Saturday, September 29, 2007

What Caught My Eye Today

European Union - The new euro coins feature a revised map of Europe that does not include Turkey. The first euros, minted in 2001, showed a map of just E.U. members. Teh new euros were supposed to sport a map of the entire European continent including countries that are not in the union. E.U. members included non member countries, such as Ukraine and Belarus, but left off Turkey. Turkey wantws to open official membership talks to join the E.U. but many member states are reluctant to include a Muslim-majority country. Nope, no religious discrimination with these guys. And the Western world wonders why Muslims dislikes us so much.

Kosovo - A powerful bomb exploded in a shopping district in the Kosovar capital, Pristina, killing two people and destroying at least a dozen restaurtants and stores. The blast, on Bill Clinton Boulevard, was one of the biggest bombings in Pristina since 1999. Police believe the bombing is gang related. Kosovo has been under U.N. administration since the end of the NATO bombing campaign, which forced Serbian troops out of the mostly ethnic-Albaninan province. The U.S. and E.U. support Kosovar independence from Serbia. Bill Clinton Boulevard? What up with that?

Violent Crime - Violent crime in the U.S. unexpectedly surged in 2206, led by a 7.2% jump in robberites and a 1.8% rise in homicides. Overall violent crime rose 1.9% in 2006 which follows a 2.3% rise in 2005. This is the first time since 1993 that crime is up two years in a row. Yeah, that may be true, but it is increasing at a decreasing rate. We've got that going for us.

Offensive Language - The Udink family of Oregon was ordered to turn in their vanity license plates because the state decided some people might be offended by them. Teh state DMV informed the family that that the word 'dink' has several derogatory meanings, one of them sexual, the other a racial slur for Asians. And 'U' can be read as 'you'. Consequently, the family's UDINK1, UDINK2 and UDINK3 must be surrendered. Two observations here. First, I always knew dink as 'dual income, no kids'. Secondly, how bad do you feel for the poor kids in that family? I can see it now--poor Stevie is sitting quietly as attendance is being taken...'Steve Udink, Steve Udink.' This kid is going to get crucified in the playground.

Language - According to SDL International, a major translator of languages, the rise in demand for translations into Eastern European languages outpaces translations into Asian languages. Here is a sampling of growth in demand for translations:

  • Latvian - 81%
  • Bulgarian - 78%
  • Estonian - 77%
  • Lithuanian - 67%
  • Slovenian - 49%
  • Chinese - 44%
  • Russian - 38%
  • Turkish - 36%
  • Japanese - 28%

Cars - Speaking of lists, women bought 37% of new vehicles sold through August, 2007. According to J.D. Power & Associates here are the top ten premium models with the highest female owners:

  1. Volvo S40 - 53%
  2. Jaguar X-type - 51.2%
  3. Lexus IS - 47.7%
  4. Acura TSX - 47.3%
  5. Mercedes-Benz C Class - 47.2%
  6. Lexus RX - 46.9%
  7. Volvo S50 - 46.6%
  8. Acura RDX - 45.3%
  9. Volvo s60 - 45.1%
  10. BMW X3 - 44.6%
Do you notice that not a single American car made the list. Who says women know nothing about cars.

Sports - Business Week published its list of the top 100 most influential people in the world of sports. Here are the top 10:

  1. Roger Goodell, NFL Commissioner
  2. Tiger Woods, Golfer
  3. David Stern, NBA Commissioner
  4. George Bodenheimer, President of ESPN and ABC Sports
  5. Bud Selig, MLB Commissioner
  6. Brian France, Chairman & CEO, NASCAR
  7. Dick Ebersol, Chairman NBC Sports
  8. Phil Knight, Chairman, Nike
  9. Sean McManus, President, CBS News & Sports
  10. Rupert Murdoch, Chairman & CEO, News Corp.

This in a nutshell sums up the problem with sports as I see it. Out of the top 10, only one guy, Tiger Woods, is an actual athlete. Sports, at least professional sports, is more about business than the pursuit of athletic excellence.

Thursday, September 27, 2007

What Caught My Eye Today

Myanmar - Soldiers with automatic rifles fired into crowds of anti-government demonstrators killing at least nine people in the bloodiest day in more than a month of protests demanding an end to military rule. On the second day of a brutal crackdown, truckloads of troops in riot gear also raided Buddhist monasteries on the outskirts of Yangon, beating and arresting dozens of monks. State radio said security forces fatally shot nine people, including a Japanese citizen, and wounded 11 people. The bloodshed followed lesser violence yesterday, in which the government said police bullets killed one person, while media and dissident reports said up to eight died on the first day of the crackdown in Myanmar. Every other time the regime has been challenged, it has responded with harsh force, including in 1988 when troops killed as many as 3,000 pro-democracy protesters. The regime uncharacteristically did little to stop demonstrations as they grew last week, but authorities leaped into action after Monday saw some 100,000 people take to the streets of Yangon, the country's largest city. First came official warnings Tuesday against protests, then an overnight curfew was ordered. Yesterday, the regime finally flexed its military might as soldiers and police beat demonstrators, arrested monks and political activists and, for the first time, fired into some crowds. Still, by Myanmar standards, the crackdown has been somewhat restrained. They call this 'restrained'? Now there's a scary thought. I also find it fascinating how the political environment is changing in that region of the world, the United States is again calling on China to intervene. First North Korea, now Myanmar. I guess since we're committed to this Iraq quagmire, we don't have much time to deal with the rest of the world. I wonder what will happen if the rest of the world decides it can get along without us. Admittedly, that is a bit of a stretch of the imagination, but worth mulling over to be sure.

U.S. Military - Defense Secretary Robert Gates said he's inclined to approve an Army proposal to spend nearly $3 billion extra to accelerate the expansion of its active-duty force. Army Secretary Pete Geren said speeding up the growth of the force, stretched thin by wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, would mean recruiting faster and increasing the number of soldiers who re-enlist. Also in January, when Bush announced his intention to send five extra combat brigades to Iraq in a change of war strategy, he approved a plan to increase the size of the active-duty Army by 74,000 soldiers over five years — from 512,000 to 586,000 soldiers. The rationale was that the Army needs to get bigger in order to sustain a long-term commitment in Iraq and Afghanistan without wearing out the troops and alienating their families. The Marine Corps also is expanding for the same reason. Geren said the Army now sees a need to accelerate its growth plan, as strains on troops continue to mount. He said the Army estimates it will cost an extra $2.7 billion to $2.8 billion — mainly in added personnel costs — to accomplish the 74,000 increase in four years rather than five. The Army secretary also said that one of the key lessons from the Iraq war is that the proper role of private contractors in a war zone needs to be examined more fully. He noted the controversy that has arisen over accusations against Blackwater security contractors in connection with the killing of 11 Iraqis on Sept. 16 in Baghdad. Those contractors were working for the State Department, not the U.S. military. At first glance, $2.8 billion seems like a rather big number, but it pales in comparison to the $190 billion that the Pentagon is requesting to fund the war against terrorism in 2008. Here's my plan. How about we give $10,000 to every man, women and child in Iraq--no strings attached (which happens to be about three and half time per capita income) then get the hell out. I bet that would get them to like us a lot more than they do right now. Too much you say? What's $268 billion (give or take a few hundred million) compared to the $427 billion that we've spent so far. Estimates have us spending in the neighborhood of $1 trillion over the long haul following our policy.

Jena - The black teenager whose prosecution in the beating of a white classmate prompted a massive civil rights protest walked out of a courthouse today after a judge ordered him freed. Mychal Bell's release on $45,000 bail came hours after a prosecutor confirmed he will no longer seek an adult trial for the 17-year-old. Bell, one of the teenagers known as the Jena Six, still faces trial as a juvenile in the December beating in this small central Louisiana town. The District Attorney's decision to abandon adult charges means that Bell, who had faced a maximum of 15 years in prison on his aggravated second-degree battery conviction last month, instead could be held only until he turns 21 if he is found guilty in juvenile court. Bell is among six black Jena High School students arrested in December after a beating that left Justin Barker unconscious and bloody, though the victim was able to attend a school function later the same day. Four of the defendants were 17 at the time, and legally adults under Louisiana law. Those four and Bell, who was 16, all were initially charged with attempted murder. The DA said he sought to have Bell tried as an adult because he already had a criminal record, and because he believed Bell instigated the attack. Critics accuse the DA, who is white, of prosecuting blacks more harshly than whites. They note that he filed no charges against three white teens suspended from the high school for allegedly hanging nooses in a tree on campus not long before fights between blacks and whites, including the attack on Barker. Not being familiar with the judicial system in Louisiana, it's difficult to say if the DA was being discriminatory in this particular case or not. However, based on subsequent rulings by the Federal Court of Appeals, the DA isn't exactly looking too good right about now.

Air Travel - President Bush promised on Thursday to take steps to reduce air traffic congestion and long delays that have left travelers grounded. Bush met in the Oval Office with Transportation Secretary Mary Peters and acting Federal Aviation Administrator Bobby Sturgell. The president urged Congress to look at legislation to modernize the FAA, and instructed Peters to report back to him quickly about ways to ensure that air passengers are treated appropriately and progress is made to ease congestion. The airline industry's on-time performance in the first seven months of 2007 was its worst since comparable data began being collected in 1995, according to the government. In July, the most recent month for which data are available, 20 carriers reported an on-time arrival rate of 69.8 percent, down from 73.7 percent a year earlier. "Endless hours sitting in an airplane on a runway with no communication between a pilot and the airport is just not right. We've got a problem," Bush said. "We understand there's a problem. And we're going to address the problem." Okay, two thoughts on this one. First, Bush is going to try to solve the FAA mess? Dude might have an easier go of things if he went after something a little less daunting, like say, Social Security. Secondly, you have to love the eloquence of this man. I'm surprised he didn't include, 'Houston, we have a problem.' somewhere in there.

India - Five months later, Bollywood actress Shilpa Shetty is still feeling the effects of a kiss from Richard Gere. Immigration officials at Mumbai airport briefly detained Shetty, saying she was still wanted for obscenity charges filed in the wake of the public kiss with the Hollywood star. Gere embraced and kissed Shetty on her cheek at a public AIDS awareness event in New Delhi in April, sparking an outcry among conservative hardline Hindus, who claimed the pair had violated the country's strict anti-obscenity laws. A regional court issued arrest warrants against Gere and barred Shetty from leaving the country. The order was soon overturned by the Supreme Court. But the Supreme Court ruling didn't show up in the immigration department computer system. You have to feel for Shetty. That deal with Gere must feel like a rash at this point. Just when you think you have it licked, it comes back with a vengeance.

