Friday, May 30, 2008

Vatican: excommunication for female priests

Catholics.......................

Vatican: excommunication for female priests

VATICAN CITY - The Vatican is slamming the door on attempts by women to become priests in the Roman Catholic Church. It has strongly reiterated in a decree that anyone involved in ordination ceremonies is automatically excommunicated.

A top Vatican official said in a statement Friday that the church acted following what it called "so-called ordinations" in various parts of the world.

Monsignor Angelo Amato of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith says the Vatican also wants to provide bishops with a clear response on the issue.

The church has always banned the ordination of women, stating that the priesthood is reserved for males. The new decree is explicit in its reference to women.

Thursday, May 22, 2008

What if gas cost $10 a gallon?

What if gas cost $10 a gallon?


Forget pizza delivery. And cheap airfares. And bottled water. In fact, forget a way of life that looks much like today's. But would that be so bad?

In four years, U.S. gas prices have doubled to more than $3.70 a gallon, and crude oil has tripled to around $125 a barrel. Allowing for inflation, that's higher than prices were during the 1978–83 oil shock that triggered a recession and sky-high interest rates. But . . .

What if gas cost $10 a gallon?

Thousands of truckers would go bankrupt. Airplanes would sit idle in hangars. Restaurants and stores would shut down. Car-pooling, hybrid vehicles, scooters and inline skates would swing into vogue. And telecommuting, rooftop vegetable gardens, home cooking and recycling would proliferate.

Yes, it would be painful. At $10 a gallon, filling a Ford Explorer could cost $225. Even gassing up a Honda Civic could set you back $132.

And suddenly the bus wouldn't look so bad.

A large recession, not a depression According to Todd Hale, a senior vice president for consumer researcher Nielsen, at $10 a gallon, the average family's gas bill would leap from 16% of its retail spending to about 40%. People would drive less, yes. But many have to drive to work or the supermarket, and they'd cough up the cash -- screaming all the way -- and cut back elsewhere.

Businesses and farmers, meantime, would be squeezed as the costs of transport, petrochemical fertilizers and plastics rose. If an oil shock came quickly, sending gas to $10 a gallon and oil to roughly $350 a barrel, the chain reaction of spiraling prices and sliced consumer demand would hit us hard.

"It would be a large recession, not a depression," says Michael Englund, the chief economist for Action Economics in Boulder, Colo. That would mean tight budgets and unemployment until the economy adapted and growth returned.

Consumer spending on eating out, clothing, electronics, vacations and other little luxuries would fall sharply. A Nielsen study found that even at recent gas prices, 41% of consumers were eating out less. In total, 18% of those surveyed were cutting spending to a "great degree." That would bruise companies such as Applebee's, Macy's, Gap, Best Buy and others. But discount retailers, particularly those selling food and gas, could do relatively well. Think Costco, Wal-Mart and McDonald's.

We'd see "a lot of parked planes," says Bill Swelbar, an air transport engineer for the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The U.S. airline industry pays out $465 million in fuel costs for every $1 rise in oil. At $350-a-barrel oil, the industry would pay more than $100 billion extra, almost as much as last year's total airfare sales. Even if airlines ratcheted up fares 50%, half of their airplanes would be grounded because they'd be too expensive to fly, Swelbar reckons.

Many independent truckers, who pay for their own fuel, would go bankrupt as their costs soared and shippers switched to barges and trains. Taxis and FedEx would be strictly for the well-heeled. And home pizza deliveries would cease. Pizza delivery drivers also pay for their own gas. "It'd be brutal," says Joseph Miller, an assistant manager at a Domino's Pizza in Seattle. "I would think we wouldn't have any drivers."

Food prices could jump by a third or more, experts estimate. About 80 cents of the $4.50 retail cost of a box of cornflakes goes to transport it, says Dan Basse, the president of AgResource, a Chicago research company. On top of that, there's the cost of fertilizers to grow the corn and diesel for farm equipment. In 2005, transportation and energy made up 8.5% of all retail food costs, but energy was far cheaper then. As $10 gas pushed up food prices, pinched consumers would give up pricey fresh meat and vegetables for cheap pastas and oils. Ranchers and dairies with energy-hungry milking barns would struggle. And cities might sprout to life as people planted vegetable gardens on their roofs and balconies and in vacant lots.

Plastics for appliances, packaging, pacemakers and myriad other products would jump in price as the natural gas that plastic is made with rose in value alongside oil. Bill Wood, the president of Mountaintop Economics and Research in Massachusetts, says shoppers would have a choice: "Paper or paper?" Small plastic bottles of water would disappear. Glass and metal containers would make a comeback. And recycling would explode. Families might even have nine bins in the hall to separate their trash, as they do in Japan, where consumer recycling tops 90%.

Prediction: $200 oil, $5 gasEconomists say oil prices could continue to surge in the next two years, with prices as high as $5.60 a gallon at the gas pump possible.

As drivers began to switch to 100-mile-per-gallon plug-in hybrid cars (already expected to launch by 2010), the electricity grid could come under strain. Theoretically, if everyone had one and plugged it in at night, the grid could handle 84% of the nation's car fleet. But to avoid the risk of city brownouts, the grid capacity would have to rise. Solar, wave and wind power would ramp up. Giant solar thermal power plants, which use mirrors to concentrate the sun's energy, would be built. But in the rush to get power, we'd probably also step up the use of cheap, dirty coal (50% of our electricity generation now). Even nuclear power (21%) could be considered anew.

Resistance to drilling for oil in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and off California would shrink. Environmentalists might stand their ground. But as James Williams, an energy economist for WTRG Economics in Arkansas, says, "Let's put it this way: Y'all wanna drive?" Oil reserves in both areas are thought to be more than 10 billion barrels, double the proven reserves in Texas. That would help feed America's 21-million-barrel-a-day appetite.

After the hurt, some benefits There'd be other ramifications, too. The federal government's deficit would balloon as it paid for energy incentives and social welfare. We could even see civil unrest as the poor scrambled to survive.

Suburbanites would crowd into urban town houses to avoid costly commutes, and working from home would become common. Eventually, public transportation might even improve.

Some of these things, such as small cars and excellent public transportation, are already entrenched in Europe and Japan. Gas prices there are the equivalent of $8 to $10 a gallon, largely because of high taxes. They live with it. We could, too.

In the longer term, we might even be better off.

As the economy adjusted to functioning with new energy sources and more-efficient energy use, jobs in engineering, science, alternative energy and conservation would boom.

Matthew Simmons, the founder of investment bank Simmons & Company International in Houston, says he thinks a good slice of the hundreds of billions of dollars that would flow to oil-producing nations would filter back to the U.S. He believes the oil industry infrastructure is aging and America would be called on to help.

"We'd have a more engineer, blue-collar, scientific world, versus the Starbucks, high-tech business that we've been in," he says. Not to mention that America's Achilles' heel -- its dependency on foreign oil for 60% of its needs -- would finally have a remedy. A painful one, but effective.

Will gas cost $10 a gallon anytime soon? It's unlikely, though short-term expectations of $4 or even $5 gas this year are increasingly common.

But most oil specialists believe that in the near term, $10 gas couldn't happen -- or that if oil hit $350 a barrel through some Middle East disaster, it would be short-lived. They say demand would fall sharply, bringing oil prices back down. Adam Sieminski, the chief energy economist with Deutsche Bank in Washington, D.C., puts the probability at less than 3%.

Richard Heinberg, a senior fellow at the nonprofit Post Carbon Institute in Sebastopol, Calif., disagrees. He believes it could happen within five years (of course, $10 likely would be worth less then).

More than half of the world's oil producers, including the U.S., Britain, Mexico, Venezuela and Russia, are seeing production decline, Heinberg says. Meanwhile, demand is growing at 1.5% to 2% a year. Heinberg says the OPEC countries need their reserves to meet booming demand at home and that at some point, oil will become scarce.

The result: Prices will shoot up.

Published May 16, 2008

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Calif. quake scientists detail impact of 'Big One'

Calif. quake scientists detail impact of 'Big One'


By ALICIA CHANG, AP Science Writer 52 minutes ago

LOS ANGELES - The "Big One," as earthquake scientists imagine it in a detailed, first-of-its-kind script, unzips California's mighty San Andreas Fault north of the Mexican border. In less than two minutes, Los Angeles and its sprawling suburbs are shaking like a bowl of jelly.

The jolt from the 7.8-magnitude temblor lasts for three minutes — 15 times longer than the disastrous 1994 Northridge quake.

Water and sewer pipes crack. Power fails. Part of major highways break. Some high-rise steel frame buildings and older concrete and brick structures collapse.

Hospitals are swamped with 50,000 injured as all of Southern California reels from a blow on par with the Sept. 11 attacks and Hurricane Katrina: $200 billion in damage to the economy, and 1,800 dead.

