Saturday, December 31, 2011

All eyes on German renewable energy efforts (AP)

FELDHEIM, Germany ? This tiny village of 37 gray homes and farm buildings clustered along the main road in a wind-swept corner of rural eastern Germany seems an unlikely place for a revolution.

Yet environmentalists, experts and politicians from El Salvador to Japan to South Africa have flocked here in the past year to learn how Feldheim, a village of just 145 people, is already putting into practice Germany's vision of a future powered entirely by renewable energy.

Chancellor Angela Merkel's government passed legislation in June setting the country on course to generate a third of its power through renewable sources ? such as wind, solar, geothermal and bioenergy ? within a decade, reaching 80 percent by 2050, while creating jobs, increasing energy security and reducing harmful emissions.

The goals are among the world's most ambitious, and expensive, and other industrialized nations from the U.S. to Japan are watching to see whether transforming into a nation powered by renewable energy sources can really work.

"Germany can't afford to fail, because the whole world is looking at the German model and asking, can Germany move us to new business models, new infrastructure?," said Jeremy Rifkin, a U.S. economist who has advised the European Union and Merkel.

In June, the nation passed the 20 percent mark for drawing electric power from a mix of wind, solar and other renewables. That compares with about 9 percent in the United States or Japan ? both of which rely heavily on hydroelectric power, an energy source that has long been used.

Expanding renewables depends on the right mix of resources, as well as government subsidies and investment incentive ? and a willingness by taxpayers to shoulder their share of the burden. Germans currently pay a 3.5 euro cent per kilowatt-hour tax, roughly euro157 ($205) per year for a typical family of four, to support research and investment in and subsidize the production and consumption of energy from renewable sources.

That allows for homeowners who install solar panels on their rooftops, or communities like Feldheim that build their own biogas plants, to be paid above-market prices for selling back to the grid, to ensure that their investment at least breaks even.

Critics, like the Institute for Energy Research, based in Washington, D.C., maintain such tariffs put an unfair burden of expanding renewables squarely on the taxpayer. At the same time, to make renewable energy work on the larger scale, Germany will have to pour billions into infrastructure, including updating its grid.

Key to success of the transformation will be getting the nation's powerful industries on board, to drive innovation in technology and create jobs. According to the Environment Ministry, overall investment in renewable energy production equipment more than doubled to euro29.4 billion ($38.44 billion) in 2011. Solid growth in the sector is projected through the next decade.

Some 370,000 people in Germany now have jobs in the renewable sector, more than double the number in 2004, a point used as proof that tax payers' investment is paying off.

Feldheim has zero unemployment ? despite its tiny size ? compared with roughly 30 percent in other villages in the economically depressed state of Brandenburg, which views investments in renewables as a ticket for a brighter future. Most residents work in the plant that produces biogas ? fuel made by the breakdown of organic material such as plants or food waste ? or maintain the wind and solar parks that provide the village's electricity.

"The energy revolution is already taking place right here," says Werner Frohwitter, spokesman for the Energiequelle company that helped set up and run Feldheim's energy concept.

But it's not only in the country. Earlier this month in Berlin, officials unveiled a prototype of a self-sustaining, energy-efficient home, built from recycled materials and complete with electric vehicles that can be charged in its garage.

The aim of the prototype home is to produce twice as much energy as is used by a family of four ? chosen from a willing pool of volunteers who will be selected to live in the home for 15 months ? through a combination of solar photovoltaics and energy management technology, in order to show the technology already exists to allow people to be energy self-sufficient.

"We want to show people that already today it is possible to live completely from renewable energy," said German Transport Minister Peter Ramsauer as the project, dubbed "Efficiency House Plus," was unveiled. The house is part of a wider euro1.2 million ($1.57 million) project investing in energy-efficient buildings.

"The Efficiency House Plus will set standards that can be adopted by the majority in the short term," Ramsauer told The Associated Press. "The basic principle is that the house produces more energy than needed to live. The extra energy is then used to charge electric-powered cars and bicycles or sold back to the public grid."

Germany's four leading car makers are also participating in the project with BMW AG, Daimler AG, Volkswagen AG and Opel, which is part of Buick's parent company, General Motors Co., each making an E-car for use by in the home.

Such strong cooperation between Germany's industrial sector coupled with a political landscape that emphasizes stability and a heightened public ecological sensibility makes Germany fertile ground to lead the way in the transformation from a post-carbon economy to one run on renewable energy.

"Germany has the most robust industrial economy per capita. When you talk about industrial revolution, that's Germany. It's German technology, it's German IT, it's German commutation," said Rifkin, who outlines what he calls the "The Third Industrial Revolution," in a newly released book of the same title that explains how the economies in the future could swap fossil fuels for renewable energies and still maintain growth.

Robert Pottmann, an asset manager with Munich Re, one of the world's biggest reinsurers, says the company seeks to invest about euro2.5 billion ($3.27 billion) in the next few years in renewable energy assets such as "wind farms, solar projects or maybe new electricity grids."

Alan Simpson, an independent energy and climate adviser from Britain who visited Feldheim as part of a wider tour of Germany last month to see what the renewable revolution looks like up close said it was inspiring to view what is being accomplished on the ground.

"It's great to think about Germany delivering on everything that we are being told in Great Britain is impossible," Simpson said.

Amid the excitement, there is also an awareness of the real need for the German experiment to succeed.

"If Germany can't pull this off," said Rifkin. "We don't have a plan B."

___

Associated Press writer Juergen Baetz contributed to this story from Berlin.