Soccer - The way Brazil and sensational striker Marta played, it didn't matter who was in goal for the United States. Marta scored two goals and the Brazilians put on a dazzling display of soccer Thursday, outhustling the Americans at nearly every turn to cruise to a 4-0 victory in the Women's World Cup semifinals. The opening score came on an own-goal in the 20th minute, when American defender Leslie Osborne headed a corner behind Scurry. Marta made it 2-0 in the 27th to add to Brazil's growing confidence. She evaded a half-dozen players and cracked a left-footed shot from 15 yards that hugged the ground and beat Brianna Scurry diving to her left. She got her left hand on the ball but couldn't stop it. Any hope the U.S. had was snuffed out a few seconds into first-half injury time when Shannon Boxx picked up her second yellow card, leaving the Americans a player short. Forced to push for a goal in the second half, the U.S. left itself exposed at the back with Maycon, Daniela and Cristiane narrowly missing in the opening minutes. Cristiane finally broke through in the 56th minute to make it 3-0, left-footing a shot home in a one-on-one contest with Scurry. Brazil's last flurry came in the 79th minute when Marta showed why she was the 2006 player of the year. Off the left wing, she faked around U.S. defender Tina Ellertson, raced into the box, faked another defender and beat Scurry with a shot that drew a huge ovation from a crowd of 48,000. Scurry, the 36-year-old keeper who stopped a deciding penalty kick to give the U.S. the 1999 World Cup, was under intense scrutiny. Ryan named her to start just 24 hours beforehand, benching Solo who had allowed only two goals in four World Cup games -- and none in almost 300 minutes. Angry she was replaced for the critical game in favor of veteran Scurry, Goalie Hope Solo lashed out at U.S. coach Greg Ryan. "It was the wrong decision, and I think anybody that knows anything about the game knows that," Solo said. "There's no doubt in my mind I would have made those saves. ... You have to live in the present. And you can't live by big names. You can't live in the past." I saw the game this morning. Brazil was there to win, and the U.S. made it way too easy for them to do just that. There's no way to say that Hope Solo would have been any more successful in stopping Marta than Briana Scurry--Marta was unbelievably good--but clearly the U.S. team's mental state was all messed up due to the last minute switch.

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

What Caught My Eye Today

Myanmar - Security forces fired warning shots and tear gas canisters while hauling Buddhist monks away in trucks as authorities tried to stop anti-government demonstrations, the first mass arrests since protests erupted last month. About 300 monks and activists were arrested across Yangon, according to an exile dissident group, and reporters saw a number of monks — who are highly revered in Myanmar — being dragged into trucks. The junta had banned all public gatherings of more than five people and imposed a nighttime curfew following eight days of anti-government marches led by monks in Yangon and other areas of the country, including the biggest protests in nearly two decades. President Bush on Tuesday announced new U.S. sanctions against Myanmar, formerly known as Burma, accusing the military dictatorship of imposing "a 19-year reign of fear" that denies basic freedoms of speech, assembly and worship. British Prime Minister Gordon Brown called for an urgent U.N. Security Council meeting on Myanmar, or Burma, and urged the military regime there to be restrained in reacting to protests. The European Union also threatened to strengthen existing sanctions against the regime if it uses violence to put down the demonstrations. Seeing as both countries are starting to run out of supporters, maybe Myanmar and Iran should hook up. Seems like a match made in heaven, doesn't it?

U.S. Dollar - The dollar has fallen to yet another all-time low against the euro, after further weak U.S. economic data. Figures showed that consumer confidence has fallen to a near two-year low, while house prices have seen the sharpest drop in 16 years. Analysts said the data boosted expectations that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates still further. In early trading, the euro hit a high of $1.4163, before pulling back to $1.4122 by late morning in Europe. The Fed cut interest rates to 4.75% from 5.25% last week, in a move aimed at restoring confidence in both the housing and financial markets. It was the first rate cut in four years. The high value of the euro has caused concern among European exporters, as it makes their products more expensive in the U.S. Thankfully for us Americans, prices remain the same. Oh happy day. On the bright side, some of us (don't worry, it isn't me) are seeing some upswing in their stock portfolios as profits increase due to increased spending on U.S. goods from the rest of the world.

Baseball - The ball Barry Bonds hit for his record-breaking 756th home run will be branded with an asterisk and sent to the Baseball Hall of Fame, its owner said. Fashion designer Marc Ecko, who bought the ball in an online auction, set up a Web site for fans to vote on the ball's fate, and the decision to brand it won out over the other options, sending it to the museum unblemished or launching it into space. Ecko, whom Bonds called "an idiot" last week, had the winning bid Sept. 15 in the online auction for the ball that Bonds hit Aug. 7 to break Hank Aaron's record of 755 home runs. The final selling price was $752,467, well above most predictions that assumed Bonds' status as a lightning rod for the steroids debate in baseball would depress the value. The asterisk suggests that Bonds' record is tainted by alleged steroid use. The slugger has denied knowingly using performance-enhancing drugs. Fans brought signs with asterisks on them to ballparks as he neared Aaron's hallowed mark. Regardless of Bonds' guilt or innocence, somehow this seems a fitting end to this story. Maybe someday the truth about his alleged steriods use will come out, but for now, it certainly seems as if Bonds will have to live with the asterisk.

Cycling - Floyd Landis, who has been stripped of his 2006 Tour de France title after failing a dope test, insists he has prevailed on the French roads without cheating. In a letter to his fans posted on his
Web site, Landis said: "I can sleep well at night knowing that I won the 2006 Tour de France fair and square. I hope that my campaign to clear my name still means something to all of you who have kindly donated to my legal defense fund. If any good has come out of this, we have shown that the anti-doping system is corrupt, inefficient and unfair. The content of this decision unfortunately highlights this once again. The straightforward and clear dissent in support of my case contrasts sharply with the scientifically flawed and illogical majority decision against me." Whatever gets you through day, sparkplug. I also find it somewhat telling that nowhere on his website, does Floyd show the donations that he has received to date.

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

What Caught My Eye Today

Myanmar - Myanmar's (or Burma, if you prefer) military leaders imposed a nighttime curfew and banned gatherings of more than five people after 35,000 Buddhist monks and their supporters defied the junta's warnings and staged another day of anti-government protests. Authorities announced the ban on gatherings and a 9 p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew through loudspeakers on vehicles cruising the streets of Yangon, the country's biggest city, and its second city, Mandalay. The announcement said the measures would be in effect for 60 days. The current protests began Aug. 19 after the government hiked fuel prices in one of Asia's poorest countries. But they are based in deep-rooted dissatisfaction with the repressive military rule that has gripped the country since 1962. If protesters defy the restrictions and the military responds with force, it could further alienate already isolated Myanmar from the international community. It would almost certainly put pressure on Myanmar's top economic and diplomatic supporter, China, which is keen to burnish its international image before next year's Olympics in Beijing. Hey guys, a word to the wise. You don't want to be messing with China right about now. They've got their hands full trying to but a good show on for the Olympics next summer. Brutal oppression of your people isn't something they have time for right now.

Iran - Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad announced that his country's disputed nuclear program is closed as a political issue, and said Tehran will disregard U.N. Security Council resolutions imposed by "arrogant powers" to curb its nuclear program. Instead, he told world leaders at the U.N. General Assembly that Iran has decided to pursue the monitoring of its nuclear program "through its appropriate legal path," the International Atomic Energy Agency which is the U.N.'s nuclear watchdog. Iran insists that its nuclear program is purely peaceful and aimed solely at producing nuclear energy. But the United States and key European nations believe the program is a cover for Iran's real ambition — producing nuclear weapons. Ahmadinejad has defied two Security Council resolutions demanding that it suspend its enrichment program and imposing escalating sanctions against key figures and organizations involved in the nuclear program. He made clear in his speech that Iran does not intend to comply with them now. Whatever this dude is smoking must be really, really good. I think Columbia University President Lee Bollinger hit the nail on the head--Ahmadinejad is either the gutsiest head of state or the stupidest. Funny how the line kind of blurs between the two distinctions.

Al-Qaida - Al-Qaida continues to recruit Europeans for explosives training in Pakistan because Europeans can more easily enter the United States without a visa. Director of National Intelligence Mike McConnell said European al-Qaida recruits in the border region of Pakistan are being trained to use commercially available substances to make explosives, and they may be able to carry out an attack on U.S. territory. Europeans are being recruited specifically because they generally do not need visas to enter the United States, he said. McConnell warned then that the existing law which dictated when the government must obtain warrants from a secret intelligence court to eavesdrop had become a dangerous blockade to spying on terrorists overseas. You have to sympathize with the frustration that McConnell is expressing. Don't you hate when trivial things like the U.S. Constitution get in the way of intelligence gathering?

Japan - Yasuo Fukuda swept to power as Japan's prime minister, promising to use his skills as a negotiator to win approval for extending Tokyo's contentious mission in support of U.S. troops in Afghanistan. The 71-year-old cast himself as the steady hand Japan needs after the scandal-scarred one-year term of his youthful predecessor Shinzo Abe, who abruptly resigned two weeks ago. His policy priorities are markedly different from Abe's nationalist agenda, which included revision of the pacifist constitution to give more freedom to the military, expansion of patriotic education, and an unapologetic view of Japan's actions before and during World War II. Instead, Fukuda — who favors warm relations with the rest of Asia — struck a populist pose, vowing to tackle the government's troubling loss of millions of pension records, provide assistance to rural areas left behind in the economic recovery and deal with the fallout from the rapid aging of society. Fukuda's top legislative priority was the extension of the naval refueling mission in support of U.S.-led forces in Afghanistan. The mission started in 2001, and Washington has called publicly for Tokyo to renew its commitment. The new prime minister suggested he was confident he could finesse the opposition into going along with an extension for the sake of Japan's relations with its No. 1 ally and protector, the United States, which has some 50,000 troops based in Japan. It never ceases to amaze me how many plot lines there are linked to the Iraq War. Extending the Japanese naval refueling mission is Fukuda's top priority? That cannot be sitting too well with the Japanese population.

