Monday, December 31, 2012

Israel indicts ex-minister Lieberman

(AP) ? Israel's Justice Ministry filed its indictment of former foreign minister Avigdor Lieberman in a Jerusalem court on Sunday, charging him with breach of trust and fraud in a case that could hurt his political future.

Lieberman is accused of trying to advance the career of a former diplomat after the envoy relayed information to him about a criminal investigation into the former Cabinet minister's business dealings.

On Dec. 13, the Justice Ministry released a draft indictment to both Lieberman and the press. On Sunday, an amended version of that draft was filed in the Jerusalem Magistrates Court after prosecutors received testimony suggesting he was more deeply involved than previously thought in trying to promote the diplomat.

The actual charges remained unchanged.

Lieberman, who denies any wrongdoing, resigned his Cabinet post earlier this month after he was informed of the pending charges, though he remains a member of parliament. He did not appear in court on Sunday and had no comment on the indictment.

The diplomat he tried to promote, former ambassador to Belarus Zeev Ben-Aryeh, reached a plea bargain with the state in the case earlier this year.

The indictment did not address the main suspicions against Lieberman that had been the focus of a years-long investigation. Attorney General Yehuda Weinstein ultimately decided that prosecutors did not have a strong enough case to charge Lieberman with illicitly receiving millions of dollars from businessmen and laundering the cash through straw companies in eastern Europe.

While he was charged with lesser offenses, Lieberman's political future could be compromised if the court that hears the case decides to convict him of a crime that carries what is known in Israeli law as "moral turpitude." Lawmakers convicted of such crimes must resign immediately from parliament, then are barred from re-entering politics for seven years.

Lieberman's Yisrael Beiteinu party is running on a joint list with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud in the Jan. 22 election, and he is expected to be re-elected to parliament. Political commentators had viewed the hookup as grooming him to become a future prime minister. Lieberman takes a hard line on concessions to the Palestinians and perceives Israel's large Arab minority as a threat to the Jewish state.

In other political news, Israel's Supreme Court unanimously rejected an election committee's attempt to disqualify an Arab lawmaker from running for parliament again next month because she took part in a flotilla that tried to breach Israel's naval blockade of the Hamas-run Gaza Strip.

The lawmaker, Hanin Zoabi, enraged many Israelis in 2010 by joining the Turkish-led Mavi Marmara flotilla, which was stormed by Israeli naval commandos who clashed with pro-Palestinian activists, killing nine. The Israeli military says the soldiers acted in self-defense after being attacked on the deck.

Zoabi was nearly assaulted in parliament by another lawmaker and subsequently was stripped of some of her parliamentary privileges.

Earlier this month, an Israeli elections committee voted to disqualify her from running in next month's election. She appealed that decision to the Supreme Court, which overturned it, as it has rejected the committee's attempts in previous years to bar other Arab candidates from running.

"I welcome the ruling," Zoabi said. "I hope this ruling will put an end to the political witchhunt."

Lawmaker Danny Danon, who collected thousands of signatures demanding that Zoabi's candidacy be disqualified, accused the court of "backing the Marmara terrorist rather than naval commando fighters."

The court said in its ruling that it would release its reason for overturning the decision at a later date. Under Israel's election law, the court had to issue its ruling by Sunday.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-12-30-Israel-Politics/id-99a8dbf5ec61433fa00ae4ff1ef5aeba

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Sunday, December 30, 2012

David Comer commented on article Obama Puts Pressure on GOP in Cliff Talks

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Cosmic Religions for Space Colonization

I recommend watching the one-hour film Knocking on Heaven?s Door, by George Carey, aired by the BBC in 2011, to all space enthusiasts interested in the history of the Russian space program and our future out there in the universe. The film zeroes in on the powerful role that religion can play in advancing radical scientific visions.

eso-stars

Konstantin Tsiolkovsky, the father of the Russian space program, was a brilliant scientist and engineer, but his motivation and drive came from his philosophical convictions, his belief in humanity?s destiny to leave the Earth and colonize the universe, and his vision of a deep unity between man and the cosmos.

The real protagonist of Carey?s film is Tsiolkovsky?s mentor, Nikolai Fedorov, who taught that science would make us immortal. The film shows how the Russian space program was strongly inspired by Cosmist philosophers and mystics, who believed that we should evolve into super-humans who could leave our overcrowded planet to colonize the universe. I recently talked to Carey about this film and related projects ? he said that he researched Cosmism as a neutral observer who reports what he finds, but I think the film shows that he liked what he found.

Some reprehensible pirates tell me that Carey?s Knocking on Heaven?s Door is easy to find on the Torrent networks. There is also a streaming version on Vimeo.

Fedorov suggested that science was a tool given to us by God to enable us to resurrect the dead and, as promised, enjoy immortal life. He added that because the Earth could not sustain a population that never died, we must first learn to conquer space. His ideas about human evolution, and in particular the idea that humans should take control of the process and direct it towards their own goals, inspired generations of Russian scientists and led directly to contemporary transhumanism. See also this interesting review and discussion?of Fedorov?s ideas on Charlie Stross? blog.

Carey?s film captures the popular enthusiasm for space in the Soviet Union of the 60s. We had the same enthusiasm in the West at the time, and God knows we could use it now, all over the planet. I think contemporary versions of Cosmist philosophy could renew our enthusiasm and drive for space.

One problem is that Cosmism not only sounds like religion, but was actually a spinoff of Russian Orthodox Christianity. This may upset those space enthusiasts who are also militant atheists but, as recently noted by Charlie Jane Anders on io9, smug atheists should read more science fiction. ?A lot of the best science fiction is intensely ?cosmic,? conveying just how huge and unknowable the universe is, and how little we still understand it,? says Anders. ?In a sense, the huge cosmic imagery of science fiction resembles some of the best religious paintings.?

I think atheists are right when they point an accusing finger to the many evil things done by organized religions. But I believe that evil does not come from the honest, heartfelt faith of believers, who have the right to pursue happiness, and are often nice and compassionate persons. Evil, in religion like everywhere else, comes from evil persons with power over others.

Cosmism is not religion in a conventional sense, but highly imaginative science. Richard Dawkins (yes, Dawkins, the leading atheist thinker) thinks that it?s highly plausible that in the universe there are God-like creatures. In The God Delusion, he writes: ?Whether we ever get to know them or not, there are very probably alien civilizations that are superhuman, to the point of being god-like in ways that exceed anything a theologian could possibly imagine.?

In total agreement with Dawkins, I am persuaded that ?future magic? technologies will permit achieving, by scientific means, most of the promises of religions ? and many amazing things that no human religion ever dreamed. If there are God-like beings in the universe, I think we should go and meet them out there, and try to become God-like beings ourselves.

Sociologist William Sims Bainbridge, NSF program manager and editor of the first NBIC Converging Technologies report, thinks that religion of a certain kind was instrumental in the rise of science and modern technology, and that religion of a certain kind will be instrumental in our expansion to the stars. In a 2009 paper on Religion for a Galactic Civilization, he writes:

?Progress in spaceflight technology has halted at a level that is insufficient for colonization of the solar system, let alone for voyages to the stars? We need a new definition of spaceflight that will energize investment and innovation. I suggest a return to the traditional view: The heavens are a sacred realm, that we should enter in order to transcend death.?

?To become fully interplanetary, let alone interstellar, our society would need another leap?and it needs that leap very soon before world culture ossifies into secure uniformity, or decays into absolute chaos. We need a new spaceflight social movement capable of giving a sense of transcendent purpose to dominant sectors of the society.

?Religion will continue to influence the course of progress, and creation of a galactic civilization may depend upon the emergence of a galactic religion capable of motivating society for the centuries required to accomplish that great project. This religion would be a very demanding social movement, and will require extreme discipline from its members, so for purposes of this essay I will call it The Cosmic Order.

?It is wrong to feel that irrational religion must always be a hindrance to progress. I have suggested that only a transcendent, impractical, radical religion can take us to the stars. The alternative is one or another form of ugly death. A successful outcome depends on a kind of lucky insanity, and it is quite unlikely. But for our species, at least it is still possible.?

