Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Mitchell 1997 Ford F-150 Used Truck near Sioux Falls, SD Brookings, SD Vern Eide Ford Lincoln for $

  • Silver
  • F93211A
  • 4.6L V8
  • 1FTDX18W8VKC01264
  • 172,242 mi.
  • 4WD Truck (3 Door Extended Cab)

?

  • Convenience

    • Power steering
    • Clock - In-radio
  • Exterior

    • Pickup Bed Type - Regular
    • Intermittent window wipers
  • Safety

    • Passenger Airbag - Cancellable
  • Technical

    • 4WD Type - Part-time
    • 3 Doors
    • Four-wheel drive

?

Contact Us at (800) 778-0215

EPA mileage estimates are for newly manufactured vehicles only. Your actual mileage will vary depending on how you drive and maintain your vehicle.

Before purchasing this vehicle, it is your responsibility to address any and all differences between information on this website and the actual vehicle specifications and/or any warranties offered prior to the sale of this vehicle. Vehicle data on this website is compiled from publicly available sources believed by the publisher to be reliable. Vehicle data is subject to change without notice. The publisher assumes no responsibility for errors and/or omissions in this data the compilation of this data and makes no representations express or implied to any actual or prospective purchaser of the vehicle as to the condition of the vehicle, vehicle specifications, ownership, vehicle history, equipment/accessories, price or warranties. 1997 Ford near Sioux Falls, SD 1997 Ford Brookings, SD

Source: http://www.verneideford.com/1997-Ford-F-150-Mitchell/vd/15988518

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Recall Launched as Filner Seeks Legal Fees

July 30, 2013


The drive to recall San Diego Mayor Bob Filner (D) began in earnest "as the beleaguered politician made a formal request for taxpayers to pick up the tab for his legal fees stemming from a sexual harassment lawsuit," the San Diego Union Tribune reports.

"While the recall movement was expected to take off this week, it surprised many that Filner would ask taxpayers to foot the bill for his legal troubles."





Source: http://politicalwire.com/archives/2013/07/30/recall_launched_as_filner_seeks_legal_fees.html

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Monogamy evolved as a mating strategy: New research indicates that social monogamy evolved as a result of competition

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Social monogamy, where one breeding female and one breeding male are closely associated with each other over several breeding seasons, appears to have evolved as a mating strategy, new research reveals. It was previously suspected that social monogamy resulted from a need for extra parental care by the father.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/iP24iiHSiiQ/130729172244.htm

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Hope for tigers lives in Sumatra

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Recent findings from a camera trap survey in Sumatra, Indonesia, have uncovered a burgeoning tiger stronghold on an island that typically makes headlines for its rampant loss of forests and wildlife.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/dUDcETQQnN0/130729144711.htm

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Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Why There's No 1960s Jetsons Art in Tomorrow's Big Animation Auction

Why There's No 1960s Jetsons Art in Tomorrow's Big Animation Auction

On Wednesday there's an enormous animation art auction in L.A. that includes some gorgeous pop culture history. It will include original animation cels from Fleischer Studios, concept art from Disney legend Mary Blair, and an original production drawing from Winsor McCay's classic 1914 film Gertie the Dinosaur. There's even some 1970s and 1980s Jetsons art that should pique the interest of any retrofuture fan. But there's one thing noticeably absent among the Jetsons pieces: any production cels from the 1962-63 iteration of the show?which was its first and only season until the 1985 reboot. But how can that be?

Read more...

Source: http://paleofuture.gizmodo.com/why-theres-no-1960s-jetsons-art-in-tomorrows-big-anim-909676980

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Burn Notice Spinoff: Possibly in the Works!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/07/burn-notice-spinoff-possibly-in-the-works/

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Education: Teachers of Portuguese complete professional ...

Posted on 28 July 2013.

By Carolina Matos, Editor

A group of 15 Portuguese language teachers in the United States has completed an intensive professional development program at the University of the Azores, in Ponta Delgada, S?o Miguel island. Participants included teachers from California, New Jersey, New York, Massachusetts and Rhode Island.

In its second edition, the program was co-sponsored by the Luso-American Development Foundation (FLAD), the Instituto Cam?es and the Regional Government of the Azores, through its Dire??o Regional das Comunidades (DRC), in collaboration with the University of the Azores and the Association of Teachers of Portuguese in the United States and Canada (APEEUC).

According to Antonio Oliveira, one of the coordinators of Instituto Cam?es in the United States, the goal of the program is to provide teachers with the professional development they need to teach Portuguese language and culture at all levels, throughout the country. Oliveira estimates that currently over 40 thousand students are enrolled at all levels in Portuguese language classes in the United States.

?Portuguese has become an important language for international communication. ?In the Americas, Portuguese stands out as the third most spoken European language. In the United States the interest in learning Portuguese continues to grow and we feel the need to give adequate response to this demand. There is also the need to recognize its status as a global language. Portuguese is spoken in the seven countries that form the Lusophone world, a cultural and linguistic universe which has become a significant market with endless opportunities in the coming decades. So, these programs are very important because they provide teachers with the adequate pedagogical tools they need to teach Portuguese in a world of new realities? said Oliveira.

Organized by Professor Gra?a Castanho of the University of the Azores, the program included a curricular section aimed to improving teachers? teaching competencies and cultural section to acquaint teachers with the culture and traditions of the Azores. The program integrated various multidisciplinary workshops, visits to public and private institutions including museums, libraries, meetings with educators, artists and writers, and a cultural immersion program of field visits.

?For over 100 years, the Azores have provided teachers of Portuguese for schools in the United States; therefore, it is relevant that these professional development programs take place in the University of the Azores,? Professor Castanho said. ?According to her, the programs continue to have great acceptance in the United States where teachers and classrooms are becoming more diverse and yet a large number of students still have roots in the Azores. ?We believe this is the best way to keep the Azores as a cultural reference not only in the Portuguese language classrooms in the United States but also in the context of the Lusophone world,? she said.

Francisca Silvia Lima, originally from Brazil, teaches Portuguese at the International Charter School, in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, where many of her students have roots in the Azores. She believes the program offered her the opportunity to learn more about the Azorean culture, which, she said, will greatly enhance her teaching.

For Vanja Rangel Cavalcanti, a native of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, teaching Portuguese in Manin, California, the program provided her with the opportunity to experience the Portuguese language and culture from a different perspective in a different context.? ?I really appreciated the academic aspect of the program and everything else. I absolutely adored being here,? she said.

Stephanie Silva, teaches at the Icahn Charter School 3, Bronx, New York, NY. For her, this was a professional trip which provided her with new tools to better teach Portuguese. ?Being here opened my eyes to more opportunities. Not just to teach the language but to teach culture, traditions, and nature. It has made me want to learn more and explore more. If I am given the opportunity to return or complete another professional trip, I will,? she said.

Alice Pimentel Almeida has been teaching English as a Second language, Spanish and Special Education in the New York City public education system for 22 years. She also teaches Portuguese at the D. Nuno Alvares Pereira School, the local Portuguese heritage language school. For her the program expanded her knowledge about teaching the Portuguese language and culture focusing on the Azorean culture and traditions. ?I am very thankful to Professor Gra?a Castanho and all those involved with this program. This was an unforgettable experience,? she said.

For Jacqueline Mary da Cunha Lopes, from Brazil, a teacher of Portuguese and doctoral student at the University of Wisconsin, the program has enhanced her professional experience from which her students will also benefit. ?I congratulate the promoters and organizers of this program and offer my gratitude to the University of the Azores and its faculty. I am sure my colleagues and students at the University of Wisconsin will benefit greatly from my experience here,? she said.

Originally from Brazil, Raquel Amorim teaches at Northwestern University where she has noticed that more students are enrolling Portuguese language classes. ?Increasingly students in the areas of businesses and international relations are learning Portuguese as a foreign language because of their awareness that the language opens up new opportunities for them to work in a globalized economy,? she said.