Nerds - Looking to recruit more women, and perhaps date some sorority girls, the largest computer club at Washington State University hopes to hold a "nerd auction." The idea is to trade their computer skills to sorority girls in exchange for a makeover and, possibly, a date. Ben Ford, president of the Linux Users Group, acknowledged that some of the group's 213 registered members may not be ready for the auction block. "The problem is that we're all still nerds. Let's face it, guys. If anyone's going to bid on us, we'll need some spicing up," he wrote. "And who better to help with that than sorority girls who like nothing better than a makeover?" Ford, who has an undergraduate degree in computer science and is pursuing a master's in business management, said the idea for the nerd auction came to him in the shower. "Here's the current plan: We'll choose a handful of brave nerds to take one for the team.The girls get to have their way with them and we'll document each makeover. We'll make a snazzy video and show it over dinner. After the dinner, we'll auction off the now studly nerds," a hopeful Ford said. Hopeful? Yeah, I don't think so, bro'. No, I'm thinking you got your hands on some of that stash Ahmadinejad's been using.

Monday, September 24, 2007

What Caught My Eye Today

Iran - Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad questioned the official version of the Sept. 11 attacks and defended the right to cast doubt on the Holocaust in a tense appearance at Columbia University, whose president accused the hard-line leader of behaving like "a petty and cruel dictator." Ahmadinejad smiled at first but appeared increasingly agitated, decrying the "insults" and "unfriendly treatment." Columbia President Lee Bollinger and audience members took him to task over Iran's human-rights record and foreign policy, as well as Ahmadinejad's statements denying the Holocaust and calling for the disappearance of Israel. During a question and answer session, Ahmadinejad appeared tense and unsmiling, in contrast to more relaxed interviews and appearances earlier in the day. Bollinger was strongly criticized for inviting Ahmadinejad to Columbia, and had promised tough questions in his introduction to Ahmadinejad's talk. But the strident and personal nature of his attack on the president of Iran was startling. "You are either brazenly provocative or astonishingly uneducated," Bollinger told Ahmadinejad about the leader's Holocaust denial. First of all, with all due respect to Ahmadinejad, wht kind of reception did he think he was going to get? Dude is not exactly in the running for Man of the Year, if you know what I mean. Secondly, for everyone who criticized Columbia University for allowing Ahmadinejad to speak, these folks are practicing and celebrating that which makes America great. You holier-than-thou politicians in Washington could learn a thing or two from these guys.

Social Security - A report issued by the Treasury Department said that some combination of benefit cuts and tax increases will need to be considered to permanently fix the funding shortfall. The Treasury report put the cost of the gap between what Social Security is expected to need to pay out in benefits and what it will raise in payroll taxes in coming years at $13.6 trillion. It said delaying necessary changes reduces the number of people available to share in the burden of those changes and is unfair to younger workers. "Not taking action is thus unfair to future generations. This is a significant cost of delay," the report said. In another key finding, the report said: "Social Security can be made permanently solvent only by reducing the present value of scheduled benefits and/or increasing the present value of scheduled tax increases." White House officials stressed that President Bush remains opposed to raising taxes. Bush had hoped to make Social Security reform the top domestic priority of his second term. He put forward a Social Security plan in 2005 that focused on creation of private accounts for younger workers, but that proposal never came up for a vote in Congress with Democrats heavily opposed and few Republicans embracing the idea. Is it just me or is this the first time in several years that the topic of Social Security has been raised by the White House. If this is Bush's idea of handling his top domestic priority, we might as well kiss off what little hope we have of seeing Social Security benefits when we retire.

2008 Presidential Race - President Bush, breaking his rule not to talk about presidential politics, says he believes Hillary Rodham Clinton will defeat Barack Obama in the Democratic presidential primaries. Bush also predicts that Clinton will be defeated in the general election by the Republican nominee. The White House press secretary denied the notion that Bush was talking up Clinton's prospects to energize the Republican base against Clinton's candidacy. On the Republican side, Bush has expressed surprise that former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani remains the front-runner despite his liberal positions on social and cultural issues normally critical to the party base. Bush said Giuliani's popularity was a sign of how important the terrorism issue is to Republican voters. How much do you want to bet that the GOP is going to base its platform largely on scaring the beejeezes out of voters saying that we're all going to die in a terrorist attack if a Democrat is in the White House? Perhaps its a little far-fetched...but only a little.

Mime - Marcel Marceau, the world's best-known mime artist who for decades moved audiences across the globe without uttering a single word, has died aged 84. One of his most famous sketches was "The Cage," in which he struggled to escape through an invisible ring of barriers, only to find that one cage succeeds another and there is no escape. I saw Marceau perform only once--on the Muppet Show. The man was simply a genius.

Global Warming - Ultimately, rising seas will likely swamp the first American settlement in Jamestown, Va., as well as the Florida launch pad that sent the first American into orbit, many climate scientists are predicting. In about a century, some of the places that make America what it is may be slowly erased.Global warming — through a combination of melting glaciers, disappearing ice sheets and warmer waters expanding — is expected to cause oceans to rise by one meter, or about 39 inches. All told, one meter of sea level rise in just the lower 48 states would put about 25,000 square miles under water. That's an area the size of West Virginia. The amount of lost land is even greater when Hawaii and Alaska are included. The Environmental Protection Agency, which studied only the Eastern and Gulf coasts, found that Louisiana, Florida, North Carolina, Texas and South Carolina would lose the most land. Click
here for a map showing the most at risk areas on both coasts.

Sunday, September 23, 2007

What Caught My Eye Today

France - France's Foreign Minister said a nuclear-armed Iran would pose "a real danger to the whole world. We have to prepare for the worst, and the worst is war." The official Iranian news agency called the comments "inflammatory" and "illogical," and accused France of becoming "the executors for the will of the White House." Iran's military warned that if the U.S. or France bombed targets in Iran, U.S. forces in Iraq and Afghanistan "are within our range." I suppose anything is possible but France condemning Iran on our orders? I think that's a bit of a stretch. And another thing. If France bombs Iran (and we don't), would Iran only retaliate against Americans? That's not cool.

Iran - Speaking of Iran, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said that the American people are eager for different opinions about the world, and he is looking forward to providing them with "correct and clear information," state media reported. The hardline Iranian leader left today for New York to address the U.N. General Assembly and speak to students and teachers during a forum at Columbia University. Tensions are high between Washington and Tehran over U.S. accusations that Iran is secretly trying to develop nuclear weapons and helping Shiite militias in Iraq that target U.S. troops — claims Iran denies. Ahmadinejad said his visit will give Americans a chance to hear a different voice. "The United States is a big and important country with a population of 300 million. Due to certain issues, the American people in the past years have been denied correct and clear information about global developments and are eager to hear different opinions," Ahmadinejad said. Gee, I wonder what (or who) Ahmadinejad could be referring to when he says 'certain issues?'

Why not go for the rare tri-fecta. Here's some more dish on Iran, courtesy of our distinguished Vice President, Dick Cheney.

Israel - Vice President Dick Cheney had at one point considered asking Israel to launch limited missile strikes at an Iranian nuclear site to provoke a retaliation. The news comes amid reports that Israel launched an air strike against Syria this month over a suspected nuclear site. Cheney was considering asking Israel to strike the Iranian nuclear site at Natanz. A military response by Iran could give Washington an excuse to then launch airstrikes of its own. Washington has been pursuing diplomatic efforts to persuade Iran to alter its nuclear program. It has refused to take military options off the table, even U.S. resources are taxed by having 169,000 troops in Iraq. Although some intelligence sources say Iran is years away from nuclear capability, Israel believes that military action may be necessary as early as 2008. Israel has declined to comment on the reported air strike, while Syria has denied receiving North Korean nuclear aid and said it could retaliate for the September 6 violation of its territory. The White House should put a muzzle on this guy before he ends up getting someone hurt. Oops, too late. We're already up to 3,798 U.S. deaths (not counting the 27,753 wounded in the line of duty) in Iraq.

Dubai - The Dubai Tower this week was declared the world's tallest free-standing structure, when it reached 1,822 feet, topping Toronto's CN Tower which has held the record since 1976. The Dubai Tower, which is still under construction, will stand at 2,684 feet when it is complete in 2008. That celebration might be short-lived. Another Dubai skyscraper, scheduled for completion in 2009, is reportedly aiming for at least 3,937 feet. Oh, for goodness sake. This is starting to get out of control. Listen up all you vertically obsessed building developers--how about dialing back the testosterone treatments just a tad?

Sports - Here's a rundown of some of the headlines that caught my attention.

Soccer - At the Women's World Cup in China, the U.S. defeated England 3-0 Saturday on second-half goals from Wambach, Shannon Boxx and Lilly during a 12-minute span. The No. 1-ranked Americans advanced to Thursday's semifinal in Hangzhou. The final is Sept. 30 in Shanghai, with the U.S. seeking a third title to go with the ones from 1991 and '99. They will match up against Brazil, a 3-2 winner over Australia. This is Brazil's first berth in the semifinals of the women's World Cup. In the other semifinal, Germany (3-0 winners over North Korea) will face Norway (1-0 winners over China).

NASCAR - Carl Edwards battled through seven late cautions to win the NASCAR Nextel Cup Series Dodge Dealers 400 at Dover International Speedway. On a day where several "Chase for the Championship" contenders struggled, Edwards drove a Ford Fusion to his third win of the season and seventh career to move up to third in the standings, three points behind leader Jeff Gordon. Gordon was 11th in a Chevrolet Impala and took the lead atop the standings from teammate Jimmie Johnson who finished 14th. Tony Stewart ran ninth in a Chevrolet and moved into second place, just two points behind Gordon. See this is why I love the Chase for the Nextel Cup--after 2 of 10 races, the top 6 drivers are separated by 18 points. I bet the PGA wishes they had this kind of drama for the Fed Ex Cup.