Only about 700 of those people are victims of building collapses. Many others are lost to the 1,600 fires burning across the region — too many for firefighters to tackle at once.

A team of about 300 scientists, governments, first responders and industries worked for more than a year to create a realistic crisis scenario that can be used for preparedness, including a statewide drill planned later this year. Published by the U.S. Geological Survey and California Geological Survey, it is to be released Thursday in Washington, D.C.

Researchers caution that it is not a prediction, but the possibility of a major California quake in the next few decades is very real.

Last month, the USGS reported that the Golden State has a 46 percent chance of a 7.5 or larger quake in the next 30 years, and that such a quake probably would hit Southern California. The Northridge quake, which killed 72 people and caused $25 billion in damage, was much smaller at magnitude 6.7.

"We cannot keep on planning for Northridge," said USGS seismologist Lucy Jones. "The science tells that it's not the worst we're going to face."

USGS geophysicist Kenneth Hudnut said scientists wanted to create a plausible narrative and avoided science fiction like the 2004 TV miniseries "10.5" about an Armageddon quake on the West Coast.

"We didn't want to stretch credibility," said Hudnut. "We didn't want to make it a worst-case scenario, but one that would have major consequences."

The figures are based on the assumption that the state takes no continued action to retrofit flimsy buildings or update emergency plans. The projected loss is far less than the magnitude-7.9 killer that caused more than 40,000 deaths last week in western China, in part because California has stricter building code enforcement and retrofit programs.

The scenario is focused on the San Andreas Fault, the 800-mile boundary where the Pacific and North American plates grind against each other. The fault is the source of some of the largest earthquakes in state history, including the monstrous magnitude-7.8 quake that reduced San Francisco to ashes and killed 3,000 people in 1906.

In imagining the next "Big One," scientists considered the section of the San Andreas loaded with the most stored energy and the most primed to break. Most agree it's the southernmost segment, which has not popped since 1690, when it unleashed an estimated 7.7 jolt.

Scientists chose the parameters of the fictional temblor such as its size and length of rupture and ran computer models to simulate ground movement. Engineers calculated the effects of shaking on freeways, buildings, pipelines and other infrastructure. Risk analysts used the data to estimate casualties and damages.

A real quake would yield different results from the scenario, which excludes possibilities such as fierce Santa Ana winds that could whip fires into infernos.

The scenario: The San Andreas Fault suddenly rumbles to life on Nov. 13, 2008, just after morning rush hour. The quake begins north of the U.S.-Mexican border near the Salton Sea and the fault ruptures for about 200 miles in a northwest direction ending near the high desert town of Palmdale about 40 miles north of downtown Los Angeles.

Scientists chose the scenario because it would create intense shaking in the Los Angeles Basin and neighboring counties — a region with nearly 22 million people.

The scenario will be released at a House Subcommittee on Energy and Mineral Resources meeting in Washington.

Here are the major elements:

_10 a.m.: The San Andreas Fault ruptures, sending shock waves racing at 2 miles per second.

_30 seconds later: The agricultural Coachella Valley shakes first. Older buildings crumble. Fires start. Sections of Interstate 10, one of the nation's major east-west corridors, break apart.

_1 minute later: Interstate 15, a key north-south route, is severed in places. Rail lines break; a train derails. Tremors hit burgeoning Riverside and San Bernardino counties east of Los Angeles.

_1 minute, 30 seconds later: Shock waves advance toward the Los Angeles Basin, shaking it violently for 55 seconds.

_2 minutes later: The rupture stops near Palmdale, but waves march north toward coastal Santa Barbara and into the Central Valley city of Bakersfield.

_30 minutes later: Emergency responders begin to fan across the region. A magnitude-7 aftershock hits, but sends its energy south into Mexico. Several more big aftershocks will hit in following days and months.

Major fires following the quake would cause the most damage, said Keith Porter, of the University of Colorado, Boulder, who studied physical damage for the scenario.

The quake would likely spark 1,600 fires that would destroy 200 million square feet of housing and residential properties worth between $40 billion and $100 billion, according to the scenario.

Once the shaking stops, emergency responders would do a "windshield survey" that involves rolling through neighborhoods to tally damage and identify areas of greatest need, said Larry Collins, captain of the Urban Search & Rescue Task Force at the Los Angeles County Fire Department.

Collins said the scale of the disaster means firefighters would not be able to put out every flame.

"We're going to have to think about out-of-the-box solutions," he said.

___
On the Net:
U.S. Geological Survey: http://www.usgs.gov

Man accused of repeatedly calling 911 for cab

Man accused of repeatedly calling 911 for cab

http://cosmos.bcst.yahoo.com/up/player/popup/?rn=4226712&cl=7887651&src=news


Tue May 20, 7:50 PM ET

WACO, Texas - A man accused of calling 911 15 times in a row because he was tired of waiting for a cab was arrested early Tuesday, police said.

Each time Kevin Lewis Waits called, the emergency dispatcher told the man he had to call a taxi service and that police could not help him, said Waco police officer Steve Anderson.

Police eventually went to the apartment complex and found a cab waiting for Waits, who was also there but did not have the $26 taxi fee, Anderson said. Waits, 25, was trying to get to a house in town, the Waco Tribune-Herald reported in its Tuesday online edition.

Waits, of nearby Hillsboro, was arrested after being taken to the hospital because he told an officer that he had used methamphetamine, Anderson said. Waits remained in custody Tuesday afternoon awaiting bond on charges of harassment and theft of service, according to the McLennan County Jail.

Woman nabbed for alleged DUI at same crash spot

Woman nabbed for alleged DUI at same crash spot - Yahoo! News


Wed May 21, 2:17 AM ET

TRUCKEE, Calif. - Call it drunken driving deja vu. For the second time in five months, a 23-year-old California woman has been arrested after she allegedly crashed her car while driving under the influence at the exact same spot north of Lake Tahoe.

And to top it off, Truckee Police say that in both cases, her blood alcohol content was more than three times the legal limit.

Police say Melissa Dennison of Truckee crashed at about noon on Sunday on Glenshire Drive just south of the Glenshire Bridge. They say she was extremely intoxicated and had trouble standing or walking. Her blood alcohol level initially was measured at .346. The legal limit is .08.

Sgt. J. Litchie said Dennison also had been charged with a DUI in January when she crashed at the same spot and registered a blood alcohol level of .380.

If convicted of the second offense, she faces up to 10 years in prison and fines in excess of $2,000.

A telephone message The Associated Press left at a listing for Dennison in Truckee on Tuesday was not immediately returned.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Sen. Edward Kennedy has malignant brain tumor - Yahoo! News

Sen. Edward Kennedy has malignant brain tumor - Yahoo! News

Need I say anything more .......
Revenge for Chappaquiddick
What comes around.................



By GLEN JOHNSON, Associated Press Writer 1 hour, 44 minutes ago

BOSTON - A cancerous brain tumor caused the seizure Sen. Edward M. Kennedy suffered over the weekend, doctors said Tuesday in a grim diagnosis for one of American politics' most enduring figures.

"He remains in good spirits and full of energy," the doctors for the 76-year-old Massachusetts Democrat said in a statement.

They said tests conducted after the seizure showed a tumor in Kennedy's left parietal lobe. Preliminary results from a biopsy of the brain identified the cause of the seizure as a malignant glioma, they said.
His treatment will be decided after more tests but the usual course includes combinations of radiation and chemotherapy.

Kennedy has been hospitalized in Boston since Saturday, when he was airlifted from Cape Cod after a seizure at his home.

"He has had no further seizures, remains in good overall condition, and is up and walking around the hospital," said the statement by Dr. Lee Schwamm, vice chairman of the Department of Neurology at Massachusetts General Hospital and Dr. Larry Ronan, Kennedy's primary care physician.

They said Kennedy will remain in the hospital "for the next couple of days according to routine protocol."
Kennedy's wife and children have been with him each day since he was hospitalized. Senator Kennedy's son, Rep. Patrick Kennedy, D-R.I., plans to stay at the hospital for the time being.

"Obviously it's tough news for any son to hear," said spokeswoman Robin Costello. "He's comforted by the fact that his dad is such a fighter, and if anyone can get through something as challenging as this, it would be his father. So he's optimistic, he's hopeful, but obviously he's concerned."

President Bush was notified by his staff of Kennedy's diagnosis at 1:20 p.m.

"He said he was deeply saddened and would keep Senator Kennedy in his prayers," spokeswoman Dana Perino said.

Malignant gliomas are a type of brain cancer diagnosed in about 9,000 Americans a year — and the most common type among adults. It's an initial diagnosis: How well patients fare depends on what specific tumor type is determined by further testing.

Average survival can range from less than a year for very advanced and aggressive types — such as glioblastomas — or to about five years for different types that are slower growing.

