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Times Square recruiting station boomed
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-Lurid Crime Tales-
FDA finds contaminant in suspect blood-thinner - Guess who's involved
Perhaps drugs ought to be primarily consumed in the country of origin, and only that in excess of that country's demand can then be shipped abroad.
U.S. health officials said Wednesday they have found a contaminant in a blood-thinning drug produced by Baxter Healthcare Corp. that has been linked to more than a dozen deaths in the United States.

In early February, the Food and Drug Administration launched an investigation and then a recall of some forms of the product.

The scrutiny began after a spike in reports of health problems associated with heparin, a drug made by Baxter from pig intestines at plants in China and Wisconsin.
Uh oh . . . .
Though the cause of the problems has not been determined, FDA investigators found "a heparin-like compound -- that is not heparin -- present in some of the active pharmaceutical ingredients" in both facilities, said Dr. Janet Woodcock, acting director of the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research.
You mean someone went out and actively researched what would fool the quality tests on an important drug? Now who on earth would do something like that? Maybe it was accidental.
The contaminant, which made up 5 percent to 20 percent of each sample tested, "reacts like heparin in some of the conventional tests used for heparin," which explains why it was not picked up, she told reporters in a conference call.

No causal link between the contaminant and the adverse events has been established yet, Woodcock said. She added that it was not clear whether the contaminant was added accidentally, as part of the processing or deliberately.

It also was not clear whether the contaminant was introduced in the company's plant in Wisconsin or the one in China, Woodcock said.
Let's see. US authorities have no fuc&ing clue what the contaminant is after consulting plant officials I'll bet. Hmm. That leaves one other option, which involves a country with too many businessman who often have less respect for consequences on human life than the almighty Yuan.
Though she said the exact structure of the contaminant has not been identified, "it is similar to heparin glycans." Glycans are polysaccharides, a complex class of carbohydrate. She added it was unclear whether other heparin products used outside the United States might also contain the product.

Later this week, the agency will release recommendations on how manufacturers and regulators can screen for the contaminant, she said.
How 'bout close the China plant. That would screen out lots of stuff.
Last year, pet food made in China was found to be tainted with an ingredient that replaced more expensive protein and that initial tests did not identify as a contaminant. Asked if the heparin contamination could be a similar case, Woodcock said, "It's possible."

Doctors have used the blood-thinner for 60 years with "no history of any problems whatsoever," said the FDA commissioner, Dr. Andrew C. von Eschenbach. Von Eschenbach said it would be "disingenuous" to expect the agency would be able to inspect "every institution in every case."
Yeah, but if you use profiling and common sense, it might help cut the problem down to size. If not eliminate it altogether.
I seem to recall that the FDA was created exactly to inspect every institution that handled food or drugs.
Over the last fiscal year, the agency reported having inspected more than 1,000 foreign plants, a record.

Since the agency issued its report that 19 deaths had been linked to the drug since January 1, 2007, it has received word of another 27 deaths, "but many of those do not fit our definition of this type of event," Woodcock said.

In all, the FDA has received 785 heparin-linked reports of adverse events -- including difficulty breathing, nausea, vomiting, excessive sweating and plummeting blood pressure that can lead to life-threatening shock. "They're continuing to come in fairly rapidly because there has been a lot of reporting of this," she said.

In a written statement, Baxter said its tests have suggested "that the root cause may be associated with the crude heparin, sourced from China, or from the subsequent processing of that product before it reaches Baxter."

