Saturday, December 31, 2016

Happy New year 2017!

The clock has struck Midnight (were I'm from) Mexico City time so I thought it would be appropriate to post a cliche new year post.


Wishing you all a safe, fun & prosperous new year!


I just want to thank you all for taking the time out of your day to read the LSRBlog I really appreciate it. With a new year comes new opportunity, so let's make 2017 shine bright like a diamond!****


See you in 2017!



On Dec. 31, a ‘leap second’ will be added to our universal clocks — because of waves

washingtonpost.com - The year 2016 will last a little longer. You’ll need to wait a second!

As massive as our planet is, the Earth still “brakes” for ocean waves. Remarkably, this pale blue dot decelerates thanks to the braking action of ocean tides. In fact, our planet decelerates 2 milliseconds per day per century, according to the Naval Observatory. The final effect is that the planet’s rotation slows compared to atomic clocks.

A half-century ago, the world’s scientists agreed to stop basing time on astronomy. Instead, they defined the building block of time — one second — based on the cesium atom. The 13th General Conference on Weights and Measures in October 1967 defined the “second” as the vibration (9,192,631,770 periods of radiation) of the cesium atom, according to the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST).

But since the world slows by about 2 milliseconds a day, a leap second needs to be added about every 500 days. Civil time must be adjusted so that the world’s atomic clocks do not vary from the Earth’s rotational time by more than 0.9 seconds, according to the observatory.

Said Geoff Chester: “By adding a leap second, we’re essentially stopping our atomic clocks to let the Earth catch up.”

To synchronize the world, timekeepers will add one second to the clocks on Dec. 31. Under the concept of Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), a leap second will be added at 23 hours, 59 minutes and 60 seconds — or 6:59:60 p.m. Eastern Time. The second will be added to the U.S. Naval Observatory’s Master Clock facility, according to Chester, an astronomer at the observatory.

Since 1972, when the first leap second occurred, 26 tics have been added. The last was June 30, 2015.

Time is of the essence and it affects us all. For example, to ensure that all of Google’s applications — like Gmail, YouTube and Google Maps — communicate with each other, perfect time is needed. During this leap second, Google will “smear” time to provide a seamless transition.

Google has “application programming interfaces” that integrate its services. Instead of applying leap seconds to the company’s servers, Google evenly distributes that one second over a 20-hour period.

For the leap second No. 37 on New Year’s Eve, Google will apply that so-called linear smear, which starts at 14:00 UTC on New Year’s Eve and it will end at 10:00 UTC on New Year’s Day. During the smear, Google’s server clocks will run slightly slower than usual, as each second of time will be about 13.9 microseconds longer than a second. (Source)

Friday, December 30, 2016

US: Wages Are Increasing, But What's Behind It?


- The Great Recession ended 7 1/2 years ago, and job gains have been steady since, but greater demand for workers is only starting to increase pay.

The increases are still relatively modest, and the data are still mixed. In October, for example, the Labor Department reported average hourly earnings increased at a 2.8 percent rate — the highest since mid-2009, but wage growth slowed in November. A separate report this month showed the cost of labor — another measure of wage growth — increased especially during the spring of this year.

What's driving the recent wage growth is unclear.

"The mystery has been that we've seen a decline in the unemployment rate, but we haven't seen the kind of increases in wage growth that we would expect," says Michael Strain, director of economic policy studies at the conservative American Enterprise Institute.

He speculates that until recently, employers figured they didn't have to increase wages, because in recent years so many people had stopped working or looking for work.

"Businesses kind of have the sense that [the missing workers] are out there — they are a pool of available workers — so that has, I think, suppressed wage growth," Strain says.

This year, that finally appears to be changing, and Strain and others believe wage growth will continue into next year, chiefly because the supply of labor is declining. The unemployment rate, at 4.6 percent, is near a level economists say is close to a "natural" unemployment rate.

New state and local minimum wage laws are another reason wages are rising. Since 2014, 21 states and Washington, D.C., changed their minimum wage laws. Last month, voters approved initiatives in Arizona, Colorado, Maine and Washington state. And more increases are expected in the coming year.

Strain says those increases have a ripple effect beyond just the lowest paid workers. Many union contracts, for example, benchmark to the minimum wage.

"There's no question minimum wage increases cause wage growth to accelerate," he says. "How much of that can be attributed to minimum wage increases is an open question."

In Anggie Godoy's case, minimum wage hikes made a big difference. She started working as a McDonald's drive-through cashier three years ago, making $8 an hour. Since then, the Los Angeles City Council raised the minimum wage to $10.50. Without the city's new law, Godoy says, she would only have seen a tiny increase.

"Working three years there, I only got a 10-cent raise," she says.

Godoy, who participated in fast-food workers' strikes demanding a $15 hourly wage, says that as her wages increased, so did wages for those in more senior positions.

Andrew Chamberlain, chief economist for online job site Glassdoor, says Godoy is right.

"Like dominoes up the pay scale, you see wage hikes all across the board," he says.

But minimum wage isn't the biggest factor, Chamberlain says, citing Glassdoor's data that show the most in-demand jobs are those whose pay is increasing fastest: truck drivers, construction workers and machine operators. That is not true for some white-collar jobs — sales jobs and financial analysts, for example, which are losing ground.

"Clever coders are finding ways to program around them," Chamberlain says. "Insurance agents today are largely being replaced by self-service insurance websites."

David Levine, CEO of the American Sustainable Business Council, a progressive advocacy group, says increasing pay can be a way to address another labor-market problem: low productivity growth.

"With that retention they're also getting employees that are more committed to the business, therefore productivity goes up," he argues.

Simply put: You pay more to get more. (Source)

Thursday, December 29, 2016

Turkey's Erdogan: 'Confirmed evidence' US-led coalition supports ISIS & other terrorists in Syria

RT.com - Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said "it's very clear" that the US-led coalition is supporting terrorist groups in Syria, Islamic State (IS, also known as ISIS/ISIL) among them.

"They give support to terrorist groups including Daesh (Arabic for IS)," Erdogan said.

Saying that the US have accused Turkey of supporting IS, speaking at a press conference on Tuesday the Turkish leader blamed the US-led coalition for assisting terrorists themselves.

Apart from IS, he also mentioned Kurdish People's Protection Units in northern Syria (YPG) and Democratic Union Party (PYD) as groups supported by the coalition.

"We have confirmed evidence, with pictures, photos and videos," he added.

Erdogan has also called on Saudi Arabia and Qatar to join Russia, Turkey and Iran in peace talks on Syria. On Tuesday, the Turkish leader said officials of these Gulf states should be included in the talks of foreign ministers in Kazakhstan next month, as their countries had "shown goodwill and given support'' to Syria, AP reported.

However, the Turkish president stressed that Ankara itself would not take part should Syrian Kurdish groups - whom he called "terrorist organizations" - be invited to take part in the meeting.

Commenting on Ankara's accusations, US State Department spokesman Mark Toner said Erdogan's claims were "ludicrous."

Saying that there is "no basis for truth" in Erdogan's statement, Toner added that Washington is "100 percent behind the defeat and destruction of Daesh, even beyond Syria and Iraq."

The State Department also praised Ankara's efforts in northern Syria, saying that they have been "very efficient, very successful." The US is in "constant contact" with Turkey, Toner added.

"The evidence [mentioned by Erdogan] is quite ample, [the US] have been doing it for a number of years, including running secret CIA operations through Jordan, then through Turkey and into Syria," Michael Maloof, a security analyst and former Pentagon official, told RT.

He added that Erdogan's comments were "disingenuous," however, as "he continues to supply arms [into Syria] as well, with his ultimate aim [being] to go after the Kurds, and ISIS is secondary."

On Tuesday, Moscow also accused Washington of "sponsoring terrorism" in Syria. (FullText)

Wednesday, December 28, 2016

PR China: We will be on Mars by 2020


BEIJING - China is aiming to own the race for space in the next decade.

China's ambitious and fast-growing space program is targeting a landing on the dark side of the moon by 2018, and reaching Mars before the end of the decade.

The country's space agency held a press conference on Tuesday to mark the release of a policy paper, and outlined the government's ambitious goals for exploring deep space.

Wu Yanhua, deputy chief of the National Space Administration, said Beijing aims to launch its first Mars probe around 2020 to carry out orbiting and roving exploration, followed by a second mission that would include collection of surface samples from the red planet.

She said other plans include sending probes to Jupiter and its moons.

"Our overall goal is that, by around 2030, China will be among the major space powers of the world," she said.

Tuesday, December 27, 2016

Cheetahs heading towards extinction as population crashes

(BBC) The sleek, speedy cheetah is rapidly heading towards extinction according to a new study into declining numbers.

The report estimates that there are just 7,100 of the world's fastest mammals now left in the wild.

Cheetahs are in trouble because they range far beyond protected areas and are coming increasingly into conflict with humans.