In my article Uploaded e-crews for interstellar missions on KurzweilAI, republished by io9 as Why we should send uploaded astronauts on interstellar missions, I propose a strategy for cost-effective interstellar missions: to do without the wetware bodies of the crew, and send only their minds to the stars, their software, uploaded to advanced ?computronium? circuitry in miniature starships. This will be a step in the right direction, because it seems likely that biological intelligence is only a transitory phenomenon, and advanced civilizations among the stars are probably post-biological in nature.

Bainbridge agrees. At a space policy symposium in 2001, he said that the gradual merging of human beings with their computers over the next century gives rise to the prospect of interstellar immortality. Then he teamed up with polymath genius Martine Rothblatt, a very successful space and biotechnology entrepreneur and a relentless advocate of the rights of transgendered persons, to develop the Bainbridge-Rothblatt ?mindfile? approach to mind uploading.

?A mindfile is the sum of saved digital reflections about you,? says Martine Rothblatt. ?All of the stored emails, chats, texts, IMs and blogs that you write are part of your mindfile. All of the uploaded photos, slide shows and movies that involve you are part of your mindfile. Your search histories, clicked selections and online purchases, if saved, are part of your mindfile. Your digital life is your mindfile.? Rothblatt believes that?future AI technology will be able to merge the information stored in the mindfile with ?human firmware,? a generic model of a human mind, and bring you back to life.

Rothblatt?s LifeNaut and CyBeRev websites offer a growing array of services for the creation and storage of mindfiles, based on Bainbridge?s research on personality capture. I have strong reservations on the practical possibility to capture enough of a personality with today?s slow interfaces, but future brain scanning and BCI technologies will permit a much faster capture of memories, thoughts and feelings, and I can imagine how future AI technology may be able to patch incomplete information.

Rothblatt founded Terasem, a scientific religion strongly reminiscent of Fedorov?s Cosmism and Bainbridge?s Cosmic Order, to advance space colonization and ?soft uploading? via mindfiles. One of the services of Terasem is beaming mindfiles to space in the hope that advanced civilizations, Dawkins? God-like super aliens, may one day decode them and bring them back to life, much like a police sketch artist creates a realistic photo from a few clues. The same technology will be used by our descendants to beam uploaded astronauts to stellar colonies and starships.

Source: http://ieet.org/index.php/IEET/more/prisco20121230

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World Junior Championship: Canada beats U.S. 2-1 [Photos]

Canada's goalie Malcolm Subban lays on the ice after making a save as Team USA's Nathan MacKinnon (L) skates by during the first period of their preliminary round game during the 2013 IIHF U20 World Junior Hockey Championship in Ufa, December 30, 2012. REUTERS/Mark Blinch

Canada's Ryan Strome celebrates his goal against Team USA during the first period of their preliminary round game during the 2013 IIHF U20 World Junior Hockey Championship in Ufa, December 30, 2012. REUTERS/Mark Blinch

Canada's goalie Malcolm Subban (30) guards the net with teammates Xavier Ouellet (16) and Mark McNeill (24) as Team USA's Sean Kuraly (7) and Riley Barber (16) go for the puck during the second period of their preliminary round game at the 2013 IIHF U20 World Junior Hockey Championship in Ufa, December 30, 2012. REUTERS/Mark Blinch

Canada's Ryan Murphy collides with Team USA's Blake Pietila (R) during the first period of their preliminary round game during the 2013 IIHF U20 World Junior Hockey Championship in Ufa, December 30, 2012. REUTERS/Mark Blinch

Canada's players celebrate defeating Team USA during their preliminary round game at the 2013 IIHF U20 World Junior Hockey Championship in Ufa, December 30, 2012. REUTERS/Mark Blinch

Canada's goalie Malcolm Subban celebrates with teammate Phillip Danault (R) after they defeated Team USA in their preliminary round game during the 2013 IIHF U20 World Junior Hockey Championship in Ufa, December 30, 2012. REUTERS/Mark Blinch

Canada's Ryan Nugent-Hopkins celebrates his goal with Xavier Ouellet (16) against Team USA during the first period of their preliminary round game during the 2013 IIHF U20 World Junior Hockey Championship in Ufa, December 30, 2012. REUTERS/Mark Blinch

Canada's goalie Malcolm Subban makes a against Team USA during the third period of their preliminary round game at the 2013 IIHF U20 World Junior Hockey Championship in Ufa, December 30, 2012. REUTERS/Mark Blinch

Canada's players celebrate defeating Team USA during their preliminary round game at the 2013 IIHF U20 World Junior Hockey Championship in Ufa, December 30, 2012. REUTERS/Mark Blinch

Canada's goalie Malcolm Subban falls on the ice in play against Team USA during the third period of their preliminary round game at the 2013 IIHF U20 World Junior Hockey Championship in Ufa, December 30, 2012. REUTERS/Mark Blinch

Canada's Ryan Strome (L) celebrates his goal against Team USA's goalie John Gibson during the first period of their preliminary round game at the 2013 IIHF U20 World Junior Hockey Championship in Ufa, December 30, 2012. REUTERS/Mark Blinch

Canada's goalie Malcolm Subban stretches before his team plays Team USA in their preliminary round game during the 2013 IIHF U20 World Junior Hockey Championship in Ufa, December 30, 2012. REUTERS/Mark Blinch

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UFA, Russia -- The weight of a country's expectations can be a heavy load for any goaltender to shoulder.

A nylon cape? That's a lot lighter.

"It feels pretty good," Canada goaltender Malcolm Subban said after staring pressure in the face during a 2-1 victory over the United States Sunday at the 2013 World Junior Championship.

"The biggest thing was the rivalry we have with that team. It was a lot easier to get up for that game."

Subban, picked by Canada head coach Steve Spott to be the netminder of record for the entire tournament, barring injury, had hockey fanatics biting at their fingernails through Canada's first two games. He allowed three goals against both Germany and Slovakia and had a shoddy .893 save percentage.

But Subban, who many teammates said was in a different frame of mind in the hours leading up to the game, was close to perfect against the U.S., allowing only a goal by defenceman Jacob Trouba in the third period.

There was a stop on a breakaway by John Gaudreau in the first period, one that came after the speedy forward deked to his backhand and tried to slip the puck between Subban's legs. But the Boston Bruins first-round pick, a member of the Belleville Bulls of the Ontario Hockey League, calmly moved across the crease, simultaneously closing the five-hole.

There were one-timers from Trouba and Seth Jones, like trying to pick off ducks from the point, that Subban steered away during U.S. power plays. There was a lunging save on Ryan Hartman late in the third.

All told, it was the Subban fans had been expecting to see since the selection camp started in Calgary three weeks ago. The talk about Jordan Binnington getting a chance to prove his mettle in Canada's net can be put to rest.

Subban quite likely will become the first goalie since Carey Price in 2007 to play every minute for Canada at the world junior. Canada won gold that winter in Sweden.

But Canadian goaltending has been an issue for some in recent years at the world junior. Three tournaments have gone by without gold for the kids in the red, white and black sweaters.

"I am really proud of him," Spott said, no doubt a tad relieved as well. "I think goaltending in our country has been on the forefront the last couple of years. It's a big moment for Malcolm, a big moment for our hockey club. As (goaltending consultant) Ron Tugnutt said, give him the chance and he stood up tall.

"Malcolm was square, his rebound control was solid, he just seemed to have that swagger he had in the summer (in exhibition games against Russia) and that was important."

Of course, it wasn't just Subban who came to play as Canada had no choice but to take on the U.S. minus two forwards because of suspensions to JC Lipon and Boone Jenner (which are finished). Spott singled out the play of Phillip Danault and Mark McNeill, especially on the penalty kill.

There were the usual suspects on the scoreboard, as captain Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, who leads the tournament with eight points, and Ryan Strome beat U.S. goalie John Gibson in the first period to give Canada a 2-0 lead.

There were some penalties for Canada to wade through, but nothing of the suspension variety, not even in the eyes of the touchy International Ice Hockey Federation.

And there was some luck on Subban's side, as the puck bounced over the stick of American forward Alex Galchenyuk in the final minute with nothing but an open net standing in its way.

