Crank it up

The Ghost In You

A man in my shoes runs a light

and all the papers lied tonight

but falling over you

is the news of the day

Angels fall like rain

And love – is all of heaven away

Inside you the times moves

and she don’t fade

The ghost in you

She don’t fade

Inside you the time moves

and she don’t fade

A race is on

I’m on your side

And here in you

my engines die

I’m in a mood for you

Or running away

Stars come down in you

and love – you can’t give it away

Inside you the times moves

and she don’t fade

The ghost in you

She don’t fade

Inside you the time moves

and she don’t fade

Don’t you go

it makes no sense

when all your talk

and supermen

just take away the time

and get in the way

Ain’t it just like rain

And love – is only heaven away

Inside you the times moves

and she don’t fade

The ghost in you

She don’t fade

Inside you the time moves

and she don’t fade

The love in you she don’t fade.

Clap Harder!

When Double Dippers become economic party poopers

By TOM RAUM, Associated Press Writer

Sat Jul 31, 11:11 am ET

WASHINGTON – They’re a minority, but a vocal one, and they’re hovering like storm clouds over a brittle recovery.

Are double dippers becoming recovery party poopers?

“If consumers are hearing a lot of bad economic news and they’re already scared, they might pull back some more,” said Nigel Gault, chief U.S. economist for IHS Global Insight.

There are 15 million people unemployed. “Employers might be willing to hire more if consumer spending was doing better,” Gault said. “But then maybe consumer spending won’t start doing better until employers start to hire.”

With such a mindset, warnings of an impending double dip-recession can hit home because “consumer behavior is driven by outlook, not only people’s present situation but their future concerns,” said Pew associate director Michael Dimock.

Magical thinking is the solution to everything!

Prime Time

In order to affect a timely halt to deterioriating conditions, and to ensure the common good, a state of emergency is declared for these territories by decree of Lord Cutler Beckett, duly appointed representative of His Majesty, the King. By decree, according to martial law, the following statutes are temporarily amended: Right to assembly, suspended. Right to habeas corpus, suspended. Right to legal counsel, suspended. Right to verdict by a jury of peers, suspended. By decree, all persons found guilty of piracy, or aiding a person convicted of piracy, or associating with a person convicted of piracy, shall be sentenced to hang by the neck until dead.

Later-

If you can stay up for it, tonight is a pivotal episode of Ghost in the Shell.  TV Listings calls it ‘Endless Gig’, Wikipedia ‘Return to Patriotism’.  I call it ‘Sacrifice of the Tachikomas’.

Yahoo TV Listings

Evening Edition

Evening Edition is an Open Thread

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 Engineers prepare to seal ruptured oil well

by Matt Davis, AFP

Sat Jul 31, 12:35 pm ET

NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana (AFP) – Engineers Saturday readied a plan to permanently seal a damaged Gulf of Mexico well, despite delays to the process caused by debris left behind by a recent tropical storm.

As the work continued, incoming BP boss Bob Dudley vowed his company would not abandon residents affected by the spill after the well is finally sealed.

BP hopes to drown the well in an operation dubbed a “static kill,” in which mud and cement will be injected down into the ruptured wellhead via a cap installed on July 15.

2 New BP boss faces up to massive Gulf oil clean-up

by Matt Davis, AFP

Sat Jul 31, 5:12 am ET

NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana (AFP) – Incoming BP boss Bob Dudley has vowed that the firm would stand by Gulf residents for years to come, as it prepared to scale back oil spill clean-up efforts and move to a new phase.

Making his first trip to the region since being named to take the helm of the British energy giant, Dudley said with no oil leaking into the Gulf of Mexico for two weeks now the company’s focus was shifting to long-term economic and environmental recovery.

“We’ve had some good news on the oil… but that doesn’t mean we’re done. We’ll be here for years,” Dudley told reporters in Mississippi, one of the five states hit by the massive oil spill.

3 [Indian forces kill sixth protester in two days in Kashmir http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20…

by Izhar Wani, AFP

2 hrs 4 mins ago

SRINAGAR, India (AFP) – Two more protesters were killed Saturday in Indian Kashmir, bringing to six the number of young men shot dead by security forces in two days as fresh protests against Indian rule shook the region.

The latest casualties marked the deadliest 48 hours in the Muslim-majority Himalayan territory since June 11, when the turmoil first erupted after a 17-year-old student demonstrator was killed by a police tear-gas shell.

So far, Indian security forces have been accused of killing 23 Kashmiri civilians — many of them in their teens or 20s — in less than two months.

4 US growth slows fueling fears over recovery

by Andrew Beatty, AFP

Sat Jul 31, 5:29 am ET

WASHINGTON (AFP) – US economic growth slowed dramatically in the second quarter, the government has said, stoking fears that the recovery is losing steam and fueling a fierce political debate over how to respond.

Gross domestic product (GDP) growth fell back sharply to 2.4 percent in the second quarter, the Commerce Department said, slamming the brakes on an already tepid rebound and painting a bleak picture of the road ahead.

“The post-recession rebound is history,” said Bart van Ark, chief economist for The Conference Board, a leading business research group.

5 Hackers pick up where Facebook privacy leaves off

by Glenn Chapman, AFP

1 hr 47 mins ago

LAS VEGAS (AFP) – Hackers are weighing in on the Facebook privacy controversy with creations that help people strengthen privacy or empty profile pages at the world’s leading social networking service.

American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) technology fellow Chris Conley showed off an arsenal of such applications at the infamous DefCon gathering, which kicked off Friday in Las Vegas.