News of the diagnosis hit hard for colleagues on both sides of the aisle.

"I'm really sad," former Sen. Bob Kerrey, D-Neb., said when told in a Senate hallway about Kennedy's condition. "He's the one politician who brings tears to my eyes when he speaks."

"I am so deeply saddened I have lost the words," Sen. John Warner, R-Va., said in a Senate hallway. Warner said he and Kennedy had been friends for 40 years. Both served on the Senate Armed Services Committee together.

Kennedy, the second-longest serving member of the Senate and a dominant figure in national Democratic Party politics, was elected in 1962, filling out the term won by his brother, John F. Kennedy.
His eldest brother, Joseph, was killed in a World War II airplane crash. President Kennedy was assassinated in 1963 and his brother Robert was assassinated in 1968.

Kennedy is active for his age, maintaining an aggressive schedule on Capitol Hill and across Massachusetts. He has made several campaign appearances for Sen. Barack Obama in February, and most recently last month.

Kennedy, the senior senator from Massachusetts and the Senate's second-longest serving member, was re-elected in 2006 and is not up for election again until 2012.

Were he to resign or die in office, state law requires a special election for the seat no sooner than 145 days and no later than 160 days after the vacancy occurs.

Monday, May 19, 2008

The Canadian Press: Clinton's losing battle leaves women sad and angry about sexism

The Canadian Press: Clinton's losing battle leaves women sad and angry about sexism

Sexism or Racism - If you vote for the female you are racist. If you vote for the black guy, you are sexist. Quit playing the cards and just get to work. Same party - same crap.

Clinton's losing battle leaves women sad and angry about sexism

32 minutes ago

WASHINGTON — There are many reasons why Hillary Clinton is losing the Democratic nomination fight.

And for some supporters who are devastated a woman likely won't be breaking the glass ceiling to the Oval Office this year, sexism is top of mind.

The fading dream generated by Clinton's historic bid is leaving behind a wash of disappointment and anger, some of it directed at party officials and the media.

An Ohio-based group of Clinton supporters even says it will try to thwart Barack Obama in key swing states in the presidential race this fall.

"Our party has been witness to the most outrageous display of misogyny and sexism in modern campaign history," organizer Cynthia Ruccia told a news conference in Columbus late last week.
"It's been open season on women and we feel we need to stand up and make a statement about that because it's wrong."

There's no doubt Clinton has been subject to all kinds of sex-based slurs in her tenacious fight to become the first woman president, including endless commentary about her looks, wardrobe and the way she laughs.

Media pundits have called her a bitch, a whore and "a scolding mother, talking down to a child." She was recently compared to the maniacal, spurned woman played by actor Glenn Close in Fatal Attraction.

One blogger on ABC's website described why he was "getting to hate this woman," including her "towering frigidity, blazing hubris and bellowing mendacity."

"She is a stranger to consistency, sincerety and (at a guess) oral sex," he wrote.

In a Washington Post column last week headlined Misogny I Won't Miss, Marie Cocco decried T-shirts bearing the slogans Bros before Hos sold on the Internet and the Hillary Nutcrackers available at airport concessions.

One of the best-sellers on the Hillary Vilification Shop website is a T-shirt emblazoned with Stop Mad Cow and a picture of Clinton with horns.

Yet, wrote Cocco, leading Democrats with the exception of Senator Barbara Mikulski of Maryland, haven't "publicly uttered a word of outrage" at the hate hurled at Clinton.

For some, like Ruccia, a former congressional candidate, recent calls for Clinton to quit the race are "a supreme insult."

"We're being told to sit down, shut up and get with the program."

The group is pushing to have delegates counted from Michigan and Florida, penalized by the Democratic party because they held their primaries early.

Obama's name wasn't on the Michigan ballot and Clinton won more support in both states.

Yet that wouldn't help Clinton overcome Obama's lead in delegates needed to secure the nomination.
Many Clinton supporters agree there's a host of reasons why her campaign has faltered, incuding a fundamentally flawed primary strategy ill-prepared for the appeal of Obama's message of hope and change.

And her husband Bill's dismissive comments of Obama in South Carolina alienated many black voters who had once supported her.

Clinton has also benefitted from her sex, including the fact that she picked up so much support from fellow women intent on seeing her succeed.

Obama is obviously facing his own set of challenges as an African American, including voters who openly say they won't vote for a black man and widespread fears among supporters that there will be a race-based attempt on his life.

Despite the letdown many women feel, Clinton is being credited by many as redrawing the map by proving the public will vote for a woman.

But some say her epic battle won't necessarily make things any easier for the next female contender, who will still have to walk a fine line between being tough and spend time proving their competency when their male counterparts don't.

There are fears the trials Clinton has faced may put many women off taking a shot at the highest office for a long time to come.

"I think it's going to be generations," Karen O'Connor, director of the Women and Politics Institute at American University, told the New York Times.

"Who would dare run? The media is set up against you and if you have the money problems to begin with, why would anyone put their families through this?"

"Why would anyone put themselves through this?"

Girl Wearing Pain Patch Dies; Foster Mother Charged - New York Times

Girl Wearing Pain Patch Dies; Foster Mother Charged - New York Times

Sick Bastard!!


By AL BAKER
Published: May 20, 2008

A 6-year-old girl in foster care in Harlem died Sunday after her foster mother placed a powerful medicinal patch on her neck and sent her to bed to treat the child’s complaints of pain, the authorities said.

The little girl, Taylor Webster, was pronounced dead at Mount Sinai Medical Center in Manhattan on Sunday evening and her foster mother, Joanne Alvarez, 54, was arrested and charged with criminally negligent homicide.

The antipain patch given to Taylor by Ms. Alvarez is known as a fentanyl transdermal patch, official said. When it is placed on the skin, it delivers a narcotic drug that is more powerful than morphine. Ms. Alvarez also gave Taylor Motrin painkillers by mouth, the police said.

Detectives from the New York Police Department and the office of Robert M. Morgenthau, the Manhattan district attorney, are investigating the case, particularly how Ms. Alvarez obtained the pain patch and for what purpose she had it. The city Medical Examiner’s office was conducting an autopsy on Monday, officials said.

“The mother gave the child Motrin and also put one of these medical patches on the child, and it appears that this may have caused the child’s death,” said Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly, who spoke of the case after a City Council budget hearing on Monday. “So it’s under investigation.”

Mr. Kelly said the case was a crime because of the severity of the negligence.

“You can have negligence and you can have gross negligence that rises to the level of criminality,” Mr. Kelly said. “It really has to do with the gross aspect of the negligence, as to whether or not it rises to the level of criminality.”

An official in Mr. Morgenthau’s office said that a criminal complaint was being drawn up against Ms. Alvarez and that she was expected to be arraigned before a judge sometime on Monday evening.

Sharman Stein, a spokeswoman for the city’s Administration for Children’s Services said the incident was under investigation.

It was unclear why Taylor was in foster care or how long she had been in the care of Ms. Alvarez. Generally, children are placed in foster care by the city’s child welfare agency after they suffer some kind of abuse or neglect at the hands of their biological parents.

The incident unfolded inside the 11th-floor apartment of Ms. Alvarez at 1345 Fifth Avenue, in the Taft Houses, the police said. It began around 11 p.m. on Saturday when Taylor complained of pain. Ms. Alvarez, who lives in the apartment with an adult child, put the pain patch on Taylor’s neck — in the area of her Carotid artery — and also gave her the Motrin, the police said.

The next day, at about 3 p.m., Ms. Alvarez was discovered lying in her bed and not breathing, the police said. Police officers were called and the girl was taken to the hospital where she was pronounced dead at 5:10 p.m., officials said.

In speaking with investigators, Ms. Alvarez said she had been prescribed the pain patch, but she could not provide the name of a physician and the prescription has not yet been confirmed.

“We have not verified where she got this patch,” said one official who said the patch is usually prescribed for adults, not children.

Friday, May 16, 2008

State pushes Bush administration on firefighting planes

State pushes Bush administration on firefighting planes

Thursday, May 15, 2008

(05-15) 19:00 PDT Los Angeles, CA (AP) --

California is pressuring the Bush administration to deliver on its promise to outfit two massive National Guard cargo planes for firefighting duty by July, warning Thursday that residents face another season of wildfire danger.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., said delays in outfitting the huge C-130 aircraft were "unacceptable."

"Mr. President, help us," Feinstein said in a letter to President Bush. Without the firefighting planes, the government will be "severely underprepared for the coming wildfire season."

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, in a recent letter to the White House, said the planes were "a critical resource in fighting wildfires that California cannot do without."

Another year without the planes "would be reckless," the governor told Bush.

