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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: IS THE NEW AGE REALLY COMING?
2/2/2013 4:04:39 PM

Sylvester Stallone supports assault weapon ban

By RYAN PEARSON | Associated Press14 hours ago

Actor Sylvester Stallone attends the "Bullet To The Head" premiere at AMC Lincoln Square on Tuesday, Jan. 29, 2013 in New York. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP)
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) — Sylvester Stallone says that despite his "Rambo" image and new shoot-em-up film "Bullet to the Head," he's in favor of new national gun control legislation.

Stallone supported the 1994 "Brady bill" that included a now-expired ban on assault weapons, and hopes that ban can be reinstated.

"I know people get (upset) and go, 'They're going to take away the assault weapon.' Who ... needs an assault weapon? Like really, unless you're carrying out an assault. ... You can't hunt with it. ... Who's going to attack your house, a (expletive) army?"

The 66-year-old actor, writer and director said he also hopes for an additional focus on mental health to prevent future mass shootings.

"It's unbelievably horrible, what's happened. I think the biggest problem, seriously, is not so much guns. It's that every one of these people that have done these things in the past 30 years are friggin' crazy. Really crazy! And that's where we've dropped the ball: mental health," he said. "That to me is our biggest problem in the future, is insanity coupled with isolation."

Stallone is now in production on his next project, pairing up with the former "Raging Bull" Robert De Niro for "Grudge Match," about two aging boxers.

"People think it's going to be some geezer brawl. Really? OK, they're in for a surprise. I'm telling you. I've been working on the fight, the choreography. He's taking it deadly serious. Because no one wants to be shown up," Stallone said of De Niro. "It's going to be like a 'Rocky' fight. This will be 'Rocky 7,' with me fighting — with Rocky fighting the 'Raging Bull.'"

___

Follow AP Entertainment Writer Ryan Pearson: http://twitter.com/ryanwrd

Sylvester Stallone and director Walter Hill discuss changes in depicting violence on screen
'Bullet To The Head' Insider Access

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"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: IS THE NEW AGE REALLY COMING?
2/2/2013 5:00:31 PM
England Decides Not to Sell Off Public Forests













Written by Michael Graham Richard

The government of England has backtracked and decided that it won’t sell a significant portion (about 15%) of the public forests it holds, but will instead create a trust to hold them for future generations.

“The new body will have greater independence from Government and greater freedom to manage its resources and maximise its income but with the right safeguards in place to operate for the long-term benefit of people, nature and the economy,” said UK Environment Secretary Owen Paterson.

Kudos to Save Our Woods (SoW) for fighting the good fight and raising awareness about public forests in England. The half a million names that they collected in a petition against the proposed disposal of public forested land certainly helped. SoW describes their mission thus on their about page:

We formed Save Our Woods, a grass-roots organisation, to get to the facts behind the 2010 proposed sell off of our Public Forest Estate (PFE), which led us to campaign for the removal of the forestry clauses from the Public Bodies Bill and to ensure that our publicly owned forests remained in public ownership, in perpetuity.

We encourage you to check them out and support them!

This post was originally published by TreeHugger.

Related Stories:

100,000 Ash Trees Killed by Fungus in UK

Success! Temporary Reprieve for UK’s Badgers

A Turning Point for the Spirit Bear Coast

Read more: , , ,

Photo: European Environment Agency/flickr



Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/england-decides-not-to-sell-off-public-forests.html#ixzz2JlGpTRfd

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: IS THE NEW AGE REALLY COMING?
2/2/2013 5:50:38 PM

Is Egypt the Barometer of Wider Global Change?

The entrance of Egypt's presidential palace in Cairo is in flames Friday, February 1, as protesters battle security forces. Egypt has been embroiled in violence after a series of events last week. There were protests on the two-year anniversary of the uprising against Hosni Mubarak's former regime and deadly clashes after a judge sentenced 21 people to death over a 2012 soccer riot.