___

On the Internet:

Feldheim: http://www.neue-energien-forum-feldheim.de/

German Renewable Energy Agency: http://www.unendlich-viel-energie.de/en/homepage.html

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/environment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111229/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_germany_making_renewables_work

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Friday, December 30, 2011

93% Mission: Impossible Ghost Protocol

What really sets MI - Ghost Protocol apart from your garden variety potboiler are the outstanding action sequences. Actual location shooting at three locales: Moscow, Dubai and Mumbai, highlight set pieces with astonishing stunts. Each individual display would have provided sufficient excitement independently, but put together and there's scarcely time to breathe. When the team initially attempts to infiltrate the Kremlin, the operation is giddy with disguises, gadgets and humor. There's a hallway screen that's an ingenious technology that Benji and Ethan use to remain undetected in the fortified complex. Later, accessing a security room at the Burj Dubai from the outside of the skyscraper is a heart pounding spectacle. Ethan wears a pair of electronic friction gloves that enable him to climb the glass exterior of the Burj. You'll gasp at the difficulty of the mission.That MI - Ghost Protocol is far and away the best one yet, has got to be one of the biggest surprises of 2011. Some credit should go to Director Brad Bird for breathing new life into this series. Best known for writing and directing modern animated classics The Incredibles and Ratatouille, his facility for storytelling is clearly an asset here. There has been care to create personalities that seem human so when they're hanging by an arm off the side of the tallest building in the world, we genuinely feel scared. When Jeremy Renner's character is required to leap down a vertical cooling tunnel wearing a magnetic suit that will allow him to float, you can see the uncertainly on his face before he jumps. Those subtle touches are endearing because they make these individuals easier to identify with. These aren't indestructible automatons, these are real human beings and we care about them.

July 7, 2011

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

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Union Claims 400 Workers Exposed to Asbestos at Sydney Museum Redevelopment

The Construction Forestry Mining Energy Union (CFMEU) charged that 400 workers may have been exposed to asbestos for about one year in the $50-million redevelopment of the Museum of Contemporary Arts building in Sydney.

WorkCover is investigating the claim made by the union that asbestos was in the edifice's sandstone joints, windows and in the lagging of pipes. The museum was originally built in the 1940s as the headquarters of the Maritime Services Board.

Brian Parker, New South Wales (NSW) Secretary of the CFMEU, said the project's contractor, Watpac Constructions, should have known about the risks of asbestos exposure in the redevelopment project. He added the workers should have been informed so they could have put in place more safety precautions such as wearing of face masks.

NSW Planning Minister Brad Hazzard confirmed the presence of asbestos in the mortar of the sandstone building. He asked workers involved to undergo health checks.

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However, the Asbestos Disease Foundation said workers would not know for up to 40 years the impact of asbestos exposure on their health. Barry Robson, president of the foundation, pointed out that it only takes one asbestos fibre to create mesothelioma and lung cancer.

To double the size of the building, workers had to knock down parts of the edifice. Mr Parker told ABC that the area should have also been cordoned off and safe removal of the hazardous construction materials should have also taken place.

"Workers have been exposed and possibly their families and possibly the general public as well," Mr Parker warned.

However, WorkCover Authority of NSW acting Chief Executive Officer John Watson dispelled the charge made by the CFMEU. He said the safety watchdog visited the site after the union filed a complaint and it is satisfied that the processes are in place to manage exposure to asbestos.

Although work on the project is on hold due to the Christmas break, the NSW government said the project is proceeding according to timetable and the museum would reopen in May 2012.?

Source: http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/273318/20111228/union-claims-400-workers-exposed-asbestos-sydney.htm

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Scientists fixate on Ric-8 to understand trafficking of popular drug receptor targets

Scientists fixate on Ric-8 to understand trafficking of popular drug receptor targets [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-Dec-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Tom Rickey
tom_rickey@urmc.rochester.edu
585-275-7954
University of Rochester Medical Center

Half the drugs used today target a single class of proteins and now scientists have identified an important molecular player critical to the proper workings of those proteins critical to our health.

A protein known as Ric-8 plays a vital role, according to new results from a team led by Gregory Tall, Ph.D., assistant professor of Pharmacology and Physiology at the University of Rochester Medical Center. The work was published recently in Science Signaling.

What you see, what you smell, how you feel molecules known as G-protein coupled receptors and their prime targets, G proteins, are key to those and many other processes that are ubiquitous in our bodies. These proteins serve as the targets of drugs used to treat conditions like cancer, diabetes, depression, allergies, and heart disease.

These receptors normally weave themselves throughout the cell membrane, with one part protruding from the outside of a cell, and the rest of the protein inside the cell. When a compound like a drug or a hormone attaches to a receptor on the cell surface, it affects the G protein bound to the portion of the receptor that is inside the cell, triggering a cascade of signals that make life possible or improve health, in the case of a drug, or perhaps hurting health in the case of a toxin.

Previously, Tall discovered the existence of Ric-8 and learned that it binds to G proteins, which are made inside cells and have to make their way to the cell's outer edge, the membrane, to work correctly. In the new work, his team found that Ric-8 is a chaperone that G proteins need to be transported to the cell membrane. When Ric-8 is knocked out, G proteins don't work as they should and are destroyed.

"G proteins are involved in many biological processes how we see and taste, how our heart beats, even our mood," said Tall. "It's a very important class of proteins. Ric-8 is the chaperone that gets G proteins where they need to be, to the cell membrane. Without it, many of these proteins end up destroyed within the cell."

"Understanding more precisely how this important class of proteins operates in the body can perhaps make many of the drugs we use today more effective for patients," Tall added.

To do the study, Tall and colleagues had to devise a system where they could study the molecules in action. In living animals such as mice, when Ric-8 is knocked out completely, the animals die. So the team worked to identify a stem cell line in which the Ric-8 gene was knocked out, so they could study G protein function in the absence of Ric-8.

###

The first author was graduate student Meital Gabay. Other authors at the University include Mary Pinter, an undergraduate student now at the University of Colorado at Denver; technical associate Forrest Wright, now at SUNY Upstate Medical University; and graduate student PuiYee Chan. The team worked with scientists at Regeneron Pharmaceuticals who created the "knockout" mice used in the study.

