Friday, June 7, 2013

The Circle of Trust

U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice addresses the media following a UN Security Council meeting on July 11, 2012 in New York City. Susan Rice was one of the first foreign-policy advisers to join Obama's presidential campaign

Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images

With her appointment as national security adviser, Susan Rice stands to become the most important figure on President Obama?s foreign-policy team?except for Obama himself.

This administration famously makes policy from the top down. In no realm is this more true than foreign policy. And in her new post (which, significantly for her, does not require Senate confirmation), Rice will have access to the man at the very top, several times a day, at a moment?s notice.

National security advisers fill whatever role their president wants them to fill. Some, like McGeorge Bundy under John F. Kennedy or Colin Powell under Ronald Reagan, focus on making the interagency machinery run like clockwork. Some, like Condoleezza Rice under George W. Bush, focus on briefing the president and codifying his instincts into policy. Some, like Brent Scowcroft under George H.W. Bush, do both.

Susan Rice will be the third person to have the job in the Obama White House. The first, retired general James Jones, was picked for his close contacts throughout the defense establishment, but the new president soon realized that he needed someone with more political agility. He turned more and more to Jones? deputy, Thomas Donilon, who?d worked on Obama?s presidential campaign.

When Jones washed out after less than two years, Donilon succeeded him, to the dismay of some, including Defense Secretary Robert Gates, who at least initially saw him as a sharp-elbowed politico out of his depth on policy matters. Donilon has grown in the office, though he is still rough-edged in manner, and some see his incessant demand for more and more briefing papers, and longer and longer meetings, as reflecting not just the complexity of the issues but also a tendency to view each emerging crisis on its own terms, not as one piece of a broader mosaic.

This shortcoming may be the result of factors beyond any administration?s control: the rapid reshaping of the international system in the post-Cold War era; the emergence of new, possibly revolutionary actors in long-stable (even long-stagnant) regions of strategic importance; and the resulting diminution of leverage held by any nation, even one as powerful as the United States.

And yet the Obama administration could be shaping the world a bit more actively than it?s managed to do so far (though it?s hard to say, as it would be for any American president in these times, whether the shaping would be for the better or worse). Even some of Obama?s most avid defenders concede that decision-making is too centralized and dissenting voices are too marginalized.

The State Department is not likely to be the locus of new ideas or fresh thinking. The new secretary of state, John Kerry, is spending most of his time on the road, putting out fires and trying to form common ground with other leaders. He?s well suited for these urgent tasks, but they leave little room for mulling the wider implications and he seems to have developed no inner circle, no corps of trusted, bright advisers to help direct the broader thinking.

Over at the Pentagon, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel is still finding his footing, and his most challenging tasks concern ways to cut the budget while preserving the military?s missions and the service chiefs? vested interests?a complex enterprise but not necessarily the stuff of geostrategy.

This is where Susan Rice can step in.

She?s no Brent Scowcroft, though she does have years of experience in the world of foreign policy, having served as a senior official on President Clinton?s National Security Council as well as Obama?s U.N. ambassador.

Even her admirers wince at her abrasive style, which they say makes Donilon?s most ill-tempered moments seem mild by comparison. When the Russians vetoed a U.N. Security Council resolution against Syria, Rice threw a public fit, declaring that the United States was ?disgusted? at their ?shameful? behavior?not exactly diplomatic behavior and oddly impervious of the fact that we too have been known on occasion to block the condemnation of horrible allies. When the Europeans were pushing for action on Libya and Obama was still deciding what to do, Rice snapped at the French ambassador, ?You?re not going to drag us into your shitty war.?

And yet she has proved herself an effective player when the agenda is in place. For instance, she evolved into a leading force in the campaign, within the Obama administration and the Security Council, to help the Libyan rebels overthrow Qaddafi.

Ultimately, though, President Obama is his own national-security adviser. He has appointed Susan Rice to fill the formal slot because?as he said when he was considering her to be secretary of state?she reflects his views on foreign policy to a T.

Rice was one of the first foreign-policy advisers to join his presidential campaign. (Samantha Power, an NSC official who has now been nominated to replace Rice at the U.N., was another early joiner.) He has continued to consult with Rice routinely, and, in her new job, she is likely to be as close to Obama?s ear as any national security adviser has been to any president.

What?s not clear is whether she has the bureaucratic moxie, the intellectual chops, and, above all, the creative flexibility not just to put the boss? orders into action but to widen the sphere, open the chutes, bring in new ideas, and weave them?along with the administration?s own disparate strands of thinking?into a cohesive whole. One thing is clear: If she can?t do it, no one else is in a position to do so.

Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/war_stories/2013/06/susan_rice_to_become_national_security_adviser_the_former_u_n_ambassador.html

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Thursday, June 6, 2013

Carrie Underwood takes video of year at CMT Awards

Brian Kelley, left, and Tyler Hubbard, right, of Florida Georgia Line, and Nelly perform at the 2013 CMT Music Awards at Bridgestone Arena on Wednesday, June 5, 2013, in Nashville, Tenn. (Photo by Donn Jones/Invision/AP)

Brian Kelley, left, and Tyler Hubbard, right, of Florida Georgia Line, and Nelly perform at the 2013 CMT Music Awards at Bridgestone Arena on Wednesday, June 5, 2013, in Nashville, Tenn. (Photo by Donn Jones/Invision/AP)

Carrie Underwood pauses on stage at the 2013 CMT Music Awards at Bridgestone Arena on Wednesday, June 5, 2013, in Nashville, Tenn. (Photo by Frank Micelotta/Invision/AP)

Carrie Underwood performs at the 2013 CMT Music Awards at Bridgestone Arena on Wednesday, June 5, 2013, in Nashville, Tenn. (Photo by Donn Jones/Invision/AP)

Jason Aldean, left, and Kristen Bell speak in the audience at the 2013 CMT Music Awards at Bridgestone Arena on Wednesday, June 5, 2013, in Nashville, Tenn. (Photo by Donn Jones/Invision/AP)

(AP) ? Carrie Underwood's awesome week got off to a roaring start at the CMT Music Awards.

Underwood won top honor video of the year Wednesday night for "Blown Away," capping the evening with an emotional tribute to Oklahoma tornado victims before taking the fan-voted award for the second year in a row. Miranda Lambert and Florida Georgia Line were the night's top winners with two awards apiece.

"The good Lord has been very good to me ? well, to all of us in this room ? for a very long time," Underwood told the crowd after the win.

Underwood ? the top winner in CMT Awards history with 10 belt buckles, including four for video of the year ? also is celebrating the opening of a Country Music Hall of Fame exhibit and five years with the Grand Ole Opry. She'll close down the Country Music Association Festival on Sunday night. All of this comes less than two weeks after joining the Rolling Stones in Toronto on May 25 ? the eighth anniversary of her win on "American Idol."