Meanwhile, Scientific Protein Laboratories LLC, which supplies the company with the active pharmaceutical ingredients, issued a statement saying it is working with the FDA, Baxter and outside experts to identify the cause of the adverse events. "Thus far, no conclusions have been reached about the root cause," it said. "It is premature to conclude that the heparin active pharmaceutical ingredient sourced from China and provided by SPL to Baxter is responsible for these adverse events."
No it isn't.
It said that its voluntary recall of suspect product was being made as a precaution.
And the alternative to a voluntary recall of this "suspect" product here? Yeah, I thought not.
Posted by: gorb || 03/06/2008 04:28 || Comments || Link || [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  investigators found "a heparin-like compound -- that is not heparin -- present in some of the active pharmaceutical ingredients" in both facilities,
Posted by: Icerigger || 03/06/2008 9:24 Comments || Top||

#2  Might be wayfarin, which is also a blood thinner and is used to kill rats.
Posted by: lotp || 03/06/2008 9:27 Comments || Top||

#3  And by "a heparin-like compound -- that is not heparin", we mean lead.
Posted by: SteveS || 03/06/2008 9:43 Comments || Top||

#4  'Way to tarnish the brand equity, there, boys!
Posted by: Mike || 03/06/2008 12:39 Comments || Top||

#5  Part of the problem is that there are now plenty of raw materials that are produced only in China. So there are no alternative sources to go to when this kind of issue comes up.

A dozen deaths in the U.S. alone? Over what period of time, I wonder. And how many deaths and health problems occurred due to this that were not reported to the FDA as being associated with heparin.
Posted by: trailing wife || 03/06/2008 12:59 Comments || Top||

#6  I recall vaguely that artificial sweetners such as Sacchrin are Polyglycols (so is antifreeze)
So what's the "Contaminant? Antifreeze? it's sweet to the taste.

Posted by: Redneck Jim || 03/06/2008 14:06 Comments || Top||

#7  #1: investigators found "a heparin-like compound -- that is not heparin -- present in some of the active pharmaceutical ingredients" in both facilities

I missed that. Does it mean that the US-side is involved as well? It seems impossible to me that they would tinker with the FDA-approved formula. Is it possible that a supplier is messing with the component ingredients? Who is the supplier - China perhaps?
Posted by: gorb || 03/06/2008 14:10 Comments || Top||

#8  Plastic crap and textiles from China are bad enough but food and drugs? What that tells me is that U.S. businessmen and their pet politicians are just as contemptuous of human life as their Chinese counterparts. At the very least these products should be clearly labeled as being from China. Then consumers could ask their doctors or pharmacists for alternatives.
Posted by: Abu Uluque (aka Ebbang Uluque6305) || 03/06/2008 14:30 Comments || Top||

#9  ...a drug made by Baxter from pig intestines...

Boy, that'll piss off the muzzies.

Why are we still buying shit from China?
Posted by: DarthVader || 03/06/2008 17:18 Comments || Top||


-Short Attention Span Theater-
Innocent by breast size.
Posted by: 3dc || 03/06/2008 14:36 || Comments || Link || [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "The judges were very good-mannered as they showed no expressions on their faces. I guess they're well-trained," Kozakura said.

Lucky she can't read minds...
Posted by: tu3031 || 03/06/2008 15:11 Comments || Top||

#2  I think we need a more detailed examination of the evidence.

After all, implants don't compact and move as much as real breasts. Are they real? Did the jury get to examine them?
Posted by: DarthVader || 03/06/2008 16:14 Comments || Top||

#3  "The judges were very good-mannered as they showed no expressions on their faces. I guess they're well-trained," Kozakura said.

Stunned, just as likely, but in an inscrutable way.
Posted by: Procopius2k || 03/06/2008 16:24 Comments || Top||

#4  In her appeal, the defence counsel held up a plate showing the size of the hole and said that she could not squeeze through with her 110-centimetre (44-inch) bust.

Heck she can hardly squeeze into that sports jacket she's wearing in the pic.
Posted by: CrazyFool || 03/06/2008 16:36 Comments || Top||

#5  No hips at all, apparently.
Posted by: KBK || 03/06/2008 22:07 Comments || Top||

#6  FARK.com Posters showed some pics of 40DD-and-neyond babes - D *** NG, and I thought DOLLY and KITTEN NATIVIDAD were "it". You hear stories or rumors about larger female cup sizes, but don't believe until you actually see it.

