Friday, June 10, 2011

Thousands rally for college tuition cuts in South Korea

Twenty-four years ago, tens of thousands of college students protested in Seoul, calling for democracy.

But today thousands of students gathered at Chonggye Square, calling for the government to cut their tuition fees.

“Half-price tuition, half-price,” shouted the crowd sitting on the ground, holding a candle in each hand.


Friday’s gathering came at the peek of recent student protests against the government, calling on the government and the ruling Grand National Party to keep its promise to halve college tuition.

Grand National Party’s new floor leader Hwang Woo-yea announced last month that the party will push ahead with the “half-price tuition” policy, one of President Lee’s key campaign pledges.

Unlike the original pledge, however, the new GNP plan aims to slash college tuition in half only for students from households in the bottom 50 percent income bracket.

Students, nongovernmental organizations and opposition politicians took to the streets in central Seoul, criticizing the government and the GNP party for paying lip service ahead of next year’s presidential election.

“Like me, many students can’t afford to pay tuition fee, so have to take a student loan. I came out here because the situation is getting worse,” said Chung Tae-young, 22, a junior at a Seoul university.

Joining the college students on Friday were also 40- and 50-somethings sitting side by side with the students.

“I came here because I feel responsible for this happening,” said Moon Byung-joon, 54, an office worker.

“Many students are having difficulty repaying their tuition loans. I think it is our responsibility for ignoring their plight,” he added.  

The candle light vigil Friday was led by a nationwide network of people concerned about the high tuition fees, a national alliance of college students and the four opposition political parties. They urged the police to “guarantee a free and peaceful rally.”

College students and their parents here have long complained about the nation’s notoriously expensive tuition fees -- the second-highest among OECD universities after the United States. Last year, the average annual university tuition reached 7.5 million won for private schools and 5 million won for state schools.

Source: Korea herald

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Samsung to buy Nokia?

Last week it was Microsoft. This week it's Samsung.

Market chatter says Samsung wants to buy Nokia, and Samsung isn't denying it, Arild Moen at Dow Jones reports. (Samsung says it doesn't comment on rumors as standard operating procedure.)

Moen doesn't say where the rumor of Samsung buying Nokia came from. It's just "speculation."
With Nokia's stock dropping, these sorts of rumors will start kicking up.

But, Nokia is so utterly screwed it's hard to figure out why anyone would want it. Is its strong distribution really worth the ~$20 billion+ it would cost to buy the company?

Update: On Twitter, Florian Mueller points out Samsung would get a nice set of patents to fight Apple with if it bought Nokia.




Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/samsung-buying-nokia-rumor-2011-6#ixzz1OiwCYNj3

Ban Ki-moon receives full support for second term as UN Secretary-General

European Commission President Barroso is the latest to back Ban Ki-moon for another five-year term as Secretary General of the United Nations.



After serving as Secretary-General since January 2007, Ban Ki-moon announced his intention to run for a second term on 6 June in New York.


“At a time of unprecedented global change, the world increasingly looks to us, the United Nations, to lead on the great collective issues of the day,” he said.  “That is our challenge as we look ahead.”


President Barroso applauded Ban Ki-moon in a statement.


“Let me tell you how much we, in the European Union, appreciate his wisdom and his dedication to the solution of the important issues on our planet, from sustainability and supporting developing countries to our constant struggle for peace,” he said. “I believe Ban Ki-moon has been and is a very good Secretary-General of the United Nations and we will be very pleased to see him continue in that very important position.”


Ban Ki-moon has also received backing from France, China, the US and Britain.


In a statement of support UK Prime Minister David Cameron said, “He has championed and renewed the vital role of United Nations in tackling complex global challenges."


No rivals have emerged and Ban Ki-moon is expected to win another term as Secretary-General.








Read more: Ban Ki-moon receives full support for second term as UN Secretary-General - New Europe http://www.neurope.eu/articles/Ban-Kimoon-receives-full-support-for-second-term-as-UN-SecretaryGeneral/106920.php#ixzz1Oif7Bi7i

U.S. Congress proposes another bill on tougher sanctions against North Korea

The U.S. House of Representatives will consider a bipartisan bill on reinforcing sanctions on North Korea, along with Iran and Syria, for their proliferation activities, a senior congresswoman said Tuesday.

The bill, co-drafted by Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Florida), who chairs the House Foreign Affairs Committee, and Rep. Brad Sherman (D-California) calls for the expansion and strengthening of sanctions against the so-called rogue states.

Among a set of stipulations in the bill is to tighten reporting requirements in the existing nonproliferation act to include information on persons who have acquired materials mined or otherwise extracted within the territory or control of the three nations.

It also sanctions any entity that is selling conventional military goods or technology to them.

“The continued collaboration between Iran, North Korea and Syria helps drive the dangerous programs and policies of each of these rogue states, and endangers the United States and our allies,” Ros-Lehtinen said in a press release. “The threats posed by these rogue regimes to free nations and to the oppressed people of these three countries grow every day.”

She added the measure will “strengthen laws already on the books which seek to prevent these rogue states from sending dangerous materials to one another, other rogues and extremist groups.”

Source: Yon Hap News

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Volcano erupts in chile causing mass evacuation




Southern Chile's Puyehue volcano erupted for the first time in half a century, prompting evacuations for 3,500 people as it sent a cloud of ash that reached Argentina, authorities said.

