Monday, August 12, 2013

5 Shameful Ways the United States is Leading the World by Judy Molland August 10, 2013


  • 4:00 pm
5 Shameful Ways the United States is Leading the World
America, the land of the brave and the free. America, the best country in the world. That’s how many Americans like to speak of their country and indeed, it is the reason many immigrants see the United States as the land of their dreams.
There’s a dark side to this, however: ways in which this country is the best that it should not be proud of.
1. Obesity
Arriving in the U.S. as an immigrant, I was amazed at the size of restaurant portions. So it’s no surprise to learn that the U.S. has been ranked as the most obese country in the world. Obesity is indeed a national health crisis and contributes to an estimated 100,000 to 400,000 deaths in the U.S. per year. In 2012, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that 35.7 percent of American adults are obese, as well as 17% of children and adolescents.
Experts indicate that the love of fast food, sugary drinks, processed food and sweet treats accounts for much of this, but those portion sizes are also to blame. It’s so easy to gain weight here since the ethic driven into people is to finish what’s on their plates. Since there’s so much put on people’s plates in the United States, they’re invariably going to end up eating more.
2.  Health Care
Individuals spend more money per person on health care in the United States than in any other country in the world, about $5,300 annually. In comparison, Switzerland spends about $3,500 dollars per person per year, Japan about $2,000 and Turkey as little as $446 per person each year.
The main reason for the high cost of American health care is that most medical services, materials, technologies and drugs are more expensive than in other industrialized countries. Governments in many other countries play a much stronger role in financing health care services and their citizens are obliged to help pay for it through taxes. In return, all are usually covered by national health insurance. Obamacare, anyone?
3.  Giving Birth
According to a recent New York Times-commissioned analysis, the total average cost of having a baby is $37,341, making the United States the most expensive place in the world to have a baby. This covers prenatal care ($6,257), birth ($18,136 on average), postpartum care ($528) and newborn medical care ($12,419). The total is so high in part because every service is billed separately. And it’s not that women in other countries, where maternity expenses are free or inexpensive, get lower-quality care. In fact, America has one of the highest rates of infant and maternal death among industrialized countries.
Insurance doesn’t necessarily help: 62 percent of private plans come with no maternity coverage. Mothers-to-be have to go through what the Times calls “an extended shopping trip though the American healthcare bazaar” where they try to figure out the cost of things like ultrasounds and blood tests. Pricing is widely variable, and it’s common for mothers to receive treatments they really don’t need.
4.  Energy Use Per Person
The U.S. is the global leader in the amount of energy use per person. Specifically, the U.S. is number one in electricity consumption and  in oil consumption, and number two in coal consumption, right behind China.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration reports that Americans account for nearly 19 percent of Planet Earth’s total primary energy consumption, which comes from petroleum, natural gas, coal, nuclear and renewable energy.
What’s to blame for these numbers? The cost of heating and cooling increasingly large homes, electricity requirements for home electronics, the high amount of energy required to produce consumer goods in the industrial sector, and the insistence on owning your own car and driving everywhere.
5.  Defense Spending
The U.S. spends far more than any other country on defense and security. Since 2001, the base defense budget has soared from $287 billion to $530 billion, a figure that doesn’t even include the primary costs of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.
The U.S. government actually spent about $718 billion on defense and international security assistance in 2011, compared to 2% that it spent on education. That includes all of the Pentagon’s underlying costs as well as the price tag for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, which came to $159 billion in 2011. It also includes arms transfers to foreign governments. It does not, however, include benefits for veterans, which came to $127 billion in 2011, or about 3.5 percent of the federal budget.
The United States is a remarkable country in many ways, but certainly not all ways.

Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/5-shameful-ways-the-united-states-is-leading-the-world.html#ixzz2bnVlwB6s

Iran’s New President


(Wiki Commons/Fastfission)
(Wiki Commons/Fastfission)
It appears that the U.S. and Israel are miles apart in their understanding of what happened this weekend in Tehran as Iran inaugurated its new, friendlier-in-appearance president, Hassan Rouhani. The word “moderate” is thrown around cheaply in the Arab and Muslim world (Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has been called one for years, facts notwithstanding).
Consider the statement of the United States: “The inauguration of President Rouhani presents an opportunity for Iran to act quickly to resolve the international community’s deep concerns over Iran’s nuclear program. Should this new government choose to engage substantively and seriously to meet its international obligations and find a peaceful solution to this issue, it will find a willing partner in the United States.”
And comments made yesterday by Prime Minister Netanyahu: ““The president of Iran has been replaced, but the goal of the regime has not been replaced, it remains as it was. Iran’s intention is to develop a nuclear capability and nuclear weapons in order to destroy the State of Israel, and this constitutes a danger not only to us and the Middle East, but the entire world, and we are all committed to prevent this.”
Rouhani is a more pleasant face on an unchanged Iranian regime – a regime that is still the world’s leading state sponsor of terror, that is still helping Bashar al-Assad murder tens of thousands of his own people in Syria, and that is still – as Prime Minister Netanyahu pointed out – totally committed to developing a nuclear weapon and to using the West’s desperation to negotiate to buy time until it builds such a capability. Any talks Iran agrees to hold will be for the express purpose to delaying and deceiving. That the rest of the world knows this is beyond doubt. That it pretends otherwise and, instead, abides the fantasy of an Iran that is lead by a dialogue-seeking moderate is a disgrace for which the next generation will – and should – hold us accountable.