Funding for the work came from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences and from the Empire State Stem Cell Board.



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Scientists fixate on Ric-8 to understand trafficking of popular drug receptor targets [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-Dec-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Tom Rickey
tom_rickey@urmc.rochester.edu
585-275-7954
University of Rochester Medical Center

Half the drugs used today target a single class of proteins and now scientists have identified an important molecular player critical to the proper workings of those proteins critical to our health.

A protein known as Ric-8 plays a vital role, according to new results from a team led by Gregory Tall, Ph.D., assistant professor of Pharmacology and Physiology at the University of Rochester Medical Center. The work was published recently in Science Signaling.

What you see, what you smell, how you feel molecules known as G-protein coupled receptors and their prime targets, G proteins, are key to those and many other processes that are ubiquitous in our bodies. These proteins serve as the targets of drugs used to treat conditions like cancer, diabetes, depression, allergies, and heart disease.

These receptors normally weave themselves throughout the cell membrane, with one part protruding from the outside of a cell, and the rest of the protein inside the cell. When a compound like a drug or a hormone attaches to a receptor on the cell surface, it affects the G protein bound to the portion of the receptor that is inside the cell, triggering a cascade of signals that make life possible or improve health, in the case of a drug, or perhaps hurting health in the case of a toxin.

Previously, Tall discovered the existence of Ric-8 and learned that it binds to G proteins, which are made inside cells and have to make their way to the cell's outer edge, the membrane, to work correctly. In the new work, his team found that Ric-8 is a chaperone that G proteins need to be transported to the cell membrane. When Ric-8 is knocked out, G proteins don't work as they should and are destroyed.

"G proteins are involved in many biological processes how we see and taste, how our heart beats, even our mood," said Tall. "It's a very important class of proteins. Ric-8 is the chaperone that gets G proteins where they need to be, to the cell membrane. Without it, many of these proteins end up destroyed within the cell."

"Understanding more precisely how this important class of proteins operates in the body can perhaps make many of the drugs we use today more effective for patients," Tall added.

To do the study, Tall and colleagues had to devise a system where they could study the molecules in action. In living animals such as mice, when Ric-8 is knocked out completely, the animals die. So the team worked to identify a stem cell line in which the Ric-8 gene was knocked out, so they could study G protein function in the absence of Ric-8.

###

The first author was graduate student Meital Gabay. Other authors at the University include Mary Pinter, an undergraduate student now at the University of Colorado at Denver; technical associate Forrest Wright, now at SUNY Upstate Medical University; and graduate student PuiYee Chan. The team worked with scientists at Regeneron Pharmaceuticals who created the "knockout" mice used in the study.

Funding for the work came from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences and from the Empire State Stem Cell Board.



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-12/uorm-sfo122711.php

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hardwarezone: Did the Muppets boost Google+ growth in December? http://t.co/Pp5y8lWw

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

BMW 3 SERIES 320D M SPORT IN METALLIC RED, FULL BMW HISTORY, 6 MONTHS TAX, 1 YEAR MOT, SPORTS CAR : Hounslow : £8,475

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Colombian city gets giant, outdoor escalator (AP)

BOGOTA, Colombia ? Officials in Colombia's second-largest city on Monday inaugurated a giant, outdoor escalator for residents of one of its poorest neighborhoods.

For generations, the 12,000 residents of Medellin's tough Comuna 13, which clings to the side of a steep hillside, have had to climb hundreds of large steps authorities say is the same as going up a 28-story building.

Now they can ride an escalator Medellin's mayor says is the first massive, outdoor public escalator for use by residents of a poor area.

"It turned out very well," said Mayor Alonso Salazar, adding that he has not heard of any such project elsewhere in this world.

Salazar said officials from Rio de Janeiro plan to visit Medellin to see if such an escalator would work in that city's favelas, which also cling precariously to hillsides.

Comuna 13 residents came out to celebrate and study the $6.7 million escalator which officials say will shorten the 35-minute hike on foot up the hillside to six minutes. Use of the escalator is free.

"This is a dream come true," homemaker Olga Holguin told RCN television.

Cesar Hernandez, head of projects for Medellin, said the electric stairway is divided into six sections and has a length of 384 meters (1,260 feet). An escalator goes up and a second goes down. Authorities plan to build a covering for inclement whether.

Salazar described Comuna 13 as the city's district that has "suffered the greatest urban violence... but lately this has been receding and we hope this social package will help it move forward."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111227/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_colombia_giant_escalator

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Women Beat Men to Jobs as Japan?s ?Mancession? Spurs Deflation

December 26, 2011, 9:28 PM EST

By Aki Ito and Toru Fujioka

Dec. 27 (Bloomberg) -- Three times a week, Seiya Ogawa bikes to an unemployment center in Kadoma, home to Panasonic Corp., looking for work to help pay for his son?s final year at college.

?At this point, I?m willing to take any job,? said the 49-year-old, who assembled electronic circuit boards in what was once a bustling manufacturing suburb of Osaka, Japan?s third- largest city. This month, it?s officially one year since he first signed on at the center, and ?it?s like my humanity?s been stripped from me,? he said.

Ogawa and his son rely on the incomes of his wife and daughter, a social role reversal that is spreading in Japan as factories and building companies fire workers and services that hire mostly women add employees. The new jobs pay lower average wages, making it harder for Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda to spur consumer spending and pull the world?s third-largest economy out of a decade of deflation. The increasing burden as breadwinners also gives women less incentive to marry and have children early in a country that already has the fastest-aging population in the developed world.

?With Japanese companies increasingly moving abroad and a shrinking population making growth in construction work unlikely, these sectors just can?t absorb male workers the way they used to,? said Toshihiro Nagahama, chief economist at Dai-Ichi Life Research Institute in Tokyo. ?Nominal wages are falling and falling as a result. This mancession is far from over.?

