Saturday, November 26, 2011

Germany wakes up to festering neo-Nazi threat (Reuters)

BERLIN (Reuters) ? After 30 years living in eastern Germany, Mozambique-born Ibrahimo Alberto this summer decided he could endure no more daily racist abuse. He turned his back on his job, gave up on what had become his home and moved with his family to the west.

The last straw for Alberto came when his son was playing in a soccer match and an opponent shouted: "Nigger swine. I'll beat you to death."

"I had enough. I saw it was getting more and more," Alberto told German radio after he moved to Karlsruhe. He is so scarred from his experience that he no longer talks to the media, former colleagues told Reuters.

Such every-day racism is fertile ground for right-wing militancy that easily turns into hardcore neo-Nazism and erupts into violent attacks.

This month's chance discovery in eastern Germany of a group of at least three fanatical neo-Nazis called the 'National Socialist Underground' who investigators believe murdered eight Turks, a Greek and a German policewoman has been a wake up call.

Investigators are looking into links with other violent crimes, including a 2004 bomb attack in Cologne, and have reopened all unsolved cases with a possible racist motive since 1998. They also found a list of 88 names of politicians and Muslim community representatives believed to be targets.

The discovery of the so-called Zwickau cell who carried out the racially motivated murders across the country between 2000 and 2007, as well as robbing 14 banks, has triggered accusations Germany has been blind to the threat.

Experts have for years warned of the violent potential of Germany's far-right milieu.

"The problem has been vastly underestimated. Unfortunately, I wasn't at all surprised to see such aggression," said Anetta Kahane, head of the Amadeu Antonio Stiftung anti-racism group.

"These 10 deaths could have been prevented if someone had listened to our warnings back in 1998 that militants were thriving in Thuringia," she told Reuters. "I lie awake at night asking if I could have done more. But no one listened."

Many unemployed youths, especially in eastern Germany, fall under the spell of neo-Nazi groups, or "Kameradschaften," which indoctrinate them with propaganda glorifying Hitler's Third Reich. Peer pressure sucks them first into a racist ideology and then into violent crime.

Yearning for a sense of belonging, radicals wear military-style clothes and have their own Internet radio stations. They listen to music by bands with names like "Sturmtrupp" and "12 Golden Years" - a reference to the 12-year Third Reich.

Crime is effectively a logical step, say experts.

Kahane's foundation says far-right crime has claimed 185 lives here since 1990, compared to an official figure of 47. The left-wing Baader Meinhof gang and Red Army Faction that terrorised western Germany in the 1970s, 80s and 90s, killed 30 to 40 people.

The Office for the Protection of the Constitution, a German intelligence agency responsible for monitoring threats such as Muslim fundamentalists and the far left and right, estimates the country has 25,000 right-wing extremists, 9,500 of them violent.

"The overall threat from right-wing militants has become enormous since German unification," said Bernd Wagner, founder of EXIT, a scheme to help right-wingers reject extremism.

"And every self-respecting militant neo-Nazi group has the potential to commit an act of terrorism," Wagner told Reuters.

INFILTRATION

Neo-Nazis infiltrate whole communities, converting young people to their ideology. They run sports clubs and summer camps, participate in voluntary fire brigades and even manage nurseries.

"A whole apparatus is set up encompassing villages and towns binding together people with the same views," said Wagner.

The Odertal area, around Schwedt, where Alberto lived, is an example. Close to the Polish border, unemployment is nearly 20 percent and its population has shrunk by a third in the last 20 years. Right-wing radicals have moved in and forced outsiders away.

Alberto, who suffered daily insults and provocations such as having piles of neo-Nazi newspapers stuffed through his letterbox, said the worst thing was a complicit silence from the townspeople of Schwedt, in the eastern state of Brandenburg.

"Silence means accepting the people who were always against me. Now they've won," he said.

Eastern states are especially prone to the problem.

