Sunday, September 30, 2012

Woods missing out on U.S. Ryder Cup party

MEDINAH, Illinois (Reuters) - The United States Ryder Cup team put smiles on millions of American golf fans on Saturday but Tiger Woods was not among them.

The biennial U.S.-Europe showdown has never brought out the best in Woods but the 14-time major winner slumped to new lows at Medinah Country Club, losing all three of his matches and being benched for the first time in his Ryder Cup career.

After being relegated to the sidelines by captain Davis Love III for Saturday's morning foursomes, Woods and partner Steve Stricker returned to duty in the afternoon fourballs.

But a one-up loss to Spaniard Sergio Garcia and Briton Luke Donald left them as the only members of the 12-man American squad not to contribute a point to the U.S. cause.

As a Ryder Cup party erupted around him, Woods had the forlorn look of someone who had been left off the guest list, standing alone in the twilight with his eyes closed and hands clasped above his head absorbing yet another defeat.

"I've played well the last two afternoons and didn't get a point," Woods told reporters after watching his Ryder Cup record dip to 13-17-2. "It's tough.

"Yesterday I made a bunch of birdies and today I made five on the back nine and it just wasn't enough. Feeling good about my game but just unfortunately haven't got a point."

Woods said he supported Love's decision to sit him down for the morning matches but the break did little to energize the former-world number one as he and Stricker watched Garcia and Donald race to a four-up lead in the fourballs.

Appearing down-and-out, Woods suddenly sprung to life at the turn after missing a four-foot par putt, throwing himself into a back nine charge that featured five birdies, only to come up agonizingly short.

He birdied the 16th hole to cut the margin to one-up with two holes to play then hit his tee shot on the par-3 17th to within four feet of the hole.

He made the birdie but his momentum was halted when Donald got his tee shot even closer and also made birdie to halve the hole then Woods and Stricker both missed birdie putts on the last that would have earned them half a point.

"We fought hard, unfortunately it just wasn't enough," Woods said.

"Strick's made a huge birdie at 12. We gave ourselves two good looks on 18 and didn't get it done."

Despite his woes, Woods will get a final chance to earn a point in Sunday's singles. While Woods has fallen flat in the team events, he remains an imposing opponent in head-to-head competition with a record of 4-1-1 in Ryder Cup play.

And the former world number one is still looming as a winner with the Americans holding a commanding 10-6 advantage at the end of the second day.

"Being up four is nice," offered Woods. "We are really looking forward to going out there and hopefully... we are in a great spot right now to win the Cup." (Editing by Julian Linden)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/woods-missing-u-ryder-cup-party-005704612--golf.html

tom coughlin wes welker eli manning eli manning kelly clarkson national anthem halftime show super bowl halftime show 2012

small dead animals: You Are Selfish

You Are Selfish

according to Joe O'Connor for not having children.

Hey Joe, have a COSTFU.

Hey Joe, have a second COSTFU

Posted by Captain at September 30, 2012 6:56 AM

I'm with Joe. (O'Connor not Biden). I can't buy his critics' arguments for the simple reason that child 'free' people, while they 'enjoy' their lifestyle, they fail to understand that they maintain a critical dependence on literally thousands of other peoples' kids efforts & outputs. No kids? Fine. Then no doctors, no mechanics, no farmers etc. Sort of parallels Ayn Rands philosophy of Takers and Makers.

Nice rant Cappy! I get the impression that Joe's article was designed to be inflammatory enough to get people reading and commenting, but not so much as to get him into trouble therefore he sticks to apparent soft targets. For example, since gay marriage is seemingly the most pressing issue facing western civilization these days, Joe could have mentioned how selfish gays were for choosing that path...

As long as childless couples pay the full cost of elder care and not take a subsidy then I have no trouble with it at all, its their choice.

They should be able to afford the robots (i.e. like the japanese)and filipinas that are required to take care of them and provide companionship.

Watching my own in laws and family go through this now. Nothing wrong with being selfish, just accept the life cycle costs of it.

I've got kids and I whole heartily agree with his rant.
Having kids is one of the few remaining freedoms we have where the state has little ability to limit outside of trying to convince women they should invoke their rights to abortion.
If you are consuming non governmental goods and services, you are contributing through the tax system, which funds the provision of the governments goods and services.

Yeah well...I'm currently not married and no kids "to speak of". No kids to care for me in my dotage....I guess we're all in the same boat in that last regard.......

Well, one thing's for sure. If you don't have kids, you've got lots of time to make long videos about youself that I (with kids)don't have the time to watch.

People without children have no stake in the future and should not be able to vote to tax my children to support their current consumption. They should also no be able to vote to bring in huge numbers of immigrants because we need a younger population, so that my children are forced to be strangers in a strange land when they grow up.

It is obvious that the guy in the video should not have any children.

That would be waste of human flesh, waste of school, waste of correctional facilities, waste of taxes for all the things that parents want other people?s money for, waste of human life.

He is exactly right.

The only thing remains is, who is going to pay for his old age.

Sorry, never mind, some other people. They will be happy to no end to contribute.

Does the term nihilist mean anything?

None the less, he should not have children. Should not change his mind, ever.

"People without children have no stake in the future and should not be able to vote to tax my children to support their current consumption"

Excellent! Then we shouldn't be taxed now to support the current education, healthcare or lifestyle of children right now.

Fair is fair. Please apologize to your children for us.

The Freedom to have or not have children should be a fundamental one.

While we can question the wisdom of either depending on the circumstances, condemning someone for wanting to choose either is wrong.

Fred - it's a deal!!!

You keep your education taxes and healthcare taxes that are spent on my children. (BTW - kids in private school and I've private medical insurance). Not sure what part of my kids lifestyle you are funding, but feel free to invent a number!

In return, your pension, your old-age social and health care will not be paid by my children.

Fred, I'd be good with that. I don't believe in public healthcare or education, but since they are not going away, we could at least stop borrowing money that no one alive today will ever be around to pay back.

I always figured the tax argument to be a bit of a red herring. A guy I know used to bitch at me because he had to pay school taxes, when he and his wife had decided not to have kids. I pointed out that my kids would have the extra tax burden of looking after him when he is old and sick. So he could damn well help out with their school now.

However, the good Captain did make me question this somewhat. I would point out that I cannot afford live on $20,000 per year. I make a little over $70,000. And yes, I am one of those guys who gets out of bed at 6, spends a lot of time driving kids to dance, karate, etc. And I really do wish I couold afford to travel more.

I save for my retirement, but not nearly as much as I would like to. I just don't have the cash. I would love to have a motorcyle, but can't afford it. I have always wanted a sports car, but such a thing is impossible to justify given my circumstances. I am not complaining mind you. It is just the reality of my life and the choices I have made.

But as the Captain pojnts out, he makes around $20,000 per year. He probably pays very little income tax. And I am willing to bet that his retirement porfolio looks a lot better than mine. He has a motorcycle, and probably travels more than me. Not that I begrudge him any of this. But it does strike me that he is paying very little now, but will reap the benefit of my kid's taxes later on, assuming that they make choices more like mine than his.

But whatever. Who ever said life was fair.

There are many ways to contribute to society. People without children do so in other ways. Perhaps they have time to volunteer to coach or run a church group for kids. They pay taxes to support many programs which benefit parents and children. Parents get tax breaks that single people don't--so in essence they benefit doubly.

People may opt to have no children for non-selfish reasons. Perhaps they know they are too "selfish" for parenthood. Isn't that a "non-selfish" way to think? Having kids just so you have someone to look after you in your dotage could be considered selfish thinking.

Many people are not in stable relationships. Should they have kids and let the state support them?

Having kids doesn't guarantee that they'll be around when you're drooling and in diapers. Many elder care facilities are full of oldsters with kids that never visit them.

It's a funny world where people assume the right to judge other people's choices when it's really none of their business.

"It's a funny world where people assume the right to judge other people's choices when it's really none of their business."

Yeah! Thank God that Cappy never judges other people's choices!

The point is that the only REAL wealth we will ever create is our children. All the money, durable goods, consumable goods, services are worthless if there is no one left to use them. This insane idea that money is worth something is just that INSANE!