But character was evident in every Canadian player. Subban, in slamming the door not only on his critics but also the Americans with 36 saves, just happened to have the most.

"You have a feeling in a game like that it ain't going in," Strome said. "He really proved how good he is and I think he quieted a lot of people."

For one night, Subban wore Canada's player-of-the-game cape.

Now, his team is one win away from getting a bye to the semifinals. Russia, on New Year's Eve, is up next.

?

terry.koshan@sunmedia.ca

twitter.com/koshtorontosun

Source: http://www.winnipegsun.com/2012/12/30/world-junior-championships-canada-beats-us-2-1

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Saturday, December 29, 2012

Fiscal Cliff Polls Show Americans Increasingly Pessimistic About Resolution

With just days before the fiscal cliff is reached, public opinion is growing increasingly pessimistic about the prospects of a deal.

An online HuffPost/YouGov poll conducted Wednesday and Thursday found that 51 percent of Americans thought a fiscal cliff deal was not very or not at all likely, up from 36 percent in late November. Only 8 percent thought a deal was very likely.

The skepticism transcended partisan lines, with more Democrats, Republicans and independents all saying a deal was more unlikely than likely. Republicans, however, were the most likely to expect further gridlock, with 59 percent predicting that a compromise wouldn't be reached.

The results mirror a Gallup poll that showed a 7-point dip over the last week in the belief a deal would be reached. Other polling has found even less confidence.

Most Americans have been following fiscal cliff news at least somewhat -- 88 percent in the HuffPost/YouGov poll said they'd heard something about the issue. The debate, however, has seemingly changed few minds, giving Democrats a relatively stable edge in public opinion for their handling of the negotiations, as well as their position on ending the Bush tax cuts on incomes over $250,000. A proposed last-ditch deal might set the threshold at $400,000.

The HuffPost/YouGov poll was conducted among 1,000 adults in the United States and has a margin of error of 4.4 percentage points, though that variation does not take into account other potential sources of error including statistical bias in the sample. It used a sample selected from YouGov's opt-in online panel to match the demographics and other characteristics of the adult U.S. population. Factors considered include age, race, gender, education, employment, income, marital status, number of children, voter registration, time and location of Internet access, interest in politics, religion and church.

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/28/fiscal-cliff-polls-huffpostyougov_n_2377118.html

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Galaxy S3 Mini Dropped From Apple's Patent Claims Against Samsung


By Dan Levine
SAN FRANCISCO, Dec 28 (Reuters) - Apple Inc has agreed to withdraw patent claims against a new Samsung phone with a high-end display after Samsung said it was not offering to sell the product in the crucial U.S. market.
Apple disclosed the agreement in a filing on Friday in U.S. District Court in San Jose, California.
Last month Apple asked to add the Galaxy S III Mini and other Samsung products, including several tablet models, to its wide-ranging patent litigation against Samsung.
In response, Samsung said the Galaxy S III Mini was not available for sale in the United States and should not be included in the case.
Apple won a $1.05 billion verdict against Samsung earlier this year, but has failed to secure a permanent sales ban against several, mostly older Samsung models. The patents Apple is asserting against the Galaxy S III Mini are separate from those that went to trial.
Samsung started selling the Mini in Europe in October, to compete with Apple's iPhone 5. In its filing on Friday in U.S. District Court, for the Northern District of California, Apple said its lawyers were able to purchase "multiple units" of the Mini from Amazon.com Inc's U.S. retail site and have them delivered within the country.
But Samsung represented that it is not "making, using, selling, offering to sell or importing the Galaxy S III Mini in the United States." Based on that, Apple said it agreed to withdraw its patent claims on the Mini, "so long as the current withdrawal will not prejudice Apple's ability later to accuse the Galaxy S III Mini if the factual circumstances change."
A Samsung official declined to comment. Apple could not immediately be reached for comment.
The case in U.S. District Court, Northern District of California is Apple Inc. vs. Samsung Electronics Co Ltd et al., 12-630. (Reporting By Dan Levine; Editing by Leslie Adler)

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/28/galaxy-s3-mini-apple-samsung_n_2376952.html

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Missing Money (talking-points-memo)

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Friday, December 28, 2012

Pets for adoption | savannahnow.com

THE HUMANE SOCIETY FOR GREATER SAVANNAH

All pets adopted from HSGS are spayed/neutered, up to date on vaccines, dewormed, micro-chipped and get a free vet exam. To view all available pets, go to humanesocietySAV.org or stop by 7215 Sallie Mood Drive.

SAVE-A-LIFE

Adoptions are 11 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Saturdays at PetSmart, 11132 Abercorn St. Foster pets are socialized, current on vaccines and spayed/neutered (or a voucher is given). We assist pet owners who need to find a new home for a pet. Go to www.savealifepets.org or call 912-598-7729.

GEORGIA ANIMAL RESCUE AND DEFENCE

100 Dichroic Dragon Drive, Pembroke. View other animals at the shelter at www.gardonline.org. For appointments, call Micki at 912-271-4749. The shelter is open 2-6 p.m. daily, including holidays and Sundays.

Source: http://savannahnow.com/accent/2012-12-27/pets-adoption

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2012 Social Business and Customer Service Trends | Moxie ...

2012 Social Business TrendsWe get contemplative at the end of every year. Did we do everything we set out to do? Did we meet our goals? What were the best movies we?ve seen or books we?ve read?

Maybe our year-in-review helps us predict what?s coming in the new year, or at least think about how we?ll approach things differently.

Social business and customer service have certainly seen lots of moving and shaking in 2012. Here are some of the trends that may be foreshadowing the year to come.

Social business grows up: quantifying social

Remember back in 2009 when ?social? was the new business buzzword? The world knew this was a revolution and everyone wanted to be a part of it. The only problem was that people didn?t quite know how to fit it into their budgets, how to track investments ? how to measure it.

This year marks major improvements toward wrapping numbers around social business. McKinsey?s study of the social economy exploded last summer, with predictions that the industry will add $1.3 TRILLION in annual revenue.

After years of trial and error, companies are learning where money is being wasted in social media and are modifying their course.

Stop blocking social media at work! Studies are proving the benefits of social, such as how collaboration tools are boosting productivity.

It?s safe to say that social business has grown up and, most likely, will continue to mature as technology laggards catch up.

Mobile explodes, putting new pressures on business

With the variety of mobile devices (both smartphones and tablets) now available, the ubiquity of data access, and increasing reliance on information anywhere, mobile sales are exploding with no end in sight.

That means more online business, sales, and customer service is being tapped, adding extra pressure to operations internally and externally.

Businesses are scrambling to tap the benefits of mobile, but not without encountering challenges. IT professionals are learning the role of mobile within the enterprise ? no overnight task.? When it comes to customer experience, move it or lose it: 73% of mobile users feel companies don?t deserve their loyalty if their needs aren?t being met. Ouch.

When it comes to the future of mobile, it?s looking more and more interactive.

Customer service gets way more social

If a customer complains about a product or service and the business isn?t around to hear it? everyone else will be. Studies show that nearly half of all social media users (and that?s a lot) look to social media for customer service. This year has been all about gearing up on the strategies, tactics, and tools to give better customer experiences through social.

Analysts are predicting that internal collaboration tools will be essential to keeping up with customers in 2013. Many businesses are adopting social customer experience management software.

What?s more, we?re seeing more traditional CRM giants acquiring or integrating agile social capabilities from third parties into their software. Perhaps this is the beginning of making all business more social in 2013 and beyond!

What trends have you seen in 2012? What do you think 2013 has in store for social business?

Tags: enterprise social software, social business
Posted on:

Source: http://blog.moxiesoft.com/2012-social-business-trends/

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After buyout, a lesson in modern economics

Jeremiah Patterson / Investigative Reporting Workshop

The Momentive Performance Materials plant near Albany, N.Y.

By Kat Aaron Investigative Reporting Workshop

When Apollo Global Management bought Momentive Performance Materials, a chemical factory in upstate New York, in 2006, it administered a lesson in modern-day economics at what had long been one of the biggest and most stable employers in the Albany area.

