Tag Archives: current

‘Takers’ We Lost Him Best Action Movies Ever Review

Best action movies ever hasn’t been keen at all on Takers, especially since the studio kept moving the dates on it which is not a good sign and then puts it in the dumping grounds of late august. It’s got a great cast with Matt Dillon but that doesn’t always save a film added by: gooma2

MARCOART THE SERIES

POP ARTIST PETER MARCO OF MARCOART NYC COLLABS WITH PRODUCTION COMPANY LNF PRO TO PRESENT MARCOART THE SERIES. FOLLOW THE THE CAREER OF POP ARTIST MARCO FILLED WITH PAINTING, CELEBRITIES, TRAVEL, ANIMATION, AND MORE! PLUS SEE THE FIRST MOBILE ART TRUCK IN NYC AND THE WORLD! FIRST THREE WEBISODES BELOW MORE COMING SOON! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MwZni83mqiw http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EuB2L4Sn7Rs http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vykAlVp7S6s for more info go to http://www.lostnotfoundproductions.com http://www.marcoart.com added by: joecap9011

Who Needs an Intervention?

Who does Sergio Cilli need to stage an intervention for next? You tell us!

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Who Needs an Intervention?

Pakistan Floods Have Ravaged Bear Sanctuary, Killing 20 of the 23 Bears Living at Kund Park Sanctuary | Video

Pakistan floods ravage bear sanctuary Aug 20, 2010 Sadly, WSPA must report some distressing news from our bear baiting project in Pakistan. The recent floods have severely affected the Kund Park sanctuary, resulting in the tragic death of 20 of the 23 bears living there. The death of these much-loved bears has devastated BRC and WSPA staff and we know it will be equally upsetting for our supporters. Suzi Morris, WSPA UK Director said: “I hope it is of some comfort to know that it was the generosity of WSPA supporters that allowed the final chapter of these bears’ lives to be one of peace and tranquillity, safe from the violence and fear of bear baiting.” Rescue against the odds Initially it was feared that all of the 23 bears at Kund Park had been lost but Babu, Maylu and Sohrab were found alive in the floodwaters. In difficult circumstances, BRC staff transported them to the near-complete, new sanctuary at Balkasar. It is now more urgent than ever that building work on the Balkasar sanctuary is finished and the team at BRC are working flat out to achieve this. Over the past few weeks the world has watched as heavy monsoons have caused the worst floods in Pakistan for 80 years. At the time of writing, up to 14 million people have been affected by the floods and an estimated 1,600 have lost their lives. The damage to the Kund Park sanctuary is so severe that is seems unlikely that it can be rebuilt in the near future, perhaps at all. Thanks to WSPA supporters, the new Balkasar sanctuary is due to be completed in October and will have the capacity to provide a home for Babu, Maylu and Sohrab and for the remaining bears still being used to fight in bear baiting arenas. Why was the sanctuary so badly hit? The Kund Park sanctuary is located between the Indus and Kabul Rivers in North-West Frontier Province, the epicentre of the recent floods. A flood warning system was in place but the dramatic rise in floodwaters – reaching 60ft above river level – did not give BRC staff enough time to remove the bears from danger. The team did all they could to try to secure the safety of the bears by moving them to higher ground, staying at the sanctuary for as long as possible before they had to evacuate for their own personal safety. Tireless search and rescue As soon as the floodwaters receded, Fakhar and his team worked around the clock to search for the bears. Three bears were found alive but after days of searching, they had to face the devastating realisation that 20 of their beloved bears were confirmed dead. WSPA is extremely impressed by the fortitude of BRC staff and their response to such a devastating tragedy. Many of the local staff were personally affected, some losing their homes to the floods, but this did not stop their dedication to securing the safety of the bears they have spent years caring for. _____ Amongst the drowned bears were names that WSPA supporters will know well Star: rescued only months earlier from the horrors of bear baiting, thanks to BRC and the wonderful response of WSPA supporters to a recent appeal. Lailah: saved from bear baiting in 2008 and featured in a WSPA appeal. Rustam: liberated by Victor Watkins, WSPA’s bear expert, in 2001 and one of the oldest bears at the Kund Park sanctuary. Dewa: confiscated from poachers in 2009 aged just five months old, was taken to the Kund Park sanctuary along with his brother, Babu, who was saved from the floods. The other two lucky survivors are three year old Maylu was rescued in 2006, saved from the black market bear trade. Sohrab is a two year old Asiatic black bear who had been living peacefully at the Kund Park sanctuary since 2007. added by: EthicalVegan