College Football - The Kentucky Wildcats (4-0), who climbed to No. 14 in the latest Associated Press poll. Southern California (4-0) and Louisiana State (4-0) remained the top two teams in the country with Oklahoma and Florida swapping placed at Nos. 3 and 4, respectively. West Virginia (4-0), California (4-0), Texas (4-0), Ohio State (4-0), Wisconsin (4-0) and Rutgers (3-0) - who entered the Top 10 for the first time this season - finished out the rest of the first ten. Georgia (3-1) skyrocketed seven spots to No. 15 this week after an overtime victory over previously unbeaten Alabama on the road Saturday. The Crimson Tide (3-1) dropped six spots to No. 22.
No. 11 Oregon (4-0) started the second ten, followed by Kentucky (4-0), Georgia (3-1), South Carolina (3-1) and Virginia Tech (3-1). South Florida (3-0), Hawaii and Missouri (4-0) finished out the top 20. Completing the poll are Penn State (3-1), Alabama (3-1), Arizona State (4-0), Cincinnati (4-0) and Nebraska (3-1).

Baseball - With just over a week to go in the regular season, the post season contenders is taking shape. In the American League, it looks like Boston in the East (though the New York Yankees could overtake them in the last week), Cleveland in the Central and the Los Angeles Angels in the West. The wild card is currently held by the Yankees. Over in the National League, apparently no one is interested in making it to the post season. The New York Mets' magic number to clinch the East is 5 games, the Chicago Cubs need 4 to win the Central, and in the West the Arizona Diamondbacks need 6 to make it into the playoffs. Bear in mind that there are only 6 or 7 games left for all these teams. The San Diego Padres, Philadelphia Phillies and Colorado Rockies all still have a shot at either winning their divisions or getting the wild card.

Friday, September 21, 2007

What Caught My Eye Today

Jena - A judge denied a request to release a teenager whose arrest in the beating of a white classmate sparked this week's civil rights protest in Louisiana. Mychal Bell's request to be freed while an appeal is being reviewed was rejected at a juvenile court hearing, effectively denying him any chance at immediate bail. Bell, 17, was convicted of aggravated second-degree battery, which could have led to 15 years in prison. But his conviction was thrown out by a state appeals court that said he could not be tried on the charge as an adult because he was 16 at the time of the beating. Yesterday, the case drew thousands of protesters to this tiny central Louisiana town to rally against what they see as a double standard of justice for blacks and whites. The march was one of the biggest civil rights demonstrations in years. This story has been frontline news all week. I hope that this because there is a genuine interest in having a constructive dialogue on race rather than just a passing cause célèbre. I found over 6000 new articles about this story. Only NPR, the BBC and the Guardian had anything to say about the story prior to this week's events. So basically, unless you are an avid listener of public television and radio or are British, you probably had no idea how long this issue has been percolating.

China - Mattel Inc. tried to save face Friday with Chinese officials, taking the blame for the recent recalls of millions of Chinese-made toys as it strives to mend a strained relationship with the nation that makes most of its toys and fattens its profit. The world's largest toy maker sent a top executive to personally apologize to China's product safety chief as reporters and company lawyers looked on. The unusual move reflects how invested El Segundo-based Mattel has become in China. Mattel ordered three high-profile recalls this summer involving more than 21 million Chinese-made toys because of concerns about lead paint or tiny magnets that could be swallowed. Mattel previously said many of the toys were recalled because of design problems. It also said certain vendors in China or their subcontractors violated Mattel's rules by failing to use safe paint or to run tests on paint. If this is just a ploy to maintain business relationship, this is a totally weenie move on Mattel's part. If you guys screwed up in the first place, how come you waited so long to come clean?

Iraq - American convoys under the protection of Blackwater USA resumed four days after the U.S. Embassy suspended all land travel by its diplomats and other civilian officials in response to the alleged killing of civilians by the security firm. A top aide to Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki had earlier conceded it may prove difficult for the Iraqi government to follow through on threats to expel Blackwater and other Western security contractors. The U.S. ban earlier this week had confined most American officials to the Green Zone, a 3 1/2-square-mile area in the center of the city that houses the American Embassy and thousands of U.S. soldiers and contractors. The decision kept them from visiting U.S.-funded construction sites or Iraqi officials elsewhere in the country except by helicopter — an indication of how dependent the State Department is on Blackwater protection. Blackwater has said its employees acted "lawfully and appropriately" in response to an armed attack against a U.S. State Department convoy. Several Iraqi witnesses and officials claim the security guards were the first to open fire. What a cluster...well, you know. From what I can figure about the only stuff that seems to be running smoothly over there are the military operations that General Petraeus is running. Hey, here's an idea. How about election him President? I bet he come up with and execute a plan to get us out without bringing an end to civilization as we know it.

Free Speech - Columbia University planned Friday to go forward with a speech by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, while the city mobilized security to protect him from protests during his New York visit. Ahmadinejad, who is to arrive in New York on Sunday to address the United Nations General Assembly, is scheduled to speak at a Columbia question-and-answer forum on Monday. His request to lay a wreath at the World Trade Center site was denied and condemned by Sept. 11 family members and politicians. Ahmadinejad has called the Holocaust "a myth" and called for Israel to be "wiped off the map." The White House has said Iran sponsors terrorism and is trying to develop nuclear weapons. Columbia canceled a planned visit by the Iranian president last year, citing security and logistical reasons. Rallies are planned outside the university building where he was to speak and at the United Nations, prompting city and state officials to prepare a security detail for him. The city police and the U.S. Secret Service are charged with protecting the Iranian leader along with dozens of heads of state arriving for the assembly. I will freely admit that I am not a fan of Ahmadinejad's policies or delusions about world history, but by putting our heads in the sand and pretending the guy isn't out there popping his mouth off isn't going to solve anything. Maybe if we listen to the man, we can figure out how to deal with him a little better. I'll say this, I bet this dude will have a full house on Monday.

Bomb Scare - Troopers arrested an MIT student at gunpoint Friday after she walked into Logan International Airport wearing a computer circuit board and wiring on her sweatshirt. Authorities call it a fake bomb; she called it art. The student's attorney said the charges against her were an overreaction, but authorities expressed amazement that someone would wear such a device eight months after a similar scare in Boston, and six years after two of the jets hijacked in the Sept. 11 attacks took off from Logan. She was charged with possessing a hoax device. A not guilty plea was entered for her and she was released on $750 bail. Okay, so free speech is one thing, but this broad was just plain stupid. There is no difference between this and screaming 'Fire' in a crowded room just for the sake of doing so. Freedom of speech is a privilege that a lot of men and women have given their lives to preserve for us. Let's use some common sense.

Wealth - Microsoft founder Bill Gates is the richest person in America for the 14th year in a row, followed by investor Warren Buffett, according to Forbes magazine's latest list of the wealthiest Americans with Gates' fortune $59 billion and Buffett $52 billion. Casino magnate Sheldon Adelson ($28 billion), head of Las Vegas Sands Corp, and software tycoon Larry Ellison ($26 billion), chief executive of Oracle Corp, remain at No. 3 and No. 4 on the 25th annual ranking of 400 rich Americans, which now requires a minimum net worth of $1.3 billion for inclusion. The collective net worth of those listed on the 400 this year rose $290 billion to $1.54 trillion. Of the top 400 richest Americans, Forbes said 270 were entirely self-made, 74 inherited their wealth and 39 are women. There were 82 American billionaires who did not make the list. To give you some perspective no just how much $1.54 trillion is, Russia's (as in the country) Gross Domestic Product in 2006 was $1.73 trillion. You hear all the time, 'sure they may be rich, but are they happy?'. Dude, these guys are so rich they can buy all the happiness they want.

Baseball - Home run record holder Barry Bonds will leave the San Francisco Giants at the end of this season, the player said on his personal website. Bonds said the Giants had told him he would not be playing for them in 2008 but added he intended to continue in the game. In his statement, Bonds said he believes the Giants made the decision long ago not to bring him back for next season. "Although I am disappointed, I've always said baseball is a business, and I respect their decision," Bonds said. "However, I am saddened and upset that I was not given an earlier opportunity to properly say goodbye to you, my fans, and celebrate with the city throughout the season as I truly believe this was not a last-minute decision by the Giants, but one that was made some time ago." Bonds had said he wanted to finish his career in the comfort of his hometown, where his father, Bobby, played alongside his godfather, Willie Mays. You know some team will pick him up if the price is right. Last time I checked, Oakland wasn't too far from San Franciso, and being an American League team, the Athletics have a Designated Hitter position.

Cycling - Floyd Landis has been officially stripped of his 2006 Tour de France title after being found guilty of doping. As a result, Spaniard Oscar Pereiro, who finished second to the American in the overall standings, has been named the new 2006 Tour de France champion. Landis has been found guilty of doping by a U.S. panel of judges following a positive test for the banned male sex hormone testosterone during his victorious ride on the French roads in July 2006. And that ends that. Adios, Floyd.

Thursday, September 20, 2007

What Caught My Eye Today

Racial Discrimination - Drawn by a case tinged with one of the most hated symbols of Old South racism — a hangman's noose tied in an oak tree — tens of thousands of protesters rallied in Jena, LA against what they see as a double standard of prosecution for blacks and whites. The cause of today's demonstrations dates to August 2006, when a black Jena High School student asked at a student assembly whether blacks could sit under a shade tree that was a frequent gathering place for whites. He was told yes. But nooses appeared in the tree the next day. Three white students were suspended but not criminally prosecuted. The noose incident was followed by fights between blacks and whites, culminating in December's attack on white student Justin Barker, who was knocked unconscious. According to court testimony, his face was swollen and bloodied, but he was able to attend a school function that same night. Six black teens were arrested. Five were originally charged with attempted second-degree murder — charges that have since been reduced for four of them. The sixth was booked as a juvenile on sealed charges. Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton joined scores of college students bused in from across the nation who said they wanted to make a stand for racial equality just as their parents did in the 1950s and '60s. Just a couple of days back (Sept 17, 2007) I got up on my soapbox and criticized the Saudis for discriminating against a woman's right to drive. This serves as a reminder to all of us that we don't have to look very far to find discrimination. There's plenty of it right here in our own backyard. That being said, regardless of the provocation, we cannot look the other way when 6 guys beat up someone senseless. I'm not saying they weren't provoked, and certainly they should get a punishment that fits the crime, but they did commit felonies.

