Wednesday, August 22, 2012

What's keeping Todd Akin in Senate race? (+video)

Republican Senate contender Todd Akin expressed a determination to stay in the race, even amidst advice from others in his party to step down. He says his comments relating to rape boil down to 'one word in one sentence on one day.'?

By Steve Kraske and Dave Helling,?The Kansas City Star (MCT) / August 21, 2012

Alaina Carnan works in the Senate campaign office of U.S. Rep. Todd Akin, R-Mo. in Chesterfield, Mo. Akin has come under pressure to abandon his Senate compaign after his comments that women's bodies can prevent pregnancies in cases of "legitimate rape".

AP Photo/Bill Boyce

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A deadline for dropping out of Missouri?s U.S. Senate race passed Tuesday with Republican Todd?Akin?still in the hunt, despite more withering attacks from his own party.

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?Let me just make it clear: We?re not getting out of this race,??Akin?said on a conservative St. Louis radio show. ?I?m in this for the long haul, and we?re going to win it.?

The unprecedented onslaught spurred by his weekend comments about rape victims came from the highest reaches of the Republican Party and raised new doubts about whether?Akin?s?campaign could recover.

Even GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney called for?Akin?to withdraw. So did U.S. Sen. Roy Blunt, Missouri?s highest elected Republican, and four former senators from Missouri: John Ashcroft, Jack Danforth, Kit Bond and Jim Talent.

Major GOP fundraisers, including Crossroads GPS, pledged again to abandon?Akin?s?campaign. So did the National Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee. And top party officials asked?Akin?not to attend next week?s Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla.

But through it all,?Akin?held firm, blaming his fall from party grace on ?one word in one sentence on one day.? That, he said, was a reference to his use of the word ?legitimate? in response to a TV interviewer?s question Sunday about whether he supports abortion even in cases of rape.

?If it?s a legitimate rape, the female body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down,??Akin?said that day in comments that triggered a national firestorm. He later said he misspoke and apologized.

But?Akin?didn?t comment Tuesday on the ?female body has ways to shut that whole thing down? part of his statement, which was widely debunked by women?s groups in Missouri and nationwide.

Romney attempted to distance himself for the second straight day from the remarks that the Republican Party fears could further weaken its standing with women.

?Todd?Akin?s?comments were offensive and wrong, and he should very seriously consider what course would be in the best interest of our country,? Romney said. ?Today, his fellow Missourians urged him to step aside, and I think he should accept their counsel and exit the Senate race.?

The group of Missouri?s Republican senators ? current and former ? were just as direct, saying?Akin?s comments about rape victims were ?totally unacceptable? and that?Akin?must step down.

?We do not believe it serves the national interest for Congressman Todd?Akin?to stay in this race,? they said in a statement. ?The issues at stake are too big, and this election is simply too important. The right decision is to step aside.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/yPu9xsDvK9E/What-s-keeping-Todd-Akin-in-Senate-race-video

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Tuesday, August 21, 2012

92% Safety Not Guaranteed

Question: If you could go back in time, what time would you return to and why? Normally I answer, or vaguely answer, my own questions in these reviews but I?m not going to on this one. I am not an overly nostalgic person unless it has to do with a film or a band. Plus, after seeing Safety Not Guaranteed this past weekend, I learned a valuable lesson. Sorry if this confuses anyone but you will just have to see Safety Not Guaranteed to understand what I am referring to?.or trying to, at least. I have wanted to see this film for a long time. There was just something about the story that drew me to it ? not too long ago I even posted the preview on here; and I save those posts usually for films that I think will be interesting, unique or that tell a story that will move me. This one did, not drastically, but enough to get me out of my writer?s block (fingers crossed) and make me contemplate parts of my life. That?s what I want from most films, art, books, etc?an opportunity to think; notice something you hadn?t before; and look upon an idea with a fresh perspective, etc? Safety Not Guaranteed took on an age-old idea: looking back on your past with regret and hoping you can change things so you wouldn?t be unhappy now. And the filmmakers made a charming, perfectly decent film that will just make you smile. Plus, they added the idea of time travel. Who wouldn?t like that, right? So, I ask again, would you want to go back in time and why? For most, I believe, the reasoning will involve another person: a partner, girlfriend, boyfriend, parent or someone with whom you hurt or they did something that haunts you, still. We all make mistakes. Mistakes are thrust upon us. We fall in love with the wrong person, or the right person, and hearts get broken no matter what. Also, we can be cruel to another. Admit it ? we have ALL been there. We are human. Safety Not Guaranteed represented several aspects of people?s regret and/or searching for the cure to change their current situation. And I think most will be able to relate. Now the next question(s): Could we fix it? Should we fix it? Would we be better off if we changed these brief, few moments of the past? Or are we where we are supposed to be? Thinking about regrets is enough to drive you a little mad. And that?s how the actor in this film, Mark Duplass? character, is portrayed. Someone who must be insane because he puts a classified ad in the paper requesting a partner go back in time with him. He declares it will be dangerous and your safety will not be guaranteed. His ad intrigues a magazine editor ? enough to send a writer and two interns to check the story out. There are a couple other character in this film that display the same sort of desire to change their present by reaching towards the past: The young intern, Darius, played by Aubrey Plaza and her boss, Jeff, played by Jake. M. Johnson. Both these characters represented the vast differences on why someone would want to go back in time. I liked both characters, a lot. In fact, Jeff was one that kept the comedy going in this film. He?s the type of guy you don?t want to like but he evokes sympathy when you aren?t expecting. Darius is a sarcastic girl that has a deep, hidden secret on why she is unhappy now. As for the rest of the story, no more details. Just go see this film. It is slated as a comedy, and it was absolutely funny at parts but it is not slap stick or a joke every few minutes type of film. The humor is subtle and well placed. Safety Not Guaranteed showed real humor, the humor we all have in our lives. The absurdity that is ever present ? that?s what makes it a comedy. However, I would categorize this as a drama as well. And that?s a compliment. Bottom line: Just give me a good story, tell it well and with respect (especially for the audience), and you?ve got a fan in me. Safety Not Guaranteed did all three. Well done! My favorite thing: There might too many things to list here. I just really, really liked this film. Okay, I laughed OUT LOUD when Jeff raises his fists in the air. His reaction to what was happening just kept me smiling and smiling. My least favorite thing: I got nothing this time. Directed by Colin Trevorrow, Big Beach Films, 2012 Genre: Comedy Starring: Aubrey Plaza, Jake M. Johnson, Mark Duplass, Karan Soni, Jeff Garlin and Kristen Bell. Rating: R Length: 86 minutes Review: 9 out of 10

July 18, 2012

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/safety_not_guaranteed/

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Business Model Innovation Through Process Change - Brad Power ...

More and more companies I see these days are making strategic process changes to drive unprecedented business model innovation. Forbes has embraced online collaborative publishing as it adds a substantial online presence to its traditional print magazine. Healthcare organizations are implementing electronic health records systems so they can migrate from islands of medical services to sharing patient data across care providers. Consumer packaged goods manufacturers are monitoring social media to get real-time information on their customers' perceptions and share it with brand managers.