Stephanie Maria Francisco is a Portuguese-American, teaching Bilingual Elementary Education at Ann Street School, in Newark, New Jersey. She also teaches Portuguese at the local Union Portuguese Language School. She attended a Portuguese heritage language school and studied in Portugal at the University of Coimbra. ?Being a product of a Portuguese heritage school myself, my own accomplishments often serve as an example for my students today. Professional development opportunities such as this are fundamental in helping teachers to continue to learn new methodologies. I also hope to share with my students the cultural experiences I had in this paradise that is the Azores,? she said.

Other participants include Helena Maria Gon?alves, Vivian Prudente Rodrigues, Maria Cristina Barreto Costa, Vilma Aparecida de Oliveira Pecci, Silvana Nascimento Silva, Edneuza Farias, and Raquel Martins Rosa.

Limited to 20 participants, the program is administered and certified by the University of the Azores and qualifies participants to receive PDPs through Lesley University.? Teachers of Portuguese language and culture at the elementary, secondary and university levels in United States are encouraged to apply next year. Costs are estimated at about US$4,000 per participant to include fees, flights, accommodation, meals and local transport. Scholarships are available to selected applicants through the Luso-American Development Foundation (FLAD).

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The?Azores??(population 250,000) became an Autonomous Region of Portugal in 1976. The government of the Autonomous Region of the Azores includes the Legislative Assembly, composed of 57 elected deputies, elected by universal suffrage for a four-year term; the Regional Government and Presidency, with parliamentary legitimacy, composed of a President, a Vice-President and seven Regional Secretaries responsible for the Regional Government executive operations. The Autonomous Region of the Azores is represented in the Council of Ministers of the Central Government by a representative appointed by the President of Portugal

Source: http://portuguese-american-journal.com/education-teachers-of-portuguese-complete-professional-development-program-azores/

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Paulson will not testify in Tourre trial

By Nate Raymond and Katya Wachtel

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Hedge fund billionaire John Paulson will not testify in the high-profile civil case against former Goldman Sachs Group Inc bond trader Fabrice Tourre, who is on trial in federal court in New York.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission accuses Tourre of failing to tell investors that 57-year-old Paulson's hedge fund firm intended to bet against Goldman Sachs' Abacus 2007-AC1. The $2 billion offering was tied to subprime mortgage bonds and known as a synthetic collateralized debt obligation.

Tourre denies wrongdoing.

On Monday morning U.S. District Judge Katherine Forrest cited a July 28 letter by Tourre's lawyers saying they no longer plan to call Paulson and others on their witness list to testify.

Sean Coffey, a lawyer for Tourre, confirmed the legal team would not be calling Paulson, as did a spokeswoman for the Southern District of New York in an emailed statement.

Paulson's firm had helped to select the securities that were packaged into the deal. The SEC says Tourre told investors that Paulson's firm was investing in Abacus, suggesting he expected the price of the securities to rise, when actually the hedge fund was shorting it.

The shorting of the deal was part of Paulson's broader bet against the U.S. housing market in 2007, which earned him Wall Street fame and billions of dollars.

The trial may draw to a close sooner than expected. Closing arguments may take place Tuesday or Wednesday, Forrest said on Monday morning.

"Summations are expected to be heard on Wednesday, though this is subject to change," the court spokeswoman said.

The case is SEC v. Tourre, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 10-03229.

(Reporting By Katya Wachtel and Nate Raymond; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/paulson-not-testify-tourre-trial-143717471.html

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Monday, July 29, 2013

Amanda Berry surprises Cleveland concert crowd

CLEVELAND (AP) ? One of three women held captive in a Cleveland home for a decade appeared at a public event for the first time since her rescue, a day after her abductor pleaded guilty in the case.

Amanda Berry made a surprise appearance at the daylong concert RoverFest in Cleveland on Saturday night, walking on stage with her family and waving at the cheering crowd. Wearing sunglasses and dressed in jeans and a black T-shirt, Berry smiled broadly while acknowledging the applause, but she didn't address the crowd. The rapper Nelly called Berry back to the stage after his music set.

The appearance came a day after Ariel Castro, a former school bus driver, pleaded guilty to 937 counts in a deal that will send him to prison for life without parole, plus 1,000 years.

Berry, now 27, Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight disappeared between 2002 and 2004 when they were 14, 16 and 20 years old. They escaped in May when Berry kicked out part of a door and called to neighbors for help.

Berry told a police dispatcher in a dramatic 911 call: "Help me. I'm Amanda Berry. I've been kidnapped, and I've been missing for 10 years, and I'm, I'm here, I'm free now."

Castro, 53, who was arrested and jailed shortly afterward, was accused of raping and beating the three repeatedly. He also fathered a 6-year-old daughter with Berry, authorities say.

The women didn't attend the court proceeding but said in a statement that they were relieved by the conviction and looking forward to the end of the legal proceedings.

Berry and the other women said she had accepted a ride from Castro, who had remained friends with DeJesus' family and attended vigils over the years marking her disappearance.

Castro was accused of restraining the women, sometimes chaining them to a pole in a basement, to a bedroom heater or inside a van. The indictment included two counts of aggravated murder related to accusations that he punched and starved one of the women until she miscarried.

Earlier this month, the three women offered thanks on YouTube for emotional and financial backing they've received since going "through hell and back."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/amanda-berry-surprises-cleveland-concert-crowd-130013567.html

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Google appears ready to ditch Android over its intellectual property issues

The discovery that Google's new Chromecast web streaming device is based on Google TV code stripped of Android features provides additional evidence that Google is working to distance itself from the Android platform that the company developed under the management of Andy Rubin.


Branded Chrome, not Android despite being Android not Chrome
While Android has been widely deployed on smartphones globally and is almost universally considered a tremendous success, the platform and its close association with its namesake Rubin, who was himself nicknamed "Android" while working at Apple in the early 1990s, has inflicted more liability and expense on Google than it has strategic opportunity, revenues or profits.

Evidence from multiple sources, including the design decisions behind Google's latest Chromecast product, support the idea that the company now sees more future potential and interest in investing in Chrome OS than in continuing to support Rubin's Android and defending the platform from ongoing intellectual property disputes, even if the company has no interest in publicizing those intentions.

Google TV, minus the Android

While Google presented its new Chromecast as running a scaled down Chrome OS, hackers examining the device have "concluded that it?s more Android than Chrome OS," adding, "to be specific, it?s actually a modified Google TV release, but with all of the Bionic / Dalvik stripped out and replaced with a single binary for Chromecast."

Bionic is Google's replacement standard C library for Android, which replaces the GPL-licensed code in Linux to avoid entangling Android software in GPL-related licensing issues. It's also optimized for running on lower end devices than the mainstream version of Linux aimed at PCs and servers. The most obvious reason for Google to drop compatibility with Android apps on Chromecast is to be able to offer the device at a very low price using minimal hardware.

Dalvik is the higher-level virtual machine of Android that runs apps. Android's Dalvik is essentially a rewritten, optimized variant of Sun's Java VM, an issue that has spawned a legal fight between Google and Oracle after the latter acquired Sun and accused Android of infringing its intellectual property.

Developers creating software for Android devices can target Dalvik with VM apps, or write native apps targeting the lower level Bionic. But neither of these are supported on Chromecast, unlike Google's previous attempts to target the living room with Google TV devices running specialized Android apps.

The most obvious reason for Google to drop compatibility with Android apps on Chromecast is to be able to offer the device at a very low price using minimal hardware; its new "casting" feature that's so simple it doesn't need a user interface or the ability to run apps of its own.

It also makes sense for Google to give the device "Chrome" branding rather than "Android" branding because while it requires the Chrome browser to "cast" WebRTC video streams to the device, it doesn't require an Android device to work, and has no need to associate itself with the Android ecosystem of smartphone apps it isn't designed to run.


