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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/2/2013 8:47:01 PM

Drug overdose deaths spike among middle-aged women


Associated Press

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Graphic shows national data on drug overdosing; 2c x 6 inches; 96.3 mm x 152 mm;

ATLANTA (AP) — Overdose deaths in the U.S. are rising fastest among middle-aged women, and their drug of choice is usually prescription painkillers, the government reported Tuesday.

"Mothers, wives, sisters and daughters are dying at rates that we have never seen before," said Dr. Thomas Frieden, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which compiled the data.

The female overdose problem is one of the few health issues the CDC is working on that are clearly getting worse, he added.

For many decades, the overwhelming majority of U.S. overdose deaths were men killed by heroin or cocaine. But by 2010, 40 percent were women — most of them middle-aged women who took prescription painkillers.

Skyrocketing female overdose death rates are closely tied to a boom in the overall use of prescribed painkillers. The new report is the CDC's first to spotlight how the death trend has been more dramatic among women.

The CDC found that the number and rate of prescription painkiller overdose deaths among females increased about fivefold 1999 to 2010. Among men, such deaths rose about 3½ times.

Overall, more men still die from overdoses of painkillers and other drugs; there were about 23,000 such deaths in 2010, compared with about 15,300 for women. Men tend to take more risks with drugs than women, and often are more prone to the kind of workplace injuries that lead to their being prescribed painkillers in the first place, experts say.

But the gap has been narrowing dramatically.

Studies suggest that women are more likely to have chronic pain, to be prescribed higher doses, and to use pain drugs longer than men. Some research suggests women may be more likely than men to "doctor shop" and get pain pills from several physicians, CDC officials said.

But many doctors may not recognize these facts about women, said John Eadie, director of a Brandeis University program that tracks prescription-drug monitoring efforts across the United States.

The report highlights the need for "a mindset change" by doctors, who have traditionally thought of drug abuse as a men's problem, he said. That means doctors should consider the possibility of addiction in female patients, think of alternative treatments for chronic pain, and consult state drug monitoring programs to find out if a patient has a worrisome history with painkillers.

The CDC report focuses on prescription opioids like Vicodin and OxyContin and their generic forms, methadone, and a powerful newer drug called Opana, or oxymorphone.

"These are dangerous medications and they should be reserved for situations like severe cancer pain," Frieden said. He added that there has been no documented increase in pain in the U.S. public that would explain the boom in painkiller prescriptions in the last 10 or 15 years.

Some experts said the increase in prescriptions can be traced to pharmaceutical marketing campaigns.

CDC researchers reviewed death certificates, which are sometimes incomplete. In only a fraction of cases were specific drugs identified. Sometimes a combination of drugs was involved in deaths, like painkillers taken with tranquilizers.

It was not always clear which deaths were accidental overdoses and which were suicides. But CDC officials think more than 70 percent were unintentional.

One striking finding: The greatest increases in drug overdose deaths were in women ages 45 through 54, and 55 through 64. The rate for each of those groups more than tripled between 1999 and 2010.

In 2010, overdose deaths in those two groups of middle-aged women added up to about 7,400 — or nearly half the female total, according to CDC statistics.

It's an age group in which more women are dealing with chronic pain and seeking help for it, some experts suggested.

Many of these women probably were introduced to painkillers through a doctor's prescriptions for real pain, such as persistent aches in the lower back or other parts of the body. Then some no doubt became addicted, said Dr. Andrew Kolodny, a psychiatrist who specializes in addiction at Maimonides Medical Center in New York City.

There aren't "two distinct populations of people being helped by opioid painkillers and addicts being harmed. There's overlap," said Kolodny, president of a 700-member organization named Physicians for Responsible Opioid Prescribing.


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/2/2013 8:52:09 PM

The Washington Post Advocates Sending a Washington Post Source to Jail

The Atlantic Wire


The Washington Post Advocates Sending a Washington Post Source to Jail

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The Washington Post
's editorial board is demanding the U.S. government offer a plea deal to Edward Snowden, who told the world about the National Security Agency's surveillance programs in the pages of The Washington Post. Now, most papers keep their editorial boards separate from their newsrooms, but they generally acknowledge being on the same team. Not so much in this case: Not only does thePost editorial board demand one its reporter's sources go to jail, the opinion section also thinks the news source is not a very good one, calling him a "naive hacker" and a "political martyr." And the Post insists that "the first U.S. priority" should be to stop further leaks. Which is weird, because Snowden has already leaked his stuff to The Guardian and the Post, and it's up to the editors to decide whether to publish it. The Post, for example, has had 41 slides of a NSA PowerPoint presentation on PRISM, publishing the first four at the beginning of June, and four more last weekend. How many more slides are coming? When will the Post stop leaking?