The authors are calling for an urgent re-categorisation of the species from vulnerable to endangered.
Wiped out

According to the study, more than half the world's surviving cheetahs live in one population that ranges across six countries in southern Africa.

Cheetahs in Asia have been essentially wiped out. A group estimated to number fewer than 50 individuals clings on in Iran.

Because the cheetah is one of the widest-ranging carnivores, it roams across lands far outside protected areas. Some 77% of their habitat falls outside these parks and reserves.

As a result, the animal struggles because these lands are increasingly being developed by farmers and the cheetah's prey is declining because of bushmeat hunting.

In Zimbabwe, the cheetah population has fallen from around 1,200 to just 170 animals in 16 years, with the main cause being major changes in land tenure.

Researchers involved with the study say that the threats facing the fabled predator have gone unnoticed for far too long.

"Given the secretive nature of this elusive cat, it has been difficult to gather hard information on the species, leading to its plight being overlooked," said Dr Sarah Durant, from the Zoological Society of London, UK, and the report's lead author.

"Our findings show that the large space requirements for the cheetah, coupled with the complex range of threats faced by the species in the wild, mean that it is likely to be much more vulnerable to extinction than was previously thought."

Another of the big concerns about cheetahs has been the illegal trafficking of cubs, fuelled by demand from the Gulf states, as reported by the BBC earlier this year.

The young cats can fetch up to $10,000 on the black market. According to the Cheetah Conservation Fund, some 1,200 cheetah cubs are known to have been trafficked out of Africa over the past 10 years but around 85% of them died during the journey.

At the recent CITES conference in South Africa, governments agreed to put new measures in place to tackle this issue, clamping down on the use of social media to advertise cheetahs for sale.

However if the species is to survive long term then urgent efforts must be made to tackle the wider question of protected areas and ranges.

The new study argues for a "paradigm shift in conservation", moving away from the idea of just declaring an area to be protected and towards incorporating "incentive-based approaches". This, in essence, means paying local communities to protect a species that many see as a dangerous predator.

"The take-away from this pinnacle study is that securing protected areas alone is not enough," said Dr Kim Young-Overton from Panthera, another author on the report.

"We must think bigger, conserving across the mosaic of protected and unprotected landscapes that these far-reaching cats inhabit, if we are to avert the otherwise certain loss of the cheetah forever."

To fully recognise the scale of the threat that the cheetah now faces, the report is calling on the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) to change the categorisation of the fastest animal on its Red List from vulnerable to endangered.

This would help focus international conservation support on a species that the authors fear is heading for extinction at an increasing pace.

The report has been published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (Source)

Monday, December 26, 2016

Obama's exit interview: I could've won again


(CNN) Arguing that Americans still subscribe to his vision of progressive change, President Barack Obama asserted in an interview recently he could have succeeded in this year's election if he was eligible to run.

"I am confident in this vision because I'm confident that if I had run again and articulated it, I think I could've mobilized a majority of the American people to rally behind it," Obama told his former senior adviser David Axelrod in an interview for the "The Axe Files" podcast, produced by the University of Chicago Institute of Politics and CNN.

"I know that in conversations that I've had with people around the country, even some people who disagreed with me, they would say the vision, the direction that you point towards is the right one," Obama said in the interview, which aired Monday.

"In the wake of the election and Trump winning, a lot of people have suggested that somehow, it really was a fantasy," Obama said of the hope-and-change vision he heralded in 2008. "What I would argue is, is that the culture actually did shift, that the majority does buy into the notion of a one America that is tolerant and diverse and open and full of energy and dynamism."

Neither Donald Trump nor Hillary Clinton won a majority of the vote in the 2016 contest. Clinton beat Trump in the popular vote by almost 2.9 million ballots, though Trump won more electoral votes and thus the presidency.

In the 50-minute session, Obama repeated his suggestion Democrats had ignored entire segments of the voting population, leading to Donald Trump's win. He implied that Hillary Clinton's campaign hadn't made a vocal enough argument directed toward Americans who haven't felt the benefits of the economic recovery.

"If you think you're winning, then you have a tendency, just like in sports, maybe to play it safer," he said, adding later he believed Clinton "performed wonderfully under really tough circumstances" and was mistreated by the media.

The podcast interview was Obama's latest post-election analysis, which has focused on Democrats' failure to convince non-urban voters and a media preoccupied with negative stories about Clinton. Obama said his party this year hadn't made an emotional connection to voters in hard-hit communities, relying instead on policy points he said didn't make enough of an impact. ContinueReading

Sunday, December 25, 2016

Belize Navidad!

From miles away, no matter how far we are, the warmth of Christmas will bring us closer together. May you have a wonderful holiday!



Saturday, December 24, 2016

Christmas Survey 2016


In honour of the Christmas holiday, I thought I would do something different and do a fun survey relating to Christmas. There are 24 questions so let's get started..

How soon do you start Christmas shopping? - 2 weeks before Xmas.
Favorite Christmas movie?
- Home Alone

Do you celebrate Christmas? - Sure. I observe Christmas.

What do you want for Christmas 2016? - Nintendo 3DS and a new car.,

What's the best gift you've ever received? - A Microsoft Zune.

Have you ever left Santa cookies?
- Yes, long ago.
Have you ever had a white Christmas? - Yes, but nothing like an epic snowstorm though.

What part of Christmas do you look most forward to? - The time I have to relax and do nothing.

What's the worst gift you've ever received? - Some board game kit can't remember what kind.
Do you put up a Christmas tree? - Not really.

Do you put Christmas lights outside your home?
- I try to decorate as much as I can. Nothing too extravagant.

Where do you celebrate Christmas? Depends. Usually at my parents if I can or at home.

Do you go shopping on Black Friday? - Nope. Never will.

What is your favourite Xmas food? - I like potatos with gravy, Turkey (bird) & pie.

What is your favourite Christmas song? - 12 Day's of Xmas. 

Do you drive around and look at the Christmas light displays?
Yes.

When do you open your gifts? - Usually on Christmas Eve.

Eggnog or Hot chocolate? - Hot Chocolate.

Do you prefer giving or receiving gifts? - Receiving gifts. 

Christmas card or letter? - I prefer Christmas cards. 

What is your favourite Christmas memory? - When I got to visit my dad's side of the family in another state. That was fun.

What would be an appropriate gag gift for most of your friends? - Foreign candy or Xmas themed jewellery. 

Do you secret Santa or some type of gift exchange? - Not really. I did a white elephant gift exchange one time and it was awful, never again..

What is your one wish for this Christmas holiday season? - Warmer weather ; )

Hope you all have a safe & blessed Christmas!

Friday, December 23, 2016

Cars in France are now tootling along the world’s first solar panel road

- Take a drive through northern France from this week and you may find yourself tootling along what’s said to be the world’s first solar panel road.

Opened in the Normandy village of Tourouvre-au-Perche on Thursday (Dec22), the 1-kilometer (0.62 mile) stretch of road is covered with 30,000 square feet of solar panels hooked up to power local street lights.

The electricity-generating road, called Wattway, wasn’t cheap to construct, however, costing the state a whopping €5 million (about US$5.2m).

The unique stretch of road was built by French civil engineering firm Colas, which, according to the Guardian, is currently working on around 100 similar projects in a number of countries around the world.

Wattway is part of a broader five-year plan announced by the French government at the start of 2016 to pave 1,000 kilometers (621 miles) of roads with photovoltaic panels. Ségolène Royal, France’s minister of ecology and energy, said that if its entire network of solar roads proves successful, it’ll generate enough power to provide up to five million people with electricity.

But whether the project will ultimately triumph is the big question. Critics point to the huge costs of installing such technology, though that may reduce over time. Also, with the panels laying flat on the road, they’re not as effective as those found on houses or in vast solar farms, which are angled for maximum efficiency.

The road’s durability will also come under scrutiny, with all kinds of vehicles and all kinds of weather testing it to the limit, though Colas says the panels have been strengthened with silicon-based resin to ensure their longevity.

A similar feature opened in the Netherlands in 2014, though that one was designed for cyclists instead of cars. After a year of use, the 70-meter bike path was deemed a success, achieving its goal of generating enough electricity to keep three homes powered. Designed by consortium SolaRoad in partnership with the Netherlands Organization for Applied Scientific Research, the path did, however, experience some problems, with harsh weather causing the top part of some of the panels to break off. Engineers have since sorted out the issue.

Still, the overriding challenge appears to be cost, and until a way can be found to significantly reduce the price of the technology, the appearance of miles and miles of solar panel roads may still be a ways off. (SourceText)

Thursday, December 22, 2016

After the Berlin attack: Tangle of bureaucracy, not failure of government


- The laundry list of bureaucratic blunders is growing in the wake of the Berlin truck attack. The founder of a far-right movement seems to have had inside information. Highly embarrassing, says criminologist Rafael Behr.