Private equity companies like Apollo make money through debt. In a leveraged buyout, a firm hones in on a company, often one that is publicly traded, and struggling, and takes it private. The acquisition is financed by borrowing against the company itself. The goal is to take the company public again, ideally in three to five years, and net a profit for the investors and the firm. The debt remains with the company.

The debt load can translate to major belt-tightening at the acquired company. The buyer is looking to increase productivity, reduce inefficiencies and, as jargon would have it, create synergies. That often means a private equity firm will buy up a few companies in a particular industry, mash them together and eliminate the overlap. That often means eliminating jobs.


Whether private equity firms, on average, create or destroy jobs is a matter of debate. Buyouts by private equity firms have a generally positive effect on the financial performance of the acquired companies but are ?associated with lower employment growth,? according to a 2008 report by the Government Accountability Office. A more-recent academic paper found that post-buyout, companies see increases in both layoffs and jobs created. On balance, the authors write, there is a 1 percent net loss of jobs when a company is taken over by a private equity firm.

But the loss of jobs is often not the only toll for workers caught in the middle of a leveraged buyout, as Momentive workers learned soon after Apollo purchased their company from General Electric. (GE is a part owner of NBCUniversal.)?

Apollo cut the wages for most of the production and maintenance workers at its Waterford plant. The National Labor Relations Board investigated and tentatively concluded that the company had violated the contract. But with other locals rallying behind a new contract offer, hundreds of the production workers were forced to accept drastically reduced pay.

In the months after the contract vote, the stress level at the plant was through the roof, said one worker, who, like his colleagues, spoke on condition of anonymity because he feared retaliation from company officials. His doctor treats lots of Momentive workers, he said, ?and she says Xanax should be in our drinking water.?

The anxiety ?was affecting my stomach,? another worker said. ?I can?t eat. I?m drinking more than I?ve ever drank in my whole life.?

Since the wage cuts, workers said, attracting qualified hires has been difficult. The new contract, they said, has brought more responsibility for less pay. They alleged that new hires are asked to perform dangerous tasks with inadequate training. And longtime workers are taking second jobs to make up for lost pay, several men said.

?There?s a guy near me who has a part-time job at Wal-Mart,? one man said, adding that in his unit people work seven afternoons in a row, with one day off, then seven straight days of midnight shifts.

?He often says he?s only got three hours of sleep? before returning to work, he said.

?This is suicidal,? another man said.

Momentive, in a written statement, says it ?seeks to attract a world-class workforce through competitive compensation and benefits, while providing a safe work environment.? The company also notes that since 2006, when Apollo took over, the Waterford site has shown improvement on two of OSHA's key measures of worker safety.?

Still, the union has raised safety concerns. For years, the Waterford plant was part of a special program at the Occupational Safety and Health Administration that honors workplaces with exemplary safety and health records and procedures. Waterford was a VPP Star site, the highest rank within the Voluntary Protection Program. The benefits of the VPP star aren?t just a nice flag to fly in front of the factory. Once in the program, the site is exempt from random checks by OSHA inspectors.

In late 2010, the union withdrew its support for the VPP program in Waterford, which is required for the certification. Such a loss of union support is rare, according to OSHA. In January 2011, the plant lost its VPP status.

That withdrawal from the program was a long time coming. In November 2008, the membership of Local 81359 had sent a letter to Momentive?s management, saying the company?s ?actions and tactics have created this hostile work environment and we fear for the health and safety? of the plant workers.

After that warning, OSHA inspectors found eight serious violations at the plant over several months in 2010, each resulting in a $4,500 fine.

One of the violations involved ?an uncontrolled release of sulfuric acid,? exposing employees to ?inhalation and burn hazards.? Momentive did not furnish employment ?free from recognized hazards that were causing or likely to cause death or serious physical harm,? according to the violation notice. (Four of the violations were later ?deleted? by the agency during discussions with the company of fines and penalties.)

?The night of the sulfuric acid release there were some young new guys there, and a guy who had been there for a long time,? said Dominick Patrignani, a union official. ?He kept people from getting burned. We would have been reading about it in the obit section, possibly.?

?The knowledge base of the people they?re bringing in is nothing like we?ve ever seen before, because you can?t get highly skilled workers at $14 and $15 an hour.?

On May 25, 2011, two workers on the night shift were severely burned in a flash fire at the plant. In the early morning, the men were preparing to clean some equipment, according to one worker with knowledge of the incident. But when they started to take apart a piece of pipe, gas somehow ignited. The men were severely burned and were airlifted to the Burn Center at nearby Westchester Medical Center. Both survived, but now face a long recovery.

?This whole event could have been prevented,? Patrignani said, adding that he had raised safety concerns about that area of the plant to the operations manager the week before the accident.

In November 2011, an OSHA investigation of the May accident resulted in $81,000 in additional fines for Momentive, for 10 serious violations and one repeat violation. The company is appealing the fines and OSHA has yet to issue a final determination.

----

For Momentive?s Waterford workers, the wage changes are a done deal. A group of workers filed additional complaints with the National Labor Relations Board, but those went nowhere. Some organized a vote to decertify the union ? essentially, to fire the union as their representatives ? but that failed.

They have received their settlement checks, and most are resigned to the drastically lower pay, new responsibilities and the tension. But resignation doesn?t mean the living is easy.

I met with one Momentive worker, his fianc?e and their young daughter at a Dunkin? Donuts off Route 9. When I mentioned that someone told me I should talk to the wives if I want to get the real picture of the pay cuts and their impact, she nodded. ?We almost lost him, you know,? she said. ?He had a heart attack from the stress.? He was now seeing a therapist and a psychiatrist, and was taking multiple anti-anxiety drugs, she said.

Over coffee and a box of doughnut holes, the couple laid out what they?ve been through since the pay cuts took $400 a week out of his paycheck.

First they got jammed up on bills and they cut down to one car, a hardship in an area where you can?t hail a cab or catch a bus, and you can?t get a gallon of milk without driving to a store.

The man had to ask a friend for a ride to work. ?It was hard to do that,? he said quietly. ?I?m not used to asking for help.?

Since then, they?ve scaled back a lot.

?We?re OK with that,? his fianc?e was quick to say. She doesn?t get her hair done any more, or her nails, things they took for granted before. They don?t go on vacation, or to the movies. But the furnace is on its last legs, she said, and they don?t know how they would pay for repairs if it conks out.

And it?s not just the little things. When his wages were cut, they fell behind on their mortgage, and the bank wasn?t willing to lower their rate, now at 8.5 percent. They couldn?t refinance with another lender, because their credit was bad. ?Of course it was bad,? she said. ?We lost a huge chunk of our income.?

When they couldn?t refinance, and couldn?t get a loan modification, they said they got tangled up with a foreclosure rescue scam, which took cash up front and advised them to fall further behind on their loan. Efforts to work with government programs didn?t pan out. Now they?ve declared bankruptcy and the house is in foreclosure.

?It?s all I?ve ever wanted, to work. To provide for my family. I didn?t want El Dorados and Rolexes,? the Momentive worker said, worrying the sleeves of his brown work jacket.

--------

As the workers and their families settle in to their new reality, more changes may lie ahead. Momentive continues to ?pursue various cost reduction initiatives? across its sites, including ?sourcing through low-cost countries, overtime reduction and other labor efficiency,? according to its 2010 annual report. Whether that means moving more production to China, where the company expects to ?generate future growth,? remains to be seen.? Momentive said in its written statement that ?Waterford continues to be an important facility? in the company's ?North American network.?

The company has also been making moves in the United States, merging Momentive with competitor Hexion in late 2010.

Then, in April 2011, Momentive filed the paperwork for an $862 million initial public offering that? would have brought the company out of Apollo?s hands and return it to public trading. But the company is, as its 2011 annual report notes, still a ?highly leveraged company,? owing $2.9 billion at the end of the year. By June 2012, that figure had grown to nearly $4 billion. In August, Standard & Poor?s downgraded Momentive?s debt from B- to CCC. A month later, Momentive withdrew the IPO filing.