“They are needed because people don’t have control of their privacy and don’t really understand,” Conley said after the presentation.

6 Emotional Massa braced for Hungary return

by Gordon Howard, AFP

Sat Jul 31, 7:12 am ET

BUDAPEST (AFP) – Felipe Massa returns to the Hungaroring, where he suffered a high-speed horror crash 12 months ago, determined to stage an emotional reunion with the medical staff and marshalls who saved his life.

The Brazilian’s Ferrari careered off the track at last year’s Hungarian Grand Prix after he was struck on his helmet by a part which flew off Rubens Barrichello’s Brawn GP car in qualifying.

He spent over a week in a coma suffering from a skull fracture and battled to save his sight in one eye. He also missed the rest of the season.

7 BP to try well kill Tuesday

By Leigh Coleman, Reuters

Sat Jul 31, 9:33 am ET

BILOXI, Mississippi (Reuters) – BP said on Friday it could seal its ruptured Gulf of Mexico oil well by next week as the House of Representatives voted to toughen regulation of offshore energy drilling.

Incoming BP Chief Executive Bob Dudley said the British energy giant would attempt a “static kill” operation on Tuesday to try to plug the blown-out deep-sea well that caused the worst offshore oil spill in U.S. history.

This marks a slight delay. The U.S. official overseeing the spill response, retired Coast Guard Admiral Thad Allen, had said on Thursday he hoped the operation to pump mud and cement into the well could be performed as early as this weekend.

8 House approves oil spill reform bill

By Tom Doggett and Richard Cowan

Fri Jul 30, 7:16 pm ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The House of Representatives on Friday approved the toughest reforms ever to offshore energy drilling practices, as Democrats narrowly pushed through an election-year response to BP’s massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

Passing the bill as the House leaves for its six-week recess gives lawmakers the opportunity to return home boasting they reined in Big Oil and held BP responsible for the worst offshore oil disaster in U.S. history.

The vote was 209-193 on the bill supported by President Barack Obama.

9 U.S. worried more secret documents may be released

By David Alexander, Reuters

Fri Jul 30, 9:06 pm ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. officials are worried about what other secret documents the whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks may possess and have tried to contact the group without success to avoid their release, the State Department said on Friday.

The shadowy group publicly released more than 90,000 U.S. Afghan war records spanning a six-year period on Sunday. The group also is thought to be in possession of tens of thousands of U.S. diplomatic cables passed to it by an Army intelligence analyst, media reports have said.

“Do we have concerns about what might be out there? Yes, we do,” State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley told a briefing, adding that U.S. authorities have not specifically determined which documents may have been leaked to the organization.

10 Second senior Democrat may face ethics trial

By Corbett B. Daly and Thomas Ferraro, Reuters

Sat Jul 31, 11:13 am ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – A second senior Democratic lawmaker may face a public ethics trial this fall, posing a possible setback to their party’s efforts to keep control of the House of Representatives in the November elections.

The House ethics panel is expected to say as early as on Monday that its investigative subcommittee has found evidence that Representative Maxine Waters violated the chamber’s ethics rules, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters.

The House panel unveiled ethics charges against Representative Charles Rangel on Thursday, and both lawmakers face potential public trials just weeks before voters head to the polls for the November mid-term elections.

11 3 squabbling companies must cooperate to plug well

By MICHAEL KUNZELMAN and RAY HENRY, Associated Press Writers

33 mins ago

NEW ORLEANS – On shore, BP, Halliburton and Transocean are engaging in a billion-dollar blame game over the blown-out oil well in the Gulf of Mexico. At sea, they’re depending on each other to finally plug up the environmental disaster.

Workers say the companies’ adversarial relationship before Congress, in public statements and maybe one day in the courts isn’t a distraction at the site of the April 20 rig explosion, where Transocean equipment rented by BP is drilling relief wells that Halliburton will pump cement through to permanently choke the oil well.

“Simply, we are all too professional to allow disagreements between BP and any other organization to affect our behaviors,” Ryan Urik, a BP well safety adviser working on the Development Driller II, which is drilling a backup relief well, said in an e-mail last week.

12 Rangel using 3-way defense against ethics charges

By LARRY MARGASAK, Associated Press Writer

1 hr 8 mins ago

WASHINGTON – To rebut a lengthy list of alleged ethical misdeeds, Rep. Charles Rangel is trotting out this three-way defense: I didn’t do it. I did it, but was inattentive. Others lawmakers were allowed to do the same thing without penalty.

It’s an approach that nervous Democrats are watching closely in one of the most politically explosive cases in years.

Should it go to a public trial this fall, smack in the middle of the election season, and should his defense fall short, that won’t help Democratic candidates forced to defend their party’s ethics against Republican campaign attacks.

13 US stalls on Sept. 11 trial for 5 at Gitmo

By BEN FOX, Associated Press Writer

1 hr 25 mins ago

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico – As the U.S. military prepares for the first war crimes trial under President Barack Obama, its most high-profile case against the planners of the Sept. 11 attacks is stuck in political and legal limbo.

Canadian prisoner Omar Khadr, accused of killing an American soldier during a raid on an al-Qaida compound, is scheduled to go to trial Aug. 9 at the U.S. base in Cuba.

But Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the professed mastermind of the attacks, and four alleged accomplices are still sequestered at Guantanamo without charges. The Obama administration, after months of review, hasn’t made a decision on whether to seek a military or civilian trial.

14 LA pushing to become nation’s mass transit leader

By DAISY NGUYEN, Associated Press Writer

1 hr 49 mins ago

LOS ANGELES – The region famous for jilting the street car to take up a love affair with the automobile is trying to rekindle its long ago romance with commuter rail.