The National Service of Geology and Mining said the explosion that sparked the eruption also produced a column of gas 10 kilometers (six miles) high, hours after warning of strong seismic activity in the area.
"You can see the fire (in the volcano) and a plume of smoke, and there's a strong smell of sulfur," top Los Rios region official Juan Andres Varas told reporters.

The government, which earlier ordered the evacuation of 600 people, expanded that number to 3,500 people to be relocated to shelters in safe areas. Authorities issued a red alert, the maximum warning level, for the area.


A border crossing between Argentina and Chile was closed.
Yeimi Obando, a professor who was evacuated, told National Television of Chile that people "are very worried" about the effect of the ashes on their cattle and other animals.

A cloud of ash could be seen in the Patagonian resort town of Bariloche in Argentina, about 100 kilometers (62 miles) east of the volcano.

"We're trying to stop car traffic and ask that people stay at home and close their doors and windows to prevent the volcanic ash from coming in.

The city's airport was also closed," Carlos Hidalgo, Bariloche's communications secretary, told TN television.

"Ash was dumped like a snowstorm," he said. "The city is covered in gray ash."

Nearby localities were also affected, said Hidalgo, whose city of 50,000 people welcomes thousands of foreign tourists each year to its lakes and mountain scenery, as well as ski slopes in the winter months.
Argentine officials in La Angostura announced late Saturday that the Andean town of 16,000 people was on "red alert" and residents were urged to ration water use.

Flagship airline Aerolineas Argentinas cancelled six flights on Saturday because of the volcano, the company said.
Puyehue is located 870 kilometers (540 miles) south of the capital city Santiago in the Cordon Caulle complex nestled in the Andes mountains. Its last major eruption was in 1960, following a magnitude 9.5 earthquake.

Source: Yahoo!

Saturday, June 4, 2011

South Korea vows strong response to any future North Korea attacks

South Korea’s defense minister has warned that his country would respond very strongly to any future attacks by North Korea.

Kim Kwan Jin said at a regional security conference in Singapore on Saturday that his government must react with stiffer responses than in the past because North Korean provocations are becoming increasingly bold.

Kim said North Korea has been insincere in previous talks and must change its attitude for South Korea to return to formal discussions.

North Korea vowed Friday to launch “retaliatory military actions” against South Korea, a threat that came days after Seoul said its military had used photos of Pyongyang's ruling family for target practice.

Source: AP

Friday, June 3, 2011

Mexican crime groups now making money from pirated goods

Marcelo Ramirez watches over a stall piled with pirated movies and music outside a busy Metro stop flanking the capital’s elegant Reforma Avenue. For him, buying and selling pirated goods is a way of life.

“There are no good jobs,” he said while customers browse the discs, each with a makeshift cover slipped inside a cellophane envelope. “If people could make a good living there wouldn’t be piracy. We would all buy originals.”

Absent from these discs are the disturbing drug cartel logos that have begun appearing on pirated movies and music elsewhere in the country: a “Z” or a bucking bronco for the Zetas, a monarch butterfly for La Familia Michoacana.

Experts say criminal organizations such as these have increasingly taken control of Mexico’s informal economy and with it, its multibillion-dollar market for pirated movies, music, software and other goods ― illegally producing, distributing and even exporting the latest Hollywood hits, music by popular Mexican artists and computer programs.

Criminal organizations now make only about half their money trafficking illegal drugs, said Edgardo Buscaglia, an expert on organized crime with Mexico’s Autonomous Technological Institute, a leading university. The other half of revenue, in the billions, comes from smuggling migrants, extortion, kidnappings and Mexico’s vast black market for pirated goods.

The consequences are enormous, said Jorge Amigo Castaneda, director of the Mexican Institute of Industrial Property.

The institute estimates that Mexico lost 480,000 jobs due to piracy and falsification in 2009, the latest year for which statistics are available.

For example, the faking of brand-name apparel cost the clothing industry $9.5 billion. The footwear industry, which has seen 70 percent of businesses close in recent years, must compete with the 200 million pairs of counterfeited “brand name” shoes that enter the country illegally each year.

With intellectual property of all kinds at serious risk of piracy or falsification in Mexico, the country loses its competitive edge in attracting national and foreign investment, Amigo said.
Mexico dropped six places to No. 66 in the World Economic Forum’s 2010-2011 report on global competitiveness, falling behind Panama, Costa Rica and Uruguay.

The hand of organized crime in piracy is evident, experts say.

The cartel logos popping up on movies, music and software discs are “obviously not registered trademarks, but it’s their own brand,” according to a government official who asked not to be named for security reasons.

“If someone from La Familia shows up, enters (a store) and sees that the discs don’t carry the butterfly, things are going to get ugly for the owners,” the official said. “They are forcing stores to buy their discs.”

Drug traffickers “get involved in piracy in the same way they get involved in the kidnapping of migrants,” said Gustavo Fondevila, an expert on piracy and criminal organizations with Mexico’s CIDE think tank. “They’re looking for ways to diversify their criminal business.”

Less than a mile away from where Ramirez mans his stall, Federico de la Garza sits in the Mexico City office of the Motion Picture Association where, as director, he is working on a campaign to convince Mexicans not to buy pirated goods.

Nine out of 10 movies sold in Mexico are pirated, he said.

With law enforcement and judicial institutions weak in Mexico, both the Motion Picture Association and the Business Software Alliance are working to convince the public that piracy is harmful.

The Motion Picture Association is sponsoring commercials that aim to instill a sort of “social shame” around buying pirated goods. The spots ridicule piracy and call into question a consumer’s values.