Read part 1: A buyout, a reorganization and the new face of job security

While Momentive may not go public, its owner Apollo Global Management did. Following in the footsteps of industry giant Blackstone, Apollo launched an IPO in March 2011. With the IPO, Apollo CEO Leon Black reportedly personally pocketed $1.8 billion, the Wall Street Journal reported. Apollo Global Management declined to comment for this article.

As for Momentive workers, they still take home a nice paycheck. They know that. They work hard at their union jobs, and they get paid enough to support themselves and their families, maybe save enough to survive into old age. But something besides the pay has changed.

?I don?t like what?s happening. I don?t think it?s right. I don?t think it?s fair. But at the same time, I still have mixed feelings. I?m probably paid better than 90 percent of people,? one man said. It?s the principle, he said: It?s as if he had $10 in his pocket, and Apollo came along and took $2. He still has eight bucks, but that doesn?t make it right. And while he makes more than most people, he said, being able to retire comfortably after decades of work is what?s supposed to happen. It?s not an outrageous luxury, nor should it be.

Now, though, the canceled IPO and the debt load have him wondering about the plant?s future, and the future for young workers at Momentive. ?I realize they?re a good employer, and they provide a lot of good jobs,? he said. ?I don?t want to see them fail.?

He goes to work every day, he said, and does the best he can. But the contract fight has changed his relationship with a job he once loved. ?It?s like being betrayed by a spouse,? he said. ?It?s awful hard to go back. It?s never going to be the same for me.?

The?Investigative Reporting Workshop?at American University, is a nonprofit, professional newsroom that?pairs experienced professional reporters and editors with graduate students, and co-publishes with mainstream media partners and nonprofit newsrooms.

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Source: http://openchannel.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/12/21/16074805-after-buyout-union-workers-get-a-lesson-in-modern-economics?lite

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Thursday, December 27, 2012

Health and Fitness: Back Pain - Some Clues to Discovering the Cause

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Source: http://krimkifga.posterous.com/health-and-fitness-back-pain-some-clues-to-di

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Georgia?s Hunger Games

A soup kitchen line A soup kitchen line

Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images.

When the economy crashed in 2008, millions of Americans lost their jobs. Applications for food stamps soared. So did attendance at emergency food providers?soup kitchens and food pantries?that help the estimated 50 million people, working and non-working, who can't afford enough groceries to get through the month.

Unlike in past economic downturns, though, the welfare rolls barely budged. Where 15 years ago 68 percent of poor Americans received cash via Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (as welfare was officially renamed in 1996), today only 27 percent of Americans with incomes low enough to qualify for cash benefits receive them. As the New York Times' Jason DeParle discussed in a front-page article earlier this year, the resulting welfare gap has left at least 4 million families with neither jobs nor cash aid.

The size of the welfare gap, however, varies widely from state to state. In states like California and Maine, which have focused on getting their poor citizens into jobs programs, about two-thirds of those eligible still receive welfare. On the opposite end of the spectrum is Georgia, which over the past decade has set itself up as the poster child for the ongoing war on welfare. Even as unemployment has soared to 9 percent and 300,000 Georgia families now live below the poverty line?50 percent higher than in 2000, for a poverty rate that now ranks sixth in the nation?the number receiving cash benefits has all but evaporated: Only a little over 19,000 families receiving TANF remain, all but 3,400 of which were cases involving children only. That's less than 7 percent, making Georgia one of the toughest places in the nation to get welfare assistance.

What's Georgia's secret? According to government documents, interviews with poor Georgians, and those who work with them, it's a simple one: Combine an all-Republican state government out to make a name for itself as tough on freeloaders; a state welfare commissioner so zealous about slashing the rolls that workers say she handed out Zero candy bars to emphasize her goal of zero welfare; and federal rules that, regardless of who's in the White House, give states the leeway to use the 1996 law's requirement for "work activities"?the same provision that Republicans have charged President Obama wants to unfairly water down?to slam the door in the face of the state's neediest.

What this has created is a land that welfare forgot, where a collection of private charities struggle to fill the resulting holes. For the Atlanta Community Food Bank, that means sending out more than 3 million pounds of canned goods, bread, and other groceries each month to churches in and around Atlanta to help feed the state's growing number of poor and near-poor. The food bank?s staff also helps arrange for free tax prep services, and helps the city?s poor apply for food stamps and Medicaid. One thing they don't discuss, though, is welfare. "We don't talk about TANF anymore," says food bank advocacy and education director Laura Lester. "We don't even send anybody in to apply, because there's just no point."

It's a state of affairs that's left an increasing number of Georgians with nowhere to turn. Teresa, a single mom of a 2-year-old living in a domestic violence shelter, tells of how she broke down and applied for cash benefits after fleeing an abusive relationship?only to be chastised by state welfare officers who asked, "Wouldn't you rather work?" Eventually, Teresa says, "I was sitting there crying?I just didn't know what else to do. I said, you've gone from letting people sit on their butt and collect money to the very opposite of that."

Ultimately, it didn?t matter. In the end, she was rejected for failing to fill out her paperwork correctly.

One of the common misconceptions about welfare reform is that once Newt Gingrich and Bill Clinton had settled their grand bargain back in 1996, a new regime was put in place: If you won't work (or at least look for work), you'll no longer get a government check. In fact, though, welfare reform is less a single law than 50 separate experiments, as Washington provided states with a broad framework under which they are free to set their own rules on time limits, grant levels, and work requirements for those seeking help.

Immediately after the new law was put in place, the welfare rolls plunged by two-thirds?though no one could say for certain whether this was because people were leaving the rolls for jobs or merely sinking deeper into poverty. And though the slide eased a bit nationally after the economy cooled around 2001, the welfare gap?the number of people poor enough to receive benefits who weren?t actually getting them?still amounted to nearly two-thirds of those below the poverty line.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=321f51f943343610d5adf0cf92225988

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N.Y. firefighters' killer had detailed plan for attack

WEBSTER, N.Y. (AP) ? The ex-con turned sniper who killed two firefighters wanted to make sure his goodbye note was legible, typing out his desire to "do what I like doing best, killing people" before setting the house where he lived with his sister ablaze, police said.

Police Chief Gerald Pickering said Tuesday that the 62-year-old loner, William Spengler, brought plenty of ammunition with him for three weapons including a military-style assault rifle as he set out on a quest to burn down his neighborhood just before sunrise on Christmas Eve.

And when firefighters arrived to stop him, he unleashed a torrent of bullets, shattering the windshield of the fire truck that volunteer firefighter and police Lt. Michael Chiapperini, 43, drove to the scene. Fellow firefighter Tomasz Kaczowka, 19, who worked as a 911 dispatcher, was killed as well.

Two other firefighters were struck by bullets, one in the pelvis and the other in the chest and knee. They remained hospitalized in stable condition and were expected to survive.

On Tuesday, investigators found a body in the Spengler home, presumably that of the sister a neighbor said Spengler hated: 67-year-old Cheryl Spengler. Spengler's penchant for death had surfaced before. He served 17 years in prison for manslaughter in the 1980 hammer slaying of his grandmother.

But his intent was unmistakable when he left his flaming home carrying a pump-action shotgun, a .38-caliber revolver and a .223-caliber semiautomatic Bushmaster rifle with flash suppression, the same make and caliber weapon used in the elementary school massacre in Newtown, Conn., that killed 26.

"He was equipped to go to war, kill innocent people," the chief said of a felon who wasn't allowed to possess weapons because of his criminal past. It was not clear how he got them.

The assault rifle was believed to be the weapon that struck down the firefighters. He then killed himself as seven houses burned on a sliver of land along Lake Ontario. His body was not found on a nearby beach until hours afterward.

Residents of the suburban Rochester neighborhood who left their homes during the fire were allowed to return Tuesday. Police SWAT team members had used an armored vehicle to evacuate more than 30 residents.

Spengler's motive was left unclear, Pickering said, even as authorities began analyzing a two- to three-page typewritten rambling note Spengler left behind.

He declined to reveal the note's full content or say where it was found. He read only one chilling line: "I still have to get ready to see how much of the neighborhood I can burn down, and do what I like doing best, killing people."

Pickering added: "There was some rambling in there and some intelligence we need to follow up on."