It was "Idol" that gave Underwood her close relationship with fans, and they continue to show up for her.

"It's crazy and it's amazing and it's all about the fans," Underwood said backstage before leaning against the wall to chat with Lenny Kravitz. "It still blows my mind."

The night belonged to Lambert and FGL before Underwood's flourish at the finish.

The duo of Tyler Hubbard and Brian Kelley won breakthrough video and duo video of the year on their breakthrough hit "Cruise," then performed a remixed version of the song with rapper Nelly to close the show.

The breezy, easy-grooving "Cruise" pushed the duo to country stardom last year. Their remix with Nelly moved into the top five on Billboard's Hot 100 pop songs list this week, making it the rare country crossover hit and an early candidate for song of the summer.

"That came from the songwriting gods themselves," Hubbard said backstage after the show. "We wrote that song with a couple of buddies a few years back. It started at our house. We watched it go from the living room to the stage to the studio to the radio, and it's just continued to build. It's been a wild thing to watch."

Lambert won female video of the year for "Mama's Broken Heart" and CMT performance video of the year for "Over You," recorded during the 2012 "CMT Artist of the Year" broadcast.

"I just got a kiss from Lenny Kravitz," Lambert said as she took the stage for her second trophy. "That was an award in itself."

Much of the early focus of the show was on country's biggest male star, Jason Aldean. Making his first appearance as an awards show co-host, he kicked off the show by playing "American Woman" with Kravitz, got hosting tips from an unlikely cast of characters that included Blake Shelton, Reba McEntire, Kelsey Grammer, Vince Vaughn, Lorraine Bracco and Luke Bryan.

He also won collaborative video of the year for "The Only Way I Know" with Bryan and Church, who were among the top nominees coming into the show with Lambert.

Lady Antebellum won group video of the year for "Downtown" and took the stage with mother-to-be Hillary Scott about a month from her due date.

"This is Hillary's maternity present coming early," Charles Kelley said.

Lambert's husband Blake Shelton won male video of the year for "Sure Be Cool If You Did" ? an award presented by Lambert. Shelton was traveling due to his duties as a coach on TV's "The Voice," so Lambert accepted, shouting, "Honey, I'm drinking for two tonight."

The CMT Awards are rarely focused on winners of the belt buckle trophy and Wednesday night was no different.

Underwood had the most poignant moment of the night with "See You Again," her tribute to tornado victims in her home state. Swift had the night's most eye-catching performance, singing "Red" with a color guard of flag bearers while playing electric guitar and wearing a red-and-black shorts-and-overcoat ensemble that had a Sgt. Pepper feel to it.

Nicole Kidman with husband Keith Urban joined in as Darius Rucker and Lady Antebellum led the crowd at Bridgestone Arena in a "Wagon Wheel" sing-a-long. Hunter Hayes took it outside and walked through a crowd of hundreds before taking the stage, and Bryan performed across the street at Lower Broadway venue The Stage.

And Little Big Town sang Fleetwood Mac's "The Chain" as fog enveloped the stage and Urban joined them for an extended guitar solo.

___

Online:

http://cmt.com

___

Follow AP Music Writer Chris Talbott: http://twitter.com/Chris_Talbott.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-06-06-Music-CMT%20Music%20Awards/id-10a7df7ee928488da692ffdde1627732

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Alejandra Ruani: Do You Really Want The Top Job? 7 Lessons Gloria Feldt Taught Me About Our New Female Power

"The most confounding problem facing women today isn't that doors aren't open, but that not enough women are walking through them," argues Gloria Feldt, best-selling author of the book No Excuses and founder of the movement Take The Lead.

So, what's the solution?

In my recent interview with Gloria, she explains how you can let go of that outdated male-oriented definition of power, overcome your internal resistance to having a successful career and feel fulfilled in all aspects of your life.

Gloria believes you really can have it all.

In the next few paragraphs, she'll teach you how.


Lesson No. 1: Don't give away the power to define yourself.

Alejandra: One of the first things that stood out in your book is your regret about giving away the power to define yourself. Tell me about that.

Gloria: Even if you've done what other people think are amazing things in your life, that doesn't necessarily mean that you've come to terms with embracing your own potential. I had lived the first part of my life doing what I thought the culture of the time wanted me to do. I wanted to be the perfect wife, the perfect mother, and then I became a community volunteer. I wanted to do all those things perfectly well, but I didn't do it starting from my own intention. There's nothing wrong doing things for other people, it's a good thing, but I think you can lose yourself in it. In order to realize your potential, you need to define yourself first, before someone else defines you. We are all going to be defined. Better to do it for ourselves in a way that is authentic and meaningful to us than to allow others to present us to the world.

Lesson No. 2: It's not your lack of ambition. It's your lack of intention.

Alejandra: Let's talk about your 'Hillary moment.'

Gloria: In 2008, I was asked by Elle Magazine to write an article about women running for office. That was at the moment when it appeared that we might have had our first female president. The article was supposed to be optimistic and positive. Instead, what I found was that only 18% of Congress is female. It's not because they can't win. It's because women don't run. If women run, they're as statistically likely to win as men. Despite the fact that there are now dozens of organizations spending millions of dollars every year to recruit and train women to run for office, they're still 40% less likely than men to even think about running for office. There's been some research and the conclusion was that women don't have as much ambition as men. But, after interviewing women all over the country, I concluded is that it's not a lack of ambition at all. If a woman sees an injustice or if she feels that something is not right for her children or her family, she will do almost anything. She doesn't seek power for power's sake. So, I concluded it's not a lack of ambition, it's a lack of intention. There's something that men have: Baby boys bounce out of the womb knowing the world is their oyster. They don't question whether they have the right, whether they should run for office or whether they should be CEO. It's assumed. It's so much part of the culture. It's the standard when it comes to 'leader.' Women are still the 'other' when it comes to being a leader. We don't see ourselves as leaders and we don't have that intention in the same way that men do from the moment of birth.

Lesson No. 3: If you want to lead, don't think about how others feel about you.

Alejandra: What's holding women back?

Gloria: Girls are still socialized first to think about how others feel about them, and to be concerned about that. That's not a bad thing, but it works against you when in this whole field of leadership. It turns out that the dynamics are exactly the same whether we're talking about politics or business or the workplace, and even personal life. From the boardroom to the bedroom, you can say. The dynamics are exactly the same. It's our own relationship with power that holds us back. A culturally learned aversion to taking power.

Lesson No. 4: Your definition of power is the wrong one. Try this one.

Alejandra: We think of power as something not so positive...