Business model innovation ? often enabled by new technology platforms ? isn't new. It was the driver of dramatic growth for, among other companies, Dell, FedEx, and Wal-Mart. In the late 1990s the dot-com boom made every organization look at the potential for online presence and examine its business model. But the pace has been heating up with emerging social (Facebook), mobile (smart phones and iPads), "cloud," and "big data" technologies that are creating new ways to compete, and, along with them, new ways of working.

Embrace Industry Disruption
Consider the transformation at Forbes, the business publishing and media company, which has embraced the shift from traditional print media to online publishing, salvaging a business that was being disrupted, and becoming a disrupter itself. Forbes is well known for its lists, such as of the richest Americans (the Forbes 400). In 1996 the company launched a website at a time when other media companies were trying to figure out how to respond to the rise of the Internet. Forbes.com quickly grew to 18 million monthly unique users. Forbes then took another bold step by deciding to move beyond its website to a more inclusive and scalable digital publishing platform. 30 million unique users now visit Forbes.com monthly, and it has 1,000 content creators.

This latest change was driven by Lewis DVorkin, an experienced veteran of both the traditional news industry and digital media, who joined Forbes as its Chief Product Officer (a newly created position) in 2010. In 2011 DVorkin rolled out a "New Newsroom" on a blog-based platform (WordPress) and a new organization. The New Newsroom added outside contributors to Forbes' traditional staff reporters. Forbes gave the outside contributors visibility to help build their personal brands, and in return the contributors broadened Forbes' coverage. The self-publishing tools Forbes provided to contributors made it easy to write something and publish it, to put images into it, to link to other media, or to embed videos.

For example, as contributors write, the platform suggests images which Forbes has already paid for; they can just click on one, put it into their post, and write a caption. Forbes also gives contributors control over comments. They can highlight comments they think are valuable and they can delete or mark as spam comments that are weak or abusive. And Forbes provides contributors with real-time feedback on how many views each post is getting. The counter at the top of every post helps contributors see what is working and learn to better serve their readers. Each contributor has an individualized real-time data dashboard.

Knit Your Network Together
Partners Healthcare, the large healthcare provider in the Boston area, is also putting in a new technology platform and processes to enable a new business model in an industry undergoing disruption. According to the Boston Globe, Partners is negotiating to buy a standard enterprise system (Epic) to knit together its nine hospitals with 6,000 physicians and other healthcare providers in Massachusetts:

"Expected to cost at least $600 million over 10 years, the Epic system would give each patient a single up-to-date record accessible by all Partners providers, at a time when doctors and hospitals are under pressure to keep closer tabs on the sickest people they care for and to better track their own performance over time... Its executives said the decision is an important step toward a more integrated, statewide system for sharing medical records."

With the new system, data for a patient who is referred from a primary care office to an orthopedist, has surgery, and later is discharged with home care would be available in real time, and would make it easier to apply quality control tools ? such as warnings of possible drug interactions ? uniformly across all healthcare providers.

Monitor the Pulse of Customer Opinions in Real Time
Consumer goods companies are realizing that they can keep their fingers on the pulse of consumer opinion in real time by tapping into the flow of consumer commentary in social media. In a recent article, Procter & Gamble CEO Robert McDonald described the process change from his experience:

"In 1984, when I was the Tide brand manager, I would get a cassette tape of consumer comments from the 1-800 line and listen to them in the car on the way home. Then, back at the office, I'd read and react to the letters we'd received. Today that's obviously not sufficient ? you've got blogs, tweets, all kinds of things. And so we've developed something called 'consumer pulse,' which uses Bayesian analysis [a statistical technique that can determine which items are important] to scan the universe of comments, categorize them by individual brand, and then put them on the screen of the relevant individual. I personally see the comments about the P&G brand. This allows for real-time reaction to what's going on in the marketplace, because we know that if something happens in a blog and you don't react immediately ? or, worse, you don't know about it ? it could spin out of control by the time you get involved."

Today's new generation of technologies, e.g., social and mobile, are enabling a new wave of process changes. For many organizations, the technology is moving faster than they are, but if harnessed, associated process changes can drive industry disruption and competitive advantage.

Questions: Do you see competition with processes heating up? What changes have you seen in the C-Suite when process changes jump onto the strategic agenda?

Source: http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2012/08/business_model_innovation_thro.html

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Assange's embassy life is cramped but connected

LONDON - Living on takeaway meals in a small room with a treadmill to burn off frustrated energy and a vitamin D lamp to make up for a lack of sunlight, Julian Assange has the one material thing he values most: a computer with an Internet connection.

The WikiLeaks founder took refuge nine weeks ago at Ecuador's embassy in London to avoid being extradited to Sweden, where he is wanted for questioning over alleged rape. Having feared jail, he now finds himself living like a prisoner.

Yet British friend and supporter Vaughan Smith, who hosted Assange at his country mansion for a year during his failed legal battle against extradition, said the Australian was in good spirits and enjoying the virtual freedom of his computer.

Assange in balcony appeal to Obama: Release leak suspect Bradley Manning

"He seemed to be bearing up fine. The key to understanding Assange is that if he's got a computer he's normally happy," Smith told Reuters after he visited the embassy, housed on one floor of a red-brick apartment block in affluent Knightsbridge.

"The thing that concerns him most is the possibility he won't be able to work properly - and that's why he seems less keen on prison cells than on embassies."

On Sunday, the world had its first glimpse of Assange since June 19, when he slipped into the embassy. Last week, Ecuador, led by leftist president Rafael Correa, granted Assange asylum - but Britain still plans to arrest him if he tries to leave.

Appearing on a narrow balcony to berate the United States over what he called its "witch hunt" against his anti-secrecy website, the 41-year-old former computer hacker was in the full glare of the world's media for 10 minutes.

His distinctive white-blond hair now trimmed short, he wore a neatly pressed shirt and tie and appeared in good health, if rather tired. His speech delivered, he paused to survey cheering supporters, busy journalists and stern London police on the street below, before retreating to his private world within.

Smith said Assange was sleeping and working in a single small room that looked like someone's office hastily converted into living quarters. He had started out with an air mattress but that had now been replaced by a real bed.

"It's a small room. It has a window, but I wouldn't describe it as airy. I didn't see any kitchen facilities, though I understand he has access to a microwave. He has access to a shower. A supporter gave him a running machine," said Smith.

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He declined to say what the window overlooked because he did not wish to identify the room to outsiders. Those embassy windows which are visible from the street have had curtains drawn all the time since Assange moved in.

'He can do what he needs'
"It's pretty tight. He's divided the room up with a bookcase into a sleeping part and a non-sleeping part," said Smith.

"The key thing is he can work. He can hold meetings, he can invite some people in. He can do what he needs to do."

Ecuador granted him asylum on the grounds that Assange might be sent from Sweden to the United States to face WikiLeaks-related charges. Britain will not let him go to Ecuador from the embassy because its courts ruled he should be sent to Stockholm.

Assange's mother Christine, speaking by telephone from Australia, told Reuters she had received personal assurances from Ecuadorean Foreign Minister Ricardo Patino that her son would be made as comfortable as possible during his stay.