The entrance of Egypt’s presidential palace in Cairo is in flames Friday, February 1, as protesters battle security forces. Egypt has been embroiled in violence after a series of events last week. There were protests on the two-year anniversary of the uprising against Hosni Mubarak’s former regime and deadly clashes after a judge sentenced 21 people to death over a 2012 soccer riot.

Is Egypt the Barometer of Wider Global Change?

Stephen: The Arab Spring led to governmental and societal changes in several countries. Yet the world’s most populous Arab nation remains in complete turmoil, as ‘change’ at the top seems to have seen little real change for the people. In fact, it seems that their day-to-day lives are even worse.

But are we in the so-called West in any better position? Other than the fact that many of us don’t live in a situation of continual, countrywide violence? In my opinion, we are just as captive to the whims of ‘elite’ leadership and control – those same things the Egyptians are still ‘fighting’ to be free of.

While this article concludes with the statement that revolution usually “gets replaced by more radical elements of society” maybe an altogether more radical shift is actually underway?

Could Egypt Fall Apart?

By Michael Martinez, CNN – February 1, 2013

http://edition.cnn.com/2013/01/31/world/meast/egypt-collapse-analysis/index.html?hpt=hp_t1

(CNN) — The renewed bloodshed and defiant protests in Egypt prompts a provocative question: Could Egypt really collapse?

Just two years into a revolution that ignited during the Arab Spring, Egypt’s defense minister warned this week the raging conflict “may lead to the collapse of the state and threaten the future of our coming generations.”

On Wednesday, analysts described that statement as overreaching, but none dismissed the severity of the country’s problems.

“His comments were a bit over the top,” said Joshua Stacher, a fellow at the Woodrow Wilson International Center of Scholars.

“It depends on what your definition of what ‘collapse’ is,” added Steven A. Cook, senior fellow for Middle Eastern studies at the Council on Foreign Relations. “The economy is certainly in terrible shape.”

James Coyle, director of global education at Chapman University in California, said the comment by Defense Minister Gen. Abdul Fattah al-Sisi was “a bit of an overreaction.”

“But five days of riots and tens of deaths and thousands of demonstrators still in Tahrir Square two years after the fall of (Hosni) Mubarak, I can understand why he would say it.”

Analysts agreed that the remarks should serve as an alarm.

“It was a warning to everybody — the opposition, the Brotherhood — that they’ve got to get their act together,” said CNN correspondent Ben Wedeman in Cairo. He was referring to the Muslim Brotherhood, the Islamist party to which President Mohamed Morsy belongs.

The military — the powerful bulwark for Egyptian secularism that temporarily governed the country after the revolution ousted longtime ruler Mubarak — is worried about civil war.

“This is a telegraphed message to everybody that this is getting out of control,” Wedeman said.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton also addressed the defense minister’s warning of a collapse.

“I hope not,” she told CNN Tuesday. “That would lead to incredible chaos and violence on a scale that would be devastating for Egypt and the region.”

Morsy’s government needs to understand that the revolution’s aspirations “have to be taken seriously” and that “the rule of law applied to everyone,” she said.

“It’s very difficult going from a closed regime — essentially one-man rule — to a democracy that is trying to be born and learn to walk,” Clinton explained. “I think the messages and the actions coming from the leadership have to be changed in order to give people confidence that they are on the right path to the kind of future they seek.”

Exacerbating the political crisis is Egypt’s woeful economy, where the lifeblood of tourism is all but dead and the currency is devalued, analysts said.

Recent demonstrations in Port Said and nearby cities along the Suez Canal are symbolic because that region was among the first where the Mubarak regime lost control during the 2011 unrest leading to revolution, analysts said. The region has long felt distant from Cairo.

Demonstrators this week ignored the curfew Morsy imposed on the region following bloodshed on the second anniversary of the revolution last Friday. Protesters fed up with slow change clashed with authorities, leaving seven people dead.

Rage exploded again when a judge sentenced to death 21 residents of Port Said for their roles in a deadly soccer riot last year. At least 38 people were killed in the two days of violence after the verdict.

The defense minister denied reports that the army used live ammunition on the protesters, state-run media said.

