve Bloomfield
Hundreds of people like this child from the poverty-stricken Central African Republic are flooding into neighbouring Chad each week, ending up in camps for displaced people. Photo / Reuters
CHAD - solitary metal signpost indicates the point where the Central African Republic meets Chad. There is nothing on either side of this endless stretch of dirt highway to indicate any difference between one desperately poor central African state and the other.
But the relief that travellers feel when they pass the Frontiere Tchad sign - sponsored by a local brewery - is palpable.
With the family's entire belongings strapped to the back of three donkeys, Fadimatou Fanta and her four sons skirt around the collapsed bridge and scrabble up the embankment to safety. They have walked for seven days and hundreds like them are arriving in Bekoninga every week.
It is a pattern repeated across the frontier between the Central African Republic (CAR) and Chad.
That so many people are desperate to leave the republic, the sixth poorest country in the world, and go to Chad, the seventh poorest, indicates the level of the crisis engulfing this forgotten corner of the world.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10425486



Former first lady of Rwanda still struggles with French refugee official

5:00AM Saturday February 24, 2007
By Alex Duval Smith
FRANCE - The woman regarded by many as an architect of genocide is on the verge of tears. Agathe Habyarimana has been driven to despair by a prosaic reality of everyday life in France. Stateless, without so much as an ID card to show at the post office, an alleged mastermind of the Rwandan massacres is living an administrative nightmare.
"I am so disappointed. I thought this was the land of asylum and human rights," she said after learning last Thursday that, 13 years after France's military saved her life, its refugee officials have turned her down on appeal.
In a rare interview in her Paris lawyer's office, Habyarimana, 64, flanked by four of her sons, pre-empts questions: "It's all lies. I deny the lot."
Glued to her chair, her hands on her lap, she avoids the word "genocide" to describe the killing of 800,000 Rwandans in 1994, stumbling over her syllables to say a mumbled "jonocide".
Her 21 years as first lady ended on April 6, 1994, when the jet carrying her husband, President Juvenal Habyarimana, was shot down over the capital, Kigali.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10425467

My hero

 

Through scholarships to students Michael Moore demonstrates his dedication to the future of this country. Having turned his back on the opportunity of formal education at a university as a young man, he found a patriotic purpose to his life.

That purpose would be a void in the American political landscape the size of a nation. That void was to bring 'the truth' no matter the form it took to anyone whom would listen. As a young man he risked pursuing 'the truth' and now in his fifties with his head held high, he commands a following that could EASILY be called "Michael Moore Nation." A force to contend with.

Where would we be without visionaries such as Moore with the guts to 'stand the post' to keep America on track and free of the tyranny of men such as those in political office with agendas that disregard the very Constitution that affords them the opportunity to serve in one of the most powerful positions in the world.

Michael Moore is America. He reflects an aspect of the American experience we cannot forget or allow to die.

I am confident this legal victory, which is one of many for him, came with a great deal of political hurdles and great expense.

Thank you, Mike.

Thank you for keeping the faith, when at times it was far easier to turn a blind eye.

Thursday, February 22, 2007

Morning Papers

Michael Moore Today
http://www.michaelmoore.com/

Michael Moore wins another round in libel case

By John Flesher / Associated Press
TRAVERSE CITY -- Filmmaker Michael Moore won another round Tuesday in a court battle with the brother of Oklahoma City bombing conspirator Terry Nichols.
The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Ohio sided with a Michigan-based federal judge who in 2005 threw out James Nichols’ suit accusing Moore of libeling and defaming him in the Oscar-winning movie, “Bowling for Columbine.”
Nichols, a Sanilac County soybean farmer, contended statements in the 2002 film could lead viewers to believe he was involved in the bombing. He also claimed the film invaded his privacy and inflicted emotional distress.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/mikeinthenews/index.php?id=9239


AWOL soldier faces less than a year in military prison
KRIS-TV
FORT HOOD, Texas -- An Army soldier faces less than a year in a military prison for fleeing before his second deployment to Iraq.
In a plea deal that caps his punishment at 10 months, Spc. Mark Wilkerson pleaded guilty to desertion and missing troop movement after the military decided last month that he would be court-martialed. He is to be sentenced by a judge Thursday.
Wilkerson, 23, surrendered at Fort Hood in August, about a year and a half after failing to return from an approved two-week leave. Since then he has worked in an office at the Central Texas Army post and has been allowed to leave after initially being confined to the post, although he was never in a cell, he said.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=9253


U.S. helicopter shot down near Baghdad
By Sinan Salaheddin / Associated Press
BAGHDAD, Iraq - A U.S. helicopter was shot down and crashed north of Baghdad on Wednesday, the military said after initially stating that the chopper made a "hard landing." All aboard were safely evacuated by a second helicopter.
At least seven U.S. helicopters have crashed or been forced down under hostile fire since Jan. 20. Military officials have said that militants are increasingly targeting helicopters amid the buildup of U.S. troops in Baghdad, firing simultaneously with an assortment of weapons from different directions.
The military has also detected another deadly insurgent tactic in recent weeks — the spreading of toxic chlorine gas by combining it with explosives.
In Washington, two Pentagon officials said the tactic has been used at least three times since Jan. 28, when a truck carrying explosives and a chlorine tank blew up in Anbar province west of Baghdad. More than a dozen people were reported killed.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=9247