Wednesday, December 21, 2016

Does a Doctor's Gender Affect Your Chance of Survival?

(nytimes.com) - \CHICAGO — What if your doctor's gender could influence your chance of surviving a visit to the hospital?

A big study of older patients hospitalized for common illnesses raises that provocative possibility — and also lots of questions. Patients who got most of their care from women doctors were more likely to leave the hospital alive than those treated by men.

The differences were small — about 11 percent of patients treated mostly by women died within 30 days of entering the hospital, versus 11.5 percent of those treated by men. But the all-male research team estimated that there would be about 32,000 fewer deaths each year in the U.S. if male physicians performed at the same level as their female peers.

The study didn't probe why there might be these differences in survival. And Dr. Ashish Jha, the lead author, said the study doesn't mean patients should avoid him and all other male physicians.

But he said male doctors could take a cue from women doctors' tendencies that might contribute to better care. According to other research, women doctors are more likely than men to follow treatment guidelines, provide preventive care more often and communicate more with patients.

Jha said that it was important to better understand the reasons behind the differences, and to share that information with all physicians to improve care.

Jha, an internist and Harvard Medical School professor, said he has not spoken to his own patients about the study — yet.

"As a male physician, I have a stake in this," Jha said.

The study was published Monday in JAMA Internal Medicine.

Tuesday, December 20, 2016

US: 6 retailers to end insane on-call shift schedules


latimes - Six retailers have agreed to stop using on-call shift scheduling following an inquiry by a coalition of nine attorneys general, including California’s.

New York Atty. Gen. Eric Schneiderman says an estimated 50,000 workers nationwide will benefit from the agreement.

On-call shift scheduling requires employees to call work before a scheduled shift to find out if they have to work that day.

“On-call shifts are not a business necessity and should be a thing of the past,” Schneiderman said in a statement. “People should not have to keep the day open, arrange for child care and give up other opportunities without being compensated for their time.”

The six companies are Aeropostale Inc., Carter’s Inc., David’s Tea, Walt Disney Co., Pacific Sunwear of California Inc. and Zumiez Inc.

Four of the firms — Carter’s, Disney, David’s Tea and Zumiez — said they also would give employees their work schedule at least one week in advance.

The six companies are among 15 retailers who received a joint letter in April from the attorneys general.

The other nine companies — American Eagle, Payless, Coach, Forever 21, Vans, Justice Just for Girls, BCBG Max Azria, Tilly’s Inc. and Uniqlo — say they don’t use on-call scheduling or recently ended the practice.

In California, companies must compensate workers with up to four hours of wages if they are required to come in but are not given work, or if they are promised a long shift and then given only a fraction of it. (Source)

Monday, December 19, 2016

Australian woman finds deadly snake wrapped around her Christmas tree

- An Australian woman from Melbourne on Sunday (18 December) discovered a deadly tiger snake wrapped around her Christmas tree. The woman identified as Cheryl immediately called for professional snake catcher Barry Goldsmith to her home in Frankston, a suburb in Melbourne, ABC Australia reported. "The snake is among the most dangerous of Australia," Goldsmith said. The reptile reportedly entered through an open door before curling up among the decorations. "It's one of the more different ones, but we find them in all sorts of places. Tiger snakes are very good climbers," he added. According to reports, tiger snakes are highly poisonous and are very common in southern Australia in summer. (FullText)

Sunday, December 18, 2016

Deaths From Synthetic Opioids Up 72%, CDC Says


WASHINGTON (CNN) - Death rates from synthetic opioids, including fentanyl, increased 72.2% from 2014 to 2015, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Friday. The new report confirms the dramatic increase in opioid overdoses that first responders have been seeing as they respond to overdose calls.

Fentanyl is 50 times more powerful than heroin and made headlines as the drug that killed pop star Prince in April. The elephant tranquilizer carfentanil, a form of fentanyl and 10,000 times stronger than morphine, has also been claiming lives in a number of cities, as reported by local officials.

The new report says the latest available data found that 33,091 people died from opioid overdoses in 2015. That number combines prescription and illegal forms of the painkiller that can also send users into a state of euphoria. They account for 63% of the 52,000 deaths from any type of drug overdose in 2015, up from 2014, when 61% of fatal overdoses were due to opioids.

No one is immune to the crisis. The increasing death rates were seen in men and women of all ethnicities and across all age groups, starting at age 15.

Geography is not protective, either. When looking at overdose fatalities from 2010 to 2015, increases were found in 30 states and Washington DC.

During the same period, the number of heroin deaths increased by 20.6%, the report found. Eleven states reported increases in heroin deaths, with South Carolina, North Carolina and Tennessee seeing the greatest increases.

Synthetic opioid deaths increased in 16 states. New York was hit hardest, with a 135.7% increase from 2014 to 2015. Nearby Connecticut saw a 125.9% increase, and Illinois had a 120% increase in deaths from synthetic opioids.

Deaths from so-called natural opioids, which include the prescription medications morphine and codeine, and semi-synthetic opioids, which include the prescription drugs oxycodone and hydrocodone, decreased 2.6% from 2014 to 2015. However, they are still responsible for more than 12,700 deaths.

Fatalities from methadone, used to treat heroine addiction, dropped by 9.1%.

The new statistics are based on national records for causes of death.

"Today's report shows significant increases across states in death rates from heroin and synthetic opioid deaths, coupled with continuing high numbers of fatal overdoses related to natural/semi-synthetic opioid deaths," the CDC said in a statement. The further illustrates "the continued problem with misuse of prescription opioids and the substantial impact of illicit opioids on this epidemic". The CDC also reiterated the need for law enforcement and health officials to work together to control the epidemic.

Saturday, December 17, 2016

Philippines' Duterte to U.S. over aid: 'Bye-bye America'

(usatoday) - President Rodrigo Duterte threatened Saturday to terminate a pact that allows U.S. troops to visit the Philippines, saying "bye-bye America" as he reacted with rage to what he thought was a U.S. decision to scrap a major aid package over human rights concerns.

A U.S. government aid agency, the Millennium Challenge Corporation, said earlier in the week that its board deferred a vote on a renewal of the development assistance package for the Philippines "subject to a further review of concerns around rule of law and civil liberties."

The agency has clearly not voted to scrap or approve the aid package, but Duterte unleashed an expletives-laden tirade upon his arrival in his southern hometown of Davao after back-to-back visits to Cambodia and Singapore.

"I understand that we have been stricken out of the Millennium Challenge. Well, good, I welcome it," Duterte said with apparent sarcasm.

"We can survive without American money," he said.

"But you know, America, you might also be put to notice. Prepare to leave the Philippines, prepare for the eventual repeal or the abrogation of the Visiting Forces Agreement," he said, referring to a 1998 accord that governs American forces visiting the Philippines for joint combat exercises.

Speaking with reporters Friday, Duterte also told U.S. workers or troops to “start packing.”

"You know, tit for tat ... if you can do this, so (can) we. It ain't a one-way traffic," Duterte said, adding tauntingly, "Bye-bye America."

The U.S. Embassy in Manila did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The Philippines was a U.S. colony from 1898 until the 1940s. The island group hosted permanent U.S. military bases until the Philippine government ordered them removed 25 years ago.

As many as 600 U.S. troops are currently stationed in the Philippines, and at least two major training exercises involving American and other forces are held in the country each year.

Friday, December 16, 2016

Yemen edging nearer famine as war, 'shredded economy' take toll: U.N. official


(Reuters) - Yemen's humanitarian catastrophe is set to worsen as the war has ruined the economy and is stopping food supplies getting through, driving the country to the brink of famine, the top U.N. aid official in the country told Reuters.

"Throughout the whole of this country kids are dying," said Jamie McGoldrick. U.N. Humanitarian Coordinator in Yemen.

Nearly two years of war between a Saudi-led Arab coalition and the Iran-allied Houthi movement has left more than half of Yemen's 28 million people "food insecure", with 7 million of them enduring hunger, according to the United Nations.

In the latest setback, Yemen's biggest traders have stopped new wheat imports due to a crisis at the central bank, documents seen by Reuters show.

Already, eight out of 10 children are stunted by malnutrition and every 10 minutes a child dies due to preventable diseases, U.N. agency figures show. To scrape by, several families often rely on one salary-earner, and child marriage is increasing, with girls married off at the age of 15 on average, and often younger.

The U.N. estimates that 18.8 million people need some form of humanitarian aid but it struggles to deliver supplies, partly because of the war and partly due to a lack of funding. The disruption of wheat shipments will exacerbate the problem.

"We know that early next year we will face significant problems," said McGoldrick, who described the economy as "shredded".

Almost half of Yemen's 22 governorates are already officially rated as being in an emergency food situation, he said. That is four on a five-point scale, where five is famine.