The above being it, CLEARLY WE MUST SUPPORT THIS OUTSTANDING JAPANESE INSTITUTION AND PRACTICE.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 03/06/2008 22:14 Comments || Top||


Idiom Shortage Leaves Nation All Sewed Up In Horse Pies
The Onion

WASHINGTON—A crippling idiom shortage that has left millions of Americans struggling to express themselves spread like tugboat hens throughout the U.S. mainland Tuesday in an unparalleled lingual crisis that now has the entire country six winks short of an icicle.

Since beginning two weeks ago, the deficit in these vernacular phrases has affected nearly every English speaker on the continent, making it virtually impossible to communicate symbolic ideas through a series of words that do not individually share the same meaning as the group of words as a whole. In what many are calling a cast-iron piano tune unlike any on record, idiomatic expression has been devastated nationwide.

"This is an absolute oyster carnival," said Harvard University linguistics professor Dr. Howard Albright, who noted that the 2008 idiom shortage has been the country's worst. "I don't know any other way to describe it."

Albright said that citizens in the South and West have been hit by the dearth of idioms like babies bite the bedpost, with people in those colorful expression–heavy regions unable to speak about anything related to rain storms, misers, sensations associated with nervousness, difficult or ironic predicaments, surprise at a younger relative's rapid increase in height, or love. In some areas, what few idioms remain are being bartered or sold at exorbitant prices. And, Albright claims, unless something is done before long to dry out the cinnamon jars, residents of Texas may soon cease speaking altogether. . . .
Land o' Goshen! The chances of averting disaster are slim to none, and Slim's leavin' town!
With an emergency measure to release a pepper-stack of backup idioms into everyday speech still being debated in committee, Congress has been criticized for its inability to respond to the crisis. Moreover, a number of Beltway insiders have accused members of both houses of abusing their positions to gain access to hundreds of 1920s-era idioms that have been kept in reserve for decades.

"Well, bully," said Sen. Charles Schumer (D-NY), who claimed that the Capitol was not expecting a shipment of fresh idioms for weeks. "Americans have to collar all their jive, and take us cats at our word: Everything's copacetic, daddy-o, so don't flip your lids."
Dig that Senator’s righteous riff. That was ready, so help me! He’s got his boots on! The cats were fallin‘ out when they heard it!
. . . Authorities said they expect the shortage to subside by April, but in the meantime, they urge citizens to skip shy the rickshaw until such time as the flypaper marigolds have a chance to waterfall—with or without a pole dragon's cottage—unless the cork and the bubble-truck tumble from the mountaintop, at which point, of course, old birds could light up every tuba tent and walleyed river king from 44 to the roller coaster.
Posted by: Mike || 03/06/2008 06:56 || Comments || Link || [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  However, the TLA shortage is a much more immediate problem.
Posted by: Phil_B || 03/06/2008 7:21 Comments || Top||

#2  A TLA shortage? OMG! WTF? LOL!
Posted by: Mike || 03/06/2008 14:35 Comments || Top||

#3  What with many idioms not passing the PC test, a lot have fallen out of favor:
Math teacher daughter was helping a student work through an algebra problem; knowing that there may be multiple ways to achieve the correct answer, she said that there was more than one way to skin a cat. that earned her a time out in the principal's office the next day; seems another student was a PETA member.
Posted by: USN,Ret. || 03/06/2008 15:00 Comments || Top||

#4  Even "Eeny, Meanie, Miney, Moe" fails the "PC" test. (Second verse)
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 03/06/2008 17:42 Comments || Top||

#5  Jim,what's wrong with "catch a tiger by the toe"?
Posted by: Rambler in California || 03/06/2008 17:47 Comments || Top||

#6  Rambler, you're too young.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 03/06/2008 18:51 Comments || Top||

#7  Nimble, huh?