National Pride

Japan?s economy is shifting from monozukuri, or making things -- which the nation prides itself on -- to services, especially those catering to the 29 million seniors over age 64. Manufacturing and building industries, where seven out of 10 staff are male, will lose 4 million positions this decade, according to Tokyo-based Works Institute, funded by employment- services provider Recruit Co. Health care, 74 percent female, added people at the fastest pace across all industries in the past three years, growing 16 percent, Labor Ministry data show.

The shift is accelerating, thanks to a near record-high currency that?s wiping out profits at exporters including Panasonic and Sony Corp., giving the government no time to ease the transition. Panasonic forecast its biggest annual loss in a decade this fiscal year, while Sony estimated it will lose 90 billion yen ($1.2 billion).

Panasonic and Sony shares have slumped 45 percent and 53 percent this year, helping pull the benchmark Topix index 20 percent lower. At the same time, Message Co., the nation?s second-biggest operator of nursing homes by number of rooms, has risen 1.6 percent, and Nichii Gakkan Co., operator of the largest number of homes, is up 25 percent.

?Future of Japan?

Services such as nursing and health care are ?the future of Japan,? said Curtis Freeze, founder of Honolulu-based Prospect Asset Management Inc., who is considering adding Message to the $300 million that Prospect manages because its employment policies may reduce staff-turnover costs. Manufacturers ?are in the middle of restructuring, and they?re going to struggle. It?s the smaller services companies that will do most of the hiring.?

Health care, with 19 percent of working women, isn?t the only field to add jobs in the past three years: Education -- another profession where women outnumber men -- as well as research, restaurants and real estate also have grown, even as Japan lost a net 12.1 million positions.

Forty-two percent of people employed in 2010 were women, the highest share since the Labor Ministry made comparable data available in 1973, when the figure was 38.5 percent.

?Really Tough?

?It?s really tough right now,? said Reiko Sato, 31, at the government employment office near her home in Tokyo. ?It?s the end of the year, so there are lots of short-term positions at department stores or restaurants that everyone?s competing to get. It?s easier for the girls, because that?s who the stores want. I just feel bad for the men who have to come here. They probably won?t have something in time for the New Year.?

Manufacturing, where men outnumber women by more than 2-to- 1, is still Japan?s largest employer, accounting for about 16 percent of its 62.5 million workers. In construction, the ratio of men to women is 6-to-1. Since October 2008, the former shrank payrolls by 9 percent and the latter by 11 percent. Meanwhile, the health-care workforce will grow 32 percent from 2010 to 2020, according to Works Institute.

Pay Gap

As a result, one of the developed world?s biggest gender- pay gaps -- second only to South Korea and roughly double the average in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development -- is narrowing. Women between 30 and 34 earned an average 2.99 million yen last year, 69 percent of the 4.32 million yen for men, according to National Tax Agency data. That?s up from 55 percent in 1978.

The increase may help shift consumer spending toward services women prefer, such as traveling and dining out, and away from durable goods including cars and electronics, said Kyohei Morita, chief Japan economist at Barclays Capital in Tokyo. HIS Co., Japan?s largest listed travel agency, has risen 4.3 percent this year, to 2,141 yen.

?It?s because I work that I can go on these trips and buy my favorite makeup,? said Ayumi Ohtaki, a 27-year-old call- center operator in Tokyo who earns 240,000 yen a month. While she?s in no hurry to marry, she said she would want to keep her job after her wedding to ensure she could continue to buy the things she wants.

?If the money?s just from my husband, I wouldn?t be able to do anything fun,? she said.

Birth Rate

With women like Ohtaki marrying later and delaying starting a family, and more men struggling to find work, Japan?s falling birth rate is likely to get worse, said Mary Brinton, a sociology professor at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, who studied the lives of young Japanese men shut out of well-paid, full-time work in the 1990s.

The number of babies born in 2010 was 1.07 million, down from 1.19 million in 2000, according to the Health, Labor and Welfare Ministry.

?This so-called mancession is going to cause continuing problems for the marriage rate and birth rate,? she said. ?Many young Japanese men say they want to have a stable job before they consider marrying.?

Even so, the shift toward more female employees isn?t likely to boost overall consumer spending because the factory jobs being lost paid more than the newly created service positions. Social services and nursing paid an average 229,732 yen a month last year, 63 percent of the 362,340 yen for factory workers and 62 percent of the 373,288 yen earned in construction, according to the labor ministry.

?The reality is that women get paid less,? Morita said.

Global Trend

The trend of women replacing men in Japan?s workforce mirrors a similar shift in other developed nations as companies cut back payrolls. Last year, the average male unemployment rate among the OECD countries was 8.5 percent, compared with 8.1 percent for women, according to the organization?s website. In 2000, the situation was reversed, with 5.8 percent of men jobless and 6.8 percent of female workers.

Japan?s unemployment rate in 2010 was 5.4 percent for men and 4.6 percent for women, a record gap. Joblessness may rise to 7.1 percent for men and 5.9 percent for women by 2020, Works Institute estimates.

That?s a bleak outlook for Ogawa, who lives alongside Kadoma?s rusting, shuttered factories, which once drew laborers from across Japan as they boomed with the Panasonic headquarters they surround. He says the stagnation has changed the attitude of young people in their 20s like his son and daughter, who hoard the money they earn rather than spending it.

?It?s hard to tell them to aim high when I?m struggling to find a job,? Ogawa said. ?I don?t dare talk about my good times when I was their age; they just wouldn?t understand.?

--With assistance from Kanoko Matsuyama and Eleanor Warnock in Tokyo. Editor: Adam Majendie, Melinda Grenier.