Cheney slams Iraq plan advocated by Dems
By Terence Hunt / Associated Press
WASHINGTON - Vice President Dick Cheney on Wednesday harshly criticized the Iraq strategy advocated by Democratic leaders in Congress, saying their approach would "validate the al-Qaida strategy." House Speaker Nancy Pelosi fired back that Cheney's remarks were out of bounds.
The speaker said she tried to complain about Cheney to President Bush but could not reach him.
"You cannot say as the president of the United States, 'I welcome disagreement in a time of war,' and then have the vice president of the United States go out of the country and mischaracterize a position of the speaker of the House and in a manner that says that person in that position of authority is acting against the national security of our country," the speaker said.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=9247


Denmark to Withdraw From Iraq
Associated Press
COPENHAGEN, Denmark -- Denmark is considering boosting its contingent in Afghanistan by 200 troops to 600, Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen said Wednesday.
Earlier, the government presented plans to withdraw troops from Iraq. Fogh Rasmussen said no firm decision had been taken on the Danish troops serving under NATO command in Afghanistan, "but we cannot exclude that we will go from the present 400 to 600."
The prime minister said Wednesday that his country will withdraw its 460-member contingent from southern Iraq by August and transfer security responsibilities to Iraqi forces, and that the decision had been made in conjunction with the Iraqi government and Britain, under whose command the Danish forces are serving near Basra.
Fogh Rasmussen said Denmark would replace the troops with surveillance helicopters and civilian advisers to help the Iraqi government's reconstruction efforts.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=9248


Blair to announce Iraq withdrawal plan
By Thomas Wagner / Associated Press
LONDON - Prime Minister Tony Blair will announce on Wednesday a new timetable for the withdrawal of British troops from Iraq, with 1,500 to return home in several weeks, the BBC reported.
Blair will also tell the House of Commons during his regular weekly appearance that a total of about 3,000 British soldiers will have left southern Iraq by the end of 2007, if the security there is sufficient, the British Broadcasting Corp. said, quoting government officials who weren't further identified.
The announcement comes even as President Bush implements an increase of 21,000 more troops for Iraq.
But Blair said Sunday that Washington had not put pressure on London to maintain its troop numbers. The BBC said Blair was not expected to say when the rest of Britain's forces would leave Iraq. Britain currently has about 7,100 soldiers there.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=9238


Veteran's anti-war broadside posted on his barn
By Eric Parry / Eagle-Tribune
CHESTER, MA - Bruce Juchniewicz doesn't wear his heart on his sleeve, he wears it on a barn written in white letters.
It's because he knows what war can do to a person that he decided to post the message "Stop The War" in bold letters with an American flag on the side of his red barn, a statement visible to anyone traveling through Chester on Route 102.
"It's just the way I feel," the Vietnam veteran said, sitting in his Colonial home, built in 1812. "With every war there's more veterans."
As a veteran himself, Juchniewicz is worried about the next generation of soldiers returning from war.
Since returning from Vietnam in 1972 after serving as a rescue swimmer and helicopter crew chief with the Navy, Juchniewicz's life has been plagued with insomnia and post traumatic stress disorder, he said. He's worried that the president and U.S. military leaders don't consider how much war can affect the lives of returning troops.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=9246


Antiwar protesters bring message to Kennedy's Pawtucket office
By Tom Mooney / Providence Journal
PAWTUCKET — Jacque Amoureux, whose brother served with the Marines in Iraq, and Stephany Kern of Westerly, whose son died there, were among 20 war protesters who converged on the Pawtucket office of U.S. Rep. Patrick J. Kennedy yesterday demanding that he publicly support withholding money for the war effort.
While Kennedy’s opposition to escalating the war has been appreciated, said Amoureux, a 30-year-old graduate student at Brown University, “we’re particularly perplexed why Kennedy isn’t more strongly supporting defunding the war.
“We have to apply some pressure on him to be straighter with us about what he thinks.”
Amoureux and Kern are members of the Rhode Island chapter of Military Families Speak Out, who say they will be making the same demand on U.S. Rep. James Langevin this week.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=9245


Iraq war protesters target Democrats
By Jo Mannies / St. Louis Post-Dispatch
For the past three weeks, waves of anti-war protests, sit-ins and arrests have become almost routine for Rep. Russ Carnahan's district office in Brentwood.
And the local band of activists behind the disturbances is just getting warmed up. Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., appears to be their next target — on Tuesday, the group launched a sit-in at her downtown office. Four were arrested, released and fined $75 apiece.
The demonstrations are part of a national eight-week campaign, called The Occupation Project-, that has been organized by a coalition of anti-war groups out to cut off funding for the Iraq war.
But instead of picketing officials who support the war, the protesters primarily are targeting Democratic members of Congress seen as most sympathetic to their cause.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=9244