If successful, the novel plan to borrow billions from the federal government, led by Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, would result in the largest transit expansion project in the nation.

Los Angeles County voters agreed two years ago to pay a half-cent sales tax over the next 30 years to extend train and rapid bus lines, projects that would routinely require federal assistance.

15 Obama: Rangel case troubling; some Dems say resign

By LAURIE KELLMAN, Associated Press Writer

2 hrs 37 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Rep. Charlie Rangel is getting sympathy from some fellow Democrats but scant support from others as he faces trial on several ethics charges.

President Barack Obama says he hopes the 80-year-old lawmaker can end his career with dignity and some House Democrats want him to resign – now.

Obama, speaking on the issue for the first time, praised Rangel for serving his New York constituents over the years, but said he found the ethics charges “very troubling.”

16 Ariz. governor considers changing immigration law

By PAUL DAVENPORT and JACQUES BILLEAUD, Associated Press Writers

Sat Jul 31, 7:14 am ET

PHOENIX – A federal appeals court has decided not to step into the controversy over Arizona’s tough immigration law until November, leaving state officials to consider other steps they might take in the meantime.

Republican Gov. Jan Brewer, who signed the law and appealed a ruling blocking its most controversial sections, said Friday she would consider changes to “tweak” the law to respond to the parts U.S. District Judge Susan Bolton faulted.

“Basically we believe (the law) is constitutional but she obviously pointed out faults that can possibly be fixed, and that’s what we would do,” Brewer told The Associated Press. She said she’s talking to legislative leaders about the possibility of a special session, but said no specific changes had been identified.

17 Informant says WikiLeaks suspect had civilian help

By DAVID DISHNEAU, Associated Press Writer

4 mins ago

HAGERSTOWN, Md. – An Army private charged with leaking classified material to the whistleblower website WikiLeaks had civilian help, a key figure in the case said Saturday.

The development, first reported in the New York Times, suggests an expansion of the government’s investigation into leaks including more than 76,900 secret Afghanistan war records posted on WikiLeaks in the past week.

Army and FBI officials didn’t immediately return calls and e-mails from The Associated Press asking if they are looking at possible civilian accomplices of Army Pfc. Bradley E. Manning, who’s charged under military law with leaking classified material.

18 A look inside the government’s deportation flights

By SOPHIA TAREEN, Associated Press Writer

1 hr 44 mins ago

CHICAGO – Guillermo Campos Ojeda stares blankly at the clouds from the jetliner’s window, mentally retracing the 22 years that he lived in the United States as an illegal immigrant.

His odyssey began in 1988 with an illegal border crossing and ended in May when he was pulled over for driving without a license. In between were double shifts at a Chicago factory, a string of run-ins with the law, a marriage and his ultimate joy: the birth of his daughter, now 2, who is a U.S. citizen.

But on this flight arranged by the federal government, his journey takes a new turn: Ojeda is being deported along with 52 other illegal immigrants. Their day starts at a suburban Chicago processing center and ends with a lonely walk across a bridge from Brownsville, Texas, into Mexico.

19 Uneasy in US, Iroquois believe survival’s at stake

By SAMANTHA GROSS, Associated Press Writer

Sat Jul 31, 12:16 pm ET

ONONDAGA NATION, N.Y. – A group of young men have gathered in the longhouse for the feather dance, and the sounds of their singing filter outside, where Mohawk Chief Howard Thompson sits.

His people call him Onerekowa, the name his predecessors have borne for a thousand years. Each month, when he gathers with the 49 other chiefs from the six Haudenosaunee nations, he stands to speak in the language of his ancestors. And when the 50 come to a decision, they don’t take a majority vote. Instead, as it has for a millennium, the leaders of the Iroquois Confederacy decide by consensus.

Today Thompson awaits the start of a meeting of the Haudenosaunee Peace and Trade Committee, where tradition will grapple with the outside world. The issue is passports.

20 Jewish group opposes ground zero mosque

By RACHEL ZOLL, AP Religion Writer

Fri Jul 30, 8:45 pm ET

NEW YORK – The nation’s leading Jewish civil rights group has come out against the planned mosque and Islamic community center near ground zero, saying more information is needed about funding for the project and the location is “counterproductive to the healing process.”

The Anti-Defamation League said it rejects any opposition to the center based on bigotry and acknowledged that the group behind the plan, the Cordoba Initiative, has the legal right to build at the site. But the ADL said “some legitimate questions have been raised” about funding and possible ties with “groups whose ideologies stand in contradiction to our shared values.”

“Ultimately this is not a question of rights, but a question of what is right,” the ADL said in a statement. “In our judgment, building an Islamic center in the shadow of the World Trade Center will cause some victims more pain – unnecessarily – and that is not right.”

21 Texas man exonerated of rape free after 27 years

By JUAN A. LOZANO, Associated Press Writer

Fri Jul 30, 7:36 pm ET

HOUSTON – Imprisoned for 27 years for a rape he didn’t commit, Michael Anthony Green walked out of jail a free man on Friday and in the process was able to leave behind some of the anger that had fueled his survival behind bars.

Accompanied by his attorney, Green walked out of the Harris County Jail and into the arms of about 20 family members who cheered him.

“Live life,” Green said, when asked what he is going to do now.

22 DC Metro crash spurs federal oversight push

By SARAH BRUMFIELD, Associated Press Writer

Fri Jul 30, 5:38 pm ET

WASHINGTON – Supporters of a bill that would give federal regulators power to force transit agencies to make safety improvements are rallying around a ruling that the lack of federal oversight contributed to the fatal Metro crash in Washington last year.