To contact the reporters on this story: Aki Ito in Tokyo at aito16@bloomberg.net; Toru Fujioka in Tokyo at tfujioka1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Paul Panckhurst at ppanckhurst@bloomberg.net

Source: http://c.moreover.com/click/here.pl?r5665681469

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Kim Jong-un Hailed as Supreme Commander of North Korea?s Military

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Source: www.nytimes.com --- Saturday, December 24, 2011
State-run media called the country?s new young leader, Kim Jong-un, ?supreme commander? in a commentary, which also urged him to continue the Military-first revolution. ...

Source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=e565d8975966257d44a7f7f2997002b0

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Powerful Darfur rebel chief dead, Sudan says (Reuters)

KHARTOUM (Reuters) ? Sudan's armed forces have killed the leader of Darfur's most powerful rebel group, state media said on Sunday, dealing a severe blow to insurgents in the remote western region in their nearly decade-long war with Khartoum.

The Darfur conflict has rumbled on since mainly non-Arab insurgents took up arms in 2003, saying the central government had left them out of the political and economic power structure and was favoring local Arab tribes.

Khalil Ibrahim, head of the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM), emerged as one of the most powerful rebel commanders. In 2008, his fighters drove across the arid western terrain and launched a shock attack on Khartoum, killing over 200 people.

Sudan's authorities have long hunted Ibrahim, who had taken refuge in neighboring Libya under Muammar Gaddafi until the leader's overthrow deprived him of his safe haven, and had refused to sign a Qatar-brokered peace deal.

Al-Sawarmi Khalid, Sudan's armed forces spokesman, said government forces killed Ibrahim early on Sunday morning as he tried to cross into South Sudan, which seceded in July under a 2005 peace deal that ended a separate, decades-long civil war.

"The armed forces clashed in a direct confrontation with Khalil Ibrahim's rebel forces, and were able to eliminate Khalil Ibrahim, who died with a group of commanders," Khalid told state television.

JEM officials did not answer phone calls for comment on Sunday, but Al Jazeera television quoted Ibrahim's brother as confirming the death, saying he died in an air raid on his military convoy.

The death of Ibrahim, often described as commanding and charismatic, could be a major blow to JEM, although tightly restricted access to Sudan's conflict zones has made it hard to gauge the actual strength and internal unity of insurgents.

"Khalil's death is an important symbolic victory for the Government of Sudan - JEM has long been the most formidable military opposition in Darfur," Aly Verjee, a researcher at the Rift Valley Institute think tank , said.

"I don't think JEM will disappear with Khalil's death, but there's a risk that JEM fractures without his leadership, as has happened with the SLM (Sudan Liberation Movement) and other rebel movements in Darfur."

FIGHTING GOES ON

The United Nations has said as many as 300,000 people may have died in Darfur, where Khartoum mobilized troops and mostly Arab militias to crush the uprising. Khartoum puts the death toll at 10,000.

While violence has died down since the mass killings reported in the early days of the conflict, law and order have collapsed and the area has been hit by attacks by bandits, militias, soldiers and tribal groups in recent years.

Some 2 million people have fled the fighting, the United Nations says.

Various Darfur rebel groups, including two factions of the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA), have fought on despite a huge United Nations-African Union peacekeeping operation set up in 2007.

Qatar brokered a peace deal which Sudan signed this year with the Liberation and Justice Movement (LJM), an umbrella association of smaller groups.

But JEM and the other major rebels groups have refused to sign the document, dampening hopes the region will soon see lasting peace.

In November, Darfur's main insurgent groups said they had formed an alliance to topple President Omar al-Bashir with other rebels in two border states, where fighting broke out around the time of South Sudan's independence.

Islamist in its outlook, Ibrahim's group has cooperated in the past with the more secular SLA rebels, although their different ideologies and histories have led to tensions.

JEM has claimed military advances as recently as last week, saying on Saturday its fighters clashed with government militias in parts of the North Kordofan state and were planning to advance on the capital Khartoum.

The report could not be independently verified.

Ibrahim died during a clash in North Kordofan's Wad Banda area, where authorities have accused JEM of attacking civilians and looting in the region, Sudan's state news agency SUNA said. The rebel group denies the charges.

The International Criminal Court has charged Bashir with masterminding genocide and other crimes in the region, accusations Khartoum dismisses as political.

(Writing by Alexander Dziadosz; Editing by Jon Hemming)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111225/wl_nm/us_sudan_darfur

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China, Japan unveil deals to tighten finance ties | Washington ...

Chinese and Japanese leaders have unveiled initiatives to tighten financial links between East Asia's economic giants and sometime rivals ? measures that could expand use of China's tightly controlled currency abroad.

During a visit to Beijing by Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda, the two governments said in a surprise announcement Sunday they will encourage use of their own currencies in bilateral trade, which now is conducted mostly in U.S. dollars.

They also agreed to support the sale of bonds denominated in China's yuan by Japanese companies in Tokyo and foreign markets and by the state-owned Japan Bank of International Cooperation in mainland China's markets, which are closed to most foreign investors.

The pledges were a striking step for China and Japan, which are the world's second- and third-largest economies and are bound by billions of dollars in trade but whose political relations often are strained over conflicting territorial claims and other disputes.

"To support the growing economic and financial ties between China and Japan, the leaders of China and Japan have agreed to enhance mutual cooperation in financial markets of both countries and encourage financial transactions between the two countries," the governments said in identically worded statements.

They said Japan's government also planned to purchase Chinese government bonds, and an application process for official approval of that was under way.

The governments gave no timetable for practical steps to put the pledges into action or the size of possible bond offerings. Commercial banks still have to create yuan-denominated letters of credit and other tools before traders in Japan can use the currency.

The moves might reduce the dominance of the U.S. dollar in East Asia, the world's fastest-growing region. The Kyodo News agency cited a Japanese official who told reporters some 60 percent of trade between Japan and China is now settled in dollars, which requires companies to convert money between yen, dollars and yuan, adding to their costs.

Beijing controls the yuan's exchange rate and the flow of money into and out of China's booming economy. But the government has begun allowing limited use of yuan for trade. It said this month that some companies that obtain Chinese currency abroad will be allowed to invest it in mainland financial markets.