Iraq - President Bush refused to criticize a U.S. security company in Iraq accused in a shooting that left 11 civilians dead, saying investigators need to determine if the guards violated rules governing their operations. "Obviously, to the extent innocent life was lost, you know, I'm saddened," the president said at a wide-ranging news conference. "Our objective is to protect innocent life. And we've got a lot of brave souls in the theater working hard to protect innocent life." Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has urged the U.S. Embassy to find another security firm to protect its diplomats, saying he cannot tolerate "the killing of our citizens in cold blood." He called the shootings a "crime" and said they had generated "widespread anger and hatred." Blackwater's operations in Iraq were suspended, prompting the U.S. embassy in Baghdad to ban all road convoys by diplomats and other civilian personnel outside the heavily fortified Green Zone. Call me crazy, but Bush's comments don't exactly sound like they are dripping with sincerity.

Iran - On another foreign policy issue, Bush said he took seriously threats by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. "This is a person that consistently talks about the use of force on Israel, for example, and Israel is our very firm and strong ally," Bush said. He was asked about a recent statement by France's foreign minister that the international community should prepare for the possibility of war in the event Iran obtains atomic weapons — although the official later stressed the focus remains on diplomatic pressures. "I have consistently stated that I am hopeful that we can convince the Iranian regime to give up any ambitions it has in developing a weapons program, and do so peacefully," Bush said. "That ought to be the objective of any diplomacy." He also defended the decision of New York officials to deny Ahmadinejad permission to lay a wreath next week at ground zero — site of the destroyed World Trade Center. "I can understand why they would not want somebody that's running a country that's a state sponsor of terror down there at the site," the president said. In one breath, Bush says he wants to pursue a peaceful diplomatic solution, and in the next he calls Ahmadinejad the leader of a country that is 'a state sponsor of terror.' Again, I may be way out in left field on this one, but does he not see the possibility of his remarks being construed as somewhat inconsistent?

Animal Cruelty - It's stories like this next one that make me question just how civilized a society have we evolved into. A man who captured neighborhood cats and kittens and fed them live to his pit bulls was charged with aggravated cruelty to animals. The arrest warrant said the man "did give injured live cats and kittens to his pit bull dogs and let the pit bulls kill the already injured cats and kittens. He would capture and injure neighborhood cats for this purpose." Authorities found the bodies of two kittens near the man's residence and also found a gruesome image on his cell phone: a picture of one of his pit bulls and one of the mauled, dead kittens, and beneath picture a caption that says "Good Dog." What could possibly motivate people to do such horrifically cruel acts? People say pit bulls are dangerous animals. Maybe so, but they didn't start off that way. People, just like you and me, taught them to be dangerous.

Cycling - The verdict said "guilty." Like so much else in the confusing, contentious Floyd Landis doping case, though, none of the answers are really that simple. Landis lost his expensive and explosive case Thursday when two of three arbitrators upheld the results of a test that showed the 2006 Tour de France champion used synthetic testosterone to fuel his spectacular comeback victory. The decision means Landis, who repeatedly has denied using performance-enhancing drugs, must forfeit his Tour title and is subject to a two-year ban, retroactive to Jan. 30, 2007. Not that it changes his opinion of who the rightful winner was. "I am innocent," he said, "and we proved I am innocent." The majority of the panel disagreed. Floyd, buddy, let me explain how this proof thing works. You see, if you had actually proved yourself innocent, the verdict would have been 'not guilty.' You may be innocent--as you alone seem to believe--but, alas, my friend, you did not prove it.

Celebrity Pairing - Jenny McCarthy worried about finding a good man after her son, Evan, was diagnosed with autism two years ago. Then Jim Carrey came along. McCarthy and Carrey, 45, went public with their romance last year. Though she's in love, McCarthy has no plans to marry the twice-divorced actor. "There will be no certificate," she says. "It goes far deeper than that. Jim came into our life with an open heart and open arms. He's learned a lot about autism. He listens. The power of listening. It can move mountains." So like, these two have been an item for a year? Wow. I'd love to be a fly on the wall for Sunday dinner at their place just to see how often they make it through dinner without someone starting a good-humored food fight. Well, good for them. I hope things work out.

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

What Caught My Eye Today

Taiwan - The United Nations again blocked Taiwan's quest for membership in the world body despite a high-profile campaign this year by Taipei that has irritated the United States as well as China. Taiwan was expelled from the United Nations in 1971 in favor of China. It was the 15th consecutive year that a membership bid by the island of 23 million people had met the same fate, but the first time it had applied under the name Taiwan instead of its formal title, Republic of China. At issue is whether Taiwan is part of China or not. Beijing says it is and has threatened to attack the island if it declares independence. U.N. membership could be considered a move toward independence. The self-ruled island that China has claimed as its own since the 1949 civil war says the assembly's resolution no longer applies to present-day Taiwan, which is recognized by 24 countries. The Marshall Islands, representing that group, had asked for Taiwan's application to be considered by the new General Assembly session. Well I for one am shocked by this turn of events. You would think that the political clout of the Marshall Islands would have helped to further Taiwan's cause.

Iran - The deputy commander of Iran's air force said that plans have been drawn up to bomb Israel if the Jewish state attacks Iran. The announcement came amid rising tensions in the region, with the United States calling for a new round of U.N. sanctions against Iran over its disputed nuclear program and Israeli planes having recently overflown, and perhaps even attacked, Iranian ally Syria. Iran has said in the past that Israel would be Iran's first retaliatory target if attacked by the United States. Iran's ambassador to Kuwait said that U.S. bases in the Gulf would be targeted if the country was attacked and a top Revolutionary Guards commander said this week that Americans could be found all around Iran and that they were legitimate Iranian targets if the U.S. takes military action. Two U.N. resolutions imposing sanctions on Iran have failed to persuade the country to suspend uranium enrichment. Tehran insists the program is aimed at producing energy for civilian use but the U.S., its European allies and many others fear the program's real aim is to produce nuclear weapons. It's heartening to see the cogs of diplomacy working so well to diffuse this rather volatile situation. I'm curious whether this flap is as dire as the media is reporting, or if all we're hearing is a bunch of sound bits from mouthpieces that are not actually calling the shots.

Britain - In a visit to Britain by Gen. David Petraeus and U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker, top U.S. commander in Iraq said that Britain's handover of southern Iraq to government forces has been a success so far but he warned against a premature withdrawal of coalition troops from the country. Speaking before a meeting with Prime Minister Gordon Brown, Petraeus offered support for Britain's plan to give Iraqi security forces control of Basra province later this year or earlier next year. British media had reported that Petraeus intended to press Brown to increase the number of British troops patrolling the Iraqi border with Iran to cut off the smuggling of Iranian weapons to Shiite militias. So like, the media got wrong? The hell, you say. Could it possibly be that the truth was not as exciting and therefore may not grab as many readers or viewers? Perhaps I'm being a bit harsh here, but do you remember back in the day, when you could pick up a newspaper or turn on the evening news and actually get the news rather than some blow-hard's opinion on what you should think?

Stock Market - Stocks bounded higher as Wall Street extended its rally a day after the Federal Reserve's big interest rate cut. A mild reading on consumer prices added to the market's momentum. The move comes a day after central bank policymakers slashed the target federal funds rate to 4.75 percent from 5.25 percent because of signs that credit market problems could hurt the overall economy. The Dow on Tuesday climbed nearly 336 points — its biggest one-day point gain in nearly five years. Investors looked past record oil prices at other economic data that appeared to justify the Fed's rate cut and perhaps eased some concerns about lingering inflation. While stocks surged yesterday after the Fed cut rates, some investors have already begun wondering how long the central bank could sustain its efforts to provide cheaper access to cash if prices began to creep higher. Fear not, loyal readers. I still cannot quit my day job, at least not for a few more decades.

O.J. Simpson - Let me begin by saying--what a putz. With that out of the way, here's the latest. A judge set bail at $125,000 for O.J. Simpson in connection with the armed robbery of sports memorabilia collectors at a Las Vegas hotel. Simpson, standing in court in a blue jail uniform and handcuffs, furrowed his brow as the judge read the list of charges against him. He answered quietly in a hoarse voice and nodded as Justice of the Peace Joe Bonaventure Jr. laid out restrictions for his release, including surrendering his passport to his attorney and having no contact with co-defendants or potential witnesses. Simpson was charged with kidnapping, robbery with use of a deadly weapon, burglary while in possession of a deadly weapon, coercion with use of a deadly weapon, assault with a deadly weapon, conspiracy to commit kidnapping, conspiracy to commit robbery and conspiracy to commit a crime. He did not enter a plea. In what I hope echoes the sentiments of most of the general public, toss the guy in the clink and throw away the key, if for no other reason, so we don't have to read about or hear about this plight on society anymore.

Baseball - The California entrepreneur who submitted the winning bid on Barry Bonds' record-tying 755th home run ball said Tuesday that he also will let the public decide what to do with it. Ben Padnos told The Associated Press that he would follow the lead of fashion designer Marc Ecko, who bought Bonds' No. 756 ball, and let fans vote on whether he should give it to the Hall of Fame or destroy it. Ecko said Monday he was taking votes on whether to give the ball to the Hall of Fame, brand it with an asterisk or blast it into space. Unlike Ecko, Padnos plans to make money by selling ads on his voting Web site. If you, like me, want to celebrate democracy in its purest form (at least in Ecko's case), cast your votes for #755
here and for #756 here.

Monday, September 17, 2007

What Caught My Eye Today

Venezuela - Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez threatened on Monday to close or take over any private school that refuses to submit to the oversight of his socialist government as it develops a new curriculum and textbooks. All schools, public and private, must admit state inspectors and submit to the government's new educational system, or be closed and nationalized, with the state taking responsibility for the education of their children, Chavez said. A new curriculum will be ready by the end of this school year, and new textbooks are being developed to help educate "the new citizen," said Chavez's brother and education minister Adan Chavez. The president's opponents accuse him of aiming to indoctrinate young Venezuelans with socialist ideology. But the education minister said the aim is to develop "critical thinking," not to impose a single way of thought. I'm sure that if "critical thinking" happens to align perfectly with Chavez's way of thinking, that will be by sheer coincidence. I mean is it his fault that he just happens to be right about everything?

