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Taxpayers Fund Study Establishing ‘Web-Based Sex Diaries’ for Gay Males as Young as 16

The National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Disease (NIAID), a division of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), has awarded $126,000 over the past two years to a University of Washington study that established “web-based sex diaries” for gay males as young as 16. By the time the grants end in 2011, taxpayers will have spent more than $250,000 for the study. “The study’s second aim is to assess the feasibility of using web-based sex diaries to collect sexual behavior data and to identify the appropriate diary schedule. MSM [men who have sex with men] will be randomly assigned diary schedules and we will compare the frequency of reported behaviors across diary schedules and against the retrospective questionnaire data,” the grant abstract states. The study, titled “The Importance of Early Sexual Experiences Among Men Who Have Sex with Men,” seeks to find out if the circumstances under which young homosexuals first engage in homosexual acts impacts their future sexual behavior. Researchers will attempt to follow 100 gay men ages 16-20 who have had fewer than three gay sex partners or are “within three years of their same-sex debut,” meaning that they had their first gay sexual experience within the past three years. The 100 gay men will be asked to fill out an online questionnaire about their early gay experiences, take regular HIV tests, and fill out the sex diaries detailing the gay sex acts they engage in. “Men who have sex with men (MSM) experience rates of HIV and bacterial sexually transmitted infections (STI) that are many times those experienced by heterosexuals in the U.S.,” the abstract states. “We propose to conduct a cohort study of 100 MSM who are: 1) age 16-20 with 1-3 lifetime male sex partners, or 2) age 16-30 within 3 years of their same-sex sexual debut. This cohort will be followed for 1 year during which participants will complete a baseline computer administered self-interview (CASI) regarding early homosexual experiences and sexual behavior; retrospective online follow-up questionnaires every 3 months; web-based sex diaries; and HIV/STI testing at baseline, 6, and 12 months.” The study, which has been awarded funding until completion in 2011, seeks to determine whether homosexual men who engage in same-sex relations at an early age are more likely to engage in further risky sexual behavior and, if so, what types of risky sexual behavior they engage in. Investigators will try to find patterns common to the sexual behaviors of young gay men, including condom use, HIV status disclosure, and their sexual repertoire. “[I]nvestigators will conduct exploratory analyses to define patterns of sexual behaviors such as condom use, HIV status disclosure, and sexual role and repertoire. The principal investigator for the project is Dr. Matthew R. Golden of the University of Washington in Seattle. Golden is the director of the university’s HIV/STD research program. According to NIAID, another $63,000 will be awarded for this project in fiscal 2010 and another $63,000 in fiscal 2011–giving the project a total of $252,000 in taxpayer funding through June of 2011. CNSNews.com asked both Golden and NIAID the following question: “The Census Bureau says the median household income in the United States is $52,000. How would you explain to the average American mom and dad–who make $52,000 per year–that taxing them to pay for this grant was justified? Golden did not respond to the question. But the National Institutes of Health responded by e-mail. “One of the primary research goals of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases is to develop effective HIV/AIDS prevention strategies to control and ultimately end the HIV/AIDS pandemic, which has killed 25 million people worldwide,” an NIH spokeswoman said. “The goal of this study is to augment efforts to prevent the spread of HIV and other sexually transmitted infections (STIs) among men who have sex with men in the United States, a population that is disproportionately affected by HIV and STIs. “Although only a small percentage of American men report having sex with other men, this group accounts for nearly half of all people in the United States living with HIV and more than half of all new HIV infections in this country each year. It is noteworthy that some men who have sex with men also have sex with women, meaning an HIV-infected man in this population could also spread the virus to a heterosexual woman. “This small pilot study by Matthew Golden is focused on determining the feasibility of a larger study to learn how young men who have sex with men form patterns of sexual behavior, what factors predict these patterns, and how these behavioral patterns change over a lifetime. “This information will help scientists design more effective HIV and STI prevention programs for men who have sex with men in the United States, especially for those at highest risk for infection. With the lifetime cost of HIV/AIDS treatment in the United States estimated to range from $470,600 to $665,500 per person in 2004 dollars (which is $550,000 to $779,000 per person in 2010 dollars), it is more cost-effective to prevent HIV infection than to treat it.” Crossposted at NB sister site CNS News  

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Taxpayers Fund Study Establishing ‘Web-Based Sex Diaries’ for Gay Males as Young as 16

Our Rangel Game: Which Eugene Robinson Is It?