Most trade in yuan is conducted through Hong Kong, where Beijing also has created a market for yuan-denominated bonds that McDonald's Corp. and some other foreign companies have used to raise money to invest in their mainland operations.

The easing of controls on bond sales could help to reduce costs for Japanese companies that need to raise money to invest in their China operations.

The communist government keeps China's bond and other financial markets sealed off from global financial flows. That helped the country avoid the turmoil of the 2008 global financial crisis but has slowed the development of markets that Chinese leaders want to support economic development.

The latest pledges also might help to promote moves to allow the yuan to trade more freely on currency markets.

The United States and other trading partners complain that Beijing's currency controls keep the yuan undervalued, giving China's exporters an unfair price advantage and hurting foreign competitors at a time when the global economy is struggling.

Source: http://washingtonexaminer.com/news/2011/12/china-japan-unveil-deals-tighten-finance-ties/2034946

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Google becomes the Clark Griswold of the internet with 'Jingle Bells' doodle

Having conquered so many aspects of the software world, it's time for Google to take the next logical step in its evolution: becoming that annoying neighbor who always goes a bit overboard each year with the Christmas display. This time out, Google's doodle lets you play five notes of "Jingle Bells" manually, bringing down the lights and finishing up the song with a full-on holiday light show. Check it out, but don't blame us if your computer blows a fuse.

Google becomes the Clark Griswold of the internet with 'Jingle Bells' doodle originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 24 Dec 2011 14:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/TCxCifUOV2k/

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Rapper 'Tyler, the Creator' arrested for vandalism (AP)

WEST HOLLYWOOD, Calif. ? The rapper known as "Tyler, the Creator," was arrested after authorities say he got rowdy following a show at The Roxy Theatre in West Hollywood.

Los Angeles County sheriff's Sgt. Arthur Famble Jr. said the rapper was arrested Thursday night after he appeared in a show by his group, Odd Future, and destroyed the Sunset Strip nightclub's electronic soundboard.

The sergeant said Roxy security guards called deputies, and the 20-year-old rapper, whose real name is Tyler Gregory Okonma, was booked for investigation of felony vandalism. He was released early Friday on $20,000 bail.

As Okonma was being led to a squad car, the crowd leaving the Roxy became angry and rushed toward deputies, Famble said.

Additional deputies were called in to disperse the crowd, and Sunset Boulevard was shut down for about a half-hour.

No one was hurt.

Telephone numbers for Okonma and his Los Angeles record company couldn't be found. Okonma said in a Twitter message that he wasn't arrested.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/music/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111223/ap_en_mu/us_rapper_vandalism_arrest

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Judge blocks parts of South Carolina immigration law (Reuters)

CHARLESTON, South Carolina (Reuters) ? South Carolina is barred from enforcing several key parts of its new law aimed at curbing illegal immigration, a federal judge ruled on Thursday, making the state the latest to see such efforts halted by the courts.

U.S. District Judge Richard Gergel temporarily blocked parts of South Carolina's measure. He ruled the federal government has exclusive constitutional authority to regulate immigration and the state's law would disrupt federal enforcement operations.

The U.S. Justice Department and a coalition of civil rights groups had sued to keep some aspects of the law from going into effect on January 1.

The judge said South Carolina could not require police officers to check the immigration status of a person they stop for even a minor traffic violation if they have "reasonable suspicion" that the person is in the country illegally.

This "state-mandated scrutiny is without consideration of federal enforcement priorities and unquestionably vastly expands the persons targeted for immigration enforcement action," Gergel said.

Gergel also barred South Carolina from making it a felony for anyone knowingly to harbor or transport an undocumented person.

The state cannot require immigrants to carry federal alien registration documents because such registration is under the exclusive control of the federal government, the judge said.

GET TOUGH

South Carolina is among states that have enacted tough laws against illegal immigration in the past two years, citing inaction by the federal government that has left a void in immigration policy.

But federal judges have consistently blocked the attempts, halting key parts of other immigration laws passed in Alabama, Georgia, Arizona, Utah and Indiana. The fight over the Arizona law will go before the U.S. Supreme Court next year.

In a related matter on Thursday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit, based in Atlanta, rejected requests to put on hold its review of the immigration laws in Alabama and Georgia pending the resolution of the Arizona case.

South Carolina lawmakers' disagreement with federal immigration enforcement does not give the state the right to "adopt its own immigration policy to supplant the policy of the national government," Gergel said.

There are an estimated 11.2 million illegal immigrants in the United States, according to the Pew Hispanic Center.

(Editing by Colleen Jenkins, Jerry Norton and Bill Trott)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111222/us_nm/us_usa_immigration_southcarolina

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Halperin's Take: Closing Strong (TIME)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/178400297?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Friday, December 23, 2011

God Forbid that Jimmy Carter Sent Condolences to Kim Jong Un (ContributorNetwork)

COMMENTARY | Former President Jimmy Carter has allegedly sent condolences to the new dictator of North Korea, Kim Jong Un, over his loss, and wished him "every success" in the new role, which the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) reported, according to Business Insider Dec. 21. The Washington Times reported that a Carter Center spokeswoman won't be around until next year to verify or deny the story for the newspaper as of Dec 21.

Let's hope Carter didn't. For if he did, God forbid, it will make the former president look not only foolish in general, but even more foolish to the right wing in this country, who constantly trashes his presidency and/or mentions him along with President Barack Obama, like Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., did Dec. 20, on the Fox News show "On the Record," according to Fox News' website.

When a cruel despot (e.g., Kim Jong Il, Adolf Hitler, Joseph Stalin, Saddam Hussein, etc.) dies, who in their right frame of mind thinks about going to their local Hallmark store to buy a card and/or send out some other communicative message of condolences and well wishes to those deceased's survivors?