Don't forget that some couples have no children for medical reasons. Don't (ass)ume the reasons unless you are told personally. I feel the pain personally!

But Cappy, isn't this just a natural extension of your determination not to get caught up with any modern women? IE, those that seem to take it for granted that underneath all males are really betas.

I mean, you would have to show some sort of commitment to a long term relationship with a woman first, before the concept of having a child in your life could even be realistically entertained.

I don't see that happening any time soon.

Kids are the ultimate satisfaction of ego, a parent gets to see themselves in another human being. Who's selfish?

So having 6 or more children well collecting welfare, and getting bigger and bigger cheques with each new kid is unselfish?

Children cost a lot of time and money. My three are a bargain in both cases. Never a regret.

Single mothers and their government children are usually stupid women who spread their legs for jerks, they should not be paid.

Joe's right and good for him for saying it.
It's no big surprise that the self-absorbed set are all worked up about someone speaking the truth.
They really don't like being reminded of what traitors they are to their long line of ancestors.
But that's nothing compared to their betrayal of their very own future generations who don't get to exist.
So FU Captain!

It's a silly argument so I haven't bothered with the comments and therefore apologize in advance for any redundancy:

- People who don't want children would be poor parents.

- It is shameful to shame people into having children they don't want.

- Is is perhaps just as selfish and narcissistic to have children to perpetuate your line.

I have two children 41 and 38. Both are childless for a variety of reasons mostly to do with their chosen careers in the arts. I have expressed NO view on this and am perfectly neutral on the notion of being a grandparent. I couldn't care less.

Well, I never disagree with people who know deep down that their genetics are not worth passing on and/or they do not have the patience and resiliency required to raise a child. You've made the right decision. Good for you.

As to the specifics. How much tax does a person making $20,000 per year and living in a modest sized home subsidize public education? At best they might...might pay back their own subsidized education. Assume their own education was $5000/yr in the 80's for 12 years and divide by their current property tax of about $1000 per year (with about half to education).
I also doubt annual income tax they pay on $20000 is enough to pay for their pension and healthcare.

As for lifestyle. It depends. We traveled and did as we pleased for the first 10 years before we had kids. It was fun and carefree and then we wanted something more. Kids, especially little kids, change your lifestyle and are not always as fun as a life full of sleeping in, smoking cigars and drinking all day but they are fun in their own way. As a SAHM, the kids and I spend our summers swimming at the pool, relaxing at the beach or visiting the family cabin- we have a blast. During the school year my daytime responsibilities are as carefree as the childless.

Trying to describe parenthood and the satisfaction it brings to the childless is impossible so I won't try. I have to say though...does the man in this video seem like a happy person?

There are personal choices and there are immature choices. It takes some life experience to appreciate family. In times of troubles it is much easier when your clan stands behind you.

btw... the leading cost of unnatural death in USA: self inflicted injuries. Suicides and drug overdose, taking the flag position from car accidents.

I for one did not arise late on a Sunday morning to endure a childish James Spader want to be's anthem to nihilism. Coupled with the obvious denial of the significance of his own existence, this video brat justifies, indeed personifies, the inflammatory title of O'Connor's article and raises the stakes by grouping all childless "couples" under the self bus he drives. This, of course, is a straw man as I cannot fathom the idea that this individual has ever been in a relationship which transcended mutual usury.

While O'Connor paints with a brush too broad this respondent offers gilded framing. Bad form on a Sunday morn.

Off to church. My son serves the 12:00.
Oh, I've had my smoke and a glass of champagne.

Yep - watching that woman who always calls in sick, leaving her colleagues with the extra workload, who spends hours entertaining our male supervisor in his office, who has taken three maternity leaves on company time and my taxes, who still gets first pick at vacation time because her "senority" isn't affected by her maternity leave, who gets first dibs on higher-paying temporary positions because her gender qualifies her over white males in the office - sh*t her little snot-nosed darlings are as much mine as hers. How is it that I am being called "selfish?"

Adding:
I once lambasted fellow staff members for exerting enormous pressure on a female staff member for not having children.
This pressure was intense and caused the target enormous anxiety.

I considered it bullying of the worst kind.

I won't besmirch their motives with the facile argument that they wanted her to "share their misery". Perhaps they wanted her to "share their joy".
Whatever: butt out.

All those economic arguments about intergenerational costs, debt and such are jejune.

Yes, it is and they are.

At least the Captain has the good manners to plan to blow his brains out when he gets too old and sick to properly care for himself. The DINK crowd are generally "employed" in make-work government jobs that let them swan off to Cuba for a month every year on the taxpayer's dime. (People with children and real jobs and businesses don't have the time or money.) They're counting on fat government pensions to pay for their diaper changes and wooden legs and oxygen tanks and heart and liver transplants---all paid for by other people's children.

Of course, long before that day comes, the government will have run out of other people's money and their blessed pension cheques, assuming they come at all, won't be enough to buy a cup of tea. The nephews and nieces who still bother to take their calls will be too busy caring for their own children---and their own parents---to have much time for the problems of the self-absorbed uncles and aunts from whom their parents were lucky to get a postcard from Havana at Christmas, never mind any help with the kids.

Oh, they've had their reward, mark my words.

Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy youth, while the evil days come not, nor the years draw nigh, when thou shalt say, I have no pleasure in them.

Remember the Creator of all things that told you to be fruitful and multiply. Amazing how He always seems to know best.

(Will he not provide, in our old age? Aye, he'll send us our sustenance in our old age, if we'll have them. They're called children.)

The major reason people decide not to have children is clearly cost. Money, time, energy and health. Children cost all these things.

If you are a young person pursuing education for a professional career or even an apprenticeship, you do not have the money or the time. Most young people I know are still living with their parents because its just too expensive to keep a vehicle and an apartment while studying or working those entry-level jobs.

If you are an established couple you most likely have the money, but to get the money you are BOTH working and you have considerable debt. So you -both- have to -keep- working. Therefore you may have the money, but you don't have the time.

If you are 35-45, now you might be able to spare one of the couple to look after the kids, but being older now you don't have the energy or the health, because you spent it getting money. Having your first new baby when you are 40 will test the will and the strength of any man, I don't care who you are.

Which is why people like the Captain look at that hamster wheel and say "not a chance, dude!" Most of the families where I live are broken apart by the strain, because they said "F- it!" and had kids anyway. Practically everybody around here is divorced, its a frickin' tragedy. The local school has free food for the kids who come to school without breakfast, because Dad's not home and Mum had to drive to work at 6:30 AM and the kid went to school without being fed.

Familiar to many will be the old guys like myself lamenting that we never see kids riding around town on their bikes, playing in the parks, having road-hockey in the suburbs etc. "Helicopter parents" is a current-culture term for the phenomenon. Well gee, when I was a kid we all had Mum at home when we were playing outside, within ear-shot. Nowadays Mum is AN HOUR AWAY at work and the kid is in some kind of professional care establishment, be it day-care, school, after-school care, etc. and so is Dad, and so are Grandma and Grandpa for that matter.

Why does it take two incomes to support two people? Where did all that money go?

Taxes.

Because as I and the Captain and many other people here harp endlessly, government takes half of everything you make. Or more, if you're a high income earner. So unless you make a major sh1tload of money, you can't afford kids.

I'll tell you something else. Old people with kids are going to be in the same boat as old people without in a few years, because your children won't be able to hold up the strain of caring for their ancient f-ed up Mum and Dad. Particularly if they have to look after your grand children. Kids or no kids, you are going to be "taking a walk in the snow" or dying in a gutter someplace after they boot you out of the nursing home because your money ran out. Anybody who isn't making an income of their own is going to be hungry like Victorian London. Or like China is today. That's the glide path we're on.

Really what that all boils down to is all of us paying the price of living in an inefficient command economy. It killed the Soviets, its presently killing the Chicoms, and it will most certainly kill us shortly. So we either shrug off that ever-increasingly-heavy government millstone or it crushes us.

For all those of you who say the Left is the same as the Right, that's the concept you are missing out on. The New Left is more government, the New Right is -less- government. Any party not actively engaged in cutting taxes, regulations and budgets is of the Left, no matter the rhetoric.