RELATED: No, Sarah Palin Is Not Going to Al Jazeera — but the Washington Post Thought So

The hypocrisy was not lost on, well, the entire Internet.Gawker's Hamilton Nolan called the Post a "Jealous Little Newspaper," writing, "Take note, potential leakers and whistleblowers inside the U.S. government: the official stance of the Washington Post's editorial board is that you should shut up and go to jail." Perhaps they should leak elsewhere, he suggested. For The New Republic Michael Kinsley writes, "If the Post felt free to run this information, how damaging to the nation could it be?" If Snowden is guilty of a crime, isn't it's reporter, too? "The Washington Post editorial board wants the NSA leaks to stop, even though it doesn't know what horrors the Snowden trove may hold?" Reuters' Jake Shafer tweets. "Note to Washington Post editorial board: @BartonGellman's stories are coming from INSIDE YOUR BUILDING!"

RELATED: Chelsea Clinton Sparks a Critic War

The editorial is right in saying Snowden is in a terrible position — trapped in a Russian airport. That prison time in the U.S. would be better is a tougher case to make. "It’s hard to believe that the results would leave the 30-year-old contractor worse off than living in permanent exile in an unfree country," the Post says. WikiLeaker Bradley Manning was held naked in solitary confinement for a long time, after all. Maybe it's not crazy to imagine Snowden could offer to stop the leaks in exchange for a reduced sentence (the Espionage Act carries the potential for the death penalty). But Snowden has reportedly already given his information to The Guardian and other reporters, like the Post. It is their decision to release that information or sit on it.

RELATED: The NRDC Just Wants The Washington Post to Get Its Name Right

But the weird thing is that several writers for The Washington Post have taken a curiously strong stand against the leaks that give them something to write about. Columnist Richard Cohen said the NSA story didn't amount to much, and that Snowden will "go down as a cross-dressing Little Red Riding Hood," which is a weird gay joke. David Ignatius wrote, "Snowden looks these days more like an intelligence defector, seeking haven in a country hostile to the United States, than a whistleblower." Of the Justice Department investigation into Fox News reporter James Rosen and his North Korea reporting, Walter Pincus wrote, "When will journalists take responsibility for what they do without circling the wagons and shouting that the First Amendment is under attack?" That's a great point. It's time for The Washington Post​, it's time to take some responsibility.


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/2/2013 8:55:44 PM

UPDATE 1-Trayvon Martin trial told Zimmerman injuries "insignificant"

Tue Jul 2, 2013 3:03pm EDT

(New story with medical examiner testimony on Zimmerman injuries)

By Barbara Liston

(Reuters) - Volunteer watchman George Zimmerman suffered "insignificant" injuries from the fight in which he said he shot and killed unarmed black teenager Trayvon Martin out of fear for his life, a Florida medical examiner testified at his murder trial on Tuesday.

Medical Examiner Valerie Rao said she reviewed Zimmerman's medical records and the pictures of his injuries taken at the police station after the fight on Feb. 26, 2012 shooting in a gated community in Sanford, Florida.

"They were not life-threatening. They were very insignificant," Rao told the Seminole County Criminal Court jury.

Zimmerman, 29, has claimed that Martin punched him in the face and repeatedly slammed his head into a concrete sidewalk.

Rao said Zimmerman's injuries were consistent with one blow to the face and one impact with the concrete.

Zimmerman, who is white and Hispanic, has pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder and could face life in prison if convicted. He says he killed Martin, a black 17-year-old, in self-defense.

The racially charged case captivated much of the United States in 2012. Police initially declined to arrest Zimmerman, believing his story of self-defense, sparking protests around the country. A special prosecutor later brought the murder charge.

Martin was a student at a Miami-area high school and a guest of one of the housing development's homeowners. He was walking back to the home in the rain from a convenience store when Zimmerman spotted him and called police, saying Martin looked suspicious. There was a confrontation between the two in which Zimmerman shot Martin through the heart with a handgun he was licensed to carry.