"I know there are some worrying developments and the deterioration we’ve seen in the economy and the health services and the ability to supply food would only give us an estimate that things are going to get much worse," McGoldrick said.

The U.N. has been conducting a new food assessment in preparation for a new humanitarian appeal in 2017, when it will ask donors for life-saving help for 8 million people. But a famine may still not be officially declared.

Thursday, December 15, 2016

‘Brexit’ Talks Could Stretch 10 Years, British Official Warns

LONDON — Struck off the guest list for dinner at a European Union summit, Britain’s prime minister, Theresa May, faced a second embarrassment on Thursday, over warnings that trade talks on quitting the bloc could last a decade, and even then might fail.

Despite the June 23 referendum decision to leave the European Union, Britain remains a full member until the end of negotiations on British exit, known as Brexit, which Mrs. May aims to complete by the spring of 2019.

Britain’s ambiguous, and increasingly isolated, position was underscored by the format for the gathering in Brussels on Thursday in which the other 27 leaders were to debate their own strategy for Brexit over dinner — and without Mrs. May.

The awkwardness Mrs. May faced when she was politely asked to leave the room was compounded by a leaked warning from her own top aide in Brussels, highlighting the mind-numbing complexity of undoing four decades of European integration.

According to the BBC, the advice, given to ministers in October by Ivan Rogers, Britain’s ambassador to the European Union, suggested that completing talks on a new trade relationship with the bloc could take 10 years — and even then might not survive a process of ratification by each of the 27 other nations.

Mrs. May’s office did not deny the substance of the report, but said that the ambassador was reflecting the views of other member countries, not his own assessment of the situation.

Nevertheless, it presents a stark contrast to some British assertions that a new relationship could be struck within the two-year timetable envisaged under the formal process for withdrawal, which Mrs. May intends to begin by the end of March. Even this timetable may be optimistic, because Michel Barnier, one of the European Union’s lead negotiators, has said that in reality, a deal would have to be done within 18 months to allow time for ratification.

In the meantime, Britons remain fiercely divided over Brexit, with supporters encouraged by the fact that the economy has so far not suffered the dire fate predicted by some ahead of the referendum. Their opponents say the negative effects will become visible next year, after being delayed by the post-referendum stimulus injected into the economy by the Bank of England and a competitive edge gained by the depreciation of the pound sterling.

While some of those who favor Brexit fret that they could be cheated of their referendum victory, many businesses worry about the apparent lack of a coherent government strategy, almost six months after the referendum.

Their big fear is that two years of negotiation will fail to yield a trade deal, leading to a “cliff edge” plan in which import and export tariffs are applied with little time to prepare. Continue reading main story

Wednesday, December 14, 2016

Drinking, drug use largely down among U.S. teens in 2016


LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The use of alcohol, marijuana, prescription medications and illicit substances declined among U.S. teens again in 2016, continuing a long-term trend, according to a study released on Tuesday by the National Institutes of Health.

But the research found that high school seniors were still using cannabis at nearly the same levels as in 2015, with 22.5 percent saying that had smoked or ingested the drug at least once within the past month and 6 percent reporting daily use.

"Clearly our public health prevention efforts, as well as policy changes to reduce availability, are working to reduce teen drug use, especially among eighth graders," Dr. Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, said in a statement accompanying the study results.

"However, when 6 percent of high school seniors are using marijuana daily, and new synthetics are continually flooding the illegal marketplace, we cannot be complacent," Volkow said.

The annual survey, part of a series called Monitoring the Future which has tracked drug, alcohol and tobacco use among teens since 1975, also found that during 2016 there was a higher use of pot among 12th graders in states with medical marijuana laws.

According to the study, marijuana and e-cigarettes are more popular among teens than regular tobacco, with a large drop in the use of tobacco cigarettes among 8th, 10th and 12th graders.

In 2016, 1.8 percent of high school seniors smoked half a pack or more of tobacco cigarettes per day, compared with 10.7 percent in 1991.

The use of alcohol has seen similar declines, according to the research, with 37.3 percent of 12th graders reporting this year that they had been drunk at least once, down from a peak of 53.2 percent in 2001.

The analysis found that the use of illicit drugs other than marijuana by teens was at its lowest levels since tracking began.

The study, which is sponsored by the National Institute on Drug Abuse and conducted by researchers at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, surveyed 45,473 students from 372 public and private schools. (Source)

Tuesday, December 13, 2016

NASA researcher says Earth is long overdue for ‘extinction-level’ cosmic event

nydailynews.com) - A senior scientist affiliated with NASA says it's only a matter of time before an asteroid or comet will bring large-scale devastation to Earth — and humans aren't prepared.

Dr. Joseph Nuth of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center presented his research during the American Geophysical Union's 49th annual meeting, held this week in San Francisco.

"The biggest problem, basically, is there's not a hell of a lot we can do about it at the moment," Nuth said, according to the Guardian.

Nuth believes that Earth is overdue for an "extinction-level" cosmic event.

During his presentation, Nuth cited a "close encounter" with a comet in 1996, and again in 2014, when a wayward comet traveled within "cosmic spitting distance of Mars."

The 2014 comet was discovered 22 months ahead of its arrival, Nuth said.

"If you look at the schedule for high-reliability spacecraft and launching them, it takes five years to launch a spacecraft. We had 22 months of total warning," he said, according to the Guardian.

Nuth wants NASA to build an interceptor rocket — a way to ensure that an asteroid or comet doesn't crash into Earth.

Though comets or asteroids large enough to cause to more than a mark in the Earth's atmosphere are typically rare, NASA estimates that 90% or more of near-Earth objects are larger than a kilometer — the right size to cause calamity on the planet.

Officials with NASA and the Federal Emergency Management Agency in October performed a simulation of what might happen if a large asteroid were to hit Los Angeles.

The simulation, which included a 330-foot asteroid, featured an explosion that could level cities and result in mass casualties.

"It's not a matter of if, but when, we will deal with such a situation," said Thomas Zurbuchen, the Associate Administrator of NASA's Science Mission Directorate, in a post-simulation statement. (Source)

Monday, December 12, 2016

11 women, one pregnant, caught with 1.6 lb of cocaine concealed in the vagina


(FoxNews) - Eleven women from Colombia, one of them pregnant, were detained at Barajas airport in Madrid, each with 1.6 pounds of cocaine concealed in the vagina, police said.


The arrests took place two weeks ago, on Nov. 27, but Spanish police made it public on Monday.

The women, aged between 22 and 47, had arrived in Madrid on a flight from Medellín, Colombia, and carried the drug in a cylindrical container inserted in their body.

One of the women disclosed she was pregnant and was rushed to a nearby hospital, where the drug was removed safely.

Confidencial Colombia reported that five of the women were arrested at first, and a few hours later the other six. They all carried the drug in a similar fashion.

The story is reminiscent of the 2004 hit movie “Maria Full of Grace,” whose lead character – also pregnant- agrees to fly to the U.S. with 62 pellets of cocaine in her stomach. (FullText)

Sunday, December 11, 2016

Venezuela seizes Christmas toys to distribute to the poor

(BBC) Venezuelan authorities have arrested two toy company executives and seized almost four million toys, which they say they will distribute to the poor.

Officials accused the company of hoarding toys and hiking prices in the run-up to Christmas.

Last week, the government issued an order to retailers to reduce prices on a range of goods by 30%.

Business owners say the order is a populist political move, and pushing them towards bankruptcy.

Venezuela's consumer protection agency, Sundde, said toy distributor Kreisel had stockpiled the goods and was reselling them at a margin of up to 50,000%.

"Our children are sacred, we will not let you rob them of Christmas," it said in a tweet, along with photos and video of thousands of boxes of toys. FullText




Saturday, December 10, 2016

FBI and CIA give differing accounts to lawmakers on Russia's motives in 2016 hacks

Washingtonpost.com - In a secure getting room under the Capitol last week lawmakers held in their hands a classified letter written by colleagues in the Senate summing up a secret new CIA assessment of Russia's role in the 2016 US presidental election.

Sitting before the House Intelligence Committee was a senior FBI counterintelligence official. The question the Republicans and Democrats in attendance wanted answered that Russia "quite" clearly intended to help Republican Donald Trump defeat Hillary Clinton and clinch the White House. FullText

Friday, December 9, 2016

South Korean President Park Stripped of Her Powers After Impeachment Vote


SEOUL — South Korea's parliament voted overwhelmingly to impeach President Park Geun-hye on Friday (Dec 9) after a huge political scandal involving a childhood friend and confidant left her isolated and loathed.

Park was officially stripped of her powers just after 7 p.m. local time (5 a.m. ET), and Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-ahn took over as acting president.

"I stand here with grave and sad heart and feel deeply responsible for what's happening now and I am very sorry," said Hwang said. "We cannot allow any gap in the governance and I am going to do my very best to restore stability."