G I Rights Hotline

http://girights.objector.org/


McCain: Roe v. Wade should be overturned
Associated Press
SPARTANBURG, S.C. - Republican presidential candidate John McCain, looking to improve his standing with the party’s conservative voters, said Sunday the court decision that legalized abortion should be overturned.
”I do not support Roe versus Wade. It should be overturned,” the Arizona senator told about 800 people in South Carolina, one of the early voting states.
McCain also vowed that if elected, he would appoint judges who ”strictly interpret the Constitution of the United States and do not legislate from the bench.”
The landmark 1973 decision in Roe v. Wade gave women the right to choose an abortion to terminate a pregnancy. The Supreme Court has narrowly upheld the decision, with the presence of an increasing number of more conservative justices on the court raising the possibility that abortion rights would be limited.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=9235



I-Team: Army Recruiters Follow-Up
Jim Osman / CBS 3
PHILADELPHIA - While the British are pulling troops out, we are sending thousands of additional men and women to Iraq. Earlier this month, a CBS 3 I-Team investigation first exposed exactly how some local recruiters may be trying to enlist new soldiers.
Because of our initial report, the Army has opened its own investigation into potential recruiting abuses.
In a rare interview, a former recruiter steps forward to tell his story to Investigative Reporter Jim Osman.
As a former Marine, Chris Dugan went to malls and local high schools to recruit new enlistees.
"If I recruited someone - that would count towards points that would help me become a sergeant before I get out of the marine corps. So I'm willing to manipulate the truth for these people," said Dugan.



The Australian

Navy tries to turn back 85 boatpeople
Cath Hart
February 23, 2007
AUSTRALIAN authorities tried to turn 85 Sri Lankan asylum-seekers in an unseaworthy vessel back to sea after intercepting them off the West Australian coast this week.
The asylum-seekers, all men, are now aboard the former Gulf War navy vessel HMAS Success in international waters about 50 nautical miles off Christmas Island.
They remain in limbo while they are in international waters because they must reach Christmas Island if they want to make claims for asylum, which would be dealt with by Australia's offshore processing system.
The Department of Immigration and Citizenship last night confirmed the boat, thought to have been sailed from Indonesia by people-smugglers, was intercepted by Success on Tuesday off Christmas Island.
Labor last night questioned new Immigration Minister Kevin Andrews's handling of the case, in particular the lengthy delay between intercepting the boat and releasing details to the public.

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,21272550-601,00.html


Mark Steyn: Blair is right on troops
Eighty per cent of the violence in Iraq takes place within 50km of Baghdad

ACCORDING to my dictionary, the word "ally" comes from the Old French. Very Old French, I'd say. For the New French, the word has a largely postmodern definition of "duplicitous charmer who undermines you at every opportunity".
For the less enthusiastically obstructive NATO members, "ally" means "wealthy country with no military capability that requires years of diplomatic wooing and black-tie banquets in order to agree to a token contribution of 23.08 troops." Incidentally, that 23.08 isn't artistic licence on my part. The 2004 NATO summit in Turkey was presented as a triumph of multilateral co-operation because the 26 members agreed to contribute between them an additional 600 troops and three helicopters to the Afghan mission. That's 23.08 troops and a ninth of a helicopter per ally. In fairness, Turkey chipped in the three helicopters single-handed, though the deal required them to return to Ankara after three months.
And these days troops is something of an elastic term, too. In Norwegian, it means "fighting men who are prepared to stand shoulder to shoulder with the Americans, as long as they don't have to do any fighting and there are at least two provinces between their shoulders and the American ones". That's to say, Norway is "participating" in Afghanistan, but, because its troops are "not sufficiently trained to take part in combat", they've been mainly back at the barracks manning the photocopier or staging amateur performances of Peer Gynt for the amusement of US special forces who like nothing better than to unwind with five acts of Ibsen after a hard day hunting the Taliban.

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,21269819-601,00.html



Cheney brings out the hate in peaceniks

ABOUT 350 anti-Iraq war protesters last night formed a hostile welcome committee for US Vice-President Dick Cheney, clashing with police outside Sydney's Town Hall as they ignored calls for peaceful protests.
Mounted police officers and members of the riot squad scuffled with protesters in scenes reminiscent of violent anti-globalisation protests at the G20 summit in Melbourne last year.
The crowd, led by members of the Stop The War Coalition, marched down George Street - one of Sydney's main streets - without permission from police, who cited traffic concerns for the decision.
The clashes occurred when protesters attempted to break through the wall of police officers. Ten protesters were arrested.
Road closures to ensure Mr Cheney's motorcade received a green-light corridor on one of several secret routes also caused traffic chaos in parts of the city hours before his arrival last night.