Prosecutors claim Zimmerman profiled Martin as a criminal, got out of his car and chased after him vigilante-style rather than waiting for police to arrive. (Additional reporting by Tom Brown; Writing by Jane Sutton; Editing by Grant McCool)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/2/2013 9:01:24 PM

In 'golden age' of surveillance, US has big edge


FILE - This June 23, 2013 file photo shows a TV screen shows a news report of Edward Snowden, a former CIA employee who leaked top-secret documents about sweeping U.S. surveillance programs, at a shopping mall in Hong Kong. The saga of Edward Snowden and the NSA makes one thing clear: The United States' central role in developing the Internet and hosting its most powerful players has made it the global leader in the surveillance game . Other countries, from dictatorships to democracies, are also avid snoopers, tapping into the high-capacity fiber optic cables to intercept Internet traffic, scooping their citizens' data off domestic servers, and even launching cyberattacks to win access to foreign networks. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu, File)

Associated Press

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LONDON (AP) -- The saga of Edward Snowden and the NSA makes one thing clear: The United States' central role in developing the Internet and hosting its most powerful players has made it the global leader in the surveillance game.

Other countries, from dictatorships to democracies, are also avid snoopers, tapping into the high-capacity fiber optic cables to intercept Internet traffic, scooping their citizens' data off domestic servers, and even launching cyberattacks to win access to foreign networks.

But experts in the field say that Silicon Valley has made America a surveillance superpower, allowing its spies access to massive mountains of data being collected by the world's leading communications, social media, and online storage companies. That's on top of the United States' fiber optic infrastructure — responsible for just under a third of the world's international Internet capacity, according to telecom research firm TeleGeography — which allows it to act as a global postmaster, complete with the ability to peek at a big chunk of the world's messages in transit.

"The sheer power of the U.S. infrastructure is that quite often data would be routed though the U.S. even if it didn't make geographical sense," Joss Wright, a researcher with the Oxford Internet Institute, said in a telephone interview. "The current status quo is a huge benefit to the U.S."

The status quo is particularly favorable to America because online spying drills into people's private everyday lives in a way that other, more traditional forms of espionage can't match. So countries like Italy, where a culture of rampant wiretapping means that authorities regularly eavesdrop on private conversations, can't match the level of detail drawn from Internet searches or email traffic analysis.

"It's as bad as reading your diary," Wright said. Then he corrected himself: "It's FAR WORSE than reading your diary. Because you don't write everything in your diary."

Although the details of how the NSA's PRISM program draws its data from these firms remain shrouded in secrecy, documents leaked by spy agency systems analyst Edward Snowden to the Guardian and The Washington Post newspapers said its inside track with U.S. tech firms afforded "one of the most valuable, unique, and productive" avenues for intelligence-gathering. How much cooperation America's Internet giants are giving the government in this inside track relationship is a key unanswered question.

Whatever the case, the pool of information in American hands is vast. Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft Corp. accounts for more than 90 percent of the world's desktop computer operating systems, according to one industry estimate. Mountain View, California-based Google Inc. carries two-thirds of the world's online search traffic, analysts say. Menlo Park, California-based Facebook Inc. has some 900 million users — a figure that accounts for a third of the world's estimated 2.7 billion Internet-goers.

The pool of information in American hands is vast. Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft Corp. accounts for more than 90 percent of the world's desktop computer operating systems, according to one industry estimate. Mountain View, California-based Google Inc. carries two-thirds of the world's online search traffic, analysts say. Menlo Park, California-based Facebook Inc. has some 900 million users — a figure that accounts for a third of the world's estimated 2.7 billion Internet-goers.

Electronic eavesdropping is, of course, far from an exclusively American pursuit. Many other nations pry further and with less oversight.

China and Russia have long hosted intrusive surveillance regimes. Russia's "SORM," the Russian-language acronym for System for Operational-Investigative Activities, allows government officials to directly access nearly every Internet service provider in the country. Initially set up to allow the FSB, the successor organization to the KGB, unfettered access to Russia's Internet traffic, the scope of SORM has grown dramatically since Vladimir Putin took power in 2000 and now allows a wide range law enforcement agencies to monitor Russians' messages.