Former Bush campaign manager Ken Mehlman finally comes out – Republican Party – Salon.com

Former head of the Republican National Committee and Bush '04 campaign manager Ken Mehlman has finally come out as a gay man. Mehlman broke the “news” to The Atlantic's Mark Ambinder. Everyone in politics basically suspected/”knew” this for years, but Mehlman says he only came to grips with it personally this year. “Mehlman's leadership positions in the GOP came at a time when the party was stepping up its anti-gay activities,” Ambinder writes, and boy howdy. But Mehlman has decided to become an open advocate for gay marriage, and the moderation of the GOP on gay issues. He participated in a fundraiser for the American Foundation for Equal Rights — a group supporting the legal challenge to Proposition 8 in California — last September, and he “has become a de facto strategist for the group,” attracting major Republican donors. “It's taken me 43 years to get comfortable with this part of my life,” Mehlman tells Ambinder. Plus he recently moved: Mehlman said that his formal coming-out process began earlier this year. Over the past several weeks, he has notified former colleagues, including former President Bush. Once he realized that the news would probably leak, he assembled a team of former advisers to help him figure out the best way to harness the publicity generated by the disclosure for the cause of marriage rights. He is worried that some will see his decision to go public as opportunistic. Mehlman recently moved to Chelsea, a gay mecca in New York City. Hm. Well, welcome to being on the right side of one issue, Ken. (And this marks another one that Mike Rogers was right about.) added by: toyotabedzrock

Could self-aware cities be the first forms of artificial intelligence?

The cities of the future will be huge and super-dense — but will they also be alive? Could the increasingly complex systems needed to manage the next generation of megacities become our first true artificial intelligence? People have speculated before about the idea that the Internet might become self-aware and turn into the first “real” A.I., but could it be more likely to happen to cities, in which humans actually live and work and navigate, generating an even more chaotic system? http://io9.com/5619183/could-self+aware-cities-be-the-first-forms-of-artificial-… added by: unimatrix0

Mass Rape: Armed Groups Gang-Raped Between 150 and 200 Women, and Some Children, in Four Days | Videos

Armed Groups Raped More Than 150 Women Added On August 25, 2010 Journalist Josh Kron reports from Goma, DRC, about the mass rape of women over four days in North Kiva last month. added by: EthicalVegan

New York cab driver stabbed for being Muslim

This is exactly what results from all the right wing hate spewed towards Muslims added by: Tyr

