#4
I think I lost her when she said "I'm a teenager".
Posted by: European Conservative ||
07/16/2013 0:32 Comments ||
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#5
So funny. You can see the RAGE spike when she listens to the sound bite from the white juror. Then she swallows it down and goes on with the script. Watched a lot of Jerry, Maury and Montel I'll bet.
In an effort to quash a growing scandal over how much the City University of New York was willing to pay former CIA chief David Petraeus to teach a single class next fall, administrators announced Monday that Petraeus salary would be reduced from $150,000 to just $1. How can we make all of this unpleasantness just go away ?
Petraeus was perfectly willing to teach for less, and wanted to put the controversy behind him, his lawyer said. Here, take it all. Just give me the NYC Per Diem, my suite at the Franklin, and a limmo.
The general never was taking on this teaching assignment for the money, said Robert Barnett, Petraeuss lawyer, in a statement to The New York Times. CUNY confirmed the change while maintaining that Petraeus expertise was worth much more than $1. Of course it wasn't about the money, it never is.
A butter sculpture of President Abraham Lincoln will share the dairy-centric spotlight this year with the world-famous butter cow at the Iowa State Fair.
The fair runs Aug. 8 to Aug. 18
Posted by: Bobby ||
07/16/2013 06:48 ||
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[Al Ahram] A general in the police force was on Monday put in charge of Egypt's supply ministry, which manages its system of distributing state subsidised food and fuel.
Mohamed Abu Shadi, who announced he had accepted the post, was formerly the senior interior ministry official responsible for investigating supply crimes.
Egypt is the world's biggest importer of wheat and also buys diesel to distribute to the population at subsidised prices.
Abu Shadi told news hounds there were no crises in Egypt's strategic supplies. He did not elaborate.
Posted by: Fred ||
07/16/2013 00:00 ||
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[MAGHAREBIA] The European Union will donate 33 million euros for the rehabilitation and the renovation of some 119 residential neighbourhoods across Tunisia, Tunisie Numerique reported on Sunday (July 14th). Nearly 700,000 people will benefit from the project, which includes sanitation, lighting, roads and new cultural and sport facilities.
Posted by: Fred ||
07/16/2013 00:00 ||
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[Al Ahram] Egypt's Ministry of Information will be scrapped in Egypt's transitional period, interim president Adly Mansour's media advisor Ahmed El-Musselmenani said on Monday.
El-Musselmenani said an independent body for national media will be set up instead, as stipulated in the suspended constitution, Ahram's Arabic news website reported. Without a Ministry of Truth perhaps they might achieve eventual democracy. They certainly never will with one.
Interim prime minister Hazem El-Beblawi had said on Sunday that the information ministry -- responsible for regulating the country's media -- will still operate in the transitional period.
There have been recurring demands to eliminate the ministry so as to ease media restrictions and allow greater freedom of speech.
Media figure Dorreya Sharaf El-Din has been nominated for the position of minister of information in the new cabinet.
Posted by: Fred ||
07/16/2013 00:00 ||
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[Al Ahram] Dozens of people were maimed Monday in ethnic festivities in the west African state of Guinea, officials told AFP, after petrol station guards killed a youth from a rival tribe.
A police source said the violence broke out in the southern forest region when the guards from the Guerze tribe accused the youth, an ethnic Konianke, of stealing before torturing and beating him.
The victim's family told their fellow Konianke tribespeople who "rose up against these medieval practices" in the town of Koule, the source said.
The violence spread to the nearby scenic provincial capital N'Zerekore, 570 kilometres (350 miles) southeast of Conakry, leaving dozens injured and several homes destroyed.
Security forces deployed to break up the fighting had been unable to restore calm in N'Zerekore by the afternoon, witnesses told AFP, while the police source said there were "dozens maimed by machetes".
"The two communities are now fighting with machetes, axes, sticks and stones. I cannot say the exact number of casualties in the districts or even the number in hospital. The situation is extremely serious," he added.
"Since the festivities broke out in Koule overnight and moved to N'Zerekore, we have registered one death and at least 50 injured, 20 in Koule and 30 in N'Zerekore," a hospital source told AFP.