Last year's wind-driven wildfires charred about 800 square miles, killed 10 people and destroyed nearly 2,200 homes from north of Los Angeles south to the Mexican border.

The Associated Press disclosed in October that despite repeated assurances, the California Air National Guard's two C-130 cargo planes were never outfitted with tanks needed to carry thousands of gallons of fire retardant. The situation meant that rather than deploying C-130s from inside the state, Schwarzenegger was forced during last year's fires to ask Secretary of Defense Robert Gates to call in the six remaining older C-130s from other states as far away as North Carolina.

After the devastating fires last year, the Bush administration told state officials the planes would be outfitted with the gear no later than July. But Feinstein said neither plane would be available for the 2008 fire season.

U.S. Department of Agriculture Undersecretary Mark Rey said complex engineering and electrical issues needed to be resolved to fit the planes with the firefighting gear. They could be ready by September if test flights this summer are successful, he said.

In any case, enough firefighting aircraft will be available to protect the public and property, he said. Large tankers can be brought in quickly from other states, if needed.

If fires break out, "We have plenty of civilian aircraft to bring into the fight," Rey said.

The Associated Press: Texas officials sue US over border fence

The Associated Press: Texas officials sue US over border fence

Just Build the damn fence!!!!!

WASHINGTON (AP) — Texas mayors and business leaders filed a class-action lawsuit Friday alleging Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff hoodwinked landowners into waiving their property rights for construction of a fence along the Mexican border.

Members of the Texas Border Coalition said Chertoff did not fairly negotiate compensation with landowners for access to their land for six-month surveys to choose fence sites. The coalition of mayors and business and community leaders is seeking an injunction to block work on the fence.

They also want a federal judge to rescind all the agreements with landowners and to order Chertoff to start again. The department has sought and won access from hundreds of landowners to determine where to build the fence and other barriers to illegal border crossings.

The coalition's attorney, Peter Schey, said Chertoff violated a 1996 immigration law that requires fair negotiation with landowners.

The lawsuit also names Robert Janson, director of Asset Management at U.S. Customs and Border Protection, as a defendant.

It was filed with U.S. District Judge Reggie B. Walton, a Bush nominee who presided in the criminal case of I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, Vice President Dick Cheney's former chief of staff.

"They hoodwinked property owners" into waiving their property rights, Schey said.

"This whole thing has been built on a foundation of lawlessness," he said.

Landowners were visited by officials from Homeland Security, Army Corps of Engineers and Customs and Border Patrol. But the government didn't send anyone to advise the owners' of their property rights, Schey said. Some landowners accepted offers of $100 for access to their land.

The Department of Homeland Security has repeatedly denied allegations of unfair negotiations, saying it has bent over backward to work with landowners.

The agency wants to build about 353 miles of fence by year's end to bring total fencing, walls and barriers to about 670 miles.

"This is just a delay tactic. I can't imagine this has any merit," said Homeland Security spokeswoman Laura Keehner, who had not yet seen the lawsuit.

The lawsuit also alleges:

_ Chertoff failed to write and make public any regulations or guidelines on negotiation procedure and determining a "reasonable" price for access to property.

_ Chertoff has not written policies on how to consult with landowners about their concerns as required by a 2007 law.

_ Landowners' rights to equal protection under the law were violated because the fence bypasses the property of some well-connected landowners, including Dallas billionaire Ray Hunt and his relatives.

_ The newer law requires Chertoff to build the fence where it is most practical and effective but he continues to build where a 2006 law specified.

Brownsville Mayor Pat Ahumada said the mayors are willing to work with Homeland Security to devise alternatives to the border fence.

"They are determined to build a wall to appease mid-America," Ahumada said. "This is a political problem that's being addressed at the expense of all the border communities."

Ellen DeGeneres, Portia de Rossi engaged after California ruling -- -- Newsday.com

Ellen DeGeneres, Portia de Rossi engaged after California ruling -- -- Newsday.com

Ellen DeGeneres, Portia de Rossi

Ellen DeGeneres and Portia de Rossi head into the Elton John Oscar Party. (AP photo / February 24, 2008)

LOS ANGELES - Ellen DeGeneres and longtime girlfriend Portia de Rossi are jumping at the chance to get married.

DeGeneres announced their engagement during a Thursday taping of "The Ellen DeGeneres Show," telling the studio audience the news that the California Supreme Court had struck down state laws against gay marriage.

"So I would like to say now, for the first time, I am announcing: I am getting married," she said during the show, airing Friday.

The studio audience leapt to its feet for a long ovation, and De Rossi ("Ally McBeal," "Nip/Tuck") was sitting in the audience, beaming and clapping.

Then DeGeneres cracked: "Thank you. I'll tell you who the lucky guy is soon."

The court ruling means same-sex couples could tie the knot in as little as a month. However, religious and social conservatives are seeking to put a constitutional amendment on the ballot in November that would undo the Supreme Court ruling and ban gay marriage.

DeGeneres, 50, has boldly used TV before to make a stand for gay rights.

In 1997, she brought her character on the ABC sitcom "Ellen" out of the closet, making the show the first on prime-time network TV to have an openly gay lead. The move drew cheers from gay civil rights organizations but was condemned by some religious groups.

A month before, DeGeneres had proclaimed from the cover of Time magazine that she was a lesbian.

DeGeneres, 50, and the glamorous de Rossi, 35, have been a familiar couple at Hollywood events, including the Academy Awards. Previously, DeGeneres had a high-profile relationship with actress Anne Heche.

In a 2005 interview with Allure magazine, the comedian said she hoped she and de Rossi are "together the rest of our lives."

"I never would have thought my life would have turned out this way," DeGeneres told the magazine. "To have money. Or to have a gorgeous girlfriend. I just feel so lucky with everything in my life right now."

Police say men trying to steal power lines shocked - Yahoo! News

Police say men trying to steal power lines shocked - Yahoo! News

Get them out of the gene pool!!!

CONFLUENCE, Pa. - Two Somerset County men are charged with trying to steal live power lines that were still attached to a transformer and utility poles.

Police said Kevin Lee Lytle, 27, and Daniel Jay Basinger, 24, both of Confluence, were shocked during the theft attempt on May 3 in Lower Turkeyfoot Township.

Both were charged Wednesday, but only Basinger was well enough to attend his arraignment on the attempted theft charge.

Police say the incident disrupted power to area residences for about five hours. Penelec Power Co. owns the lines which suffered $1,500 damage.

The Associated Press could not immediately reach either man for comment.

Bush Pushes to Pipe Water From Canada to US Southwest

10/17 - Bush Pushes to Pipe Water From Canada to US Southwest


Great Lakes Article:

Cost, not emotion, likely to kill export idea Philip LeeThe Ottawa CitizenPosted 10/17/2002

Water is heavy: 1,000 litres of water weighs a tonne. Pump water hundreds of kilometres through a pipeline, or pour it into a tanker and ship it any distance at all, and water becomes expensive.

Just how expensive is a matter of debate. Estimates range from US$1,000 to $3,000 an acre foot (there are about 1.2 million litres in an acre foot).

Residents of cities in California now pay about US$600 an acre foot for water, and farmers as little as $50 an acre foot.

Are Americans so desperate for water that they would pay the cost of piping it or shipping it from Canada? That is the essential question in the often emotional great water debate in Canada.

Last month, U.S. President George W. Bush confirmed the fears of the most vocal opponents of bulk water shipments. Mr. Bush told reporters the United States would be interested in piping Canadian water down to the thirsty southwestern states and that he would raise the issue with Prime Minister Jean Chretien at the G8 Summit in Genoa.

The federal government immediately responded by insisting bulk exports of water from Canada weren't on the table.

The Council of Canadians, which has led the campaign against water exports with the support of the Canadian Union of Public Employees and the Canadian Environmental Law Association, pounced on Mr. Bush's statement. Maude Barlow, the chairwoman of the council, said Mr. Bush had been candid enough to tell the truth, and that Mr. Chretien has suggested he is willing "turn the tap."

"Canadians wanted bulk exports banned and the Liberals are opening the floodgates," she said.

The crux of the argument from the opponents of bulk water shipments is that under the terms of the North American Free Trade Agreement, water is not protected, and that if Canada permits the sale of bulk water, it becomes a tradable commodity. Once water is a commodity, a giant water valve will be turned on and stuck in that position.

The council has called on the Chretien government to pass legislation prohibiting the export of water, and has linked the trade of water with the trend across North America to hire private firms to deliver water services.

"What is more fundamental to democracy than control over the water we drink?" asks Judy Darcy, CUPE's national president. "Access for all Canadians to a basic source of life is what's at stake.

Multinational corporations are trying to privatize water services in hundreds of Canadian municipalities and turn our water resources into an export commodity. They can't buy the air we breathe, so now they want to buy and control the water we drink. What we are saying is simple: No water for profit."