For more than a month, hundreds of thousands of South Koreans have spilled onto the streets each Saturday to protest Park's relationship with Choi Soon-sil who is accused of massive influence peddling.

Prosecutors say the 64-year-old colluded in Choi's criminal activities to manipulate government affairs and extort businesses. Choi is the daughter of late cult leader Choi Tae-min, who himself befriended Park as a young woman after saying her assassinated mother had appeared in his dreams.

The allegations have plunged the world's 11th biggest economy into an unprecedented crisis and exposed a series of bizarre revelations — including the mass government purchase of erectile dysfunction medication, Viagra.

Friday's vote count was 234 for the motion and 56 against with nine abstained or nullified. Park officially remains president while the country's Constitutional Court deliberates the decision, which could take up to 180 days.

President Park responded Friday's developments during a nationally televised cabinet meeting, saying she was sorry for having "caused so much chaos at the national level due to my lack of virtue and my mistakes."

"I honestly accept the voices of the parliament and the people very gravely and sincerely hope that the current chaos will be resolved," she said. "I will be calmly responding to the impeachment course."

Park, who has immunity from prosecution in the case as long as she remains in office, has denied wrongdoing but acknowledged carelessness in her ties with her friend, who has already been indicted.

Nam Jung-su, a spokesman for the Emergency People's Alliance to Oust Park Geun-hye, which was organizing the weekly protests of millions that have shaken the country, called for Park to step down immediately.

Thursday, December 8, 2016

U.S. Jobless Claims Decline Signals Still Healthy Labor Market

WASHINGTON—The number of Americans applying for first-time unemployment benefits fell last week, a sign the labor market remains in expansion mode.

Initial jobless claims, a proxy for layoffs across the U.S., fell by 10,000 to a seasonally adjusted 258,000 in the week ended Dec. 3, the Labor Department said Thursday.

Economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal had expected 255,000 new claims last week. Claims for the week ended Nov. 26 were unrevised at 268,000

Data on unemployment applications can be volatile from week to week, especially in the holiday period between Thanksgiving and mid-January. On an unadjusted basis, claims typically peak for the year in January, a time when seasonal employees are dismissed and year-end layoffs are completed.

Seasonally adjusted claims had climbed by 35,000 over the prior two weeks before the latest decline. The more-stable four-week moving average edged up last week by 1,000 to 252,500. The average figure remains near a four-decade low.

Initial claims have held below 300,000 for 92 consecutive weeks, the longest such streak since 1970—when the U.S. population and workforce were far smaller than they are today.

The U.S. labor market is broadly healthy. The unemployment rate fell to 4.6% in November, the lowest since August 2007. That figure reflected some people finding jobs, while even more dropped out of the workforce. Nonfarm employers added 178,000 jobs last month, essentially matching monthly job growth recorded so far this year.

The Labor Department said no special factors affected the latest claims data.

Thursday’s report also showed continuing unemployment claims, drawn by workers for longer than a week, fell by 79,000 to 2,005,000 in the week ended Nov. 26. Data on continuing claims are released with a one-week lag. (Source)

Wednesday, December 7, 2016

Designer Tom Ford on why all men should be penetrated once: ‘I think it would help them understand women’


*the following contains graphic sexual content; discretion is advised.

nydailynews.com - Tom Ford has offered a unique way for men to better comprehend women.

The designer and filmmaker told GQ he believed all men should be sexually penetrated at least once in their lifetime back in 2004 — and more than 10 years later, he stands by those comments even though he claims to have been drunk when he first made them.

“I think it would help them understand women,” he told GQ this week. “It’s such a vulnerable position to be in, and it’s such a passive position to be in. And there’s such an invasion, in a way, that even if it’s consensual, it’s just very personal.

The “Nocturnal Animals” director said there’s more than just a physical connection, making it a challenge to explain to those who have never experienced it.

“I think there’s a psyche that happens because of it that makes you understand and appreciate what women go through their whole life, because it’s not just sexual, it’s a complete setup of the way the world works, that one sex has the ability to literally — and is expected to and is wanted to — but also there’s an invasion,” he said. “And I think that that’s something most men do not understand at all.”

During the original interview, Ford, in addition to being under the influence, also propositioned the heterosexual male writer.

“I was just trying to take the piss out of him,” he explained, adding he “read the article through his fingers when it came out, the whole time wondering, ‘Oh God, what was I thinking?’”

Ford, who is now sober, has been married to his husband Richard Buckley for two years. They’ve been together for about 30 years and share a 4-year-old son together named Jack. (Source)

Tuesday, December 6, 2016

Cancer Prevention: Can Eating A Handful Of Nuts A Day Reduce Risks Of Disease?

ibtimes.com - Whether it be almonds, pecans or pistachios, nuts are much more than just a tasty treat – they have a ton of health benefits too.

A study released in BMC Medicine journal Monday found that nuts reduced the risk of a variety of diseases from heart disease, diabetes and even cancer. The study, conducted by an international team of researchers, reviewed 29 former studies about the health benefits of nuts and found that nuts had a diverse range of positive impacts on the human body.

The study analyzed data on more than 800,000 people and found that those who had at least a handful or 20 grams of any type of nuts were 30 percent less likely to develop heart disease while a handful of nuts reduced the chances of developing cancer in subjects by 15 percent. As for diabetes, a disease which affects more than 29.1 million people in the U.S., according to the American Diabetes Association, risks were cut by nearly 40 percent just from snacking on a few nuts a day. The study also found that consumption of nuts lowered the risks of premature death by 22 percent,

Imperial College London professor Dagfinn Aune, who co-authored the study, said in a statement that all types of tree nuts including peanuts, which are actually legumes, are high in nutrients like fiber, magnesium and polyunsaturated fats that are beneficial for preventing cardiovascular disease and reducing cholesterol levels.

“Some nuts, particularly walnuts and pecan nuts, are also high in antioxidants, which can fight oxidative stress and possibly reduce cancer risk,” he said. “Even though nuts are quite high in fat, they are also high in fiber and protein, and there is some evidence that suggests nuts might actually reduce your risk of obesity over time.”

Along with reducing the risks of disease, nuts are also a great source of energy due to all their rich proteins, vitamins, minerals and healthy fats that combat feelings of fatigue. (Source)

Monday, December 5, 2016

Japanese prime minister plans landmark visit to Pearl Harbor


- Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will visit Pearl Harbor with President Obama later this month, becoming the first Japanese leader to travel to the site of the attack on Hawaii 75 years ago that thrust the United States into World War II.

The joint visit comes after Obama went to Hiroshima with Abe in May, becoming the first sitting American president to visit the site where the United States dropped one of two atomic bombs in 1945 to force Japan’s surrender.

Abe said Monday that he will visit Hawaii on Dec. 26 and 27 to “pay tribute” to military personnel from both sides of the Pacific who died during the war.

“This visit is to comfort the souls of the victims. We’d like to send messages about the importance of reconciliation” between the two countries, Abe told reporters in Tokyo.

The 75th anniversary of the attack falls Wednesday.

The White House welcomed Abe’s decision, confirming that Obama would accompany Abe to the USS Arizona Memorial at Pearl Harbor to honor those killed.

“The two leaders’ visit will showcase the power of reconciliation that has turned former adversaries into the closest of allies, united by common interests and shared values,” Josh Earnest, the White House press secretary, said in a statement.

“The meeting will be an opportunity for the two leaders to review our joint efforts over the past four years to strengthen the U.S.-Japan alliance, including our close cooperation on a number of security, economic, and global challenges,” he said. (FullText)

Sunday, December 4, 2016

Venezuela confirms bigger bills amid world's highest inflation

Reuters - Venezuela will introduce six new notes and three new coins starting in mid-December to help alleviate practical problems in doing business with the world's most inflationary currency, according to the central bank.

Currently, the OPEC nation's largest note is worth just 2 U.S. cents on the black market, meaning cash transactions are extremely cumbersome.

The bolivar currency has suffered its most dramatic monthly fall in history, down 60 percent since early November against the dollar on the black market, as the country struggles with a major economic crisis that is leaving millions hungry and the medical sector in crisis.

The largest new bill, according to a central bank communique, will be worth 20,000 bolivars, just under $5 on the streets. It will be accompanied by notes of 10,000, 5,000, 2,000, 1,000 and 500 bolivars and three coins of smaller value.

"(This) will make the payments system more efficient, facilitate commercial transactions and minimize the costs of production, replacement and transfer ... which will translate into benefits for banking, trade and the general population," the central bank said.

Paying a restaurant or supermarket bill without a debit or credit card can often require a backpack full of cash. However, even getting cash at ATMs in recent months has proven difficult.

On Friday, the country's point-of-sale machines suffered chronic malfunctions. Unable to process transactions, businesses asked customers to use cash, transfers or pay later.