It remained unknown what set Spengler off but a next-door neighbor, Roger Vercruysse, noted that he loved his mother, Arline, who died in October after living in the house in a neighborhood of seasonal and year-round homes across the road from a lakeshore popular with recreational boaters.

Pickering said it was unclear whether the person believed to be Spengler's sister died before or during the fire.

"It was a raging inferno in there," Pickering said.

As Pickering described it and as emergency radio communications on the scene showed, the heavily armed Spengler took a position behind a small hill by the house as four firefighters arrived after 5:30 a.m. to extinguish the fire: two on a fire truck; two in their own vehicles.

Several firefighters went beneath the truck to shield themselves as an off-duty police officer who came to the scene pulled his vehicle alongside the truck to try to shield them, authorities said.

The first police officer who arrived chased and exchanged shots with Spengler, recounting it later over his police radio.

"I could see the muzzle blasts comin' at me. ... I fired four shots at him. I thought he went down," the officer said.

At another point, he said: "I don't know if I hit him or not. He's by a tree. ... He was movin' eastbound on the berm when I was firing shots." Pickering portrayed the officer as a hero who saved many lives.

The audio posted on the website RadioReference.com also has someone reporting "firefighters are down" and saying "got to be rifle or shotgun ? high-powered ... semi or fully auto."

Spengler had been charged with murder in his grandmother's death but pleaded guilty to a reduced charge of manslaughter, apparently to spare his family a trial. After he was freed from prison, Spengler had lived a quiet life on Lake Road on a narrow peninsula where Irondequoit Bay meets Lake Ontario.

That ended when he left his burning home Monday morning, armed with his weapons, a lot of ammunition and a measure of hate.

"I'm not sure we'll ever know what was going through his mind," Pickering said.

Services were set for the two Rochester-area volunteer firefighters. Calling hours will be held at Webster Schroeder High School on Friday and Saturday. A funeral service for Chiapperini was scheduled for noon Sunday at the high school, with burial in West Webster Cemetery.

A funeral Mass for Kaczowka will be held at 10 a.m. Monday at St. Stanislaus Church in Rochester. Burial will be at Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in Rochester.

___

Esch reported from Albany. Associated Press writer Larry Neumeister in New York City also contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ny-firemens-killer-mapped-plan-slayings-071946537.html

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12262012 ? Creating Urgency with a Real Estate buyer to pressure ...

Believe it or not, this was posted up on a National Realtors Website as part of the strategies to use when dealing with ?Buyers that are Driving you nuts!!!?

I was hoping to find the LOL ? after ward ? Heck, I would have even thought a LMAO would have been appropriate. ?However, there was nothing of the kind.

If you have an agent that is telling you that you need to do something right now and cannot wait, make sure they are pushing from the ?Facts? and not opinion. ?Also, determine what they have to lose if you don?t step forward and seal the deal. ?If they have their commission hanging in the balance ? you may want to re-think you relationship with them. ?click here to read our article on Firing your real estate agent :)

However, if they tell you that you better pull out of the deal. ?You should not write that offer, you should ask for more items to be repaired. ?Or that you should walk from the deal, you may realize something much different. ?It could be that your Realtor is 100% on your side and wants the best for you and is watching your back like a seal team member watches his?brethren.

When approaching homes that are for sale, I cannot help but wonder sometimes how the agent with the listing obtained the sales price. ?Did they see data that I did not? ?Did I miss something? ?Why was the home that they had listed so expensive? ?Looking at price per square foot ? this just happened in Stevenson Ranch with a couple of our clients. We looked at a home that was priced at about 1 and 1/4 million dollars. ?However, this home, according to the square footage, condition and upgrades was 300k over priced.

Firing a Santa Clarita real estate agentThe view was stellar and I would venture to say that the home was almost ?one of a kind?. ?I would also venture to say that the inventory with regard to any home, including one of a kind homes, is poor to say the least.

However, did this home need to be priced at 300k over the comparables? ?Maybe in the sellers eyes. ?Maybe the?Realtor?expressed to them they could get that amount. ?Will that agent be able too or did they ?buy the listing? from the owner by over promising? ? They could if there was a no?appraisal?contingency for the buyers approaching the plate with a suitcase full of money. ? Or at least a buyer with 20% down that wanted to make up the difference in Cash and stated within contract they?d waive the?appraisal.

However, when my clients wanted to offer much less than the ?asking price? on this home, I could not fault them. ?Heck, if they wanted to offer full list price, I would have faulted them. I would have told them that I am dead set against offering full list price for the home. ?Especially?in an unsure and unstable market.

Back in 2004, we had clients that offered more than list price on a home in Burbank. ?They had our blessing to do so. ?The home was priced at $400K and they offered $550K. ?Knowing what the market was doing and how it was increasing, I was sure this would have been a great investment and it was. ?In fact, we sold that very same home in late 2006 for over 715k. ?Sometimes, it?s okay to offer more than list price ? you just have to get a game plan together to do so and the stars?definitely need to be in alignment :)

When do you hold them, when do you show them, when do you walk away and when do you run? ?If you did not get the reference, the questions were from a song by Kenny Rodgers.

When you are getting unverified pressure from your real estate agent that is making you feel uncomfortable and when it becomes a ?Do or Die? scenario ? Run. ?Make sure you are getting the best advice possible. ?Make sure your trusted Realtor is on your side 100%. ?And feel free to do some ?Testing??occasionally?when dealing with your?Realtor? ?You may see something that will influence a decision that will keep you safe from harm.

Santa Clarita real estate and community events written about by Connor and Paris MacIvor with REMAX of Santa Clarita CA.? Turning to the most current real estate and housing market trends and news ? they release that information in the form of a Daily Santa Clarita real estate news update. They are also recognized authors on Google Plus and within the Santa Clarita real estate community.


Source: http://blog.paris911.com/2012/12/26/12262012-creating-urgency-with-a-real-estate-buyer-to-pressure-them-into-buying-now/

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Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Treatment Talk ? 5 Reasons Addiction is Ruining Your Life ...

addiction, recovery

I?m pleased to present a guest post by M. Farouk Radwan.

Most people who are addicted to a certain substance have an idea about its harmful effects but what most people don?t know is that there are other harmful side effects for addictions that many people are not aware of.

Apart from the health effects you know about there are other bad mental effects that result from addiction. And while many people forget about the physical risks when they do a bad habit still they can change their minds if they knew about the short term mental effects that these bad habits cause.

Do you know that your bad habit can be the reason for your depression, sadness or anxiety?

Read the following lines to know how your bad habits can affect you.

How addiction ruins your life:

1. Dopamine disturbance: when you get addicted to anything even food the levels of dopamine in your brain gets disturbed. Dopamine Is the chemical responsible for activating the reward system in the brain. The more you do your bad habit the less sensitive your brain becomes to dopamine and as a result the more boring your life becomes. Because new things rarely manage to stimulate your brain the way your bad habit does your life becomes dull, unsatisfying and boring.

2. Low testosterone:? Testosterone is produced by both males and females. Testosterone reduces depression and prevents many of the bad moods people experience. It was found that people who occasionally drink alcohol have 20% less testosterone produced in their bodies.? As for hard core drinkers their bodies produce 40-50% less testosterone. In other words, alcohol will ruin your manhood if you are a man and your mood if you are a woman.

3. Addiction reduces self esteem: When the dopamine levels in the brain drop as a result of addiction the person experiences more anxiety and becomes more self conscious. This leads to a reduced self esteem. Many of those who gave? up on addiction reported feeling much more confident and experienced great improvements in their social relations.

4. Guilt will ruin your mood: Even if you think that its completely ok to do the bad habit you are doing your subconscious mind will be accumulating guilt each time you do it. After a long time of commitment to your bad habit you will start getting used to that guilt and your normal state of feeling will be a bad mood. In other words you will always be feeling bad but you will assume that that?s how you should be feeling anyway!

5. Stress and tension: don?t try to fool yourself by believing that the health warnings you read or the values you were raised to believe in wont have an effect on your mood. Any conflict happens in the brain will result in stress. If you kept doing your bad habit even though you believe that its wrong then you will get subjected to a high level of stress which will ruin your mood as well.

