Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Today on New Scientist: 31 January 2012

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Fossil DNA has clues to surviving rapid climate change

In the last ice age, organisms adapted fast or died. The stunning find of epigenetic changes to DNA frozen in permafrost may help explain their trick

Lazy photon among the missing in exotic LHC roll call

String balls, leptoquarks and lazy photons have yet to put in an appearance at the LHC, the world's largest particle smasher

Herd of ivory elephants reveals illicit trade in Egypt

Ranks of ivory elephants in a Cairo shop show how the illegal tusk trade remains strong despite a 20-year ban

Look ma, no wings: Secret of great tit flight revealed

Watch a slow-mo movie that shows a bird folding its wings to take a turn

Self-portraits of a declining brain

An exhibition of artist William Utermohlen's works reveal how his art was influenced by his Alzheimer's disease

Pythons hunt Florida mammals to brink of extinction

In just 10 years, discarded and escaped pet pythons have almost wiped out many Everglades mammals, including bobcats and opossums

Virtual tailor's dummy makes designing clothes easy

Augmented reality could help make dressmaking far simpler by letting designers work with a virtual dummy first

Unite to fight bird flu

Now we know the true scale of the threat from H5N1 avian flu we should put the people who know how to stop it in charge, says Debora MacKenzie

Why you think your team is the best

You can't help being biased towards your favourite team since your brain perceives the actions of your own team as better than the those of a rival team

First recording of deep-water fish chat

Grunts, quacks and knocks may help fish communicate in an environment so murky that they cannot easily see their neighbours

Sex life of worm hides a protein with links to ALS

A protein that helps worm sperm to fertilise an egg may be related to a human protein that plays a role in inherited forms of ALS

Fish oil in pregnancy reduces infant eczema

Women with a family history of eczema may be able to avoid giving the condition to their children by taking fish oil during pregnancy

Capturing the heart of the disappearing Arctic

Photographer Ragnar Axelsson captures an austere waning world beautifully in his exhibition Last Days of the Arctic

AR goggles make crime scene investigation a desk job

Investigators could soon probe a crime scene for clues remotely, and help officers on site by interacting through an augmented reality system

Light test for laser-guided bullet

Bad aim? US government engineers have invented laser-guided bullets that could ensure you never miss a shot

Source: http://feeds.newscientist.com/c/749/f/492992/s/1c4c1918/l/0L0Snewscientist0N0Cblogs0Cshortsharpscience0C20A120C0A10Ctoday0Eon0Enew0Escientist0E310Ejanu0E10Bhtml/story01.htm

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Saturday, January 28, 2012

Chevron 4Q profit falls 3 pct on refinery decline (AP)

NEW YORK ? Chevron Corp. said Friday that net income slipped 3.2 percent in the fourth quarter as its refineries struggled to pass on the higher cost of crude oil.

The San Ramon, Calif. oil giant on Friday reported net income of $5.12 billion, or $2.58 per share, in the final three months of 2011. That compares with $5.3 billion, or $2.64 per share, in the same part of 2010. Revenue increased 11.9 percent to $60 billion.

The net income fell short of Wall Street forecasts of $2.86 per share, according to FactSet. Shares dropped $2.04, or 1.9 percent, to $104.55 in premarket trading.

Chevron, the second-largest U.S. oil company behind Exxon Mobil Corp., said that oil and natural gas production declined in the quarter. Profits from its exploration and production business increased anyway, as the company sold oil at higher prices. International natural gas prices also rose in the quarter.

The refining business struggled, however, as falling prices for retail gasoline and other fuels made it harder to pass along higher oil costs to customers. Chevron's U.S. refining operations lost $204 million from October to December, compared with a profit a year-earlier, while international refining profits fell by 46.4 percent.

For the full year, Chevron earned $26.9 billion, or $13.44 per share, compared with $19 billion, or $9.48 per share in 2010. Annual revenue increased 23.3 percent to $253.7 billion.

Exxon will release its fourth-quarter financial results on Tuesday.

Earlier in the week, ConocoPhillips reported a 66 percent increase in quarterly earnings, though much of that came from the sale of a pipeline and other assets. Occidental Petroleum Corp. reported a 35 percent jump in quarterly profits as it increased production and sold crude oil for higher prices.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/earnings/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120127/ap_on_bi_ge/us_earns_chevron

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Mujjo Conductive Gloves Let You Slide To Unlock With Your Begloved Knuckle

Screen Shot 2012-01-27 at 11.31.12 AMWe get a lot of PR pitches ("Write about our social media network for fish lovers! If you don't, we'll take our exclusive to TetraLover.blogspot.com," "We'll give you a private jet if you write good things about Apple - Sincerely, Tim Cook," "Take a look at these iPhone gloves!") and there are few I've dreaded more than writing about the aforementioned iPhone gloves mostly because the founders kept emailing me about these damned gloves. These things come from a Dutch company called Mujjo and they purport to allow you to interact with your iPhone with any part of your hand, including your wrist, knuckle, and palm. The founders must have used them to punch out emails on the icy Hague metro every day of the past month because they were pretty darn persistent. The question when dealing with these sorts of pitches, really, is two-fold: a) does the product advertised work? and b) will I write about the product after being literally hounded for three weeks by these guys? In answer to both, I would respond with a resounding (literally) "Yes." They work and yeah, what the heck, Mujjo, people like gloves, right? Also a post will get Mujjo to stop emailing me.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/QIWOwoKUegM/

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Thursday, January 26, 2012

Apple Employee Meeting Reveals More Corporate Kindness From Tim Cook

With an employee headcount in excess of 45,000, Apple’s ability to manage news concerning its internal machinations sets a benchmark for corporate information control. It’s all described in fascinating detail in recent reporting from Fortune’s Adam Lashinsky. Yesterday, however, CEO Tim Cook held an all-hands meeting for the work force, and a little bit of [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/GearFactor/~3/wV5CNwna2kE/

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Libyan defense minister seeks deal in seized town

FILE, in this Sept. 18, 2011 file photo, Former rebel fighters put a pre-Gadhafi flag at the northern gate of Bani Walid, as smokes raise from the town, Libya. Moammar Gadhafi loyalists seized control of a Libyan city and raised the ousted regime's green flag, an official and military commanders said Tuesday Jan 24 2011, in the most serious revolt yet against the country's government. (AP Photo/Alexandre Meneghini, File)

FILE, in this Sept. 18, 2011 file photo, Former rebel fighters put a pre-Gadhafi flag at the northern gate of Bani Walid, as smokes raise from the town, Libya. Moammar Gadhafi loyalists seized control of a Libyan city and raised the ousted regime's green flag, an official and military commanders said Tuesday Jan 24 2011, in the most serious revolt yet against the country's government. (AP Photo/Alexandre Meneghini, File)

FILE - In this Sept. 18, 2011 file photo, former rebel fighters celebrate as smoke rises from Bani Walid, Libya, at the northern gate of the town. Moammar Gadhafi loyalists seized control of a Libyan city and raised the ousted regime's green flag, an official and military commanders said Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012, in the most serious revolt yet against the country's government. (AP Photo/Alexandre Meneghini, File)

(AP) ? The Libyan defense minister held talks Wednesday with tribal leaders in a town overrun by locals loyal to former leader Moammar Gadhafi, an official said.