Gloria: We have in our minds an old, outdated and no longer really functional definition of power: as the 'power over'-- the power to make you do something. So we, as women, at best we've been discriminated against, and at worst we've been raped and beaten. So, why would we want that kind of power? But we can change the definition of power in our own minds. From that outdated and hierarchical male-defined 'power over,' to an expansive, full of promise, innovative 'power to.' The power to make life better. For ourselves, our families, our communities, our world. The power to transform our work, our businesses, our creativity. Women will then say 'I want that kind of power.' As soon as we can change the paradigm of power in our own thinking and in our culture, we'll be in a much healthier place for women and for men. For children and for everybody.

Lesson No. 5: If you can't find female role models, become one.

Alejandra:
Perhaps we don't have many examples to look at?

Gloria: We don't have many female role models in high-powered positions. If you can't see it, you can't be it. Women's history is not typically taught, even though there are some amazing women in history. I use the example of Ada Lovelace, who actually is the reason why we have computers. She created the first algorithms that enabled programming to ever happen. But the credit for her work was all taken by the man she was working with. Nobody knows about her. There couldn't have been a Steve Jobs if she hadn't done what she did. So, we need to learn our history and we need to understand that reaching equality is a long-term process. Even though now we have doors open and women can apply to any job they wish to, many women don't apply for them. Partly because they can't figure out how they can manage to take care of their families and go for that high-powered job. So, the problem is now that the doors are open and women are certainly capable of doing the CEO job or some other high-powered job. But she needs to take the lead and change the system.

Lesson No. 6: Don't follow your dream, lead it.

Alejandra: She's a mother who would love the top job, but holds back worried about having no time or energy left to enjoy her children. How can she overcome this internal resistance?

Gloria: One of the things that I do is to talk about what I call 'sister courage' -- the principles that I used in movement building to change any kind of system. For example, if you're in a workplace where you feel that having flex time would be beneficial and would make for a healthier workplace for you and other employees (including men), instead of isolating yourself and thinking it's your problem, you need to reach out. You don't have to figure out by yourself how you can juggle everything and miss your child's piano recital or something like that when you don't need to. Instead, use these very simple principles:

  1. Be a sister. Reach out to somebody else who you think may have the same problem or who you may have heard talking about the same problem or issue.
  2. Have the courage to ask for help. We often feel isolated. We feel like we can't ask for help. Sometimes it's just a matter of asking and the other person is usually very happy to help out. Have the courage to put the issues on the table and talk about them.
  3. Join forces. If you think there needs to be some systemic change, then you need to get your facts together and talk to other people who share your concerns. Make sure that you all have the same message and the same information. Let's assume it is about flex time. There is now sufficient data to show that by giving employees flexible hours and by evaluating them based on accomplishments rather than by how many hours they sit at their desk, that actually morale goes up, and, more importantly, productivity goes up. So, there is your little mini-movement. You can go to your HR department or you can go to your CEO. You can present your case, and you'll most likely get some change.

The message is that we all have power. Even if you're not in a powerful job. If you have quite a few people that have the same concerns, together, you go talk to a senior person or HR, there's strength in those numbers. You can make change happen. We see that all the time out there in the world. We have reached a point where we have to take that responsibility ourselves.

Lesson Number 7: You deserve that leadership position, so take the lead.

Alejandra: Tell me more about your goal to bring women to a fair and equal share of top leadership positions by 2025.

Gloria: Just to give you a comparison, at the current rate, it will take 70 years to reach leadership parity. We need to speed things up. So, last year a colleague and I decided to form an organization which we call Take The Lead. One of our programs is a webinar series. I talk about women's relationship with power, explain each of the nine power tools and give women a template that they can use to solve problems or reach their goals. I invite you and all the women who're ready to take the lead in their lives and careers to subscribe to our newsletter and participate in our upcoming online events. Together we can make change happen.

Take Action Now

You've heard Gloria. Define your intention. Embrace your power to lead positive change. You might be the one who inspires the next generation of young professionals.

Join the conversation. What's your biggest frustration when trying to get ahead in your career? What is it costing you not to have this problem handled?

Add your voice in the comments area below. Be a sister...

?

Follow Alejandra Ruani on Twitter: www.twitter.com/Health_Divas

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alejandra-ruani-/do-you-really-want-the-top-job_b_3397246.html

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Increase Your Web site Revenue With These SSO Ideas | Promoting ...

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Wednesday, June 5, 2013

NIH Fact Sheet Lays Out Sequester Impact

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Japan's Abe targets income gains in growth strategy

TOKYO | Wed Jun 5, 2013 6:57am EDT

TOKYO (Reuters) - Prime Minister Shinzo Abe pledged to raise incomes by 3 percent annually and set up special economic zones to attract foreign businesses in the third tranche of measures aimed at boosting growth in the world's third-biggest economy.

Abe is also considering a push for public pensions and other public funds - a pool of $2 trillion - to increase returns by raising investment in equities, a government draft growth strategy showed, confirming a Reuters report.

The government will seek the view of experts and aim to reach a conclusion by autumn, the draft said. Still, such a move could face opposition from Japan's risk-averse voters.

The steps are the last batch of proposals in a growth strategy that includes measures to mobilize women in the workforce, boost private investment and deregulate some sectors. The package is set to be approved by the cabinet on June 14 along with macro-economic policy guidelines including fiscal reform targets to address Japan's massive public debt.

However, some analysts were skeptical the strategy would achieve the goals of the prime minister's "Abenomics" policy given a lack of bold steps, such as changes to promote labor market flexibility and make it easier for companies to exit dying businesses while shifting to growth areas.

Tokyo share prices fell 3.8 percent on the day, partly on disappointment over Abe's speech.

"The government has come up with rosy numerical targets but I doubt any of these could be met or that such a targeting policy could work out as planned," said Hideo Kumano, chief economist at Dai-ichi Life Research Institute. "After all, the government cannot control every economic activity just like the central bank cannot control long-term interest rates."

"'Abenomics' should not lean toward a planned economy and market players are attaching greater importance to deregulation, not these numerical targets."

ABE'S "THIRD ARROW"

The Bank of Japan's sweeping monetary expansion, announced in April, aims to achieve 2 percent inflation in less than 2 years. Analysts say wages will need to rise faster to put consumer prices and growth on a sustainable upward track.

Abe is wary of appearing to benefit corporations over consumers ahead of a July 21 upper house election, but he is also reluctant to take bold steps that might hurt backers of his conservative Liberal Democratic Party (LDP).

"I think the most important target to achieve is per capita gross national income," Abe said in a speech on Wednesday to unveil steps aimed at engineering long-term growth.

"That's because the aim of our growth strategy is nothing other than to create jobs for enthusiastic people and raise take-home pay for those who are working hard.

"In short, to let households benefit. That's the point."