Final words

Addiction doesn?t only affect your health in a bad way but it also affects your hormone levels, state of mind and mood. Even if you believe that your addiction is totally harms you will be shocked to know about the real psychological effects it can have upon you.

Save yourself and stop your bad habits today.

M.Farouk Radwan is the founder of http://www.2knowmyself.com, a website that has more than 2000 self help, psychology and personal development articles. Farouk is a full time blogger who makes a living by selling his books on his blog.

Have you struggled with addiction? What suggestions do you have that helped you reach recovery??

If you liked this post, please share on Facebook, Twitter and Google+. Thank you.

Related posts:

Source: http://treatmenttalk.org/5-reasons-addiction-is-ruining-your-life/

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Thursday, December 20, 2012

How to Calculate Flood Risk | C&S Insurance Blog

CaptureAfter Hurricane Sandy struck the Northeast portion of the United States only a few weeks ago, many home and business owners have become increasingly more concerned with flooding.? With that being said, the government has created and is overseeing a website, FloodSmart, a tool that helps these owners calculate flooding costs.? The site offers information about flooding, helps determine possible costs that may mount, and has accredited flood insurance experts that can provide advice to users.

On the site, FloodTools is an interactive portion that allows users to type in their addresses in order to see what type of flooding they can potentially expect on their property.? After the demonstration is complete, an insurance quote appears on the screen that states how much you should be paying based on your location.

Why is this site so successful? Not only is it user friendly, individualized, and specified to your personal needs, it is also easy to read and identify.? For example, if an area on the map turns red, it is of a higher risk than an area that turns white or lighter colors. ??Additional features include a loss calculator where you can input your home or office?s square footage, number of stories, and the value of possessions.? Check it out today!

Source: http://www.candsinsuranceblog.com/?p=1521

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Deep freeze, snowstorms hit Romania, Bulgaria

BUCHAREST, Romania (AP) ? Authorities have declared a state of emergency in northeastern Bulgaria as heavy snow and freezing temperatures are causing disruptions in both Bulgaria and Romania.

Strong winds and snow produced power outages, forced border crossings to close and blocked roads in northeast Bulgaria.

Romanian police said Bulgarian authorities had stopped traffic at two border crossings due to the heavy snow and advised citizens not to travel to the worst-hit areas. Some thirty villages were without power in Bulgaria's Ruen district, and some also had no water. Almost all local roads were impassable.

In Romania, the snow caused havoc on nine national highways and 180 towns and villages suffered power outages.

Temperatures are expected to plummet to minus 17 degrees Celsius (1.4 degrees Fahrenheit) in Bulgaria in the next few days.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/deep-freeze-snowstorms-hit-romania-bulgaria-123358273.html

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Monday, December 17, 2012

Exclusive WWE.com Slammy Award Winners

All WWE programming, talent names, images, likenesses, slogans, wrestling moves, trademarks, logos and copyrights are the exclusive property of WWE, Inc. and its subsidiaries. All other trademarks, logos and copyrights are the property of their respective owners. ? 2012 WWE, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This website is based in the United States. By submitting personal information to this website you consent to your information being maintained in the U.S., subject to applicable U.S. laws. U.S. law may be different than the law of your home country. WrestleMania XXIX (NY/NJ) logo TM & ? 2012 WWE. All Rights Reserved. The Empire State Building design is a registered trademark and used with permission by ESBC.

Source: http://www.wwe.com/shows/raw/2012-12-17/slammy-award-winners

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Opinion: Put reason back in gun debate (CNN)

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 and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/271226703?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Spaniards hope for eviction reprieve amid crisis

FILE In this Nov. 19, 2012 file photo, 45-year old office manager Irene Gonzalez of Spain, left waits with a friend, to be evicted from her home in Madrid. Irene Gonzalez is a domestic violence victim, works half-time because of layoffs at her air conditioning employer and is a single mother caring for her two children at the small apartment she and her ex-husband bought during Spain?s economic boom years. These factors that should prevent her from being kicked out under a new Spanish decree aimed at protecting the needy from being made homeless after at least two economically desperate Spaniards facing eviction committed suicide. Even if Gonzalez manages to stay in her home for a few more years, she still faces debt in unpaid mortgage principle, court fees and interest totaling close to euro140,000 that she and her ex-husband will owe for the rest of their lives. If they don't pay it off, their children inherit it. After putting in place the decree, Spain is now under increasing pressure to come up with a first-of-its kind insolvency law for the country that would allow mortgage debtors to turn in their keys and face limited liability. (AP Photo/Paul White, File)

FILE In this Nov. 19, 2012 file photo, 45-year old office manager Irene Gonzalez of Spain, left waits with a friend, to be evicted from her home in Madrid. Irene Gonzalez is a domestic violence victim, works half-time because of layoffs at her air conditioning employer and is a single mother caring for her two children at the small apartment she and her ex-husband bought during Spain?s economic boom years. These factors that should prevent her from being kicked out under a new Spanish decree aimed at protecting the needy from being made homeless after at least two economically desperate Spaniards facing eviction committed suicide. Even if Gonzalez manages to stay in her home for a few more years, she still faces debt in unpaid mortgage principle, court fees and interest totaling close to euro140,000 that she and her ex-husband will owe for the rest of their lives. If they don't pay it off, their children inherit it. After putting in place the decree, Spain is now under increasing pressure to come up with a first-of-its kind insolvency law for the country that would allow mortgage debtors to turn in their keys and face limited liability. (AP Photo/Paul White, File)

FILE In this Nov. 9, 2012 file photo, a man paints graffiti against banks reading, ''Assassin'', during a march against evictions, in Barakaldo, northern Spain after a woman fell to her death as bailiffs approached to evict her for non-payment of the mortgage from her fourth-floor apartment. At least two economically desperate Spaniards facing eviction committed suicide. Even after being evicted, if people can't pay off off their mortgages, their children inherit it. After putting in place the decree, Spain is now under increasing pressure to come up with a first-of-its kind insolvency law for the country that would allow mortgage debtors to turn in their keys and face limited liability(AP Photo/Alvaro Barrientos, File)

FILE In this Nov. 19, 2012 file photo, 45-year old office manager Irene Gonzalez of Spain cuts a cake while she waits to be evicted from her home in Madrid. Irene Gonzalez is a domestic violence victim, works half-time because of layoffs at her air conditioning employer and is a single mother caring for her two children at the small apartment she and her ex-husband bought during Spain's economic boom years. These factors that should prevent her from being kicked out under a new Spanish decree aimed at protecting the needy from being made homeless after at least two economically desperate Spaniards facing eviction committed suicide. Even if Gonzalez manages to stay in her home for a few more years, she still faces debt in unpaid mortgage principle, court fees and interest totaling close to euro140,000 that she and her ex-husband will owe for the rest of their lives. If they don't pay it off, their children inherit it. After putting in place the decree, Spain is now under increasing pressure to come up with a first-of-its kind insolvency law for the country that would allow mortgage debtors to turn in their keys and face limited liability. (AP Photo/Paul White, File)

FILE In this Nov. 19, 2012 file photo, 45-year old office manager Irene Gonzalez of Spain stands by her front door while she waits to be evicted from her home, in Madrid. Irene Gonzalez is a domestic violence victim, works half-time because of layoffs at her air conditioning employer and is a single mother caring for her two children at the small apartment she and her ex-husband bought during Spain's economic boom years. These factors that should prevent her from being kicked out under a new Spanish decree aimed at protecting the needy from being made homeless after at least two economically desperate Spaniards facing eviction committed suicide. Even if Gonzalez manages to stay in her home for a few more years, she still faces debt in unpaid mortgage principle, court fees and interest totaling close to euro140,000 that she and her ex-husband will owe for the rest of their lives. If they don't pay it off, their children inherit it. After putting in place the decree, Spain is now under increasing pressure to come up with a first-of-its kind insolvency law for the country that would allow mortgage debtors to turn in their keys and face limited liability. (AP Photo/Paul White)

In this photo taken on Tuesday, Dec. 4, 2012 people gather inside a conference room in Madrid, Spain. Every Tuesday night in Madrid, hundreds of people crowd into a cramped conference room seeking advice from anti-eviction activists on what they should do after receiving notice that their homes have been auctioned for a fraction of the purchase price along with a warning that they will be kicked out while still owing amounts ranging from tens to hundreds of thousands of euros. Many are immigrants who arrived in Spain seeking a better life only to see the economy turn sour, but there are also Spaniards who have lost jobs and can?t pay their mortgages. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti)

MADRID (AP) ? Irene Gonzalez is desperately waiting to hear if she'll benefit from an emergency government decree that protects Spaniards such as her from being evicted for failing to make their mortgage payments.