Apart from Mr. Bush's statement, the council appears to have evidence to back up its concerns. On the East Coast, Newfoundland Premier Roger Grimes continues to argue that his province should be permitted to export water. A company called McCurdy Enterprises wants to export 49 billion litres of water a year from Newfoundland's Gisborne Lake.

On the West Coast, a California company, Sun Belt Water Inc., is taking Canada to court under the terms of NAFTA to force B.C. to sell bulk water to the U.S., and to claim millions of dollars in damages for the business it says it has lost through Canada's refusal to adhere to what it claims are the terms of the trade agreement.

For the council, most water issues return to the question of exports and privatization. Early this year, the council opposed a plan by the OMYA stone manufacturing firm - the world's largest supplier of calcium carbonate to the paper, paint, plastic, food and pharmaceutical industries - to extract water from the Tay River near Perth, Ont.

While the residents of the area were raising valid concerns about the ecological implications of a plan to remove several million litres of water a day from the small river, the council said the project "may trigger much broader obligations for water exports under the North American Free Trade Agreement."

Throughout the debate, the council has raised concerns about the potential ecological damage of bulk water shipments.

Canadian author Marq de Villiers points out that the transfer of water on a large scale from one basin to another is a risky business. A water basin is the "hydrological cycle's recycling unit," he writes, and we are "tampering with this life-support system, with uncertain consequences."

But Mr. de Villiers notes that what is missing from the bulk water debate is an acknowledgment that water isn't anyone's property.

"Water is not 'ours' or 'theirs' but the planet's. We use water, and it passes on, and then it comes back to us. But it is not, surely, something we should either hoard or prevent others from using."

Peter Gleick, a California water guru who heads the Pacific Institute for Studies in Development, Environment and Security, agrees that environmental and social consequences should be the primary issue when appraising any bulk water transfer proposals.

"I don't think water should be exported from anywhere until local environmental needs have been guaranteed, the local ecosystems have been protected, and the local populations have been protected and their needs are met," he says.

Despite these legitimate ecological and social issues, the bottom line for bulk exports may turn out to be economics, Mr. Gleick says.

"I actually think this enormous controversy over bulk water exports is a little bit silly because no one's going to be able to afford it," he says. "That might not be true if we're talking about whether Chicago wanted to take more water out of the Great Lakes, but that's a different issue. I think that no one is going to be able to afford to put water into tankers, move it very far, and make any money.

"And frankly I think some of these people who complain because they have been prohibited from doing it, I think we've saved them a lot of money. I think they should have been allowed to do it and go bankrupt."

What about the possibilities of transferring water from one place to another in giant plastic bags towed by ships? This system has been championed on the Pacific coast by entrepreneur Terry Spragg, who has developed water bags larger than the Goodyear blimp.

"I think that could be cheaper than tankers, but even so it's not cheaper than improving water-use efficiency," Mr. Gleick says. "It's not cheaper than changing the allocation of water from farmers to the cities. ... If a city can afford to pay $600 an acre foot and farmers are paying $50 an acre foot, then the cities could buy some water from the farmers, and everybody would be happy. The cities could pay farmers $100 an acre foot and they're getting cheap water and the farmers are making money."

Sandra Postel, Mr. Gleick's counterpart on the East Coast, at the World Water Project in Amherst, Massachusetts, agrees that the economics don't favour bulk shipments.

"It's got to be cost-competitive with the next best alternative, which, in most cases where the water would be shipped, is desalination," she says. "Those costs, while still very high compared to traditional water costs, have been coming down. It's funny, all of the information I've seen on the ideas for shipping water by tanker and all the phone calls I've gotten from various companies interested in doing this, I've yet to see some serious cost numbers. What does it cost to take water from some part of Canada and ship it to China or the Middle East?"

Ms. Postel also notes that bulk water shipments would deliver water too expensive to use for irrigation.
"If we (Americans) are growing wheat with water imported from Canada, nobody is going to be able to afford the food."

The debate over bulk exports began in earnest in the 1980s with a proposal, backed by former prime minister Brian Mulroney and Quebec premier Robert Bourassa, which would have dammed the mouth of James Bay and diverted canals of water to dry regions of Canada and the U.S. The project, called GRAND, the Great Replenishment and Northern Development Canal Concept, included possibly an aqueduct into the Great Lakes and then pipelines south from there.

Further west, the North American Water and Power Alliance (NAWAPA) proposed to dam most rivers in B.C. and divert the water into the U.S. and Mexico through hundreds of dams and canals. Mr. de Villiers says the NAWAPA plan would have done more damage to the environment than all the water diversions in America combined.

Neither of these heavily subsidized mega projects (NAWAPA had a $500-billion U.S. price tag) got off the ground. In the late 1980s, the Santa Barbara, California, decided to build a desalination plant instead of seeking water exports from Canada.

Elizabeth Brubaker, director of Environment Probe, a supporter of privatization of municipal water systems, thinks the bulk export debate is "a red herring." However she warned that Canadians must remain on guard against subsidized water diversion mega-projects.

"The mere lack of economic efficiency doesn't prevent us from spending a lot of money on a project sometimes," she says. "Some of the water export proposals that have been pushed over the years have been potential disasters."

The export issue reared its head again in 1998 when Ontario granted the Nova Group of Sault Ste. Marie permission to export millions of litres of Lake Superior water by tanker to Asia. The Nova Group withdrew its proposal after a storm of controversy on both sides of the border.

The next year, the Canadian government announced a bulk-water prohibition strategy, introducing amendments to the International Boundary Waters Treaty Act to prohibit bulk-water removal from boundary waters, in particular the Great Lakes. Of all the possible sources of water for the thirsty U. S., the Great Lakes are the most obvious. The Great Lakes ecosystem holds 20 per cent of the world's supply of fresh surface water. However, rainfall and rivers supply only one per cent of the Great Lakes water. The rest of the water is ancient glacial deposits.

Two years ago, the Canadian and U.S. governments asked the International Joint Commission to prepare a report on the bulk exports issue. The commission was established by the Boundary Water Treaty of 1909 and helps to regulate water diversion in the Great Lakes.

After holding public hearings, the commission delivered its report in March last year. It recommended that governments "should not permit any new proposal for removal of water from the Great Lakes Basin to proceed unless the proponent can demonstrate that the removal would not endanger the integrity of the Great Lakes Basin."

The commission said there should be "no net loss" of water from the lakes and and that any water that is taken must be returned in a condition that protects the quality of the water.

Moreover, the commission argued the era of major water diversions and transfers has passed. After building a network of dams, reservoirs and canals, the western U.S. is now focusing on ecosystem restoration to try to undo the damage that has already been done.

The commission noted the western U.S. has an option for water far less expensive than bulk imports, namely the buying and leasing of water rights from farmers, who consume 80 per cent of the water supply, many of them growing low value crops such as corn and alfalfa. Some farmers can make more money selling water than growing food.

The commission also noted that desalination is increasingly becoming a realistic alternative to bulk water shipments.

"Although it seems clear that climate change and continued reports of worldwide water shortages will continue to keep discussion of bulk water shipments alive, the cost of such shipments makes it unlikely that there will be serious efforts to take Great Lakes water to foreign markets, and cost will continue to serve as an impediment to bulk shipments from coastal waters," the commission concluded.

The commission noted that a hidden water transfer is already taking place, from aquifers in the Great Lakes basin that recharge the lakes themselves.

"Groundwater withdrawals at rates high enough to warrant concern" are already happening, particularly in the Chicago area, where aquifer levels have been dropping for more than two decades. Chicago is also withdrawing surface water from the Great Lakes basin at a rate of 4,300 cubic feet per second. Half the water is for drinking and the rest is used to reverse the flow of the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal. Excess water winds up in the Mississippi River.

The commission says we do not understand the issue of groundwater consumption and recharge in the Great Lakes, and there needs to be more aquifer mapping and study of the role of groundwater in supporting the ecological systems of the basin.

In June, the governors of the eight states that border the Great Lakes and the premiers of Ontario and Quebec agreed to limit exports of water to inland municipalities. Any plan to pipe water out of the lakes will require governments to consider whether the diversion is environmentally sound.

The Council of Canadians said it was disappointed that the commission failed to more definitely recommend against bulk exports.

But the commission did address the groups concerned about bulk transfers, admitting that at public hearings many speakers felt the commission too readily dismissed the threat of major water diversions.

"They indicated that while an analysis of past proposals for mega-diversions indicates that they may not have been feasible, at least from an economic standpoint, this does not mean that proposals of this kind could never be pursued for economic or other reasons.

"While the commission acknowledges the anxiety expressed by some at the hearings, the commission continues to believe that the era of major diversions and water transfers in the United States and Canada has ended.