President Nicolas Maduro blamed the problems on a cyber attack, but he did not provide any evidence. He attributes the country's economic crisis to an "economic war" led by the opposition with a helping hand from Washington.

Strict currency controls introduced in 2003, which pegged the bolivar to the dollar, coupled with heavy reliance on oil are seen as the root of the crisis by most economists.

Venezuela's central bank has failed to publish any inflation data for 2016. The International Monetary Fund estimates that price rises next year will surpass 2,000 percent.

The money supply, the sum of cash and checking deposits as well as savings and other "near money" deposits, was up a staggering 12 percent in the two weeks to Nov. 25 and the curve is literally exponential since Maduro's predecessor Hugo Chavez came to power in 1999.

Saturday, December 3, 2016

Tornado Outbreaks On The Rise: Is Climate Change Cause For Blame?


- Frequent tornadoes and thunderstorms that kill people and destroy property have become a matter of grave concern. In the United States alone, the insured losses caused by severe thunderstorms have been put at $8.5 billion from the period between January to June 2016.

A new study has tried a linkage between climate change and the increasing incidents of tornadoes. Calling for a deeper study on some meteorological factors, the paper zeroes in on vertical wind shear as an important variable in triggering mega storms.

Led by Michael Tippett, associate professor of applied physics at Columbia Engineering, the study published in Science scans significant tornadoes and outbreaks lasting for many days. It notes that major tornado incidents had been going up substantially since 1954 though a definite reason could not be given for that.

In the paper, researchers have analyzed the trends in the tornado outbreaks and found extreme outbreaks are increasing at the fastest rate.

"This study raises new questions about what climate change will do to severe thunderstorms and what is responsible for recent trends," says Tippett, who is also associated with the Data Science Institute and the Columbia Initiative on Extreme Weather and Climate.

Offering new insight into the trends in environmental conditions that encourage thunderstorms and tornadoes, the study looks at the convective available potential energy, or CAPE, and storm relative helicity, a measure of vertical wind shear.

With greenhouse gases trapping more energy and heat in the atmosphere air will start holding more water and that opens the scope for extreme storms.

One crucial ingredient in forming violent storms is vertical wind shear, which lifts intensity in sync with altitude. Unlike CAPE, shear does not change much with global warming. (FullText)

Friday, December 2, 2016

US: Republicans Finding Repealing Obamacare Complicated

Yahoonews- Now that Republicans control both houses of Congress and the presidency, their threat to repeal the Affordable Care Act no longer is a pipe dream, but the trick now is to transition to a new system that doesn’t rip coverage away from the 20 million Americans who have signed up in recent years.

President Barack Obama’s signature legislative achievement was signed into law March 23, 2010, but didn’t come into full force until last year. Republicans hate the mandate that requires all adults to obtain coverage or face fines, they hate that the federal government has become the primary regulator of healthcare, and they hate that the law specifies what insurance companies need to cover.

Republicans said Wednesday they intend to repeal the ACA by early next year but possibly delay the effective date three years to figure out with what they want to replace it. Part of the balancing act will entail convincing insurers not to bail on the healthcare marketplaces.

“I think once it’s repealed, you will have hopefully fewer people playing politics and [instead] coming together to try to find the best policy,” House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., told Politico, adding once there’s “a date certain that something’s going away … you know you have to have something done.”

House Republicans have voted 60 times to repeal the ACA since it was enacted. During the campaign, President-elect Donald Trump repeatedly said the law would be repealed and replaced with something “much better.”

After the election, however, Trump said some elements of the ACA should be preserved, like the guarantees of coverage for people with pre-existing conditions and allowing children to stay on their parents’ plans until they reach 26 years of age.

Further complicating the Republicans’ path forward is a study released by Kaiser Family Foundation that indicates only about a quarter of Americans want the law repealed entirely.

“The flaws in Obamacare are obvious to me. The solutions are much harder,” Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., told Politico.

Health Secretary-designate Rep. Tom Price, R-Ga., is a longtime critic of the ACA — and a doctor. Among the changes he has proposed, the Fiscal Times reported, are eliminating the state-run marketplaces, individual mandates and federal tax credits for low-income participants. Instead, he would like to see tax credits pegged to a person’s age, ranging from $1,200 to $3,000 to partially cover premiums and out-of-pocket costs.

For a pre-existing condition or chronic illness to be covered, consumers would have to prove they had continuous coverage for the preceding 18 months to prevent people from obtaining coverage only after they become ill.

Senate Health Education, Labor and Pension Committee Chairman Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., said he’d like to have a replacement plan in hand before the ACA is repealed, an approach favored by Price.

But House Speaker Paul Ryan said Wednesday he’s in favor of taking care of repealing the law immediately.

One approach under consideration is to take the law on in pieces rather than by passing one massive bill, an approach that likely would drag out the process and possibly produce a backlash from voters who want to see action after six years of bluster.

Ryan has offered a proposal he says would give patients and doctors more control and foster competition among insurers.

Like the ACA it would set up state insurance exchanges and protect those with pre-existing conditions. It also would auto-enroll people at points of service and give states the power to form multistate high-risk pools.

The proposal would provide tax credits for obtaining coverage and improve Health Savings Accounts by allowing premiums to be paid from them and increasing the amount of before-tax money that can be contributed to them.

The plan also calls for improvements to Medicaid and privatizing Medicare.

Thursday, December 1, 2016

Hallucinogenic drugs could soon work like a 'surgical intervention' for mental illness


businessinsider.com- Dinah Bazer was diagnosed with ovarian cancer in the spring of 2010.

The Brooklyn resident, an ice skating teacher and former bank IT programmer in her 60s, was devastated. Luckily, doctors were able to successfully treat her disease with chemotherapy, but the dread of a reoccurrence just wouldn't go away. It was like waiting for the other shoe to drop.

"I was totally consumed with fear and anxiety," she said on a recent call with a group of reporters.

So in 2011, Bazer enrolled in a trial at New York University, where researchers were looking to test a substance that they hoped would have a seemingly "mystical" ability to lift depression and anxiety connected to fear about life's end.

The drug they were testing wasn't one dreamed up in a lab. It's the essential component of psychoactive magic mushrooms, psilocybin.

In a living-room-like setting at the Bluestone Center at the NYU College of Dentistry, accompanied by trained therapists, Bazer took a pill. At first she couldn't know whether it was the drug or a placebo, but once the effects started to come on, it would be clear. Sure enough, within about 40 minutes, she started to "trip."

"I visualized my fear as physical mass in my body," a black concentration, she said. She became angry, volcanic.

She screamed. "Get the f--- out!"

And then this woman who said she had been an atheist her entire adult life — and still is — had a strange sensation.

"I was bathed in G-d's love, and that continued for hours," she said. "I really had no other way to describe this incredibly powerful experience."

The feeling faded, but so did her fear, depression, and anxiety. They have not returned.

Bazer was a participant in one of two controlled clinical trials of the effects of psilocybin on patients dealing with depression and distress related to facing the end of life. Aside from a few smaller pilot studies, these two trials — one by researchers from Johns Hopkins University and the other, which Bazer participated in, at NYU — were the first major ones of their kind. The results from both studies were published in the Journal of Psychopharmacology on December 1, along with 10 commentaries by prominent experts in the field of psychiatry.

The results from both trials were encouraging enough that the scientists involved hope they'll be able to get consent from the Food and Drug Administration to move forward to a large-scale Phase 3 study, the third and final set of human trials that is needed before the FDA considers approving a new drug.

"This is a potential pathway to clinical approval," said Roland Griffiths, a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at JHU School of Medicine, who led the JHU study and is one of the pioneers in the modern era of psychedelic research. "But that [approval] requires the next step of going to the FDA and getting permission to move forward."

The recent announcement that the FDA would allow trials using MDMA — the chemical name for the drug commonly known as Molly or Ecstasy — to treat post-traumatic stress disorder to move to Phase 3 gives him hope, too, especially since he says MDMA might have even more "baggage" than psilocybin when it comes to getting approval. (FullText)

Wednesday, November 30, 2016

US: F.D.A. Agrees to New Trials for Ecstasy as Relief for PTSD Patients

CHARLESTON, S.C. — After three tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, C. J. Hardin wound up hiding from the world in a backwoods cabin in North Carolina. Divorced, alcoholic and at times suicidal, he had tried almost all the accepted treatments for post-traumatic stress disorder: psychotherapy, group therapy and nearly a dozen different medications.

“Nothing worked for me, so I put aside the idea that I could get better,” said Mr. Hardin, 37. “I just pretty much became a hermit in my cabin and never went out.”

Then, in 2013, he joined a small drug trial testing whether PTSD could be treated with MDMA, the illegal party drug better known as Ecstasy.

“It changed my life,” he said in a recent interview in the bright, airy living room of the suburban ranch house here, where he now lives while going to college and working as an airplane mechanic. “It allowed me to see my trauma without fear or hesitation and finally process things and move forward.”