Supporters believe the National Transportation Safety Board’s strong language favoring federal oversight will make it easier to convince lawmakers that it is needed nationwide. But Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., put a hold on the bill to keep it from being fast-tracked through Congress after Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., introduced it last week.

A faulty electronic circuit was blamed for the crash that killed nine people, but the NTSB said Tuesday that Metro’s “anemic safety culture” and the Federal Transit Administration’s lack of authority to oversee safety contributed. The board said previous attempts to get Metro to organize its safety operation failed because federal safety oversight is lacking.

Health and Fitness News

Welcome to the Stars Hollow Health and Fitness weekly diary. It will publish on Saturday afternoon and be open for discussion about health related issues including diet, exercise, health and health care issues, as well as, tips on what you can do when there is a medical emergency. Questions are encouraged and I will answer to the best of my ability. If I can’t, I will try to steer you in the right direction. Naturally, I cannot give individual medical advice for personal health issues. I can give you information about medical conditions and the current treatments available.

From the Bean Pot to the Table

Photobucket

When you have a big, savory pot of beans at hand, there’s no shortage of dishes you can make: salads, soups, even gratins. Beans offer protein and fiber, and they’re a good source of potassium, calcium, iron and folic acid.

snip

Christmas limas are an heirloom bean: big and beautiful, they’re mottled with whites and purples. They’re just as lovely when cooked, turning light and dark reddish brown, with a sensuous texture and sweet, savory flavor. Christmas limas are expensive but worth the occasional splurge.

If you can’t find Christmas limas or don’t want to spend the money, all of this week’s recipes work well with more modestly priced large white limas. You can find them in many grocery stores and in Middle Eastern markets.

Cooked White or Christmas Limas

Greek Salad With Giant Beans and Arugula

Baked Limas With Tomatoes and Peppers

Giant Lima Bean Ragout (or Soup)

Baked Large Limas With Spinach and Feta

General Medicine/Family Medical

Florida seen at risk from Caribbean dengue epidemic

(Reuters) – An epidemic of dengue fever in the Caribbean and Latin America has increased the risk of an outbreak of the sometimes deadly mosquito-borne virus in South Florida, a bioclimatologist and dengue expert said on Tuesday.

Florida’s proximity to affected countries, the flow of people from there and similar tropical climate factors raised the probability of the disease afflicting the southern state after an absence of decades, Dr. Douglas Fuller told Reuters.

EMS systems catch cardiac arrests, and a lot more

(Reuters Health) – San Francisco sends out seven ambulances in response to people thought to be in cardiac or respiratory arrest for every one person that is actually in cardiac arrest, according to a new study of the city’s Emergency Medical Dispatch system.

The results reflect an issue faced by emergency departments around the world: how do you decide where to send a limited number of ambulances and paramedics?

“Using resources most effectively – that’s the name of the game,” Dr. Jeff Clawson told Reuters Health. Clawson, who was not involved in the current study, contributed to the first emergency medical dispatch system and is now with the National Academies of Emergency Dispatch in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Bystander CPR — no breaths necessary, studies say

(Reuters) – When someone collapses suddenly, mouth-to-mouth rescue breathing may not be necessary and could lower the chances of survival, researchers said in two studies on Wednesday that found chest compression alone is enough.

The findings add to evidence that the simpler approach works best during cardiopulmonary resuscitation, or CPR.

“Chest compression alone is at least as good, at least as beneficial,” Dr. Thomas Rea, medical program director for King County Emergency Medical Services in Washington state and chief author of one of the studies, said in a telephone interview.

Does CPR on a moving stretcher work?

(Reuters Health) – Paging script-writers: Pumping on a patient’s chest during CPR while a stretcher careens down a hospital hallway works just fine, Chinese researchers have found.

By straddling patients on the stretcher — think “ER,” the American TV drama — paramedics can get them faster to and from the ambulance while still doing cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR).

What hadn’t been clear was how that precarious position would affect the quality of chest compression done by people without the balance of a bull rider.

Protein in urine can forecast kidney disease

(Reuters) – Doctors may be able to watch for kidney injury and protect patients by looking for protein in urine, researchers reported on Thursday.

Patients with the highest levels of protein, or albuminuria, had an almost five-fold increase in the risk of developing acute kidney injury, the researchers reported in the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology.

Rabbits grow their own joint replacements in study

(Reuters) – Rabbits implanted with artificial bones re-grew their own joints, complete with cartilage, researchers reported on Thursday.

Only a single compound called a growth factor was needed to induce the rabbits’ bodies to remodel the joint tissue, said the team at Columbia University in New York, Clemson University in South Carolina and the University of Missouri.

Such a joint should last longer and work more naturally than a metal joint, the researchers said.

Companies involved in making replacement joints and regenerative medicine are expressing interest, said Columbia’s Jeremy Mao, who led the study.

What prevents falls after strokes? Study: Not much

(Reuters Health) – While most stroke survivors will suffer falls, strategies to prevent these dangerous events continue to fall short, suggests a new study out of Australia.

Up to three in four stroke survivors fall within six months of their stroke, and these falls can lead to serious injuries, including broken bones.

“Although research has shown that fall prevention programs including exercise are effective for older people, it was unclear whether these, or any other interventions, work for people with stroke,” lead researcher Dr. Francis Batchelor of the University of Melbourne, in Australia, told Reuters Health by email.