"As far as the embassy staff go they have been wonderful. The people are extremely nice. Ecuadorean people are genuinely warm. They're making sure he's got good food, he's warm and comfortable," she said.

Christine and Julian Assange speak on the phone when possible but she said their conversations were limited because, she believed, the lines were being monitored.

"There's very little we can say to each other which is personal," she said. "So it's really cut down the traction we can have. But we have a close relationship."

The embassy - which lists its official address as "Flat 3B, 3 Hans Crescent, London SW1" - is on the first floor of a six-storey mansion block, a style of brick apartment building popular around the turn of the last century in London. The block also hosts the Colombian embassy and private apartments.

The Ecuadorean embassy has no outside space beyond narrow balconies, rendering sunshine scarce for long-term inhabitants. WikiLeaks staff emerging from the building last week told supporters camped outside that Assange had a vitamin D lamp inside the room where he was living.

The block is across the street from the rear of Harrods, the luxury department store which draws thousands of shoppers and tourists daily. The store has a loading bay right next door to the embassy and movements of Harrods' trademark olive green trucks and vans have on occasion been blocked by throngs of Assange supporters and news crews filling the street.

Inside, unseen, Assange remains busy at his computer.

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Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/48729142/ns/world_news-europe/

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Monday, August 20, 2012

Heavy Metals Within Protein Shakes - Should You Stop Sipping ...

A current research on protein beverages has been producing waves of matter as well as alarm to ripple through the fitness and bodybuilding world. Product firms are up in arms and people are wondering whether they should stop drinking protein drinks after the newspaper said they tested 15 protein drinks for heavy metals (arsenic, cadmium, lead and mercury) and 3 of them got up above the proposed secure limits??We acquired 15 protein powders and drinks mostly in the Ny city area or on line and tested numerous examples of each for arsenic, cadmium, lead and mercury? said Consumer Reports.?Concentrations in most products were fairly low,? continued the article, ?but when considering the huge meal recommended, the number of micrograms per day for a few of the products was high compared with most others tested.?Out of the 15 products tested, the following exceeded the U.S. Pharmocopeia (USP) proposed limits for safety:EAS Myoplex Original Rich Dark Chocolate (prepared to drink water ): 16.9 arsenic, 5.1 cadmium Muscle Milk candy powder: 12.2 arsenic, 5.6 cadmium, 13.5 lead, 0.7 mercury Muscle Milk Vanilla Cream: 12.2 lead* Amounts in microgramsSo, if you use protein drinks should you worry? In case you stop drinking them? Well, it seems disturbing that certain brands are high in these metals, but bear in mind that:( 1) Some people and organizations are questioning the option of 3rd party lab used by Consumer stories, as well whilst the explanations for satisfactory safe levels.( 2) These test results showed that that 12 out of 15 goods were within safe limits even at high doses (or had zero major metals present), and (3) Products which tested high were tested centered on very large doses. Consequently, this might be a flag only for very large users (three shakes per day or up to 8 scoops) of specific items (not protein powder generally )Heavy material contamination is really a particular health concern for specific communities including children, young growing children, women of childbearing age who plan to have children shortly, pregnant women, and nursing women.However, I don?t consider this document is really a reason for worry or giving up reasonable utilization of protein supplements.Due to all of the publicity, I imagine that the few firms named will create rebuttals or reactions, and when necessary, merely tighten up their quality get a grip on. Probably, the industry generally speaking will begin publishing additional information on their security, testing and quality standards. Some organizations have reassuringly already done the like their websites their sales have been probably boosted by which, not hurt them ).I believe this really is largely a non-issue.Consumer Reports is just a preferred book for many individuals exploring purchases of electronics, cars and devices. They certainly were likely well-intentioned in their protein article (even though who knows what fundamental tendencies might be there ).In the near future, but, I had like to obtain the results printed in a peer reviewed journal and see these kinds of tests conducted under scientific analysis. This way, we could evaluate the test results, read about the experimental methods and obtain the evidence-based facts about protein needs and toxin safety standards, as opposed to depend on editors whose common career is researching models of toasters.On a relevant note, the NSF has questioned the lab/testing methods utilized in this story:NSF International can?t comment on the test results reported in the July 2010, Consumer Reports article on protein products. Critical information is omitted by it concerning the laboratory that conducted the test and its qualification skills. ISO 17025 certification is important for any laboratory screening for heavy metals in vitamin supplements and dietary products. The content also omits the test methods used, analytic preparation, sample size, the cornerstone of their risk assessment, detection limitations, quality get a grip on information and instrumentation used for this report.While it is fine and good that this information was printed, what really bothers me about the write down is that it seems their correspondents are employing these test results as ammo to strike the complete notion of using protein products and consuming a higher protein diet.?You don?t need added protein? and ?high protein food diets hurt your kidneys,? state Consumer Reports. In addition they offer a dietitian who said the body can only just use 5 to 9 grams of protein per hour. I had want to see a research ticket on that one!They are clearly perpetuating some of the same dumb misconceptions about protein that bodybuilders and power athletes have had to debunk for years.When mentioning how cadmium is harmful to the kidney, they included, ?the way that large protein is poor for your kidneys.? That?s false. A higher protein diet (on par in what a strength player could realistically consume), is not detrimental to a wholesome kidney.High protein food diets are contraindicated for individuals who curently have kidney disease and caution is justified using populations where threat of sub-clinical kidney problems could be present or where there?s kidney disease predisposition. That?s not the same as saying eating a higher protein diet causes help disease.It is very true that there?s a ?more is better? mindset among many muscle-seekers and protein supplement marketing often feeds right into that. The consumer may be informed ? via advertisement or content ? to get protein products multiple times every day (better for sales than recommending periodic or gentle use only once needed, right? )Protein marketing can sometimes border on the excessive today ? with all kinds of claims made for muscle gain, weight loss, increased performance and even anti-aging. The truth is, protein supplements are only food ? powdered or liquid food ? they are NOT secret! Plenty of conditioning and muscle fanatics currently depend a significant amount of on supplements and not enough on whole, organic foods.How lots of people really drink 3 protein drinks a, every day (21 per week)? I actually do not understand. No one in my own range does, and it?s not a thing I recommend. In my Burn up the Fat, Feed the Muscle system, I recommend eating generally full food, eating many different ingredients and using protein shakes or sprays being an occasional supplement for ease or if you require a supplement to help you meet your optimum amount of intake.Personally, I use protein powder once a day in my own oats and I love an occasional protein shake ? you will make some pretty tasty rattles if you include such things as fruit, peanut butter, ice, etc. I really do not intend on stopping.Some individuals are freaking out over this. I understand the temperament type: certain people may say, ?No way, when there is ANY rock in any protein drinks I?m maybe not getting them at all! Why take a chance?? Appears sensible, except that many of the protein beverages examined were properly within security limits and all were within limits with an increase of reasonable usage.Besides, tiny publicity is expected anyway. What is in the entire food you?re eating? When you forced the issue, you may find some substance to gripe about ? including heavy metals ? in several of the foods you eat daily right now ? yes, the so named ?clean foods? ? dairy foods, fruits, vegetables, lean meats, fish, seafood, etc.Advice: (1) Too much of anything may be harmful to you, so don?t go insane with protein beverages or protein foods (or too much of anyone sort of food). (2) Avoid diet plans which make you determined by protein drinks or dinner alternative supplements. (3) Don?t believe anything you read in the mainstream press until you check out the true research on your own. when you wish to understand what vehicle or camcorder to buy (4) Use Consumer Reports. Simply take their bodybuilding and sports nutrition information with a grain of salt.