Author: Stand For Israel | August 5, 2013
Posted in:  Iran, SFI Daily Dispatch

Free a lonely orca

Lolita has been trapped at the Miami Seaquarium for more than 40 years. She was torn away from her family in Puget Sound in 1970, confined to a tank, and trained to perform circus-style tricks for park guests. Lolita is the only orca at the marine park, so she has no opportunity to communicate or interact with any other animal who speaks her language. Her pod has since been declared an endangered species and is able to swim safely and freely, while she's still stuck in captivity all alone.  

Please click the link below to send a quick note to the Miami Seaquarium urging the CEO to release Lolita to a coastal sanctuary. You can learn more about her story here: http://www.seaworldofhurt.com/orca-capture/default.aspx.

Thank you for taking a few minutes to help Lolita have a chance to return to her mother in her natural habitat. 

Campaign Updates August 8, 2012 No Dolphin Abusement Parks in India


When our colleagues at PETA India learned that state governments were planning to open dolphin parks around the country, they immediately contacted the appropriate officials to remind them that permission must be granted before such facilities can open.
In an unequivocal response, the Ministry of Environment and Forests said that it has not granted permission to keep dolphins in captivity and will not do so since tearing them away from their families, confining them to cramped tanks, and forcing them to perform constitutes cruelty and violates India's anti-cruelty laws.
In support of its May 2013 decision, the ministry referenced scientists' calls for these intelligent and sensitive animals to be recognized as "nonhuman persons" deserving of their own specific rights.
PETA had already put that debate into the legal discourse when we filed a groundbreaking lawsuit against SeaWorld for violating orcas' rights under the Thirteenth Amendment, which prohibits the condition of slavery without reference to "persons" or any particular class of victim. Torn from their rightful home, kept against their will, and forced to work for SeaWorld's profit, wild-caught orcas are the very definition of slaves.
More and more families are refusing to buy tickets to marine abusement parks. The days of enslaving social ocean dwellers in concrete bathtubs are coming to an end.

Mystery Lung Fungus: Are You at Risk?

Valley fever is hard to diagnose, even harder to treat, and potentially fatal—and the number of cases is rising dramatically.

| Mon Aug. 12, 2013 3:00 AM PDT


Karen Deeming was a healthy 48-year-old living in Los Banos, California, and working on her master's degree in anthropology and archaeology. Then, in late 2012, a few weeks after returning from a dig in Mariposa, California, Karen began to feel sick. A chest x-ray turned up bilteral pneumonia and masses in her lungs.
What followed was eight months of debilitating illness. And she's not better yet.
If you suspect that Karen had lung cancer, you're wrong. She had something else—and she isn't alone. Cases of her illness are on the rise: In 1998, there were 2,000. In 2011, there were around 23,000.
To find out what Karen's illness is—and whether you're at risk—watch the video above.

"White Gold" or "Bloody Teeth"?

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The exploitation of elephants takes many different forms throughout the world. When they are not being poached for their ivory, they are enslaved as beasts of burden and forced to toil at a relentless pace. Click "More about this issue" to learn more!
Goal: 50,000 Progress: 34,046
Sponsored by: The Rainforest Site
After facing decimation in the 1980s, a global ban on ivory sales barely saved Africa's elephants from extinction.
Then, in 2008 the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) agreed to unleash stockpiles of ivory in a "one-off" sale to China, and the decision kicked off a surge in demand for the coveted "white gold". Rather than reduce the need for black-market ivory and the poaching that supplies it, China's growing middle class wants more.
And they are willing to pay for it. Soaring prices encourage more poaching and attract the attention of armed rebel groups, corrupt government officials, and international criminal organizations. The profits, in turn, fund other illegal activities elsewhere in the world.
2011 and 2012 were especially lethal years for elephants, smashing previous records for illegal ivory seizures, typically captured en route to China. The trend shows no sign of slowing in 2013.
Petition the Chinese Ambassador to the United States to help reverse this bloody path towards extinction.