Gonzalez, 45, has had her full-time job reduced to part time at the small air-conditioning company she works for. She's a single mother caring for two children in a cramped apartment in a working class neighborhood that she and her ex-husband bought in 2001, when the nation was basking in a strong economy and a seemingly endless housing boom.

She says she can't afford the mortgage payments and her ex-husband, who always handled them after they divorced, stopped paying several years ago when construction business soured with the bursting of Spain's building bubble.

Even if Gonzales is granted a two-year reprieve from eviction, Spanish law still mandates that she and her ex-husband will still owe almost ?140,000 ($183,000) on the mortgage, court fees and interest for the rest of their lives. If they don't pay off the debt, their children ? now 13 and 8 ? inherit it.

Spain has endured a wave of foreclosures that have generated protests and at least two recent suicides by people about to be ousted from their apartments and houses.

"What I want to do is just give the house to the bank and be free of the debt," the 45-year-old Gonzalez said. "I've told my parents I want to renounce my inheritance because the bank would get my part."

Since issuing the emergency decree, which will protect Spanish families with an annual income of less than ?14,400 after taxes, the government has been under increasing pressure to come up with reforms to its mortgage system. Activists have been lobbying for an insolvency law that would allow those who have defaulted on their mortgages to simply turn in the keys to their homes as they do in countries like the United States, freeing them from mortgage debt.

In neighboring France, for example, if someone cannot pay their mortgage, there is an official body that acts as an arbiter between bank and homeowner to work out the loan. If that process fails, the bank will take the homeowner to court and get permission to auction off the house. Expelling the former owners takes a second trial.

For the first time this month, Spanish voters cited foreclosure evictions as one of their main concerns, according to a recent poll by a government institute. Meanwhile, some Spanish judges outraged with being forced to turn people out on the streets are increasingly refusing to order evictions. And several mayors are threatening to withdraw municipal funds from banks that evict residents, while other city councils are designating their communities "eviction-free zones."

Every Tuesday night, a conference room in Madrid is packed full of people seeking advice from the Platform for Mortgage Victims, an anti-eviction pressure group that has started chapters across the country. The worried homeowners, who owe amounts ranging from tens to hundreds of thousands of euros on their mortgages, are desperate for help and advice after receiving court notices that their homes have been auctioned for a fraction of the purchase price and they'll soon be kicked out on to the streets.

Teary-eyed, they clutch court paperwork and describe how banks freely granted loans for 100 percent of the cost of the home they bought during Spain's economic boom that started crashing in 2008, and has only deepened since. Some are grandmothers who had paid off their houses decades ago, and then tried to help their children by putting up their property as collateral for a loan ? and now face eviction because of non-payment by the children. Many are immigrants who arrived in Spain seeking a better life only to see the economy turn sour.

Before the financial crisis hit Spain in 2008, the country was on an extended building boom lasting nearly a decade. Banks lent money freely, frequently offering mortgage applicants more than they said they wanted and often encouraging borrowers to take on more mortgage debt for restoration projects and new cars. But home prices have crashed more than 30 percent over the last four years and the lending market is virtually frozen.

People who bought homes at inflated prices during the boom can no longer unload them. And to make the situation worse, banks are rarely giving mortgages unless it is for foreclosed properties that are already on their own books, said Carlos Bardavio, a Madrid-based lawyer with Hogans Lovell International LLP who specializes in Spanish real estate.

"Right now the real estate assets are not liquid," he said. "People find themselves with property they cannot pay the mortgage on or sell, they lose it, and they still owe money to the bank."

Exactly how many evictions of people from their homes have happened since the crisis hit Spain and burst its property bubble in 2008 is unclear. Government statistics do not break down how many evictions are for first residences, second homes or property like small warehouses or apartments ? which many Spanish families have traditionally purchased to rent out for extra income. Nonetheless, judges have issued more than 350,000 court orders for eviction following foreclosures since Jan. 1, 2008, and anti-eviction activists refer to that figure when they talk about how many people have lost their homes.

Data from the Bank of Spain clearly show that the total value of mortgage defaults has skyrocketed from ?4.1 billion in 2007 before the crisis hit to ?19.1 billion for the March-June period this year; the percentage of doubtful home mortgages stood at 0.7 percent of overall home mortgages in 2007, and is now up to 3 percent. Activists say Spanish banks can initiate foreclosure proceedings after mortgage holders fail to make three months of payments, though Bardavio said there is no standard rule and that they usually wait until eight to 10 payments have been missed. The entire process ending in eviction can take between six months and several years.

"Traditionally, Spanish foreclosure rates have been very low and the family network was strong, you always had some family member who would help you pay the mortgage so you could start over," said Carlos Vergara, a financial management professor at Madrid's IESE Business School. "But now the uncle who might have helped you in the past doesn't have the savings he used to."

Spain's Economy Ministry estimated recently that only between 4,000 and 15,000 people were evicted from 2008 until now from primary residences they own, but the estimate was based on data supplied from the banks, and activists dismiss the figures as an attempt to downplay the size of the problem.

"How can it be so few people when we have so many coming to us every week asking for help?" asked Rafael Mayoral, a lawyer for the Madrid chapter of the Platform for Mortgage Victims. He said some evictions are being halted because of the decree, but said many families won't be saved because their income is higher than the ?14,400 limit.

Protests have mushroomed this year throughout Spain, where anti-eviction demonstrators advertise upcoming evictions and the street locations on Web pages to encourage people to show up at the apartments and try to prevent court agents escorted by police from carrying them out. The crowds range from dozens to hundreds and some protests have resulted in clashes with police and emotional scenes as people are forced to leave their homes.

The Spanish government plans to introduce new mortgage legislation in coming months, and last week ordered the government statistics agency to start tracking foreclosures of primary residences.

Activists have been calling for a U.S.-style system whereby those who default on their mortgages simply give up their homes and file for personal bankruptcy, leaving their credit rating in tatters but freeing them from mortgage debt.

But the Spanish Banking Association warns that the interest rates for business and individuals would shoot up if the activists' plan was adopted.

"Spain's mortgage system didn't create any problems," the association said in a statement, stressing that most Spaniards are still managing to make their mortgage payments. "The economic crisis and rising unemployment are the reasons why many Spanish families can't keep up on their mortgage payments."

Gonzalez' ex-husband used to pay the mortgage on the house she still lives in with their children. But he stopped paying several years ago after his small construction business stopped getting work and she says she's never made enough money since then to pay. She doesn't speak much with him since their divorce. But her daughter who sees him every other weekend says he's thinking about simply leaving Spain and going back to his native Peru because he can't find work.

Stacked in the hallway outside Gonzalez' apartment are dozens of cardboard boxes, ready to be used to pack up belongings if authorities show up to make her leave. Both children know the eviction could be coming, and the uncertainty over where the family would live has turned the daughter into a compulsive eater, while the son wants to know where he will keep the toy cars and books neatly arranged in his room.

Gonzalez is on a waiting list for a cheap apartment to rent from the Catholic charity Caritas, but if the eviction comes before that, she plans to move into the apartment of a friend near her children's school. Another possibility could be a cheap rental from a pool that the government is setting up for bank-owned apartment blocks among the 700,000 Spanish houses and apartments now sitting vacant.

"I feel totally defenseless," she said. "Before the crisis you could ask friends or family for help and then give what they loaned you back, but now you can't."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-12-10-Spain-Evictions/id-b47b45562a99461b84e888ed8e785194

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