Study: Alcohol Helps Rheumatoid Arthritis Symptoms

July 28, 2010 — Rheumatoid arthritis patients who drink alcohol tend to have less severe symptoms than those who don’t, a new study finds.

Earlier research has shown that compared to teetotalers, alcohol drinkers are less likely to develop rheumatoid arthritis, a progressive and often disabling inflammatory disease that attacks the joints.

But the study is the first to suggest drinking alcohol can lessen the severity of symptoms in people who already have the disease.

Patients in the study who drank at least 10 alcoholic beverages a month had 20% to 30% less pain and inflammation than patients who didn’t drink alcohol, rheumatologist and study co-author James Maxwell of England’s University of Sheffield tells WebMD.

While he acknowledges more study is needed to confirm the association, Maxwell says the evidence is mounting that moderate alcohol consumption reduces both the risk and severity of rheumatoid arthritis.

“Generally speaking, it appears that drinking alcohol in moderation may benefit patients with rheumatoid arthritis.”

Sniffing Device Helps Disabled People Move, Write

July 26, 2010 — Israeli scientists have developed a device that allows severely disabled people to sniff to precisely control objects such as wheelchairs and personal digital assistants, a new study says.

The nasal-mask device works so well that disabled people who can’t move at all can learn to write text messages and drive electric wheelchairs by sniffing, researchers report in the July issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Noam Sobel, PhD, of the department of neurobiology at the Weizmann Institute in Israel, and colleagues set out to find a way to allow people with disabilities ranging from quadriplegia to “locked-in syndrome” to learn how to control devices with their noses just as they would using a joystick or computer mouse.

The Weizmann Institute has filed for a patent on sniff-controlled technology, which the researchers report as a possible conflict of interest.

New Pain Drug May Be Alternative to Oxycodone

July 23, 2010 — An extended-release form of the pain medication tapentadol has fewer gastrointestinal side effects than oxycodone when it’s used for pain relief in people with osteoarthritis or chronic low back pain, a new study shows.

The painkiller, called tapentadol ER, could provide a new alternative for the relief of chronic pain if approved by the FDA.

Researchers say they examined the safety and tolerability of the drug in people with chronic knee or hip osteoarthritis pain or pain in the lower back, compared to people taking the better known and older oxycodone CR.

The study, published in the journal Pain Practice, shows that tapentadol ER is associated with a lower overall incidence of adverse gastrointestinal problems than oxycodone CR. Fewer patients taking tapentadol ER tablets suffered constipation, nausea, and bouts of vomiting than people on oxycodone, the study shows.

Pets, Dust May Worsen Ragweed Allergies

July 23, 2010 — People who have hay fever and who also have an allergy to cats, dogs, dust mites, or grass pollen have hay fever symptoms that are more severe and occur earlier on, according to a new study.

Hay fever season occurs in late summer when ragweed is in full bloom. However, not everyone allergic to ragweed experiences symptoms at the same time or in the same way. An estimated 36 million Americans have seasonal allergies. Ragweed is a plant that can grow anywhere; it is common throughout the Northeast, but it also grows in the South and Midwest and is a major cause of late-summer and fall allergy symptoms. People allergic to ragweed experience itchy eyes, runny noses, and sneezing.

For Some, Low Levels of ‘Good’ Cholesterol May Not Be Bad

July 23, 2010 — Traditionally, patients at risk of heart disease are told to lower their levels of “bad” LDL cholesterol while raising their levels of “good” HDL cholesterol. But patients taking statin drugs who reduce their LDL cholesterol to very low levels may not need to boost their HDL cholesterol levels, according to a new study.

”Once we get the levels of LDL down to very low levels, it becomes unclear whether HDL is an important determinant of [cardiovascular] risk,” says researcher Paul Ridker, MD, director of the Center for Cardiovascular Disease Prevention at Brigham & Women’s Hospital, and professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, Boston

Heatwave smog turns Muscovites into heavy smokers

Reuters) – The worst smog to hit Moscow in almost a decade has sent pollution 10 times above safe levels and Russia’s chief lung doctor on Wednesday said residents were inhaling the equivalent of 40 cigarettes every few hours.

The city of more than 10 million has been sweltering under a record breaking heatwave exacerbated by peat fires in areas surrounding the capital.

With street temperatures hitting almost daily all-time highs, the peat fire’s smoke and its cinder smell have crept into sultry offices, homes and restaurants.

“The concentration of carbon monoxide and suspended particles in Moscow surged up to 10 times above the limit last night,” Alexei Popikov, chief specialist at Mosekomonitoring, a city government agency overseeing air pollution, told Reuters.

Warnings/Alerts/Guidelines

Stop-Smoking Aid Chantix Sparks Safety Concerns

July 27, 2010 — Evidence is accumulating that the stop-smoking drug Chantix is linked with unprovoked acts and thoughts of aggression and violence, according to a new report.

The drug is so potentially dangerous that its use should be restricted to exclude police, military, and similar occupations in which workers carry weapons, says Thomas J. Moore, senior scientist for drug safety and policy at the Institute for Safe Medication Practices in Horsham, Pa. Moore is one of three co-authors of the new report on the drug, published in the Annals of Pharmacotherapy.

“My colleagues and I have been concerned about the safety profile of [Chantix] since our first report [warning of adverse events] in 2008,” Moore tells WebMD.

FDA considering changes to risky drug safeguards

(Reuters) – Safeguards to protect patients from risky drugs should have less paperwork and more consistency, drugmakers and pharmacy representatives said this week during a U.S. Food and Drug Administration meeting.

The drug industry acknowledged the benefit of so-called risk evaluation and mitigation strategies, or REMS, a set of disclosure and educational tools to protect consumers from drugs with potentially serious side effects.