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,21272553-601,00.html


The New Zealand Herald

Cyclone rips down Mozambique prison as 600 inmates escape
11:00AM Saturday February 24, 2007
By Steve Bloomfield
Children stand in front of their flooded house in Caia in Sofala province in north-central Mozambique. Photo / Reuters
At least four people and died and scores have been injured after a cyclone ripped through central Mozambique yesterday.
Winds reached 170mph as Cyclone Favio powered its way through homes and hotels in the tourist town of Vilanculos.
Authorities in Zimbabwe were last night warning residents that the cyclone, now downgraded to a tropical storm, would hit low lying areas in the east of the country over the weekend.
The cyclone destroyed thousands of homes in Mozambique, also hitting hospitals and schools.
Electricity pylons were ripped up, trees uprooted and fields full of crops such as cassava and maize were washed away.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10425595



Why everyone loves Bill Clinton
11:00AM Saturday February 24, 2007
By Andrew Buncombe
WASHINGTON - When you are there, in person, you get an idea of what all the fuss and bother is about.
When you see how he effortlessly connects with an audience, somehow making it appear he is speaking to each and every one of them individually, you understand why people will pay good money to listen to Bill Clinton.
Take for example the Democratic Party convention in the summer of 2004 in Boston. Knowing that Clinton's oratorical skills would drown those of the presidential candidate John Kerry, officials made sure the two men addressed the party faithful on different days.
It made no difference; despite Senator Kerry's valiant efforts - "I'm John Kerry and I'm reporting for duty" - it was Clinton's speech, and that of the then unknown Barack Obama, that people remembered.
Or how about that October, just two months after he had undergone quadruple heart by-pass surgery, when Clinton stumped for Mr Kerry in Philadelphia in the final days of the election campaign.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10425600


Fire threatens Piha Homes
6:34PM Saturday February 24, 2007
A woman runs for safety as a fire breaks out in the Auckland suburb of Piha. Photo / Dean Purcell
A fire that was heading towards three houses at Piha Beach, west of Auckland, is now under control.
Witnesses say smoke was blanketing the beach as the fire raged through a vacant paddock towards three homes.
Homeowners were forced to evacuate, and scramble to get their belongings out.
The fire is now virtually out, and people are starting to take their things back inside.
It’s believed the fire has started in the paddock, next to a holiday park, and was fuelled by tinder-dry vegetation and fanned by a strong easterly breeze.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10425625



Prison staff criticise managers for relationship
5:00AM Saturday February 24, 2007
By Derek Cheng
The manager of Rimutaka Prison is having a relationship with the jail's crime prevention manager which is deterring prison staff from exposing their allegedly corrupt colleagues, prison officers say.
The relationship is between the acting prison manager, Chris Smith, and the prison's crime prevention manager Rachel Sayers. The couple declined to comment.
Four Rimutaka Corrections officers, who between them have worked at the prison for 37 years, told the Herald they feel uncomfortable bringing information to Ms Sayers because of the relationship.
The officers, who did not want to be identified for fear of reprisals, had little faith in the prison management. "[Ms Sayers] is someone you are supposed to be able to report to in confidence and in secrecy," said one officer.
Current and former staff have criticised the management for failing to adequately act in the face of corruption allegations.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10425579



Girl loses finger to flesh-eating bug
Email this storyPrint this story 5:00PM Saturday February 24, 2007
Flesh-eating disease necrotising fasciitis has claimed the finger of a five-year-old Invercargill girl.
The Southland Times reported today that Leilani Pennicott spent five weeks in an induced coma in Auckland's Starship Hospital last October after a needle became embedded in her hand.
She had an operation to remove the needle but was admitted to Southland Hospital two days after returning home, having contracted necrotising fasciitis. She was convulsing and lapsed into unconsciousness.
Doctors operated but when Leilani did not respond to treatment, she was flown to Auckland's Starship Hospital.
Her mother, Alana Pennicott, told the newspaper she thought her daughter was a "goner".
"I was bawling my eyes out ... knowing two elderly people had died from the disease about the same time she was in hospital was quite scary," Ms Pennicott said.
Her daughter pulled through and was recovering well, although there were fears she may lose more fingers as a result of the disease.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10425615



Fame game takes some getting used to for Lonelygirl
5:00AM Saturday February 24, 2007
By Juliet Rowan
Jessica Rose shot to fame as LonelyGirl15 but has now scored a role starring with Lindsay Lohan in I Know Who Killed Me.
Jessica Rose may have been named Forbes magazine's top "Web Celeb", but the New Zealand-raised teenager is just getting to grips with being recognised on the streets of Los Angeles.
"I'm a very private person so I almost feel embarrassed if someone recognises me," the 19-year-old told the Weekend Herald.
"I'm really awkward, I guess. I really don't know what to say. I'm not quite good at that yet."
That could all soon change with Rose cast in a psychological thriller, I Know Who Killed Me, alongside Hollywood starlet Lindsay Lohan. Twenty-year-old Lohan, who appears in Robert Altman's final film, A Prairie Home Companion, now screening in New Zealand, is regular tabloid fodder.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1501119/story.cfm?c_id=1501119&objectid=10425576