Google's shift from Android to Chrome on TV

At the same time however, the core strategy behind Chromecast that led to its scaled down design clearly appears to have been a major, late in the game shift for Google's living room aspirations, one that coincided with the surprise ouster of Rubin this spring.

Hackers' discovery that "most of the Google TV code was reused" for Chromecast, specifically that "the bootloader, kernel, init scripts, binaries, are all from the Google TV," lends credence to a report by the Wall Street Journal that described an Android TV prototype developed under Andy Rubin and shown in private at CES at the beginning of this year.

That project was reportedly abandoned this spring around the same time Rubin was demoted from running Google's Android platform. He was replaced by Sundar Pichai, who had previously worked on Google's Chrome browser and led Chrome OS development.

Google's Chrome-related branding for the new device makes sense, now that Android is under the direction of Pichai rather than Rubin. But it also signals the beginning of an even more significant shift, one that explains why Google put Rubin's prototype Android TV product on ice in favor of a much cheaper (and more strategic than profitable) web streaming dongle, and why the company replaced Rubin himself as the leader of Android with Pichai, who represents Google's other platform: Chrome OS.

Danger, will Rubin son!

Rubin joined Google in 2005 in the acquisition of the Android Inc. startup he had co-founded two years earlier. Little was originally known about Google's intentions for Android, but it appeared to be part of an initiative to promote its web services, including search and maps, across various mobile phone platforms.

After Apple launched iPhone in 2007, the market position of existing smartphone makers Palm and BlackBerry along with the licensed mobile platforms of Microsoft and Symbian quickly eroded as Apple established itself as the market leader in smartphones. Apple's iPhone came packed with first party software integrating Google features including web search, maps and YouTube.

Later that year, Google's announced plans to launch Android as an open source alternative to Microsoft's Windows Mobile and Nokia's Symbian for members of the Open Handset Alliance, initially led by HTC, Sony and Samsung. At the time, each was already building Windows Mobile and or Symbian devices.

A company video (below) portrayed an intention to facilitate innovative new mobile products across the industry, rather than being an attempt to build an in-house "gPhone" as an answer to Apple's iPhone, as some rumors had suggested.


As Apple's iPhone increasingly gained traction in the market, the overall conceptual design and features of Google's Android platform under Rubin's direction radically shifted to increasingly take on the appearance and functionally the iPhone, sparking tensions between Apple and Google.
Those tensions increased as Apple delayed App Store approval for Google Voice in the summer of 2008 and later balked at integrating new features of Google Maps in iOS, including Google Latitude location tracking and the Google Maps+Navigation services that debuted with Android 2.0 in late 2009."Make no mistake; Google wants to kill the iPhone. We won't let them." - Steve Jobs

"We did not enter the search business. They entered the phone business," Jobs reportedly told employees at a company meeting in February of 2010. "Make no mistake; Google wants to kill the iPhone. We won't let them."

Chrome OS leads to further split between Apple and Google in 2009

Android's increasing competition with iOS began forcing Google's chairman Eric Schmidt to recuse himself from attending any Apple board meetings that discussed the company's mobile strategies. Schmidt had been a member of Apple's board since August 2006.

In mid 2009, Google unveiled its plans to enter the netbook market with Chrome OS, with the expectation that the first batch of devices would ship by the middle of 2010.

Shortly after that announcement, Apple's chief executive Steve Jobs released a statement saying, "as Google enters more of Apple's core businesses, with Android and now Chrome OS, Eric's effectiveness as an Apple Board member will be significantly diminished, since he will have to recuse himself from even larger portions of our meetings due to potential conflicts of interest. Therefore, we have mutually decided that now is the right time for Eric to resign his position on Apple's Board."

Schmidt had apparently not been included in any of Apple's internal discussions related to iPad, which launched at the beginning of 2010. Its success essentially destroyed the once booming netbook category that Google's Chrome OS had originally targeted.

Google postponed the launch of Chrome OS netbooks to the end of 2010 and then again to the middle of 2011, when the first Chromebooks finally began appearing, initially from Samsung.

Without Chrome OS ready, Google didn't have any official response to the iPad for an entire year until early 2011, when It unveiled its separate Android 3.0 Honeycomb initiative aimed at taking over the iPad similar to how Android 2.0 had targeted the iPhone.

While both Android and Chrome OS are built on top of a Linux core, they share little relatively little else. That makes the two platforms internal rivals, much the same way that Apple II and Macintosh teams rivaled for attention within Apple in the 1980s, Newton and Mac OS platforms fought it out in the 1990s, and two teams pit embedded iPod Linux vs. a scaled down OS X mobile platform prior to the launch of iPhone in the 2000s.

Cracks begin appearing for Android in 2010

By 2010, Android had become the only serious competitor to Apple's iOS, while Chrome OS hadn't even materialized as a product yet. In part, this was because much of Google's attention had shifted from Chrome OS-based netbooks to preparing its new Android 3.0 Honeycomb tablet initiative aimed at Apple's increasingly popular iPad.


However, Google's future plans for Android would be dramatically reconfigured by unanticipated events that took root that year: the first was the budding series of problems that would result in the complete failure of Android 3.0 to support significant tablet sales for any of Google's hardware partners after its launch in 2011.

The second was the exact opposite problem: Samsung launched its own efforts to clone the iPhone 3GS and later the iPad, sparking intense legal tensions between it and Apple. By arming itself with a direct copy of Apple's iPhone, Samsung rapidly became the most successful Android licensee by far, eventually threatening Google's control over its own mobile platform.



Apple illustration of Samsung phones pre- and post-iPhone. | Source: Apple trial brief

Samsung refused to heed Google's requests in 2010 not to launch Android 2.x tablets before the new Android 3.0 was released in early 2011. It also ignored Google's written advice that its Galaxy Tab products were too similar in design to Apple's iPad.

More problems for Android in 2011

Samsung also refused to negotiate any settlement with Apple regarding its iPhone and iPad infringement concerns, resulting in Apple's eventual decision to sue Samsung in early 2011.

The failure of Android to benefit Google and its runaway success at Samsung grew publicly evident in 2011, as Android 3.x not only did nothing to boost tablet sales, but also took center stage in the flop of a second Google initiative aimed at home automation products: Android @ Home.

While Android was growing so widespread in smartphones to the point of outnumbering the installed base of iPhones, the only company that seemed to be benefitting financially from that was Samsung. A series of Google's own Nexus-branded phones had failed to gain much traction in the market and the Open Handset Alliance was increasingly populated by companies that were actively losing lots of money on smartphones.


Meanwhile, Apple's lawsuit against Samsung began revealing facts including the testimony that Google had only earned a total of $550 million from Android from its start in 2008 through 2011, effectively nothing at all compared to its existing web and network services.

Google was also earning relatively little from Android Market, bringing in less than 7 percent of what Apple had earned over the same period in the App Store.


Third party developers were already aware that Android Market wasn't performing well, as Google previously addressed "anxious app developers" early in 2011 assuring them that it was working to address the problem and that it was "not happy" with the slow app sales itself.

Major problems for Android in 2012: losing Apple

Despite Android's vast distribution, Google was still earning 80 percent of its mobile revenues from iOS. But the friction Android was generating between Google and Apple was endangering even that.

Apple launched its own iAd mobile advertising platform in 2011 and began blocking by default web cookies "from third parties and advertisers" in Safari on the desktop, a move that threatened Google's core advertising business.

When Google attempted to secretly work around the block, it was hit with negative publicity and the largest fine in the history of the Federal Trade Commission.

Apple also began efforts to work with Google's search competitors, partnering with Baidu in China and adding Microsoft Bing and Yahoo search options to the Safari browser. At the end of 2011, Apple launched Siri, taking on Google web search and the company's voice-based services at the same time. For iOS 7, Apple has further outlined plans to have Siri provide users with Bing results by default.