The recapture this week of Bani Walid, 90 miles (140 kilometers) southeast of Tripoli, was the first such organized operation by armed remnants of Gadhafi's regime.

But there were no immediate signs that the operation was part of some wider attempt to restore the family of Gadhafi, who was swept out of power in August and killed in the nearby city of Sirte in October. His sons, daughter and wife have been killed, arrested or have fled to neighboring countries.

Rather, the fighting seemed to reflect a rejection of Libya's new Western-backed authorities by a town that never quite accepted the revolutionaries' rule,

It also highlighted the still unresolved tensions between those who benefited under Gadhafi's regime and those now in power ? tensions that are tightly wound up with Libya's tribal and regional rivalries.

Bani Walid government representative Mubarak al-Fatmani said Wednesday that Defense Minister Osama al-Juwali was "seeking a solution" to the clashes between Gadhafi loyalists and forces of the new regime.

Bani Walid was one of the last Gadhafi strongholds captured by the new leadership late last year.

On Wednesday, brigades loyal to the ruling National Transitional Council held positions and checkpoints outside Bani Walid as al-Juwali held the talks with the tribesmen inside the town.

Before the town's takeover, a simultaneous outbreak of shootings in the capital and Libya's second largest city, Benghazi, raised authorities' concerns that other networks of loyalists could stage operations elsewhere.

The security woes add to the difficulties of the NTC, which is struggling to establish its authority and show Libyans progress in stability and good government.

The Bani Walid fighting erupted on Monday, when hundreds of well-equipped and highly trained remnants of Gadhafi's forces battled for eight hours with the local pro-NTC revolutionary brigade, known as the May 28 Brigade, said al-Fatmani, the town representative. The brigade was driven out and Gadhafi loyalists then raised their old green flag over buildings in the western city.

Four revolutionary fighters were killed and 25 others were wounded, al-Fatmani said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-01-25-ML-Libya/id-2d7f6e30b2384c618b82ab69b2eaa65c

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Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Cynthia Nixon Labels Her Homosexuality a "Choice"


Cynthia Nixon finds herself in a bit of trouble within the gay community.

The actress - best known for her role as Miranda on Sex and the City, and in a committed relationship with Christine Marinoni - is profiled this week in The New York Times and tells the newspaper:

“I gave a speech recently, an empowerment speech to a gay audience, and it included the line ‘I’ve been straight and I’ve been gay, and gay is better.’ And they tried to get me to change it, because they said it implies that homosexuality can be a choice. And for me, it is a choice."

Cynthia Nixon Bald

Cynthia Nixon has shaved her head for a role in a Broadway play. But that's not why the actress is making headlines.

Nixon made these comments around the same time Washington became the seventh state to legalize gay marriage, and she doesn't see her viewpoint as contrasting with the stance of many activists.

“A certain section of our community is very concerned that it not be seen as a choice, because if it’s a choice, then we could opt out," the actress says. "I say it doesn’t matter if we flew here or we swam here, it matters that we are here and we are one group and let us stop trying to make a litmus test for who is considered gay and who is not.

"I am very annoyed about this issue. Why can’t it be a choice? Why is that any less legitimate? It seems we’re just ceding this point to bigots who are demanding it, and I don’t think that they should define the terms of the debate."

What do you think of Nixon's comments?

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/01/cynthia-nixon-labels-her-homosexuality-as-a-choice/

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France passes genocide law, faces Turkish reprisals (Reuters)

PARIS (Reuters) ? France approved on Monday a bill making it illegal to deny that the mass killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks nearly a century ago was genocide, raising the prospect of a major diplomatic rift between two NATO allies.

Lawmakers in the upper house (Senate) voted 127 to 86 in favor of the draft law outlawing genocide denial after almost six hours of debate. The lower house had backed it in December, prompting Ankara to cancel all economic, political and military meetings with Paris and recall its ambassador for consultations.

The bill had been made more general so that it outlawed the denial of any genocide, partly in the hope of appeasing the Turks. It now goes to President Nicolas Sarkozy to be ratified.

"This day will be written in gold not only in the history of friendship between the Armenian and French peoples, but also in the annals of the history of the protection of human rights," said Armenia's Minister of Foreign Affairs, Edward Nalbandian.

Turkey's ambassador to France Tahsin Burcuoglu told reporters he was "saddened" by the vote and warned there would be permanent measures taken against France.

Armenia, backed by many historians and parliaments, says about 1.5 million Christian Armenians were killed in what is now eastern Turkey during World War One in a deliberate policy of genocide ordered by the Ottoman government.

The Ottoman empire was dissolved after the end of the war, but successive Turkish governments and the vast majority of Turks feel the charge of genocide is a direct insult to their nation. Ankara argues there was heavy loss of life on both sides during fighting in the area.

Earlier, Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc told reporters at the Council of Europe in Strasbourg that Ankara would take new and permanent measures unless the bill was rejected and compared it to the Inquisition in the Middle Ages which was created by the Catholic Church to stamp out heresy.

"If the law is voted (through), it will hurt French and Turkish relations." Arinc said Turkey could take the matter to the European Court of Human Rights.

Turkey says the bill is a bid by Sarkozy to win the votes of 500,000 ethnic Armenians in France in the two-round presidential vote on April 22 and May 6.

It mandates a maximum 45,000-euro ($58,000) fine and a year in jail for offenders. France passed a law recognizing the killing of Armenians as genocide in 2001.

WAVING VOTING CARDS

About 200 Franco-Turks protested outside the Senate. They waved their French voting cards and banners with slogans including: "It's not up to politicians to invent history."

The Socialist Party, which has a majority in the upper house, and Sarkozy's UMP party, which put forward the bill, backed the legislation.

A non-binding Senate recommendation last week said the law would be unconstitutional and, after weeks of aggressive Turkish lobbying, there were suggestions the outcome would be closer.

Opponents in the Senate said the law would not encourage the Turks to recognize the Armenian genocide and would do nothing to help relations between the two nations.

"It is an unbearable law which calls into question historical research," said centre-left senator Jacques Mezard.

Sarkozy is expected to ratify the bill before parliament is suspended in February ahead of the presidential election.

It could still be rejected if some 60 lawmakers agree to appeal the decision at the country's highest court and that body considers the text unconstitutional. The Constitutional Council would have one month to make its decision.

Sarkozy wrote to Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan last week saying the bill did not single out any country and that Paris was aware of the "suffering endured by the Turkish people" during the final years of the Ottoman empire.

French foreign ministry spokesman Bernard Valero called on Turkey not to overreact and said Paris considered Ankara a "very important ally."

Engin Solakoglu, first secretary at the Turkish embassy in Paris, said: "France can't continue to say that Turkey is an important ally when it votes laws against it."