Maybe if it was "Catch the camel by the toe".
Posted by: twobyfour || 03/06/2008 20:08 Comments || Top||

#8  wait a minute, camel+toe = ....hmmm?
Posted by: Frank G || 03/06/2008 20:42 Comments || Top||


Some really odd jobs
I'll take beer tester. Fred can have internet prophylactic tester. Y'all can fight over the rest.
Posted by: gorb || 03/06/2008 04:58 || Comments || Link || [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I was going to go with crack filler until I saw that it's not about filling those, er, cracks...
Posted by: Spot || 03/06/2008 7:17 Comments || Top||


MRE makeover: Army unveils a new menu for soldiers
Anybody out there who has tried this stuff? Has it hit store shelves yet?
Don Egolf remembers what Army chow looked like when he served in Germany in World War II: A tin of scrambled eggs and bacon bits that he pried open with a tiny can opener.

On Wednesday at the Pentagon the 102nd Infantry Division vet pocketed one of those irksome little openers, the P-38, as a souvenir. Then he dug into the latest in combat cuisine, a plate of blackened catfish, teriyaki chicken, little french toast squares and pumpkin cake -- no opener needed.

The Army offered up samples of the food as it rolled out its newest innovation -- special packets of easy-to-eat, high-nutrition, high-calorie foods designed for mobile forces. The chow, mostly bagged finger-type foods that soldiers can just tear open and eat on the run, will be available in the field next month.

That's not the way it was in his day, Egolf noted. "When we did get to eat, we got K-rations," Egolf recalled, referring to the meals of dried biscuit, canned meat and eggs plus cigarettes that soldiers were issued during the early wars.

The new food "is delicious. This food is seasoned," said Egolf, who now lives at the U.S. Soldiers' and Airmen's Home in Washington.

Spread out on tables along the Pentagon's third floor Wednesday at lunch time, containers of garlic mashed potatoes, barbecue pork, beef and black beans, and Mediterranean chicken simmered as long lines of soldiers waited for a taste. Those new offerings will be available to troops in MREs (meals ready to eat) over the next three years.

Other soldiers snatched up sample packages of jalapeno cashews, chocolate-covered coffee beans and the always popular beef jerky.

Fueling the Army's fighting forces long has been a subject of much research, as the military works to make the food more nutritious, easier to carry and better tasting. The Army knows that food and mail delivery have the biggest impact on soldiers' morale, so the Natick Soldier Research Development and Engineering Center conducts continued testing on new and improved ways to feed the force.

"When you're eating the same things, three times a day, taste and variety is a big thing," said Sgt. 1st Class James Laverty, who has served in Iraq and Afghanistan multiple times with the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment. He said the food has changed even since his first tour in Afghanistan when the war began. "It's the taste," he said. "Hands down, that is the number one thing I was impressed with."

Army leaders are calling the new high-calorie Natick offering the First Strike Ration, and it would serve troops like Laverty, who head into combat first and are on the move. The packet is good for three meals, and includes about 3,000 calories -- designed for soldiers moving hard and fast, carrying heavy packs and equipment.

Inside are easy-to-eat, high-protein, high-carbohydrate foods that soldiers can stuff in their rucksacks and chomp on the run, including a pepperoni pocket sandwich, bacon cheddar pocket, tuna, beef jerky, wheat bread, cheese spread, applesauce, several power bars and even a pack of caffeine gum.

"The last thing you want to do is give them something heavy to carry," said Jeremy Whitsitt, outreach coordinator for the Pentagon's combat feeding program. "They can eat these when they're on patrol or while they're marching down the road."

The larger MREs, meanwhile, come with individual flameless heaters and are more elaborate.

The southwest beef and black beans got the nod from Army Secretary Pete Geren, who sampled some of the fare. Using the well-worn adage, he said: "The Army travels on its stomach."
Posted by: gorb || 03/06/2008 04:51 || Comments || Link || [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  those irksome little openers, the P-38,

American soldiers stacked a lot of tins and then a P38 Lightning opened fire on them so they could eat.
Those were the times.
Posted by: JFM || 03/06/2008 9:13 Comments || Top||

#2  I always had one of those on my dog tags ready to open my can of lima beans and ham fat.
Posted by: USMC6743 || 03/06/2008 11:26 Comments || Top||

#3  yes, but are the meals halal? We wouldn't want to offend the people we are hunting.
Posted by: Rambler in California || 03/06/2008 11:41 Comments || Top||

#4  grim smile

Mr. Lotp and I bought some of the current MREs from the commissary last year as part of our emergency supply cache. (retiree shopping privileges) Not home cooking, but not bad. Lots of of calories per meal of course, but that just means that we could split one meal among two of us just fine in most circumstances.