During the Cold War, schools in the communist East Germany - unlike those in the West - did not try to instil a sense of national guilt for the Holocaust, meaning Nazism as an ideology was less of a taboo. There was also less exposure to foreigners.

Just listening to the lyrics of songs popular among neo-Nazis illustrates the implicit hatred and violence.

One song, "You are destroying our race," on a CD entitled "Our solution is violence" goes:

"You see them all over the land holding a half-caste by the hand. They present the ugly toads with which they are destroying our race ... You have to spit at them in the face. Beat them up without mercy and chase them with their brood out of Germany."

From here, turning to crime for a thrill is easy, say experts. And weapons are available. The Office for the Protection of the Constitution said in its 2010 report the availability of weapons and explosives posed a latent threat.

In view of the Zwickau case, this seems an understatement.

Victims' families have complained that investigators were deaf to their suspicions and police in Thuringia are under fire for letting the cell drop from their radar in the last decade.

Gamze Kubasik, the 22-year-old daughter of a man shot dead in his kiosk in Dortmund in 2006, said police had suggested he had gambling debts or was involved with protection money.

"Suddenly we were under suspicion. The police kept looking for dodgy business deals by my father. The police didn't take seriously our suspicion that it could have been neo-Nazis," she told top-selling Bild daily.

"INTENTIONAL INCOMPETENCE"

Kahane sees this behavior as "intentional incompetence."

"There hasn't been this kind of incompetence in fighting Islamists and left-wing extremism," she said. "It's partly due to the past, we don't like remembering our legacy."

For years, media have reported that some states have massaged their far-right crime figures to enhance their image.

Der Spiegel magazine reported how police officers in Saxony Anhalt argued whether the terms "nigger slut" or "I'll kill your nigger child" qualified as racially motivated.

The case has also triggered sharp criticism of methods used by intelligence services, such as the use of unreliable paid informants who have continued to sympathize with far-right groups, possibly even channeling payments toward crime.

Politicians from all parties have been quick to condemn the murders and vowed to step up action against the right wing. Conservative Chancellor Angela Merkel has described the Zwickau case as a disgrace for Germany [ID:nL5E7MN3X8].

But campaigners say the government will be judged on actions, not words. In what some see as a bureaucratic response, the government has proposed compiling a national register of far-right extremists and centralizing intelligence agencies.

The government has also said it will look at banning the far-right National Democratic Party (NPD), represented in two state assemblies and the recipient of 1.06 million euros in taxpayers' money last year.

The NPD has condemned the murders but many experts believe some party members had at least informal links to the cell.

The party, which says the German constitution is a "diktat" imposed by victorious Western powers after World War Two, is more radical than populist, anti-immigration parties elsewhere in Europe. German authorities say it is inspired by Nazis.

"Elements in the party are closely linked to militants. The two feed each other. What the Kameradschaften do helps the party and what the party does helps the Kameradschaften, said Wagner.

Many experts doubt whether politicians will risk a second try at banning the NPD after a previous attempt failed in 2003 because prosecution witnesses were exposed as informants.

"What needs to be done is to develop a new spirit to properly tackle far-right extremism," said Wagner.

"It is about morals, ethics. It is about building an alternative influence to far-right ideas," said Wagner.

(Editing by Giles Elgood)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111124/wl_nm/us_germany_neonazis

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Joel Kelsey: America Deserves a Government That Works

As I sit down to write this post, the congressional job approval rating is hovering around 12 percent. It has been for the past three months.

With the failure of the "super committee" -- the bipartisan group of senators and House reps tasked with trimming $1.2 trillion from the federal budget -- the legislative branch's inability to address the nation's problems has gone from alarming to negligent.

So it is with genuine bewilderment that I witness attempts in Congress to bind the rest of our government in red tape, in what appear to be efforts to shut down independent agencies and block the enforcement of consumer protections. Two pieces of legislation, the Regulatory Accountability Act (H.R. 3010/S. 1606) and the REINS Act (H.R. 10), set up additional procedural hurdles for federal agencies that protect consumers from corporate abuses -- and that are supposed to prevent disasters like the BP oil spill and the mortgage crisis.