Joe O'Connor is a d1ck for not mentioning that part. He just wants us hamsters to run faster. Sorry Joe, getting kinda tired of running but not getting anywhere.

I liked the article. We've got kids but we know people who don't, and it's not because they can't. It's on purpose.

Much of what the article says is true. The childless couples we know who are childless on purpose often spent weeks/months rambling around the world, looking for fulfillment. They always seem restless.

Kids add a great deal of interest to life. They are not a burden if you discipline them well, and don't spoil them. It's really not that hard at all.

Lot's of abnormal stuff going on these days. People not wanting to have kids, gays, adoption of children by gay couples. Perhaps we have dispensed with evolution!

Obviously the choice to have kids or not is not up to anyone else, and to call whatever choice selfish is "not even wrong".

It would be interesting, though, to calculate who actually contributes & receives most, an average DINK couple or an average 1.5 half income, 2,5 kids, family (1525?), from the time of "marriage" (age 27 or whatever) to death (let's say age 80).

Over this time frame (27-80 years of age):
- Likely the DINKs earn more and pay more in taxes (income, capital, property, etc) all through life, incl in retirement
- The 1525s get tax payer funded child benefits, utilize tax payer funded child care, schools, universities, hockey rinks, kids health care,... (adults' health care cost likely the same for DINKs and 1525s)
- Both DINKs and 1525s pay into CPP and presumably saves into RRSPs or similar schemes
- Likely the DINKs are clawed back (OAS) more than the 1525s in their retirement
- However, one can assume the 1525s' kids help fund OAS and old age healthcare for DINKs and 1525s alike (while the DINKs only pay taxes themselves during their retirement)

So, from a financial perspective, it comes down to: Does the DINKs extra tax payments and less benefits throughout life compensate for not paying fully during their old age?
No idea, can someone find some stats?

An average muslim woman has an IQ of 80 and 8 kids.
When the muslims will be burning cars, smashing windows and stoning/beheading the infidels in North America and there will be nobody there to protect you, you'll remember Joe O'Connor's article.

I have two and if my wife could, we'd have more. They are marksmen and martial arts experts in their late teens. They will be fighting when push comes to shove. I am just not sure they will be motivated to fight for the childless couples - they made an informed decision to weaken our civilization. So 'a$$holes' pejorative is misdirected.

Procreation is genetically programmed into us. I would suspect that individuals who don't have children, are substituting this basic human function with alternatives whether they realize it or not. One could argue away the economics that pit neighbours against each other, or one could embrace this simple fact. A capitalist economy needs to grow or maintain the status quo in order to function. This growth is spawned from demand, and in western economies this is based on population. The entitlements that government doles out is based on this same principle. Immigration policy is based on this simple fact. If Canadians wont have children, they will be imported to replace those retiring from the workforce. The only solution is to dismantle the current system, nix all entitlements including healthcare, and let everyone stand or fall on their own.

"If Canadians wont have children, they will be imported to replace those retiring from the workforce."

Yes, good point, and that my indeed be the greatest cost of all, namely that immigration is turned up to such a high rate that Canada as we know it disintegrates.

Alan at 11:00 ,

Why stop at 6 ?

www.youtube.com/watch?v=_KUW2vCPX7w

Best line : "someone needs to be held accountable, and they need to pay!"

Geez, still the vitriol.

1. I will be paying for my own retirement. Doubt social security will be there.

2. If there isn't enough money and I can't afford my retirement I will be doing the Smith and Wesson plan.

3. "You'll die all alone!!!!" So you had your kids to be your personal entertainment slave AND to pay for your retirement? Wow, what great parents.

One of the benefits of having kids,is when the inevitable day comes that we are too old to care for ourselves,and the State has to decide what to do with us,having pissed away all the tax dollars on green projects,we shall be offered a peaceful transition to Heaven or wherever.

My Daughter is a nurse,and has assured me she will use a nice,"fine" needle to administer my last shot. I appreciate this as I have a phobia of needles.

I'd much rather be murdered by family than a stranger.

Phantom nails it. My fiance & I are almost exactly the spot he describes (mid/late-30s, established careers, she just completed her Masters), and I am honestly starting to wonder if we'll be able to handle having a baby or if the window has passed us by (doesn't help that she's had some medical troubles this year that a pregnancy would have only compounded).

I would quite likely regret not having a child, but if that's to be our lot in life we will make the best of it. However I will certainly not be lectured by self-righteous jackasses who think we aren't looking after ourselves or not paying our share of freakin' taxes!

Won't it be great when all children are born in a bottle , raised in a government run child facility.
Its a good thing that people for the first time in history are not penalized for not having children. Every other culture has. It never works though.

Perhaps Obama is right. Only those who don't criticize the false Prophet of Islam, have the future. At least they are growing population wise while the West withers into a childless future. The lads we now inhabit will be theirs. Just as we took them from Indians after they where decimated by smallpox & cholera.
One way or another you pay a price. When childless couples , one will die before the other. Being alone cared for by those who loath them will not be an easy ride. Those with children will find the indifference of the age the nearly same outcome.
Government has destroyed the family.
Gays die early. From disease along with stress.
The only model that has truly worked is the extended family. That has been almost eradicated.
I see a future where when you reach a certain age. Without millions you are given a needle like a dog past its time. Abortion with euthanasia has made this socially acceptable. Economics will make it a standard. If not a culture that does not value life.
Sacrifice is a forbidden word in the West today.
Just like duty or honor has lost all meaning.
In the end it will be a chilly end for us all. Child arrears or the nihilists.
We will become what we value. Which apparently is materialism with only pleasure, till another culture takes us over as we shrink. That people is undeniable. My opinion is some people should never have children, some even more. That ultimately we have all lost our way for our Idols.
We don't live in a Nation any more but a temporary Hotel.

Changed over to Crome google The spell checker is a nightmare.It actually changes word without your knowledge.Including ones you want. Sorry for the confusing post.

John in Kanada

I don't think that simple stats would be enough to tell the tale. A chart of income vs. entitlements would make more sense
- a high income childless couple is more beneficial than a low income, single-parent, welfare dependent family
-a single man making $20000 per year is less beneficial than a family making $150,000 per year.
But a comparison of the average, middle income childless couple vs. average, middle income two parent family would be interesting.

I suspect that the average family would be more of a net benefit than the average childless couple simply due to them getting credit for producing the next generation of taxpayers. The childless couple's contribution to society ends abruptly when they die while the contributions of the taxpaying children of an average, middle class family continues after death. It would be like the significant difference in value between a compounding interest account and keeping your money in your mattress.

I sure hope all those memories of shopping trips and weekends skiing keep you good company when you are old.

"They are not a burden if you discipline them well, and don't spoil them. It's really not that hard at all."

Amen..... , and I think the captain would agree with that. However like him I wonder how many parents have the stomach to actually teach their children to be resilient and independent, not spoiled entitled brats waiting for their success to fall from the sky.

I'm glad my girls are at the stage they are out on their own in a few years hopefully working at a decent job, and their degrees pay off for them.

But I feel for those just having kids and having to dance the politically correct minefield the state figures healthy strong beneficial families should function under.

So many important common sense traditions and truths that have built our society, starting with the family have been replaced with feel good elitist gobbledygook. With each new rule trying to fix the shortcomings and the mess made with the last.

I don't blame people for not having children as it could get costly in more ways than just money for sticking to your guns and RAISING your kids the way you see fit to bring about responsible independent adults with a moral compass (it's not always pretty).

Who eventually (before thirty) pull up the pegs and start the cycle over again. (and hopefully have one kid as headstrong as they where - it's what keep me going).

Captain just exposed himself as capable of only short-term selfish ideas.

What's the point of ranting on 'conservative' blogs if you don't care where this world is going?

Three more aspects missed in the discussion:

1. Some people don't have children because they have waited and waited and slipped on fertility curve.


2. When you are old you need someone to take care of you not in financial terms. You need someone to check on you that you can trust to check if you are all right, that no one scams you when you are senile, that no one hurt you when your mental and physical capacity will diminish.


3. Relations we create makes us humans. There are always exceptions, but choosing not to establish family marks the human social animal for an elimination from a genetic pool.