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Source: http://2leep.in/heavy-metals-within-protein-shakes-should-you-stop-sipping-them.html

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A Canard That Will Not Die: 'Legitimate Rape' Doesn't Cause Pregnancy (Atlantic Politics Channel)

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Sunday, August 19, 2012

How The Deferred Action Immigration Program Went From Dream ...

When President Obama addressed the National Council of La Raza at its annual convention last summer, he laid out his efforts to enforce the nation's "flawed" immigration laws in a "humane" fashion, and then followed with what was supposed to be a laugh line: "Now, I know some people want me to bypass Congress and change the laws on my own --"

Before Obama could finish, someone shouted, "Yes you can." Soon, more than a dozen others joined the chorus to rhythmic applause. For a few seconds, the president said nothing. He offered a weak, irritated smile to this group of mostly Latino community organizers, civil rights activists, policy wonks and political operatives.

After campaigning on a pledge to overhaul the nation's immigration system in the first year of his presidency, Obama not only failed to deliver on that promise. His administration also deported more undocumented immigrants than any other in U.S. history.

But the spontaneous outbursts from the civil rights group's convention audience proved prophetic, or perhaps instructive. This week, the Obama team initiated what some immigrant activists and Obama critics alike have called the most significant change in the nation's immigration system in nearly 25 years. Across the country, as many as 1.7 million young undocumented immigrants, brought to the country illegally as children, were expected to apply for temporary, renewable immigration relief and work permits, according to a Pew Hispanic Center analysis. The administration announced the deportation policy shift in June.

Why did Obama come around?

PRESSURING THE PRESIDENT

The White House insists that the deferred action directive is part of a long-running effort to operate an effective and efficient deportation apparatus while Congressional gridlock remains. After establishing deportation priorities and giving immigration enforcement field offices greater discretion about which undocumented immigrants to let go, officials discovered that low-risk undocumented immigrants continued to clog the system. This prompted the Obama team to settle on a temporary, administrative solution, said a senior administration official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The deferred action directive eventually took shape thanks to a confluence of conditions, according to activists, undocumented immigrants, elected officials and political operatives contacted by The Huffington Post. These included the president's electoral concerns, the potent political threat embodied by outspoken Florida Tea Party Republican Sen. Marco Rubio and Obama's awareness of the ongoing suffering of undocumented immigrants in America.

Under the terms of what immigration officials have dubbed the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, beginning this week, federal officials will consider applications that could grant certain young undocumented immigrants, sometimes referred to as Dreamers, renewable two-year deportation reprieves and a permit needed to work legally. In order to qualify, they must be 31 or younger, have arrived in the country before their 16th birthday and meet other education, military service and criminal record requirements.

Dreamers are young immigrants brought to the country illegally as children. The term is derived from the Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors Act, a bill first introduced as the Dream Act in 2001 by Utah Republican Sen. Orrin Hatch. In most of its various forms the Dream Act has called for some sort of path to either legal immigrant status or citizenship and eligibility for in-state tuition rates, and in a few of the many attempts to get the bill passed since 2001, access to state financial aid.

If the long lines and testimonials collected at application assistance clinics in Chicago, Miami, New York, Houston, Los Angeles and several other cities this week offer any indication, some Dreamers hope the program will help them to come out of the often-referenced shadows of American life. Many say they manage daily fears of deportation and pressure to stop attending school, and navigate exploitative and illegal work and living conditions or manipulative personal relationships.

Several people told The Huffington Post that pressure for immigration reform -- albeit sometimes low-volume -- has been applied to the Obama administration since he took office, by Sen. Dick Durbin, a Democrat from Illinois, New Jersey Democrat Sen. Robert Menendez and various organizations, including the American Immigration Lawyers Association, America's Voice and the Center for American Progress.

UPTICK IN DEPORTATIONS

It was a challenging time for the administration. Tea Party Republicans won so many House Seats in the November 2010 elections that any hope of comprehensive reform and pursuing many other priorities in the next session was dead. The election outcome and the short clock left on the lame duck session expanded the ranks of immigrant advocates ready to champion the Dream Act, said Rep. Luis Gutierrez, an Illinois Democrat. Until then, many of immigration reform's senior statesmen -- people connected to most of the nation's large Latinos civil rights and immigrant advocacy organizations -- had been fixated on more sweeping, comprehensive immigration reform, he said.

The next month, the bill narrowly failed in a procedural vote. It died just 14 votes short.

A few days before Christmas, Gutierrez and other members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus went to see the president. Gutierrez had already been arrested outside the White House protesting the absence of federal immigration reform and state-level attempts at immigration enforcement.

"When we left that meeting, the president said let's put on our thinking caps over the holidays and see what we can come up with," Gutierrez said.

The caucus decided to ask for administrative action that would protect the undocumented parents of U.S. citizen kids and Dreamers with a policy similar to the one that governs Cuban refugees who make it to U.S. shores. The relief that the caucus called for would be limited to people already inside the U.S. Earlier that year, a group of Dreamers had made a similar request of the president in a meeting with Valerie Jarrett, a senior advisor and assistant to the president for Public Engagement and Intergovernmental Affairs.

But, after the holidays, Obama made a series of speeches declaring Congress had the sole authority to change immigration law and protect Dreamers. Reform advocates also were alarmed by a clear uptick in deportations.

The Department of Homeland Security's Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency annual deportation report revealed that in fiscal year 2010, ICE removed 392,862 undocumented immigrants from the United States, a nearly 50 percent spike from the last portion of the Bush administration in fiscal year 2008.

So in March 2011, when ICE Director John Morton began issuing new orders in a series of memos, immigrant advocates thought tangible relief was in sight, said Frank Sharry, executive director of America's Voice, an immigrant advocacy organization.

The Morton memos identified priorities. ICE agents were supposed to focus on detecting and deporting undocumented immigrant criminals, people who had recently entered the country without permission and those who had repeatedly done so. Morton directed agents to let people go if they met ICE's low-priority standards, such as those who have U.S. citizen children under 18 and have lived in the country for 10 years or more. They also included undocumented immigrants who have filed a labor or civil rights complaint -- a measure designed to provide due process to undocumented immigrants and to avoid creating a perverse incentive to exploit them.

"We thought this was going to be phenomenal," Sharry said.

Despite objections by the ICE officer's union, as far as the administration was concerned, the Morton memos worked. In fiscal year 2011, the number of total deportations grew just slightly to 396,906 people, a 1 percent jump over the previous 12-month period. More criminals were being deported than ever before.

But included in that list of criminals deported were people caught driving without a license and apprehended for other minor offenses. Dreamers were getting deported in some cities and not in others, said Gutierrez. Easy-to-catch but low-risk undocumented immigrants -- mothers driving a few miles over the speed limit, workers locked in disputes with bosses who refused to pay wages -- were still clogging the system.