Saudi Arabia - For the first time ever, a group of women in the only country that bans female drivers have formed a committee to lobby for the right to get behind the wheel, and they plan to petition King Abdullah in the next few days for the privilege. The government is unlikely to respond because the issue remains so highly sensitive and divisive. But committee members say their petition will at least highlight what many Saudis — both men and women — consider a "stolen" right. Conservatives, who believe women should be shielded from male strangers, say women in the driver's seat will be free to leave home alone and go when and where they please. They also will unduly expose their eyes while driving and interact with male strangers, such as traffic police and mechanics. But supporters of female drivers say the prohibition exists neither in law nor Islam, but is based on fatwas, or edicts, by senior clerics who say women at the wheel create situations for sinful temptation. Women tried to defy the ban once and paid heavily for it. In November 1990, when U.S. troops were in Saudi Arabia following Iraq's invasion of Kuwait, some 50 women got behind the wheel and drove family cars. They were jailed for one day, their passports were confiscated and they lost their jobs. It's funny how depending on what side of a debate you happen to be on that the difference between a 'right' and a 'privilege' seems to get obscured. On another note, isn't it ironic how our nation's leaders can talk about creating a democratic and free society in Iraq, while seemingly turning a blind eye and deaf ear, to what I have to believe the majority of American citizens consider a basic right--the freedom to drive.

Pakistan - Pakistan's Election Commission changed the rules Monday to open the way for President Gen. Pervez Musharraf to seek a new five-year presidential term without giving up the powerful position of army chief. Opposition parties decried the move as a brazen violation of the constitution and accused the U.S.-allied leader of trying to bulldoze legal obstacles to his staying in power amid increasing demands for an end to military rule. They predicted a surge in democracy protests. the ruling was likely to end up before the Supreme Court, which has proved an impediment to Musharraf this year and which many people hope can find a way to guide Pakistan out of a political crisis that some fear could lead to violent demonstrations and martial law. What I want to know is who sits on the Election Commission and how did they get their posts in the first place. If these were political appointments, do you want to wager who made those appointments?

China - Beijing church leaders will ordain a new bishop this week filling an influential post that had been closely watched to gauge whether the government would consult with the Vatican on church appointments. Joseph Li Shan was approved by China's 59-member Conference of Bishops. There had been no contact between China and the Vatican about Li's appointment because the two sides have no diplomatic relations. But the Vatican-affiliated missionary news agency Asia News said Li may have received the Vatican's blessing. The Vatican says only it has the right to name bishops and the question of their appointment has been the main stumbling block in resuming relations with the government in Beijing. China views papal appointments as interference in its internal affairs. China forced its Roman Catholics to cut ties with the Vatican in 1951, shortly after the officially atheist Communist Party took power. Worship is allowed only in the government-controlled churches, which recognize the pope as a spiritual leader but appoint their own priests and bishops. Earlier this month, a bishop who led an underground congregation of Roman Catholics and was repeatedly detained in China for his loyalty to the Vatican died in police custody, according to a monitoring group. Well this will be interesting to watch. I'm all for compromise, but let's not confuse compromise with throwing in the towel. The Vatican risks setting a dangerous precedent if it allow's China to select it's own bishops. If China is granted that privilege, who is to say that other countries won't try to do the same?

Steve Fossett - Like Amelia Earhart's disappearance over the Pacific Ocean 70 years ago, the riddle of Steve Fossett's whereabouts is threatening to become one of the world's greatest aviation mysteries. Nearly two weeks after Fossett's light plane vanished above a vast expanse of rugged Nevada wilderness, an army of rescuers and volunteers are still no closer to locating the millionaire aviator. Fossett has not been heard from since September 3, when he took off on a solo flight from a private airstrip south of Reno, and failed to return as scheduled three hours later. Since then, a mini air-force of helicopters and planes have taken to the skies in an effort to locate the 63-year-old, a veteran of several world record breaking balloon and plane flights around the globe. A total of around 20,000 square miles (52,000 square kilometers) has been searched with no success. Seeing as we're drawing historical comparisons here, I'm thinking that there will soon be one more similarity between Fossett and Earhart--the one where the pilot is never found.

Chocolate - Mars Inc. said it will continue to use 100 percent cocoa butter in its U.S. chocolate products, bucking an industry campaign to allow cheaper vegetable oils to be substituted. The announcement comes amid a push by a dozen food industry groups to change long-established federal standards to allow for replacing cocoa butter with another vegetable fat, up to a level of 5 percent. The groups say the change, which would save money for manufacturers, would allow more flexibility and innovation. Manufacturers already can use vegetable fats instead of cocoa butter, but they are not allowed by the Food and Drug Administration to call it chocolate. In a world awash in terrorism, human suffering, global warming and pretty much any other depressing situation you can think of, it's nice to hear that someone is tanking a stand to protect the sanctity of one of the few bastions of pleasure that we have left in the world. Good for you Mars--keep the chocolate clean.

Sunday, September 16, 2007

What Caught My Eye Today

These first two items come courtesy of this month's issue of Esquire:

Kazakhstan - Kazakhstan discovered it had oil - and a lot of it - in 2000. When they start pumping the Kashagan oil field in the Caspian Sea in 2011, Kazakstan's oil production will double. By 2015, the country's reserves could top 110 billion barrels, catapulting it into the top five oil producing countries in the world. The world's ninth largest country jumped from #82 to #63 on the World Bank's ranking of countries, boasting a banking system more advanced than Russia's. The government's business-friendly efforts, coupled with an average economic growth rate of 9% per year, budget surpluses topping 6% per year, and increased public spending are attracting foreign investment from companies including Deutsche Bank, Exxon Mobil, Ernst & Young, Mitsubishi and ABN AMRO Bank. Too bad the nation's leader, Nursultan Nazarbayev, is nuts. President for as long as the country has been in existence-since 1991-Nazarbayev has a history of unstable behavior. His most recent exploit has been moving the capital from Almaty, a city on the southern border near China, to Astana, a made up city in the middle of nowhere. Speculation abou the president's motives range from his desire to move create a capital free of dreary Communist baggage to his belief that Astana is easier to pronounce than Almaty. Among the many reasons why I will never be rich is my aversion to risk. But seriously, how many of you would invest billions of dollars with this crackpot in charge?

Imperialism - Here is a fascinating take on 5 candidates to be added to the United States:

Cuba: Fidel Castro dies, leaving his brother Raul in charge of the country. Raul gets replaced by some "national unity" committee that holds free presidential elections within 5 years. One or more of those candidates stumps openly for American statehood. Florida holds every subsequent U.S. presidential candidate hostage to the Cuba-statehood plank.

Washington D.C.: Assuming Cuba comes into the Union as a "red state", expect the political spectrum to be balanced out with the former district being added as a "blue state."

Puerto Rico: This "red state" contender would command half a dozen seats in the House based on its population. Currently, Puerto Rico draws $20 billion out of the Treasury each year in federal grants while paying back nothing in taxes and is subject to all our laws while having no representation in Congress and no vote for president.

Mexico: Well, parts of it, at least. The northernmost states could conceivably join up in some scheme balance by GOP-heavy Texas's subdivision (The 1845 congressional joint resolution admitting Texas allows for its division into as many as 5 separate states). The United Mexican States has a history of secessionist movements. While the northern states are clearly integrating economically with the U.S., the ones continue to fall behind.

Central America: Leading candidates here include El Salvador (where 1 in 5 Salvadorans lives and works in the U.S. already), Panama (I'm guessing that the Canal has something to do with this) and Costa Rica (where an increasing number of American retiree are choosing to relocate).

Canada: The western provinces (British Columbia and Alberta) have never liked the francophone easterners and would make a wonderfully matched set in Quebec ever got its wish and triggered Canada's breakup.

I can see the Washington D.C. and Puerto Rico scenarios coming to fruition some day, but the rest of this seem completely far-fetched (though amusing).

O.J. Simpson - O.J. Simpson was arrested Sunday and faces multiple felony charges in an alleged armed robbery of collectors involving the former football great's sports memorabilia. Prosecutors were planning to charge Simpson with two counts of robbery with use of a deadly weapon, conspiracy to commit robbery, burglary with a deadly weapon, two counts of assault with a deadly weapon and coercion. A conviction on the most serious charge, robbery with use of a deadly weapon, could bring a sentence of three to 35 years for each count. Simpson said he and other people with him were retrieving items that belonged to him and that there were no guns involved and that he went to the room at the casino only to get stolen mementos that included his Hall of Fame certificate and a picture of the running back with J. Edgar Hoover. Simpson said that he did not call the police to help reclaim the items because he has found the police unresponsive to him ever since his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend, Ron Goldman, were killed in 1994. This seems reminiscint of how Al Capone was brought down. When law enforcement could not get him on any murder raps, they busted him for income tax evasion. One way or another, the guilt will find a way to get busted.

Golf - The PGA Tour's "new era in golf" came to a familiar conclusion Sunday when Woods captured the Tour Championship in record-setting fashion, closing with a 4-under 66 for an eight-shot victory at East Lake and his seventh title of the season. Along with winning the Tour Championship and its $1.26 million prize, Woods was a runaway winner of the FedEx Cup and the $10 million that goes into his retirement account. Woods' primary objective is winning majors, and he already has 13 of those. The World Golf Championships were created in 1999, and he has won 14 of 25. And now the FedEx Cup. It was the 61st career victory for Woods, which makes him at 31 the youngest player to reach that mark. Jack Nicklaus was 35 when he captured his 61st tour victory. The $1.26 million in cash he earned Sunday pushing his season total to $10,876,052, the second-highest mark in PGA Tour history. Woods came up $29,114 short of the record set by Vijay Singh in 2004, although Singh earned that in 29 tournaments. Woods played in only 16 this year. You almost feel bad for the rest of the guys on the PGA tour...almost. Over on the women's side, dominating the singles matches like they always have, the Americans celebrated one of the most coveted wins in women's golf Sunday, a 16-12 decision over Europe to win the Solheim Cup.

NASCAR - Clint Bowyer raced to his first Nextel Cup victory Sunday, starting from the pole and leading all 221 of the 300 laps to win at New Hampshire International Speedway. Bowyer entered the 12-driver Chase as the only contender without a victory, and had never finished higher than third in his short Cup career. Jeff Gordon, the four-time series champion, finished second and was followed by two-time series champion Tony Stewart. Kyle Busch was fourth and followed by Martin Truex Jr., Johnson and Matt Kenseth as Chase drivers took the top seven spots. Johnson and Gordon are tied for the points lead, and Stewart is just 10 points back. Bowyer moved up eight spots into fourth place, only 15 points out. Kyle Busch jumped four spots to fifth and is 35 points behind. Truex is sixth, 40 points back and Kenseth is seventh. Carl Edwards dropped four spots to eighth, and Denny Hamlin fell three spots to ninth. Kevin Harvick is 10th. Jeff Burton 11th and Kurt Busch plummeted seven spots to 12th.