Are people here actually using TAXES as an excuse to guilt us into having kids we don't want? Public education and health care? What kind of statist BS is that?

My best friend got married right out of college and started pumping out kids. 3 kids later, he's stuck in a treadmill job - and will be forever - has no peace in his home, no time to read, no time to crank the music, watch an adult movie (but boy has he seen the kiddie movies 100 times) no time alone, no time to spend with his wife as adults...

He is barely a person anymore. He's a worker bee.

No cildren, more immigrants some of whom are not very desireable.
End of story.

I missed it in the article...did Joe mention that homosexual couples must, by his reckoning, be considered selfish? I don't read so well because I stopped paying for my education to "unselfishly" raise a couple of kids! Accidents happen.

Xiat at September 30, 2012 11:26 AM

"......... In times of troubles it is much easier when your clan stands behind you.

btw... the leading cost of unnatural death in USA: self inflicted injuries. Suicides and drug overdose, taking the flag position from car accidents."

This article and the comments have caused me to reflect on things.

Xiat's reference to suicide...a matter that I always find troubling...regardless the motivation....but...c'est la vie...Although I am technically childless...with out familly...I belong to a clan of sorts.

My proxy brothers, nephews, and grandkids are the ranks of my comrades in arms. One of the "nephews" one day, seeking my counsel on a matter, reveiled he was 21 before he learned my genuine statis....he had always assumed I was familly....but then declared....."we look after our own."

Abraham was not neccessarilly referring to the God of hosts...when he said..."and I shall lift up my eyes unto the hills from whence comes my strength."

BTW....we all die alone, will die alone....It's just something you have to do yourself.

Perhaps I am indeed alive, loved, and well....among friends.....

I think you have it backwards Jason. The man on the video was the one complaining about taxes (on an income of, errr, $20000 per year) while hypocritically rationalizing being a parasite who feels no guilt about collecting Social Security and other benefits paid for by the "breeder's" children. Others posters are questioning the validity of his tax argument.

Sadly the Islamist are having children and a good portion of well heeled civilization lovers aren't

Jason's on to something. Sounds like there is a stream of thinking here along the lines of "you must have children to work and pay taxes to cover your medical bills once you get old!"

Gee, what a persuasive argument LOL

The fact is that there is a good economic explanation for the decreasing number of people with children. Over the course of a few generations, children have gone from being an economic asset to a liability. Think of the big farm families of 100 years ago where the kids were doing hard work as soon as they were big enough to wield a shovel or an axe.

These days, children cost big money. Extracurriculars, clothes, toys - all very expensive things. For the most part, the only people having more than four children are either the wealthy (think of MDs or dentists with stay at home spouses) or the oblivious (the stereotypical welfare mom who starts pumping them out at 15).

Even the most outspoken pro-offspring people I know don't have more than three children. You would think if 3 children is great, then 6 should be twice as awesome, no? But they don't do it because it is so damn expensive... if they had 3 more kids then any kind of vacation, entertainment or pleasure beyond what you can do at home for free goes out the window. So the large family has disappeared.

Not saying it's right or wrong, it's just simple economics.

Cappy Cap,

The main point I take from your video is that a lot of parents "outsource" their kids. And that is spot on.

One of my friends spends $1500 a month for daycare, and his wife makes about $1500 a month (after taxes). So financially, they bring in the same amount, but get to advance a career (i.e. let someone else do the heavy lifting).

Two points of issue though:
1 - Have you read Atlas Shrugged? You seem to take the word "selfish" as a bad thing.

2 - wth are you doing with the matches? Where is your butane torch?

No kids.... no CPP.

My only regret in life will be I only had two kids. I should have had five. When it all goes down the sewer hole (and it will), my kids and grandkids are my support structure.

I'm now trying to convince my girls that they need to have five (at least a full line - 3 offense and 2 defenders. NO Goalies).

To those that don't want kids - enjoy your pointless lives!

democracy and individual rites just took one h3ll of a beating in this discussion. Never mind that the religious fruitcakes are putting a $$$ value on life, children and freedom, go figure!!!!!

It amuses me that most of the people I know who decided not to have kids are liberals who insist that giving an increasing proportion of their income to crap that mostly doesn't benefit them as an individual is a wonderful idea. But they're not having kids mainly because they don't want most of their disposable income to go toward supporting someone else. Puzzling.

I have a lot of kids. WHen we were deciding whether tho have kids the main argument against was a selfish one, that is, we liked our lifestyle (consisting mainly of self indulgence). The main argument for seemed to be tradition (which on the face of it seems like a pretty weak argument). In the end we are very happy with our decision.
Individuals will have many reasons to have children (or not to). In most cases the reasons will , be definition be selfish (reflecting personal needs or wants). I do not presume to judge folks on their decisions on a personal level. From a sociological standpoint however, the future belongs to those cultures whose members choose to have kids (for whatever reason).

Eagle,

The torch is out of butane.

The Rest

1. I pay property taxes, regardless of income. You and kids can mail me a thank you letter.
2. My god, the arguments are about breeding more kids so they can pay the taxes for the current generation????!!!!

Yeah, and I'm "selfish."

Sheesh

The argument that people who don't have kids are having their retirements subsidized by those who do is specious. Half the baby boomers will be retired in seven years, at which point the pension system will collapse. There will be no pension for anyone born after 1965, and everyone knows it.

It depends: are you paying for today's public education or are your property taxes paying back your own subsidized education?

The spectres of female-advantaged divorces, loss of custody and child support payment-bondage dissuades more than a few potential fathers.

LC,

Went to private school for most of my k-12 education. Pretty sure I've paid my fair share and more back.

Again, you can mail me a thank you letter.

Cpt.

Neanderthal caveman Ug turns to his cavemate Ooog and says, "No baby for you. Too much work hunting gathering to feed them". Says cavewoman Ooog to her cavemate Ug, "You right! Taxes took half of a sabre tooth tiger carcass last week and do you know how much sundance lessons for kids costs?"

And now you know what happened the the neanderthals.

Enjoy having no kids when you're younger, because I guarantee when you're elderly and completely alone in a 'care home' where no one cares, you'll mourn your decision.

Here's a news flash everyone: We are ALL selfish. And we also can all be capable of selflessness when it suits us.

We all pay taxes. Some just pay more than others.

And Cap .... I don't really care that some people choose not to have kids. That is your business. Please mind it and stay out of mine.

Stop weighing in on matters concerning childrearing and parenting, as though you know something about it. You don't. Stop assuming you know about my motivations for having kids. You don't.

And as far as your contention that the vast majority of people "breeding kids" are either welfare recipients, or preppies looking for fashion accessories: That is your opinion, and it is a stupid one. Just as stupid as someone who might say that the vast majority of people who choose not to have kids are spoiled brat man-boys who simply cannot handle responsibility.

And as for your contention that we are all envious of your layabout lifestyle. We're not. I get a great deal of fulfillment from my busy lifestyle. I like my work. And I like hanging out with my kids. I enjoy watching them in their sports. I love family get-togethers when all of the cousins play together, and when my siblings and I can chill out and talk about life. I love my family in all it's raucous clamour. I would not trade it for your life. Not if you threw in a billion dollars.

I understand how you find Joe O'Conner's article annoying. But your rant was no better.

I assume your parents paid for your private school K-12 education, you likely paid nothing. Which is the point I was attempting to make. The argument that a childless person's property taxes are paying for other people's children's education is debatable. Whether privately or publicly educated, you did not pay for your education. Your parents and (according to their own arguments) childless couples paid for your education. If your ideal world came true and only parents paid the education portion of property tax then you would have never paid a dime for your education. Some might consider that selfish...not me, of course

No thank-you letter required from us. Our average annual income tax is a bit more than twice the man in the video's annual income and, by looking at the house, our property taxes are also much higher. Do you think he will send a thank you letter to the higher-income property tax taxpayers for paying more than their "fair share" of the progressively calculated municipal taxes to pay for roads, garbage pickup etc.?