'WE WERE ANGRY WITH OBAMA'

In November, Sharry, of America's Voice; Gaby Pacheco, a well-known Dreamer; and representatives from a number of immigrant advocacy, civil and labor rights groups gathered in Washington and concluded that prosecutorial discretion was a failure.

"There were people at that event who were incensed," Sharry said. "The president was either being deliberately mislead or he is choosing to be. Advocates and people like Dick Durbin were telling him what was happening and he was choosing to believe his bureaucrats."

DHS declined to comment on the claim. Durbin could not be reached for comment.

DHS had agreed in August to review a backlog of about 300,000 cases pending in immigration court (many of which were initiated during the Bush administration), but by early 2012, less than two percent were allowed to stay in the country as a result of the review, Sharry said.

DHS officials say that figure ultimately rose to about 9 percent, or 28,000 individuals, by the end of May.

Sharry and Pacheco; members of Congress such as Gutierrez, Menendez, Durbin and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.); and others continued a series of meetings with White House staff, including Jarrett and Cecilia Mu?oz, a one-time National Council of La Raza staffer and now director of the White House Domestic Policy Council.

But immigrant advocates were worried about the effect of pushing Obama publicly on the contentious issue in the midst of his re-election campaign, Sharry said.

"Truthfully, we were angry with Obama but we're terrified of Romney," he said. "At this point he had pretty much emerged as the frontrunner and said that he would veto any Dream Act that reached his desk."

Many activists weren't sure what to do, Sharry said. America's Voice decided to lean on the administration publicly.

In the spring, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano raised the question of administrative relief with the White House, a senior administration official said on condition of anonymity. Napolitano had already asked her staff for a variety of options. She may have been prompted to do so because of a confrontational meeting she had with Congressional Democrats a few months earlier. Napolitano came prepared to talk budget. But, according to Gutierrez, the conversation quickly turned to stories of real people who were being deported although they met the government's low-priority criteria.

The White House began examining the law.

Just as the Obama team was digging into the idea of administrative action, Sen. Rubio, the Tea Party Republican from Florida, began floating a Dream Act-like proposal with reporters.

White House officials contacted Pacheco and members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus. The message: Rubio should not be trusted, both Pacheco and Gutierrez said.

Rubio had no cosponsors, and no other Republican said publicly that they would support the bill. He had not even introduced it to the Senate. And, Rubio drew a difficult-to-parse distinction. His bill would not prevent Dreamers from becoming citizens, but included no pathway to citizenship, either. Backing a Rubio bill might hurt the prospects of a far-reaching Dream Act in the future, Mu?oz and Jarrett told activists.

"No one came right out and said don't work with Rubio, you're going to hurt us," Pacheco said. "It was a lot more subtle than that."

The White House and Sen. Reid, without question, worried that Rubio might swoop in and become the "white knight" of immigration reform, said Sharry.

Neither Rubio nor his staff responded to requests for comment.

Dream Activists outside Washington, meanwhile, hatched a pressure plan of their own.

On June 5, a group of Dreamers staged a sit-in protest inside an Obama for America office in Colorado. Within weeks, Dreamers who wanted to confront the administration in public ways staged sit-ins -- or attempts at sit-ins -- in Obama campaign offices in Ohio, Michigan, Georgia, California and North Carolina. The group was gearing up for sit-ins in swing states.

Campaign staffers told the protesters they had been instructed not to call police, said Timothy Farrell, who handles communications for Dream Activists Ohio. Instead, in Obama for America offices where protesters showed up, campaign staff and volunteers retreated to back rooms, turned off Internet access or closed the office completely for a few days, Farrell said.

When Farrell asked the campaign for a statement, he said, the response came from the Chicago Obama for America office, national campaign headquarters.

"I can't say with certainty the president knew about the sit-ins," Farrell said. "But someone very close to him certainly did."

Then the White House received a letter signed by 96 legal scholars, most of them law school professors like Obama.

"In it, they basically said, the question isn't can you do this, but why haven't you," Pacheco said.

On June 11, administration officials sat down to make a final decision, Sharry said. That morning, the Washington Post ran a front-page story about a young undocumented immigrant living in the Virginia suburbs outside the nation's capital. Instead of preparing for graduation, the student and her mother were getting ready for their scheduled deportation.

Sharry asked a White House staffer about the story. They had seen it.

"I think the president sees these things, I think, if no one else, Michelle [Obama] probably brings them to his attention. She gets his legacy as the black president. But has the president had the full and complete personal evolution on immigration that he has on, say, gay marriage? I don't know."

On June 15, Obama stood behind another podium. This time, he spoke in the White House Rose Garden, and announced the deferred action directive.

"Now, let's be clear -- this is not amnesty, this is not immunity," he said. "This is not a path to citizenship. It's not a permanent fix. This is a temporary stopgap measure that lets us focus our resources wisely while giving a degree of relief and hope."

Related on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/19/deferred-action-immigration-program_n_1786099.html

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Cardinal to attend annual retreat after recuperating from cancer treatment

Updated: August 18, 2012 9:43PM

After a few days of recuperating at home following treatment for cancer, Cardinal Francis George will head Sunday to north suburban Mundelein to make his annual retreat.

George?s retreat plans were announced by Rev. William Woestman at mass Saturday at Holy Name Cathedral, the seat of the Chicago Archdiocese over which George presides. Woestman asked those gathered to pray for George after he underwent a procedure Wednesday to remove cancerous cells in his kidney and liver.

?Although he?s 75, he?s very strong,? Woestman said. ?So we pray especially for him so he may continue for a few more years? as cardinal.

Parishinoers were later asked join in a petition asking that George and ?all those who are receiving treatment for cancer ... receive the grace needed for healing and the endurance needed for peace.?

Those attending mass said they were thinking of George and wishing him well.

?He?s a good man and we pray for him, said Gerda Joseph, an 82-year-old parishioner at Holy Name. ?I know him as a nice guy, a thoughtful guy, a smart guy who doesn?t beat around the bush,? she said.

Jon Meek, 38, of Arlington Heights, said he was praying for George to ?regain his health and strength.? A testicular cancer survivor, Meek said he appreciated a special living Stations of the Cross that the Archdiocese put on specifically for those with cancer and those caring for them.

Karen DeRose of Deerfield was also praying for the Cardinal.

?I hope things work out the best they can,? she said. ?I?m praying for him and I hope it goes well.?