The Business Software Alliance is working with chambers of commerce throughout Mexico to encourage business owners not to purchase pirated software.

“It is not about prosecuting more people; it’s about asking society for a pact in which we can all work together,” said the association’s Mexico manager, Kiyoshi Tsuru. “The problem is massive.”

Studies suggest that Mexicans generally don’t view piracy as criminal or immoral.

Even when people believe that buying pirated items links them to organized crime, foments delinquency and weakens local industry, they still shop for pirated goods. In a 2009 study of affluent consumers, the American Chamber of Commerce in Mexico reported that 88 percent of respondents had purchased pirated goods, even though most view piracy negatively.

Ramirez, the vendor, said he knows it’s a crime to buy pirated goods. Still, he regularly shops for movies ― action flicks for himself, cartoons for his children.

The stall he watches was raided by police about three months ago, he said, but normally “they don’t bother you here.”
Source: The Dallas morning news

Life discovered 1.3 km beneath the earth's surface

Scientists discovered tiny worms in deep earth where it was thought creatures could not survive, Science News reported.

The discovery of the worm “Halicephalobus mephisto,” and “Plectus aquatilis,” found 1.3 kilometers deep in South African mines, hints that habitable environments may exist on other planets, such as Mars, according to the report.

They are the deepest-living known “multi-cellular” organism and survive up to 41 degrees Celsius and at very low level of oxygen.

Dr. Gaeton Borgonie of the University of Ghent in Belgium found them in the samples of water and soil from the South African gold mines by placing filters over the mines’ bore-holes.

The report showed that the water in which the worms were found is at least several thousands years old and the scientist believed that the animals originally lived on the surface but were washed down through the crack by rainwater.

Source: YonHap

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Muslim girl stoned to death after attending beauty contest

A teenage Muslim girl was stoned to death under 'Sharia law' after she participated in a beauty contest in Ukraine, Daily Mail reported.

Katya Koren was found dead in a village in the Crimea region near her home.

The 19-year-old loved wearing fashionable clothes and had come seventh in the beauty contest, her friends said.

Her body was buried in a forest and was found a week after she disappeared.

Police is investigating the cases and probing claims that three Muslim youths killed her. The Muslims are claiming her death was justified under Islam, the report said.

One of the three -- named as 16-year-old Bihal Gaziev -- is under arrest and told police she had 'violated the laws of Sharia.

Source: YonHap

Massive Gmail phishing attack hits top U.S. officials

Hundreds of personal Gmail accounts, including those of some senior U.S. government officials, were hacked as a result of a massive phishing scheme originating from China, Google said Wednesday.


The account hijackings were a result of stolen passwords, likely by malware installed on victims' computers or through victims' responses to e-mails from malicious hackers posing as trusted sources. That type of hack is known as phishing. Gmail's security systems themselves were not compromised, Google said.


The company believes the phishing attack emanated from Jinan, China. In addition to the U.S. government personnel, other targets included South Korean government officials and federal workers of several other Asian countries, Chinese political activists, military personnel and journalists.


The news comes a little more than a year after a separate hack originating from China affected Gmail accounts of Chinese human rights activists. In that case, attackers were able to break through Google's security systems, and two Gmail accounts were hacked.

That cyber attack set off a series of events that eventually led to Google ending its agreement with the Chinese government to censor certain search results, and the company physically moved its servers out of the country.
This time around, the hack appears larger in scope -- but Google itself was not attacked. A person with knowledge of the attack's details said there was no apparent correlation between last year's attack and this one.
A spokesman from Google declined to comment on how the company obtained the information about the most recent hack. Public information, user reports and a third-party hacking blog called Contagio was used to determine the scope, targets and source of the attack.

Google said it notified the victims and disrupted the campaign.


The hackers were attempting to monitor the victims' e-mails, and some users' forwarding settings were altered.
The company urged users to "please spend ten minutes today taking steps to improve your online security so that you can experience all that the Internet offers -- while also protecting your data."
Google provided several examples of how Gmail users can better protect themselves from phishing attacks on its blog, including enabling a setting that allows users to login to their accounts only after receiving a verification code on their phones. The company also suggested that users monitor their settings for suspicious forwarding settings.

Source: CNN

U.S. blasts Syria for boy's alleged torture, death

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton says Syria's alleged torture and killing of a 13-year-old boy underscores that the Syrian government is making no effort to institute real reforms.
She says she hopes the child didn't die in vain, and that President Bashar Assad's regime ends its brutal crackdown.

The killing has outraged Syrians since images of the body appeared on YouTube.

Syria's government hasn't addressed the claims by an opposition group that its security forces were responsible for the death.

Clinton told reporters Tuesday that the boy's death symbolizes the ``total collapse of any effort by the Syrian government to work with and listen to their own people.''

Human rights groups say more than 1,000 people have been killed in unrest in Syria since mid-March.

The New York Times reported on Monday that an online video showed a 13-year-old boy, arrested at a protest on April 29, who it said had been tortured, mutilated and killed before his body was returned to his family.

"I can only hope that this child did not die in vain but that the Syrian government will end the brutality and begin a transition to real democracy," Clinton told a news conference.

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has sought to crush 10 weeks of protests against his 11-year reign with a military crackdown in which rights campaigners say 1,000 civilians have been killed and more than 10,000 people arrested.