The Regulatory Accountability Act (RAA) covers every rule and policy statement proposed by any executive or independent regulatory agency, adding 60 new procedural requirements and tacking on two additional years to rulemaking processes. According to the Coalition for Sensible Safeguards, which just released a study of this bill, the RAA would "grind to a halt the rulemaking process at the core of implementing the nation's public health, workplace safety and environmental standards."

Meanwhile, the REINS Act would require congressional approval for all major regulations issued by consumer protection agencies before those regulations could go into effect. If Congress did not approve a given regulation within the mandated 70-day timeframe, that regulation would be tabled until the following session of Congress.

While the RAA and the REINS Act cover all federal regulatory agencies, this assault on consumer protections has also produced more targeted legislation aimed at specific agencies. The FCC Reform Act (H.R. 3309) is the latest example. The bill would severely limit the Commission's authority to review the supposed benefits of mergers and other corporate transactions, and would give industry lobbyists new ways to drown out the voices of everyday citizens.

The authors of these bills contemplate "regulatory reform" and seek to change the way federal agencies operate. This would be a noble goal, but the RAA, the REINS Act and the FCC Reform Act are all more focused on protecting giant corporations from oversight than on protecting consumers.

Free Press agrees that the FCC in particular is in dire need of reform. However, agency reforms should insulate federal agencies from the industries they are charged with overseeing, not make them more susceptible to capture, corruption and capitulation.

With a 12 percent job approval rating, one thing is clear: The American people believe one federal entity whose processes are in desperate need of "reform" is Congress itself.

?

Follow Joel Kelsey on Twitter: www.twitter.com/joel_kelsey

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/joel-kelsey/america-deserves-government_b_1110415.html

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Thursday, November 24, 2011

Fetus donates stem cells to heal mother's heart

Why wait to be born to develop a healing hand? Mouse fetuses will give up stem cells to repair their mother's heart. The discovery could explain why half the women who develop heart weakness during or just after pregnancy recover spontaneously.

Hina Chaudhry of the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York City mated normal female mice with males genetically engineered to produce a green-fluorescing protein in all their body cells. Half the resulting fetuses also produced the protein, making it easy to spot any fetal tissue in the mother.

Chaudhry's team inflicted a heart attack on the pregnant mice and killed them two weeks later to take a look at their hearts. They found some fluorescent cells in the mothers' damaged heart tissue, where they had accelerated repair by changing into new heart cells, including beating cardiomyocytes and blood vessel cells.

Chaudhry says that the phenomenon is an evolutionary mechanism: the fetus promotes its own survival by protecting its mother's heart. Because the cells are easy to obtain from the placenta and unlikely to cause immunological reactions, they could provide a new and potentially limitless source of stem cells for repairing damaged hearts.

"The study is the first to show conclusively that fetal cells contained in the placenta assist in cardiac tissue repair," says Jakub Tolar, director of stem-cell therapies at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis.

"To date the mainstream stem-cell community has not paid much attention to fetal stem cells in the mother," says Diana Bianchi at Tufts University in Boston. "My hope is that this elegant paper will reawaken interest."

Previous research has identified fetal stem cells in other damaged organs of pregnant women, including the brain, liver, kidney and lung. Fetuses also produce cells that are known to protect the mother against breast cancer.

Journal reference: Circulation Research, DOI: 10.1161/circresaha.111.249037

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Sunday, November 20, 2011

Cotton Candy Is a Sweet Pocket-Sized Dual-Core Computer [Computers]

Why mess around with a tiny touchscreen interface when you can run your android OS from your big screen TV—or really any screen for that matter? More »


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Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Business Watch | CJOnline.com

[unable to retrieve full-text content]CJOnline.com is the website of the Topeka Capital-Journal newspaper. It's the Number One source of news, sports, weather and entertainment information, as well as cars, jobs and real estate advertising for the northeastern ...