Certainly, a high-profile former politician in the United States should not incite North Korea with "glad he's dead" rhetoric during the nation's time of grieving, which is lasting 13 days, according to the Arirang. It's wise to say nothing and keep the condolences cards in the drawer.

And what kind of political leader who values freedom would make wishes of "every success" to Kim Jong Un? What does that exactly mean? That this new strongman keep up his father's deeds of brainwashing, oppressing, and starving his people out of existence? Up to a million people died from a major famine that occurred over 10 years ago and the country is facing more famine, The Telegraph reported last summer.

Even the Obama Administration hasn't offered any public condolences to North Korea. For according to the Voice of America, the White House was focused on words about fostering stability in the Korean peninsula in the reaction rather than sending condolences or well wishes.

Anyone who would send condolences for one of the vilest human beings who's ever slithered along this earth should really think twice about that.

Say it isn't so, President Carter.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/un/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20111222/pl_ac/10733693_god_forbid_that_jimmy_carter_sent_condolences_to_kim_jong_un

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Automotive Safety Council Celebrates 50 Life-Saving Years ? CBS ...

The Automotive Occupant Restraints Council, founded in 1961, now known as the Automotive Safety Council, is celebrating its 50th year of saving lives.

The organization?s membership includes the leading global auto safety system manufacturers and their major suppliers.

The organization also has a new Web site at www.automotivesafetycouncil.org, which highlights the latest technologies in automotive safety.

One such technology, Electronic Stability Control (ESC), becomes standard equipment in the United States on all passenger cars and light trucks in 2012.? ESC has shown the ability to prevent the loss of control of the vehicle under numerous conditions which can potentially save thousands of lives per year when fully implemented.

?Today?s safety systems are reaching ever-greater levels of integration and sophistication,? said ASC President Doug Campbell. ?New active systems have a greater ability to sense the vehicle environment and technologies such as ESC can be employed to help prevent accidents or mitigate their severity, while occupant protection systems like seat belts and air bags have become more adaptive to the crash variables such as occupant size, position, speed of the crash, and more.?

ASC members produce most of the passive, active, interior and child safety products found in vehicles sold in the United States and the rest of the world, including ESC.

Source: http://detroit.cbslocal.com/2011/12/20/automotive-safety-council-celebrates-50-life-saving-years/

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Walmart's 2010 Black Friday and Getting Your XBox Kinect (ContributorNetwork)

If you are looking to get an XBox with Kinect on Black Friday at Wal-Mart, you may find yourself out of luck, if the retailer is offering a big discount on the game system. Here are some Black Friday hunting tips to help you find that Kinect at Wal-Mart.

1. Check a regional map of all the Wal-Marts in your area

You can use Yahoo Maps or Google Maps and type in Wal-Mart. There will pop up all the Wal-Marts in your area. Immediately eliminate all the Wal-Marts in the more densely populated areas. You want to head to Wal-Marts that out of the way. When the Wii was hot in demand last year, it was the Wal-Marts out in "cow country" that had the hard to find game system in stock.

2. Talk to employees and managers

Go to those far flung Wal-Marts a few days before Black Friday and ask them about the Kinect. If they have the system in stock and when it will be stocked for Black Friday. Chances are you can get an exact time when the systems will be in stock and you can be first-in-line to get the system.

3. Check online at Walmart.com

Walmart will also have most of their inventory for sale online. The Kinect may or may not be in-stock. However, you should check with the site to see if you can get your Kinect online as opposed to the store.

4. Split up

If you have relatives or friends that can go with you on Black Friday, split up. Go to one out-of-the-way Wal-Mart and have your friend or family member go to the other location. By dividing up, you double the chances of getting finding the Kinect in stock.

5. Talk to a relative or friend in a rural area

Let's say you live in Los Angeles or in the New York metro area, chances are, all the Wal-Marts will be out of the Kinect. However, if you have a friend or family member in rural Missouri, they may live close to a Wal-Mart that is stocked with the Kinect. It's a good idea to get in touch with these family members to help you find out if those rural Wal-mArts have the game system in stock.

if the Kniect is on sale, at Wal-Mart, for Black Friday, there is almost certainly going to be a shortage of the game system. The key to getting the game will be to head to Wal-Marts that are in the less populated areas in your area. It will also help if you and your friends and family divide up and check several Wal-Mart locations.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20111222/us_ac/7184548_walmarts_2010_black_friday_and_getting_your_xbox_kinect

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Monday, December 19, 2011

I wanna talk like you (oo)

Friday, December 16, 2011

The role of social structure in animal communication is hotly debated. Non-human primates seem to be born with a range of calls and sounds which is dependent upon their species. But overlying this there seems to be some flexibility - you can tell where a gibbon lives by its accent. New research published in Biomed Central's open access journal BMC Evolutionary Biology used Campbell's monkeys to look in detail at the nature versus nurture question and showed that non-human primate 'language', like humans, is learnt.

Researchers studied free-living Campbell's monkeys (Cercopithecus campbelli campbelli) from the Ta? National Park, Ivory Coast. They observed social interactions (time spent grooming) and recorded 'contact calls' made while the females were travelling, foraging or resting. Genetic similarity (family relationships) was determined by microsatellite analysis of DNA isolated from droppings. These monkeys have lived close to the Ta? Monkey Project Research Station for more than 10 years so their social structure and family groups are well known. Groups consisted of one male, four or six females, along with their offspring.

Dr Alban Lemasson who led the multi centre team explained, "Each female has its own distinctive vocalisation but they appear to pick up habits from each other. Similarities between 'contact calls' were dependent on the length of time adult females spent grooming each other (and who their grooming partner was) rather than genetic relatedness. This means that while the general call repertoire of non-human primates is dependent on genetic factors, the fine structure within this is influenced by the company they kept. This behaviour also fits with the theory that human speech has evolved gradually from ancestral primate vocalisations and social patterns."