Gulf Oil Spill: Rick Steiner Got BP Disaster Right From The Beginning, Warns…

I first spoke to Rick Steiner more than three months ago — about two weeks into the Deepwater Horizon disaster — after a source recommended I talk to him for a story I was writing about the spill as a teachable moment. Steiner is a marine conservationist and activist in Alaska who started studying oil spills when the Exxon Valdez ran aground in 1989, and never stopped. What Steiner said to me during that first interview was blunt, depressing — and struck me as having the ring of truth. Little did I know how true. “Government and industry will habitually understate the volume of the spill and the impact, and they will overstate the effectiveness of the cleanup and their response,” he told me at the time. “There's no such thing as an effective response. There's never been an effective response — ever — where more than 10 or 20 percent of the oil is ever recovered from the water. “Most of the oil that goes into the water in a major spill stays there,” he said. “And once the oil is in the water, the damage is done.” Steiner was also one of the first scientists to warn that much if not most of BP's oil was remaining underwater, forming giant and potentially deadly toxic plumes. I thought of Steiner last week, as I sat in a congressional hearing room listening to Massachusetts Democratic Rep. Ed Markey question Bill Lehr, a senior scientist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Lehr was one of the authors of an increasingly controversial federal report about the fate of BP's spilled oil that Obama administration officials misleadingly cited as evidence that the “vast majority” of the oil was essentially gone. Markey's persistent questioning eventually got Lehr to acknowledge that, contrary to the administration spin, most of the spill — including the oil that has been dispersed or dissolved into the water, or evaporated into the atmosphere — is still in the Gulf ecosystem. Then Markey got Lehr to recalculate what percentage of the spill BP had actually recovered, through skimming and burning. That amount: About 10 percent. In other words, Steiner was right. The other part of Steiner's prediction — that the government and BP would low-ball the volume of the spill — had already played out very publicly. BP and NOAA both opened with a 5,000 barrel a day estimate. NOAA officials stuck to that estimate for weeks, despite the fact that they had access to video feeds from the wellhead clearly showing how far off they were. More than two weeks after some of that video was made public, the government finally, grudgingly, upped its estimates to 12,000 to 19,000 barrels daily; then 20,000 to 40,000 barrels, then 35,000 to 60,000 barrels, before finalizing its estimate in early August at 62,000 barrels a day at the beginning of the spill, declining to 53,000 barrels a day toward the end. So it wasn't until early August, two weeks after the well was capped, that the public was officially clued in that BP's blowout had — by the end of June — become the largest accidental offshore oil spill in history; totaling almost 16 times the Exxon Valdez. I talked to Steiner again this week about where things stand now, what he expects will happen next, and what he hopes will come of it all. The first thing we talked about was that NOAA report. Steiner said it was obviously full of guesswork — and bad guesswork at that. “They shouldn't have even tried to issue these numbers right now,” he said. “I smell politics all over it. The only plausible explanation is they were in a rush to hang the 'Mission Accomplished' banner.” And Steiner suspects the 10 percent recovery rate for BP is actually overstated. The report based its conclusions on operational reports showing that 11.1 million gallons of oil were burned and 34.7 million gallons of oily water were recovered through skimming. But Steiner said the actual amount of oil recovered could be about half what the report claims. The oil-water mix, which officials evidently assumed was 20 percent oil, could well have been closer to 10 percent, he said. As for the burned oil figures, “they are simply coming from the BP contractors out there and then put into the Incident Command reports as gospel. As far as I know, there was no independent observation or estimation of those numbers.” And there's something else the government seems to have forgotten about when it comes to burning crude oil: “That's not technically removing it from the environment.” Steiner said. “It either went into the air as atmospheric emissions, and some of that is pretty toxic stuff, or there's a residue from burning crude that sinks to the ocean floor, sometimes in big thick mats.” Steiner had even more critiques of the report — and the response — but his central point was one of the same he made when I first spoke with him, back in May: Once the oil is in the water, the damage is done. “You just can't fix most of the damage caused in marine oil spills. You just can't do it.” (con't in comments) added by: samantha420

Oh, You’re Muslim? Here You Go!

When a NYC cabdriver picked up a fare and was asked if he was Muslim, he wasn't expecting what came next. Michael Enright, 21, of Brewster, NY allegedly hailed a cab around 1815 (6:15 pm) on Tuesday (8/24/2010). Enright asked the driver, Ahmed Sharif, 43, if he was Muslim. When Sharif replied yes, Enright brandished a knife. Cutting Sharif in the face, lip, and arm. It seems Enright was intoxicated during the assault. Enright, friendly at first, yelled ''Assalami Alakium, consider this a check-point!'' and slashed Sharif's neck. '' I feel very sad. I have been here 25 years, I have driven a taxi for 15 years. All 4 of my children were born here.'' says Sharif. Authorities said there appears to be no connection between the assault and the Islamic Center near Ground Zero. Enright faces charges of attemped murder as a hate crime, 1st degree assault, aggravated harrasment, and criminal possession of a weapon. added by: thetrimsmith