Communal violence is common in the region, near the border with Liberia, where festivities between the two tribes regularly break out over religious and other grievances. The indigenous Guerze are mostly Christian or animist, while the Koniankes -- seen as newcomers -- are Moslems considered to be close to Liberia's Mandingo ethnic community.
In Liberia's civil war, which ended in 2003, rebels fighting the forces of then president Charles Chuck Taylor The former President-for-Life of Liberia, of whom the best that could be said was that he wasn't quite as horrible as Prince Johnson, at least not usually. drew much of their support from the Mandingo community.
The Guerze, known as Kpelle in Liberia, were generally considered to be supporters of forces loyal to Taylor, who was locked away Yez got nuttin' on me, coppers! Nuttin'! last year for "aiding and abetting" war crimes in neighbouring Sierra Leone.
Posted by: Fred ||
07/16/2013 00:00 ||
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#1
you'd think the Italians would be past this.
Wait, what?
Posted by: Frank G ||
07/16/2013 14:44 Comments ||
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#2
And then Johnny Fontaine Charles Taylor comes along with his olive oil voice and guinea charm and she runs off.
[USATODAY] Russian President Vladimir Putin said Monday that NSA leaker Edward Snowden would leave the country at the "earliest opportunity," RT.com reports.
"As soon as there is an opportunity for him to move elsewhere, I hope he will do that. He is familiar with the conditions of granting political asylum, and judging by the latest statements, is shifting his position. The situation is not clear now," Putin said, according to the Russian news site.
Putin's remarks indicated that it is increasingly unlikely that Russia will offer political asylum to the 30-year-old former defense contractor.
Posted by: Fred ||
07/16/2013 00:00 ||
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#1
Russian President Vladimir Putin said Monday that NSA leaker Edward Snowden would leave the country at the "earliest opportunity,"
And don't let the door hit you'r ass on the way out.
Posted by: Redneck Jim ||
07/16/2013 1:36 Comments ||
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#2
He is a liability to Russia as well. You ought to give his passport back if only to avoid pissing off Putin more.
[An Nahar] Armed Basque separatist group ETA ETA or Euskadi Ta Askatasuna (English: Basque Homeland and Freedom) is an armed Basque nationalist and separatist organization that has been around since 1959. It demands independence from Spain and France for the Greater Basque Country. The group is proscribed as a terrorist organization by most civilized countries. More than 700 members of the organization are incarcerated in prisons in Spain, La Belle France, and other countries, though members do seem to find ready hospitality in Venezuela. on Monday welcomed as "constructive" proposals by a group of international experts who had called for it to disarm and dismantle its military apparatus.
ETA, blamed for more than 800 deaths in a four-decade campaign of bombings and shootings for the independence of the Basque homeland which straddles northern Spain and southwestern La Belle France, announced a "definitive end" to its armed activity in October 2011.
But it has not formally disarmed or disbanded as demanded by Madrid and Gay Paree, both of which refuse to enter into negotiations with the group, listed by the European Union ...the successor to the Holy Roman Empire, only without the Hapsburgs and the nifty uniforms and the dancing... and United States as a terrorist entity.
ETA has broken ceasefires in the past.
"We believe that with the commitment of all, the proposal as a whole can constitute the departure point to decide on a road map," ETA said in a statement published by Basque daily Gara.
Proposals by international experts in the so-called Social Forum -- an association of of civil associations and experts set up to spur on the Basque grinding of the peace processor -- issued on May 27, were a "constructive contribution", the group said.
The ETA denounced Spain and La Belle France's refusals to enter into dialogue.
In their report, the experts, including former Irish prime minister Bertie Ahern, said: "As an essential part of the grinding of the peace processor, we recommend designing a controlled, orderly and consensual process that culminates in the dismantling of weapons and military structures" of ETA.
They also urged that the process be independently overseen.
Posted by: Fred ||
07/16/2013 00:00 ||
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[Al Ahram] Police on Monday incarcerated Drop the gat, Rocky, or you're a dead 'un! 29 Greenpeace activists who snuck into a nuclear plant in southern La Belle France, in the latest break-in by the environmental group aimed at highlighting alleged security weaknesses at atomic facilities.