European Union candidate Turkey could not impose economic sanctions on France, given its World Trade Organisation membership and customs union accord with Europe.

But the row could cost France state-to-state contracts and would create diplomatic tension as Turkey takes an increasingly influential role in the Middle East.

(Additional reporting by Lucien Libert in Paris, Gilbert Reilhac in Strasbourg and Daren Butler in Istanbul; editing by Robert Woodward)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120123/wl_nm/us_france_turkey_genocide

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Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Republican Debate: GOP Candidates Face Off Ahead Of Florida Primary (LIVE UPDATES)

Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich tangled Monday night over whether the former House speaker engaged in "influence peddling," was a citizen publicly advocating for a certain position, or a "consultant" skirting lobbying disclosure rules.

Romney charged Gingrich with effectively lobbying on behalf of Freddie Mac, despite not having registered. Gingrich responded with a telling admission: That he hired lobbying disclosure experts study the regulations and advise him of what he could and couldn't do in order to legally avoid registering as a lobbyist. The reason he didn't want to register, he said, was to avoid being accused later of influence peddling.

"I think it's pretty clear to say that i have never, ever gone and done any lobbying. In fact, we brought in an expert on lobbying law and trained all of our staff -- and the expert is prepared to testify that he was brought in to say, here is the bright line between what you can do as a citizen and what you do as a lobbyist. For 12 years consistently running four small businesses, we stayed away from lobbying precisely because I thought this kind of defamatory and factually false charge would be made," said Gingrich.

Gingrich had previously claimed that Freddie Mac hired him as a "historian," but he may be the first historian in history to have hired a consultant to make sure his historical work didn't accidentally drift into the legal definition of lobbying.

The Gingrich campaign quickly blasted out a release calling the candidate a "small businessman," but few small businessmen would see the need to hire such a consultant, either.

The conversation quickly moved past Gingrich's admission, however.

"What's the gross revenue of Bain in the years you were associated with it? What's the gross revenue?" Gingrich asked Romney.

"Very substantial. But I think it's irrelevant compared with the fact you were working for Freddie Mac," he said.

"Wait a minute. Very substantial? Does Bain do any work with companies that did work ... with Medicare, Medicaid?" Gingrich challenged.

Romney categorically denied it. "We didn't do any work with the government. I didn't have an office on K Street. I wasn't a lobbyist. I've never worked in Washington. We have congressman who say you lobbied them," he said.

"I didn't lobby them," Gingrich said.

"We have congressmen who say you lobbied them with regard to Medicare Part D," Romney followed up.

"Whoa, whoa. You just jumped a long way over here, friend," Gingrich said, becoming agitated that the conversation moved from Freddie Mac to Medicare. Gingrich paused for an uncomfortably long time before delivering a stemwinder.

"Let me be very clear," he said, "because I understand your technique which you used on [John] McCain, you used on [Mike] Huckabee. You have used consistently. It's unfortunate and it's not going to work well because the American people see through it. I have always publicly favored a stronger Medicare program. I wrote a book in 2002 called 'Saving Lives and Saving Money.' I publicly favored Medicare Part D for a practical reason. That reason is simple. The U.S. government was not prepared to give people anything -- insulin, for example -- but they would pay for kidney dialysis. They weren't prepared to give Lipitor, but they would pay for open heart surgery. That is a terrible way to run Medicare. I'll say this in Florida. I'm proud that I publicly advocated Medicare Part D. It saved lives. It's run on a free enterprise model, includes health savings accounts and includes Medicare alternatives which gave people choices. And I did it publically and it is not correct, Mitt. I'm saying it flatly because you have been walking around this state saying things that are untrue. It is not correct to describe public citizenship having public advocacy as lobbying. Every citizen has the right to do it."

-- Ryan Grim

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/23/republican-debate-gop-debate_n_1224273.html

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Comet's fiery plunge may tell us how planets form

For the first time, scientists have caught a glimpse of a comet's final minutes before it was vaporized by the sun.?The comet was flying at about 1.4 million miles an hour.

For the first time, scientists have caught a comet in the Icarus-like act of zipping too close to the sun ? and watched as it paid the ultimate price.

Skip to next paragraph

In catching a glimpse of the comet's final vaporization, researchers not only have been able to piece together a detailed picture of the comet itself ? something usually reserved for spacecraft fly-bys. They also may have a found a way to use similar comets as test dummies for making key measurements of the sun's atmosphere, or corona.

And by throwing the break-up process into reverse, they may be able to answer a nagging question tied to the formation of planets in the solar system some 4.5 billion years ago: How does the clumping process that gathers tiny dust grains into ever bigger lumps and finally to planet-size objects really work?

The comet observations, published in the Jan. 20 issue of the journal Science, "are pioneering a new form of cometary study," writes Carey Lisse, a researcher at the Johns Hopkins University's Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Md.

The comet, C/2011 N3, was discovered July 4, 2011, a scant two days before its demise, as researchers looked at data from the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) spacecraft, a joint NASA-European Space Agency project.

Sun-grazing comets, such as C/2011 N3, are nothing new to SOHO. It has observed more than 2,100 of them, according to NASA. It finds them with an instrument designed to mask the sun's disk so the instrument can observe the glowing corona.

But that's also a problem. Sun-grazers SOHO sees vanish behind this mask. And like Las Vegas, what goes on behind the mask stays behind the mask.

It took data from three craft ? SOHO, as well as NASA's STEREO and Solar Dynamics Observatory ? to piece together the full picture of C/2011 N3's final 20 minutes.

The C/2011 N3 belongs to a family known as Kreutz sungrazers ? a vast collection of comet fragments thought to have come from the break-up of a larger comet around 2,500 years ago. Scientists estimate that the parent object's nucleus was as large as 60 miles across. Comet Halley, which makes its closest approach to the sun every 75 years, has a nucleus roughly 7 miles across.

Based on its observations, the team, led by Lockheed Martin Corporation solar physicist Karel Schrijver, estimates that C/2011 N3 was hurtling toward the sun at about 1.4 million miles an hour ? fast enough to turn a three-day trip to the moon into a four-hour sprint. When it vanished, it had closed within 62,000 miles of the sun's surface.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/vVYBZ8PIa4U/Comet-s-fiery-plunge-may-tell-us-how-planets-form

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Monday, January 23, 2012

The TechFellow Awards: Nominate Innovators To Win $100K Angel Funds

2011 TechFellow AwardsThe TechFellow Awards is different. Rather than just recognizing outstanding innovators, each of its 20 winners receive $100,000 to invest in a startup of their choice. Its purpose? To fund the next generation of high-tech entrepreneurship. Today, Founders Fund, TechCrunch, and New Enterprise Associates (NEA) announce the opening of nominations for the third annual TechFellows Awards. From now until February 17th, visit the new TechFellows website and click "Nominate a TechFellow". There you can submit the name of a great leader, disruptive visionary, product genius, or engineering wizard who deserves a greater chance to shape the future.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/o8dgW9Shqzs/

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New Genetic Clues to Breast Cancer? (HealthDay)

SUNDAY, Jan. 22 (HealthDay News) -- Researchers have identified three new genomic regions they believe are linked with breast cancer that may help explain why some women develop the disease.