The growth strategy is the "Third Arrow" in his "Abenomics" prescription to end deflation and spur sustainable growth. The first two "arrows" are hyper-easy monetary policy and big government spending.

The popular premier, who took office in December after his party's big election win, said he would target annual gains of 3 percent or more in gross national income per capita. That would be an increase of 1.5 million yen ($15,000) over 10 years from around 3.84 million yen in 2012.

The Nikkei's fall on Wednesday continued a slide begun on May 23, as investors turned cautious after a rally of more than 50 percent that saw the market reach a 5-1/2 year high.

The yen rose as high as 99.37 to the dollar after trading around 100 yen against the dollar earlier in the day, having fallen to 4-1/2-year low of 103.74 yen late last month.

"The comments from Abe lacked some of the detail the market had been looking for and left it disappointed," said Ian Stannard, head of European FX strategy at Morgan Stanley.

A pull back in Japanese share prices is a worry for Abe ahead of the July election, which his party is expected to win but needs to do so decisively to cement its grip on power.

HARD TO HIT TARGET?

Some analysts said that it was hard to see how the income gain target could be reached - especially if, as expected, the growth plan eventually includes steps that would make it easier to use temporary workers, who tend to be lower paid.

Others held out hope of more reforms down the road.

"From labor market reform to business investment and deregulation, the growth strategy is going in the right direction, but it lacks bold steps such as facilitating labor mobility, immigration and corporate tax cuts," said Masayuki Kichikawa, chief Japan economist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch. "I guess contentious issues may need to wait until after the upper house election."

Abe added more targets to those he has already announced, aiming to boost power-related investment one and a half times to 30 trillion yen over the next decade and double the balance of inward foreign direct investment to 35 trillion yen by 2020.

The special economic zones, to be created in Tokyo and other big cities, are expected to be allowed to introduce corporate tax cuts and ease regulations to attract businesses.

Abe also said the government would allow the sale over the Internet of most over-the-counter drugs as part of efforts to mobilize the Internet for growth.

Japan has already vowed to target private-sector investment of 70 trillion yen annually, the level before the 2008 financial crisis and up about 10 percent from current levels.

The government also aims to triple infrastructure exports, such as bullet trains and nuclear plants, to 30 trillion yen.

It wants to double farm exports by 2020 and have 70 percent of exports covered by free trade deals by 2018, compared with around 19 percent now, by pushing participation in the U.S.-led Trans-Pacific Economic Partnership (TPP) and other trade deals.

(Writing by Linda Sieg; Editing by Shri Navaratnam and Neil Fullick)

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/reuters/topNews/~3/aavRARHwzXg/story01.htm

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Taylor Swift Performs with Rolling Stones in Chicago

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Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Stars come out to congratulate UFC champ Benson Henderson for black belt

UFC lightweight champion Benson Henderson already has a shiny gold belt for his UFC championship. On Monday, he received his black belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu. Even as fighters win championships, they still covet the black belt because of what it means in how they've progressed in one area of the sport.

The black belt was also special to Henderson's coach, John Crouch. He contacted a wide group of friends, from NFL player Larry Fitzgerald to actor Ed O'Neil, to say congratulations to Henderson. Though the stars are fun to watch, it's particularly moving to hear from Henderson's mom and his wrestling coaches.

Related coverage on Yahoo! Sports:
? Assembly speaker standing in the way of law legalizing MMA in New York
? Mauricio 'Shogun' Rua won't be fighting in UFC 161 after all
? Quinton 'Rampage' Jackson signs with Bellator

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/stars-come-congratulate-ufc-champ-benson-henderson-black-130435607.html

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Nevada lawmakers pass bills in special session

CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) ? Nevada lawmakers got off to a slow start but picked up steam and are debating five bills in a special legislative session called overnight by Gov. Brian Sandoval.

Sandoval ordered a special session before dawn Tuesday when lawmakers failed to take final action on a handful of measures in the four-month regulation session that ended just hours earlier at midnight.

Action on bills dealing with more police officers in Clark County, class-size reduction, charter schools and tax abatements for new businesses were dealt with swiftly once the process began.

Sandoval urged legislators to wrap up the special session by 8 a.m., but the state constitution provides 20 days.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nevada-lawmakers-pass-bills-special-session-153049242.html

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Monday, June 3, 2013

We need your comments... Leave a bunch on this article for your chance to win the device of your dreams!!

We're testing out the new cross-site commenting system we're going to be using for Talk Mobile articles across Android Central, CrackBerry, iMore and WPCentral. This post is our first public test. Help us stress test it! Leave comments, help us find any bugs, and we'll reward you with the chance to win $600 towards the device of your dreams. Keep reading for all the details!

    


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Gigabyte shows four prototype BRIX mini PCs, including models with projectors and wireless charging

Gigabyte shows four prototype BRIX mini PCs, one with a projector

Gigabyte said that we'd have at least a few BRIX mini PCs to choose from. At Computex, however, it's showing four new prototypes that could lead to a much larger catalog. Two of them are run-of-the-mill designs with AMD Kabini and Intel Haswell processors -- nice enough, but more evolution than revolution. The other two are decidedly more exotic, though. One includes a wireless charging pad to charge a smartphone in a pinch, while the other carries a pico projector for on-the-spot presentations. Although Gigabyte hasn't mentioned whether or not these BRIX models will reach production, we'd wager that the conservative systems are more likely to reach our desks.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/03/gigabyte-shows-four-prototype-brix-mini-pcs/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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A Simple Vinegar Test Cut Cervical Cancer Death Rates By A Third ...

AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool

In this Tuesday, May 21, 2013 photo, Usha Devi, right, who was suffering from cervical cancer, talks with health workers from Tata Memorial Hospital in a slum in Mumbai, India. A simple vinegar test slashed cervical cancer death rates by one-third in a remarkable study of 150,000 women in the slums of India, where the disease is the top cancer killer of women. Experts called the outcome ?amazing? and said this quick, cheap test could save tens of thousands of lives each year in developing countries by spotting early signs of cancer, allowing treatment before it?s too late. Devi, one of the women in the study, says it saved her life.

MUMBAI, India (AP) ? A simple vinegar test slashed cervical cancer death rates by one-third in a remarkable study of 150,000 women in the slums of India, where the disease is the top cancer killer of women.

Doctors reported the results Sunday at a cancer conference in Chicago. Experts called the outcome "amazing" and said this quick, cheap test could save tens of thousands of lives each year in developing countries by spotting early signs of cancer, allowing treatment before it's too late.

Usha Devi, one of the women in the study, says it saved her life.

"Many women refused to get screened. Some of them died of cancer later," Devi said. "Now I feel everyone should get tested. I got my life back because of these tests."