Activists said at least five people were killed on Tuesday when tanks shelled the central town of Rastan and security forces stormed Hirak, a town in the southern Hauran Plain where the uprising first broke out in mid-March.

Syria blames the violence on armed groups, Islamists and foreign agitators, saying more than 120 police and soldiers have been killed in the unrest nationwide.

Syrian state television said Assad had issued a "general amnesty" for all members of political parties but the United States dismissed this, as it has other moves such as his lifting of a state of emergency, as talk without action.

"He has talked reform but we have seen very little in the way of action," State Department spokesman Mark Toner said at his daily briefing. "He needs to take steps -- concrete steps, not rhetoric -- to address what is going on in the country."

Source: YonHap News

Monday, May 30, 2011

Germany plans to shut down all nuclear plants by 2022




Germany's coalition government decided early Monday to shut down all of the country's nuclear power plants by 2022, a policy change prompted by Japan's nuclear disaster, the environment minister said.

Meanwhile, the country's seven oldest reactors, which were taken off the grid pending safety inspections following the catastrophe at Japan's Fukushima nuclear power plant in March, will remain offline permanently, Norbert Roettgen said. The country has 17 reactors total. Roettgen praised the coalition agreement after negotiations through the night between the governing parties.

"This is coherent," he said in Berlin. "It is clear. That's why it is a good result."

Chancellor Angela Merkel in 2010 had pushed through measures to extend the lifespan of the country's 17 reactors with the last one scheduled to go offline in 2036, but she reversed her policy in the wake of the disaster.

Germany, Europe's biggest economy, stands alone among the world's major industrialized nations in its determination to gradually replace nuclear power with renewable energy sources.

Through March — before the seven reactors were taken offline — just under a quarter of Germany's electricity was produced by nuclear power, about the same share as in the U.S. Energy from wind, solar and hydroelectric power currently produces about 17 per cent of the country's electricity, but the government aims to boost its share to around 50 per cent in the coming decades.

Many Germans have been vehemently opposed to nuclear power since the 1986 Chernobyl disaster sent radioactive fallout over the country. Tens of thousands repeatedly took to the street in the wake of Fukushima to urge the government to shut all reactors.

Japanese crisis prompted reversal

A centre-left government a decade ago first penned a plan to abandon the technology for good because of its inherent risks by 2021. But Merkel's government last year amended it to extend the plants' lifetime by an average of 12 years.

But the conservative chancellor reversed her pro-nuclear stance after the earthquake and tsunami that crippled the Fukushima Daiichi plant on March 11, triggering nuclear meltdowns.
Merkel's government ordered the country's seven oldest reactors, built before 1980, shut down four days after the Fukushima incident. The plants, which will now remain offline, accounted for about 40 per cent of the country's nuclear power capacity.

Germany used to be a net energy exporter, and the agency overseeing its electricity grid said Friday that the country remains self-sufficient even without the seven reactors and another plant that has already been offline for more than a year for maintenance work.

The coalition government's decision broadly follows the conclusions of a government-mandated commission on the ethics of nuclear power, which delivered its recommendation to abolish the technology by 2022 on Saturday. Details of the final report are to be presented later Monday.

Shutting down even more reactors, however, will require billions of investment in renewable energies, more natural gas power plants and an overhaul of the country's electricity grid.

The government of neighbouring Switzerland, where nuclear power produces 40 per cent of the country's electricity, also announced last week that it plans to shut down its reactors gradually once they reach their average lifespan of 50 years — which would mean taking the last plant off the grid in 2034.

Source: CBCnews

Heavy rains trigger tsunami-zone landslide alert

Heavy rain caused by the remains of Typhoon Songda posed multiple landslide threats Monday in areas hit by the March 11 disasters, prompting local authorities to go on alert.




Several areas had already been flooded by the morning and dozens of cars were trapped on overflowing roads in Sendai's Wakabayashi Ward and in the nearby city of Iwanuma, both in Miyagi Prefecture.

The ground in some areas sank several centimeters during the massive quake, which shifted the island's position in the Pacific Ocean. This made many areas vulnerable for the first time to high tides and heavy rain.

Shortly after 9 a.m., a blackout struck the disaster-hit town of Minamisanriku, Iwate Prefecture, where many people are still living in emergency shelters at schools.

"After the lights went out, I was horrified by my memory of the March disaster," said Yasuko Saijo, 77, who is living in one of the shelters in town.

She said her home in the coastal area has been persistently flooded by seawater since the magnitude 9 earthquake. "Heavy rain this time may further damage my home," she said.

East Japan Railway Co. suspended train services on the Tohoku Line between Fukushima and Ichinoseki stations in Iwate Prefecture, while the Joban Line between Watari and Iwanuma, both in Miyagi, was suspended for safety reasons.

In addition, at least one bullet train run was canceled as of Monday morning on the Akita Shinkansen Line, JR East said.

The typhoon had weakened into a tropical storm off Shikoku on Sunday afternoon, but the Meteorological Agency warned that it could still cause downpours and strong winds across the country through Monday.

Winds as strong as 118 kph were observed in Ishinomaki, Miyagi Prefecture, the agency said.

Ishinomaki and other coastal areas along the Pacific will see full tides between Tuesday and June 7, the agency said, warning of floods on a mass scale coupling with heavy rain.

The storm was moving toward waters off eastern Japan, activating the front hovering over the Tohoku region, especially on the tsunami-ravaged Pacific side, the agency said.