In 2012 Apple hit Google again with the surprise launch of its own Maps, the culmination of years of work and mapping-related acquisitions. Next year, Apple plans to roll out iOS in the Car, combining Siri and Maps to deliver an automotive product that, had Android never existed, would otherwise likely have been a huge partnership opportunity between Apple and Google.

Google now has to enter the automotive market on its own. After failed attempts to bring Android into tablets, home automation and TV, that would appear to be a difficult task.

Major problems for Android in 2012: gaining Motorola

In what appears to have been an attempt to counter Google's increasing dependance upon Samsung, Rubin pushed within Google for the acquisition of Motorola. In February 2012, The Verge cited Rubin as having told reporters that he had "sponsored" the deal.

Rubin described the acquisition, which included 17,000 patents and 7,500 additional patent applications in progress, as a way to gain intellectual property leverage to protect the Android platform from lawsuits by Apple and Microsoft, stating in late 2011, "I see it as basically protecting the ecosystem and extending it as well."

Industry observers have also described the Motorola purchase as an effort to prevent Android's only exclusive licensee from joining Microsoft in a Nokia-like licensing deal to adopt Windows Phone, and a way to prevent Motorola from using its patents against other Android licensees. Motorola's executives threatened to do both prior to being bought out by Google.


In addition, Google presented its $12.5 billion acquisition plan as a way for Google to gain its own hardware expertise, stating that the deal would "supercharge Android, enhance competition, and offer wonderful user experiences."

Shortly after the deal went through, Rubin told reporters he had "nothing to do with" Motorola and that, "I don't even know who's running it."

Rubin also added, "I don't even know anything about their products, I haven't seen anything," and that, "they're going to continue building Motorola branded devices and it's going to be the same team doing it," and, "they're separate from me, and I'm going to continue to do my thing."

Rubin also suggested that other Android licensees would have nothing to worry about, stating, "even if I was completely insane, it wouldn't make any sense for me to think that we could get Motorola to be 90-plus percent marketshare.""We've inherited 18 months of pipeline that we actually have to drain right now, while we're actually building the next wave of innovation and product lines" Google CFO Patrick Pichette

One year after the acquisition, Google has had very little success in leveraging any discernible benefit from Motorola's patent portfolio.

Additionally, this February The Verge cited Google's Chief Financial Officer Patrick Pichette as saying that products in Motorola's pipeline were "not really to the standards that what Google would say is 'wow,' innovative, transformative."

He added, "We've inherited 18 months of pipeline that we actually have to drain right now, while we're actually building the next wave of innovation and product lines," and, "we have to go through this transition. These are not easy transitions."

Last summer, in order to launch a Nexus-branded mini tablet, Google partnered with Asus rather that put its name on an existing Motorola product.

Rubin's role in pushing for the acquisition of Motorola to 'protect and extend' Android has been cited as key to his removal as the head of Android in the leadership restructuring that occured in March. However, Rubin also played an earlier role in creating a separate potentially lethal problem for Android.

Android's tainted intellectual property issues

Prior to leading Android at Google and co-founding Android, Inc. before that, Rubin had co-founded its predecessor Danger, which had developed a smartphone messaging device based on the Java VM, albeit using legitimately licensed software from Sun.

After Google acquired Android to launch its own foray into smartphones, Microsoft snapped up Danger in the Pink Project initiative that resulted in the KIN fiasco and involved a major cloud data loss scandal for Danger and T-Mobile.


Prior to Danger, Rubin had worked at WebTV, a startup founded in 1995 largely by employees from Apple and the General Magic group Apple had earlier spun off into a separate company. WebTV was also acquired by Microsoft and essentially scuttled in a failed attempt to port the Sun-based service to hardware using Windows CE.

And before that, Rubin had served as a low-level engineer at Apple from 1989 to 1992, where he worked on on technology that Apple now asserts was illegitimately appropriated for use in Google's Android, including the "'263 patent" (unrelated to H.263) it brought against HTC.

U.S. Patent No. 6,343,263, entitled "Real-time signal processing system for serially transmitted data," describes "the use of real-time application programming interfaces (APIs) interposed between application software or driver software and the real-time processing subsystem."

Patent expert Florian Mueller initially described the technology as foundational to Android and "extremely hard" to work around.

Nearly a year after the patent was interpreted in court in Apple's favor at the beginning of 2012, HTC decided to stop fighting and settle, signing a ten-year patent licensing agreement with Apple last November over its use of Android.While Google contributes most of the efforts required to develop and support Android, it makes very little from it.

Apple now appears to be making more money on sales of HTC's Android smartphones than HTC does. Microsoft and Nokia have also brought claims against Android licensees; Microsoft now appears to be making more money on its Android licensing agreements than it makes selling its own Windows Phone platform.

While Google contributes most of the efforts required to develop and support Android, it makes very little from it, almost certainly less than Microsoft does from licensing its IP to Android hardware makers. It clearly benefits less from Android than Samsung, even as it serves as essentially a free software development volunteer for the company.

Protecting Android's tainted intellectual property gets expensive

Google's own plan to monetize or at least defensively leverage Motorola patents has collapsed over the past year, leaving it with an unproductive subsidiary that's actively losing money: $342 million in the last quarter alone.

Google also recorded another $116 million in "amortization expenses of acquisition-related intangible assets" related to Motorola against its own ledger. In other words, it counted that much additional depreciation of Motorola assets (such as expiring intellectual property) as a loss against its own income.

Even ignoring those hits to Google's reported income, the company has recorded regular quarterly losses of $271 million, $353 million, $527 million and $233 million from its Motorola subsidiary since acquiring the company to "protect" Android. That's over $1.7 billion in total losses across just five quarters, on top of the $12.5 billion acquisition price.

Google is now in the unenviable position of Microsoft, saddled with a mobile platform that isn't exactly printing money, but which it can't just throw away because its future depends on having some presence in mobile, given that its current revenues are tied to the shrinking desktop PC market.

It's also not particularly helpful that so much of the growth occurring for Android is happening in China, where Google doesn't even really benefit from the web search traffic that its platform generates.

Android gets X-ed

It would certainly be helpful if Google had a mobile platform that wasn't tainted by the intellectual property claims rooted to the core of Android. While Chrome OS isn't quite ready to serve as a drop in replacement for Android, there's several hints pointing toward Google moving in that direction.

Last year, Google rebranded its Android Market as "Google Play," erasing direct association with Android. Additionally, Google has announced plans to replace its acquired Motorola's "Droid" branded hardware lineup under a new brand: "Moto X."


That makes the Chromecast the third significant erasing of the Android brand from Google's current and future hardware trademarks.

Deceleration of Android releases

Perhaps due to fragmentation concerns, Google has also dramatically slowed the pace of new Android development. Google chowed though four desert named releases in its first year, followed by two years of two major releases, but has spent the entire last year stuck on Jelly Bean.

The next major release, Android 5.0 Key Lime Pie, was rumored to appear last fall, then earlier this year, and now later this year, a release date slipping further than Chrome OS did back in 2009.

The last minor update of Jelly Bean wasn't even released in time to show at the company's IO developer convention this summer, which regularly scheduled more sessions on Chrome than Android every day of the event.

Slipping releases are never a good sign; just ask Apple about Copland and Gershwin in its beleaguered era of the 1990s, or Microsoft about Longhorn in the 2000s.

Out with Rubin, back to the web

The most substantial evidence supporting the idea Google doesn't plan to perpetually maintain two different operating environments is that it appointed the head of Chrome OS to replace the head of Android.

Chrome OS is also philosophically closer to everything else Google does because its based on web standards; Rubin's rejiggered Java VM platform is an oddball product that simply doesn't mesh with everything else the company does, on top of having exposed Google to intellectual property infringement liabilities and inciting its closest partners to become competitors.