College Football - Here are the latest rankings after week 3 of the college football season. Nick Saban's first big win at Alabama vaulted the Crimson Tide into the top 25 for the first time this season. Coming off a 41-38 upset of Arkansas, Alabama (3-0) climbed to 16th in the latest Associated Press poll. Surprising Kentucky (3-0) also entered the top 25 for the first time in 2007 at No. 21 after upsetting Louisville, 40-34. There were two other newcomers in the poll as well: No. 24 South Florida (2-0), which was idle last week after upsetting Auburn, 26-23, in its season opener, and No. 25 Missouri (3-0), which drubbed Western Michigan, 52-24. Louisville (2-1) dropped from ninth to 18th, while Arkansas (1-1), 16th last week, fell out of the top 25. Southern California (2-0) strengthened its spot atop the poll following an impressive 49-31 victory at Nebraska as the Trojans collected 46 of 65 first-place votes and 1,605 points from a panel of writers and sportscasters. Louisiana State (3-0) remained second after routing Middle Tennessee State, 44-0. The Tigers received 1,577 points and the remaining 19 first-place ballots. Florida (3-0), Oklahoma (3-0) and West Virginia (3-0) complete the top five, followed California (3-0), Texas (3-0), Ohio State (3-0), Wisconsin (3-0) and Penn State (3-0). No. 11 Rutgers (3-0) starts the second 10, followed by South Carolina (3-0), Oregon (3-0) and Boston College (3-0), which climbed seven slots and staked an early claim as the top team in the Atlantic Coast Conference with a 24-10 win at Georgia Tech. No. 15 Clemson (3-0), Alabama, No. 17 Virginia Tech (2-1), Louisville, Hawaii (3-0) and Texas A&M (3-0) complete the top 20. Completing the poll are Kentucky, Georgia (2-1), South Florida (2-0), Nebraska (2-1), which dropped 10 spots, and Missouri. UCLA (2-1) and Tennessee (1-2) also dropped out of the poll following lopsided losses.

Saturday, September 15, 2007

What Caught My Eye Today

Japan - After less than a year in office, Shinzo Abe quit as prime minister of Japan. Abe said that it was evident by his party's poor showing in July's elections that he had lost the people's confidence. Abe's tenure was marked by small-scale financial scandals, and analysts speculated that some larger transgression might soon emerge. One has to believe that the latter had more of a bearing on his decision to leave office. Can you imagine a head of state leaving office just because the people didn't like the job he or she was doing? I know a lot of people in the U.S. have been fantasizing about that for several months (or even years), but let's be real here.

Germany - The German army rejected nearly half its annual call-up of conscripts last year because they were overweight and out of shape. In 2002, 19% were rejected on medical grounds. In 2006, that figure jumped to 45%. Officials suspect that in some cases, sympathetic doctors are colluding with healthy but reluctant recruits, pronouncing them unfit. National service remains a divisive issue in Germany. Supporters say an army of "citizens" is a safeguard against a domestic military takeover. Detractors say that a professional army made up of volunteers would be more effective in defending against external threats. A "domestic military takeover?" Sounds to me like some folks over there are still a little spooked about a possible repeat of World War II. I'm all for learning from history, but this seems a little extreme.

India - Okay, this one is a bit creepy. The demand for Hindu funeral pyres is rapidly deforesting India. Burning a single body in the traditional Hindu manner requires 600 to 1,000 pounds of wood. With more than 8 million Hindu deaths a year, India burns 50 million trees annually, producing 50,000 tons of ash and 8 million tons of carbon dioxide. The government offers environmentally friendly gas-powered cremations, but only the poorest are sent off that way, as most observant Hindus insist on wood.

Arctic - Parts of the Arctic are losing summer ice so fast that no polar bears will be able to live there within a few decades, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. As a result, two-thirs of the world's estimated 25,000 polar bears may be gone by 2050. The agency found that as the climate warms, the remaining bears will be relegated largely to the ARctic archipelago of Canada and the northern Greenland coast. Polar bears depend on sea ice as platforms from which to hunt seals and other food. Clearly this report is flawed. Global warming is just a myth, right? How could any sane person possibly equate warmer climates to global warming?

Under-age Drinking - Apparently, you won't find much in Maine. A supermarket refused to sell a bottle of wine to a 65-year old woman because she didn't have identification. State law requires stores to check the ID of anyone who looks 27 or younger. By the woman's own admission, "no wone would mistake me for 30 or even 40. The store manager told the woman the chain has a firm policy of requiring ID from anyone who looks younger than 45. Absurd as this whole incident was, this broad must be doing something right to come off looking that good. Either that or the supermarket's staff is dumber than dirt.

Motor Sports - Accused of using leaked secret data from its main rival Ferrari, the Formula One team McLaren was hit with a record $100 million fine Thursday by the World Motor Sport Council in the biggest scandal to hit auto racing's premier circuit. The F1 case broke in July when a 780-page technical dossier on Ferrari cars was found at the home of McLaren's chief designer, Mike Coughlan, who was later suspended. Ferrari mechanic Nigel Stepney, who allegedly supplied the documents, was fired. McLaren escaped censure by the World Motor Sport Council in July due to insufficient evidence that Ferrari's technical documents were misused. The $100 million fine imposed on McLaren is 40 times larger than the previous F1 record. Over here, in the U.S., the press is making a big deal over the $500,000 fine levied against New England Patriot's head coach, Bill Belichick for illegally video taping defense signals for its opponent. Kind of sounds like small potatoes compared to the F1 fine. You know, with all this proliferation of steriods, blood doping and, now, cheating, I'll take amateur sports from now on. The simple fact of the matter is when you play for pay it is no longer sport, it's a job and it's all about business.

Friday, September 14, 2007

What Caught My Eye Today

Iraq - Defense Secretary Robert Gates raised the possibility of cutting U.S. troop levels in Iraq to 100,000 by the end of next year, well beyond the cuts President Bush has approved. Stressing that he was expressing a hope, not an administration plan, Gates said it was possible that conditions in Iraq would improve enough to merit much deeper troop cuts than are currently scheduled for 2008. It was the first time a member of Bush's war cabinet had publicly suggested such deep reductions, perhaps offering a conciliatory hand to anti-war Democrats and some wary Republicans in Congress who have been pushing for troop reductions, a change in the U.S. mission and an end to the war. Okay, now I'm getting concerned. First General Petraeus, and now the Secretary of Defense is making statements to suggest that our war policy in Iraq may actually change to reflect the will of the country. Surely, I must be missing something here.

Iran - President Bush and other American officials will one day face trial just like deposed Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein for "the catastrophes they caused in Iraq." Speaking to thousands of worshippers during the first Friday prayer of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said that Bush will be called to account for the U.S.-led invasion. "A day will come that the current U.S. president and officials will be tried in an international supreme court for the catastrophes they caused in Iraq," he said. Yeah, I see this happening...around the same time that monkeys start flying out of my butt.

Taiwan - Taiwan's president, Chen Shui-bian, criticized the U.S. on Friday for refusing to support a referendum the island is planning to hold on whether to seek U.N. membership under its own name. He believes the U.S. opposes the referendum because of China's opposition, intimidation and threat of military action. Chen said the referendum is the best way to show the world that the majority of Taiwanese favor the island gaining a U.N. seat. "I'm convinced that the United States would rather improve relations with North Korea than Taiwan," Chen said. "The U.S. also believes Kosovo will be independent eventually. If you support Kosovo, why can't you support or at least care about Taiwan? Are we that unworthy?" Taiwan is a close U.S. ally, although they have no official ties. U.S. officials worry that Chen's referendum plan will provoke China and upset the delicate balance of power in the region. I hate to say it, but it sounds like some of Chen's accusations may have some merit. Not that it matters. Taiwan can only get into the U.N. if the Security Councial approves it. And guess who has veto power? Yup. China.

Zimbabwe - If you are an animal lover, you may want to skip this item. Pets are being slaughtered for meat in shortage-stricken Zimbabwe and record numbers of animals have been surrendered to shelters or abandoned by owners no longer able to feed them, animal welfare activists say. Animals, like people, are being hard hit by Zimbabwe's economic meltdown, with official inflation of more than 7,600 percent, the highest in the world. Independent estimates put real inflation closer to 25,000 percent and the International Monetary Fund has forecast it will reach 100,000 percent by the end of the year. Vets have run out of the drug used to put down the animals and are relying on intermittent donations from neighboring South Africa. One veterinary practice was waiting for supplies to destroy about 20 animals, and on Friday could neither feed them adequately nor fatally inject them. Pets, mostly dogs, have been butchered and eaten. In its latest bulletin to donors and supporters, the SPCA said it launched an awareness campaign on "the ethical and moral issues regarding the killing and consumption of trusted companion animals." I don't have much to add here other than it's hard to image things can get much worse.

Soccer - Here's the latest from the Women's World Cup in China. Abby Wambach scored twice as the U.S. beat Sweden 2-0 -- her third in two games in China. The victory boosted the United States to four points atop Group B -- the same as North Korea -- with a final group game Tuesday in Shanghai against Nigeria. North Korea defeated Nigeria 2-0 on Friday and faces Sweden on Tuesday in the northern city of Tianjin. A draw will be enough to get the United States to the quarterfinals, although a victory might guarantee first place and a quarterfinal against Japan or England. If the U.S. finishes second it will have a tougher time against defending champion Germany. In Group A in Shanghai, Germany and England played a 0-0 draw. In the other Group A game, Japan defeated Argentina 1-0 on an injury-time goal.

Golf - Tiger Woods ran off five straight birdies, including one he never saw go in from the bottom of a bunker. Then he rammed in a 70-foot eagle putt for a 28 on the front nine of defenseless East Lake, the lowest nine-hole score of his career to cap off a a second round 63 and a 3 shot lead going into the weekend at the Tour Championship in Atlanta. As for the FedEx Cup, it might be time to start wiring that $10 million prize into Woods' retirement account. Steve Stricker is second behind Woods in the playoff standings, but was nine shots behind him going into the weekend at East Lake. Phil Mickelson needed a victory to have any chance of winning the cup -- and that was if Woods finished worse than second alone -- and he was seven shots behind through two rounds. Woods is playing some of the best golf of the year, a staggering 65 under par in 18 rounds since the British Open. He is 29-6 on the PGA Tour when he has at least a share of the 36-hole lead, and he hasn't spit up a lead on the weekend in three years. There are plenty of superlatives that you can apply to the rank-and-file, but when you are talking about Tiger Woods, they just seem ordinary. How crazy good is this guy?