Britain confirms sending more troops to Afghanistan
Email this storyPrint this story 2:15PM Saturday February 24, 2007
By Sophie Walker and Paul Majendie
UK Defence Secretary Des Browne. Photo / Reuters
LONDON - Britain has decided to send a fresh wave of troops to Afghanistan before an expected spring offensive by the Taleban, which reacted by threatening to step up suicide bomb attacks on Nato forces.
UK Defence Secretary Des Browne said in a statement today that the government took its decision after failing to persuade other Nato members to send reinforcements to Helmand province, the southern region where a Taleban insurgency flared last year.
"We have decided that it is right for the UK to provide some additional forces for the Southern Region," Browne said.
Taleban commander Mullah Dadullah told Britain's Channel 4 News the Taleban would carry out more suicide attacks on Nato forces.
"The suicide bombers are countless," he said in an interview recorded on the Afghan-Pakistan border. "Hundreds of suicide bombers have already registered their names, hundreds more are waiting."
"More troops means more will be killed, and that would make us happy; we're happy for them to come."

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10425609



UN watchdog head to visit North Korea

11:00AM Saturday February 24, 2007
Mohamed ElBaradei
VIENNA - The head of the United Nations nuclear watchdog, Mohamed ElBaradei, said today he would visit North Korea after receiving an invitation from the government there to discuss the freeze of North Korean nuclear facilities.
"According to the letter, they would like to improve and normalise the relationship with the agency and hope to go back to being a member of the agency," ElBaradei told reporters in Vienna after meeting UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.
North Korea agreed on February 13 to take steps towards nuclear disarmament in exchange for US$300 ($430.53) million in aid under a deal US President George W Bush hailed as the best chance to get it to scrap its atomic weapons programme.
The landmark agreement, reached four months after Pyongyang stunned the world with its first nuclear test, requires the secretive communist state to shut down the reactor at the heart of its nuclear ambitions and allow international inspections.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10425599



Nice vs Vice: Ethical investing pays over long term
5:00AM Saturday February 24, 2007
By Adam Bennett
When it comes to choosing investments, New Zealanders appear more concerned with returns than righteousness.
For direct investors, as long as there is good information available about companies, investment decisions can be guided directly by their conscience as far as they want them to.
But most New Zealanders' investments - including superannuation savings - are managed on their behalf by fund managers.
Their attempts to set up socially responsible investment (SRI) funds have so far either foundered or are continuing at a crawl.
Among New Zealand's top five fund managers, there's only one retail investment fund, provided by Asteron, which operates under an SRI basis.
Another, operated by Tower, is no longer accepting funds and is in the process of being wound down.
Socially responsible investments among the wholesale managed funds are also limited, comprising mainly particular mandates requested by clients such as churches or charities with sufficient funds to make their tailormade portfolios viable for the manager.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/3/story.cfm?c_id=3&objectid=10425558



Nice vs Vice: 'People will continue to drink ... smoke ... gamble'

5:00AM Saturday February 24, 2007
By Adam Bennett
Dan Ahrens thinks tobacco is a "horrible product", he hopes his child will never smoke and he thinks firearms should be outlawed.
Yet the Texan has no qualms about encouraging clients to put money into tobacco and arms companies, as well as gambling and alcohol stocks.
As manager of the Vice Fund he oversaw about US$48 million ($68 million) in investments in companies that ran casinos, sold beer and cigarettes, and made weapons.
"An investment is not an endorsement and people who think it is are fooling themselves. Tobacco, for instance, is a horrible product and I hope my child will not smoke some day. But it is legal, and people who want to smoke should be allowed to smoke," he told the Business Herald.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/3/story.cfm?c_id=3&objectid=10425560



Hedge funds buy Sainsbury on hopes of Marks & Spencer bid
5:00AM Saturday February 24, 2007
LONDON - Hedge funds are buying stakes in J. Sainsbury, Britain's third-largest supermarket owner, on expectations of a bid by Marks & Spencer, sources say.
Activist hedge fund Polygon said in a regulatory filing yesterday it had raised its Sainsbury stake to 1.75 per cent from the 1.5 per cent it declared on Monday.
Polygon was not immediately available to comment, but sources said that fund and others were buying Sainsbury shares because they believed clothes and food retailer M&S could launch a multi-billion-pound offer.
"We are expecting an M&S bid. We're all in here for the same reason," one of the sources said. "People are still buying."
Sainsbury emerged as bid target on February 2 when three private equity firms - CVC, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts and Blackstone Group - also joined the party, sources said this month.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/3/story.cfm?c_id=3&objectid=10425464