"Barring significant climate change, an overcoming of engineering problems and of numerous economic and social issues, and an abandonment of national environmental ethics, the call for such diversions and transfers will not return."

No doubt questions will continue to be raised about the possibility of Canadian water exports, but, for now at least, one definite answer has been given.

Philip Lee's series, The Global Water Crisis, can be read online at www.ottawacitizen.com.

Teachers protest cuts - Redlands Daily Facts

Teachers protest cuts - Redlands Daily Facts

These same teachers vote not to increase taxes THAT PAY THEIR SALARY!! The communities do not want tax increases to pay teachers salaries. Teachers need to quit bitching to the State Government and cry to the people that vote tax increases in if they want their cushy union jobs with decent pay and basically free medical coverage that I wish I could get!!!!!!

Redlands joins rally to say 'no' to education budget cuts

David James Heiss, Staff Writer

Sue de Bord Sanders was horrified to discover a letter in her box at Redlands High School, where she teaches English.
The letter, addressed to Ima Teacher, claimed "that your services be terminated at the close of the current school year pursuant to the Education Code."

She was a little more relieved to see the mock signature of U.R. Laidoff.

At the end of the letter was a message from the Redlands Teachers Association to join them in a rally to protest state budget cuts at the end of the day - on a day recognized as Day of the Teacher by the state.

More than 200 teachers, classified personnel and administrators joined swarms of concerned educators to protest Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's proposed cuts to education, at the busy intersection of Waterman Avenue and Hospitality Lane in San Bernardino.

On Wednesday Schwarzenegger released a revised budget proposal that seemed to offer a glimmer of hope for educators, but according to Redlands' superintendent Lori Rhodes, the budget "may look good on the surface, but they need to follow through and have responsibility to fund education at an even higher level."

Rhodes joined some of her staff and colleagues at the rally, which included several Redlands principals, school board members, district office staff, teachers and classified employees.

"What's happening with the way the state is funding education is terrible," Rhodes said. "We need to stand together to say, `This is not right,' and this was a great opportunity for us to come together and do that."

State Superintendent Jack O'Connell came down from Sacramento to address the crowd, standing side by side with County Superintendent Herb Fischer.

"I think it's clear the governor has heard the outcry from the education community over his initial budget proposals," O'Connell said. "It seems like every year education is put through the wringer during the budget process, and this needs to stop."

He expressed concern about the May revised budget, which reportedly proposes a heavier reliance on the state lottery to fund education, and echoed a sentiment of others that he was not pleased about Schwarzenegger's intention to not reverse a 10 percent cut in categorical programs such as class size reduction and counseling programs.

Speaking to local reporters, O'Connell said he came down from the rally because this area is reputed to support education.

"These communities continue to put education first, in election after election," O'Connell said. "This area passes school bonds education is still woefully underfunded. This budget is less than treading water, but it's a beginning. We need to invest in our future and expand the economy - to do that, we need a well-educated, analytical workforce."

Fischer also offered remarks on the governor's latest budget.

"While the revised budget vows to maintain Prop. 98 minimum funding, schools will still lose about $4.3 billion in anticipated revenue because no (cost of living adjustment) is being paid," Fischer said. "It's time to get our priorities straight with voters of the state."

Paula Monroe, formerly president of the Redlands Education Support Professionals Association and now one of the nine members of the National Education Association in Washington, D.C., was at the rally to join her colleagues.

Addressing the crowd on behalf of the National Education Association, she said, "It's unacceptable that one of the largest economies in the world - California - doesn't place higher value on education."

Referring to the governor, she said, "The `Terminator' is at it again. We need to remind him that this isn't a movie script. This is real for public schools, this is real for our educators, and this is real for our children.

"It's going to be a long fight," she said. "We're ready for the battle. We can do this."

Sue Sander, who was inspired at the last minute to join the rally after being shocked by her mock letter, was glad she attended, despite being tired and still having to go home and grade papers later.

"I was blown away by that" letter's statement, she said. "It took my breath away. What a painful place to be in. These are real letters people are getting across the state."

As hundreds lined the four corners of the busy intersection, shouting and blowing whistles at honking vehicles snarled in traffic, Redlands district staff members convened at El Torito on Hospitality Lane to unwind.

Tim Hoch, principal of McKinley Elementary School, stood in the crowd listening to people on a makeshift stage above a truck express their concerns about the proposed budget cuts.

"His May revision today demonstrates he's listening a little bit," Hoch said. "It's a slight improvement over his January budget proposal, so you like to think he's listening."

School board member Neal Waner, who arrived with his son Tyler, a fifth-grader at Mariposa Elementary School, came to support his district.

"Per pupil funding is 47th in the nation, and it's getting cut again," Waner said. "Collectively, our voices need to be heard in Sacramento. This affects everyone: teachers, administrators, board members, sports staff, children. It affects more than just our 22,000 students" in the Redlands school district.

Monica Solis, a math teacher at Clement Middle School, carpooled to the rally with her mother Yolanda Solis, who works as the office manager for the Redlands Teachers Association.

"We have to be very, very concerned and do something about it," Solis said. "If we want California to be a leader in education, we need to educate our future leaders and support each other."

According to Redlands Teachers Association President Rich Laabs, nearly 200 people from the Redlands Unified School District were at the rally.

They were joined by hundreds of others from several school districts.

"It was the right message, but we've got a long way to go," Laabs said, commenting on the remarks made to the demonstrators by O'Connell and others. "The governor is just starting to move in the right direction. Attendance was beyond expectation, and it made Redlands look really proud."

E-mail Staff Writer David James Heiss at dheiss@redlandsdailyfacts.com

Pope restates gay marriage ban after California vote | U.S. | Reuters

Pope restates gay marriage ban after California vote U.S. Reuters

I guess we need to pull the Roman Catholic's tax exempt status if they won't stop discriminating.

By Philip Pullella

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Pope Benedict, speaking a day after a California court ruled in favor of same-sex marriage, firmly restated on Friday the Roman Catholic Church's position that only unions between a man and a woman are moral.

Benedict made no mention of the California decision in his speech to family groups from throughout Europe, but stressed the Church's position several times.

"The union of love, based on matrimony between a man and a woman, which makes up the family, represents a good for all society that can not be substituted by, confused with, or compared to other types of unions," he said.

The pope also spoke of the inalienable rights of the traditional family, "founded on matrimony between a man and a woman, to be the natural cradle of human life".

On Thursday, the California Supreme Court overturned a ban on same-sex marriages in a major victory for gay rights advocates that will allow homosexual couples to marry in the most populous U.S. state.

Last year, Italy's powerful Catholic Church successfully campaigned against a law proposed by the previous centre-left government that would have given more rights to gay and unmarried couples.

The Roman Catholic Church teaches that homosexuality is not sinful but homosexual acts are, and is opposed to gays being allowed to adopt children.

The California court found laws limiting marriage to heterosexual couples are at odds with rights guaranteed by the state's constitution.

U.S. President George W. Bush, who is opposed to gay marriage, prayed "for the family" with the pope at the White House last month during the pontiff's visit there.

Last year, Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco, the head of the Italian Bishops Conference, made headlines with comments that critics said equated homosexuality with incest and pedophilia.

After he made the comments -- which Bagnasco said were misunderstood -- graffiti reading "Shame" and "Watch Out Bagnasco" appeared on the door of the cathedral in northern Genoa, where Bagnasco is archbishop.

The pope, who backed Bagnasco, will visit Genoa his weekend.

Opponents of gay marriage in the United States vowed to contest the ruling with a state-wide ballot measure for a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriages.

Sheriff Joe Arpaio uncovering illegals' fake IDs via business searches - Phoenix Business Journal:

Sheriff Joe Arpaio uncovering illegals' fake IDs via business searches - Phoenix Business Journal:

Phoenix Business Journal - by Mike Sunnucks Phoenix Business Journal

Jim Poulin/Phoenix Business Journal

Some illegal immigrants are using false identification to gain employment in Arizona.

Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio is ratcheting up investigations of businesses suspected of hiring illegal immigrants, including scouring work papers and employment files.

Officials said those business investigations are producing charges of document fraud and identity theft against illegal immigrants using fake identification, but have not yet led to any employer prosecutions under the 5-month-old Arizona Legal Workers Act.

It is easier to prove an undocumented worker is using falsified work papers than it is to prove his employer hired him knowing that, said Art Pederson, an immigration and employment attorney with the Phoenix law office of Mohr, Hackett, Pederson, Blakley & Randolph PC.

"It's a much straighter route to the conviction," he said.

Government Job Spotlight: Immigration Services Officer - A Day In The Life

Government Job Spotlight: Immigration Services Officer - A Day In The Life

Do your part - Become an Immigration Services Officer NOW!!!!

Become Part of the Controversy?