Iran’s New Defense Minister Behind the 1983 Attack on the U.S. Marine Barracks in Beirut


Iranian-flag1Writing at the blog of the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, Brig. Gen Shimon Shapira writes that the new defense minister in the government of “moderate” President Hassan Rouhani was commander of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps in Lebanon in the early 80s and helped fund and train the people who killed hundreds of U.S. Marines.
Instructions for the attack on the Multinational Forces were issued from Tehran to the Iranian ambassador to Damascus, who passed them on to the Revolutionary Guards forces in Lebanon and their Lebanese Shiite allies. According to the U.S. Marine commander, the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) intercepted the Iranian orders to strike on September 26, 1983. It is difficult to imagine that such a high-level directive to the Revolutionary Guards in Lebanon would be transmitted without the knowledge of their commander, Hossein Dehghan. – See more here.

Author: Stand For Israel | August 12, 2013
Posted in:  Iran, SFI Daily Dispatch

"A Beautiful Body" Book Highlights How "Real" Mothers Look June 25, 2013 by Patricia-Anne Tom 17 0


There's nothing more beautiful than the love between a mother and child, and photographer Jade Beall aims to prove just that by capturing what she says are beautiful images of mothers as they really look — "imperfect but no less beautiful for what society might consider their physical 'flaws,'" according to the Huffington Post.
To date, Beall has photographed more than 50 moms and written accounts of their journeys from self-doubt to body confidence. The stories will be showcased in A Beautiful Body, a book that Beall is producing via crowd-funding and help from volunteers.
"We are facing an epidemic of women who feel unworthy of being called beautiful," Beall told the Huffington Post, noting that mothers who have given birth can feel especially self-conscious because society "shames" mothers for not "bouncing back" after childbirth.
For more on how she aims to change society's expectations about what makes a woman beautiful, read the whole story at the Huffington Post.

Greatest Guitar Solos of All Time Readers Poll: Sweet 16 — "Stairway to Heaven" (Jimmy Page) Vs. "Heartbreaker" (Jimmy Page) Posted 08/12/2013 at 11:45am | by Guitar World Staff


A few years ago, the editors of Guitar World compiled what we feel is the ultimate guide to the 100 Greatest Guitar Solos of All Time.
The list, which has been quoted by countless artists, websites and publications around the world, starts with Richie Sambora's work on Bon Jovi's “Wanted Dead or Alive” (100) and builds to a truly epic finish with Jimmy Page's solo on "Stairway to Heaven" (01).
To quote our "Stairway to Heaven" story that ran with the list, "If Jimmy Page is the Steven Spielberg of guitarists, then 'Stairway' is his Close Encounters."
On June 10, we kicked off a summer blockbuster of our own — a no-holds-barred six-string shootout. We pitted Guitar World's top 64 guitar solos against each other in an NCAA-style, 64-team single-elimination tournament. Every day, we asked you to cast your vote in a different guitar-solo matchup as dictated by the 64-team-style bracket. Now Rounds 1 and 2 have come and gone, leaving us with 16 guitar solos and eight matchups.
So ...
WELCOME TO THE SWEET 16 ROUND, where all 16 still-standing solos will go head to head before your eyes! As always, you can vote once per matchup, and the voting ends as soon as the next matchup is posted.
In some cases, genre will clash against genre; a thrash solo might compete against a Southern rock solo. But please get real, people! They're all guitar solos, played on guitars, by guitarists, most of them in some subset of the umbrella genre of rock. When choosing, it might have to come down to, "Which solo is more original and creative? Which is more iconic or important? or Which one kicks a larger, more impressive assemblage of asses?"
Latest Sweetwater Sweet 16 Results
Winner: "Free Bird" (56.33 percent)
Loser: "No More Tears" (43.67 percent)