NZ banks doing better job than those in Australia, say customers

5:00AM Saturday February 24, 2007
New Zealand's five major banks are outpacing Australia's top four in customer satisfaction, a regular survey says.
Research organisation Roy Morgan said in the second half of last year, satisfaction with the five major banks was 78.4 per cent.
This compared with the average 69.6 per cent rating achieved by the big four Australian banks - ANZ, Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA), National Australia Bank (NAB) and Westpac.
Roy Morgan said the difference between the two countries was particularly stark when comparing the Commonwealth Bank of Australia (66.5 per cent) and New Zealand's ASB Bank (83.4 per cent).
New Zealand's major banks are all Australian-owned. ANZ and National Bank is owned by ANZ, ASB by CBA, BNZ owned by NAB and Westpac in both countries.
Among the New Zealand banks, ASB was the top-rated, with an 83.4 per cent satisfaction level.
It was followed by the National Bank at 82.6 per cent, the BNZ at 80 per cent, the ANZ at 74.1 per cent, and Westpac at 72.3 per cent.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/3/story.cfm?c_id=3&objectid=10425556



Air NZ confirms direct link to Vancouver

Email this storyPrint this story 3:07PM Friday February 23, 2007
Air New Zealand said today it would open a direct link from Auckland to Vancouver in November.
Group general manager international Ed Sims said Canada had always been an extremely popular destination for New Zealanders.
The route would significantly grow tourism numbers between the two countries which already sees 46,000 Canadians visit New Zealand and 16,000 New Zealanders visit Canada annually, he said.
The reinstatement of the Vancouver link restores a route canned in the 90s.
The services will initially operate three times a week between November and March to coincide with the peak travel season between the two destinations, as Canadians escape winter and New Zealand skiers head to the Canadian slopes.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/3/story.cfm?c_id=3&objectid=10425385



Microsoft ordered to pay $2b damages
5:00AM Saturday February 24, 2007
Microsoft infringed audio patents held by Alcatel-Lucent and should pay US$1.52 billion ($2.15 billion) in damages, a US federal jury has found.
The No 1 software maker said yesterday it planned first to ask the trial judge to knock down the ruling and would appeal if necessary. It said the verdict was unsupported by the law and that it had already licensed the technology in question from Germany's Fraunhofer.
Telecommunications hardware and software firm Alcatel-Lucent had accused Microsoft of infringing patents related to standards used for playing MP3 digital music files.
One analyst said the decision means Alcatel-Lucent might seek payments from providers of software and hardware that support MP3 files, including Apple's iPod and iTunes.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=5&objectid=10425544



Apple and Cisco resolve dispute over iPhone

9:00AM Friday February 23, 2007
NEW YORK - Network equipment maker Cisco Systems and computing giant Apple said today they had reached an agreement that allows both to use the "iPhone" name, after Cisco sued the iPod maker for using it for a new multimedia phone.
No further terms of the agreement were disclosed.
In a joint statement, they said both companies are free to use the "iPhone" trademark on their products throughout the world, and each side will dismiss any pending actions regarding the trademark.
In addition, Cisco and Apple will explore opportunities to work together in the areas of security, and consumer and institutional communications.
Cisco sued Apple for trademark infringement in January after Apple unveiled its long-awaited multimedia phone called the iPhone, a name claimed by the network equipment maker.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=5&objectid=10425391



Google shuts down Cyfswatch website
12:10PM Thursday February 22, 2007
By Simon Collins
The now pulled Cyfswatch site
Google has shut down the controversial Cyfswatch website because of threats posted on the blog site yesterday against Green MP Sue Bradford.
Google spokeswoman Victoria Grand said the US-based giant had previously censored postings that breached its terms of service but had now closed the site permanently because of "repeat violations".
She said Google investigated the site when the New Zealand Ministry of Social Development first complained about it last month, and again after the ministry lodged a new complaint about the postings threatening Ms Bradford yesterday.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=5&objectid=10425243



Everything being done to bring Hicks to trial, says Cheney
2:15PM Saturday February 24, 2007
SYDNEY - US Vice-President Dick Cheney says everything is being done by his government to have Australian terror suspect David Hicks brought to trial as soon as possible.
Mr Cheney was speaking to reporters after holding talks in Sydney with Prime Minister John Howard.
During the one-hour meeting Mr Howard stressed Australia's disappointment at how Hicks had spent five years being held at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba without having gone to trial.
Mr Cheney said Hicks had now been charged and the US Defence Department was now deciding whether a military commission would be convened to try Hicks.
"Mr Hicks is near the head of the queue," Mr Cheney said.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10425608



Cheney praises China but suspects its aims
5:00AM Saturday February 24, 2007
By Caren Bohan
Protesters shout their opposition to the Iraq war and their opposition to Australian David Hicks being held at Guantanamo Bay. Photo / Reuters
AUSTRALIA - United States Vice-President Dick Cheney says he is concerned about China's military build-up and also whether North Korea will follow through on its commitments in a nuclear deal.
On a visit to Australia, Cheney - one of Washington's firmest allies over the Iraq war - also emphasised the importance of coalition forces remaining in Iraq until it had stabilised.
"The notion that free countries can turn our backs on what happens in places like Afghanistan or Iraq or any other possible safe haven for terrorists is an option that we simply cannot indulge," Cheney said yesterday.
"If our coalition withdrew before Iraqis could defend themselves, radical factions would battle for dominance of the country," he said.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10425503