The activists managed to enter the grounds of the Tricastin plant, around 200 kilometres (120 miles) north of Marseille, around dawn, Greenpeace and police said.
They hung yellow banners reading "Tricastin: a nuclear accident" and "Francois Hollande ...the Socialist president of La Belle France, an economic bad joke for la Belle France but seemingly a foreign policy realist... : president of a catastrophe?" in reference to the French president, according to Isabelle Philippe, a spokeswoman for the environmental group.
Before entering the facility, the activists also projected images inside the plant, including one showing a crack running along part of the structure.
"Greenpeace wants to point out all the security weaknesses in the production of nuclear energy," she said. "Tricastin is one of the most dangerous plants and one of five that should be closed quickly."
"It was the easiest thing in the world for the activists to enter the plant, it took them 20 minutes to get from the entrance to the top of the structures," she said.
The interior ministry said all the activists tossed in the calaboose Maw! They're comin' to get me, Maw! '>were tossed into the calaboose in a full sweep of the facility. It had taken several hours to arrest them all, after some had chained themselves to structures inside the plant.
Among those arrested were French, Italian, Romanian and Spanish nationals.
The government said in a statement that it was considering "stiffer penalties" for such actions.
The activists "were not able to access the plant's sensitive areas," like command rooms, interior ministry front man Pierre-Henry Brandet said.
"It's a media stunt that poses no security danger," he said.
He insisted that the environmentalists, who divided into three groups upon entering the plant, "were immediately detected".
Posted by: Fred ||
07/16/2013 00:00 ||
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#1
Leav'em there until they glow.
Posted by: Redneck Jim ||
07/16/2013 1:32 Comments ||
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#2
Those chained up.
Get everyone in NBC suits look like you're gonna cut them off then all run off as someone "accidentally" sets off a false alarm.
[Al Ahram] An appeals court in Turkey is hearing arguments in the case of more than 300 military officers -- including the former air force and navy chiefs -- convicted of a failed plot to overthrow the Islamic-based government in 2003.
The officers were convicted in September in a historic case that has helped curtailed the military's hold on politics. The officers received prison sentences ranging between six and 20 years.
Lawyers on Monday began presenting their appeals arguments. The hearings are expected to last for days.
The trial has been hailed as a break with a tradition of military impunity and a move toward greater democracy. But it has also been marred by judicial flaws, including allegations of fabricated evidence. Critics say the trial is a ploy to intimidate secular opponents.
Posted by: Fred ||
07/16/2013 00:00 ||
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[HOSTED.AP.ORG] Farmers say farm robots could provide relief from recent labor shortages, lessen the unknowns of immigration reform, even reduce costs, increase quality and yield a more consistent product.
"There aren't enough workers to take the available jobs, so the robots can come and alleviate some of that problem," said Ron Yokota, a farming operations manager at Tanimura & Antle, the Salinas-based fresh produce company that owns the field where the Lettuce Bot was being tested.
Many sectors in U.S. agriculture have relied on machines for decades and even the harvesting of fruits and vegetables meant for processing has slowly been mechanized. But nationwide, the vast majority of fresh-market fruit is still harvested by hand.
Research into fresh produce mechanization was dormant for years because of an over-abundance of workers and pressures from farmworker labor unions.
In recent years, as the labor supply has tightened and competition from abroad has increased, growers have sought out machines to reduce labor costs and supplement the nation's unstable agricultural workforce. The federal government, venture capital companies and commodity boards have stepped up with funding.
"We need to increase our efficiency, but nobody wants to work in the fields," said Stavros G. Vougioukas, professor of biological and agricultural engineering at the University of California, Davis.
But farmworker advocates say mechanization would lead to workers losing jobs, growers using more pesticides and the food supply becoming less safe.
"The fundamental question for consumers is who and, now, what do you want picking your food; a machine or a human, who with the proper training and support, can" ... take significant steps to ensure a safer, higher quality product, said Erik Nicholson, national vice president of the United Farm Workers of America.
Posted by: Fred ||
07/16/2013 00:00 ||
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#1
(Chortle) A new Under class for Democrats to exploit.
I hear Robosexual, now.
Do we really need a Ro Man?