Today's Sweetwater Sweet 16 Matchup (3 of 8)
"Stairway to Heaven" Vs. "Heartbreaker"
Today, for the first time since the Greatest Guitar Solos of All Time readers poll began on June 10, a guitarist is squaring off against himself! Yes, it's Jimmy Page against Jimmy Page! (This shouldn't be too surprising, since the Led Zeppelin axman is responsible for four of our final 16 guitar solos; it was bound to happen at some point.) Be sure to cast your vote for his classic solo on "Stairway to Heaven" (01) or his equally classic "Heartbreaker" (16) solo.
HOW THEY GOT HERE
"Stairway to Heaven" defeated Prince's "Little Red Corvette" (64) in Round 1 and Jimi Hendrix's "Machine Gun" (32) in Round 2.
"Heartbreaker" defeated a pair of instrumental tunes: Carlos Santana's "Europa" (49) in Round 1 and Eric Johnson's "Cliffs of Dover" (17) in Round 2.
Get busy! You'll find the poll at the very bottom of the story.
01. “Stairway to Heaven”
Soloist: Jimmy Page
Album: Led Zeppelin—Led Zeppelin IV (Atlantic, 1971)
If Jimmy Page is the Steven Spielberg of guitarists, then “Stairway” is his Close Encounters. Built around a solid, uplifting theme—man’s quest for salvation—the epic slowly gains momentum and rushes headlong to a shattering conclusion. The grand finale in this case is the song’s thrill-a-second guitar solo.
Page remembers: “I’d been fooling around with the acoustic guitar and came up with several different sections which flowed together nicely. I soon realized that it could be the perfect vehicle for something I’d been wanting to do for a while: to compose something that would start quietly, have the drums come in the middle, and then build to a huge crescendo. I also knew that I wanted the piece to speed up, which is something musicians aren’t supposed to do.
“So I had all the structure of it, and ran it by [bassist] John Paul Jones so he could get the idea of it—[drummer] John Bonham and [singer] Robert Plant had gone out for the night—and then on the following day we got into it with Bonham. You have to realize that, at first, there was a hell of a lot for everyone to remember on this one. But as we were sort of routining it, Robert started writing the lyrics, and much to his surprise, he wrote a huge percentage of it right there and then.”
Plant recalls the experience: “I was sitting next to Page in front of a fire at our studio in Headley Grange. He had written this chord sequence and was playing it for me. I was holding a pencil and paper, when, suddenly, my hand was writing out the words: ‘There’s a lady who’s sure, all that glitters is gold, and she’s buying a stairway to heaven.’ I just sat there and looked at the words and almost leaped out of my seat. Looking back, I suppose I sat down at the right moment.”
While the spontaneous nature of Plant’s anthemic lyrics came as a pleasant surprise, the best was yet to come. The beautifully constructed guitar solo that Guitar World readers rated the “best ever” was, believe it or not, improvised.
“I winged it,” says Page with a touch of pride. “I had prepared the overall structure of the guitar parts, but not the actual notes. When it came time to record the solo I warmed up and recorded three of them. They were all quite different from each other. All three are still on the master tape, but the one we used was the best solo, I can tell you that.
“I thought ‘Stairway’ crystallized the essence of the band. It had everything there, and showed the band at its best. Every musician wants to do something that will hold up for a long time, and I guess we did that with ‘Stairway.’ ”



16. “Heartbreaker”
Soloist: Jimmy Page
Album: Led Zeppelin—Led Zeppelin II (Atlantic, 1969)
Performing a convincing solo in a group context is difficult for any musician, but it takes a real man to stand unaccompanied and deliver. On “Heartbreaker,” Jimmy Page did just that. For an electrifying 45 seconds, Page let loose sans rhythm section and, needless to say, the guitar world has never been quite the same.
“I just fancied doing it,” laughs Page. “I was always trying to do something different, or something no one else had thought of. But the interesting thing about that solo is that it was recorded after we had already finished “Heartbreaker”—it was an afterthought. That whole section was recorded in a different studio and was sort of slotted in the middle. If you notice, the whole sound of the guitar is different.
“The solo itself was made up on the spot. I think that was one of the first things I ever played through a Marshall. I was always having trouble with amps, and Marshalls were state-of-the-art reliability. By that time I was using a Les Paul, anyway, and that was just a classic setup.”
“We definitely recorded the solo section separately,” confirms engineer Eddie Kramer. “Jimmy walked in and set up and the whole session was over in about 20 minutes. He did two or three takes and we picked the best one, which was edited in later. However, to this day, I have a hard time listening to it, because I think we did a shitty edit—the difference in noise levels is pretty outrageous. But I don’t think Jimmy cared, he was more interested in capturing an idea, and on that level, he succeeded.”
[[ When you're done voting, start learning most of the guitar solos in this poll — and and a whole lot more! Check out a new TAB book from Guitar World and Hal Leonard: 'The 100 Greatest Guitar Solos of All Time: A Treasure Trove of Guitar Leads Transcribed Note-for-Note, Plus Song Notes for More Than 40 of the Best Solos.' It's available now at the Guitar World Online Store for $29.99. NOTE: Neil Young's "Cortez the Killer" guitar solo (solo number 39 on our list) is NOT included in this book. ]]

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Greatest Guitar Solos of All Time Readers Poll: Sweetwater Sweet 16 — "Stairway to Heaven" Vs. "Heartbreaker"
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