One size does not fit all and it would be a dull world indeed if it did. I fully agree with much of what the Captain said but most important it's his choice. I have never regretted having children but that was my (and my wife's) choice. I worked hard to support the family and she worked hard as a homemaker to raise the children. No trips to Europe and mostly camping vacations. No daycare and no dreams beyond being mortgage free and what we could afford. I would never trade lifestyles with Cappy but would also never begrudge the path he chose. Both visions of life have their benefits and drawbacks. We decide and that's the way it should be.

I would like to know how mr.capitalism is going to enjoy his shanpps and cigars when the sharia is enforced .

ohh well that's right he wil be dead by the time it is fully enforced in north america , so piss on the rest fo us and our kids and our kids kids.

he has no skin in the game casue he is a pussy!!

I have no problem with him haveing or not having kids none of my buisness but he thinks all his freedoms that he has are his givine to him by himself . and fails to realize that hundres of years ago other peoples kids faught and died so he could today enjoy his shnapps and cigars earning a measly 20k a year!!

for someone so smart he sure is stupid!!

Does Rumple Minze send Cappy stuff for free, like Macallan's did for Mordecai Richler? They really should.

I have always maintained that an awful lot of people don't really give a damn about their kids. This would be perfectly obvious if most people looked around occasionally instead of just running cliches around in their heads all day.

BTW, I absolutely think - and lefties, I wasn't raised to think this; this is postjudice; my mother earned much more than my father, which is probably why I have no siblings, something I'm actually pretty bitter about - I absolutely think that if a)divorce hadn't been normalized and b)women weren't expected to have "careers" (because housekeeping and child-rearing is dull but going in to a cubicle every damn day is so very fulfilling, thanks for that insight Betty Friedan) a lot more people would have kids and those kids would be a lot better off.

Life makes a lot more sense when you realize that the left and all its works are just pure evil.

What Revnant Dream said @ 12:19 and Xiat @ 12:39.

sasquatch, yes, it is good to have those friends. Have had them for over 40 years.

We enjoy our children and grandchildren. Yes, we all die alone, but a child will help to make the passage.

medic said: "Enjoy having no kids when you're younger, because I guarantee when you're elderly and completely alone in a 'care home' where no one cares, you'll mourn your decision."

Because heaven knows there aren't any lonely old people in "care homes" whose children and grandchildren never come to visit, right? ;-)

Life makes a lot more sense when you realize that the left and all its works are just pure evil.

That's a lot like saying, "hey, watch out for that poisonous snake, be careful of it's tail".

Speaking of looking around, obviously the left is just the tail. They aren't clever enough to be anything else.

My son, only 12 years old, has just mowed 2 acres of lawn perfectly, edged a 250 foot long driveway, picked up the dirt/grass from the edging, and then washed and swept the entire driveway.

Take that you childless yuppies!

HAR!!!

"Neanderthal caveman Ug turns to his cavemate Ooog and says, "No baby for you. Too much work hunting gathering to feed them". Says cavewoman Ooog to her cavemate Ug, "You right! Taxes took half of a sabre tooth tiger carcass last week and do you know how much sundance lessons for kids costs?"

And now you know what happened the the neanderthals. "

Work 'em hard, idle hands are the devil's tools :)

Besides, idle kids are an annoyance to the rest of us.

It amuses me that most of the people I know who decided not to have kids are liberals who insist that giving an increasing proportion of their income to crap that mostly doesn't benefit them as an individual is a wonderful idea.
Posted by: K Stricker at September 30, 2012 1:47 PM

A mini lesson in economics: Values are SUBJECTIVE. You can't make a definitive statement about what or what doesn't benefit a person. In doing so you are indulging in PROJECTION. Even a cocaine habit may benefit the person according to his scale of values.

"Canada?s latest batch of 2011 census numbers was released Wednesday and revealed that 44.5% of couples are ?without children? compared to 39.2% with children."
I'd like to know who the other 16.3% of couples are.

Me No Dhimmi said: "You can't make a definitive statement about what or what doesn't benefit a person."

Actually, you can. Behaviors can be rated for benefit or harm on a functional scale that take into account things like life expectancy, infant mortality, energy available per individual, living space available per individual, and so forth. Based on measurable functional criteria,you can analyze belief systems, customs, family structures, even personal habits and behaviors on a cost/benefit basis.

Nobody ever does that though, because it always makes the Lefties look bad. Multiculturalism assumes all cultures are functionally equal, but they are not.

Ours is a lot more efficient on most measures than any other, but LESS efficient than it used to be. Central planning and control is extremely expensive.

And now you know what happened the the neanderthals. "
Posted by: Cpt. Capitalism at September 30, 2012 4:09 PM

Yup. Their competition out-thought them, out-boinked them, out-numbered them, and out-fought them.

YES, The Phantom, but still:
The cost/benefit analysis is based on the analyzer's scale of values and by what he considers "functional".

Did you know there's a whole NEW and laughably ridiculous "science" called the "science of happiness".
Same problem. Assumptions must be made by the "scientist" as to what constitutes happiness.
Moreoever, happiness is not a measurable quantity.
And imagine, say, the UN's definition of happiness!

HOWEVER, I most certainly agree with your observations above vis-a-vis the role of Government as Leviathan and the resulting reality that now two+ incomes are needed to raise a family, usually meaning 3 jobs per family: 2 for the woman, 1 for the man.

I consider the theory that intentionally childless couples are "selfish" to be nonsense on stilts; as ridiculous as scolding the chap above, whose 12-year son did all that yard work, for being selfish.

There's probably no such thing as a selfless act anyway!

"There's probably no such thing as a selfless act anyway!"

I took that to be a central theme of "Atlas Shrugged", but apparently I'm outnumbered by the "OMG Rand thinks greed is awesome!" crowd.

Vitriol indeed.

Last I checked, SDA was a bastion of liberty, small government, and individualism.

And some are dumping on Cappy cause he chose not to have kids???

***

Well, I'm gonna light up a Padron 5000 Series in solidarity with The Captain. And I will use my butane lighter.

It's a happiness thing. My 3 grandchildren have given something to my life that was never there before and could only be put there by them and I really couldn't imagine life without them.

I absolutely agree that "child-free" people should remain that way.

Eagle I dont think anyone gives a rats patooty who has kids and who doesn't .

I think it is patriotic to have kids and teach your cultural values to them. How ever I also think it is patriotic to make the concieous effort to not have kids of you don't want them.

So that you and or your kids are not a drain on our systems .

By the way I am for homeschooling and eliminating the public school system, and also private health care.

As well as eliminating the cpp .

I am also for little very little to no immigration period even if it means our country dies and is invaded and conquered at least it is obvious as appeased to the creeping sharia and lefy political agendas being slowly foisted upon our kids and us.

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Source: http://www.smalldeadanimals.com/archives/021462.html

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Internet Marketing Dates For Your Diary - The Business Success ...

(Taken from a transcript of Nicola?s weekly private client Business &?Internet Marketing Mentoring?Call)

I just want to make sure that you?re all aware of two events coming up ? one is the event Neil Asher and myself are hosting in London on the 20th October, which is all about how to build a real business selling real ? physical ? products to real people. ?Online. ?Things that actually have to get posted to folks!? Not that you?d be posting them, mind!

Neil has made a massive success of that in several businesses so far and you can find out more about that here >>> and read more about that further on in this post.

I?d also like to recommend Martin Avis? forthcoming workshop, the Kiss Workshop in London, 13th and 14th of October.? It?s going to be absolutely brilliant, I know Nick?s already booked.? I?m going to be there as well for the whole two days, I?m staying overnight.? Nick and I are going out for dinner, if anyone of you would like to come and join us you would be most welcome.? Really it?s a collection of under the radar internet marketers who are seriously making money online but who don?t necessarily shout about it, teach about it, mentor about it or whatever.? I know several of them personally and I know they?re really serious people who are earning significant sums every month.

I know it?s still a dream of many of you to create a second income online and while I?ve made a lot of money online it?s always been through coaching and mentoring, and occasionally selling the odd product and occasionally recommending someone else?s product.? But like many of you I?d really, really like to have something rolling in the background that brings in significant sums every month ? on an automated basis.?