For centuries, the United States has been welcoming immigrants from around the world and encouraging each of them to fulfill their dreams and make a contribution to the social, economic and political fabric of our Nation.

With the current media frenzy on deportations, state and federal immigration legislation, and over 20 million undocumented and illegal immigrants residing in our country, immigration issues will continue to fuel political debate. There are a few ways to get involved and become part of the solution. You can hoot and holler at your television or elected official, join an advocacy group, write about the issue, run for public office, or, if you truly want to work the issue from the ground, you could become an Immigration Services officer.

Under the Department of Homeland Security, the U. S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) is now advertising hundreds of Immigration Services Officer positions nationwide at the GS-5/7/9 grade levels. Starting salaries range from $26,264 to $39,795, depending on the grade level and location.

Promotion potential and regular salary increases are also available.

What's expected of employees? New recruits will attend a 6-week BASIC training program in Dallas, Texas, a 1-week Practicum at the National Benefits Center in Lees Summit, Missouri, and a one week Practicum at either a District Office or Service Center. During the training and practicum, recruits will be provided with the skills needed to adjudicate applications and petitions for citizen status.

As an Immigration Officer, your primary responsibilities include:

Adjudicating cases and granting or denying applications and petitions for immigration benefits;
Independently researching, interpreting, and analyzing an extensive spectrum of sources;
Conducting security checks in accordance with all applicable USCIS/DHS laws and policies;
Interviewing applicants and petitioners to elicit statements, assessing applicant credibility, and analyzing information gained to identify facts and considerations; and Providing direct and continued assistance to US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) personnel and officials of other Federal agencies in identifying individuals who pose a threat to national/public security.

What are the qualifications? Applicants can qualify for the GS-5/7/9 grade levels based on education, experience, or a combination of both education and experience. All academic majors are acceptable for this position.

So if you believe you have what it takes to help make a significant impact on our Nation's future by securing our shores and helping qualified immigrants and refugees legally reside, work and build new lives in the United States, the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services is accepting applications through May 26, 2008.

If you are interested, act fast and apply through www.usajobs.com.

Border Patrol Agent arrested

KXAN.com - News, Weather, Sports - Austin, TX Briefs: HIV spit, border agent arrest

Whether legal or not - The Border Patrol Agent needed to be sent to Mexico and live.

A Texas border patrol agent could get 30 years in the slammer for human smuggling. Jesus Miguel Huizar, 28, is charged with conspiracy to commit alien smuggling and money laundering.

Two Mexican nationals were also in on it. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials said the border agent was letting illegal immigrants through a checkpoint for $500 a head and then arranged for their transportation.

Firefighters making progress on SoCal wildfire

Firefighters making progress on SoCal wildfire - USATODAY.com

It is going to be a LONNNGG fire season this year!!

MOUNT BALDY VILLAGE, Calif. (AP) — Firefighters face a second day of hot and dry weather as they work to contain a wildfire on towering Mount Baldy.

Highs in the area 45 miles northeast of downtown Los Angeles were expected to reach the upper 90s Friday.

The blaze on the flanks of the 10,064-foot mountain has scorched 420 acres of grass and brush and is 60% contained, the U.S. Forest Service said.

No injuries or building damage were reported.

The fire started Tuesday and was burning in steep, rocky canyonlands where the brush last burned more than three decades ago. The cause of the fire was under investigation

Detroit mayor tries to exempt text messages from public-records law

Detroit mayor tries to exempt text messages from public-records law - On Deadline - USATODAY.com

Yeah - lets make it non-disclosable AFTER you screwed up!


Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick has issued a new directive that seeks to protect information from "telephones, text messaging devices and pagers" from public disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act. But the Free Press says city officials and legal observers don't think the new policy will stand up in court.

"It's meaningless, except that it shows the monumental hubris that's at work here," says Herschel Fink, an attorney for the Free Press, a fellow Gannett newspaper.

Kilpatrick was charged with a range of criminal violations after the Free Press published excerpts from sexually-charged text messages that the Democrat sent to a top aide via his city-owned phone.

47% of UK males would give up sex for a 50″ HDTV

47% of UK males would give up sex for a 50″ HDTV IT Facts ZDNet.com

LONDON (Reuters) - Nearly half of British men surveyed would give up sex for six months in return for a 50-inch plasma TV, a survey -- perhaps unsurprisingly carried out for a firm selling televisions -- said on Friday.

Electrical retailer Comet surveyed 2,000 Britons, asking them what they would give up for a large television, one of the latest consumer "must-haves".

The firm found 47 percent of men would give up sex for half a year, compared to just over a third of women.

"It seems that size really does matter more for men than women," the firm said.

A quarter of people said they would give up smoking, with roughly the same proportion willing to give up chocolate.

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Baby subpoenaed for unpaid chiropractor bill - Yahoo! News

Baby subpoenaed for unpaid chiropractor bill - Yahoo! News

Way to go doctors office - Must never have looked at the AGE blank on the medical records.

HARRISONBURG, Va. - A Harrisonburg court has dismissed a case against a baby boy summoned to appear in court for an unpaid bill. Richard White said he was shocked when he got a subpoena in the mail requiring his 1-year-old son, Jacy, to appear in Rockingham County General District Court next Tuesday over a $391 chiropractor bill.

Neither of Jacy's parents was named in the lawsuit, which has been dismissed at the request of the plaintiff.

Shortly after his son's birth in April 2007, White says he took Jacy to the chiropractor. He suspects that when the family moved, the office updated records for everyone but Jacy.

White says his insurance didn't cover the $391 and only recently billed him — about the same time the residents of his former home forwarded the subpoena.

Builders' confidence falls again - May. 15, 2008

Builders' confidence falls again - May. 15, 2008

Builders: No signs of housing recovery

The latest survey of homebuilders' confidence shows that the market remains in rough shape and will remain in a funk six months from now.

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Homebuilders' confidence fell once again in May and their view of the state of the battered market hit a record low.

The National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo monthly index fell to its second lowest reading on record, ahead of only last December's reading.

Builders were asked for their view of the current market, the amount of the buyers looking at homes and expectations for six months from now.

Only 6% of the builders surveyed believe the current market is good while 69% view it as poor. Builders also reported a lower level of people looking to buy new homes.

And 51% of the builders said they now expect conditions to remain poor six months from now, up from 47% who were expecting a poor outlook in the previous reading.

"The message is very clear: The single-family housing market is still deteriorating and Congress and the Administration must move immediately to enact legislation that will help reverse the trend," said NAHB President Sandy Dunn, a homebuilder from Point Pleasant, W.Va.

The group is backing a proposed homebuyer tax credit of up to $7,500 for qualified buyers as a way to try to jump start the market.

The report comes a day ahead of the government's latest report on housing starts and building permits.

Economists surveyed by Briefing.com forecast that starts fell to an annual rate of 940,000 April, which would mark a 17-year low. Permits, also viewed as a reading on builder's confidence in the market, are forecast to slip to 912,000, which would also be a 17-year low.

Earlier this week, luxury homebuilder Toll Brothers (TOL, Fortune 500) reported sharp drops in both revenue and new orders when it released preliminary results, saying that even many buyers who put down a deposit aren't taking the next step of signing a contract due to lack of confidence in the market.

No charges filed in West Bloomfield pot-laced brownie case

No charges filed in West Bloomfield pot-laced brownie case Freep.com Detroit Free Press

By Kelly Kozlowski • Free Press staff writer • May 15, 2008

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No charges have been filed against a West Bloomfield High School student suspected of bringing marijuana-laced brownies on a field trip Wednesday to Cedar Point in Sandusky, Ohio. The brownies were distributed to at least one classmate during the trip.

“We conducted an investigation yesterday,” said Robin Innes, director of public relations for Cedar Point.

“No criminal charges were filed.” Innes said authorities had not identified the number of students who had eaten the brownies."What we've learned and determined is that the incident occurred en route to the destination, so it's out of our jurisdiction," Innes said.

According to West Bloomfield Township Executive Lt. Carl Fuhs, a school liaison within the police department was notified when it happened, but “this is not involving the West Bloomfield Township police at this time… and we have absolutely no case pending.”

The classmate who ate a brownie became ill and had to be treated by medical staff at the park, leading the high school's principal, Bob Pyles, to cut the field trip short.The suspected student was questioned but offered little cooperation, according to reports.

Upon return to their high school, the group of more than 200 juniors and seniors were given a note from Pyles that read, in part: “For the safety and well-being of all students on the trip, the trip was cut short and all students were brought back to West Bloomfield High School. At this time, the matter is under investigation, and action will be taken against the responsible parties."

Representatives from the West Bloomfield School District, as well as those from WBHS, were unavailable for comment.