Posted by: Redneck Jim ||
07/16/2013 1:42 Comments ||
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#2
Lest we fergit, IIRC BUGS BUNNY > "One of these days they may invent something that will actually outsmart a Rabbit".
#4
It's my understanding that tractors now practically run themselves already. Look for the first self-driven vehicle to be a tractor in some field somewhere.
#5
Robots of the world, unite!
You have nothing to loose but your batteries!
Posted by: European Conservative ||
07/16/2013 2:29 Comments ||
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#6
Tractors on large farms now largely do run off of GPS combined with other types of software. They even have tractors which meter whatever soil modifier they apply based upon satellite data over a large field, so that the rate of application is updated constantly and checked with location to apply just the right amount for a particular spot.
Agriculture, at least for large crops like grains, potatoes, cotton, and large-scale veggies like tomatoes for processing and root crops for supermarket distribution etc. have been and will continue to be automated in their production.
Those carrots you buy in a bag? Deere and the other ag equipment manufacturers have machines that pull, top, clean and bag them in one process, then spit the bags into a truck driving alongside the harvester.
Most of supermarket meat is raised the same way, with heavy automation. A lot of the propaganda by animal rights groups about cruelty on these farms is overblown but there is definitely an automated aspect to two of the big three (chicken and pork), less so with beef which does require grass feeding for about a year prior to being grained up. Even milking is automated relative to each cow's, um, spacing, plugged into a machine which automatically adjusts the four milking nozzles and applies them with little human intervention.
Despite questions about some aspects of aquaculture, that too is making inroads in the total amount of fish consumed. Oysters and salmon that Americans consume are now almost entirely farmed. Much of the white fish is either farm-raised catfish or tilapia. Value added fish products like frozens fillets or fish sticks are more often than not caught on large quota-boat operations like the ones seen on "Deadliest Catch", frozen into blocks, and processed (automated) into breaded product, not caught and sold fresh by small operator individually owned boats.
In the early 1900's a little less than half of Americans were directly involved in growing/harvesting food and fiber crops or in raising animals. It's now 5% or less depending on how you figure things. Outside of boutique or specialty crops raised on small family farms for mostly affluent or trendy end users, that is going to continue. Like it or not (and I don't, always), that's how it is. A difference of a few cents in margin can make or break an operation, and for the most used and lucrative products that means volume, and that means automation.
Posted by: no mo uro ||
07/16/2013 5:29 Comments ||
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#7
>In the early 1900's a little less than half of Americans were directly involved in growing/harvesting food and fiber crops or in raising animals. It's now 5% or less depending on how you figure things.
UK it's 1%. Automation doesn't lower the ability of the economy to employ people, it raises it.
Unemployment is caused by taxes on employment (and some rent-seeking).
#8
Robots are a great idea until one of them chops up a new born fawn with a hay bailer. PETA will throw a fit and the unions will demand a 'look out driver' earning a 'living wage' on all robot tractors.
Those carrots you buy in a bag? Deere and the other ag equipment manufacturers have machines that pull, top, clean and bag them in one process, then spit the bags into a truck driving alongside the harvester.
Tomatoes are also machine-picked, despite their fragility.
Apparently tomato growers once upon a time depended on migrant workers to pick their crops. Then there was a massive strike, and the tomato processors -- Heinz, Campbells, etc -- had nothing to sell. So they cut deals with their growers: we'll front the cost of automation, you pay us back over so many years, no interest, we guarantee to buy from you at market rates.
And so the migrant workers, in their strike, lost their jobs.
Posted by: Rob Crawford ||
07/16/2013 8:36 Comments ||
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#10
But those machine tomatoes suck dead bunnies. :(
#11
They're getting better. I eat the Roma tomatoes even in the summer now. And their consistency makes them good for sandwiches.
Posted by: Fred ||
07/16/2013 10:07 Comments ||
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#12
But notice the gripe about the infernal machines doing away with farm worker jobs, when one of the incentives toward automation is lack of workers.
Posted by: Fred ||
07/16/2013 10:10 Comments ||
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#13
Increased Gov't farm subsidies and EBT cards should level the playing field on both sides and make everyone happy.....except the poor working stiff and tax payer.
A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.
Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing
the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.
Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence
over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has
dominated Mexico for six years.
Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No
trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.