In China, surveillance is "pervasive, extensive, but perhaps not as high-tech" as in the United States, said Andrew Lih, a professor of journalism at American University in Washington. He said major Internet players such as microblogging service Sina, chat service QQ, or Chinese search giant Baidu were required to have staff — perhaps as many as several hundred people — specially tasked with carrying out the state's bidding, from surveillance to censorship.

What sets America apart is that it sits at the center of gravity for much of world's social media, communications, and online storage.

Americans' "position in the network, the range of services that they offer globally, the size of their infrastructure, and the amount of bandwidth means that the U.S. is in a very privileged position to surveil internationally," said Wright. "That's particularly true when you're talking about cloud services such as Gmail" — which had 425 million active users as of last year.

Many are trying to beat America's tech dominance by demanding that U.S. companies open local branches — something the Turkish government recently asked of San Francisco-based Twitter Inc., for example — or by banning them altogether. Santa Clara, California-based WhatsApp, for example, may soon be prohibited in Saudi Arabia.

Governments are also racing to capture traffic as it bounces back and forth from California, importing bulk surveillance devices, loosening spy laws, and installing centralized monitoring centers to offer officials a one-stop shop for intercepted data.

"Eventually, it won't just be Big Brother," said Richard J. Aldrich, the author of a book about Britain's GCHQ eavesdropping agency. "There will be hundreds of little brothers."

But the siblings have a lot of catching up to do if they want to match surveillance powers of the United States, and some have turned to cyberespionage to try to even the playing field. A high-profile attack on Gmail users in 2010, for example, was blamed on Chinese hackers, while suspicion for separate 2011 attack on various U.S. webmail services fell on Iran.

But even in the dark arts of cyberespionage, America seems to have mastered the field. Washington is blamed for launching the world's first infrastructure-wrecking super worm, dubbed Stuxnet, against Iran and for spreading a variety of malicious software programs across the Middle East. One U.S. general recently boasted of hacking his enemies in Afghanistan.

In his comments to the South China Morning Post, Snowden said Americans had broken into computer systems belonging to a prominent Chinese research university, a fiber optic cable company and Chinese telecoms providers.

"We hack everyone everywhere," Snowden said.

U.S. officials haven't exactly denied it.

"You're commuting to where the information is stored and extracting the information from the adversaries' network," ex-NSA chief Michael Hayden told Bloomberg Businessweek earlier this year. "We are the best at doing it. Period."

___

Paisley Dodds in London and Nicole Winfield in Rome contributed to this report.


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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/2/2013 9:10:50 PM

Why Is it So Hot in the Southwest?


LiveScience.com

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The National Park Service's thermometer showing 129 degrees F (54 C) on June 30, a new record high for June in Death Valley






It hasn't been this hot in the Southwest in June for 110 years.

Sure, the mercury got close to Sunday's record in 1994, but the last time it was this hot in California was in 1902, in a little town called, appropriately enough, Volcano. The National Weather Service officially declared Sunday (June 30) thehottest June day in the United States ever, at 129 degrees Fahrenheit (54 degrees Celsius) in Death Valley, tying the record from 1902. Death Valley also holds the world heat record, hitting 134 F (57 C) on July 10, 1913.

The scorching heat wave results from a ridge of high pressure settled in over the Southwest, according to the National Weather Service (NWS). The ridge is stuck in part because a giant swoop in the jet stream has divided the country, with the high-pressure parked west of the atmospheric winds, while cooler air is swept to the East.

The high-pressure system is wreaking havoc on an already parched landscape; thunderstorms rising around the edge of the ridge spark wildfires. In Yarnell, Ariz., 19 firefighters were killed on Sunday, the deadliest U.S. firefighter disaster in decades. The blaze was triggered by a lightning strike on Friday (June 28).

Even though the NWS predicts the high-pressure ridge will begin to break up by the weekend, temperatures will remain above normal, with no relief from the summer monsoon in Nevada or Arizona, the agency said.

The record-high temperatures in Alaska in mid-June also were from a high-pressure system baking the biggest state. High-pressure systems prevent clouds and winds from entering the region they cover, letting the sun sear the atmosphere and ground. The high pressure also makes it more difficult for new weather systems to move in and break up the heat.

Email Becky Oskin or follow her @beckyoskin. Follow us @livescience, Facebook & Google+. Original article on LiveScience.com.


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