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It’s time to stop buying the New York Post
Posted: January 10, 2014 at 3:40 pm
I used to be a daily buyer of the New York Post, the daily paper known for a sense of venality and trashy fun. I was working at the time for a weekly newspaper and reading the daily slate of celebrity gossip, and the Post, though it didnt provide ideas per se, dosed me with a jolt of energy I couldnt have gotten from coffee. The Op-Eds, by folks like Rich Lowry and John Bolton, had always been negligible to my reading of it; the gossip was and remains enticing. But what was most intriguing were always the slice-of-life stories that would have been, at most, small squibs in the metro section of the nationally minded New York Times. Exemplary is the cover that ran the day after New York state legalized gay marriage it depicted, instead of the earth-shaking news, a picture of a woman saved from jumping off a building by hero cops. (The little joke here the biggest news of the day, unremarked upon, hung over this womans suicide attempt didnt go unnoticed, but seemed funny and not deeply weird.) Little Upworthy-style stories of human triumphs or, more commonly, dark stories of misdeeds and ill fortune and small-scale political graft reminded me that I lived in a big and porous city, full of events entirely opaque to me but for the 30 minutes a day spent reading the paper.
I stopped buying the Post after it refused to back down from its Bag Men cover and havent looked back. It wasnt so much that I was protesting the newspaper, or boycotting it; it just didnt, and still doesnt, feel right to get news from a source with such a semantic sense of true and false. As readers will recall, the newspaper printed a cover strongly implying that two young men were involved in the bombing of the Boston Marathon, complete with the headline referencing backpacks and a slang term for criminals and a photo of the men. It then refused to walk its story back, claiming that The image was emailed to law enforcement agencies yesterday afternoon seeking information about these men without noting just how many photos of other people, not of Middle Eastern descent, might have been in similar photos.
The hits kept coming among them the Posts horrifying treatment of a dead Brooklyn landlord, whose death the paper didnt so much report as revel in with display copy asking WHO DIDNT WANT HIM DEAD?The Post refused to walk that back, either claiming, The Post does not say Mr. Stark deserved to die, but our reporting showed that he had many enemies, which may have led to the commission of this terrible crime. Our thoughts and prayers are with the family at this time of loss. If thats how the Post shows its thoughtful, spiritual side, one would hate to see it actually expressing vitriol.
One sees that side the venal, indefensible side once again in the papers coverage of Eliot Spitzer and Lis Smith. This doesnt have the import of life or death or terrorism, which is just the point. The coverage has consistently treated the relationship between a man going through a divorce and an adult woman acting of her own free will as not just politically interesting (hes the former governor who ran for municipal office in New York last year and lost; she worked for his campaign) but somehow morally revolting. They published a story about his sucking her toes on a vacation; the pair were compelled to respond with receipts disproving the story. The tone of the Posts incessant coverage has, throughout, been slut-shaming in the extreme with Smith framed as an ambitious, youngish cookie [...] us[ing] a married degenerate.
The whole thing isnt out of character for the Post; its the way the Post has been all along. But where before the Posts serious misdeeds first framing two young Middle Eastern men as terrorists in precisely such a way as to sell papers but to avoid ever having to retract, then yukking it up over murder the tone of the Post no longer seems enervating and different but like a foreign country I know I never again want to visit. The ideology of other properties of Rupert Murdoch define them as politically conservative in a manner that is at least useful in clarifying the stakes in the national debate Fox News and the Wall Street Journal editorial page, like it or not, do set the agenda. The New York Posts agenda is just anger, in every direction, all the time. Its like reading an Internet comment section. There are other places to find interesting stories, places that are guided by virtues other than indulging their pure rage and appealing to yours.
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It’s time to stop buying the New York Post
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Human microbiome linked to health, obesity
Posted: at 3:40 pm
New York, Jan 10 (IANS): The human microbiome, the collection of trillions of microbes living in and on the human body, plays a crucial role in our overall well being, says a new research.
Scientists are experiencing startling insights into the role that microorganisms play, not only in disease, but more importantly in our health and well-being, said Lita Proctor of the National Human Genome Research Institute in the US.
Scientists now recognise that the microbiome may be responsible for a broad variety of metabolic and developmental processes from food digestion to vitamin synthesis, and even brain function.
The report, produced by the American Academy of Microbiology, also highlighted the role of the microbiome in obesity and inflammatory bowel disease.
The report describes the beauty and complexity of the human microbiome and the insults we may be causing our microbiomes as a result of common practices in our modern societies.
"We now need to include the microbiome when considering human health and the future research directions for this emerging field which combines medicine, ecology and evolution, added Proctor.
Researchers have long known that bacteria reside on and within the human body, but traditional microbiology has typically focused on the study of individual species as isolated units.