All three newly identified areas "contain interesting genes that open up new avenues for biological and clinical research," said researcher Douglas Easton, a professor of genetic epidemiology at the University of Cambridge in England.

Breast cancer is the most common cancer among women, with about 1 million new cases annually worldwide and more than 400,000 deaths a year.

Scientists conducting genome-wide association studies -- research that looks at the association between genetic factors and disease to pinpoint possible causes -- had already identified 22 breast cancer susceptibility loci. Locus is the physical location of a gene or DNA sequence on a chromosome.

"The three [newly identified] loci take the number of common susceptibility loci from 22 to 25," said Easton.

However, the three new susceptibility loci might explain only about 0.7 percent of the familial risks of breast cancer, bringing the total contribution to about 9 percent, the researchers said.

Michael Melner, scientific program director for the American Cancer Society, said this current research adds some important new clues to existing evidence, but he agreed that the number of cases likely associated with these three variants is probably low.

"So the total impact in terms of patients would be fairly small," Melner said.

The study is published online Jan. 22 in Nature Genetics.

To find the new clues, Easton's team worked with genetic information on about 57,000 breast cancer patients and 58,000 healthy women obtained from two genome-wide association studies.

The investigators zeroed in on 72 different single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). A SNP -- pronounced "snip" -- is a change in which a single base in the DNA differs from the usual base. The human genome has millions of SNPs, some linked with disease, while others are normal variations.

The researchers focused on three SNPs -- on chromosomes 12p11, 12q24 and 21q21.

Easton's team found that the variant on the 12p11 chromosome is linked with both estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer (which needs estrogen to grow) and estrogen receptor-negative breast cancer. The other two variants are only linked with ER-positive cancers, they said.

One of the newly identified variants is in an area with a gene that has a role in the development of mammary glands and bones. Easton said it was already known that mammary gland development in puberty is an important period in terms of determining later cancer risk. "But these are the first susceptibility genes to be shown to be involved in this process," he said.

One of the other SNPs is in an area that can affect estrogen receptor signaling, the researchers found.

Melner, noting some of the research is "fine tuning" of other work, said in his view the new understanding of the signaling pathways and their genetic links is the most important finding.

"When you delineate a pathway, you bring up new potential targets for therapy," he said. "The more targets you have, you open up the potential for having multiple drugs and attacking a cancer more easily, without it becoming more resistant."

Overall, Melner added, the results underscore the complexity of the different mechanisms involved in breast cancer development.

More information

For more about the genetics of breast cancer, visit the American Cancer Society.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/science/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20120122/hl_hsn/newgeneticcluestobreastcancer

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Sunday, January 22, 2012

Republican apologizes, says wasn't urging Obama's death (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? A Kansas Republican leader under fire for sending an email invoking a bible verse to suggest that Democratic President Barack Obama's "days be few in number" apologized on Thursday but said that he would not resign.

Critics said the email forwarded by Speaker of the State House Mike O'Neal, that was later published by the Lawrence Journal-World newspaper, called for Obama's death.

"The forward contained a single verse and was only intended as election commentary regarding the president's days in office. I have apologized, and I am sincerely sorry," O'Neal said in an email.

O'Neal's email sent to friends and colleagues cited part of Psalm 109:8 which in some interpretations reads: 'Let his days be few; and let another take his office.'

The following verse reads, "May his children be orphans and his wife a widow."

Two pastors delivered a petition signed by 30,000 people demanding that the speaker resign. O'Neal issued an apology, but his communications director said the speaker would not be resigning.

"He is using sacred scripture to flippantly suggest people should be praying for the death of the president," said Michael Sherrard, a spokesman for Faithful America, an online interfaith community based in Washington that organized the petition.

(Reporting By Lily Kuo; Editing by Eric Walsh)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120120/pl_nm/us_usa_campaign_obama_psalm

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Google Puts the Hammer Down on Three More Services [Google]

Good news everyone! Google announced today that the three of its web services will be getting the axe by mid-year. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/Z9LuAU3Ka1I/google-puts-the-hammer-down-on-three-more-services

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Power out, snowfall records smashed in Seattle (Reuters)

SEATTLE (Reuters) ? A historic snow and ice storm paralyzed Seattle on Thursday, shutting the airport and schools, causing car crashes, downing trees and cutting power to at least 90,000 households as blown-out transformers lit up the skies.

The National Weather Service declared an ice storm warning early on Thursday through noon local time for eight western Washington counties.

Record-setting daily snowfall of 6.8 inches was measured early Thursday at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, shattering the previous record of 2.9 inches in 1954, said meteorologist Dan DePodwin on Accuweather.com.

As a result of the storm which arrived on Tuesday evening and was nicknamed "Snowmageddon," the airport remained closed with its three runways and ramps coated with ice.

"We're still not seeing departures at this point," airport spokesman Perry Cooper said.

The airport was stocked up on de-icing supplies, but "the best we can hope for is a warming situation," he said.

Streets were also a mess as frigid temperatures and freezing rain in the Tacoma area, 35 miles south of Seattle, coated roads with ice and played havoc with traffic.

In the greater Seattle area, downed trees blocked lanes on at least three state highways, Washington State Patrol spokeswoman Julie Startup told Reuters at 6:30 a.m. local time. She said there were many collisions on the icy roads.

Power outages kept residents in the dark but blown-out transformers put on a spectacular show.

"Skies just keep lighting up," Startup said.

Charles Tomala, spokesman at the Washington Emergency Operations Center, said that 24,000 residents in the Tacoma area were without power at 7 a.m. local time on Thursday.

An additional 70,000 people in southern King County, Thurston and Pierce counties were without power at 7:15 a.m. local time, Puget Sound Energy spokesman Roger Thompson said.

"Ice is really the big issue right now," Thompson said.

Puget Sound Energy warned that power outages in some areas may not be restored until Saturday.

Mark Clemens, a spokesman with the state's Emergency Operations Center, said Governor Christine Gregoire issued an unannounced "proclamation of emergency" late on Wednesday that would officially extend the hours that truck drivers could legally transport milk and other dairy products throughout the state.

Gregoire spokeswoman Karina Shagren, however, said she was unable to confirm that Gregoire had signed the proclamation.

(Writing By Barbara Goldberg; editing by Paul Thomasch)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/weather/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120119/us_nm/us_weather

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Saturday, January 21, 2012

Burt Rutan on Designing the World’s Largest Aircraft

In 1991, to address a requirement to launch a booster heavier than 500,000 pounds, I did the Model 205 and 206 preliminary designs. These configurations used engines, landing gear, and other systems from the Boeing 747. Later, to address other requirements, I did preliminary designs for other large aircraft, some that had rocket systems so that the space booster could be released in a steep, rocket-propelled climb.