Police officers nabbed for killings by their GPS system

5:00AM Saturday February 24, 2007
Jose Adolfo Gutierrez. Photo / Reuters
GUATEMALA - Four Guatemalan policemen were arrested yesterday in the murder of three Salvadoran politicians after being linked to the crime by a global positioning system in their vehicle, the Government said.
Luis Herrera, head of a special police unit charged with investigating organised crime, was captured after the GPS receiver in his police truck revealed he had been at the scene of the kidnapping and the site where the bodies were found, authorities said.
Herrera, Jose Adolfo Gutierrez and two others from the unit, were filmed by traffic cameras as they intercepted a car carrying the three members of the Guatemala-based Central American regional parliament and their driver.
The detained policemen "obviously" did not know the GPS was in their vehicle when they carried out the killings, police chief Erwin Sperisen said.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10425495



Pentagon calls off bunker blast plan
Email this storyPrint this story 6:15AM Saturday February 24, 2007
The Pentagon has cancelled plans to detonate a 700-tonne explosive charge in the Nevada desert in order to gather data for use in developing weapons capable of destroying deeply buried bunkers.
The planned experiment, which would have sent a mushroom-like cloud 3000m into the air, drew legal action and protests from Nevada residents.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10425506



Tiger kills child after flash fright

Email this storyPrint this story 5:15AM Saturday February 24, 2007
A 6-year-old girl was mauled to death by a performing tiger at a zoo in China as she was being photographed with the animal.
The animal lunged at the girl's head when a flashbulb went off as the child was being photographed at the Kunming Zoo in Yunnan province.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10425505



Child trampled as horses run wild
Email this storyPrint this story 7:15AM Saturday February 24, 2007
Rodeo parade spectators watched in horror yesterday as a 5-year-old was thrown off her mount and trampled by an out-of-control team of horses pulling a wagon in Tucson, Arizona.
She later died.
Two other girls riding beside her managed to get out of the way.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10425507



Egypt blogger jailed for insulting Islam

3:15PM Friday February 23, 2007
ALEXANDRIA, Egypt - An Egyptian blogger was convicted for insulting Islam and Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak yesterday and sentenced to four years in jail over his writings on the internet.
Abdel Karim Suleiman, a former law student in his early 20s, was the first blogger to stand trial in Egypt for his internet writings. He has been in custody since November over eight articles he wrote on his blog (www.rezgar.com/debat) since 2004.
Suleiman, a Muslim and a liberal, has not denied writing the articles but said they merely represented his own views.
- REUTERS

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/category/story.cfm?c_id=301&objectid=10425437


Designs from Islamic artists streets ahead of West
5:00AM Saturday February 24, 2007
ISLAM - Islamic artists were exploiting a mathematical principle to decorate buildings with complicated patterns of tiles more than 500 years before its discovery in the West.
The decorative tilework that adorns some medieval Islamic buildings has been found to use basic geometric shapes that form a complex and highly intricate tiling pattern which does not repeat itself.
In modern mathematics the principal of non-repeating patterns on a flat surface is known as quasicrystal geometry. The most famous example is known as Penrose tiling, after the Oxford mathematician Roger Penrose who was thought to have discovered it 30 years ago.
But two American mathematicians believe that near-perfect quasicrystal geometry was practised by Islamic scholars earlier than the 15th century when it was used to decorate the walls of important buildings.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/category/story.cfm?c_id=301&objectid=10425493



Mother rots in Saudi jail as in-laws try to force divorce
5:00AM Monday February 19, 2007
By Daniel Howden
DAMMAN - Fatima al-Timani is near the end of her sixth month in prison in the Saudi town of Damman. Her only crime is to refuse to be separated from the man to whom she had been happily married for four years and with whom she has two children.
Fatima is the latest victim of a growing practice of forced divorce, where relatives have used hardline Islamic courts to dissolve matches against the will of the married couple.
The plight of 34-year-old Fatima, who was pregnant when court proceedings began in 2005 and is now in prison with her 1-year-old son, Suleiman, has drawn widespread public sympathy.
She is forbidden to see her husband, Mansour al-Timani. He now looks after their 2-year-old son, Noha, who has been allowed only occasional visits to his mother.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/category/story.cfm?c_id=301&objectid=10424611



Anne Frank's family sought US visa, letters show
3:15PM Thursday February 15, 2007
By Tom Hals
NEW YORK - The father of Anne Frank, the Jewish girl whose diaries of life hiding from the Nazis became world famous, sought money and help obtaining a US visa from a wealthy New York friend in hopes of escaping Europe, according to documents released today.
Frank asked for US$5000 ($7222) from college friend Nathan Strauss Jr, whose father at the time owned Macy's department store, as he tried to escape Holland with his wife, mother-in-law and daughters Margot and Anne, according documents from the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research in New York City.
"This is the first concrete evidence that he did actually pursue the possibility of escape from Holland," said David Engel, a New York University professor.
A YIVO volunteer discovered the correspondence among the millions of documents in its archives in mid-2005, but the institute had to resolve copyright issues before putting them on display.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/category/story.cfm?c_id=301&objectid=10424170

continued ...