###

Social learning of vocal structure in a nonhuman primate?
Alban Lemasson, Karim Ouattara, Eric J Petit and Klaus Zuberb?hler
BMC Evolutionary Biology (in press)

BioMed Central: http://www.biomedcentral.com

Thanks to BioMed Central for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 70 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/116104/I_wanna_talk_like_you__oo_

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Lawmaker unveils bill to avert defense cuts (AP)

WASHINGTON ? The chairman of the House Armed Services Committee has introduced a bill to avert further cuts in Pentagon spending after the failure of the deficit-cutting supercommittee.

Republican Rep. Howard "Buck" McKeon is proposing a reduction of the federal workforce by 10 percent to produce revenue that would avoid one year of cuts to defense and nondefense programs. The California lawmaker said in a statement that the reduction would come through attrition.

McKeon said commanders have warned that cuts to defense would undermine the military's ability to defend the nation.

Under the automatic cuts, federal spending would be reduced by $1.2 trillion over 10 years, with about half coming from defense.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/usmilitary/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111215/ap_on_go_ot/us_defense_cuts

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Removing sulfur from jet fuel cools climate

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

A Yale study examining the impact of aviation on climate change found that removing sulfur from jet fuel cools the atmosphere. The study was published in the October 22 issue of Geophysical Research Letters.

"Aviation is really important to the global economy. We better understand what it's doing to climate because it's the fastest growing fossil fuel-burning sector and there is no alternative to air travel in many circumstances. Emissions are projected to increase substantially in the next two decades?by a factor of two?whereas projections for other sectors are expected to decrease," said Nadine Unger, the study's author and assistant professor of climate science at the Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies.

Particles of sulfate, formed by burning sulfur-laden jet fuel, act like tiny mirrors that scatter solar radiation back into space. When sulfur is removed from the fuel, warming occurs but it's offset by the cooling effect of nitrate that forms from nitrogen oxides in jet exhaust. The result is that desulfurization of jet fuel has a small, net cooling effect.

In 2006 the United States introduced an ultralow sulfur standard for highway diesel, and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is interested in desulfurized jet fuel for its potential to improve air quality around airports. Aircraft exhaust particles lodge in the lungs and cause respiratory and cardiovascular illness. In 2006 there were more than 31 million flights across the globe, according to an FAA emissions inventory.

"It's a win-win situation, because the sulfate can be taken out of the fuel to improve air quality around airports and, at the same time, it's not going to have a detrimental impact on global warming," she said.

Unger used a global-scale model that assessed the impact of reducing the amount of sulfur in jet fuel from 600 milligrams per kilogram of fuel to 15 milligrams per kilogram, which is the level targeted by the U.S. Department of Transportation.

The study also simulated the full impacts of aviation emissions, such as ozone, methane, carbon dioxide, sulfate and contrails?those ribbons of clouds that appear in the wake of a jet?whereas previous studies examined each chemical effect only in isolation.

"In this study we tried to put everything together so that we account for interactions between those different chemical effects," said Unger. "We find that only a third of the climate impact from aviation can be attributed to carbon dioxide."

Unger also ran a simulation of aviation emissions at the Earth's surface and found that the climate impact is four times greater because the emissions occur at altitude in the upper atmosphere.

"The chemical production of ozone is greater in the upper troposphere and its radiative efficiency is greater," she said. "It's a stronger greenhouse gas when it's higher up in the troposphere, which is exactly where aviation is making it."

###

Yale University: http://www.yale.edu

Thanks to Yale University for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 54 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/116006/Removing_sulfur_from_jet_fuel_cools_climate

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Friday, December 16, 2011

Israeli defense minister Ehud Barak calls for crackdown on 'Jewish terror'

Mr. Barak addressed an uptick in Jewish vigilantism. Today, Jewish extremists attacked a Jerusalem mosque, albeit one no longer used for prayers.

Right-wing Jewish extremists vandalized and attempted to burn down an unused Jerusalem mosque today, the latest of a string of attacks by Jewish groups that have spurred public debate over whether such violence should be considered "terrorism."

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Agence France-Presse reports that the vandals spray-painted graffiti insulting Islam and the Prophet Mohammed on the mosque, which has not been used for religious functions since 1948, and is currently used as a municipal storage facility. The graffiti also included the words "price tag," ? referring to a policy The Christian Science Monitor has described as "using violence against Palestinians and Israeli security forces in retaliation for outpost evacuations and militant attacks on settlers."

The graffiti also included "Mitzpeh Yitzhar" and "Ramat Gilad," the names of two illegal settlement outposts in the West Bank that are set to be destroyed by the end of the month.?

The mosque arson is just the latest in a string of attacks by Jewish right-wing extremists. On Monday night and early Tuesday morning, a group of what IDF Maj.-Gen. Avi Mizrahi called "Jewish rioters" attacked an Israeli military base in the West Bank, reports The Jerusalem Post. The attackers burned tires, vandalized military vehicles, and threw rocks at IDF personnel, apparently spurred by rumors that the military would soon be evacuating and leveling the Ramat Gilad settlement.?

?I personally saw the people, the rioters, that threw stones and cursed our soldiers and commanders. I have not seen such hatred of Jews toward soldiers during my 30 years of service,? Mizrahi said.

Rioters also attacked Palestinian civilians in the same area in the West Bank, injuring one woman.

Justice Minister Yaakov Neeman is investigating emergency measures to crack down on the extremists, reports Haaretz, one of which is to declare them a terrorist organization, which would expedite legal action against them. Defense Minister Ehud Barak recommended investigating such an approach, saying that, "From the way they conduct themselves, there's no question that this is terror behavior," though he notes that it is still unclear whether the extremists fall under the legal definition of terrorists.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/qS32Zcg0AL8/Israeli-defense-minister-Ehud-Barak-calls-for-crackdown-on-Jewish-terror

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