It?s interesting because a lot of the people that will be there are actually making money from affiliate marketing ? just from recommending other people?s stuff.? Old school and bloomin? hard work nowadays but still apparently do-able. ?Martin only recently branched out into having his own membership site and creating his own product which is a private label company that he and his wife Delia were running together.? He?s built a six-figure income literally with just a text on e-zine that he sends every week recommending other people?s stuff, all the stuff that he?s used himself, all the stuff that he?s recommending personally.? But it can be done.

Martin was one of our chosen speakers for the really useful internet day with Brett McFall and he was the obvious person to ask.? Also there that day was Sarah Starr who used to own ? well, she still does actually ? a video production company.? She was videoing it for us.? Sarah is dyslexic, which is why she uses video a lot, and she is another person who?s going to be speaking in this Kiss Workshop event in London.? I think it?s ?147 for the two days.? It?s going to be absolutely dynamite content from people who are not trying to sell you big ticket items or big ticket coaching, and it?s going to be great fun.? I wouldn?t miss it for the world.

Selling Physical Items Online

On the topic of building a business, one of my colleagues in one of the other businesses I?m involved in ?. Neil?s actually created a couple of business selling physical products rather than digital or ?info products.? Two or three that I know about.? One?s called Kidz 5 A Day, which is where he figured that he wanted his daughter Isabella to be eating more vegetables but she only liked tomatoes! ?Well do you know the SuperGreens stuff that you can buy ? good for adults but good luck getting kids to drink it! ?

I didn?t realise this, I thought Neil just licensed his products from overseas.? But it turns out he actually got what?s called a private label manufacturing company to make it for him.? It?s really delicious, I actually got it in my fridge.? His daughter loves it, it?s like chocolate milkshake.? It?s like Ovaltine mixed with chocolate milkshake.? He sells this stuff all around the world from a website.?

He?s also got a company called Advanced Child Academy, and we?ve got a lot of ACA boxes in our cupboard.? When he goes away, my daughter Phoebe takes over the packing and dispatch of the said items to the people who are buying these physical products online.? Again, they?re all over the country, they?re all over Europe.? So I know that he can do what he says he does.?

We had an interesting conversation about it the other day and he said, ?Look, why are you going to this Martin Avis thing in London??? I said because I really want to learn how to create a passive income online rather than having to coach and mentor for it all the time, although I do love doing that as well obviously.

He said it?s easy.?

I said, ?It might be easy for you Neil but it?s not easy for your average person.?? He said, ?Okay.? That sounds like a challenge to me, why don?t I teach you how to do it then we can perhaps turn it into a product or something if you want to or we might be able to turn it into a seminar in Brighton.? But the main thing is I want to prove to you that it?s a lot easier than you think it is.??

I said, ?Okay.? So then how would you do it??? He said, ?Well, I?d outsource it.? I know what to do and I?d outsource it.??

I said to him ?The problem with lots of people is that they might be able to afford to come to a seminar or come to a webinar or whatever, or even buy a tuition product, but they probably wouldn?t have the resources to then outsource it all like you would. ?You?ve got to teach them how to do it on a limited budget, otherwise you?re not moving them from knowing it?s possible for you to knowing it?s possible for them, to thinking it?s probable.? That?s what you have to do with marketing, move people from possible for them to probable for them, otherwise you won?t make any sales.??

So that?s something I wanted to share with you.? We?re doing two webinars next week.? I don?t know how he managed to talk me to doing that actually.? He?s very persuasive and very enthusiastic.? It?s difficult to say no.?

So, next week we?re doing two webinars that you really ought to come along to one or other of them.?

The other thing you want to think about is if you?re trying to sell something online, whether it?s a product or a service ? I haven?t mastered this completely yet ? you need to think about moving people from thinking that the outcome is possible for other people to moving them to think it?s possible for them, to moving them to think that it?s probable for them if they buy your product or service or invest in your product and service.

That?s why it?s easier to sell to business people really because they think in terms of investment rather than spending / buying ? although Neil is selling both Kidz 5 A Day and Advanced Child Academy to people who have jobs, have kids and who are buying stuff, they?re not investing in anything.?

So again, he?s out to blast my limiting beliefs out of the waters as he put it.? So, if you want to watch that happening that will be quite interesting.

?

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Source: http://thebusinesssuccessfactory.com/internet-marketing-dates-for-your-diary/

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Saturday, September 29, 2012

Researcher says flaw in Android creates phone risk

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Cellphones using Google's Android operating system are at risk of being disabled or wiped clean of their data, including contacts, music and photos because of a security flaw that was discovered several months ago but went unnoticed until now.

Opening a link to a website or a mobile application embedded with malicious code can trigger an attack capable of destroying the memory card in Android-equipped handsets made by Samsung, HTC, Motorola and Sony Ericsson, rendering the devices useless, computer security researcher Ravi Borgaonkar wrote in a blog post Friday. Another code that can erase a user's data by performing a factory reset of the device appears to target only the newly released and top selling Galaxy S III and other Samsung phones, he wrote.

Borgaonkar informed Google of the vulnerability in June, he said. A fix was issued quickly, he said, but it wasn't publicized, leaving smartphone owners largely unaware that the problem existed and how they could fix it.

Google declined to comment. Android debuted in 2008 and now dominates the smartphone market. Nearly 198 million smartphones using Android were sold in the first six months of 2012, according to the research firm IDC. About 243 million Android-equipped phones were sold in 2011, IDC said.

Versions of Android that are vulnerable include Gingerbread, Ice Cream Sandwich and Jelly Bean, according to Borgaonkar. He said the Honeycomb version of Android, designed for tablets, needs to be tested to determine if it is at risk as well.

Samsung, which makes most of the Android phones, said only early production models of the Galaxy S III were affected and a software update has been issued for that model. The company said it is conducting an internal review to determine if other devices are affected and what, if any, action is needed. Samsung said it is advising customers to check for software updates through the "Settings: About device: Software update" menu available on Samsung phones.

Borgaonkar, a researcher at Germany's Technical University Berlin, said the bug works by taking advantage of functions in phones that allow them to dial a telephone number directly from a web browser. That convenience comes with risk, however. A hacker, or anyone with ill intent, can create a website or an app with codes that instruct the phones linking to those numbers to execute commands automatically, such as a full factory reset.

The phone's memory card, known as a subscriber identity module, or SIM, can be destroyed remotely in the same way, Borgaonkar said. "Vulnerability in Android can be exploited to kill the SIM card permanently by clicking a single click," he wrote. "After the successful attack, the end user has to go to the mobile network operator and buy a new SIM card."

While Borgaonkar has drawn attention to the problem, it's unclear how useful the vulnerability would be to cybercriminals who are primarily interested in profits or gaining a competitive advantage, said Jimmy Shah, a mobile security researcher at McAfee. "There's no benefit to the attacker if they can't make money off it or they can't steal your data," Shah said. "It's really not that useful."

But the technique could cause huge headaches if it were harnessed to issue outbound phone calls, said Mikko Hypponen, chief research officer at F-Secure, a digital security company in Helsinki, Finland. "If that would be doable, we would quickly see real world attacks causing phones to automatically dial out to premium-rate numbers," he said.

___

Online:

Ravi Borgaonkar's blog post: http://www.isk.kth.se/~rbbo/ussdvul.html

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/researcher-says-flaw-android-creates-phone-risk-190905663.html

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Vatican court rejects some evidence in butler trial, announces pope's secretary to testify

VATICAN CITY - The pope's once-trusted butler went on trial Saturday for allegedly stealing papal documents and passing them off to a journalist in the worst security breach of the Vatican's recent history ? a case that embarrassed the Vatican and may shed some light on the discreet, internal workings of the papal household.

In its first hearing in the case, the three-judge tribunal threw out some evidence gathered during the investigation of butler Paolo Gabriele, who is charged with aggravated theft. It also decided to separate Gabriele's trial from that of his co-defendant, a computer expert charged with aiding and abetting the crime.

Gabriele is accused of taking the pope's correspondences, photocopying the documents and handing them off to Italian journalist Gianluigi Nuzzi, whose book "His Holiness: The secret papers of Pope Benedict XVI," was published to great fanfare in May.