Source: http://www.suntimes.com/14581460-418/cardinal-to-attend-annual-retreat-after-recuperating-from-cancer-treatment.html

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Saturday, August 18, 2012

Moody's: More Calif. cities at risk of bankruptcy

FILE- In this Feb 29, 2012 file photo, a Stockton city worker walks away from city hall in Stockton, Calif. Stockton is one of three California cities to file for bankruptcy this year, which has led Moody's Investors Service to begin a review of municipal finances in the state because of what it sees is a growing threat of increased city bankruptcies and bond defaults.(AP Photo/Ben Margot, file)

FILE- In this Feb 29, 2012 file photo, a Stockton city worker walks away from city hall in Stockton, Calif. Stockton is one of three California cities to file for bankruptcy this year, which has led Moody's Investors Service to begin a review of municipal finances in the state because of what it sees is a growing threat of increased city bankruptcies and bond defaults.(AP Photo/Ben Margot, file)

FILE- In this June 26, 2012 file photo, Engine 20 is seen locked up at the closed fire house station 1 in Stockton, Calif. Stockton is one of three California cities to file for bankruptcy this year, which has led Moody's Investors Service to begin a review of municipal finances in the state because of what it sees is a growing threat of increased city bankruptcies and bond defaults.(AP Photo/Ben Margot, file)

FILE - In this June 26, 2012, file photo, a man rests at the entrance to city hall in Stockton, Calif. Stockton is one of three California cities to file for bankruptcy this year, which has led Moody's Investors Service to begin a review of municipal finances in the state because of what it sees is a growing threat of increased city bankruptcies and bond defaults.(AP Photo/Ben Margot, file)

(AP) ? One of the nation's top credit rating agencies said Friday that it expects more municipal bankruptcies and defaults in California, the nation's largest issuer of municipal bonds.

Moody's Investors Service said in a report that the growing fiscal distress in many California cities was putting bondholders at risk.

The service announced that it will undertake a wide-ranging review of municipal finances in the nation's most populous state because of what it sees as a growing threat of insolvency.

The report has both investors and government leaders worried.

Three California cities ? Stockton, San Bernardino and Mammoth Lakes ? have filed for bankruptcy so far this year. They are not likely to be the last, Moody's said.

Moody's reports that some cities are turning bankruptcy as a new strategy to take on budget deficits and avoid obligations to bondholders, an emerging dynamic that could have ripple effects throughout the investment community.

The municipal bond market has long been characterized by low default rates and relatively stable finances, Moody's said, but that outlook is beginning to change as bankruptcy becomes a tool for cash-strapped cities.

As a result, the agency will reassess the financial position of all cities in California, which issues about 20 percent of the municipal bond volume nationwide, "to reflect the new fiscal realities and the governmental practices."

The agency also will examine the outlook for municipal bonds in other troubled states, according to Robert Kurtter, managing director of public finance at Moody's.

Moody's would not say which states it will review, though Kurtter mentioned Michigan and Nevada as possibilities. Friday's report noted that cities across the country are in financial distress but said that a greater share of bankruptcies are expected in California.

In California, officials rushed to downplay the report.

"Moody's has an obligation to review changing circumstances, but we would just suggest that their assessment of the framework and ground activities is perhaps exaggerated," said Chris McKenzie, executive director of the League of California Cities.

The state treasurer's office also cautioned against overacting to three bankruptcies among California's 482 cities.

"No city's going to blithely skip into bankruptcy court to avoid its obligations," said treasurer's office spokesman Tom Dresslar, who called the report "a little hyperbolic."

More than 10 percent of California cities have declared fiscal crises, according to the Moody's, with the most troubled areas lying inland in the middle of the state and east of the Los Angeles area.

Kurtter said the declarations of emergency were "a reflection of the broader fiscal stress in the state."

Moody's floated the idea Friday of an across-the-board ratings adjustment for California cities, a move McKenzie warned "would have a terrible impact on taxpayers."

The agency will consider ratings downgrades for embattled counties, school districts and special districts.

The report highlighted growing doubts in some corners about whether cash-strapped cities are making good-faith efforts to pay their debts.

"Credit analysis is based on the ability to pay and the willingness to pay," said Paul Rosenstiel, Principal at DeLaRosa & Co., a San Francisco-based municipal bond investment-banking firm.

Investors have historically assumed that cities are willing to pay their debts because they want continued access to the bond market, Rosenstiel said.

Now, some are not so sure.

"What is being considered is whether the willingness to pay is something that needs to be factored in more than in the past ? and if so, how would you measure it?" he said.

Lower bond ratings would increase borrowing costs for cities at a time when many already are struggling financially because of a steep drop in tax revenue. Because of that, Friday's report is raising alarms for city leaders who fear that it could trigger a crisis of confidence that would hinder their ability to borrow for needed projects.

"Every city in the state is looking on with some concern," said Dave Vossbrink, spokesman for the city of San Jose. "Governments of all kinds borrow money, usually to build infrastructure that lasts a long time. It's like getting a mortgage to build roads, a sewage plant, whatever it might be."

San Jose has shuttered libraries and laid off police officers to cut costs, and residents voted this summer to cut the pension benefits for city workers. But while the city is taking steps to reassure investors of its fiscal health, there is frustratingly little it can do to control larger fears about the municipal bond market.

"We know that even though we have a good reputation for our own affairs, if you are in a marketplace where some of your counterparts may be in a less desirable position, then it could have some bearing," Vossbrink said.

Moody's said it will review all California cities in the coming weeks and conduct in-depth reviews of stressed cities in September, with reports issued as the reviews are completed.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-08-17-California%20Bankruptcies/id-471885473cd442388203363e43c4cadc

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Mainstream Media?s Identity Crisis Of Infinite Broadcasts (OliverWillisLikeKryptoniteToStupid)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

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Why Good Poker Players Often Become Forex Millionaire Traders ...

If you are thinking that the best traders are all nerds and scientists think again, because one of the most successful groups of traders are ex professional poker players. So why does this group make such great traders. The answer is the same skills you need to win at poker are needed to win at FX trading.

When trading FX, there are no certainties only probabilities and to win, you need to trade with the odds on your side. Many traders come into FX trading, under the illusion that prices move to some higher force or science and they believe the vendors of cheap FX robots who claim 95% accuracy and say they can trade with little or no draw down but all these systems lose money.

When trading an odds market, you will have lots of losses but that doesn?t matter, if you keep your losses small and hit and hold the big trends which can cover your losses and give you an overall profit on your account. Most traders hate taking losses and run them but the good poker player, doesn?t ? Why try and hold a trade when the odds are against you? Better to save your money and hit the high odds hands and run them for big gains, the poker player does this when he trades FX, covers his losses and makes great gains.

The best poker players, have confidence in what their doing, the patience to take losses and wait for the big profits and then they have the discipline, to follow their strategy as it should be followed.

Many people over complicate currency trading and think they can beat it and when they lose, they can?t take it. The losing trader runs losses, trades to much or changes systems continually, in search of the perfect one. This trader lacks discipline and he losses, the good poker player, may not have gone to college or be clever but he knows the way to win is to keep his trading simple and trade the odds.

If you trade the odds, keep losses small, run profits and have confidence in what your doing, you can make a lot of money. The aim of currency trading is not to be right all the time but to make money and if you understand the correlation between poker and FX, you can see how easy it is to make profits.

About the Author

You can read more unique automated forex trading articles by going to forexvpsreviews.com; or you can download lastest automated forex robots and double your money.

Source: http://www.mps-hp.com/archives/573

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Friday, August 17, 2012

Lenovo outs Windows RT tablet costs

Windows RT devices will cost up to $US300 ($A285) less than their Windows 8 counterparts, according to Lenovo.

Lenovo?s North American boss David Schmoock told Bloomberg Windows 8 x86-based tablets will retail for $US600 to $US700, while Windows RT tablets will be set at a more ?aggressive? price point - up to $US300 cheaper.