Pap smears and tests for HPV, a virus that causes most cervical cancers, have slashed cases and deaths in the United States. But poor countries can't afford those screening tools.

This study tried a test that costs very little and can be done by local people with just two weeks of training and no fancy lab equipment. They swab the cervix with diluted vinegar, which can make abnormal cells briefly change color.

This low-tech visual exam cut the cervical cancer death rate by 31 percent, the study found. It could prevent 22,000 deaths in India and 72,600 worldwide each year, researchers estimate.

"That's amazing. That's remarkable. It's a very exciting result," said Dr. Ted Trimble of the National Cancer Institute in the U.S., the main sponsor of the study.

The story of research participant Usha Devi is not an unusual one. Despite having given birth to four children, she had never had a gynecological exam. She had been bleeding heavily for several years, hoping patience and prayers would fix things.

"Everyone said it would go away, and every time I thought about going to the doctor there was either no money or something else would come up," she said, sitting in a tiny room that serves as bedroom, kitchen, bathroom and living room for her entire family.

One day she found a card from health workers trying to convince women to join the study. Devi is in her late 40s and like many poor Indians doesn't know her date of birth. She learned she had advanced cervical cancer. The study paid for surgery to remove her uterus and cervix.

The research effort was led by Dr. Surendra Shastri of Tata Memorial Hospital in Mumbai. India has nearly one-third of the world's cases of cervical cancer ? more than 140,000 each year.

"It's just not possible to provide Pap smear screening in developing countries. We don't have that kind of money" or the staff or equipment, so a simpler method had to be found, Shastri said.

Starting in 1998, researchers enrolled 75,360 women to be screened every two years with the vinegar test. Another 76,178 women were chosen for a control, or comparison group that just got cancer education at the start of the study and vouchers for a free Pap test ? if they could get to the hospital to have one. Women in either group found to have cancer were offered free treatment at the hospital.

Still, this quick and free cancer screening was a hard sell in a deeply conservative country where women are subservient and need permission from husbands, fathers or others for even routine decisions. Social workers were sent into the slums to win people over.

"We went to every single house in the neighborhood assigned to us introducing ourselves and asking them to come to our health talks. They used to come out of curiosity, listen to the talk but when we asked them to get screened they would totally refuse," said one social worker, Vaishnavi Bhagat. "The women were both scared and shy."

One woman who did agree to testing jumped up from the table when she was examined with a speculum. "She started screaming that we had stolen her kidney," Bhagat said. Another health worker was beaten by people in the neighborhood when women realized they would have to disrobe to be screened.

"There was a sense of shame about taking their clothes off. A lot of them had their babies at home and had never been to a doctor," said one health worker, Urmila Hadkar. "Sometimes just the idea of getting tested for cancer scared them. They would start crying even before being tested."

But screening worked. The quality of screening by health workers was comparable to that of an expert gynecologist, researchers reported. The study was planned for 16 years, but results at 12 years showed lives were saved with the screening. So independent monitors advised offering it to the women in the comparison group.

An ethics controversy developed during the study. The U.S. Office for Human Research Protections faulted researchers for not adequately informing participants in the comparison group about Pap tests for screening. A letter from the agency in March indicated officials seemed to accept many of the remedies study leaders had implemented.

Others defended the study.

"We looked at the ethics very carefully" and felt them to be sound, and visited the project in India, said Trimble of the National Cancer Institute.

Dr. Sandra Swain, a cancer specialist at Medstar Washington Hospital Center, also defended the research. She is president of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, and the research results were presented at that group's meeting in Chicago on Sunday.

"There really was no wrongdoing there," she said. "They have no screening anyway," so there is no standard of care now.

Officials in India already are making plans to expand the vinegar testing to a wider population.

Many poor countries can't afford mammograms for breast cancer screening either. The India study also has been testing breast exams by health workers as an alternative. Preliminary results suggest breast cancers are being found at an earlier stage, but it's too soon to know if that will save lives because not enough women have died yet to compare the groups, said Trimble of the National Cancer Institute.

More progress against cervical cancer may come from last month's announcement that two companies will drastically lower prices on HPV vaccines for poor countries. Pilot projects will begin in Asia and Africa; the campaign aims to vaccinate more than 30 million girls in more than 40 countries by 2020.

___

Associated Press Chief Medical Writer Marilynn Marchione reported from Chicago.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/a-simple-vineger-test-cut-cervical-cancer-death-rates-by-a-third-in-india-2013-6

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Trust issues remain

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When former NFL quarterback Donovan McNabb recently called out the Cowboys for giving quarterback Tony Romo a nine-figure contract, many wondered whether this meant that McNabb would criticize any quarterbacks who in his mind justify it, or whether he?d simply use his fairly new media platform to settle scores with former rivals.

McNabb, apparently, is taking the more balanced approach.

He tells Mike Wise of the Washington Post that Redskins quarterback Robert Griffin III is doing ?too much right now; it?s just too much.?

Specifically, the second overall pick in 1999 believes that propensity of the second overall pick in 2012 to find and linger in the spotlight will potentially hurt the team.

?I get some of things he?s doing to draw attention to himself: the Adidas commercials, going out and enjoying the life of a young, famous NFL quarterback.? I understand RG has a lot of stuff going on,? McNabb said.? ?But if you?re coming off ACL surgery, you don?t need to be having a press conference at OTAs.? Every week?? Really?? It becomes a circus, a sideshow.? It takes away from the focus of what those sessions are supposed to be about:? the team.?

McNabb compared the situation to the manner in which his coach in Philly handled similar situations.? ?One thing Andy Reid did is he never let the injured guys become the story if they were off to the side at practice,? McNabb said.? ?He thought it took away from the guys who were grinding and practicing every day.

?So when I look up on TV and see him up there talking all the time about how great he?s doing ? or doing jumping jacks or someone else talking about his supernatural healing powers ? I wonder to myself:? Is this about selling tickets to the fans or what?

?I don?t blame him.? They?re letting him do it.? But at some point, it can be counterproductive.? You can set yourself up for more criticism later.?

Criticism also can come from comments made by Griffin?s father, who recently expressed public concern that the Redskins expect Griffin III to run too much.

?His dad should have never done a one-on-one interview like that,? McNabb told Wise.? ?You can?t say what he said because it almost undermines his son, who has to answer all the questions about it later.? Now, we all know what he said was right.? But that?s something you voice behind closed doors because otherwise it creates a wedge that didn?t have to be there.? No team needs those kinds of things hovering over them.?

So McNabb has offered assistance to Griffin III.? And Griffin II.

?I would really like for me and my dad to sit down with he and his dad just to tell them what we went through and talk about our experiences,? McNabb said.

McNabb tried to reach out to Griffin last year, but McNabb never heard from him.? In contrast, McNabb has spoken to Russsell Wilson ?many times,? because as McNabb explained it, ?I know what it?s like to be young, good and have the world looking at you.?