On August 5, 2010, The Washington Post published a short editorial by Eugene Robinson with the title “Charlie Rangel’s no crook.” But on October 9, 2009, the same Eugene Robinson penned a column titled ” Charlie Rangel’s Cloud: An Ethics Case Could Drag Democrats Down.” The closer we get to elections, Robinson seems to get progressively less impressed with the case against Rangel. This is his new Rangel-name-is-cleared line: Charlie Rangel’s no crook. He’s right to insist on the opportunity to clear his name, because the charges against him range from the technical all the way to the trivial. All right, there’s one exception: On his federal tax returns, Rangel failed to declare rental income from a vacation property he owns in the Dominican Republic — a mortifying embarrassment for the one-time chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, which writes the tax code. But certain facts about this transgression rarely get mentioned. For one thing, Rangel’s so-called “villa” can’t be very palatial, since it cost only $82,750 when he bought it in 1987. For another, Rangel has already filed amended tax returns and paid everything he owed, plus penalties and interest. The remaining charges are yawn-inducing. Even assuming that the allegations, as presented to the House Ethics Committee, are wholly true, the case against Rangel has a Gertrude Stein problem: There’s no there there. Compare that mistakes-were-made line to what Robinson wrote last fall:  House Democrats had better start taking the ethics allegations against Rep. Charlie Rangel seriously. I know it’s difficult for those steeped in Capitol Hill’s hermetic culture to understand, but a verdict of “mistakes were made” — which a lot of Democrats would like to reach — doesn’t cut it in the real world. Strange as it seems. Seriously. Welcome to Eugene vs. Eugene. He is seriously beating himself up. There’s more from last year: If you win big majorities in both the House and Senate by railing against a “culture of corruption” in Washington, as the Democratic Party did, voters tend to get the wacky notion that you actually mean what you say. The violations that Rangel is alleged to have committed are, inconveniently for him, easy for anyone to understand. The most serious, perhaps, is the allegation that he failed to pay taxes on about $75,000 in income from renting out a beach house that he owns in the Dominican Republic. For the chairman of the House committee that writes tax legislation not to pay his fair share in taxes would be as bad as, say, for the secretary of the Treasury not to pay his fair share in taxes. (Hold it, maybe that’s a bad example .) The most stunning alleged violation is more of a technicality: That on required financial disclosure forms, Rangel failed to list more than $500,000 in assets. The average citizen isn’t likely to have half a million bucks somehow slip his mind, since the average citizen doesn’t have anything near half a million bucks. And we’re not talking easily overlooked “Antiques Roadshow” assets — a dusty painting in the attic that turns out to be the work of a second-tier Old Master, or a rickety chair in the basement that experts date as 18th century. What Rangel failed to declare were liquid assets — a credit union account worth more than $250,000 and an investment account also worth more than $250,000 — plus some real estate he owns in New Jersey and assorted stock holdings. If you quoted this column back to New Eugene, he might accuse you of being a partisan Republican hack. New Eugene also had this to say on MSNBC’s Morning Joe (as MRC’s Rachel Burnett found). Scarborough said the messes around Rangel and Maxine Waters aren’t good for the Democrats as a whole, even though Joe likes Maxine “very much.” Robinson replied that Rangel’s replies were changing his formerly tough journalistic mind: On the other hand, it is what happens if you run against culture of corruption; you actually crack down and ramp up the ethics committee and, you know, look for the stuff you find it. I think my assessment of the two cases would actually be a bit different from yours, actually. I haven’t read that deeply into the Waters case but that really sounds pretty bad. I mean, on its face it sounds like there should be a refusal by her and stayed away from that. I have, however, gone through Charlie Rangel’s 32-page response to the charges against him. And it’s still very bad for him politically . I think he’s not without any legs to stand on, however. We keep saying 13 ethics charges. It really boils down to three or four incidents and when you actually look at them, you know, some of them are not all that troublesome. So I actually understand why he wants to have his day in court. PS: In 2005, Robinson giddily looked forward to Tom DeL:ay in jail in a piece titled “Immoral Majority.”   So pardon me for going way beyond schadenfreude to outright giddiness at the prospect that the Hammer will finally get nailed. It may be too much to hope that the former House majority leader — and how good it feels to write “former” — will actually be convicted and do jail time. The indictment for criminal conspiracy returned by a Texas grand jury on Wednesday is for alleged campaign finance violations that are the rough equivalent of money laundering, which is not the easiest crime to prove in court. Five years later, and Eugene’s still waiting for that conviction. 