However, the configuration revealed in December to meet the Paul Allen Stratolaunch requirement is not my design. About 10 years ago, to encourage innovation and design responsibility among the young engineers at Scaled, I took on the status of design advisor, while the title of Principal Configuration Designer went to a very talented team of designers, including Jim Tighe, Cory Bird, Bob Morgan and others. Except for the Bipod roadable aircraft, all the airplanes designed at Scaled after SpaceShipOne were not Burt Rutan designs.

About five to six years ago, Scaled hired many new engineers, most of them right out of college. This group of engineers includes several very talented configuration designers who will be the Principal Designers of the future Scaled aerospace platforms.

Source: http://www.popularmechanics.com/science/space/news/burt-rutan-on-designing-the-worlds-largest-airplane?src=rss

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Romney tries to sidestep tax furor he ignited (The Arizona Republic)

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Thursday, January 5, 2012

Sanwa pico projector also charges your iPhone

Apple's been making inroads with enterprise users for some time, and now Sanwa's giving the iPhone some serious presentation chops with its new pico projector. The 400-PRJ011 is compatible with both the iPhone 4 and the 4S, powered by its own 2,100mAh battery and also charges your iPhone's battery whenever you turn the projector function off. It's got a five hour charge time, can provides 2.5 hours of steady projection and throws images on the wall up to 65-inches in size at 640 × 360 resolution and a 1,000:1 contrast ratio. A global release date has yet to be announced, but our Japanese friends can pick one up for ¥19,800 ($260).

Sanwa pico projector also charges your iPhone originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 04 Jan 2012 01:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/01/04/sanwa-pico-projector-also-charges-your-iphone/

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Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Surging in Iowa, Santorum Revels in Newfound Attention (Time.com)

Scott Olson / Getty Images

Scott Olson / Getty Images

Rick Santorum eaves a town hall meeting on December 30, 2011, in Marshalltown, Iowa.

Ames, Iowa

Winning over Iowa?s fickle voters is hard enough without spoiling their fun. On Friday afternoon, Rick Santorum pulled into a Buffalo Wild Wings sports bar here to perform the ritualistic, shared-identity pander of rooting for a local sports team with which the candidate has only a passing familiarity. The problem was that Santorum?s visit to Ames, home to Iowa State University, coincided with the biggest football game of the year. By the time the Cyclones and the Rutgers Scarlet Knights kicked off at the New Era Pinstripe Bowl, the bar was mobbed with a jumble of reporters, who hovered around the six round tables reserved for the surging candidate, clogging the aisles and blocking patrons? views of the myriad flat-screen TVs with errant boom mikes. ?Watch out here, we?ve got a game going on!? bellowed one understandably aggrieved fan.

Matters deteriorated further when the candidate arrived early in the second quarter, trailed by a scrum of cameras, and proceeded to hold a media availability under the klieg-lights before meeting voters, not looking up when cheers reverberated through the bar after Iowa State broke a long run or for the collective groan when it was called back. Santorum, whose lonely barnstorm of the state often yielded tiny crowds and derision from the media, reveled in the flood of attention that has accompanied his rise in the polls. ?This is what I counted on and hoped for,? Santorum says. ?And here it is.?

And yet, the throng of reporters dwarfed the number of actual supporters by perhaps 10 to 1. Santorum?s aides had requested 30 seats for supporters, but by the time Santorum wended his way through the cameras to sit with them only about a half-dozen had assembled; the rest of the crowd stayed transfixed by the game. He plopped down and shook hands Kittie Peacock, a store manager and Santorum precinct captain from Des Moines, and Peacock?s son. The small talk had barely begun ? ?I?m in Ames, I?m rooting for the Cyclones, absolutely!? ? when the media intruded again. Santorum feigned chagrin for the commotion. ?I?m a little bit surprised at the scale of turnout,? he said. ?I apologize, I apologize to everybody here!? But he didn?t seem particularly sorry.

Nor did Kittie Peacock, who seemed bemused but excited by the camers. ?There was never this much press before,? she says, ?but caucuses work this way. The one who has laid the groundwork surges at the end.? Dean Fisher, a farmer and Santorum supporter who is running for the Iowa House in 2012, recalled seeing the candidate for the first time three months ago in nearby Toledo, at an event where less than 10 people showed up. ?Slow and steady, I guess,? says Fisher, who said he still did not expect Santorum to capture the caucuses.

For Santorum, the surge is a validation of his dogged, textbook strategy of vacuuming up votes from rural hamlets and enclaves ? a tactic that, in a year dominated by debates, sometimes seemed akin to trying to win the Super Bowl running the single-wing offense. ?We?ve been out here for a long time working very hard,? says Santorum, who said he would continue on to New Hampshire and South Carolina and was hoping for a ?top three or four? finish.

That the former Pennsylvania Senator has a shot to land even higher would be a fitting capstone to a tumultuous race. ?A week ago he was in last,? shrugged Matthew Beynon, the campaign?s deputy communications director.

Santorum?s climb from low single-digits to the mid-teens has, of course, lured detractors. Outside the event, James Schafer, a 23-year-old recent Iowa State graduate, was tucking lime-green flyers declaring Santorum a ?pro-life fraud? on the windshields of parked cars. ?I?m probably pissing off a lot of people, but I think it?s important,? he says. Asked if he planned to disseminate the flyers outside Santorum?s events all weekend, he shrugged. ?I?m pretty bored. I got nothing else going on. Might as well.?

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/time_rss/rss_time_us/httpswamplandtimecom20111231surginginiowasantorumrevelsinnewfoundattentioniidslmainledexidrssnationyahoo/44056516/SIG=143a06hj1/*http%3A//swampland.time.com/2011/12/31/surging-in-iowa-santorum-revels-in-newfound-attention/?iid=sl-main-lede?xid=rss-nation-yahoo

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Something new coming to morning television (AP)

NEW YORK ? Within the first minute of the "CBS This Morning" launch next week, producer Chris Licht promises, viewers will see something completely new to morning television.

He's keeping the details a surprise, other than to say it will be a quick and entertaining way to catch up with the world. Done well each day, Licht hopes it can become a calling card.

The new year looks to be pivotal for network morning shows. CBS and ABC's "Good Morning America" are positioning themselves as distinct alternatives to the longtime king, NBC's "Today" show, which faces uncertainty over anchor Matt Lauer's future.

CBS is scrapping "The Early Show" on Jan. 9 in favor of a new broadcast anchored by Charlie Rose, Erica Hill and Gayle King and said it wants to be more substantive. "Good Morning America" is the fastest-growing program, emphasizing a breezy approach behind James Goldston, the producer who made "Nightline" a success in recent years.

"Good Morning America" was the last competitor to seriously challenge "Today," which hasn't lost a single week in the ratings since 1995. "Today" averaged 5.42 million viewers for its first two hours in 2011, up 1 percent from the year before, the Nielsen ratings company said. The "GMA" average of 4.85 million viewers was up 10 percent over 2010, while CBS' "The Early Show" was down 7 percent to 2.55 million.