“What struck me this time was the call for emergency law and emergency measures, and it was just ignored,” Cook said. “The people in Port Said were demonstrating and just thumbed their nose at the government.”

Protesters behind the Egyptian revolution now feel betrayed, particularly as the state security agency was changed in name only to homeland security, Stacher said. No one from Mubarak’s coercive security apparatus was sentenced for any violence during the revolutionary rallies, he said.

Protesters now just throw rocks at police during most encounters, he added.

“This all boils down to something very basic,” Stacher said. “The people demanded real change in Egypt but were lied to and their wishes were postponed and they were told they weren’t important.

“And the generals went around and created this exclusivist coalition (with Morsy’s government), which is what people were protesting against in the first place,” Stacher said.

In fact, protesters began calling Morsy “Morsilini,” a reference to the late Italian fascist dictator Benito Mussolini who was Adolf Hitler’s ally. That nickname arose after Morsy gave himself sweeping powers in November.

Morsy later canceled most of those powers following demonstrations. That turn of events hurt Morsy’s image because he was enjoying international attention for playing a constructive role in the recent, bloody conflict in Gaza between Hamas and Israeli forces, analysts said.

The stakes are high for a country strategically positioned in Middle Eastern politics and in world trade through the Suez Canal.

“I don’t think the international community can afford for (Egypt) to collapse economically … or politically,” Cook said.

The defense minister’s warning is “very important” because “it shows the military has been in consultation about this. That’s why I take it more seriously,” Cook added.

In the coming month, Egyptians will go to the polls to elect a lower house in Parliament. The election will be a bellwether on how Morsy’s Muslim Brotherhood now stands against the opposition coalition National Salvation Front, analysts said.

“They are smart people,” Stacher said of opposition leaders, “but the problem is that they don’t seem like they want to have a real democracy either.”

For now, the Egyptian military doesn’t appear to want to intervene and run the Egyptian government again as another president is selected.

“If the situation deteriorates further, the military might not have a choice and it might find a warm reception,” Cook wrote on his blog for the Council on Foreign Relations.

In a revolution, the first government typically doesn’t stay in power, as seen in the Russian and French revolutions, Coyle explained.

“Usually it gets replaced by more radical elements of society,” he said.

Egyptians Storm the Presidential Palacehttp://www.ctvnews.ca/world/1-killed-in-mayhem-outside-egypt-palace-1.1138995


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: IS THE NEW AGE REALLY COMING?
2/2/2013 5:55:10 PM

UK PM Advocates Focus on Extreme Poverty

UK PM Advocates Focus on Extreme Poverty

Stephen: Is it just me? Or is his polling in the doldrums? Either way, UK PM David Cameron seem as though he has been in containment – and released. Or is it just the new energies entering his being? Thanks to Alice C.

David Cameron in Liberia: We Must Eradicate Extreme Poverty

PM also calls for focus on education during visit to school with Liberian president ahead of role co-chairing UN poverty meeting

By Patrick Wintour, The Guardian – February 1 2013

http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2013/feb/01/david-cameron-liberia-poverty-talks

David Cameron has called for the next wave of international development targets to focus on extreme rather than relative poverty. The dispute about poverty targets is one of a set of differences due to be thrashed out at a UN high-level meeting on the next millennium development goals after 2015. Cameron is co-chair of the panel that is meeting in Monrovia, Liberia.

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Before the start of the panel on Friday, Cameron went to a local school with Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, the charismatic 74-year-old Liberian president. The children told them they needed books and computers. Cameron then asked what they wanted to be when they became adults and many replied doctors or lawyers. Cameron joked: “That is very impressive. In my country, they all want to be footballers or pop stars,” before adding that was not fair.

The children had written a welcome sign for their two special guests in chalk on the blackboard in their dark and crowded classroom. Cameron told the children he would like world poverty goals to include higher quality education.

In interviews he insisted bolstering security and civil structures was crucial, alongside aid measures.

Speaking to reporters on Friday morning, Cameron said: “Liberia is a country that was absolutely devastated by conflict and civil war.

“It is now recovering but there is still desperate poverty. I think it is very important we keep a focus on eradicating extreme poverty.