Comments for No charges filed in West Bloomfield pot-laced brownie case

knowsbest wrote:
Pot-Brownies!? I guess our LAWS have made alcohol too difficult for teens to obtain. Perhaps we should try the same regulation sytem with (currently) illegal drugs? the alternate hasn't worked very well. Legalization/regulation/education/taxation.End the senseless useless wasteful War on drugs -Protect our kids- enjoy safer communities.

Jebby wrote:
pot laced brownies? that's so 3rd grade! "pot brownies" are the new "superhero underoos" in terms of high school coolness.by high school it's crystal meth or nothing at all!

ceecee59 wrote:
A law was definitely violated , yet it seems there is a problem here with jurisdiction.

buitenverwacht wrote:
Though there is pertinent information missing, I wonder if the student in question has parents with "influence".

rightisright wrote:
The law is the law. Lock this drug pusher up. Look what he tried to do to our kids! If you don't lock him up, you'll be sending the wrong message to all the illegal brownie bakers.

Perdue signs law allowing guns in restaurants | ajc.com

Perdue signs law allowing guns in restaurants | ajc.com

Concealed weapons now allowed in parks, on public transportation


The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 05/14/08

Georgians with carry licenses can tote their concealed guns on public transportation, in restaurants that serve alcohol and in state parks under legislation signed by Gov. Sonny Perdue Wednesday.

Perdue inked the controversial gun bill on the final day for him to sign or veto legislation. He also signed a $21 billion state budget that will give 200,000 teachers and state employees 2.5 percent pay raises, and approved a bill allowing auto insurers to raise rates on some coverage without state approval.

The governor vetoed 17 bills, including a measure that would require the police to impound the cars of some people caught driving without a license. The measure was aimed at illegal immigrants.

As he did last year, Perdue vetoed some spending projects dear to the hearts of House leaders, including $4.5 million for airport improvements in the districts of Speaker Glenn Richardson (R-Hiram) and Majority Leader Jerry Keen (R-St. Simons Island). His spending cuts last year added fuel to an already fiery relationship with House members. Richardson was not available for comment after the vetoes.

The gun bill was among the hottest and most heavily lobbied measures of the 2008 session. Perdue, who was endorsed by the National Rifle Association when he ran for re-election in 2006, said last week he expected the issue to wind up in court.

On Wednesday the governor did not release an explanatory statement, and he was unavailable for comment.

For two years, the bill prompted a collision of Republican constituencies, as lawmakers debated the rights of gun owners and the ability of landowners to control their property.

The General Assembly passed House Bill 89 in the final hours of the 2008 session. Until then, most of the debate on the measure had concerned a provision to permit employees to keep guns in vehicles parked on corporate parking lots.

Business interests, who had opposed the bill, say the legislation's language has been watered down to the point that the parking lots issue is no longer a concern.

But when HB 89 made its final appearance before both the House and Senate, language was added that expanded the list of public places where holders of concealed weapons permits could take their guns.

With Perdue's signature, restaurant patrons will be permitted to carry a firearm, but would be barred from drinking while doing so. Violations would be a misdemeanor. Concealed weapons will now be allowed in state and local parks. Guns in purses or under jackets will also be allowed on public transportation.

Supporters of the bill included the NRA and GeorgiaCarry.org, which argued that holders of concealed weapons permits — who submit to fingerprinting and a criminal background check — pose no danger and may protect the public.

"By signing this legislation, Gov. Perdue has expanded the rights of law-abiding Georgians who lawfully arm themselves to protect themselves and their loved ones," said Ed Stone, president of GeorgiaCarry.org.

Ron Wolf, head of the Georgia Restaurant Association, said he was disappointed by Perdue's decision, but had expected it.

"Knowing his position[s] ..., his earlier statements, I didn't really believe he'd veto it," Wolf said.

He said the law, which goes into effect July 1, creates uncertainty for restaurant owners.

"Certainly restaurants are not going to train their service personnel when they go to a table to take an order to ask if anyone is [armed]."

The state budget Perdue approved for fiscal 2009, which begins July 1, includes about $1 billion in construction projects, mostly for K-12 schools and state colleges.

Despite a troubled economy and slowing tax collections, budget writers included $6 million in hometown grants and tens of millions of dollars more in local construction projects.

House and Senate budget writers, however, cut $13.3 million Perdue recommended to buy buses to expand express, commuter bus service in metro Atlanta.

Perdue vetoed fewer projects than last year, but got in a few licks on projects lawmakers added to the budget.

He nixed $8 million for a charter school in Cobb County. He cut $3 million for the National Infantry Museum, a project backed by House Transportation Chairman Vance Smith (R-Pine Mountain).

Perdue vetoed $4 million for a flight building at the Paulding County Regional Airport in memory of three of Richardson's friends who died in a February plane crash. He also cut $500,000 for airport improvements in Glynn County, Keen's home.

The insurance bill Perdue signed, Senate Bill 276, has been a top priority of insurers for several years. It allows companies to begin charging new rates on non-mandatory auto coverage without getting Insurance Commissioner John Oxendine's OK.

In opposition, Oxendine noted that Georgia had a similar law in the 1980s that led to skyrocketing insurance rates. However, insurers and the consumer group Georgia Watch argued that there is enough competition in today's market to keep companies from inflating rates.

"Policy-makers will be watching to make sure that the freedoms provided in this legislation will not be abused," Perdue said.

The governor also signed House Bill 1133, which allows Georgia residents and businesses to get tax credits when they give money to scholarship organizations that award grants to students to attend private schools.

The bill caps the tax credits at $50 million. It was seen by some education officials as the latest in a long line of attempts by Republican lawmakers to promote private schools. Supporters saw it as a way to help children escape failing public schools.

Among the veto victims was House Bill 1027, which would have allowed some traffic offenders to take court-ordered defensive driving courses online instead of in a classroom. Opponents said the bill would be open to fraud by offenders, whose identities could not be verified through an Internet-based system and who might persuade others to take the tests for them.

He also vetoed a measure allowing sales tax refunds for some tourism attractions, and another providing new tax credits for solar energy companies establishing or expanding a headquarters in Georgia.

Perdue said the solar energy bill would have only benefited one company, which would have saved more than $4 million.

Perdue said he vetoed the car impoundment bill because he believes such action should be left up to the discretion of the officer on the scene. He also said he worried it would affect new residents of the state.

Staff writers Jim Galloway, Aaron Gould Sheinin and Ben Smith contributed to this article.

Ohio lawmakers approve payday lending cap - Business Courier of Cincinnati:

Ohio lawmakers approve payday lending cap - Business Courier of Cincinnati:

Wow - 391% interest - That was going to be my next business venture!!!!

In a move that could gut Ohio's payday lending industry, the Ohio Senate on Wednesday approved a bill that caps the annual rate for payday loans at 28 percent. The Ohio House voted in favor of the measure, HB 545, two weeks ago.

The move will drastically reduce the amount of interest payday lenders can charge in Ohio; under current law, they can charge up to 391 percent.

The Community Financial Services Association of America, a payday lending trade group, said in a news release that the cap would drive the industry out of the state.

"Operating under HB 545 is not feasible," said D. Lynn DeVault, president of the Washington, D.C.-based association. "Our member companies say they expect stores to close and jobs to be lost."

One of the companies most seriously affected would be Check 'n Go, headquartered in Mason. The chain, owned by CNG Financial, operates 1,350 stores in 30 states, including 21 in the Tri-State.

The Senate is asking lenders to create a new business model that would allow for small-denomination, short-term loans in the state, DeVault said, adding that companies were "not hopeful" that could be accomplished.

Teen who lost feet on Ky. ride speaks out - USATODAY.com

Teen who lost feet on Ky. ride speaks out - USATODAY.com:

Kaitlyn Lassiter, 14, told lawmakers in Washington on Thursday that she lives in fear since cables from an amusement park ride in Kentucky sheared off her feet last June. Here, Lassiter is flanked by her parents as she walks to a news conference.
By Stephen Boitano, Gannett News Service
Kaitlyn Lassiter, 14, told lawmakers in Washington on Thursday that she lives in fear since cables from an amusement park ride in Kentucky sheared off her feet last June. Here, Lassiter is flanked by her parents as she walks to a news conference.


LOUISVILLE (AP) — A 14-year-old Louisville girl whose feet were severed by an amusement park ride last summer says the accident has changed her life forever.

Cables on the Superman Tower of Power ride at Six Flags Kentucky Kingdom snapped on June 21, shearing off Kaitlyn Lasitter's feet.

The teen says that she isn't the person she was before. She says she's afraid now, and fears for her life when she gets in a car or elevator.

Lasitter spoke in Washington, D.C. Wednesday in support of a bill sponsored by Congressman Edward Markey of Massachusetts to give federal safety regulators powers over amusement parks.

Lasitter's family is suing the park, claiming it failed to maintain the ride and ensure riders' safety. Six Flags has denied liability.