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Our Rangel Game: Which Eugene Robinson Is It?

MSNBC’s Cenk Uygur Rants: The Tea Party Is the ‘Cancer’ of the GOP

MSNBC’s Cenk Uygur railed against the Tea Party on Friday, attacking their members as the ” cancer of the Republican Party .” The liberal radio host was completing his final day as guest anchor of the 3pm hour of News Live. During each show’s program he would offer three short commentaries railing against conservatism or President Obama for not being liberal enough. Uygur, the host of the liberal Young Turks radio show, asserted that the Tea Party will “kill” Republicans after 2010, allowing that the midterms might result in a “slight bump up for the GOP.” In contrast, the Cook Report currently predicts a 32 to 42 seat pickup for the Republicans in the House. In a second commentary, Uygur hit Obama for not being liberal enough: “We challenged the Republicans and the President all week long. We took Obama to task for TARP Elizabeth Warren, civil liberties and many other issues. But, I did want to give the President some parting advice. Please, no more half measures!” He then dismissed Obama’s left-wing accomplishments, scoffing, “Instead we got pocket change.” Fox News’ 3pm host is the low key Shepherd Smith. MSNBC now seems to be experimenting with hard left anchors for midday as well as primetime. A transcript of Uygur’s two August 6 commentaries follows: 3:45pm EDT MSNBC Graphic: My Take CENK UYGUR: Now, look, I like to make predictions, so here’s a nice controversial one for you. The Tea Party is the cancer of the Republican Party . If they were actually fighting against corruption in government, it would be a positive movement as I just explained. But if all they do is drive the GOP further and further to the right, they’re going to kill the party. 2010 might be a slight bump up for the GOP given the circumstances, but that will only hurt them more in the long run as they become convinced that radicalism is the right answer. After 2010, the long, sad decline of the Republican Party will begin and we will look back and say it started at a party, the Tea Party. We’ll be right back. 3:54pm EDT MSNBC GRAPHIC: Cenk’s Takeaway UYGUR: At the beginning of the week I told you we would be challenging the government on the show. And I think we delivered. We challenged the Republicans and the President all week long. We took Obama to task for TARP Elizabeth Warren, civil liberties and many other issues. But, I did want to give the President some parting advice. Please, no more half measures! This country elected you because you ran on the message of change. They gave you huge majorities in the House and Senate. It was a clear mandate. And what did you use it for? Health care reform with the private insurers are still the only option. Yes, there were positive parts to the bill. But the system remains the same. And how about financial reform? Where the banks are still too big to fail. Don’t you get it? If and when they crash the economy again, they’re going to blame you! And that’s my point. If banks and insurance companies and t he Republicans and conservative media all attack you with 100 percent ferocity no matter what you do, why didn’t you try for 100 percent change? Instead we got pocket change. And now if it’s not good enough to pull us out of the rut, then they’re going to say progressive ideas didn’t work. But it ain’t over. You still have two and a half years to take the fight to them. Remember when you did you didn’t want to play the same old Washington games a little better? You wanted to change the game, I’m sorry, but right now the game is exactly as it was before. So, I’m asking for your own good and from now onto have the courage to give the American people the change you promised them.