Future war: Cyber terror? North Korea continues their cyber attacks against South Korea

North Korean hackers have apparently sent spam e-mail messages to South Korean military officers, carrying viruses and malicious computer code, military officials here said Monday.

According to an official, senders who claim to be graduates of the Korea Military Academy in Seoul have written to about 60 current South Koran officers who graduated from the academy. Messages mostly included a benign greeting and attachment files, the official said.

"Our Cyber Command warned officers of these e-mails last Friday," the official said. "After tracing these messages, we believe North Koreans have tried to hack into (military information)."

The official said senders' addresses have used a South Korean domain, 'hanmail.net,' operated by a portal site Daum, including '1co3p@hanmail.net' and 'hoyon1241@hanmail.net.' He said hackers might not have been able to access any key military data since officers are restricted from accessing their Hanmail accounts on the base.

Opening the message or downloading an attachment file will activate malicious code, the official added.

"North Korean hacking attempts using the Hanmail domain appear to be spreading," the official said, adding that officers shouldn't open suspicious e-mails and should report to their respective cyber units immediately.

Sunday, May 29, 2011

The Anti Tax Payer's Bill Of Rights Lawsuit

"TABOR requires lawmakers to ask voters to raise taxes. It also limits the amount of tax revenue the state can keep and spend."

"The group of more than 30 current and former public officials" lead by Rep. Andy Kerr and former Sen. Norma Anderson are filing a lawsuit that is against the Taxpayers Bill of Rights calling these laws "unconstitutional."

See the CBS Local article for more.

TABOR provides an important check on the government's power.

Do you support TABOR? Sign the Twitition (Twitter petition) at twitition.com/874ug.

HAARP [CH02] Radar flares

I found this clip on youtube.com showing a possible HAARP radar flare in the state of Washington. In this video by Dutchsinse, he varifies these flares on intellicast.com, weather.gov, and accuweather.com.

Video of Super Typhoon Songda on weather radar

HAARP [CH01] What is it?


HF Array
According to haarp.alaska.edu,
"HAARP is a scientific endeavor aimed at studying the properties and behavior of the ionosphere, with particular emphasis on being able to understand and use it to enhance communications and surveillance systems for both civilian and defense purposes."

Optical Shelter with Dome
The HAARP facility located near Gakona, Alaska is one of many "ionosphere research" facilities located all around the world. In addition to HAARP, the US has two more facilities--one located in Puerto Rico, near the Arecibo Observatory and the other near Fairbanks, Alaska (http://www.haarp.alaska.edu/haarp/factSheet.html).

Modular UHF Ionospheric Radar
HAARP is more equipped than other research facilities. Its unique features include "electronic beam steering", "wide frequency coverage", and an advanced collection of scientific instruments. The data that these "sophisticated" instruments collect is recorded and archived into their database. Anyone can view the data that HAARP collects for their Magnetometer, VHF Classic Riometer, HAARP HF Ionosonde, Induction Magnetometer, Total Electron Content, "Latitude Scans of TEC and Scintillation", Spectrum Monitor Waterfall Charts, HAARP Observatory Weather Station, and more on their website (http://www.haarp.alaska.edu/haarp/factSheet.html,http://www.haarp.alaska.edu/haarp/data.html).

Induction Magnetometer

Atmospheric studies have been very important to the military and communication industries since the ionosphere can "distort, reflect and absorb radio signals." Imagine a company executive whose satellite download gets delayed due to an unexpected fluctuation in the atmosphere. These sudden changes can be cause by solar flares or lightning which heat or ionize air-streams. A classic example of this phenomenon occurred in 1933, know as the Luxembourg Effect, when a radio receiver, tuned to Radio-Paris, located in Southern England picked up a faint signal from the much more powerful Luxembourg station. This event would not be unusual except that the two radio stations frequencies were separated by a "large band" which prevented any "cross modulation"--that is, the presence of strong signals on adjacent channels.

Typhoon Songda Hits Southern Japan. Heavy rain and wind in Fukushima

The first major storm of the season is now making its way across southern Japan.
It has weakened somewhat, but Tropical Storm Songda is yet another natural disaster to hit the stricken country in recent times.

This has been quite a long-lived storm, and we have been tracking its progress for more than a week now. Thankfully, it has by-and-large stayed clear of the major land masses in the Western Pacific.
It brushed the Philippines, passing to the northeast of Luzon as a typhoon before drifting east of Taiwan on its way towards Japan.

At its peak it had sustained winds of 240kmph making it a super typhoon (the equivalent of a category 5 hurricane on the Safir-Simpson Scale).

The fact that the eye of the typhoon remained over the ocean means that it has been able to maintain its warm water source, which has thus continued to feed the storm.
As a result, the outer rain bands have produced major rain events for all in its path along with very high seas. It is now weakening over the slightly cooler waters to the south of Japan and the northwest Pacific.

Feeling the effects

As the typhoon made its way towards Kyushu on Sunday morning, Japan's Meteorological Agency issued a mudslide warning for Kagoshima, where recent volcanic eruptions left the ground weak and prone to such events.
Kagoshima received 121mm of rain on Saturday. A little further south, Naze had a whopping 160mm in the same time period. Subsequently, 15,400 households suffered power cuts and 426 households lost their water supply.
Overall, the combination of strong winds and heavy rain left at least 58 people injured and 278,000 households without power.

Tokyo has also been feeling the effects of the storm, which has now been downgraded to a tropical storm. Flights were cancelled for a time.