But it is requesting a lighter regulatory touch. The FDA said it would consider some changes.

Health group sues FDA over antimicrobial soap

(Reuters) – A nonprofit environmental group has sued the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, claiming the agency failed to regulate toxic chemicals found in “antimicrobial” soap and other personal care products.

The National Resources Defense Council alleges that two common ingredients, triclosan and triclocarban, can damage reproductive organs, sperm quality and the production of thyroid and sex hormones. It also names U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius as a defendant.

AstraZeneca bloodthinner goes before U.S. experts

Maryland (Reuters) – AstraZeneca Plc’s experimental blood thinner goes before U.S. advisers on Wednesday, facing questions over why a trial of the potential blockbuster drug failed to cut heart attacks and deaths in North American patients.

Brilinta, with expected annual sales of more than a billion dollars, is seen as key to AstraZeneca’s growth as the company looks to new medicines to make up for lost sales from coming patent expirations on some of its best-selling medicines.

Members of a Food and Drug Administration advisory panel will hear from company officials and agency reviewers before voting Wednesday afternoon on whether to recommend approval of Brilinta.

H1N1/Seasonal Flu/Other Epidemics

New TB test must reach more people: expert

(Reuters) – A new diagnostic tool that reduces to two hours the time needed to detect drug-resistant tuberculosis must be made available to populations vulnerable to the disease, a World Health Organization expert said.

Asia carries more than half the global caseload of drug resistant TB, which is very difficult to treat.

Patients need to take medication for up to two years and the worst type of TB, for which there is no cure, kills one out of every two patients.

“New diagnostic tools offer the opportunity to increase the sensitivity of TB diagnosis in general and to shorten the diagnosis of MDR-TB (multidrug-resistant TB) from eight weeks to two hours,” Catharina van Weezenbeek, regional adviser on TB for the WHO in the Western Pacific region, said on Thursday.

Eastern Africa polio-free, but cases found in Russia

(Reuters) – Eastern Africa is free of polio again, with four countries — Ethiopia, Kenya, Sudan and Uganda — having reported no cases of the crippling disease for more than a year, U.N. and other aid agencies said Friday.

But the virus appears to have spread from Tajikistan, where it has paralyzed 437 children since April, to infect 6 ethnic Tajiks in Russia, according to the World Health Organization.

“It was detected in a few individuals in Russia in Tajik communities. An investigation is going on, we don’t know where infection took place,” WHO spokesman Oliver Rosenbauer told Reuters.

Companies start shipping U.S. flu vaccines

(Reuters) – Two flu vaccine makers said on Friday they had started shipping supplies for the U.S. market, one of the earliest starts ever to distributing seasonal influenza vaccine.

And U.S. officials said they were changing the labeling on a vaccine made by Australia’s CSL Ltd because it appears to have caused a higher than usual rate of seizures in children.

Sanofi Aventis said it was shipping 70 million doses of seasonal flu vaccine — its largest production run ever — and GlaxoSmithKline said it was shipping 30 million doses of partner ID Biomedical’s FluLaval vaccine.

 

Two die in Florida from mosquito-borne disease

Florida (Reuters) – Two Florida residents have died from Eastern equine encephalitis, a mosquito-borne disease that is rare among humans but has infected a rising number of horses in the state, health officials said on Friday.

Both deaths were in the Tampa area, where a woman died on July 1 and an infant died on Wednesday, the Hillsborough County Health Department said. The disease known as EEE causes brain inflammation. There is no vaccine for humans.

“It’s a fairly rare disease,” said Steve Huard, spokesman for the Hillsborough health department.

Women’s Health

Smoking may worsen outcome of pregnancy complication

The findings may not sound surprising. But they actually present something of a paradox, as past studies have linked smoking to a reduced risk of developing preeclampsia in the first place.

Preeclampsia is a syndrome marked by a sudden increase in blood pressure after the 20th week of pregnancy and a buildup of protein in the urine due to stress on the kidneys. Most women with preeclampsia deliver a healthy baby, but the condition can develop into a life-threatening condition called eclampsia, which can cause seizures or coma.

For persistent fibroids, a less invasive option

(Reuters Health) – A procedure that stops the blood supply to fibroids could be a safe and effective alternative to hysterectomy for women whose fibroid symptoms won’t go away, according to a new study.

But some who get uterine artery embolization – which is less invasive, cheaper, and easier to recover from than a hysterectomy – might still eventually need a hysterectomy to relieve their symptoms, the results of the study in 150 women show.

Pregnancy-related diabetes likely to recur: study

(Reuters Health) – Pregnant women with a history of pregnancy-related diabetes, also called gestational diabetes, have a good chance of developing the condition again, suggests a large new study.

Researchers found that the risk of having gestational diabetes during a future pregnancy increases with each previously affected one — from 41 percent after the first to 57 percent after two pregnancies complicated by gestational diabetes.

Gestational diabetes typically strikes during late pregnancy and is characterized by high blood sugar that results from the body’s impaired use of insulin. While it rarely causes birth defects, complications can arise that threaten the health of both mom and baby.

“Because of the silent nature of gestational diabetes, it is important to identify early those who are at risk and watch them closely during their prenatal care,” lead researcher Dr. Darios Getahun of Kaiser Permanente Southern California Medical Group, in Pasadena, told Reuters Health in an email.

Meth use in pregnancy endangers mom and baby

(Reuters Health) – New research shows that babies born to methamphetamine-using moms face much higher risks of serious complications, compared to babies not exposed in the womb to this illegal street drug.