Google constantly updates the components of Chrome OS just like its Chrome browser, or like its various web services and apps that are often updated behind the scenes so regularly that they lack any notion of a specific version number.

In introducing Chromecast, Google also highlighted that it can work with any platform, rather than being tied to a specific device platform like Rubin's Nexus Q, which required an Android 2.x device.

Google is certain to reaffirm its commitments to Android whenever necessary, but the writing on the wall appears very clear: Android's days appear to be numbered at Google.

Source: http://appleinsider.com.feedsportal.com/c/33975/f/616168/s/2f475bcc/sc/15/l/0Lappleinsider0N0Carticles0C130C0A70C290Cgoogle0Eappears0Eready0Eto0Editch0Eandroid0Eover0Eits0Eintellectual0Eproperty0Eissues/story01.htm

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2014 NFL Draft: Top 5 SEC Prospects Not Playing for Alabama

1 of 6

NFL Draft

Brett Davis-USA TODAY Sports

This is the first of a series of articles that will outline the top five prospects eligible for the 2014 NFL draft. This is a purely subjective look at some of my personal favorite players from each of the major conferences. Obviously, over the course of the college football season, things will change. Of course, to kick things off, we have to get a little strange.

It only made sense that I start this little exercise with the power conference of all power conferences, the SEC. They are the conference that dominates the draft every year in prospects, and this year?s crop is no different. As I started putting in work for my top-five SEC draft-eligible prospects, three of them were going to come from the University of Alabama. We all understand that the Crimson Tide is the 800-pound gorilla in the middle of the room in terms of talent. There's no shame in that, but for this I wanted to give the rest of the conference a fair shake.

Rest assured, guys like C.J. Mosley, Adrian Hubbard and Hasean Clinton-Dix would have been firmly in the mix at numbers 3-5. But removing them allowed me to showcase some different names who have a shot to be really great this year.

The most notable omission from this list that should stir up Georgia fans is quarterback Aaron Murray. He was a tough player to leave off of this list, and could have easily been in the no. 5 hole. Murray is a very good player and could be one of the best college players in the entire nation this year. However, this is a list for NFL draft prospects and the more I look at Murray, the less enamored I am with him as an NFL player, and that keeps him just off the list.

So with that, lets take a look at the top five NFL draft prospects from the SEC who don?t suit up for the Crimson Tide.

Curt covers the NFL draft for Rant Sports. Connect with Curt on Twitter @nfldraftboard and on Google+.

Source: http://www.rantsports.com/nfl/2013/07/29/2014-nfl-draft-top-5-sec-prospects-not-playing-for-alabama/

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Obama?s day: Clinton, baseball, and voting rights

Obama?s day: Clinton, baseball, and voting rights

by David Jackson on Jul. 29, 2013, under News

Source: USA TODAY

President Obama begins the week on Monday by lunching with an old rival-turned-ally, basking in the glow of baseball?s world champions, and speaking with lawmakers about updating the Voting Rights Act.

After a string of meetings in the morning, Obama has a private lunch with former Secretary of State ? and 2008 Democratic primary rival ? Hillary Rodham Clinton. The White House did not provide an agenda, but many people wonder if Clinton will seek to replace Obama after the 2016 presidential election.

Following lunch, Obama gets to do one of the fun things about being president, greeting sports champions. The San Francisco Giants, the reigning World Series champions of baseball, visit the White House for a presidential ceremony.

Obama gets back to more serious work in the late afternoon, meeting with civil rights leaders as well as state and local officials about the fate of the U.S. Voting Rights Act.

Congress is pondering changes to the Voting Rights Act after the Supreme Court last month struck down a key provision, one that had required federal pre-clearance of changes to the voting systems in certain southern states.

The president and his guests will ?discuss strengthening the Voting Rights Act and safeguarding every eligible American?s right to vote,? said the White House schedule.

Attorney General Eric Holder and Labor Secretary Tom Perez will also attend the meeting.

Copyright ? 2013 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc.

Source: http://tucsoncitizen.com/usa-today-news/2013/07/29/obamas-day-clinton-baseball-and-voting-rights/

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Follow Plain military activities on Twitter

Follow Plain military activities on Twitter

THE latest news and information about military activities on Salisbury Plain is now just a click away with the launch of a new Twitter hashtag.

People who live near the training area or who visit it for work or recreation can now keep up-to-date on issues such as firing times, access and military manoeuvres by searching #modontheplain.

It can also be used to track topics and conversations relating to Salisbury Plain.

The service has been launched by the Defence Infrastructure Organisation (DIO) which Twitter users can follow under the name @MOD_DIO.

Source: http://www.salisburyjournal.co.uk/news/10576510.Follow_Plain_military_activities_on_Twitter/?ref=rss

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Peter King Warns GOP Not To Shut Down Government: Americans ?Turned Off By Terror Politics?

On CNN?s State of the Union Sunday morning, Congressman Peter King strongly urged certain members of the Republican Party to back away from their recent rhetoric threatening to shut down the government over either the funding of Obamacare or the extension of the debt ceiling.

?There?s no reason to be threatening to bring down the government,? King said. ?Let?s make this work, let?s get the spending cuts we need. But American people get turned off with the threat of terror politics.?

?We should not be closing down the government under any circumstances. That doesn?t work, it?s wrong. Obamacare passed. We have to try to defund it, we have to try to find ways to repeal it. The fact is, we shouldn?t be using it as a threat to shut down the government.?

RELATED: Rep. Peter King Blasts Rand Paul For ?Apologizing For America?: ?Fringes? Will ?Destroy? GOP

King also sounded cautiously optimistic on the prospects of immigration reform in the House.

?I think we have to show good faith in trying to find legislation that works, and I think we are going in that direction,? King said. ?The President had four years on immigration, and did absolutely nothing. I would say you?ve seen a lot of movement in the past six months. The Senate, with strong Republican help, a bill did pass. I don?t fully agree with that bill, but I think we can find ways to make that bill work. You do find people in the House willing to make it work.?

Watch the exchange here, via CNN:

?
>> Follow Evan McMurry (@evanmcmurry) on Twitter

Source: http://www.mediaite.com/tv/peter-king-warns-gop-not-to-shut-down-government-americans-turned-off-by-terror-politics/

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Sunday, July 28, 2013

No evidence against India Cements, Srinivasan may return as BCCI chief

BCCI vice-president Niranjan Shah on Sunday said N Srinivasan could return as BCCI chief and chair the IPL Governing Council meeting on August 2 as the probe panel has found no evidence against his team Chennai Super Kings in the IPL spot-fixing and betting scandal.

"He himself has stepped down and now as probe is already finished, given to the working committee already, Srinivasan can come any time he wants to. He can chair the meeting," Shah said when asked if Srinivasan can chair the GC meeting in the capital.

The Board's Working Committee and the IPL Governing Council will meet to take a final call on the issue after the two-member panel, comprising former High Court Judges T Jayaram Chouta and R Balasubramanian, submitted its report to the BCCI Working Committee which met in Kolkata on Sunday.

The panel was mandated to enquire into the roles of Srinivasan's son-in-law Gurunath Meiyappan, who was the Team Prinicipal of Chennai Super Kings, Rajasthan Royals and its co-owner Raj Kundra.

Shah said, "If there is any substantial thing coming out later on in court of law or in police investigation then I think the things will still stand, means, if they are charge-sheeted then, and if it is proven in the court of law, I think automatically then they are out of BCCI."

?The IPL spot-fixing scandal broke out when S Sreesanth, along with two other Rajasthan Royals players Ajit Chandila and Ankeet Chavan and 11 bookies, was arrested for alleged spot-fixing in the IPL.