Based on promising results like Mr. Hardin’s, the Food and Drug Administration gave permission Tuesday for large-scale, Phase 3 clinical trials of the drug — a final step before the possible approval of Ecstasy as a prescription drug.

AdvertisementContinue reading the main story

If successful, the trials could turn an illicit street substance into a potent treatment for PTSD.

Through a spokeswoman, the F.D.A. declined to comment, citing regulations that prohibit disclosing information about drugs that are being developed.

“I’m cautious but hopeful,” said Dr. Charles R. Marmar, the head of psychiatry at New York University’s Langone School of Medicine, a leading PTSD researcher who was not involved in the study. “If they can keep getting good results, it will be of great use. PTSD can be very hard to treat. Our best therapies right now don’t help 30 to 40 percent of people. So we need more options.”

But he expressed concern about the potential for abuse. “It’s a feel-good drug, and we know people are prone to abuse it,” he said. “Prolonged use can lead to serious damage to the brain.”

The Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies, a small nonprofit created in 1985 to advocate the legal medical use of MDMA, LSD, marijuana and other banned drugs, sponsored six Phase 2 studies treating a total of 130 PTSD patients with the stimulant. It will also fund the Phase 3 research, which will include at least 230 patients. (FullText)

Tuesday, November 29, 2016

McDonald’s Expands Push to Swap Frozen Patties for Fresh Beef


bloomberg.com - McDonald’s Corp. is expanding a program that ditches frozen patties in favor of fresh beef, making another break with decades of fast-food practices in a bid to revitalize the chain.

Fresh beef is now being used in some sandwiches in more than 75 restaurants in the Tulsa, Oklahoma, area, McDonald’s said in a statement, extending trials that began in the Dallas-Fort Worth region, where the company is preparing fresh beef in 55 locations.

The push more than doubles the number of restaurants serving serving fresh meat, a sign the chain is stepping up competition with fast-casual eateries such as Smashburger and Shake Shack. In Tulsa, the change will apply to Quarter Pounders and Bacon Clubhouse burgers, according to the statement.

“These burgers are hotter and juicier than our previous quarter-pound patties,” said McDonald’s Chef Chad Schafer. They’re seasoned with a pinch of salt and pepper, he said.

McDonald’s has made other moves recently to improve its food, including switching to chicken raised without antibiotics important to human medicine. It is also using real butter, not margarine, in breakfast sandwiches, and removed high-fructose corn syrup from buns. Wendy’s Co. advertises that all of its beef is fresh and has never been frozen.

The fresh beef test is being conducted in just a tiny fraction of McDonald’s 14,000 U.S. locations. Changing the supply chain, as well as kitchen operations and equipment won’t be easy, or cheap, should the test go nationwide.

“If you bring in fresh beef, you’ve got to be careful on the storage and the kitchen equipment, so you can’t have cross contamination,” Chief Executive Officer Steve Easterbrook said at an investor conference earlier this year. “We’ve got to work out whether we have the chillers or refrigerators with the necessary capacity.”

That means it will take more time -- and money -- before fresh beef could
spread to the rest of the chain.

“There’s things like that we’re going to need to work through,” Easterbrook said. (FullText)

Monday, November 28, 2016

Skating rink’s fish floor causes backlash in Japan


Social Justice

TOKYO - An amusement park in western Japan sparked an uproar after it displayed about 5,000 dead fish in the ice at a skating rink, forcing the park to close the attraction.

Space World received a flood of criticism on social media after opening the rink on Nov. 12. It was closed Sunday.

About 25 different kinds of fish could be seen under the 820-foot-long ice circuit. The park in the city of Kitakyushu opened the “Ice Aquarium” as an “attraction never heard about.”

Japanese broadcaster NHK showed the fish frozen in ice on a blue floor, so it looked like they were swimming below the ice. Some formed a school to spell out “HELLO” or make an arrow-shaped sign in the ice.

The general manager of Space World, Toshimi Takeda, said many critical messages were posted on social media, some condemning the concept as abusing living things.

Takeda said that the fish in the ice had been intended “to give the feel of the ocean to the ice skating rink,” and that the amusement park is “extremely remorseful to have invoked such unpleasant feelings.”

Space World said the fish were purchased from a fish market, and were dead before the water was frozen. The operator plans to hold a memorial service for the fish once they’re taken out of the ice.

Sunday, November 27, 2016

US: Black Friday online sales to hit a record-breaking $3 billion, over $1 billion from mobile

techchrunch.com - Black Friday online shopping is continuing to grow, and this Friday was another record-breaking day. According to a new report out this evening from Adobe, which has been tracking e-commerce transactions throughout the sales holiday, Black Friday is on track to set a new record by surpassing the $3 billion mark for the first time. It’s also expected to become the first day in U.S. retail history to drive over a billion dollars from mobile sales.

With an estimated $3.05 billion expected by the day’s close, Black Friday 2016 is up 11.4 percent from the same day last year, says Adobe.

It was clear earlier in the day that mobile was having a significant impact on the record e-commerce sales seen on Thanksgiving Day and on Black Friday. Major retailers, like Amazon, Walmart, Target and eBay, noted that mobile traffic and sales were on the rise. Amazon said that mobile orders on Thanksgiving topped Cyber Monday last year, for example, while Walmart said that over 70 percent of website traffic on Thanksgiving was mobile. Target said that 60 percent of Thanksgiving sales were from mobile devices.

This trend continued into Black Friday, as the sales event is currently tracking to bring in $1.13 billion in revenue, which is up 25 percent year-over-year. Walmart said that 60 percent of Black Friday orders on Walmart.com came from mobile devices, for example.

Mobile was also driving the majority of retail sites visits on Friday at 56 percent, Adobe noted. Most of that (47%) was from smartphones, as opposed to tablets (9%).

In addition, mobile accounted for 40 percent of sales, with 29 percent from smartphones, and 11 percent for tablets. By 3 PM ET, mobile alone had accounted for $680 million in online sales.

What’s interesting, however, is that smartphones don’t drive as many conversions as tablets and desktops. While conversions were up overall, smartphone conversations were at 1.9 percent, compared with tablets at 3.7 percent, and desktops at 4 percent. For comparison’s sake, holiday averages are 1.3 percent, 2.9 percent, and 3.2 percent, for phones, tablets, and desktops, respectively.

In addition, iOS continued to drive larger sales than Android. The average order value on iOS devices was $144 compared with $136 on Android.

It still remains to be seen if Adobe’s estimates of mobile sales topping $1 billion out of over $3 billion in total online sales will change when Black Friday finally wraps tonight, of course. But Adobe’s sample is large enough for its numbers to be fairly close. Its report is based on aggregated data from 22 billion visits to retail websites, and includes 80 percent of all online transactions from the top 100 U.S. retailers.

Adobe also noted this year’s top-selling electronics were Apple iPads, Samsung 4K TVs, the Apple Macbook Air, LG TVs, and Microsoft Xbox.

Combined with yesterday’s $1.93 in online sales on Thanksgiving, the two days are expected to close out at nearly $5 billion in sales. Top-selling toys included Lego Creator Sets, electric scooters from Razor, Nerf Guns, DJI Phantom Drones, and Barbie Dreamhouse.

Despite the record numbers, the e-commerce industry is still recovering from the downturn it took following the election. (FullText)

Saturday, November 26, 2016

Cuban revolutionary leader Fidel Castro dies aged 90


Reuters - Fidel Castro, the Cuban revolutionary who built a communist state on the doorstep of the United States and for five decades defied U.S. efforts to topple him, died on Friday. He was 90.

A towering figure of the 20th century and Cold War icon, Castro stuck to his ideology beyond the collapse of Soviet communism and remained widely respected in parts of the world that struggled against colonial rule.

Castro had been in poor health since an intestinal ailment nearly killed him in 2006. He formally ceded power to his younger brother, Raul, two years later.

Wearing a green military uniform, a somber Raul Castro, 85, appeared on state television on Friday night to announce Fidel's death, 60 years to the day since the two brothers and dozens of supporters left Mexico on a boat to take revolution to Cuba.

"At 10:29 at night, the chief commander of the Cuban revolution, Fidel Castro Ruz, died," he said, without giving a cause of death.

"Ever onward, to victory," he said, using the slogan of the Cuban revolution.

A mix of tributes and condemnation poured in from around the world.

"History will record and judge the enormous impact of this singular figure on the people and world around him," U.S. President Barack Obama said, extending "a hand of friendship" to Cuba.

Obama's elected successor, Donald Trump, said he would work to ensure the Cuban people "can begin their journey toward prosperity and liberty," even though "the tragedies, deaths and pain caused by Fidel Castro cannot be erased."

Trump's Vice President-elect, Mike Pence, was more blunt about the late leader: "The tyrant Castro is dead. New hope dawns. ... Viva Cuba Libre!" he said on Twitter.