Being careful with money means we'll eat those things one way or the other before the expire ....
Posted by: lotp || 03/06/2008 11:48 Comments || Top||

#5  Way back when, 66-69 I was Navy, one day they replaced all the old "C" (WW2 vintage) rations in the lifeboats with entirely new grub, and gave the old "C" rations to anyone who wanted them, I got a case,(Mainly to sample) and that food was still good, the only thing I couldn't eat was some bread baked in a can (Grease had turned rancid) I kept one of those P-38's (Old style, very small) on my keyring for many years, it finaly wore through the metal and was lost. Very handy little tool. The newer p-38's are several inches long, the old style about one inch overall.
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 03/06/2008 14:19 Comments || Top||

#6  Still got a P-38 or 2 in my "I remember that" drawer in the filing cabinet. And one on my keychain.

One place C's were superior to MRE (and probably the only place) was that you could reheat them in the can on the manifold of a generator, or a deuce and a half. Metal cans > plastic wrapper in that instance.

But, try as I might, I cannot be one of those old timers that says they are Meals Rejected by Ethiopians. The first bunches of these with the dehydrated meat was pretty sucky (but the dehydrated strawberries were great to eat straight up). But just about every set since those has been good. I actually like MREs, and have lived off them for a few weeks. As long as you have a bit of variety they are pretty good.

And the best thing about MRE over C-Rats?

No Ham and Muthas. Blech.
Posted by: OldSpook || 03/06/2008 16:11 Comments || Top||

#7  Ah yes, Meals Rejected by Everyone.

They weren't bad, but eating the same 12 meals 45 days in a row was too much. More variety is very much needed. However, since they are very rich in calories, you won't poop for the first two weeks. Then ... well... you don't dig a hole. You dig a trench.
Posted by: DarthVader || 03/06/2008 16:19 Comments || Top||

#8  A very ... graphic ... warning, Darth. We'll keep that in mind when the time comes.
Posted by: lotp || 03/06/2008 16:21 Comments || Top||

#9  Eww. Personally, I'm going to try to forget it starting now.
Posted by: gorb || 03/06/2008 16:51 Comments || Top||

#10  So what the hell's wrong with Good ole Spam?

. . .
Man: Well, what've you got?
Waitress: Well, there's egg and bacon; egg sausage and bacon; egg and spam; egg bacon and spam; egg bacon sausage and spam; spam bacon sausage and spam; spam egg spam spam bacon and spam; spam sausage spam spam bacon spam tomato and spam;
Vikings: Spam spam spam spam...
Waitress: ...spam spam spam egg and spam; spam spam spam spam spam spam baked beans spam spam spam...
Vikings: Spam! Lovely spam! Lovely spam!
. . .
Posted by: CrazyFool the Viking || 03/06/2008 17:52 Comments || Top||

#11  Meh - its gonna take a while yet for me to get used to these newfangled MRE's.

"More VARIETY is very much needed" > VARIETY is good when your country is absolutely winning a major war, or in the altern is in no danger of losing a major war even iff it suffers de facto battlefield defeats now and then.

Compare wid STARS-N-STRIPES > ARMY TO CALL UP 10,000 IRR MEMBERS. Read - REAR-ECHELON professionals, technical/trade specialists, bureaucrats, etc.