It snowballed into a crisis for the BCCI when Board President N Srinivasan's son-in-law and Chennai Super Kings Team Principal Meiyappan was arrested on charges of betting on May 26.

A internal probe panel, originally comprising former judges Chouta, Balasubramanian and the then BCCI Secretary Sanjay Jagdale, was constituted on May 28 to investigate the allegations against Meiyappan, who maintained his innocence after getting bail.

Srinivasan, who owns the CSK franchise, remained defiant through the turmoil and refused to resign but had to step aside as BCCI President after a stormy emergent Board meeting on June 2 where Dalmiya took charge of an interim arrangement to run the Board's affairs pending the inquiry.

The upheaval led to the resignations of Board Secretary Sanjay Jagdale and Treasurer Ajay Shirke, who asked for Srinivasan's resignation on moral grounds.

Source: http://indiatoday.feedsportal.com/c/33614/f/589706/s/2f431538/sc/2/l/0Lindiatoday0Bintoday0Bin0Cstory0Cipl0Espot0Efixing0Esrinivasan0Ebcci0Echief0Eclean0Echit0Eto0Eraj0Ekundra0Eindia0Ecements0C10C2968170Bhtml/story01.htm

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US Diplomat: US-Israel greatest threat on earth

?For the past 68 years, most military aggression can be sourced to the US and Israel. Yet, these two originators of wars pretend to be the victims of aggression. It is Israel that has a nuclear arsenal that is illegal, unacknowledged, and unaccountable. It is Washington that has drafted a war plan based on nuclear first strike. The rest of the world is correct to view these two rogue unaccountable governments as direct threats to life on earth,? Paul Craig Robert, former Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury for Economic Policy in the Reagan Administration, wrote on July 24, 2013.

Last year, America?s renowned Jewish scholar, Dr. Noam Chomsky, said that America and Israel are the greatest threats to peace.

?Like its patron, Israel resorts to violence at will. It persists in illegal settlement in occupied territory, some annexed, all in brazen defiance of international law and the U.N. Security Council. It has repeatedly carried out brutal attacks against Lebanon and the imprisoned people of Gaza, killing tens of thousands without credible pretext,? said Chomsky.

In an opinion poll conducted by the Berlin-based Infratest/Dimap Institute on April 17 and 18, 2012, nearly 48 percent of the 1,000 participants said they regard Israel as a serious threat to world peace and global security.

Last year, a poll, conducted by the Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies (ACRPS) in 12 Arab countries, said 51 percent of the respondents believed Israel to be the first major threat to the Arab world, while 22 percent considered the United States as occupying that position. This is while only 5 percent thought about Iran as the single country threatening the security of the Arab world.

The results of a face-to-face survey conducted by Russia Today TV station during April 2012, said 51 percent of the Spaniards questioned ?What country poses the biggest threat to global security?? answered, ?The United States.? Sixteen percent of the participants saw Israel as the No. 1 threat to peace in the world while 12 percent picked NATO.

Last year, Foreign Policy Journal reported that all sixteen US intelligence agencies drafted a 82-page classified report, entitled Preparing for a Post Israel Middle East. The report analyzed geo-politics and economics in the Middle East and globally. It concluded that Zionist Israel is the greatest single threat to American security and to the American economy.

On April 30, 2013, British veteran political journalist and author, Patrick Seale, said that Israel manipulates US policy in the Middle East by generating lies about Syria, Iran, Egypt and Hizbullah. The purpose of Israeli lies is to incite America to attack Syria or Iran ? but Obama seems reluctant to open a new front against Israel?s regional enemies.

?Israel is well aware that Obama ? having pulled American forces out of Iraq and planning to do much the same in Afghanistan by 2014 ? is most reluctant to commit US troops to yet another war. Nevertheless, by accusing Assad of using chemical weapons, Israel was clearly hoping to lure Obama into a Syrian campaign. Obama had, in fact, laid himself open to just such pressure by saying that any Syrian use of chemical weapons would cross a ?red line?,? wrote Seale, adding ?Israelis are also delighted that, thanks to President Obama?s mediation, the United States-Israel-Turkey coalition has been restored, and is set to be a powerful force in Middle East affairs. ?

Patrick Seale claims that Israel is not worried about a nuclear Iran or its Arab ally Syria ? it?s worried about Hizbullah the most ? which destroyed Israel?s invincible myth in 2006 Israel-Lebanon War.

US Diplomat: US-Israel greatest threat on earth | Rehmat's World

Source: http://unhypnotize.com/alternative-news-media/97262-us-diplomat-us-israel-greatest-threat-earth.html

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Child Snatchers: Doing God's Work? | Adoption Voices Magazine

Publisher?s Note:

The new book, The Child Catchers: Rescue, Trafficking in the New Gospel of Adoption by Kathryn Joyce is a must read for everyone interested in international adoption.

Mirah Riben has provided us with this comprehensive review. Thank you so much Mirah


Review of The Child Catchers: Rescue, Trafficking and the New Gospel of Adoption by Kathryn Joyce.? NY: PBS Public Affairs, 2013.

the child catchers by kathryn joyce book review adoption voices magazine mirah riben spotlight on authors adoption reform adoptee adopted investigative journalist evangelic push church childrenKathryn Joyce is a hard-hitting, award-winning investigative journalist. She became interested in adoption through her in-depth probe of the Christian Quiverfull movement[1] Christian women bearing as many babies as humanly possible, many of whom now feel called or ?commanded? by God and their pastors to add to their broods by adoption, some of which are akin to an unlicensed group homes often including children with special needs.

While Joyce was getting interested with the evangelic push for adoption, in May 2007, Evangelical Christians organizations such as Focus on the Family and pastors from across the nation were holding a three-day summit in Colorado to promote adoption. Among those present at this event was Tom Atwood, president of the National Council for Adoption, the largest lobbying organization of the adoption agency industry, with major funding coming from The Church of Latter Day Saints, as was reported in Adoption and the Role of The Religious Right (Countercurrent Nov. 4, 2007).

With no personal stake in adoption, Joyce (and Erin Siegal, author of Finding Fernanda and E.J. Graff) offer purely objective professionalism to the passionately polarizing positions and different points of view about adoption practices. On one side are adoptive and hopeful adoptive parents and the practitioners who earn their livelihoods meeting their demands, and now these churches and the agencies and programs they sponsor. On the other side is UNICEF which is mandated to uphold local laws, international treaties, and reduce corruption and exploitation, as well as NGOs such as SOS for Children, Against Child Trafficking (ACT), with no financial or personal incentive other than the best interest of the world?s children.

Oddly enough, both sides actually have the same goal: to provide care for the worlds? children in need. But the former believe this objective to mean ?the end of orphans in the world? ?via adoption first, second, and last?[2] meaning adoption by Christians in America and Europe.? The later believe the priority is family preservation first, domestic adoption second, and international placements last.

Whereas in the war on cancer, prevention and treatment co-exist, in adoption there is much demonization of those who seek prevention by those who seek to continue the flow of children for redistribution out of a misguided desire to help and also by those who have a financial stake in doing so.? As with the pharmaceutical, oil, and gun industries, there are mega-billion dollars at stake in adoption, and powerful lobbyists who work hand-in-hand with the movers and shakers of the evangelical adoption movement.

Some call the push for adoption by churches ?from Methodist to charismatic Christian to parachurch groups to homeschoolers? misguided. Instead of seeing dwindling numbers of adoption placements as an indication of a healthy society that does not need to resort to stranger placements of its young, these missionaries and adoption industry practitioner?s with a financial incentive, call it an ?adoption crisis? and claim adoption to be ?under siege.? They ?blame familiar scapegoats like UNICEF? and the Hague Convention calling them? ?evil and anti-child.? At a Christian pro-adoption meeting at Saddlebrook Church in 2012, Joyce reports Chuck Johnson as identifying all who prefer to help families in crisis and reduce the tragedies that result in loss and separation of kin and culture as ?forces that take great delight in the suffering of children.? This obscene, vitriolic rhetoric is intended to ? and succeeds in ? riling up the faithful to get out and keep snatching up babies and children for adoption.