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MSNBC’s Cenk Uygur Rants: The Tea Party Is the ‘Cancer’ of the GOP

Valarie Bertanelli

Valarie, We would like to be able to afford the diet that you did you look awesome!But our circumstances do not allow it within our finances. Last year my husband had to retire unexpectaly for hip replacement surgery. We are scrimping and saving for 25th anniversary to go on a cruise to the Mexican Rivera. But we both need to loose 20 lbs. We would love to go on the diet and loose, but finances do not allow that..Thanks for listening

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Valarie Bertanelli

Britain’s men need to take more responsibility, says Tim Henman

• Success or failure is ultimately down to player’s desire • Alex Bogdanovic should not receive any more funding Tim Henman has called on British players to start taking more responsibility for themselves. The retired player is frustrated that there are no English men in the singles draw at Wimbledon next week and is peeved in particular at Alex Bogdanovic, who has complained he has not had enough support from the Lawn Tennis Association. “When are players going to take more responsibility for themselves?” asked the former British No1. “You’re always hearing complaints about lack of funding, demanding to have a new coach or the parents complaining about something. “Ultimately it comes down to the player himself. I know Boggo, he’s a nice lad and has lots of talent but he really needs to look at himself in the mirror and ask if he deserves more funding. He’s 26 and after all he’s had he really shouldn’t be getting any more. “The LTA get a lot things wrong but too often they get blamed for everything,” he added “I have a problem with a lot of the players,” said Henman, who believes that they must learn to wean themselves off the LTA’s golden teat. “All I ever hear from the players is, ‘I didn’t get this, I didn’t get that, my funding has been cut from X to Y.’ It’s ridiculous. There’s too much of this sense of entitlement. “Part of the problem is that the players get given too much and I find that disappointing. It’s got to be about the individuals; they’ve got to go out and make this happen and do it themselves,” “The Argentines and the Spaniards, do you think they get that sort of funding from their federation? No, they get nothing. The responsibility falls on the individual. So how much do you want it? How badly do you want to be getting to these tournaments, to be paying your own air fares and for your own hotel rooms. I see those Argentines and Spaniards and they have a different desire. You’ve got to have that hunger.” Tennis Everton Gayle guardian.co.uk

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Britain’s men need to take more responsibility, says Tim Henman

World Cup 2010: Philippe Senderos to miss Switzerland’s group games

• Scans show defender has ‘painful distortion of his ankle’ • He will be out for the next two games, says team doctor Philippe Senderos will miss Switzerland’s two remaining group matches because of an ankle injury, the team’s doctor says. Senderos sprained his right ankle in Switzerland’s 1-0 upset win against Spain on Wednesday. Cuno Wetzel, the team doctor, said x-rays and magnetic scans showed no fractures but a “painful distortion of his ankle”. Wetzel said the defender “will be out for the next two games”. The 25-year-old Senderos, who has signed with Fulham for next season in the Premier League, was substituted after 36 minutes of Switzerland’s opener in Durban. The Swiss team beat the European champions, Spain, with a goal by the midfielder Gelson Fernandes. Switzerland World Cup 2010 guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: Philippe Senderos to miss Switzerland’s group games