Elsewhere, concerns remain over Japan's crippled Fukushima nuclear plant, which officials admit is not fully prepared to deal with violent storms. Fortunately the storm has now passed to the south of the site.
However, the typhoon has already brought heavy rain to the Fukushima region and there is still more to come. This has prompted worries that runoff water may wash away radioactive materials from the land into the Pacific Ocean.

The plant operator, Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) has been pouring synthetic resins over the complex in an attempt to stabilise the plant. More work needs to be done, not just now but also to ensure that future typhoons would not spread radioactive materials into the environment.

Source: Al Jazeera

Fukushima Plant not prepared for Typhoon Songda

Officials from the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) are apologizing in advance for the fact that the stricken Fukushima nuclear plant is not ready for the high winds and heavy rain of Typhoon Songda, a massive storm that could make landfall in Japan as early as Monday.

The BBC quotes TEPCO Officials as saying, "We have made utmost efforts, but we have not completed covering the damaged reactor buildings. We apologize for the lack of significant measures against wind and rain."
Buildings housing the plant's nuclear reactors are still standing open in the wake of crippling hydrogen explosions that followed Japan's March 11 earthquake and tsunami. The approaching storm could scatter highly radioactive materials into the air and sea. Plant operators are currently spreading "anti-scattering agents" around the buildings housing reactors one and four.




An adviser to Japan's Prime Minister Naoto Kan has criticized TEPCO officials, saying that the current safety measures "cannot be said to be appropriate". TEPCO and the Japanese government have faced condemnation of their handling of the crisis, which some see as inept and lacking in transparency. It is unclear whether the Fukushima plant will be in the direct path of the typhoon.

Source: The Raw Story

Nuclear Super Typhoon? Massive storm may approach Fukushima this weekend — Current gusts of 195 mph

Typhoon Songda strengthened to a supertyphoon after battering the Philippines and headed for Japan on a track that may pass over the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant by May 30, a U.S. monitoring center said.
Songda’s winds increased to 241 kilometers (150 miles) per hour from 213 kph yesterday, the U.S. Navy Joint Typhoon Warning Center said on its website. The storm’s eye was about 240 kilometers east of Aparri in the Philippines at 8 a.m. today, the center said. Songda was moving northwest at 19 kph and is forecast to turn to the northeast and cross the island of Okinawa by 9 p.m. local time tomorrow before heading for Honshu.
The center’s forecast graphic includes a possible path over Fukushima Dai-Ichi plant, which has been spewing radiation since March 11 when an earthquake and tsunami knocked out cooling systems. Three of six reactor buildings have no roof after explosions blew them off, exposing spent fuel pools and containment chambers that are leaking.

                                            SuperTycoon Heads to Japan


“We are still considering typhoon measures and can’t announce detailed plans yet,” Takeo Iwamoto, a spokesman at Tokyo Electric Power Co., said by phone when asked about the storm. The utility known as Tepco plans to complete the installation of covers for the buildings by October, he said.
Japan is regularly buffeted by typhoons and tropical storms during the northwestern Pacific cyclone season. In 2004, eight cyclones passed over or skirted the country’s Tohoku region, where the Fukushima station is located, according to the Japan Meteorological Agency. The earliest was in May that year. The eyes of two storms passed within 300 kilometers of Tohoku last year, the agency’s data show.

Fourth Storm

Songda, the name of a branch of the Red River in Vietnam, is the fourth storm to form over northwest Pacific this year. The storm lashed the Philippines as it passed the eastern seaboard, leaving one person dead, according to the country’s disaster council. Songda prompted evacuations of coastal areas and caused flooding that jammed traffic and stranded travelers.
Damage to crops was “very minimal” as most had been harvested before the storm passed, Philippine Agriculture Secretary Proceso Alcala told reporters today.
The U.S. Navy Joint Typhoon Warning Center classifies storms as supertyphoons when their maximum sustain winds reach at least 150 miles per hour, according to the Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory.


Source: Bloomberg

Saturday, May 28, 2011

Why does the world hate the US? [CH01] nocureforthat.org sums it up

Here is a clip from nocureforthat.org. I like their opinion so check it out!

May 21, 2011: The end of the world

Today, is May 28, 2011 and Harold Camping founder and general manager of Family Radio, predicted the everlasting destruction of the end of the world on Saturday May 21st at 6PM. Well... I am still here and so is everyone else.

Background:


Many are saying this is just another phony. In a yahoo forum, one user suggests that he may have a mental problem. This man truly thinks of himself as a "prophet" who has figured out the secret code of the bible. If someone believed that, I am sure they would find something to write about. On the other hand, maybe this is all just a big money making scheme.

Acronym from nocureforthat.org


In a forum David wrote:
Let ME make a prediction: Nothing will happen on May 21. But then Harold Camping will have a big problem, as will his followers. I predict that they will say that THEY averted this disaster with their prayer and righteousness, and that God has simply DELAYED it. This will enable Camping to keep on the air, and it will give him fodder to do this all over again soon. It will have to be soon because he is pushing 90 years old.

I think David said it best. Furthermore, these phony prophets need to go to jail.

Sexy girls have it easy




Source: Youtube

Saturday, May 21, 2011

CBS reporter Lara Logan sexually assaulted by crowd in Egypt





Friday, May 20, 2011

The Lucifer Effect [CH 1] What is it?