Recent advances in DNA sequencing technologies and other molecular techniques have allowed for more comprehensive examination of these microbes as communities that have evolved intimate relationships with their hosts over millions of years, the report said.
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Human microbiome linked to health, obesity
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CNN Money: Top business headlines for Jan. 10
Posted: at 3:40 pm
NEW YORK (CNN) -- CNN Money's Maribel Aber has your top business and financial news on this Friday, January 10.
Tyson Foods asks hog farmers to make animal welfare adjustmentTyson Foods Inc. of Springdale said Thursday that it has asked its hog farmers to adopt new methods of raising, monitoring and euthanizing animals and said it would increase supplier inspections in 2014. The Humane Society of the United States praised Tyson's actions, and a similar one by competing meat processor Smithfield Foods, calling it a "big movement from an important company." In the letter signed by Shane Miller, Tyson's senior vice president of pork, and Dean Danilson, vice president of animal well-being programs, the company asked that its suppliers to: Use video monitoring of sows "to increase oversight and decrease biosecurity risks." Stop using manual blunt force as a primary method of euthanizing sick or injured piglets. Adopt "pain mitigation methods" to eliminate or reduce the pain associated with tail docking and castration.
It is good to be the boss! Bosses actually are happier. So says a new Pew Research Center study that found bosses are more likely to be "very satisfied" with their jobs, family life and financial situation than their underlings. And more bosses than workers say they plan to stay put, especially since nearly two-thirds think they are compensated fairly for their efforts. But when it comes to gender workplace issues, bosses and workers have roughly the same views. The overwhelming majority of both feel that men and women are paid equally at their place of employment.
Market has #jitters about Twitter Twitter is off to a terrible start in 2014 after bearish reports from several Wall Street analysts have made investors jittery. Shares of the micro-blogging service were down nearly 9% at one point, and closed down almost 4% Thursday, after Cantor Fitzgerald gave the stock a "sell" rating and Morgan Stanley labeled it as "underweight" earlier this week. On Thursday, Cowen & Co. initiated coverage on the stock with an "underperform." But Morgan Stanley's negative rating was especially worrisome, given that the bank was one of the underwriters of Twitter's November initial public offering, said Robert Peck, an analyst with SunTrust Robinson Humphrey.
Economy stinks, books get more depressingAmerican futurism gets pretty dark during bad economic times. Many people start to see technology as the enemy, like they did in the 1930s and 1970s. And people generally feel less optimistic for the future. But new research shows that it's not just futurism that becomes more gloomy during economic recessions. When the economy stinks, all authors start to adopt a more depressing vocabulary. A recent study out of London took different "mood words" that were then broken up into six categories: anger, disgust, fear, joy, sadness, and surprise. From there the researchers made what they call a "literary misery index" to gauge the relative number of positive moods against the negative moods in 20th century books.
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CNN Money: Top business headlines for Jan. 10
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The Unintended Consequences of Zoe’s Law in Australia – Video
Posted: at 3:40 pm
The Unintended Consequences of Zoe #39;s Law in Australia
Sidestepping the main issue by introducing and passing legislation disguised as another issue has unintended consequences. Like us on FaceBook: http://www.fa...
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The Unintended Consequences of Zoe's Law in Australia - Video
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Minecraft – MainBlock Day 162 – Space Station? and 134 Diamonds. – Video
Posted: at 1:45 am
Minecraft - MainBlock Day 162 - Space Station? and 134 Diamonds.
NEW Channel! - KBDToysTV: - https://www.youtube.com/user/KBDToysTV Extreme Ant Farm - Ep 1 - http://youtu.be/P3x43rF-1I4 Ant Farm Survival Day 1 - http://you...
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Minecraft - MainBlock Day 162 - Space Station? and 134 Diamonds. - Video
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Clean-Burning ‘Fire Water’ Tested On Space Station | Video – Video
Posted: at 1:45 am
Clean-Burning #39;Fire Water #39; Tested On Space Station | Video
Astronauts have been experimenting with supercritical water that can aid ignition of fire in microgravity. It has down to Earth applications for municipal wa...
By: VideoFromSpace
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Space Engineers – Space Station Construction (Part 7) – Video
Posted: at 1:45 am
Space Engineers - Space Station Construction (Part 7)
I attempt a few designs with the new rotor machine, however they don #39;t really turn out as planned. The Game: http://SpaceEngineersGame.com Blog: http://Pauleh.com Stream: http://Twitch.tv/Pauleh...
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Space Engineers - Space Station Construction (Part 7) - Video
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Cygnus headed to space station with food, clothing, and other supplies
Posted: at 1:45 am
After a series of delays, including a 24-hour slip prompted by a solar flare,Orbital Science's robotic Cygnus spacecraft is en route to the International Space Station.