The ABC show was up 17 percent in Nielsen's measurement of how many people watch its commercials, while the other two shows were down. "That's a lot of money right there," said Goldston, executive producer of "GMA."

Efforts to make the show more engaging and creative have borne fruit, Goldston said. He believes viewers have also embraced the anchor team of George Stephanopoulos and Robin Roberts, and newcomers Josh Elliott and Lara Spencer.

"We've inherited that key, hard-to-put-your-finger-on thing of which team is having the most fun out there, and which team seems to get on best," he said. "Right now, that's our team. And I think that is very important on morning television."

Goldston is a talented, stylish producer who has smoothly integrated Elliott and Spencer into the broadcast and managed the change to a different set, said a predecessor, Shelley Ross, former executive producer of both "Good Morning America" and "The Early Show."

Ross questioned the preponderance of more entertainment-oriented segments in the ABC show's second hour, where a story about whether royal sister Pippa Middleton inspired women to get butt implants got a lengthy examination.

So, apparently, did Roberts, who told Newsweek in November that "I want to be No. 1. I don't want to sell my soul to the devil to be No. 1." She said the show needed more hard news. "We give them a lot of candy right now."

Goldston said Roberts' remarks were made "entirely in jest." Roberts also said in an email to The Associated Press that the "candy" comment was said jokingly. "It's all about striking the right balance ... and I think we do a darn good job of doing that every morning."

The producer said "Good Morning America" covers breaking news better than anyone.

"We make no apologies," he said. "It has always been the case that the show develops and changes through the course of two hours. I think what's important is that the show stays true to itself, that there's a continuity of tone and approach, that we're not asking the anchors to be different people at different points in the show. I think we're being very true to that."

ABC recently announced that Stephanopoulos, while keeping his weekday job at "Good Morning America," will also return to his pre-"GMA" job as host of the Sunday-morning political talk show "This Week." The network believes the dual roles will leave ABC well placed to get political stories during the election year.

Goldston, who wants to keep up the momentum on his show, won't even publicly commit to giving Stephanopoulos a day off during the week so he can do "This Week."

"He's going to be working a lot," he said.

There's some question about whether ABC's viewership gains are inflated due to a technical adjustment that affects Nielsen's ratings. Although Nielsen is said to measure the entire two-hour show, in reality the ratings are for only the portion in which national advertisements are run. In May, ABC moved up the last of its national ads by about 10 minutes ? meaning Nielsen's average viewership figure cuts out 10 minutes when the audience is at its lowest.

ABC would not say whether this switch improved its ratings, but the network did point out that its viewership in the first quarter of 2011, before the change was made, was also up 10 percent.

Whatever the impact, there seems little doubt that ABC's audience is growing. The same cannot be said at CBS, even though news executives have pushed "The Early Show" in a meatier direction over the past few months.

CBS has the opportunity to start clean on Jan. 9. The morning show gets a complete revamp, with a new studio, name and Licht, former producer of MSNBC's "Morning Joe."

CBS' mantra is to offer something different.

"Right now viewers basically have two choices," Licht said. "They have the `Today' show and they have the `Today' show (imitator) with probably a little bit more broad appeal stuff. Those two shows are very similar but are both good at what they do. We need to try to find a third thing. Maybe viewers don't know if they like it or not because it doesn't exist right now."

CBS has let out a handful of details about how it will work. Rose and Hill will be on the show's first hour, starting at 7 a.m., with former talk-show host King starting at 8 a.m. There's no weather forecaster. No cooking segments. Veteran newsman John Miller will have a prominent role.

The network won't be forcing spinach on its viewers, figuratively speaking. But it won't promote a "cult of personality" either, Licht said.

"If people want to feel like they're part of a family, it will evolve organically," he said. "I am not trying to sell that Charlie and Gayle go out for drinks and they're just part of one big happy family ? here we are, with a slow motion of them hugging each other. That's not what this is."

The new anchor team was met with widespread skepticism throughout the industry: How does hiring a former syndicated talk-show host and noted PBS interviewer square with the desire to run a hard news broadcast?

Rose is a "kick back and think guy," Ross said. "And that's not the morning."

Licht said Rose is a terrific interviewer who has relationships with the people who run the world in media, business and politics.

"I don't think anyone would dispute that," he said. "The skepticism is `Is he right for the morning?' And I don't think you're going to know that until you see that."

For both CBS and ABC, a rare competitive opportunity may present itself. It's not clear whether Lauer wants to continue when his contract ends this year. NBC has discussed a role on the "Today" show with "American Idol" host Ryan Seacrest, with some reports that he could replace Lauer.

Hugely important decisions loom. "Today" hums along when there are good transitions ? Katie Couric to Meredith Vieira, or Bryant Gumbel to Lauer ? but runs aground from mistakes like Deborah Norville replacing Jane Pauley.

"Usually the other programs catch up when the `Today' show screws up," said Stephen Battaglio, author of "From Yesterday to Today: Six Decades of America's Favorite Morning Show."

___

EDITOR'S NOTE ? David Bauder can be reached at dbauder(at)ap.org or (at)dbauder on Twitter.

___

CBS is a division of CBS Corp.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tv/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120102/ap_en_tv/us_tv_morning_show

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Monday, January 2, 2012

Comment on Urging Obama to Stop Rush to Iran War by Ray McGovern and Elizabeth Murray: President Obama needs to put an abrupt halt to the game of Persian Roulette about to spin out of control. ? InvestmentWatch

Exclusive: A torrent of war propaganda against Iran is flooding the American political scene as U.S. neocons and Israeli hardliners see an opening for another war in the Middle East, a momentum that ex-CIA analysts Ray McGovern and Elizabeth Murray urge President Obama to stop.

By Ray McGovern and Elizabeth Murray

President Obama needs to put an abrupt halt to the game of Persian Roulette about to spin out of control in the Persian Gulf. If we were still on active duty at the CIA, this is what we would tell him:

This informal memorandum addresses the escalating game of chicken playing out in the waters off Iran and the more general issue of what can be done to put the exaggerated threat from Iran in some kind of perspective.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meeting with President Barack Obama at the White House in 2009

In keeping with the informality of this memo and our ethos of speaking truth to power, we may at times be rather blunt. If we bring you up short, consider it a measure of the seriousness with which we view the unfolding of yet another tragic mistake.

The stakes are quite high, and as former intelligence analysts with no axes to grind, we want to make sure you understand how fragile and volatile the situation in the Gulf has become.

We know you are briefed regularly on the play by play, and we will not attempt to replicate that. Your repeated use of the bromide that ?everything is on the table,? however, gives us pause and makes us wonder whether you and your advisers fully recognize the implications, if hostilities with Iran spin out of control.

You have the power to stop the madness, and we give you some recommendations on how to lessen the likelihood of a war that would be to the advantage of no one but the arms merchants.

If your advisers have persuaded you that hostilities with Iran would bring benefit to Israel, they are badly mistaken. In our view, war with Iran is just as likely in the longer term to bring the destruction of Israel, as well as vast areas of Iran ? not even to mention the disastrous consequences for the world economy, of which you must be aware.