For centuries scientists have been trying to understand what makes "good" people turn "bad." In 1971, an experiment lead by Philip Zimbardo at Stanford University and other researchers, selected 24 normal college students to be prisoners and 51 to be guards in a mock prison--commonly known as the Stanford Prison Experiment. The results were shocking. In only six days, the guards had become so abusive that the study was shutdown. The leading officers "adapted to their roles" even more than Zimbardo had dreamed--even torturing prisoners. Some of the prisoners developed "passive attitudes" and accepted the physical abuse inflicted by the guards. Even Zimbardo thought of himself as the "Prison Superintendent" and allowed the abuse to continue for longer than it should have (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanford_prison_experiment).

The Lucifer Effect happens when people choose to change their thoughts or actions based on suggestions and the journey (or the chain of actions and reactions) leaves more bad than good results. Suggestions can be direct or implied and can come from a variety of sources i. e. our environments, advertisements, movies, books, other information, other people, groups of people, and society.

One hotly debated moral issue asks is torturing worth the information? Some will say no because the act allows the desire for cruelty to grow inside a person or society. Historically, human beings have been gruesomely cruel like when the Huguenots "hacked to pieces" Catholic children, disemboweled a priest, and buried another priest alive around 1607. Still others will say yes because of terrorists who are willing to shed innocent blood. Those others will argue that the "ticking time bomb scenario" is the only justifiable case. However, we are left with some very critical questions: What will the results make us feel? What will other countries and people feel towards us? Will there be more "justifiable" scenarios to come? If so, how many and when will the cruelty come to an end? (http://www.lucifereffect.com/guide_conform.htm,http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ticking_time_bomb_scenario,http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/religion/rel01.html)

Fukushima and Japan's Terror


As we all know, a large earthquake and tsunami that has swept through the coast of Japan on March 11th of this year has caused a extreme meltdown at a nuclear plant in Fukushima, Japan.

2 months after the disaster, the meltdown is still an ongoing stage.

Chernobyl 1986

On 26 April 1986, in Chernobyl, reactor four suffered a catastrophic power increase, leading to explosions in its core. This dispersed large quantities of radioactive fuel and core materials into the atmosphere and ignited the combustible graphite moderator. The burning graphite moderator increased the emission of radioactive particles, carried by the smoke, as the reactor had not been encased by any kind of hard containment vessel.


An explosion and fire released large quantities of radioactive contamination into the atmosphere, which spread over much of Western USSR and Europe. It is considered the worst nuclear power plant accident in history, and is one of only two classified as a level 7 event on the International Nuclear Event Scale (the other being the Fukushima I nuclear accidents).


An estimated 15,000 to 30,000 people have died in the aftermath. More than 2.5 million Ukranians suffer from health problems related to the Chernobyl blast, with 80,000 of them receiving a pension.


The town of Pripyat became abandoned after the explosion in Chernobyl.


2 months after the Fukushima nuclear accident, experts are now saying that Fukushima could leave a worse scar than the Chernobyl accident.


Fukushima, March 11, 2011



Following the 9.0 earthquake and the tsunami in the Sendai region of Japan, Japan initially announced that the nuclear plant has shut down and the core temperature has been rising due to the disabled generators.



At 7:03 pm, on the day of the disaster, Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan declares a nuclear emergency status. Japan comforted the people by telling them that the warnings are just "safety precautions" and everything was "under control" and that the damages were "minimal". They also announced that the nuclear plant had no radioactive leaks.



On the following day, media sources reported that Japan was pouring seawater into the plant. No one questioned or answered why they were putting seawater into the plant. Were they out of water? Now we know that they were mixing small amount of Boron to slowdown the rising temperatures. Now we also know that the 1st reactor was already leaking the day after the disaster.



Japan was hiding the fast meltdown process and on March 12th, due to hydrogen explosions they release steam that contains radioactive materials. Soon they announce that the steam only had "some" radioactive materials and it's acceptable level of radiation.



Soon the whole world was worreid that the blowing wind would carry the radiation and spread to other regions. America, France, Germany, Canada all reported that it was an acceptable level of radioactivity. OH BULL! Researchers in the United States have performed thousands of radiation experiments in humans to determine the effects of ionizing radiation and radioactive contamination on the human body. US Government experiments with radiation.


Managing Director, Akio Komori of the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO), the company that manages the Fukushima nuclear plant, cried after a press conference. He admitted that the ongoing radiation leaks were serious enough to cause injury or death in the highest area of danger, closest to the damaged plant.


2 months after the disaster, Fukushima nuclear plants are still out of control and the work is still being done to lower the core temperature. Although the world knows more now about the plants than we did before, we are still ignorant of things that the Japanese Government is hiding from the rest of the world. Releasing steams and releasing nuclear radiation into the ocean.... Now what's next?

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Comet Special: Story 1: Heaven's gate

Comet special

Story 1: Heaven’s gate

On March 26th of 1997, in a luxurious mansion at Rancho Santa Fe near San Diego in California in the United States, police found 39 bodies. Their age varied from teens to elderly



















All 39 bodies were laid on their backs on top of a bunk bed with blankets over their heads and they were all wearing a brand new pairs of Nike shoes.




Police soon confirmed that these bodies were of 21 women and 18 men who voluntarily committed suicide in hopes of entering the kingdom of heaven. These men and women belonged to a religious cult called Heaven’s gate led by a man named Marshall Applewhite (bottom picture).