World Cup 2010: Wesley Sneijder says Champions League beats World Cup

• Quality of football ‘better’ in European Cup • Dutch have become more pragmatic Wesley Sneijder, the Holland attacking midfielder, has criticised the quality of the football played at the World Cup to date and said it suffers by comparison to the Champions League. “So far the favourites didn’t show what they are capable of and only Germany really impressed,” said Sneijder who won the European Cup last month with Internazionale. “I think everyone has to get used to the circumstances, like the ball and altitude, and it all will start from now on,” he said. “Besides that I enjoyed watching countries like North Korea and New Zealand playing their games, but then you realise the Champions League is far better.” • Follow the Guardian’s World Cup team on Twitter • Sign up to play our great Fantasy Football game • Stats centre: Get the lowdown on every player • The latest team-by-team news, features and more The pragmatic approach used by José Mourinho at Inter has been taken on board by Sneijder’s Dutch team-mates but Holland’s performance in their 2-0 defeat of Denmark has not met with the approval of the media back in the Netherlands or the team’s fans. “In Spain and Italy they like it when you win with good football but winning without is appreciated,” said Sneijder. “Two years ago at the Euro finals we were expected to pick up the trophy after two impressive wins [over Italy and France] and the whole team got carried away with the euphoria. We know what is expected of us and that we can do much better but I can’t remember a World Cup or Euro in which a team plays six or seven fantastic matches.” World Cup 2010 Holland World Cup 2010 Group E guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: Wesley Sneijder says Champions League beats World Cup

Arianna Huffington Comes Out in Favor of Flat Tax — for Greece

Sometimes even the seemingly most unreasonable characters as far public policy goes can be reasoned with if the circumstances are right. Just sometimes it takes someone like Steve Forbes to pull it off. On the June 14 broadcast of MSNBC’s “Morning Joe,” Forbes explained that a flat tax might be the medicine that Greece, a country on the fiscal brink needs. “Well, when you engage in binge spending and the idea that going to revive an economy, you just get in a spiral on that,” Forbes explained. “In terms of countries like Greece what should be done, in addition to the necessary austerity, is they haven’t put in place policies, Joe that we did in the early ’80s that enabled this  country to get back on its feet. Forbes alluded to the bounce back Russia had after its economic struggles coming out of the collapse of the Soviet Union.  “For example, one thing Russia did right 10 years ago was put in a flat tax,” Forbes said. “Within two years, collections doubled because you make it, you pay it. Most central and eastern European countries have done the same thing with the tax codes. Do it to Greece. Greece makes it very hard to set up a legitimate business. Remove those barriers. Unleash their entrepreneurs. So, in addition to the belt tightening put in things that enable these countries to get back to their feet as well.” “Morning Joe” co-host Joe Scarborough expressed concern that belt-tightening measures may inhibit an economic recovery. But that isn’t the case according to Forbes, if the recipe is right. “No, if you combine it with these other pro-growth measures,” Forbes said. “For example, we have enormous tax increases coming in this country. Don’t do it. In Western Europe, reduce those onerous tax rates, labor practices that get in the way. One of the good things the Irish did – Ireland was hit hard by this recession. They faced up to it over a year ago. Didn’t wait for, like Greece to hit the wall. One of the things they didn’t do was raise their business tax. They have the lowest in Europe. The Europeans are always beating up on them – raise it, raise it. They kept it at 12.5 [percent]. Ireland is going to come out of this faster than other countries.” Huffington Post editor Arianna Huffington, also a guest on “Morning Joe,” said she’d be in favor of a Forbes-style flat tax, in Greece that is assuming it got Greek citizens paying their fair share of taxes. “Well, there’s something to be said for the flat tax in Greece because nobody has been paying their fair share of taxes in Greece,” Huffington said. “So if the flat tax can get Greeks to pay their fair share that might be worth it.” However, Huffington explained that she thought the real problem wasn’t tax rates, but high unemployment, similar to what the United States is facing. “But to prevent what happened to Greece from what happened in America, surely Steve, you must agree that the kind of unemployment we are facing right now – 26 million people out of work, either no job at all or under-employed or too discouraged to look for work – is not sustainable,” she continued. “I mean the kind of fear and anxiety that is seen around the country is leading to violence in many areas. So, how do we deal with that when retail spending is down? When consumer spending is down? Doesn’t the government have a role here?” But rather than government being pro-active, as Huffington suggested, government should get out of the way to allow for business to expand Forbes explained. “Well, the government has a role to provide an environment that makes it possible for a business to grow and hire,” Forbes replied. “For example, this new tax bill that the Senate may pass is going to be very, very onerous on small businesses. Stop it. Stabilize the dollar so you get small business lending again. So you create the environment and entrepreneurs will step in. But right now everybody is on the side with uncertainty. We saw it in the jobs report where businesses extended the workweek instead of hiring new people because of uncertainty. So if the government provides the right environment, this thing will snap back.”