Joyce cites instances of churches Churches setting goals or quotas and pro-adoption church leadership ignoring or acting as if they are above the law.? They seem to see themselves as Freedom Fighters like those who committed civil disobedience to free slaves. The difference is that the slaves requesting them to help them escape. These are children that may or may not want to be taken from family or home lands.Little boy climbing on a rope net.

In Child Catchers, Joyce provides an impeccably well-researched window into the world of Christian adoption. Joyce shines a light on the well-meaning who fail to accept ? and those who serve them fail to care ? ? that they are too often taking children who have families and are unintentionally increasing an already over-burdened demand that in turn proliferates kidnappings and deceptive practices to fill orders. With their hearts filled with love, salvation and desire to aid those in need, they mistakenly believe that ?tickets to America for a handful of children are an appropriate fix for an entire culture living in poverty.? Pumped up with religious fervor they are blinded to the fact that the tens of thousands spent to take each child could be put to far better use helping an entire village build a school, dig a well, purchase school books or buy medical supplies.

The book opens with a literally earth shaking event: the 2010 earthquake that devastated Haiti and the rush to adopt it engendered. Joyce focuses immediately on the infamous case of Laura Silsby?s band of bible-thumping pseudo missionaries from Idaho who were arrested trying to leave Haiti with 33 children and charged with kidnapping. Silsby and her Reverse Robinhoods felt justified and self-righteous, about taking from the poor to give to the rich, even building a resort in the Dominican Republic for adopters. A fit beginning to describe the zealousness that drives evangelicals to ?save? children physically and spiritually.

In the end, many if not most churches dissociated themselves from Silsby after she was charged with kidnaping.? The adoption industry and adoption advocates put the incident, like all adoption horror stories, in a neat little box labeled anomalies and continue right along, business as usual simply moving from country as they close adoptions in order to end the corruption. Not unlike claims that women cannot get pregnant from ?legitimate? rape, Chuck Johnson at the Saddlebrook Church, argued that claims of fraud had been blown out of proportion, saying: ?We have no indication of real, true corruption.?

But, Silsby was not the first nor was she the last to exploit a tragedy to obtain children to meet a demand, albeit in the name of doing good. The tsunami in Indonesia brought out the same baby seekers prior to the earthquake, as did the historic Vietnam Baby Lift operation. These ?rescue? missions are reminiscent of an old folk tale about a Boy Scout trying to earn his merit badge: The scout spots an old lady standing at the corner as cars whiz by. He gallantly rushes to her side and assists her safely to the other side of the street. He feels quite proud of himself until she asks that he return her to where she came from and wanted to be. Ah, the roads to hell we pave.

The book is excellent and needed albeit with a title Joyce chose as a mid-ground between the saving and the snatching sides of adoption. ?Catching? however suggests and implies something is dropping or falling; being thrown or tossed away.? In some instances adoption is analogous to the image of a the child catchers by kathryn joyce book review adoption voices magazine mirah riben spotlight on authors adoption reform adoptee adopted investigative journalist evangelic push church childrenfireman catching a child tossed in utter desperation out the window of a burning home.? But more often, it is a child snatching cloaked in pseudo-humanitarianism.? All too many adoptions involve running in and grabbing children from a simmering political or natural disaster firestorm. Instead of pouring water on these fires and attempting to save all the victims, as we would want done for us, children are grabbed leaving the rest behind in the same situation with the addition of a grievous lifelong loss. The age-old ?women and children first? is disregarded. In fact, Joyce reports that Haitians were warned not to try to flee in the aftermath of the tragedy and their needs ignored as adoption took center stage in the aftermath mayhem in Haiti.

Tom Benz, an Alabama missionary who also attempted to hustle children surreptitiously out of Haiti on a wink and nod pretext of an English-language educational cultural exchange program all the while recruiting adoptive parents[3] said:, ?every child that is adopted gets snatched out of horrible possibilities? [emphasis added]. Indeed, even those doing the snatching know it for what it is. Why not? The King James Version of the bible which ?uses the word ?pluck? in Job 24:9 has often been translated as states it as: ?The wicked snatch a widow?s child from her breast, taking the baby as security for a loan.?[4] Or: ?Others snatch the orphan from the breast, and against the poor they take the pledge.?[5] Clearly, snatch ? or even grab ? is a better translation for ?pluck? than ?catch.? The book title, like the entire process, verbally annihilates the mother from whom the child was clearly ?snatched.?

Joyce delineates clearly how the adoption industry enables ? nay incites ? religious do-gooders by reinventing the word ?orphan? to include so-called ?paper orphans? and ?half-orphans?, i.e. children with a living parent in order to intentionally inflate numbers of orphans in need. Worldwide, 90% of children in orphanages targeted for international adoption have at least one parent as orphanages provide temporary care, food, education. These children often have large extended families and there is no intent for them to be given away permanently.

The only children ?languishing? in orphanages, like the children in US foster care who could be adopted, have a disability or are older than those seeking to adopt are prepared to accept. Some are sibling groups. We often hear those who are pro-adoption bemoaning a ?shortage of available? children for adoption, and in fact demand far outstrips the number of children that fit the popular criterion for adoption. Thus encouraging well-meaning congregants to add to the demand is counterproductive. Additionally, pushing people to adopt often causes them to take in children they are not equipped to handle and Joyce cites several cases of terminated adoptions which inflicts lifelong on vulnerable children.

The industry uses terms such as ?parentless? all in an effort to create visions of children in need, isolated and all alone, as opposed to members of a community who all need assistance. Repeating phrases like ?every child deserves a family? obliterates the reality that every child is born into a family ? families intentionally kept invisible and silent. Often deceived, not told the truth, or hearing what they want to hear, would-be adopters identify with a photo that becomes of a child who they think of as ?theirs? early on. When thwarted by efforts to slow down or halt the process in order to document a child?s orphan status, waiting adopters take their pleas to politicians to help them ?reunify? and bring ?their? child ?home? to unrelated strangers in a strange land.

the child catchers by kathryn joyce book review adoption voices magazine mirah riben spotlight on authors adoption reform adoptee adopted investigative journalist evangelic push church childrenThe media, as Joyce notes, describes children being snatched up in Haiti ?as though they had no unique past, no personal history deeper than their evident need? or the tragedy that brought their existing plight to public attention. And yet is this not the plight of every adoptee?? They are as if just waiting in suspended time and space to be plucked from their cabbage patch by those who believe themselves to have been chosen by God to covet them as their own.

American adoption practice in fact deliberately and intentionally erases any and all past connectedness in order to provide the paying client a child with no strings attached who will know, love and be grateful to only their adopters and no other. Adoption destroys all ancestral and genetic ties; obliterates heritage and lineage which pro-adoptioinist Professor Elizabeth Bartholet[6] has called ?over-rated? ? easy to say when you know yours. Adoption creates bundles of joy eagerly waiting to be taken like shiny cars in a showroom. Each cleverly devoid of familial attachment (linguistically and often aided by fraudulent documents), not unlike the way we dissociate young enemy soldiers in war, never thinking them of them as someone?s child.

As for adoption meeting the goals of evangelicals, it certainly succeeds in increasing the flock. Not by proselytizing or even conversion but by a process painted as adoption which in many cases verges on or crosses the line into abduction,

Obviously international adoption does nothing to reduce abortions. Domestically, the lives of the unborn could be saved and their mothers helped to raise them. The only reasons to do otherwise are: 1) judging unwed mothers as sinners and thus unfit; 2) to maintain an ample supply of newborns for adoption. Encouraging single mothers to relinquish children for adoption is the antithesis of the teachings of the birth of Christ to a woman who may or may not have been married at the time of conception, depending upon the translation of the word ?betrothed? which most take to mean promised or engaged. ?Adoption not abortion? slogans turn mothers into incubators, suggest that children who relinquished were unwanted, and hurt those adopted by creating an illusion that those adopted were more likely to have been aborted than any of us, even those born into intact families.