Nuzzi has said his source, code-named "Maria" in the book, wanted to shed light on the secrets of the church that were damaging it. Taken as a whole, the documents seem aimed primarily at discrediting Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, the Vatican secretary of state and Benedict's longtime trusted deputy. Bertone, 77, a canon lawyer and soccer enthusiast, has frequently been criticized for perceived shortcomings in running the Vatican.

On Saturday, the court also announced that the pope's personal secretary, Monsignor Georg Gaenswein, had been called as a witness, testimony that is sure to attract attention given that Gaenswein rarely speaks in public much less about details of the intimate, papal family of which Gabriele formed part.

Other witnesses include one of the four consecrated women who take care of the pope's apartment, a monsignor in the Vatican secretary of state, the No. 2 Swiss Guard commander and the head of the Vatican police force.

Judge Giuseppe Dalla Torre set the next hearing for Tuesday, when Gabriele will be questioned. He said he thought the whole trial could be wrapped up in four more hearings.

Gabriele faces up to four years in prison if he is convicted. He has already confessed, saying he leaked the documents to shed light on what he called the "evil and corruption" in the church, and asked to be pardoned by the pope.

Gabriele, a 46-year-old father of three, appeared calm but tense during the 2 hour, 15 minute hearing, frequently crossing his hands or clasping them in his lap. He wore a light grey suit and tie.

He sat alone on a bench on one side of the intimate, austere courtroom following the proceedings impassively. During a break in the hearing, he chatted with his attorney, Cristiana Arru, and greeted journalists with a nod and a smile as he entered and exited.

Arru raised a series of objections at the start of the hearing, only some of which were accepted by the court. One concerned two jailhouse conversations Gabriele had with the head of the Vatican police force without his lawyers present. The judges declared the conversations were inadmissible. The content of the conversations isn't public.

Arru also sought access to the report of a commission of cardinals appointed by the pope to investigate the leaks alongside Vatican magistrates. The court denied the request.

Neither Gabriele's wife nor any of his three children attended the hearing. Space for the public was limited; eight of the 18 seats were taken up by the journalists who followed the proceedings and then briefed the rest of the Vatican press corps afterwards.

Security was relaxed, with the guards at the tribunal entrance mostly concerned that none of the press or public brought in any recording devices: They even checked pens to make sure they couldn't record, and sequestered cellphones into safe boxes. No television or still cameras were allowed, except for Vatican media which filmed the first moments at the start of the hearing.

Eight members of the Vatican gendarmerie who were called as witnesses were in the courtroom as well, but left during the break after the judges made clear they wouldn't be called to testify Saturday. Domenico Giani, the pope's personal bodyguard and the head of the Vatican police force, remained for the duration of the hearing.

Given the content of the leaks and the Vatican's penchant for secrecy, the fact that the trial was open to the public and media may have struck some as unusual. In fact, such trials in the Vatican's civil and penal tribunal are routinely public. They just don't happen very often or attract much attention. The Vatican's ecclesial courts on the other hand, which handle marriage annulments, clerical sex abuse cases and other matters of church law, remain firmly off-limits to outsiders.

In some ways, the willingness of the Vatican to proceed with the trial at all is an indication of its efforts to show new transparency in its inner workings. Benedict could have pardoned Gabriele as soon as he was arrested or charged, precluding any trial from getting off the ground. Instead he allowed the trial to go ahead, evidence of the "courage" the Vatican is showing to be more transparent, Vatican spokesman the Rev. Federico Lombardi has said.

He called such transparency unprecedented for the Vatican and likened it to the Holy See's recent decision to submit its financial institutions to outside scrutiny by the Council of Europe's Moneyval committee.

___

Follow Nicole Winfield at www.twitter.com/nwinfield

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/vatican-court-rejects-evidence-butler-trial-announces-popes-133017047.html

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Activists: Heavy fighting in Syria's largest city

BEIRUT (AP) ? Fighting over Syria's largest city intensified Friday with some of the fiercest battles in two months as rebel forces launched a new offensive to rout President Bashar Assad's forces from Aleppo, activists said.

The city of 3 million, once a bastion of support for Assad, has emerged as a key battleground in Syria's civil war. Its fall would give the opposition a major strategic victory with a stronghold in the north near the Turkish border. A rebel defeat, at the very least, would buy the regime more time.

Activists reported some of the fiercest clashes yet between rebels and government forces in Aleppo, where the two sides have been stalemated for weeks.

Fighters from the main rebel group known as the Free Syrian Army began a new push to drive regime forces from their strongholds Aleppo, Syria's commercial capital on Thursday, calling it the "Decisive Battle," activists said.

The Syrian military sent text message on cellular telephones to members of the armed rebellion reading: "Game over."

Aleppo had been relatively quiet until rebels stormed parts of it in late July. Neither side has been able to deliver a decisive blow, despite sporadic clashes.

"The city is witnessing one of the most violent days. All fronts are on fire," said Aleppo-based activist Baraa al-Halabi. He said clashes had broken out in neighborhoods including Midan, old Aleppo, Maysaloun, Azamiyeh, Salaheddine, Seif al-Dawla and Sheikh Maksoud.

Some activists and rebels said that members of the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, which for decades had close ties with the Syrian government, were participating in the Aleppo battles for the first time since the uprising against Assad's regime began in March last year.

Al-Halabi said some of the heaviest battles were taking place in a predominantly Kurdish area of Sheikh Maksoud where PKK fighters were fighting alongside regime forces. The major rebel group in the city ? the Tawhid Brigade ? said on its Facebook page that its members have entered the neighborhood and fought with PKK gunmen there.

However, another Aleppo-based activist, Mohammed Saeed, said PKK fighters withdrew shortly after the fighting began without taking part in the battle.

Meanwhile, state-run Syrian TV says government troops repulsed an attack on the neighborhood with the help of its residents.

Rami Abdul-Rahman, who heads the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said the pro-government gunmen in Sheikh Maksoud are local Syrians known as "Mardiliyeh" ? a clan known to support the regime.

The reports could not be independently confirmed because the government has imposed tight restrictions on the media.

In July, government forces withdrew from Kurdish areas in northeastern Syria and were quickly replaced by Kurdish fighters from the Kurdish Democratic Union Party, or PYD. The group is affiliated with the PKK, rebels fighting for autonomy in the Kurdish-dominated southeast region of Turkey. The PKK maintains bases in northern Iraq from where they launch hit-and-run attacks on Turkish targets.

Government forces also stormed several tense neighborhoods in the Syrian capital, Damascus, activists said. Troops raided homes looking for activists in Barzeh, Jobar and Qaboun, according to the Observatory and the Local Coordination Committees.

Both groups also reported some fighting between rebels and troops in and near the Palestinian refugee camp of Yarmouk.

When Syria's unrest began, the country's half-million Palestinians at first struggled to stay on the sidelines. But in recent months, young Palestinian refugees ? enraged by mounting violence and moved by Arab Spring calls for greater freedoms ? have been taking to the streets and even joining the rebels.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/activists-heavy-fighting-syrias-largest-city-081134606.html

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Is Your Startup Ready For A PR Blitz? The 7-Step ... - Fast Company

Timing a launch is one of the single most critical business decisions to be made, but many entrepreneurs get it wrong. The term "launch" holds different meanings to each entrepreneur. Some immediately think of a media blitz as the pillar of a launch, but I've seen many startups launch publicly much too early because they want their idea covered in every major news and trade outlet right away.

That comes secondary to developing a sustainable product or business model. It may seem counterintuitive, but it's best to avoid media blitz until you have fully fleshed out your idea.

Here are seven signs you're actually ready to launch publicly:

You must be your startup's biggest cheerleader, but don't fall into the excitement trap and forget the actual audience--and how your product makes life easier for them. Your focus shouldn't be on building a "cool tool," but rather a product that someone needs because it fills a void or solves a problem for them.

It's always risky to launch a product that is still in idea phase. The chances of gaining traction are not very high--and traction is especially important to investors. A good PR firm can initially work with an idea phase product to make it sound interesting and build an early user base, but they can't give you all of the users or feedback that's necessary for fine-tuning your product. Beta test instead. This provides valuable information on how to improve your product and gives you an idea of the public's reaction, both of which are crucial factors that contribute to a successful launch.