Regardless of whether McNabb is merely looking for the new generation of quarterbacks to do some NFC-championship-ring-kissing, his experiences and knowledge would be useful to any young player.

Of course, by taking his criticism of Griffin III public, the phone now may never ring.? Especially given McNabb?s views on the Bed, Bath & Beyond wedding-gift controversy.

?When that happens, it just looks like rich people receiving things from the poor,? McNabb said.? ?I know his intention wasn?t that, but it?s the perception people take from it.? It?s disrespectful.? You just don?t do that.?

What you also apparently don?t do is ignore Donovan McNabb.?? It?ll be interesting to see whether McNabb?s decision to call Griffin III (and II) out results in a sit-down, or provokes an equally public response.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/06/02/trust-issues-between-nfl-nflpa-could-make-it-harder-for-players-to-accept-help/related/

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Smoking gun in IRS scandal? Rep. Darrell Issa says he's close. (+video)

Republicans have sought a smoking gun that ties the IRS scandal to the Obama administration. They still don't have one, but Rep. Darrell Issa on Sunday said new evidence raises red flags.

By Mark Sappenfield,?Staff writer / June 2, 2013

House Oversight Committee Chairman Rep. Darrell Issa (R) of California holds up a document as he speaks to IRS official Lois Lerner on Capitol Hill in Washington last month. He said on Sunday that Lerner's refusal to answer questions at the hearing suggested that the IRS scandal 'was coordinated in all likelihood right out of Washington headquarters.'

Carolyn Kaster/AP

Enlarge

For all intents and purposes, the only politically relevant fact in the IRS scandal is the still-unanswered question of who, ultimately, decided to harangue tea party groups with reams of extra paperwork during the 2012 election season.

Skip to next paragraph Mark Sappenfield

Staff writer

Mark is deputy national news editor for the Monitor.

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The Obama administration has suggested that a few "rogue agents" in one Cincinnati office were to blame. And the evidence, so far, has appeared to at least partly support that claim. Media reports have painted a picture of an office overwhelmed by the task of sorting through which tax-exempt groups were actually playing according to the arcane rules of US tax law and which were not. Disproportionately, it seems, conservative groups got the runaround.?

Yet what has been lacking from the Republican viewpoint is ? if not a smoking gun, precisely ? then at least a steaming teacup. Where was the evidence that "rogue agents" were, in fact, dutiful subordinates, carrying out a clear plan of political recrimination that had its origins all the way back in Washington?

On Sunday, the House Republican tasked with carrying out that chamber's investigations offered his strongest claim yet that the IRS scandal was part of a broader Obama administration conspiracy.

"As late as last week, the administration's still trying to say there's a few rogue agents in Cincinnati, when in fact the indication is they were directly being ordered from Washington," said Rep. Darrell Issa (R) of California on CNN's "State of the Union."

His evidence? Partial transcripts of the closed-door testimony to Congress of IRS employees in the Cincinnati office.

According to one transcript, an employee was asked if the scandal could be the work of a few local rogue agents. "It's impossible," the employee said. "As an agent we are controlled by many, many people. We have to submit many, many reports. So the chance of two agents being rogue and doing things like that could never happen."

The interrogator then asked: "With respect to the particular scrutiny that was given to tea party applications, those directions emanated from Washington, is that right?"

"I believe so," the IRS employee said.

Yet Issa and fellow Republicans were careful not to go too far Sunday. Scandals are Washington's political potboilers, after all, and the authors try to leave every Sunday morning chapter on a cliffhanger.

When Candy Crowley, the host of "State of the Union," pushed Representative Issa for a clearer link ? evidence of a direct order from Washington ? he said his committee was following a paper trial to try to establish facts, but the White House had not yet supplied subpoenaed documents.

It is part of an established Washington tradition. Congressional investigators from one party ask presidents for reams of documents in the name of transparency, presidents of the other party tell Congress to buzz off, saying Congress is on a political witch hunt, and the scandal survives for another week.

In the meantime, Issa was careful not to specifically accuse anyone of anything ? while making it clear that he doesn't trust the Obama administration.

He cited Lois Lerner, the head of the IRS division on tax-exempt organizations, who last month refused to answer questions posed by Issa's committee, invoking her constitutional right not to incriminate herself.

"The reason that Lois Lerner tried to take the fifth is not because there is a rogue in Cincinnati, it's because this is a problem that was coordinated in all likelihood right out of Washington headquarters and we're getting to proving it," he added.

At one point, he even called White House spokesman Jay Carney a "paid liar."

"My gut tells me that too many people knew that this wrongdoing was going on before the election," he said. "And at least by some sort of convenient benign neglect, allowed it to go on through the election ? allowed these groups, these conservative groups, these, if you will, not friends of the president, to be disenfranchised through an election."

The idea that the Obama administration has played the part of an enabler, allowing a vindictive partisan culture to flourish in the American bureaucracy, was echoed by other Republicans Sunday morning.

"The culture of the president calling tea party groups terrorists and tea-baggers, and that entire culture has been cultivated by the president and his people, and everyone has been following," said Republican National Committee chairman Reince Priebus on "Fox News Sunday."

Added Republican strategist Karl Rove on ABC's "This Week": "People sitting in Cincinnati, Laguna Niguel, Baltimore, and Washington, D.C., listen to people like Sen. Max Baucus, Sen. Chuck Schumer, President Obama. When President Obama goes out in 2010 and calls these groups ?a threat to democracy,? he?s blowing a dog whistle.?

Rove also said further investigation would reveal further discrimination.

?We?re going to find that the IRS targeted conservative political groups, not liberal groups, and that they targeted specific individuals,? he said.

Democratic strategist David Plouffe, also on "This Week," rebutted the charges.

?There?s been no suggestion ? the [IRS] inspector general said there was no politics involved in this,? he said. ?This was not an effort driven by the White House. It would be the dumbest political effort of all time.?

At least on that point, perhaps, both sides can agree.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/HB-mL3RPM14/Smoking-gun-in-IRS-scandal-Rep.-Darrell-Issa-says-he-s-close.-video

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Sunday, June 2, 2013

Mitsubishi denies report of Renault partnership

PARIS (Reuters) - Mitsubishi Motors denied a French press report on Friday that Renault was considering a partnership with the Japanese car maker.

Le Figaro had earlier said Renault was exploring a possible cooperation deal with Mitsubishi, which already has an alliance with the French company's partner Nissan .

"This is not true," a Mitsubishi Motors spokesman said.

No one at Renault was immediately available for comment.

The newspaper cited an unnamed Renault executive and a person familiar with the situation as saying that the company was considering a cooperation project with Mitsubishi that would be similar to the partnerships it already has with other auto groups.