This is a cervix without any threat of cancer. No virus. No cancer. I didn't recall a cervix was an erotic sex object

 
Posted by Picasa


If you click on the title of this entry it will take you to a discussion of cervical cancer in the USA and how every state in the union is performing in preventing it with the 'ancient' art of Pap Smears.

Why is it that society begrudges women a life? It's just amazing to have an entire state take a huge backward leap in time to allow cancer deaths. If one clicks on the title of the entry below and look for Texas you will find a state that ranks among the poorest in performance in protecting women. THE POOREST PERFORMER.

Now, to realize the level of poor performance in the entire nation with only four states, Illinois, Maryland, North Carolina and Massachusetts receiving a 'VERY GOOD' rating (There are no EXCELLANT ratings. None.) is to realize how important this vaccine is for a happy and care free life. No more Pap Smears if proven in time to be very effective. No more chances of death. Care free. Is there something wrong with a woman having a carefree life? I guess in Texas there is.

To be complete about this issue there are some side effects:


HPV Vaccine's Side Effects Come To Light (click on)

Kim Mulvihill, M.D.
Reporting

(CBS 5) SAN FRANCISCO Federal health officials presented new data Wednesday on the adverse reactions of a vaccine for human papilloma virus that also works to prevent some cancer in women.

The vaccine, Gardasil, acts to prevent cervical cancer by blocking certain strains of the human papilloma virus.

Hundreds of thousands of girls and young women have gotten at least one dose of Gardasil since the FDA approved it last June.

Dr. Barbara Moscicki is a pediatrician at the University of California at San Francisco Medical Center and has studied Gardasil. The vaccine represents a breakthrough, says Dr. Moscicki, and that "this vaccine is so exciting that we can actually make a huge change in cancers worldwide."

Now, there's new information about the three-dose vaccine's adverse side effects.

The Centers for Disease Control collected more than 500 complaints since the vaccine's approval last June, including: soreness at the injection site, fainting or dizziness and fever or nausea.
And, while Gardasil is considered safe, the vaccine is still surrounded by controversy.

Dr. Moscicki said, "We need to make the vaccine better than it is. It still only protects against 70 percent of invasive cancers. It doesn't protect 100 percent, and isn't that what we would like?"

There's also a concern brewing over making the vaccine mandatory for 11- and 12-year-old girls in order to attend school.

At least 20 states are considering it, including California. Critics complain the action preempts parental choice and may promote promiscuity.

One mother in San Francisco told CBS 5 HealthWatch that she's "very much for abstinence. I think that should be emphasized much more because with abstinence you have no need for the drugs and no exposure to the virus and I think that really does solve the problem."

However, 44 percent of teens in a recent survey report they've already had intercourse or oral sex by the end of 10th grade, and that young girls who have sex too soon face a risk that a vaccine can't prevent.

Dr. Bonnie Halpern-Feisher, a psychologist at the UCSF, conducted the survey and says girls are reporting more negative consequences about having sex before they are emotionally ready, and that they are "feeling guilty, feeling bad about themselves and being used."

As for the California legislation that would make the vaccine mandatory for school girls, it's too early to tell if it's going to become law.

However, it's clearly time for parents to have an honest and frank talk with their teens about sex.

THERE IS absolutely no reason for women to shy away from receiving this vaccine. I wish Merck would find a way to allow all women of all ages to receive it nationwide. I feel that strongly about this vaccine.

For as long as I have been a liberated woman and realized cervical cancer is caused from a virus I have always felt this society was discounting an opportunity to save the lives of women. It feels good to have a company take an interest in a disease as horrible as cervical cancer and develope a long needed and 'justified' vaccine.

Cervical cancer is a horrible death. There is no reason for it. In an age of profiteers and little 'profit' for vaccines, it is reassuring that Merck has a product that reached for a high moral purpose and achieved it. I am pleased they are profitting from it and wish they would use those profits to do more vital research.

Governor Perry and every governor that reached out to protect women from such a deadly disease are great people and I applaud them. You just don't know how long I have waited for this and advocated for it. It's wonderful affirmation that American cares about their girls and women.

Quite frankly, there is no BAD time to talk about sex with adolescents. The less mystery and the more they have self esteem that includes their developing sexuality the sooner they accept their responsibility toward it.

Merck might want to develop an infant vaccine so there doesn't have to be a discussion of sex, but, then the extremists would find another reason to reject it.

We need a federal mandate to vaccinate all girls with this vaccine, no different than the meningitis vaccine (click on).

The Christian extremists are putting their children in harms' way. This is a matter of the federal government doing it's job. I don't mean to victimize anyone here, but, everyone is aware of the issue with blood transfusions and Jehovah's Witness. When it comes to children there is not a hospital around, worth it's salt, that won't take control and save a child's life in the face of parent protests. This is the same thing. We just need to get on with it. I am surprised at the negligence toward their children's health these educated people are showing.

Mandate it !

Save lives.