Believing God has preselected a child specifically for someone other than the parents God chose to birth them is preposterous and egotistical and implies God makes mistakes. Like all fundamental religious fanatics, those who use the bible and teaching of Christ to promote adoption are selective in bible quoting. They ignore or somehow misinterpret Matthew 1:27 which asks that we ?visit the fatherless and widows in their affliction? (or distress) and keep ourselves ?unspotted from the world (avoiding false teachers and doctrines).? Some translations suggest that we are obligated to care for orphans. But nowhere, in any translation, does the bible say visit the fatherless and take them, covet them as your own. Viewing adoption as ?God?s work? or ?God?s plan? ignores the need to address and help eradicate the root causes of social and economic injustice and in fact proliferates the suffering by creating increased demand for adoption which triggers corrupt means of obtaining them.

The bible which begins with who begat whom indicating the importance of bloodlines, focuses on a pivotal adoption story, that of Moses, a text book case of the child catchers by kathryn joyce book review adoption voices magazine mirah riben spotlight on authors adoption reform adoptee adopted investigative journalist evangelic push church childrena devoted, loving and capable mother ? Jochobed ? surrendering only in utter desperation when it was it the only way to save her son?s life. The bible names this woman and makes her struggles very real and poignant for a reason. The baby she sets adrift is not a nameless, unidentifiable, abandoned child floating on a raft needing to be saved. Even the child?s sister plays a role. Moses never forgets his roots but lives to be reunited in a way that was extraordinary for millions of people and forever changed world religious history. He was not converted, erasing the faith of his forefathers. ?Moses was raised to be familiar with his background as a Hebrew.[7]? ?But alas, we will not change people?s religious beliefs.

I highly recommend this book. The only thing that concerns me is that beyond the inner circle of the adoption reform community, it will be ignored as being specific to one peculiar niche of adoption. I fear that those considering adoption ? and more so the general public ? will not read it and even if they do will fail to see how much of the pro-adoption tactics impact all adoption, not just adoption by Christian evangelicals. The failure of the book to not make that crystal clear is for me the biggest loss. Buy the book. Read it. It will be a treasured addition to your adoption library.



[1] Quiverful: Inside the Christian Patriarchy Movement

[2] Rick Warren, pastor of Saddleback, one of the largest churches in America attended by twenty thousand weekly.

[3] When Benz plan failed in Haiti, he simply played the same fa?ade in the Ukraine, proving it was never about rescuing children from an earthquake and ignoring the fact that the Ukraine was trying to reduce International adoptions and increase domestic placements for their children in need. This ?Christian? man who openly lies about his true intentions not only has adopters paying high fees for adoption, he also has donors coughing up thousands for his temporary excursions in his alleged cultural exchange hoax. All dollars which could instead provide direct aid to impoverished nations.

[6] Joyce accurately identifies Bartholet as ?one of the most polemic adoption advocates in the field.? With no claim of doing God?s work she is a zealot who speaks for those whose livelihood is heavily if not solely reliant on adoption.

Source: http://adoptionvoicesmagazine.com/spotlight-on-authors/child-snatchers-doing-gods-work/

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Canada Eyes Deep Space with Next-Generation Robotic Arm

Canada has developed a new version of its famed robotic space arm to give exploration of the final frontier a helping hand.

The nation's Next-Generation Canadarm (NGC) program is designed to support both missions in low-Earth orbit and deep space, ranging from repairing communication satellites to assisting manned missions to the moon, asteroids, Mars and other corners of the universe, officials said.

"With the retirement of the space shuttle, a new generation of crewed space exploration vehicles will soon become available," said Alain Ouellet, director of space exploration development at the Canadian Space Agency (CSA). [Next-Gen Canadian Robotic Arm (Video)]

"However, these new vehicles are much smaller in size compared to the space shuttle, and therefore there is a need to adapt the robotic arm technology developed for the shuttle and the International Space Station," Ouellet told SPACE.com.

A long tradition

With apologies to guitar-strumming former space station commander Chris Hadfield, Canada's most important contributions to spaceflight over the years have been made by its robotic Canadarms.

The first Canadarm, a 50-foot (15 meters) arm attached to NASA's space shuttle,?blasted into space in 1981. Until the last shuttle flight in 2011, the arm was used to move loads from the shuttle orbiters to the space station.

After the tragic destruction of the space shuttle Columbia in 2003 during re-entry to Earth's atmosphere, NASA began attaching the Orbiter Boom Sensor System to Canadarm, to inspect other shuttles for any damage. (Columbia was doomed when a piece of insulating foam broke off the shuttle's external fuel tank during launch and breached the left wing's thermal-protection system.)

Canadarm2 was sent into orbit in 2001 to aid in the assembly of the International Space Station. The 58-foot (17.6 m) arm, which Hadfield helped install on the station during a spacewalk, now takes care of much of the orbiting lab's maintenance work, supports spacewalks and captures so-called "free flyers" ? spacecraft that must be grappled to the station, such as the commercial firm SpaceX's Dragon capsule.

Canadarm2 is part of what is known as the Mobile Servicing System, comprised of the arm itself, the Mobile Remote Servicer Base System and the Special Purpose Dexterous Manipulator, also known as Dextre or the "Canada hand."

The NGC program thus continues a rich history of Canadian space robotics.

The Next-Generation Small Canadarm, a "cousin" of Dextre, is outfitted with its own set of sophisticated tools and is designed to repair satellites in space.
Credit: Canadian Space Agency

Eyeing deep space

Developed for the CSA by MacDonald, Dettwiler and Associates?Ltd.?(MDA), the NGC system consists of two manipulators: a big one with a reach of 50 feet (15 m), and a smaller, 8.5-foot (2.6 m) arm.

While the longer arm is the same length as Canadarm, it is much lighter and more compact, officials said. It is designed to be attached to future spacecraft, even small ones, thanks to a new telescopic boom capability with a three-to-one packing ratio.

This ratio means that the deployed arm would be three times longer than its stowed configuration. When ?folded, it would take up less than 177 cubic feet (5 cubic m) of space ? about the same amount as a minivan.

The smaller manipulator prototype is a robot "handyman" ? a possible future equivalent of Dextre equipped with gear designed to help fix satellites in space and support their refueling.

"Many countries around the world now believe that Earth-orbiting satellites can be serviced robotically in much the same way that a car is brought to the garage for maintenance and filling up the fuel tank," Ouellet said.?"The on-orbit servicing of the satellites is a great opportunity for the Canadian robotics technology and the Canadian industry."

Although the Next-Generation Canadarm project is only a prototyping endeavor at this point, it is aimed at maturing technologies for future space applications.?

"There is a need to maintain the Canadarm?s technologies with the state-of-the-art," Ouellet said. "Indeed, the original Canadarm?s technologies date back to the 1980s (space shuttle arm), the '90s (Candarm2) and the early 2000s (Dextre), so many of the components that were used in the manufacturing of the arm are no longer available ? in particular, the electronic components such as the CPUs and data transmission."

"The upgrading of the technologies with the state-of-the-art represents a fantastic opportunity to enhance the capabilities of the robotic technologies and reduce the costs," he added.

Follow Katia Moskvitch @SciTech_Cat. Follow SPACE.com on Twitter @Spacedotcom. We're also on Facebook?and Google+. Original article on?SPACE.com.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/spaceheadlines/~3/GUnf_-2vAcw/22125-canada-new-robotic-space-arm.html

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