“Here in Liberia, one in 10 children do not make it to the age of five. But I also think it is important we look at those things that keep countries poor. Conflict, corruption, lack of justice, lack of the rule of law. These things matter, as well as money.”

The premier was forced to concede on Thursday that the defence budget could face more cuts in 2015-16, while the international development budget is protected.

Cameron is also pressing for new goals not to focus only on the number of children in school, but also the quality of education.


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: IS THE NEW AGE REALLY COMING?
2/2/2013 6:22:42 PM

How Phobos was Determined to be Artificial

How does one arrive at the conclusion that a “moon” is in fact an artificial construction? Thanks to Roth.

We Are Not Alone – European Space Agency

Phobos, the Martian moon is artificial claims European Space Agency
Michael Tellinger, Unbuntu, Feb. 1, 2013
http://www.ubuntuparty.org.za/2013/02/we-are-not-alone-european-space-agency.html

The prestigious European Space Agency (ESA) has declared Phobos, the mysterious Martian moon, to be artificial. At least one-third of it is hollow and its origin is not natural, but alien in nature. The ESA is Europe’s counterpart to NASA. Could this revelation motivate NASA to release the secrets it is harbouring? Don’t count on it… because if it’s artificial an alien civilization must have put it there.

Russian astronomer, Dr. Cherman Struve, spent months calculating the two Martian moons’ orbits with extreme accuracy during the early 20th Century. Studying the astronomer’s notes, Shklovsky realized as the years progressed into decades, that Phobos’s orbital velocity and position no longer matched Struve’s mathematically predicted position.

After lengthy study of the tidal, gravitic, and magnetic forces, Shklovsky came to the firm conclusion that, “ No natural causes could account for the origins of the two odd moons or their bizarre behavior, particularly that exhibited by Phobos. The moons were artificial. Someone or something built them.

During an interview about the mysterious Martian moon Shklovsky explained: “There’s only one way in which the requirements of coherence, constancy of shape of Phobos, and its extremely small average density can be reconciled. We must assume that Phobos is a hollow, empty body, resembling an empty tin can.”

For decades most of mainstream science ignored Shklovsky’s breakthrough work, until the ESA began to take a closer look at the odd little moon.

ESA study declares Phobos not natural.

The ESA study abstract that appeared in the peer-reviewed Geophysical Research Letters reveals that Phobos is not what many astrophysicists and astronomers believed for generations: a captured asteroid.

“We report independent results from two subgroups of the Mars Express Radio Science (MaRS) team who independently analyzed Mars Express (MEX) radio tracking data for the purpose of determining consistently the gravitational attraction of the moon Phobos on the MEX spacecraft, and hence the mass of Phobos. New values for the gravitational parameter (GM=0.7127 ± 0.0021 x 10-³ km³/s²) and density of Phobos (1876 ± 20 kg/m³) provide meaningful new constraints on the corresponding range of the body’s porosity (30% ± 5%), provide a basis for improved interpretation of the internal structure. We conclude that the interior of Phobos likely contains large voids. When applied to various hypotheses bearing on the origin of Phobos, these results are inconsistent with the proposition that Phobos is a captured asteroid.”

Casey Kazan writes in ESA: Mars Moon Phobos ‘Artificial,’ that “…the official ESA Phobos website contained explicit scientific data, from multiple perspectives, which strongly ‘supported the idea that this is what radar echoes would look like, coming back from inside ‘a huge…geometric… hollow spaceship’. In fact, they were the primary source of the decidedly ‘internal, 3-D geometric-looking’ radar signature. The concurrence of all three of these independent Mars Express experiments- imaging, internal mass distribution, (tracking) and internal radar imaging, now agreed that the interior of Phobos is partially hollow with internal, geometric ‘voids’ inside it. Meaning that Phobos is artificial.”

In other words, Phobos is not a natural satellite, is not a “captured asteroid,” and is hollow. This is exactly what Dr. Shklovsky found back in the 1960s. Phobos was artificially constructed and placed into Martian orbit by…who?

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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