Thursday, September 13, 2007

What Caught My Eye Today

Iraq - President Bush, defending an unpopular war, ordered gradual reductions in U.S. forces in Iraq, but firmly rejected calls to end the war, saying the insurgents who threaten Iraq's future are a danger to U.S. national security. American troops must stay in the battle, Bush said, and more than 130,000 will remain after the newly ordered withdrawals are completed in July. Bush said 5,700 U.S. forces would be home by Christmas and that four brigades — at least 21,500 troops — would return by July, along with an undetermined number of support forces. Now at its highest level of the war, the U.S. troop strength stands at 168,000. Bush said the U.S. engagement in Iraq will stretch beyond his presidency, requiring military, financial and political support from Washington. With no dramatic change in course, Bush's decision sets the stage for a fiery political debate in Congress and on the 2008 presidential campaign trail. Democrats said Bush's modest approach was unacceptable.

Wait, there's more where this came from...

A new White House report on Iraq shows slim progress, moving just one more political and security goal into the satisfactory column: efforts to let former members of Saddam Hussein's Baath Party to rejoin the political process. The latest conclusions largely track a comparable poor assessment in July on 18 benchmarks. The earlier White House report said the Iraqi government had made satisfactory gains toward eight benchmarks, unsatisfactory marks on eight and mixed results on two. Congress required President Bush to submit the report to lawmakers, assessing whether the Iraqi government had made progress toward achieving the 18 goals. In the new report, the Iraqi government showed positive movement on only one of the benchmarks. The White House report is more positive than two other recent Iraq progress reports that harshly criticized lack of progress in Iraq. The Sept. 6 report by the Independent Commission on the Security Forces of Iraq, chaired by retired Marine Corps Gen. James Jones, said Iraq's security forces will be unable to assume control of the country in the next 12 to 18 months without U.S. help and that the national police force is rife with corruption and infiltrated by militia forces and should be disbanded. The Government Accountability Office progress report on Iraq, released Sept. 4, said violence in Iraq remains high, fewer Iraqi security forces are capable of acting independently, and the parliament in Baghdad has failed to reach major political agreements needed to curb sectarian violence.

All I can say, is that if any of this surprises you, clearly you haven't been paying attention.

Indonesia - An 8.4-magnitude quake that shook Indonesia on Wednesday. But despite the intensity of the shallow undersea earthquake, no waves lashed the beach and the family shack was undamaged. A quirk of nature sent the full force of the tsunami out to sea, preventing a repeat of the 2004 Indian Ocean disaster that killed more than 230,000 people. Two other powerful temblors — magnitudes 7.8 and 7.1 — followed on Thursday off Sumatra and two weaker quakes were felt later. More than 30 aftershocks have rattled the region in the last day and many people refused to return to their homes, fearing a repeat of the 2004 tsunami. Sensitive to criticism about slow responses to the 2004 tsunami triggered by a magnitude-9 quake, governments issued alerts as far away as Kenya and Tanzania in East Africa, telling people to leave beaches. People in Mombasa, Kenya, crowded into buses after hearing the warning over the radio. I'm torn on this one. Are these guys unlucky because of the rash of earthquakes that continue to rattle their country, or, are they extraordinarily lucky because this time Mother Nature decided to cut them a break? Tough call.

Japan - Japan's space agency launched its much-delayed lunar probe beginning what it calls the largest mission to the moon since the U.S. Apollo flights. The Selenological and Engineering Explorer — or SELENE — probe came four years behind the agency's original schedule. The SELENE project is the largest lunar mission since the U.S. Apollo program in terms of overall scope and ambition, outpacing the former Soviet Union's Luna program and NASA's Clementine and Lunar Prospector projects, according to Japan's space agency. It involves placing the main satellite in orbit at an altitude of about 60 miles and deploying the two smaller satellites in polar orbits. Researchers will use data gathered by the probes to study the moon's origin and evolution. I'm not exactly sure why this has got everyone so excited. We've been there and done that...more than 40 years ago. Still, seeing as there is a country other than the U.S. or Russia pulling this stunt off, I suppose congratulations are in order.

China - After a more than a decade of delays, China's tallest building is slicing through Shanghai's hazy, skyscraper-studded skyline. The 101-story Shanghai World Financial Center, a 1,614 foot wedge-shaped tower with a rectangular hole at the very top, will be topped out tomorrow as its last beam is laid. The $1 billion Shanghai project, due for completion in time for the 2008 Beijing Olympics, is a monument to the city's ambitions to reclaim its status as a key international center. Taiwan's Taipei 101, at 1,667 feet, beat the building's height, taking the tallest sweepstakes in 2004. Developers of a skyscraper in oil-rich Dubai recently declared theirs the world's tallest building when construction reached 1,680 feet — and the building is still far from finished. That is one big mamba-jamba. If you don't believe me, see for yourself (click
here).

U.S. Dollar - The US dollar hit to new record low against the euro ($1.3886) as investors fretted about a world credit crunch. The dollar has fallen in the past week, amid hopes that Federal Reserve will cut interest rates in a bid to reassure markets over current credit fears. At the heart of the dollar's decline have been problems in the U.S. housing market, caused by the Fed increasing interest rates in order to slow accelerating inflation. The increases have led to higher borrowing costs, triggering an increase in the number of people defaulting on loans, especially in the sub-prime mortgage market. The impact on the consumer and businesses may be mixed, analysts said. Eurozone consumers could benefit from cheaper prices for some imported goods. At the same time, there is also good news for eurozone companies because oil, metals and many raw material prices are quoted in dollars, and the strength of the euro should dampen firms' input costs. However, while the strong euro may cut some import costs, it could also have a negative effect on exports as European-made goods become more expensive. The U.S. is one of Europe's largest trading partners. This just goes to show that the world is getting smaller by the day. I will say this, anything that can get the interest rate on my home equity line to go down, I'm in favor of. That vacation to Europe can wait. Hell, they don't like us much anyway.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

What Caught My Eye Today

September 11 - Victims' families gathered in a park to mark the sixth anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks in the first remembrance ceremony not held at ground zero, an event that failed to evoke the same emotions as the hallowed ground of the World Trade Center site. The Manhattan ceremonies were held largely in a public park because of rebuilding at ground zero. First responders, volunteers and firefighters who helped rescue New Yorkers from the collapsing twin towers read the names of the city's 2,750 victims. Former Mayor Rudy Giuliani returned to ground zero Tuesday, despite objections by several victims' families and firefighters who said he should not speak at the remembrance because he is running for president. Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Rodham Clinton attended the ceremony, but did not speak. Around the country, Americans went through familiar mourning rituals as they looked back on the day when terrorists hijacked four jetliners and killed nearly 3,000 people. President Bush attended ceremonies at the White House and the Pentagon, and the 40 passengers and crew members who died when a flight crashed into a Pennsylvania field were honored as "citizen soldiers." It's sometimes hard to fathom what the world was like before that day. So many things have changed since then, from air travel to our nation's foreign policy. September 11 will play a crucial role in our country's evolution for years to come--I'm not exactly sure that's such a good thing.

Iraq - Gen. David Petraeus and U.S. ambassador to Baghdad Ryan Crocker insisted progress was being made under Bush's strategy of temporarily building up troops to allow time for Iraqi lawmakers to achieve political reconciliation in testimony before the U.S. Senate. But the bipartisan criticism directed at both men during congressional hearings raised questions about whether Bush could count on Republican colleagues for help in staving off Democrats' demands for a faster pullout. Petraeus repeated his plan -- outlined on Monday -- to gradually pull out the extra 30,000 "surge" forces and bring troop levels back down to about 130,000 by next summer. But Petraeus said he could not predict how quickly troop levels would fall after the summer and his force should still protect the Iraqi population, not focus solely on handing over to Iraqi forces and conducting counter-terrorism missions. I'll say this. The Senate was definitely a tougher crowd to please than the House was yesterday. While I continued to be impressed but not entirely happy) with Petraeus' grace under pressure, it certainly appeared as if Crocker was starting to get a bit flustered.

Ethiopa - Celebrations are under way in the streets of Addis Ababa as Ethiopia ushers in the new Millennium. The country uses the calendar of the Coptic Orthodox Church - for which the 21st Century began on Wednesday at midnight. In the 6th Century, the rest of Christendom revised its estimate of the date of the birth of Christ - but Ethiopia stuck with the old date, which means it only now marks the start of the year 2000. Because it was never colonised, Ethiopia has always had a special significance for the rest of Africa. Happy New Year, I guess. I hope that Y2K bug didn't mess anything up for you guys.

Zimbabwe - A prominent critic of Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe has resigned as the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Bulawayo, after an adultery scandal. Zimbabwe's state media in July published photographs of what it said was Pius Ncube in bed with a married woman who worked for his parish. His lawyers called the allegations an orchestrated attempt to discredit him. Bishop Ncube has this year called for mass street protests and foreign intervention to remove Mr Mugabe. A brief statement from the Vatican said Pope Benedict XVI had accepted Bishop Ncube's resignation under the article of church law that says a bishop should retire if he is ill or if "some other grave reason" had made him unsuitable for office. Well if it was a smear campaign against the bishop, it sure was an effective one.

Soccer - Check it out guys, the Women's World Cup is underway in China. In The U.S.'s first match, blood streaming from a gash on the top of her head, Abby Wambach came off the field. For 10 minutes, the United States played short-handed while she got stitches. Fifth-ranked North Korea didn't waste its chance. The United States allowed a pair of goals while Wambach was off the field then rallied for a 2-2 tie Tuesday in its opener at the Women's World Cup. The top-ranked Americans, trying to regain the title they won in 1991 in China and 1999 at home, extended their unbeaten streak to 47 games. But playing in the toughest of four groups, they put pressure on themselves heading into games against third-ranked Sweden on Friday and Nigeria next Tuesday. It's customary to call the toughest group, the 'Group of Death,' and in this case the U.S.'s group is aptly named. The U.S. is ranked #1, North Korea #5, Sweden #5, and Nigeria #24. Ouch.