COLLECTIVELY, BOTH SHOW THAT THE USA IS WINNING AND INTENDS TO STAY IN THE ME - HOWEVER, ALSO INDIR REFLECTS THAT RADICAL ISLAM IS LOSING AND MAY RESORT TO MORE VIOLENT, MUTUALLY DESTRUCTIVE TERROR SCHEMAS, e.g. "AMER HIROSHIMA(S)", + GREAT POWERS CONFRONTATIONISM, TO SAVE ITS JIHAD + OWG AGENDA.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 03/06/2008 22:08 Comments || Top||

#12  I travelled coast to coast on a diet of mostly coffee, soup and bagels (with different types of meat, etc). You find that you change your diet, when faced with 2500 miles on the road.
Posted by: McZoid || 03/06/2008 23:46 Comments || Top||


Britain
Red Ken race aide quits after emails revealed
involves sex and lots of taxpayer funds misused
Posted by: lotp || 03/06/2008 08:01 || Comments || Link || [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Nice "X" hat. Those were big, when, in...1992?
Posted by: tu3031 || 03/06/2008 16:58 Comments || Top||

#2  Based on his resignation letter, I'd say he's more than qualified to be mayor o any number of US cities.

Barring that, I'm sure the DNC could find a position for him.
Posted by: Pappy || 03/06/2008 19:02 Comments || Top||

#3  If NASCAR's not involved, there's no need for a race advisor, IMHO
Posted by: Frank G || 03/06/2008 19:54 Comments || Top||


Caribbean-Latin America
Ham Alert: Frequencies used by Columbia and Venezuela Militaries
Posted by: 3dc || 03/06/2008 14:02 || Comments || Link || [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Why deploy the tanks. Just deploy four jeeps and have them communicate with eachother like they are tanks.
Posted by: Penguin || 03/06/2008 15:23 Comments || Top||


Down Under
Howard breaks silence on election loss
Posted by: ryuge || 03/06/2008 04:40 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Mr Howard criticised the Australian media for concentrating on bad news from Iraq, rather than highlighting advances, and took aim at the Rudd government for regarding Afghanistan as the central front in the war on terrorism.

"While it may be politically convenient, this view is profoundly naive and dangerous," he said.

"One only has to look at al-Qaeda's own words and actions to know that Iraq is every bit as much a major front in the war against terror as is Afghanistan. We simply cannot afford to lose in either."


Telling it like it is.
Posted by: tipper || 03/06/2008 7:11 Comments || Top||


Science & Technology
Video: Carnegie Mellon U's - ROBOT SNAKE!
Posted by: 3dc || 03/06/2008 12:42 || Comments || Link || [7 views] Top|| File under:

#1  That's what they did with the one million dollars I gave them for sharks with frickin' laser beams.
Posted by: Evil Snowman || 03/06/2008 16:00 Comments || Top||

#2  "I want these MF snakes out of my MF robotics lab right now!"
Posted by: DMFD || 03/06/2008 20:08 Comments || Top||


Genetic code of corn cracked
Posted by: 3dc || 03/06/2008 01:29 || Comments || Link || [9 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Start splicing some pork genomes into it and let the fun begin.
Posted by: gorb || 03/06/2008 1:57 Comments || Top||

#2  Gorb, why such limitations?

Beef corn
Turkey corn
Calomari corn...

I admit, pork corn, though, has a great potential, as well as pork wheat, pork rice... and whazzat in couscous... pork millet?
Posted by: Spike Uniter || 03/06/2008 2:09 Comments || Top||

#3  Genetically-cracked corn, and I don't care,
Genetically-cracked corn, and I don't care,
Genetically-cracked corn, and I don't care,
My master's gone a-way.


Nah. Doesn't work. Too many syllables.
Posted by: Mike || 03/06/2008 6:16 Comments || Top||

#4  Mike, try: Gimmie Gen'-cracked corn - I don't care...
Posted by: GK || 03/06/2008 7:56 Comments || Top||

#5  Mmmm, bacon corn.
Posted by: SteveS || 03/06/2008 8:35 Comments || Top||

#6  mmmmm....whiskey corn....woops! Already developed.
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 03/06/2008 10:05 Comments || Top||

#7  mmmmm....whiskey corn....woops! Already developed.
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 03/06/2008 10:10 Comments || Top||

#8  I'm sure scientists will now be able to do all sorts of useful things now to it now, like make it glow in the dark or taste like wheat.
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/06/2008 12:43 Comments || Top||

#9  I have the mental image of individual grains of corn the size of your hand, should eliminate starvation right there.
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 03/06/2008 14:22 Comments || Top||

#10  Nitrogen fixing corn would greatly reduce the amount of oil needed to make fertilizer.