Windows RT will be a ?very good consumer box?, Schmoock said.

Windows RT is an ARM-optimised version of the Windows 8 operating system, designed for tablets and smartphones.

Lenovo last week unveiled its first Windows 8 product, the ThinkPad tablet 2. The 10in, 9.8mm slate will run on an Intel Atom x86 chip and will launch in October alongside the debut of Microsoft?s next-gen operating system.

"This is the tablet everyone is waiting for," Lenovo?s ThinkPad boss Dilip Bhatia said at the time.

The ThinkPad tablet 2 joins a slew of similar devices expected to emerge when Windows 8 launches in October. HP has made no secret of its plans to launch a Windows 8 tablet, while Microsoft recently announced its own brand of Surface tablets.

The company this week revealed Dell and Samsung would join Lenovo in launching Windows RT products this year, in line with the Windows 8 October launch.?

Microsoft is expected to charge tablet manufacturers between $US80 and $US95 for each copy of Windows RT.?Multiple vendors at the Computex show in Taiwan earlier this year flagged $US85 as the expected price, according to VR-Zone.

The company this week made its evaluation version of Windows 8 Pro available for a free 90-day trial. ?

It announced in May that consumers who buy a new Windows 7 PC between June 2, 2012, and Jan. 31, 2013, can upgrade to Windows 8 Pro for $US14.99. In July the company said Windows XP, Vista and 7 users can upgrade to Windows Pro for $US39.99 through Jan. 31, 2013.

Microsoft is also offering discounts to those purchasing a new Windows 7 PC between June 2 this year and January 31 in 2013, with upgrades available for $US14.99.

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Source: http://www.crn.com.au/News/312269,lenovo-outs-windows-rt-tablet-costs.aspx?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=CRN+Mobility+feed

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Business Travel Demands More Mobile Options

Business Travel Demands More Mobile Options

expense mobile - business travel demands more optionsTech-savvy business travelers are operating more frequently from their phones and other mobile devices, so it?s not surprising that with all the increased activity has come more demand for phone-accessible flight and business travel information. Executive Travel Magazine recently reported the results of a survey in which multitudes of business travelers claimed that even something as simple as having flight data pushed to their phones would greatly simplify what can be a frustrating hunt-and-peck search via airline web sites.??

The article goes on to clarify the results by stating, More than 94 percent of those surveyed said they want flight status updates pushed to their phones, while 63 percent said they would like to get updates on seat upgrade availability. More than 70 percent would like an automatic notice on their devices when their flight is called for boarding In short, time-strapped business travelers are requesting tools to increase their quality of life while on the road; rather than being forced to hunt for the information they need, they?re asking that the information be sent to them.

At the moment, mobile services from airlines don?t seem to be keeping up with demand for detailed flight and boarding information, but technology has made a significant amount of progress. Access to mobile expense reporting and travel booking software has expanded rapidly over the past few years, so results like those reported in this survey will undoubtedly lead to a responsive solution in the near future. Beyond expense management and travel services, revolutionary platforms such as Apptricity?s Jetstream? offer multiple options in terms of mobile access to real-time business information.

Responsiveness to mobile business needs is improving, but feedback from business travelers is showing that, at least for airlines, there?s a need to step up and meet the demands of the exceptionally mobile.

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Source: http://blog.apptricity.com/bid/208497/Business-Travel-Demands-More-Mobile-Options

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Greatest Italian Club | Juventus | Profile | Trophi | video | The ...

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Juventus is a great team in Italy and in the European scene and even the world. This team is my favorite team. The team has also won many awards at domestic competitions (Serie A) and in the Champions League.
Juventus FC or Popular with the nama JUVE is a Professional football team from Italia, based on Turin, Italia.

Read ?

Source: http://squidom.com/SportsRecreation/Greatest_Italian_Club_Juventus_Profile_Trophi_video

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Thursday, August 16, 2012

Pennsylvania judge denies challenge to state's voter ID law

(Reuters) - A judge in the election battleground state of Pennsylvania on Wednesday rejected an effort to block the state's voter identification law, which civil rights groups argued discriminates against minority voters.

Pennsylvania, a major electoral prize in the November 6 presidential election between Democratic President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney, is one of 11 states to pass laws since 2010 requiring voters to show some form of legal identification. The laws have become a contentious issue before the November 6 elections.

Both parties see turnout as key in battleground states like Pennsylvania, and Democrats fear voter ID laws disproportionately curtail balloting by lower-income and minority voters, who typically favor their party.

Civil and voting rights groups, including the NAACP and the League of Women Voters of Pennsylvania, had sought a preliminary injunction to block the law, arguing it erects unfair hurdles for many legitimate Pennsylvania voters who lack an acceptable form of identification.

Supporters, including the Republican-dominated legislature and Republican Governor Tom Corbett, argued the law is necessary to prevent fraud and to keep non-citizens from voting.

"Petitioner's counsel did an excellent job of 'putting a face' to those burdened by the voter ID requirement," Pennsylvania Commonwealth Judge Robert Simpson said in a 70-page ruling.

"At the end of the day, however, I do not have the luxury of deciding this issue based on my sympathy for the witnesses or my esteem for counsel," Simpson wrote.

He found that the civil rights groups failed to show that the law was unconstitutional under all circumstances since it applies to all qualified voters, requiring them to present a photo ID that can be obtained for free. Judges would also be stationed at polling places on Election Day to resolve individual disputes, he added.

Before the trial, Pennsylvania conceded that it was not aware of any instances of voter impersonation fraud in the state.

While Simpson acknowledged that political interests may have motivated the legislators who voted for the law, that did not make the law unconstitutional, he said.

Simpson left open the possibility that specific individuals could try again to block the law by showing that they were prevented from voting.

APPEAL

The Advancement Project, one of the groups behind the suit, said it would appeal to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court.

The decision forces people to suffer the harm of not being able to vote in the election and then sue afterward, said the Advancement Project's co-director, Penda Hair.

"I just can't believe it," Viviette Applewhite, the 93-year-old lead plaintiff, said in a statement. "Too many people have fought for the right to vote to have it taken away like this," said Applewhite, an African American who marched with Martin Luther King Jr. in the 1960s.

The chairman of the Republican Party of Pennsylvania, Rob Gleason, applauded the court's decision.

"Voter disenfranchisement is only a risk if we don't turn our attention and efforts toward helping every voter in Pennsylvania comply with this new law," he said in a statement.

The U.S. Justice Department is reviewing whether the Pennsylvania voter ID law complies with federal voting rights laws, a department official said on Wednesday. The department said in July it would analyze Pennsylvania data to determine if voters who lack proper ID under the new law are disproportionately black or Hispanic.

Matt Barreto, a political science professor at the University of Washington who testified in the case for the ACLU, found that around 14 percent of voters in Pennsylvania do not possess the necessary ID. Latinos, people without a high school degree and the elderly are all significantly less likely to possess a valid ID, he found in a survey conducted for the ACLU.

While the law will deny people the right to vote, it is not likely to make a difference in the outcome of the presidential election in Pennsylvania, said G. Terry Madonna, a political science professor and pollster at Franklin & Marshall College in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.