"Nissan is already cooperating with Mitsubishi. Renault is looking for opportunities, but hasn't yet decided for the moment," a person familiar with the situation was quoted as telling the paper. "It could be the same type of project as the cooperation with Mercedes."

Renault, which controls 43.4 percent of Nissan, has struck partnership deals on a number of projects with Daimler , owner of the Mercedes brand, and Russian carmaker Avtovaz .

In particular Renault and Mercedes have a partnership to develop future Twingo and Smart cars, commercial vehicles as well as engines.

(Reporting by Elena Berton; Additional reporting by Kentaro Sugiyama in Tokyo; Editing by Greg Mahlich)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mitsubishi-denies-report-renault-partnership-091610488.html

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Cleanup continues as storms move toward East Coast

EL RENO, Okla. (AP) ? A violent weather system that claimed 12 lives in Oklahoma and Arkansas amid?tornadoes and flash floods gave way to clearing skies as the storms trekked toward the East Coast on Sunday.

A tornado killed nine people as it charged down Interstate 40 in Oklahoma City's western suburbs on Friday night, twisting billboards and scattering cars and tractor-trailers along a roadway clogged with rush-hour motorists leaving work or fleeing the storm's path. Flash floods in Arkansas killed three early Friday, including a sheriff attempting a water rescue.

"The last two nights, I've been having hell," said Roy Stoddard, a truck driver from Depew, Okla., who was delayed by rising floodwaters at Little Rock, Ark. on Thursday. Then on Friday evening, he had to take shelter in a store's walk-in cooler during Friday evening's rush-hour in Oklahoma City as deadly weather approached.

"I know what a tornado can do," Stoddard added.

Damage from Friday night's severe weather was concentrated a few miles north of Moore, the Oklahoma City suburb pounded by an EF5 tornado on May 20 that killed 24 people. Next up, the system was approaching the densely populated Northeast.

The Storm Prediction Center in Norman predicted a slight chance of severe weather in the Northeast on Sunday, mainly from the Washington, D.C., area to northern Maine. Hail and high winds were the chief threat, though a tornado could not be ruled out, forecasters said.

Friday night's storm formed out on the prairie west of Oklahoma City, giving residents plenty of advance notice. When told to seek shelter, many ventured out and snarled traffic across the metro area ? perhaps remembering the damage from May 20.

"It was chaos. People were going southbound in the northbound lanes. Everybody was running for their lives," said Terri Black, 51, a teacher's assistant in Moore.

After seeing last month's tornado also turn homes into piles of splintered rubble, Black said she decided to try and outrun the tornado when she learned her southwest Oklahoma City home was in harm's way. She quickly regretted it.

When she realized she was a sitting duck in bumper-to-bumper traffic, Black turned around and found herself directly in the path of the most violent part of the storm. "My car was actually lifted off the road and then set back down," Black said. "The trees were leaning literally to the ground. The rain was coming down horizontally in front of my car."

Oklahoma Highway Patrol Trooper Betsy Randolph said roadways quickly became congested with the convergence of rush-hour traffic and fleeing residents.

"They had no place to go, and that's always a bad thing. They were essentially targets just waiting for a tornado to touch down," Randolph said. "I'm not sure why people do that sort of stuff, but it is very dangerous."

Friday night's victims included a mother and a baby sucked out of their car as the EF3 hit near El Reno. A 4-year-old boy died after being swept into the Oklahoma River on the south side of Oklahoma City, said Oklahoma City police Lt. Jay Barnett. The boy and other family members had sought shelter in a drainage ditch.

More than 100 people were injured by swirling debris, most with puncture wounds and lacerations, authorities said.

A total of five tornadoes struck the Oklahoma City metro area, the National Weather Service said.

Oklahoma wasn't the only state hit by violent weather Friday night. In Missouri, areas west of St. Louis received significant damage from an EF3 tornado Friday night that packed estimated winds of 150 mph. In St. Charles County, at least 71 homes were heavily damaged and 100 had slight to moderate damage, county spokeswoman Colene McEntee said.

Tens of thousands were without power, and only eight minor injuries were reported. Gov. Jay Nixon declared a state of emergency.

Northeast of St. Louis and across the Mississippi River, the city of Roxana was hit by an EF3 tornado, but National Weather Service meteorologist Jayson Gosselin said it wasn't clear whether the damage in both states came from the same EF3 twister or separate ones.

___

Sean Murphy can be reached at www.twitter.com/apseanmurphy.

___

Associated Press writer Jim Suhr in St. Louis contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cleanup-goes-storms-move-toward-east-coast-072551044.html

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Saturday, June 1, 2013

China accuses U.S. of 'prejudice' over 1989 protest comments

BEIJING (Reuters) - China accused the United States of "prejudice" on Saturday after the U.S. State Department renewed a call for Beijing to fully account for its bloody crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrators in June 1989.

The United States should "immediately rectify its wrongdoings and stop interfering in China's internal affairs so as not to sabotage China-U.S. relations", Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said in an English-language statement released via the official Xinhua news agency.

China has already reached a "clear conclusion" about the events of 1989, Hong said.

The U.S. State Department, in a statement released on its website, said China should "end harassment of those who participated in the protests and fully account for those killed, detained, or missing."

After initially tolerating the student-led demonstrations in the spring of 1989 centered on Beijing's Tiananmen Square, the Communist Party sent troops to crush the protests on the night of June 3-4, killing hundreds, according to rights groups.

China labeled the protests as "counter-revolutionary".

The topic remains taboo in China and the leadership has rejected all calls to overturn its verdict.

Human rights remains a thorny topic between China and the United States. Chinese President Xi Jinping and U.S. President Barack Obama are due to meet in California next week for an informal summit where the issue of human rights could be raised.

(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; editing by Mike Collett-White)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/china-accuses-u-prejudice-over-1989-protest-comments-162013993.html

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What We Can Learn from Same-Sex Couples ? men cheat / women ...

What We Can Learn from Same-Sex Couples?-?Men cheat / Women nag
- First Things
May 31, 2013 / Glenn T. Stanton

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The?Atlantic?has a very provocative?cover story?this month: ?The Gay Guide to Wedded Bliss.? It explains to anyone who wants to know ?what gay and lesbian spouses can teach straight ones about living happily ever after.?

The author, Liza Mundy, highlights some of the most important research on same-sex marriage, presenting much of its critical findings. What?s curious is how she spins the evidence she presents. A more honest reading would give us reservations about viewing same-sex marriage as a model.

Mundy admits that studies have found ?higher dissolution rates among [legally registered] same-sex couples? in Scandinavia than among married heterosexual couples. This study, published in?Demography, found that even though same-sex couples enter their legal unions at older ages?a marker related to greater relational stability?male same-sex marriages break up at twice the rate of heterosexual marriages.