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Arianna Huffington Comes Out in Favor of Flat Tax — for Greece

Simon Monjack, Brittany Murphy’s Husband, Found Dead at Home

Simon Monjack, the controversial widower of Brittany Murphy, was found dead early this morning in his Los Angeles home. He was 40. Not much is known about the circumstances beyond their eerie similarities to Murphy’s own death five months ago — right down to the cause of death in the same bedroom in the same house.

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Simon Monjack, Brittany Murphy’s Husband, Found Dead at Home

Wale Was Rooting For Hometown Wizards In NBA Draft Lottery

‘Nah, we can’t get the #1 pick,’ the DMV MC recalls thinking of Wizards’ chances at star point guard John Wall. By Shaheem Reid Wale Photo: Getty Images Most of Wale’s hometown teams are giving fans great hope for the future. The Washington Nationals have a tremendous blue chip prospect pitcher in Stephen Strasburg. The Redskins acquired a first-ballot Hall of Fame quarterback in Donovan McNabb via trade and, this week, the Washington Wizards hit the lotto! One of the worst teams in the NBA, the Wizards struck the jackpot by winning the NBA lottery, which entitled them to the very first pick in this year’s NBA draft. It’s projected that the team will go with University of Kentucky Point Guard John Wall. “I’mma have to call old Johnny Boy today,” Wale said by phone from Atlanta, where he’s been in the studio with Gucci Mane, Waka Flocka Flame and Yung LA. “I never met him. I’mma just talk to him. Hopefully we’ll get him. You never know, but either way, he’s gonna have a tremendous career.” Prior to the actual Draft lottery, 14 teams were ranked in order of their regular-season records. The league-worst New Jersey Nets held the top position and, therefore, the best opportunity to get the #1 pick, with a little more than a 25 percent chance. Meanwhile, the Wizards were in the middle of the pack of 14, with a 10 percent shot. The Wizards, of course, came out on top, moving up to get Wall. Wale said he was conducting business on Tuesday, but found it difficult to concentrate with the NBA draft lottery under way. “I was actually on a conference call with [an] important company,” Wale said. “It was a countdown. Then it was like, ‘Nah, we can’t get the #1 pick.’ When it got to five left, I was like, ‘No way.’ When it was three [teams left], I completely dropped out of the conference call. I was not paying attention at all.” Wale says Wall could bring the Wizards much needed energy. “Young blood, new blood,” the DMV MC said. “I think he’ll complement Andray Blatche and Gil [Arenas] as well. I think Blatche can definitely be one of the best forwards in the league — at least the top of the East Coast. I think [Wall] will give them a opportunity to do a little more. I think [Blatche] showed he’s capable of being one of the top big men in the league when everybody got traded [last season].” Still, Wale concedes the Wizards will need a little more than Wall to get back into championship contention. “We obviously need the fan support,” he said. “We need to change the morale of the team; they have to believe they can do it. I’m a big LeBron James fan, but I’m also very supportive of all the teams coming out of D.C. I’m extra supportive. I always sit on the [arena/stadium] floor and cheer on the teams whenever I’m home: Redskins, Nationals, Capitals and United. You go to the Redskins games, and people support them good or bad. The flow at the Wizards games was not looking good towards the end of the season. I wanna turn that around.” What do you think of Wale’s loyalty to his hometown teams? Tell us in the comments! Related Artists Wale

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Wale Was Rooting For Hometown Wizards In NBA Draft Lottery