According to a Quinnipiac University/CBS News/New York Times poll released August 1, Obama leads Romney 53 percent to 42 percent in Pennsylvania.

(Additional reporting by Edith Honan; Editing by Vicki Allen and Doina Chiacu)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pennsylvania-judge-denies-challenge-states-voter-id-law-141100233.html

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Global activists gear up for Pussy Riot rallies

Masked female activists demonstrate in support of members of the feminist punk group Pussy Riot in front of the Russian Embassy in Berlin, Germany, Thursday Aug. 9, 2012. Prosecutors in Russia on Tuesday called for three-year prison sentences for feminist punk rockers who gave an impromptu performance in Moscow's main cathedral to call for an end to Vladimir Putin's rule, in a case that has caused international outrage and split Russian society. (AP Photo/dapd/Oliver Lang)

Masked female activists demonstrate in support of members of the feminist punk group Pussy Riot in front of the Russian Embassy in Berlin, Germany, Thursday Aug. 9, 2012. Prosecutors in Russia on Tuesday called for three-year prison sentences for feminist punk rockers who gave an impromptu performance in Moscow's main cathedral to call for an end to Vladimir Putin's rule, in a case that has caused international outrage and split Russian society. (AP Photo/dapd/Oliver Lang)

Las integrantes del grupo 'punk' Pussy Riot, de izq. a der. Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, Maria Alekhina y Yekaterina Samutsevich dentro de una jaula de vidrio en un tribunal en Mosc? el 8 de agosto del 2012. Ese d?a la fiscal?a solicit? penas de tres a?os de prisi?n para las integrantes de la banda, que han estado en custodia durante cinco meses despu?s de improvisar una actuaci?n en la principal catedral de Mosc? para exigir el fin del gobierno de Vladimir Putin (AP Foto/Misha Japaridze)

Canadian musician and performance artist Peaches, left, talks to actors wearing masks during the recording of a video of in support of members of the feminist punk group Pussy Riot in Berlin, Germany, Wednesday, Aug. 8, 2012. Prosecutors in Russia on Tuesday called for three-year prison sentences for feminist punk rockers who gave an impromptu performance in Moscow's main cathedral to call for an end to Vladimir Putin's rule, in a case that has caused international outrage and split Russian society. (AP Photo/dapd/Adam Berry)

(AP) ? The global campaign to free Pussy Riot is gaining speed: Supporters of the punk provocateur band mobilize this week in at least a two dozen cities worldwide to hold simultaneous demonstrations an hour before a Russian court rules on whether its members will be sent to prison.

Friday's rallies will ride a wave of support for the three women who have been in jail for more than five months because of an anti-Putin prank in Moscow's main cathedral. Calls for them to be freed have come from a long list of celebrities such as Madonna and Bjork. Protests have been held in a number of Western capitals, including Berlin, where last week about 400 people joined Canadian electro-pop performance artist Peaches to support the band.

In one of the most extravagant displays, Reykjavik Mayor Jon Gnarr rode through the streets of the Icelandic capital in a Gay Pride parade this weekend dressed like a band member ? wearing a bright pink dress and matching balaclava ? while lip-synching to one of Pussy Riot's songs.

Amnesty International has called the women prisoners of conscience and begun collecting signatures by text message for a petition to be sent to the Russian government, while the U.S. State Department has repeatedly expressed its concern.

Although the band members and their lawyers are convinced that the verdict depends entirely on the will of President Vladimir Putin, and prosecutors have asked for a three-year sentence, activists hope their pressure will ease punishment or even free the women.

Putin has said the women should not be judged too harshly, but he risks appearing weak if they walk free.

Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, Maria Alekhina and Yekaterina Samutsevich were little known before their brief impromptu performance in Christ the Savior Cathedral in February. Dancing and high-kicking, they shouted the words of a "punk prayer" asking the Virgin Mary to deliver Russia from Putin, who was set to win a third term in a March presidential election.

They were arrested on charges of hooliganism motivated by religious hatred, which carries a maximum sentence of seven years. Since then, they have been vilified by the state media ? while winning over hearts abroad.

Madonna donned a balaclava during a concert in Moscow last week and had "Pussy Riot" written on her bare back. Yoko Ono sent a personal message to Samutsevich, saying that "the power of your every word is now growing in us."

A group of leading British musicians, including Pete Townshend of the Who and members of the Pet Shop Boys, published a letter in the Times of London ahead of Putin's visit during the Olympics to urge him to give the Pussy Riot members a fair hearing.

On Friday, activists in more than a dozen cities, from Moscow to Toronto, are expected to take to the streets at 2 p.m. Moscow time (1000 GMT), an hour before the judge is to issue the verdict. The protests are being coordinated by the defense lawyers.

Venues vary from the square outside the ornate Sagrada Familia Cathedral in Barcelona to the yard outside the Russian Embassy in London.

In Paris, the protest will be held on Stravinsky Square and led by 29-year-old Alexey Prokopyev from Russie-Libert?s, a Paris-based organization formed in December to bring together Russians studying or working in France.

"Most people go to these rallies in Paris because we cannot be in Russia at the moment for various reasons ? because of jobs, classes," said Prokopyev, who was born in the Soviet Union and has spent most of the past 17 years in France. "We all wish we were in Moscow now, but since we can't we do it in Paris."

Russie-Libert?s also is helping to organize rallies in Marseille, Nice, Lyons and Montpellier.

Wearing balaclavas, activists protested earlier this month on the iconic Alexander III bridge, named after the Russian czar who was France's ally in the 1890s.

Prokopyev said that he and his peers "want Russia to be a normal country" and be able to elect a president "who doesn't make the country where we were born a laughingstock."

In New York, Friday's protest will take place outside the Russian Consulate and later on Times Square.

"It's absurd that this case is being treated as criminal, while in any other civilized country that would be merely an administrative offense," said Xenia Grubstein, a 31-year-old journalist helping to organize the New York protest.

She said the hope was that the louder people speak out against the Pussy Riot case, the greater the chance that the verdict will be fair.

A protest is also planned in Washington, where last month punk rockers and arts activists rallied outside the Russian Embassy.

The U.S. State Department has expressed concern about what it called the "politically motivated prosecution of the Russian opposition and pressure on those who express dissenting views."

In France, Culture Minister Aurelie Filippetti last week issued a statement expressing concern that artistic freedom was on trial.

A German cross-party group of lawmakers sent a letter to the Russian ambassador calling the five months the band members have spent in custody and the possible prison terms "draconian and disproportionate" punishment.

"In a secular and pluralistic state, peaceful artistic activities ? even if they may be seen as a provocation ? should not lead to accusations of a serious crime and long prison sentences," the lawmakers said in the letter, which more than 100 members of parliament signed.

The international press has been full of critical reports from the trial. One of Germany's most influential magazines, Der Spiegel, featured the band on its cover: a picture of Tolokonnikova behind bars and the headline "Putin's Russia."

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Greg Keller in Paris and David Rising in Berlin contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-08-15-Russia-Pussy%20Riot%20Goes%20Global/id-5c2546da79454b9e857434e9818f91e6

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