Heaven’s Gate



Heaven’s gate was an American UFO based religious cult found and led by Marshall Applewhite (1931-1997) and Bonnie Nettles (1928-1985). The group began in the early 1970s when Marshall Applewhite was recovering from a heart attack during which he claimed to have had a near-death experience. He came to believe that he and his nurse, Bonnie Nettles, were "the Two," that is, the two witnesses spoken of in the Book of Revelation 11:3 in the Bible. Marshall himself believed he was directly related to Jesus, meaning he was an "Evolutionary Kingdom Level Above Human."



Revelation 11:3
And I will grant authority to my two witnesses, and they will prophesy for 1,260 days, clothed in sackcloth.”




Heaven's Gate members believed that the planet Earth was about to be recycled (wiped clean, renewed, refurbished and rejuvenated), and that the only chance to survive was to leave it immediately. They were against suicide but they defined "suicide" in their own context to mean "to turn against the Next Level when it is being offered”. They believed “to be eligible for membership in the Next Level, humans would have to shed every attachment to the planet.”



What happened in 1997?

In June 1995 the American magazine Sky & Telescope published an article which discussed the likelihood of seeing unusual astronomical events such as meteor showers, supernovae and bright comets.1 A spectacular comet, it said, comes along typically every ten years or so. Astronomers had long been aware that, as we approached the end of the century (and indeed, the end of the millennium) we were long overdue for a really bright naked eye comet. only a month after the Sky & Telescope article had gone into print, two amateur astronomers in America, Alan Hale and Thomas Bopp, were independently observing the globular cluster M70 through their telescopes when they spotted a fuzzy object in the same field of view. The discovery having been confirmed as a new comet, it was subsequently designated C/1995 O1. What was most notable about it was that, for its computed distance - 663 million miles (1067 million km) - it was remarkably bright. Most comets at this distance (well beyond the orbit of Jupiter) would be very faint. Hale-Bopp was a thousand times brighter than Comet Halley would be at the same distance.

Comet Hale-Bopp in June 9th, 1996





Heaven’s gate members believed that Comet Hale-Bopp was a giant spaceship that is hovering around the earth to take them to paradise. The controversy revolves around the likes of Dr. Courtney Brown’s appearance on Art Bell’s radio show in 1996, on which the possibility of a UFO or other huge object following comet Hale Bopp was discussed.







Courtney claims that his "remote viewing" students saw a huge craft following the comet. (Remote Viewing is a controversial psychic / meditation technique for vaguely seeing and sensing any time or place in the Universe) The Hale-Bopp controversy started with the anomalous photo, shown above, taken by amateur astronomer Chuck Shramek. The Saturn-like object to the right of the comet is still unexplained, but whether it is an alien UFO or not remains to be seen.



The mass suicide

On March 19-20, 1997, Marshall Applewhite taped himself speaking of mass suicide and asserted "it was the only way to evacuate this Earth". Applewhite believed that after their deaths, a UFO would take their souls to another "level of existence above human", which Applewhite described as being both physical and spiritual. This and other UFO-related beliefs held by the group have led some observers to characterize the group as a type of UFO religion. In October 1996, the group purchased alien abduction insurance to cover up to 50 members at a cost of $10,000.



The cult rented a 9,200-sq.-ft. mansion, located at 18241 Colina Norte (later changed to Paseo Victoria), in a gated community of upscale homes in the San Diego area. The suicide was accomplished by ingestion of phenobarbital mixed with applesauce or pudding, washed down with vodka. Additionally, plastic bags were secured around their heads after ingesting the mix to induce asphyxiation. Authorities found the dead lying neatly in their own bunk beds, faces and torsos covered by a square, purple cloth.



Each member carried a five dollar bill and three quarters in their pockets. All 39 were dressed in identical black shirts and sweat pants, brand new black-and-white Nike Windrunner athletic shoes, and armband patches reading "Heaven's Gate Away Team" (one of many instances of the group's use of the Star Trek fictional universe's nomenclature).





The thirty-eight Heaven's Gate members, plus group leader Applewhite, were found dead in the home on March 26, 1997. In the heat of the California spring, many of the bodies had begun to decompose by the time they were discovered. The bodies were later cremated.

As for now, Heaven's Gate is inactive and the pass of Comet Hale-Bopp, mass suicide and continuing history of mankind have brought the closure of Heaven's Gate.













REFERENCE:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heaven

http://www.heavensgate.com/

http://www.time.com/time/reports/cult/heavensgate/heavensgate1.html

http://www.culteducation.com/hgate.html

Watch Out For Rouge Waves! [CH 1]

Legend tells of waves the size of a "10-story building" that can appear "without warning" in the middle of the ocean. They can resist "prevailing current and wave direction" or appear on a perfectly clear day. The trough of the wave--that is, the dip before and after--is a "hole in the sea." Rogue waves can exert up to "980 kPa (142 psi)" as the water breaks on the deck and hull. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rogue_wave).

Is the ocean safe? A rogue wave capsizes the ship in the movie Poseidon (2006), forcing passengers to climb through the hull of ship and escape. Although movies are exaggerated, many ships have been capsized and broken by the extreme, crushing pressure of the sinister wave. The European Space Agency (ESA) used their satellites to spot 10 humongous wave and each was over "25m (81ft)" tall. They estimate that in the last twenty years over "200 cargo ships" have sank. Wolfgang Rosenthal, of the GKSS Research Centre in Geesthacht, Germany estimates that at least "two" large vessels "every week on average" have been lost, but, because the reason is not investigated as thoroughly as airplane crashes, most losses are attributed to "bad weather" (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/3917539.stm).