And the break-up rate for lesbians? It is a stunning 77 percent higher than that of same-sex male unions. When controlling for possible confounding factors, the ?risk of divorce for female partnerships actually is more than twice that for male unions.? Mundy mentions this, but only as evidence that ?gay marriage can function as a controlled experiment, helping us see which aspects of marital difficulty are truly rooted in gender and which are not.?

Other research says the same thing about relationship dissolution rates. A?study?of two generations of British couples (one born in 1958, the other 1970) in same-sex cohabiting, opposite-sex cohabiting, and heterosexual marriage relationships found the same-sex relationships are dramatically more likely to break up than the opposite-sex cohabiting and married relationships. The probabilities of the various relationships surviving to the four- and eight-year anniversaries are dramatic. After four years, 88 percent of married opposite sex couples are together, 67 percent of opposite-sex cohabiting couples, and only 37 percent of same-sex cohabitors. After eight years, those numbers fall to 82 percent, 60 percent, and 25 percent, respectively.

The author explains the magnitude of his findings ?are consistent with previous research in other countries.? There were no significant differences between the two generational cohorts, indicating that issues of social stigma and growing social acceptance had no meaningful effect.

Other studies?conducted by celebrated lesbian scholars?find notable instability in lesbian homes, even those with children. The current National Longitudinal Lesbian Family Study (NLLFS)?found??a significant difference? in family dissolution rates when comparing lesbian with mother?father headed families, 56 percent and 36 percent respectively.

Additional?research?by other scholars highlights a major comparative study between hetero and lesbian homes where, in the five-year period of the study, six of the fourteen lesbian mother-headed homes had broken up compared to only five of the thirty-eight mother?father headed homes. They creatively explain that this stability imbalance is likely due to the ?high standards lesbians bring to their intimate unions.? Mundy says that ?lesbians . . . tend to discuss things endlessly.? Whatever the reason, lesbian relationships are dramatically more volatile, fragile, and short-lived than heterosexual couples, whether cohabiting or married.

But Mundy points out more bad news,?something so common in lesbian relationship that it has earned a name: lesbian bed death?the cessation of sex. She also puts a positive spin on this phenomenon, echoing one scholar?s theory that ?lesbians may have had so much intimacy already that they didn?t need sex to get it.? (As if one type of intimacy can fulfill one?s desire for all others.)

So what do the guys have to teach us? It might not surprise you.

Mundy is admirably honest here as well, explaining that after the AIDS crisis, ?gay male couples are more monogamous than they used to be, but not nearly to the same degree as other kinds of couples.? One study that she cites asked those in various relationships whether they had any agreed-upon rules permitting extra-curricular activities. The differences were astonishing. Only 4 percent of male/female couples had them compared to 40 percent of gay men in legally recognized unions and 49 percent in long-term cohabiting unions.

These findings agree with a much larger body of research. One of these, a widely respected?investigation, found that only a third of gay couples had monogamous agreements and truly honored them with no outside sex. In fact, it found that in the openly nonmonogamous relationships, the frequency of sex outside the relationship from its start ranged from two to a whopping 2,500 separate incidents. The median was 41.5 extracurricular incidents since the relationship?s beginning. Frequency in the last year ranged from zero to 350 occurrences of outside sex, with a median of eight incidences in the last twelve months. Even those who pledged true monogamy, the range was from one to sixty-three ?slip-ups? with a median of five. The corresponding numbers for men in heterosexual marriages are microscopic in comparison.

In the face of all this negative evidence, Mundy bases her case for the superiority of same-sex marriages on the pure assumption that such relationships are better because they are not clouded by stifling gender stereotypes. They are absent the gender power games that are rumored to exist in natural marriages. But her piece is shot through with the recognition of such gender stereotypes, such as lesbians investing more emotional energy in their relationships and gay men seeking more sexual diversity. She also admits that (as research shows) when two men decide one should stay home with a child, the argument is not about who?gets?to stay home, but who?has?to. The lesbian couples were far more interested in child care than the men, to the degree that it tended to threaten the health and longevity of their relationships.

No doubt some same-sex couples are happy, but the kinds of social science lessons Mundy seeks to draw are a matter of unforgiving averages. With more relational instability and divorce, less sex in marriage and more sex outside it, it would appear that same-sex couples?do?have something to teach us, if only by counterexample.

Glenn T. Stanton is the director of family formation studies at Focus on the Family and the author of five books on various aspects of the family. His two most recent books are?Secure Daughters, Confident Sons?and?The Ring Makes All the Difference.

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Source: http://scpeanutgallery.com/2013/05/31/what-we-can-learn-from-same-sex-couples-men-cheat-women-nag-first-things-re-blog/

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Mobile Connectivity in Africa: Increasing the Likelihood of Violence ...

Regarding the above picture of DRC government troops with their mobile phones, Alexis Madrigal from the Atlatinc wrote in his column last year:

I don?t know what to say about this photograph aside from suggesting that an enterprising PhD student write a dissertation on ?Cell Phones in War.? How are fighting, killing, and controlling territory different when you can call your brother after battle, post a photo of your squadron on the march to Facebook, or play Angry Birds between skirmishes?

Part of the answer to Alexis? question comes in a newly published article in the?American Political Science Review?by postdoctoral fellow Jan Pierskalla and PhD candidate Florian Hollenbach (ht the Monkey Cage).

In a nutshell, the authors? findings suggest that cell phone coverage in Africa increases the likelihood of political violence. The abstract is below:

The spread of cell phone technology across Africa has transforming effects on the economic and political sphere of the continent. In this paper, we investigate the impact of cell phone technology on violent collective action. We contend that the availability of cell phones as a communication technology allows political groups to overcome collective action problems more easily and improve in-group cooperation, and coordination. Utilizing novel, spatially disaggregated data on cell phone coverage and the location of organized violent events in Africa, we are able to show that the availability of cell phone coverage signi?cantly and substantially increases the probability of violent con?ict. Our ?ndings hold across numerous different model speci?cations and robustness checks, including cross-sectional models, instrumental variable techniques, and panel data methods.

It will be interesting to see how this paper resonates with different audiences, such as the ICT4D community and political scientists. Some have already started to question the methodology and underlying assumptions in the paper.

But despite the findings of this study, like it or not, at some point technology cheerleaders will have to come to terms with a simple fact: if technology helps us overcome problems of collective action, there?s no reason to believe that this can only happen when it comes to virtuous collective action. And it shouldn?t take a PhD to know that.

Read the full paper here [PDF].

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Source: http://democracyspot.net/2013/05/30/mobile-connectivity-in-africa-increasing-the-likelihood-of-violence/

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