Source: http://cjonline.com/news/2011-11-13/business-watch

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Monday, November 14, 2011

US says Canada, Mexico open to Pacific trade zone (AP)

KAPOLEI, Hawaii ? A U.S.-backed initiative to forge a Pacific free trade bloc got a big boost Sunday when leaders of Canada and Mexico said their countries are interested in joining.

The news was a coup for President Barack Obama, who had made progress on the pact one of his top priorities for the annual summit of Asia-Pacific leaders being held in his home state of Hawaii. It comes after Japan, the world's third-biggest economy, said it would join the nine nations already involved in talks on what has been dubbed the Trans-Pacific Partnership.

The balmy weather for the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation gathering at a resort on the west side of the Hawaiian island of Oahu contrasted with deepening pessimism over the economic outlook as the leaders sat down for a day of talks on how to spur growth and create jobs. With Europe again on the brink of recession, Asia's vital role as a driver of global growth has gained even greater urgency.

"Now its time to get down to work, and we have much to do," President Barack Obama said in opening the meeting. "Our 21 economies ? our nearly 3 billion citizens ? are looking to us to bring our economies closer, to increase exports, to expand trade and opportunity that creates jobs and economic growth. That's why we're here."

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper said his country must look to the East to ensure markets, especially for its energy exports. "That will be an important priority of this government," Harper said before meeting with Obama on the sidelines of the 21-member APEC summit.

The U.S. Trade Representative, Ron Kirk, welcomed the overtures from Canada and Mexico, calling them America's "neighbors and largest export markets."

Obama has said he is optimistic that work on the American-backed trade pact could result in a legal framework by next year.

For the U.S., the initiative is seen as a way to break through bottlenecks and open new business opportunities. Many in APEC see the emerging deal as a building block for a free trade area that eventually encompasses all of Asia and the Pacific ? covering half the world's commerce and two-fifths of its trade.

"The Asia Pacific region is absolutely critical to America's economic growth. We consider it a top priority. And we consider it a top priority because we're not going to be able to put our folks back to work and grow our economy and expand opportunity unless the Asia Pacific region is also successful," he told his fellow APEC leaders at Sunday's meeting.

Thomas Donohue, president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, an influential business lobbying group, praised the Pacific trade initiative.

"An important step to unlocking global economic growth will be expanding trade in the Asia-Pacific, and the TPP holds this key," Donohue said. He urged the group to move quickly in drawing up a timeline that is "comprehensive, enforceable, and makes room for new entrants."

The pact now includes only four smaller, relatively affluent economies ? Chile, New Zealand, Brunei and Singapore ? but the U.S., Australia, Malaysia, Vietnam and Peru are negotiating to join.

___

Associated Press writers Ben Feller, Erica Werner and Jaymes Song contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111114/ap_on_bi_ge/apec

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Thursday, November 3, 2011

Seagate merges Barracuda range, renounces small platters for hungry storage diners

Seagate's decided its desktop drives were getting a bit flabby. It's ditching the Green and XT brands, and in turn, deeming the entire range Barracuda. The revamped series now carries 1TB platters rather than the five 600GB layers in the older models and all will run at 7200RPM with a 64MB cache. It's part of an initiative to slim a bloated inventory channel for the company's OEM partners. Those with an environmental bent should know that the new drives more than match the Green's environmental prowess, whilst those who are speed hungry will be excited to hear news on the mooted new Barracuda XT. This replacement XT will match the hybrid stylings of the Momentus XT, a hybrid HDD that includes a 4GB SSD to increase cache speed. The 3TB monster will be available for $179.99 as soon as it hits the shipping channels -- which, so far as we can tell, should be anytime between next week and next year.

Continue reading Seagate merges Barracuda range, renounces small platters for hungry storage diners

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