If the corn is made perennial then everything improves.
Posted by: 3dc || 03/06/2008 17:14 Comments || Top||

#11  Yes! RJ, great idea, just bake it -- true whole grain bread!
Posted by: twobyfour || 03/06/2008 20:11 Comments || Top||

#12  Two by four, you gave me another idea, popcorn tht's the size of your head, per grain.
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 03/06/2008 23:32 Comments || Top||


Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka chief justice suggests whipping absent teachers
Sri Lanka’s chief justice on Tuesday suggested corporal punishment for teachers who called in sick this week in the midst of a wage dispute, court officials said Wednesday. Supreme Court Chief Sarath Silva said that if any of the teachers came before, the punishment would be sharp and swift. “Teachers taking leave on the pretext of being sick should be given six lashes,” he said at the opening of a new court house here Tuesday. “If any of these teachers come before me, I know what to do. I will give them six cuts.” Teachers say there are several salary anomalies that must be corrected by the government and they staged the strike in a bid to make Colombo act quicker. Unions said the action was a success, but schools reported normal attendance. There are some 210,000 teachers in state-run schools and their average daily absenteeism is reportedly around 20 percent.
Posted by: Fred || 03/06/2008 00:00 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:


Home Front: Culture Wars
The NY Times will never pose this question that the BBC does here -
Posted by: pinky_n_the_brain || 03/06/2008 02:56 || Comments || Link || [7 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Why should they when SCOTUS supported a twenty year suspension of the 14th Amendment equality clause? [and don't try to argue that was nothing short of 'making it up' and a proper reading of the Constitution.]
Posted by: Procopius2k || 03/06/2008 8:00 Comments || Top||

#2  Here's the NYT take,

"White Males Discriminated Against: Blacks and Women hurt most"
Posted by: mhw || 03/06/2008 14:54 Comments || Top||

#3  Britain is turning itself into a third world country with immigrants from Pakistan just like the U.S. is with immigrants from Mexico. Americans workers will find themselves accepting lower wages and a lower standard of living as the country continues to import poverty in the name of globalisation. I guess the plutocracy think they can keep themselves isolated from it in their little enclaves but I wouldn't feel so comfortable if I were them.
Posted by: Abu Uluque (aka Ebbang Uluque6305) || 03/06/2008 14:57 Comments || Top||

#4  They even try to run the Channel tunnels. Frankly, the best workers - Hindus, Philipinos, Brazilians, Chileans, South Africans - are the most likely to immigrate through legal channels.
Posted by: McZoid || 03/06/2008 23:38 Comments || Top||



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Two weeks of WOT
Thu 2008-03-06
  Times Square recruiting station boomed
Wed 2008-03-05
  Double kaboom at Pak navy college kills 5
Tue 2008-03-04
  Hamas claims 'victory' as Olmert dithers, IDF pulls out of Gaza
Mon 2008-03-03
  U.S. bangs Qaeda big in Somalia
Sun 2008-03-02
  70 Gazooks titzup in IDF operation
Sat 2008-03-01
  Colombia bangs FARC 2nd in command in Ecuador
Fri 2008-02-29
  Predator zap kills 10 in South Wazoo
Thu 2008-02-28
  VA imam thought to have aided al-Qaida
Wed 2008-02-27
  Boomer on a bus kills 40 near Mosul
Tue 2008-02-26
  Wheelchair boomer kills cop in Samarra
Mon 2008-02-25
  Yemen foils attempt to bomb oil pipeline
Sun 2008-02-24
  Iraqi security forces kill 10 al-Qaida insurgents
Sat 2008-02-23
  Turk troops enter Iraq after Kurdish fighters
Fri 2008-02-22
  Morocco busts another terror cell
Thu 2008-02-21
  Thirty Taliban killed in joint strikes


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