Surprisingly enough, some startups don't do their homework. I've seen firsthand three almost-identical companies launch within one month of each other, and it didn't end up well. It's imperative you know what else is out there so you can understand how you measure up to the competition.

What makes you different? How do you ensure that you're always one step ahead of what competitors are doing? And make sure not to miss the key opportunities that help you stand out from the crowd.

Hiring a PR firm to aid in your launch isn't about handing over the reins. It's only natural that a busy startup CEO doesn't necessarily have the time or energy to worry about the tactical details of your public relations plan, so it's important to delegate marketing/PR initiatives to a designated contact who will act as the bridge between your startup and the PR firm.
This person should drive your overall market strategy and have an understanding of where the brand will stand in the future. He or she will help develop the story that you'll tell to the public over time, which leads into the next key sign that you're ready to launch publicly.

If you don't have a story, develop one. Journalists easily recognize weaknesses in the way you position your product and if they're doing their due diligence they will let everyone know what those weaknesses are. You must understand why your product is better than anyone else's and be ready to communicate that effectively.

Part of this process is poking holes to figure out who your users are and why your product is valuable to them. Cut out the fluff, especially in your elevator pitch. Howard Tullman said it best in his Built in Chicago blog: "What you can't basically say in ten minutes about your business or your idea really isn't worth saying."

PR comes into play once you've developed a compelling message that is easily understandable and resonates with consumers. At the end of the day, people want to know the "so what?" You'd be surprised how many times I've seen a startup CEO so close to their product or service they even they couldn't answer that basic question. Think of the most successful startups: I bet they were simple, solved a problem, catered to a key audience, and had long-term benefits.

Launching publicly isn't just about the now but the vision for where you're headed. You must create a roadmap not only for your initial product launch, but also a more advanced map for your long-term goals. You may not end up following the roadmap in its entirety, but having a visible plan of attack is the best way to keep yourself on track.

A shiny logo of a top-tier media outlet on your website is pretty, but that's not a solid metric for your launch. Consider the "why" and the overarching strategy that fits into your larger marketing mix. This is your chance to:

  • Tell a story
  • Shape your positioning
  • Build a foundation of awareness that will accumulate over time
  • Establish your credibility
  • Differentiate yourself
Focusing on vanity metrics--such as the sheer number of media placements you received this month--will only set you up for disappointment because it's not a strategic way of thinking about what delivers the best ROI.

Many startup CEOs will ask, "Why didn't Fast Company cover me again when they did just last month?" It's often more effective to respond back with the question, "What have you done that warrants their coverage again?" Media mentions aren't the only ROI for your business. We've done SEO analysis and found that some of the "small" placements actually provide the best search value. Once you understand this, you're one step closer to a successful public launch.

Your startup is your baby, and maybe you're even a little bit of a control freak because of that. That's okay, but once you launch to the public, you open yourself up for scrutiny. Ideally, you've established strong messaging and a solid product to avoid or fight the criticism, but psychologically, you need to put trust in the people around you that are handling your PR and marketing efforts.

Once your product is out there, it's out there. Then, the rollercoaster ride begins. This is why it's crucial to really be prepared, but also know when to pull the trigger. Don't let the fear of letting go of control stop you from stepping back once all of the puzzle pieces to your startup are in place.

It's important to keep in mind the "snowball effect of public relations." PR done right should build up over time and align with the growth of the startup. A big splash at first is great, but it's not the be-all end-all. Think about an overall strategy that makes sense and will provide the best ROI.

The best advice is to take a step back and evaluate the situation as objectively as you can. It's better to launch the right way than have to backtrack.

Mike is president of Walker Sands Communications, a public relations and marketing agency specializing in technology and startup clients. Follow Mike on Twitter.

For more from Mike, read 4 Key Opportunities Your Startup Shouldn't Miss.

[Image: Flickr user Presidio of Monterey]

Source: http://www.fastcompany.com/3001618/your-startup-ready-pr-blitz-7-step-checklist

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Friday, September 28, 2012

Bad debts hit profits at Mauritius Commercial Bank

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Nickelblock: An element's love-hate relationship with battery electrodes

ScienceDaily (Sep. 27, 2012) ? Anyone who owns an electronic device knows that lithium ion batteries could work better and last longer. Now, scientists examining battery materials on the nano-scale reveal how nickel forms a physical barrier that impedes the shuttling of lithium ions in the electrode, reducing how fast the materials charge and discharge. Published last week in Nano Letters, the research also suggests a way to improve the materials.

The researchers, led by the Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory's Chongmin Wang, created high-resolution 3D images of electrode materials made from lithium-nickel-manganese oxide layered nanoparticles, mapping the individual elements. These maps showed that nickel formed clumps at certain spots in the nanoparticles. A higher magnification view showed the nickel blocking the channels through which lithium ions normally travel when batteries are charged and discharged.

"We were surprised to see the nickel selectively segregate like it did. When the moving lithium ions hit the segregated nickel rich layer, they essentially encounter a barrier that appears to slow them down," said Wang, a materials scientist based at EMSL, the Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory, a DOE user facility on PNNL's campus. "The block forms in the manufacturing process, and we'd like to find a way to prevent it."

Lithium ions are positively charged atoms that move between negative and positive electrodes when a battery is being charged or is in use. They essentially catch or release the negatively charged electrons, whose movement through a device such as a laptop forms the electric current.

In lithium-manganese oxide electrodes, the manganese and oxygen atoms form rows like a field of cornstalks. In the channels between the stalks, lithium ions zip towards the electrodes on either end, the direction depending on whether the battery is being used or being charged.

Researchers have known for a long time that adding nickel improves how much energy the electrode can hold, battery qualities known as capacity and voltage. But scientists haven't understood why the capacity falls after repeated usage -- a situation consumers experience when a dying battery holds its charge for less and less time.

To find out, Wang, materials scientist Meng Gu and their collaborators used electron microscopy at EMSL and the National Center for Electron Microscopy at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory to view how the different atoms are arranged in the electrode materials produced by Argonne National Laboratory researchers. The electrodes were based on nanoparticles made with lithium, nickel, and manganese oxides.

First, the team took high-resolution images that clearly showed rows of atoms separated by channels filled with lithium ions. On the surface, they saw the accumulation of nickel at the ends of the rows, essentially blocking lithium from moving in and out.

To find out how the surface layer is distributed on and within the whole nanoparticle, the team used a technique called three-dimensional composition mapping. Using a nanoparticle about 200 nanometers in size, they took 50 images of the individual elements as they tilted the nanoparticle at various angles. The team reconstructed a three-dimensional map from the individual elemental maps, revealing spots of nickel on a background of lithium-manganese oxide.

The three-dimensional distribution of manganese, oxygen and lithium atoms along the surface and within the particle was relatively even. The nickel, however, parked itself in small areas on the surface. Internally, the nickel clumped on the edges of smaller regions called grains.

To explore why nickel aggregates on certain surfaces, the team calculated how easily nickel and lithium traveled through the channels. Nickel moved more easily up and down the channels than lithium. While nickel normally resides within the manganese oxide cornrows, sometimes it slips out into the channels. And when it does, this analysis showed that it flows much easier through the channels to the end of the field, where it accumulates and forms a block.

The researchers used a variety of methods to make the nanoparticles. Wang said that the longer the nanoparticles stayed at high temperature during fabrication, the more nickel segregated and the poorer the particles performed in charging and discharging tests. They plan on doing more closely controlled experiments to determine if a particular manufacturing method produces a better electrode.

This work was supported by PNNL's Chemical Imaging Initiative.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by DOE/Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Meng Gu, Ilias Belharouak, Arda Genc, Zhiguo Wang, Dapeng Wang, Khalil Amine, Fei Gao, Guangwen Zhou, Suntharampillai Thevuthasan, Donald R. Baer, Ji-Guang Zhang, Nigel D. Browning, Jun Liu, Chongmin Wang. Conflicting Roles of Nickel in Controlling Cathode Performance in Lithium Ion Batteries. Nano Letters, 2012; : 120919105454008 DOI: 10.1021/nl302249v

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/9eMO0tL8JMs/120927152520.htm

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