Incendiary (but false) claims about how near Iran is to having a nuclear weapon are coming ?fast and furious,? (and are as irresponsible as that ill-fated project of giving weapons to Mexican drug dealers).

In our view, the endless string of such claims now threaten to migrate from rhetoric to armed clashes to attempted ?regime change,? as was the case nine years ago on Iraq. You know, we hope, that influential ? but myopic ? forces abound who are willing to take great risk because they believe such events would redound to the benefit of Israel.? We make reference, of course, to the reckless Likud government in Israel and its equally reckless single-issue supporters here at home.

Inept Advisers

Judging by recent performance, your foreign policy and military advisers, including the top generals now in place, appear unable to act as sensible counterweights to those who think that, by beginning hostilities with Iran, they will help Israel do away with a key regional rival.

You are not stuck with such advisers. You?re the President; you deserve better. You need some people close to you who know a lot more about the outside world.

You may wish to think also about how the recent remarks of Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Martin Dempsey, during an interview with the Washington Post?s Greg Jaffe, reflect on the chairman?s acumen in the strategic matters in which he has been immersed for decades.

In the interview with Jaffe, Dempsey referred to his 20-year involvement with Iraq (where he made his mark) and, according to Jaffe, Dempsey acknowledged that ?he and his Army did not fully understand the nature of the conflict they were fighting.?

Jaffe quotes a particularly telling lament by Dempsey: ?People say, ?For God?s sakes, you were a two-star general. How could you say you didn?t understand?? ? I don?t know how I can say it, but I lived it.? And I mean it.?

Suffice it to say that there are serious questions as to how much Gen. Dempsey understands about Iran and whether his meteoric rise to Chairman of the JCS is due more to the crisp salute with which he greets any idea voiced by those above him.

Discussing last week the possibility of military action against Iran, Dempsey said, ?The options we are developing are evolving to a point that they would be executable, if necessary.? He added that his ?biggest worry is that (Iranians) will miscalculate our resolve.?

That?s not our biggest worry. Rather it is that Dempsey and you will miscalculate Iran?s resolve. We haven?t a clue as to what, if anything, the Chairman is telling you on that key issue. Our distinct impression, however, is that you cannot look to him for the kind of stand-up advice you got from his predecessor, Adm. Mike Mullen.

The consummate military professional, Mullen pointed to the military and strategic realities ? and the immense costs ? associated with a war with Iran, which in turn buttressed those who successfully withstood pressure from President George W. Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney for war with Iran.

Dempsey = No Mullen

During the Bush administration, Mullen argued strongly that there would be no way a ?preventive war? against Iran would be worth the horrendous cost. He did all he could to scuttle the idea.

Mullen was among those senior officials who forced Bush and Cheney to publish the unclassified Key Judgments of the November 2007 National Intelligence Estimate on Iran?s nuclear program ? the NIE that judged ?with high confidence that in the fall of 2003, Tehran halted its nuclear weapons program.?

As Bush and Vice President Cheney have since acknowledged, that drove an iron rod through the wheels of the juggernaut then rolling off to war with Iran. And, as you know, that judgment still stands despite Herculean efforts to fudge it.

In his memoir, Decision Points, Bush, complains bitterly that, rather than being relieved by the surprising news that Iran had stopped its nuclear weapons program in late 2003, he was angry that the news ?tied my hands on the military side.?

In January 2008, Bush flew to Israel to commiserate with senior Israeli officials who were similarly bitter at the abrupt removal of a casus belli. Tellingly, in his book Bush added this lament:

?But after the NIE, how could I possible explain using the military to destroy the nuclear facilities of a country the intelligence community said had no active nuclear weapons program??

Israel?s Last Chance, Until Now

The new estimate on Iran did not stop the Israelis from trying. And in mid-2008, they seemed to be contemplating one more try at provoking hostilities with Iran before Bush and Cheney left office.

This time, with Bush?s (but not Cheney?s) support, Mullen flew to Israel to tell Israeli leaders to disabuse themselves of the notion that U.S. military support would be knee-jerk automatic if they somehow provoked open hostilities with Iran.

According to the Israeli press, Mullen went so far as to warn the Israelis not to even think about another incident at sea like the deliberate Israeli attack on the USS Liberty on June 8, 1967, which left 34 American crew killed and more than 170 wounded.

Never before had a senior U.S. official braced Israel so blatantly about the Liberty incident, which was covered up by the Johnson administration, the Congress, and Mullen?s Navy itself. The lesson the Israelis had taken away from the Liberty incident was that they could get away with murder, literally, and walk free because of political realities in the United States. Not this time, said Mullen. He could not have raised a more neuralgic issue.

Unintended Consequences

As long as he was Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, Mike Mullen kept worrying, often publicly, over what he termed ?the unintended consequences of any sort of military action against Iran.?

We assume that before he retired last fall he shared that concern with you, just as we tried to warn your predecessor of ?the unintended consequences? that could flow from an attack on Iraq.

The Israelis, for their part, would not relent. In February of this year, Mullen returned with sweaty palms from a visit to Israel. On arrival there, he had warned publicly that an attack on Iran would be ?a big, big, big problem for all of us.?

When Mullen got back to Washington, he lacked the confident tone he had after reading the Israelis the riot act in mid-2008. It became quickly clear that Mullen feared that, this time, Israel?s leaders did not seem to take his warnings seriously.

Lest he leave a trace of ambiguity regarding his professional view, upon his return Mullen drove it home at a Pentagon press conference on Feb. 22, 2011: ?For now, the diplomatic and the economic levers of international power are and ought to be the levers first pulled. Indeed, I would hope they are always and consistently pulled. No strike, however effective, will be, in and of itself, decisive.?

In 2008, right after Mullen was able, in late June, to get the Israelis to put aside, for the nonce, their pre-emptive plans vis-?-vis Iran, he moved to put a structure in place that could short-circuit military escalation. Specifically, he thought through ways to prevent unintended (or, for that matter, deliberately provoked) incidents in the crowded Persian Gulf that could lead to wider hostilities.

In a widely unnoticed remark, Adm. Mullen conceded to the press that Iran could shut down the Strait of Hormuz, but quickly added de rigueur assurance that the U.S. could open it up again (whereas the Admiral knows better than virtually anyone that this would be no easy task).

Mullen sent up an interesting trial balloon at a July 2, 2008, press conference, when he suggested that military-to-military dialogue could ?add to a better understanding? between the U.S. and Iran. But nothing more was heard of this overture, probably because Cheney ordered him to drop it. We think it is high time to give this excellent idea new life.? (See below under Recommendations.)

The dangers in and around the Strait of Hormuz were still on Mullen?s mind as he prepared to retire on Sept. 30, 2011. Ten days before, he told the Armed Force Press Service of his deep concern over the fact that the United States and Iran have had no formal communications since 1979:

?Even in the darkest days of the Cold War, we had links to the Soviet Union. ? We are not talking to Iran. So we don?t understand each other. If something happens, it?s virtually assured that we won?t get it right, that there will be miscalculations.?