Life-threatening pregnancy complications, such as uncontrolled high blood pressure, are also more common among women who use methamphetamine while pregnant, the researchers found.

The pill equally effective in obese, thin women

(Reuters Health) – Despite studies suggesting that birth control pills might not work as well in obese women, a new study suggests that they prevent pregnancy the same no matter what a woman weighs.

As long as a woman-heavy or thin–took the pill consistently, Dr. Carolyn L. Westhoff of Columbia University Medical Center in New York City and her colleagues found, it prevented her ovaries from producing eggs. Westhoff and her team report their findings in the August issue of Obstetrics & Gynecology.

Genetic Marker Linked to Ovarian Cancer Risk

July 22, 2010 — A newly identified genetic marker may help predict ovarian cancer risk, Yale University researchers report online in Cancer Research. Variations in the KRAS gene occur in one-quarter of women with ovarian cancer, and 61% of women with ovarian cancer who have a family history of breast and ovarian cancer.

“For many women out there with a strong family history of ovarian cancer who previously have had no identified genetic cause for their family’s disease, this might be it for them,” says study researcher Joanne B. Weidhaas, MD, PhD, an associate professor of therapeutic radiology and researcher for the Yale Cancer Center in New Haven, Conn., in a news release. “Our findings support that the KRAS-variant is a new genetic marker of ovarian cancer risk.”

Men’s Health

Aggressive Treatment for Prostate Cancer Is the Norm

uly 26, 2010 — More than 75% of men diagnosed with low-risk prostate cancer undergo aggressive treatment — either complete removal of the prostate or radiation therapy, according to a new study.

That’s true, the researchers found, even in men with a low level of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) of under 4 nanograms per milliliter, one of the factors taken into account when treatment decisions are made.

”If we knew for sure everyone with a PSA under 4 would not die of prostate cancer, case closed,” says researcher Mark N. Stein, MD, a medical oncologist at The Cancer Institute of New Jersey and assistant professor of medicine at the UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick.

But that’s far from true, Stein says. And that makes the balance between overtreatment and undertreatment difficult, he says. The report is appears in the Archives of Internal Medicine.

Pediatric Health

Are kids’ ER visits for food allergies on the rise?

(Reuters Health) – Children’s visits to the emergency room for serious food-allergy reactions may be on the rise, if the experience of one major U.S. medical center is an indicator.

Researchers at Children’s Hospital Boston found that the number of food-induced allergic reactions treated in their ER more than doubled over six years — from 164 cases in 2001, to 391 in 2006.

Can secondhand smoke hurt kids’ grades?

(Reuters Health) – Children and teenagers exposed to secondhand smoke at home may get poorer grades than their peers from smoke-free homes, a study of Hong Kong students suggests.

Secondhand smoke is a well-known health threat to children, being linked to increased risks of asthma, as well as bronchitis, pneumonia and other respiratory infections. Studies have also found a connection between smoking during pregnancy and higher risks of childhood behavior problems and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder.

Some research has also found that children exposed to cigarette smoke in the womb or at home may trail their peers when it comes to cognitive abilities like reasoning and remembering. But whether secondhand smoke itself is to blame remains unclear.

Damp house linked to kids’ risk of nasal allergies

(Reuters Health) – Children who live in damp, water-damaged homes may be more likely than other kids to develop nasal allergies, a new study suggests.

Researchers found that of nearly 1,900 Finnish children they followed for six years, those who lived in homes with dampness or mold problems were more likely to develop allergic rhinitis during the study period.

Allergic rhinitis refers to symptoms of congestion, sneezing and runny nose caused by allergens such as pollen, dust, animal dander or mold.

In this study, published in the American Journal of Epidemiology, 16 percent of children whose parents reported dampness in the home went on to be diagnosed with allergic rhinitis over the next six years. That compared with just under 12 percent of children whose parents reported no dampness problems — that is, no visible signs of water damage to the ceilings, walls or floors, and no visible mold or mold odor in the home.

Head Lice Grow Resistant to Treatments

July 26, 2010 — There is little else that triggers such a visceral reaction from parents than the words “head lice,” especially when they are uttered in conjunction with an outbreak in their child’s classroom or summer camp.

But when it comes to these creepy, crawly, head-dwelling creatures, there is nothing to fear except fear itself, say researchers in an updated report on the diagnosis and treatment of head lice in the August issue of journal of Pediatrics.

Yes, head lice are gross, but they are not a health hazard or a sign of poor hygiene. They don’t spread any disease, and controversial no-nit policies, which state that if your child has any sign of lice or their eggs (nits) they should be kept home, should be abandoned, they say.

“It’s only a bug on your child, not in your child like the flu or pneumonia,” study author Barbara L. Frankowski, MD, MPH, professor of pediatrics at the University of Vermont in Burlington, says in an email. “Healthy children — which includes children with head lice infestation — should be in school learning.”

Mental Health

Mental health experts ask: Will anyone be normal?

(Reuters) – An updated edition of a mental health bible for doctors may include diagnoses for “disorders” such as toddler tantrums and binge eating, experts say, and could mean that soon no-one will be classed as normal.

Leading mental health experts gave a briefing on Tuesday to warn that a new edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), which is being revised now for publication in 2013, could devalue the seriousness of mental illness and label almost everyone as having some kind of disorder.

Citing examples of new additions like “mild anxiety depression,” “psychosis risk syndrome,” and “temper dysregulation disorder,” they said many people previously seen as perfectly healthy could in future be told they are ill.