Venezuela's socialist president, Nicolas Maduro, urged revolutionaries to follow Castro's legacy, while Pope Francis said he was grieving and praying for the repose of the professed atheist, whom he met in Cuba last year.

China's president, Xi Jinping, said "the Chinese people have lost a close comrade and a sincere friend."

Friday, November 25, 2016

Reports: Russian operation boosted 'fake news' phenomenon

(usatoday - The "fake news" phenomenon that circulated thousands of phony stories during the election was aided by a sophisticated Russian propaganda effort, according to the Washington Post.

Independent researchers who tracked the bold operation say the goal was to punish Democrat Hillary Clinton, help Republican Donald Trump and undermine faith in American democracy, the newspaper reports.

Two teams of independent researchers found that the Russians exploited American-made technology platforms to attack U.S. democracy at a particularly vulnerable moment in the rancorous campaigns. Among the most-circulated stories were items on Clinton's health and fears about vote rigging.

“They want to essentially erode faith in the U.S. government or U.S. government interests,” said Clint Watts, a fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute who co-authored a report on Russian propaganda, the Post reports. “This was their standard mode during the Cold War. The problem is that this was hard to do before social media.”

The "fake news" phenomenon that circulated thousands of phony stories during the election was aided by a sophisticated Russian propaganda effort, according to the Washington Post.

Independent researchers who tracked the bold operation say the goal was to punish Democrat Hillary Clinton, help Republican Donald Trump and undermine faith in American democracy, the newspaper reports.

Two teams of independent researchers found that the Russians exploited American-made technology platforms to attack U.S. democracy at a particularly vulnerable moment in the rancorous campaigns. Among the most-circulated stories were items on Clinton's health and fears about vote rigging.

“They want to essentially erode faith in the U.S. government or U.S. government interests,” said Clint Watts, a fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute who co-authored a report on Russian propaganda, the Post reports. “This was their standard mode during the Cold War. The problem is that this was hard to do before social media.” (FullText)

Thursday, November 24, 2016

EU Parliament votes for freeze of Turkish membership talks


(yahoonews - Strasbourg (France) (AFP) - The European Parliament on Thursday voted to freeze membership talks with Turkey over its "disproportionate" post-coup crackdown, further escalating tensions with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Turkey immediately branded the non-binding vote "insignificant", while Erdogan had already said in his latest broadside against the European Union that the result was worthless.

Most EU states meanwhile want to keep the Turkey talks on track, but the vote by a large majority of MEPs will only add to the bad blood in the wake of the July 15 failed putsch.

Lawmakers voting in Strasbourg, France, said the parliament "strongly condemns the disproportionate repressive measures taken in Turkey since the failed military coup attempt".

They said they remained "committed to keeping Turkey anchored to the EU" but said that parliament "calls on the Commission and the Member States, however, to initiate a temporary freeze of the ongoing accession negotiations with Turkey."

The motion was approved by 479 votes to 37, with 107 abstentions.

- 'Insignificant' -

Turkey's Prime Minister Binali Yildirim hit out at the EU for a "lack of vision".

"It is insignificant from our aspect," he said in a televised speech.

"The EU should understand and decide whether it wants to shape its future vision with or without Turkey".

Turkish EU Affairs Minister Omer Celik said the vote was "null and void" and accused the European Parliament of jumping on the bandwagon of "far-right" parties.

"Such a resolution... only serves the objectives of the far right, Islamophobia and xenophobia," he told a news conference.

The decision hit the embattled Turkish lira -- boosted by a rate hike earlier in the day -- to leave the currency losing 1.50 percent against the dollar on the day.

A furious Erdogan said on Wednesday that "this vote has no value at all" and accused Europe of taking the side of "terror organisations".

"It is not possible for me to even digest the message that they want to deliver," he said.

Europe's message has however been increasingly clear about its concerns over rights and democracy in Turkey, especially over the coup crackdown that has seen almost 37,000 arrested.

Turkey formally applied to become an EU member in 1987 and accession talks only began in 2005, even though Ankara's aspirations to become part of the bloc dates back to the 1960s.

Wednesday, November 23, 2016

At least 4 dead, hundreds sickened in Australia asthma attacks triggered by thunderstorm

washingtonpost - A thunderstorm, one of several to strike southeastern Australia during this year’s humid November spring, triggered a rash of asthma attacks across Melbourne on Monday. The deadly respiratory blitzkrieg left families grieving in its wake.

The asthma attacks during the storm claimed at least four confirmed victims: 20-year-old law student Hope Carnevali, pictured above, died while waiting for responders from Ambulance Victoria to arrive. Paramedics struggled to resuscitate 35-year-old Apollo Papadopoulos, who eventually succumbed to the respiratory attack.

Omar Majoulled, 18, died two days before what would have been his high school graduation. A fourth victim, Clarence Leo, was reported deceased early Wednesday. Several more remained in Melbourne’s intensive care units.

The outbreak was severe even for those whose symptoms were mild under usual circumstances. “It felt like an elephant had his foot on my chest for about four hours,” said David McGann, from the Melbourne suburb of Preston, to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. McGann said his asthma attacks were not normally worrisome, but during the storm they were crushing.

By late Monday night, Melbourne pharmacies had depleted their stocks of bronchodilator medication. Emergency calls flooded in. Carnaveli’s relatives said they waited for more than a half an hour for an ambulance to arrive. “We would have taken her straight there, we wouldn’t have waited,” her uncle, John Carnaveli, told Melbourne’s 3AW Radio.

Between 6 p.m. and 11 p.m. on Monday, Ambulance Victoria fielded about 1,900 calls, nearly six times the usual volume.

“We essentially had a day’s workload within five hours,” said Ambulance Victoria’s executive director, Mick Stephenson, in a statement. “This includes 200 cases for asthma, and we were seeing asthma in people who had not experienced breathing issues before.”

At their peak, 200 calls came within a span of 15 minutes. “That’s a call every 4.5 seconds,” Stephenson said.

Ambulance Victoria put 50 extra ambulances into service, and police and firefighters responded to two dozen calls as well. The state’s Inspector General for Emergency Management announced it would review the spike in emergency demand and Ambulance Victoria’s response.

Since the first such events were recognized in the 1980s, there have been scattered reports of asthma attack outbreaks during thunderstorms around the globe, including Napoli, Italy and Atlanta. The largest confirmed episode to date was in London in June 1994. Six hundred-forty Londoners visited emergency departments with complaints of asthma or respiratory problems, of which more than a hundred were hospitalized, according to a 2016 reviewpublished in the journal Clinical & Experimental Allergy. (FullText)

Tuesday, November 22, 2016

Austia-Hungry Forever? Right-wing candidate for president of Austria wants to unite former Habsburg lands


Budapestbeacon) - Norbert Hofer, the candidate of the far-right Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ) in next month’s re-run presidential elections, wants Hungary to join a new alliance consisting of former members of the Austro-Hungarian empire.

The far-right politician believes Central European countries with similar cultures, including Austria, Hungary, Romania, Slovenia, Serbia, Croatia, and the Czech Republic, should form a new bloc within the European Union.

(Apart from the Romanian autonomous region of Transylvania, the Serbian autonomous region of Voivodina, and the Banat of Temes, which was divided between Serbia and Romania after the First World War, neither Serbia nor Romania ever belonged to the Habsburg empire. Nor is it clear what parts of modern-day Poland, Ukraine, or Bosnia Hofer has in mind for his Anschluss. –ed.)

“Austria was in an alliance with these countries during the time of the Monarchy, and I hope that we will easily agree on a platform, that way we will have greater weight in the European Council,” said Hofer in an interview with Swedish paper Dagens Nyheter.

(In point of historical fact, the House of Habsburg ruled over the constituent lands of the Austrian and later Austro-Hungrian empire until the end of the First World War. Any “alliance” was either dynastic in nature or involved military occupation.-ed.)

Hungary’s pro-government media has increasingly been paying attention to Austria’s far-right—and to the FPÖ’s ideas for a new regional bloc. Hungarian state-run news wire MTI ran the story, which was picked up by Hungarian pro-government online news site 888.hu, pro-government newspaper Magyar Idők , and pro-government newspaper Magyar Hírlap.

The renewed focus on the Austrian far-right’s proposal came just as the Hungarian government was in Serbia for a two-day joint session with its Serbian counterparts.

The FPÖ has already attempted to convince the country’s legislature that the country should join the Visegrad alliance of Hungary, Slovakia, the Czechia, and Poland, but the proposal was rejected in October.

Apparently, the party has raised its sights from the Visegrad countries of Hungary, Slovakia, and the Czech Republic to all of Vienna’s former imperial subjects.

Hofer raised the idea of an alliance in the past, but over the past few months he has begun actively trying to turn his vision into reality. (FullText)