Playing with fire: With the macho game of chicken currently under way between Iranian and U.S. naval forces in the area of the Strait of Hormuz, the potential for an incident has increased markedly.

An accident, or provocation, could spiral out of control quickly, with all sides ? Iran, the U.S. and Israel making hurried decisions with, you guessed it, ?unintended consequences.?

? or Intended Consequences?

With your campaign for the presidency in full swing during the summer of 2008, you may have missed a troubling disclosure in July by Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative journalist Seymour Hersh.

He reported that Bush administration officials had held a meeting in the Vice President?s office in the wake of the January 2008 incident between Iranian patrol boats and U.S. warships in the Strait of Hormuz. The reported purpose of the meeting was to discuss ways to provoke war with Iran.

HERSH: There were a dozen ideas proffered about how to trigger a war. The one that interested me the most was why don?t we build in our shipyard four or five boats that look like Iranian PT boats. Put Navy seals on them with a lot of arms. And next time one of our boats goes to the Straits of Hormuz, start a shoot-up. Might cost some lives.

And it was rejected because you can?t have Americans killing Americans. That?s the kind of ? that?s the level of stuff we?re talking about. Provocation.

Silly? Maybe. But potentially very lethal. Because one of the things they learned in the [January] incident was the American public, if you get the right incident, the American public will support bang-bang-kiss-kiss. You know, we?re into it.

Look, is it high school? Yeah. Are we playing high school with you know 5,000 nuclear warheads in our arsenal? Yeah we are. We?re playing, you know, who?s the first guy to run off the highway with us and Iran.

? and Now Iran?s Responsibility for 9/11!

On the chance you missed it, this time your government is getting ?incriminating? information from Iranian, not Iraqi, ?defectors.? Iranian ?defectors? have persuaded Manhattan Federal Judge George Daniels to sign an order accusing Iran and Hezbollah ? along with al-Qaeda ? of responsibility for the 9/11 attacks.

On Dec. 15, in response to a lawsuit brought by family members of 9/11 victims, Daniels claimed that Iran provided material support to al-Qaeda and has assessed Iran $100 billion in damages

Watching the blackening of Iranians on virtually all parts of the U.S. body politic, it is no surprise that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu believes he holds the high cards, enjoying the strong support of our Congress, our largely pro-Israel media, and our courts as well. He sees himself in the catbird seat ? particularly during the lead-up to the U.S. presidential election.

We know that you have said you have to deal with Netanyahu every day. But for those of us who have not had the pleasure, never did his attitude toward Washington come through so clearly as in a video taped nine years ago and shown on Israeli TV.

In it Netanyahu brags about how he deceived President Bill Clinton into believing he (Netanyahu) was helping implement the Oslo accords when he was actually destroying them.?The tape displays a contemptuous attitude toward ? and wonderment at ? a malleable America so easily influenced by Israel.

Netanyahu says it right out: ?America is something that can be easily moved. Moved in the right direction. ? They won?t get in our way ? Eighty percent of the Americans support us. It?s absurd.?

Israeli columnist Gideon Levy has written that the video shows Netanyahu to be ?a con artist ? who thinks that Washington is in his pocket and that he can pull the wool over its eyes,? adding that such behavior ?does not change over the years.?

On Dec. 29, the strongly pro-Israel Washington Times ran an unsigned editorial, ?Tehran?s moment of truth: The mullahs are playing with fire in Strait of Hormuz.? After a fulsome paragraph of bragging about how the U.S. Navy capabilities dwarf those of Iran?s, the Washington Times editors inadvertently give the game away:

?A theater-wide response to the strait closure would involve air strikes on military and leadership targets throughout the country, and the crisis could be a useful pretext for international action against Iran?s nuclear program.?

Hopefully, pointing out Israel?s overarching objective will strike you as gratuitous. No doubt your advisers have told you that ?regime change? (what we used to call overthrowing a government) is Israel?s ultimate goal. Just so you know.

Recommendations

We hope that, when we assume you wish to thwart Israel and any other party who might want to get the U.S. involved in hostilities with Iran, we are not assuming too much. With that as our premise, we recommend that you:

1- Make public, as soon as possible, a declassified version of the key judgments of the latest National Intelligence Estimate on Iran?s nuclear development program, with whatever updating is necessary. You know that the Herculean efforts of U.S. intelligence to find evidence of an active nuclear weapons program in Iran have found nothing.

Do not insult Americans with Rumsfeldian nostrums like: ?The absence of evidence is NOT evidence of absence.? Rather, be up-front with the American people. Tell them the truth about the conclusions of our intelligence community.

Bush was helped to launch the aggressive war on Iraq by a deliberately dishonest National Intelligence Estimate on weapons of mass destruction there. Let yourself be fortified by an honest NIE on Iran, and stand up to the inevitable criticism from Israelis and their influential surrogates.

2- Pick up on Adm. Mike Mullen?s suggestion at his press conference on July 2, 2008, that military-to-military dialogue could ?add to a better understanding? between the U.S. and Iran. If there were ever a time when our navies need to be able to communicate with each other, it is now.

It was a good idea in 2008; it is an even better idea now. Indeed, it seems likely that a kind of vestigial Cheneyism, as well as pressure from the Likud Lobby, account for the fact that the danger of a U.S.-Iranian confrontation in the crowded Persian Gulf has still not been addressed in direct talks.

Cheney and those of his mini-National Security Staff who actually looked forward to such confrontations are gone from the scene. If the ones who remain persist in thwarting time-tested structural ways of preventing accidents, miscalculation and covert false-flag attacks, please consider suggesting that they retire early.

Order the negotiation of the kind of bilateral ?incidents-at-sea? agreement concluded with the Russians in May 1972, which, together with direct communications, played an essential role in heading off escalation neither side wanted, when surface or submarine ships go bump in the night.

3- Get yourself some advisers who know more about the real world than the ones you have now, and make sure they owe allegiance solely to the United States.

4- Issue a formal statement that your administration will not support an Israeli military attack on Iran. Make it clear that even though, after Dec. 31, the U.S. may not be technically responsible for defending Iraqi airspace, you have ordered U.S. Air Force units in the area to down any intruders.

5- Sit back and look toward a New Year with a reasonable prospect of less, not more, tension in the Persian Gulf.

Happy New Year.

Ray McGovern works with Tell the Word, a publishing arm of the ecumenical Church of the Saviour in inner-city Washington.? He served a total of 30 years as an Army infantry/intelligence officer and then a CIA intelligence analyst.

Elizabeth Murray served as Deputy National Intelligence Officer for the Near East in the National Intelligence Council before retiring after a 27-year career in the U.S. government, where she specialized in Middle Eastern political and media analysis. She is a member of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS).

Tags: Barack Obama, Benjamin Netanyahu, Elizabeth Murray, Iran, Israel, Ray McGovern

Source: http://c.moreover.com/click/here.pl?r5688078387

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