The commercial spaceflight company Orbital Sciences Corp. launched a robotic spacecraft from Virginia's Eastern Shore Thursday (Jan. 9) on a milestone flight: the company's first official cargo delivery to the International Space Station.
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An Orbital-built Cygnus spacecraft launched into space atop the company's Antares rocket from a seaside pad at NASA's Wallops Flight Facility on Wallops Island, Va. Liftoff occurred at 1:07 p.m. EST (1807 GMT) after a series of delays, including a 24-hour slip due to ahuge solar flare on Tuesday.
The Cygnus spacecraft is hauling about 2,780 lbs. (1,260 kilograms) of fresh food, clothing, scientific equipment and other gear for astronauts on the International Space Station. The mission, called Orb-1, is the first of at least eight cargo missions Orbital will fly for NASA under a $1.9 billion contract. [See more launch photos of Orbital's 1st Cygnus cargo mission]
"We are really looking forward to thisfirst Orbital cargo mission," Dan Hartman, NASA's deputy space station program manager, said in a prelaunch briefing this week.
The Cygnus spacecraft is due to arrive at the space station early Sunday (Jan. 12), where it will be captured by astronauts using a robotic arm and attached to a station docking port.
Orbital'sCygnus spacecraftare bus-size cylindrical vehicles designed to haul payloads of up to 4,400 lbs. (2,000 kg) to the International Space Station. They include an Orbital-built service module for power and propulsion and a 17-foot-long (5 meters) pressurized compartment built by Italy's Thales Alenia Space.
In April 2013, Orbital launched itsfirst Antares rocket test flightfrom Pad-0A at NASA's Wallops Flight Facility. A second demonstration flight in September launched the first Cygnus vehicle to the space station. Pad-0A at Wallops is managed by Virginia's commercial Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport.
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Cygnus headed to space station with food, clothing, and other supplies
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Lions Face Extinction in West Africa
Posted: at 1:44 am
Fewer than 250 adults may be left in West Africa, and those big cats are confined to less than 1 percent of their historic range.
The new study, detailed in the journal PLOS ONE, suggests that without dramatic conservation efforts, three of the four West African lion populations could become extinct in the next five years, with further declines in the one remaining population, study co-author Philipp Henschel, the lion program survey coordinator for Panthera, a global wildcat conservation organization, wrote in an email. [In Photos: The Biggest Lions on Earth]
The majestic lion once roamed throughout West Africa, from Nigeria to Senegal.
But as people have converted wild lands to pastureland, hunted the lion's traditional prey antelopes, gazelles, wildebeest, buffalos and zebras and gotten into conflicts with the animals, the big cat population has plummeted in West Africa.
Cash-strapped West African governments have put little money into lion conservation, in part because "wildlife tourism is quasi-absent in West Africa," Henschel said.
And research institutions have similarly neglected the region.
"Like wildlife tourists, most international research institutions and conservation organizations active in Africa also flock to the iconic game parks in East and southern Africa, meaning that lions faced a silent demise in West Africa over the past decades," Henschel told LiveScience.
Massive Survey
To remedy that, Henschel and his colleagues recently completed a massive, six-year survey of West Africa's lions, using remote cameras, interviews with people and counts of lion tracks. The survey, carried out between October 2006 and May 2012, builds on a smaller study done last year, which found shrinking savannas for lions in the region.
About 400 adult and juvenile lions existed in the region. And the wild cats, which were originally thought to have inhabited 21 separate regions, actually exist in just four. Their range is now confined to pockets in Senegal, Nigeria and the borderlands between Benin, Niger and Burkina Faso.
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Lions Face Extinction in West Africa
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Nature Publishing Group Announces OA Journal
Posted: at 1:44 am
Weekly News Digest January 2, 2014 In addition to this week's NewsBreak(s), the editors have compiled the Weekly News Digest, featuring stories from the week just past that you should know about. Watch for additional coverage to appear in the next print issue of Information Today.
CLICK HERE to view all of this week's Weekly News Digest items.
Nature Publishing Group Announces OA Journal
Human Genome Variation, the sixth journal collaboration between NPG and JSHG, is a sister title of JSHGs Journal of Human Genetics. Katsushi Tokunaga, a professor at the University of Tokyo, will serve as editor-in-chief. The journal will feature original research articles, summaries, reviews, and data reports. Its audience is human genetics researchers and clinical geneticists.
The journal will provide a forum for scientists working in human genetics, variation and mutation to publish their discoveries, results, analysis and insights, says Dugald McGlashan, publisher of NPGs Asia-Pacific academic journals.
Authors may choose which Creative Commons license to apply to their research articles, which will be OA on publication.
NPG and JSHG will also develop a searchable database sourced from the journals data reports that includes content on genomic variation and variability.
Source: Nature Publishing Group
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Nature Publishing Group Announces OA Journal
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