“It’s leaking into normality. It is shrinking the pool of what is normal to a puddle,” said Til Wykes of the Institute of Psychiatry at Kings College London.

AIDS Patients Cite Stigma, Depression

July 22, 2010 — Seventeen percent of people with HIV/AIDS have not told their spouses or partners about their health status, even though 96% reported having disclosed their HIV status to at least one person, an international survey finds.

The survey of more than 2,000 HIV-infected people in a dozen countries reveals that in the U.S., 42% of people with the virus feel isolated because of their infection, compared to 37% worldwide. And 42% of people with HIV in the U.S. report feeling depressed.

Certain Epilepsy Drugs Linked to Suicide

July 26, 2010 — New research challenges the idea that all epilepsy drugs are associated with an increased risk for suicide.

The study found that certain newer epilepsy medications, but not older ones, were linked to an increased risk of suicidal thoughts and behaviors in patients taking the drugs for epilepsy.

Since early 2008, the FDA has required a warning on newer and older epilepsy drugs after the agency’s own research review linked use of the medications to a nearly doubled risk of suicidal behaviors or thoughts in patients with epilepsy compared to those taking a placebo.

In the newly reported study, use of the newer epilepsy drugs Keppra, Topamax, and Sabril was associated with a threefold increase in the risk of self-harm or suicidal behavior.

But other newer epilepsy drugs, including Lamictal, Lyrica, Neurontin, and Trileptal, were found to have no increased risk for such outcomes.

And researchers say the study vindicates conventional epilepsy drugs such as Depacon, Depakote, Dilantin, Tegretol, and Zarontin.

Irritable Bowel Syndrome in the Brain

July 23, 2010 — Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) may be in the brain, not in the mind.

IBS patients tend to suffer anxiety and depression, but they tire of being told their symptoms of diarrhea, constipation, and/or pain are all in their minds.

Now there’s evidence that their underlying problem may be due to the structure of their brains, says Emeran Mayer, MD, professor of medicine, physiology, and psychiatry at the University of California, Los Angeles.

“Discovering structural changes in the brain … demonstrates an ‘organic’ component to IBS and supports the concept of a brain-gut disorder,” Mayer says in a news release. “The finding removes the idea once and for all that IBS symptoms are not real and are ‘only psychological.’ The findings will give us more insight into better understanding IBS.”

Social Ties Can Add Years to Your Life

July 27, 2010 — Good friends and family do more than make life worth living. These relationships can actually add years to your life.

A new study shows that people with lots of close friends and family around will likely live a lot longer than  lonesome people. The study appears in the July issue of PLoS Medicine.

The protective effect of having lots of healthy and fulfilling relationships is comparable to that of quitting smoking, the study authors state.

“Our social relationships are important not only to our quality of life, but also our longevity,” says study author Julianne Holt-Lunstad, PhD, associate professor of psychology at Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, in an email.  “Throughout human history, we have relied on others for survival such as protection and  food, and despite modern advancements that may [help with] certain aspects of survival so that we can live more independently, it appears that our relationships nonetheless still impact odds of survival,” she says.

Nutrition/Diet/Fitness

For blood pressure, can you be fit but fat?

(Reuters Health) – If you’re trying to bring your blood pressure to healthy levels, a new study suggests that how much you weigh is more important than how fit you are.

As expected, the study found that overweight or obese people were more likely to have a high systolic blood pressure – the top number in a blood pressure reading. But for those with a high body mass index (BMI) – a measure of weight versus height — how in shape they were only had a small impact on their blood pressure.

The results suggest that people who are trying to decrease their risk for high blood pressure should focus on losing weight however they can most effectively do that, the authors say, and that increasing physical fitness should be a secondary goal.

Sit More, Die Sooner

July 22, 2010 — Sit at leisure, die at haste, an American Cancer Society study finds.

In the 14-year study, people who spent at least 6 hours of their daily leisure time sitting died sooner than people who sat less than 3 hours.

And people who both sit a lot and exercise little are at even higher risk of death, find ACS epidemiologist Alpa V. Patel, PhD, and colleagues.

The effect is stronger for women than for men, but significant for both sexes.

Recording Weight Online May Keep Pounds Off

July 27, 2010 — People who have lost weight and who are diligent in using an interactive web site on a regular basis may find it easier to maintain their weight loss, a new study suggests.

Researchers say a study involving 348 people found that those who logged in to an interactive weight loss maintenance web site to record their weight at least once a month for 2.5 years maintained more weight loss than participants who logged in less frequently. Participants could also enter information on their diet, exercise, and other weight loss activities.

The web-based weight maintenance intervention program was part of a study called the Weight Loss Maintenance Trial that lasted three years and included more than 1,600 people across the country.

Calcium supplements may raise risk of heart attack

(Reuters) – Calcium supplements, which many people consume hoping to ward off osteoporosis, may increase the risk of heart attack by as much as 30 percent, researchers reported Friday.

These tiny tablets which carry concentrated doses of calcium were also associated with higher incidences of stroke and death, but they were not statistically significant.

The researchers advised people consuming calcium supplements to seek advice from their doctors, take more calcium-rich foods and try other interventions like exercise, not smoking and keeping a healthy weight to prevent osteoporosis.

“People regard calcium supplements as natural but they are really not natural at all,” Ian Reid, professor of medicine at the University of Auckland in New Zealand, said in a telephone interview.

‘Excellence’ centers no better for bariatric surgery

(Reuters Health) – For weight-loss surgery, “Centers of Excellence” may not be any safer than their undistinguished peers, a study of 25 Michigan hospitals suggests.

Yet the overall rate of serious complications — less than three percent — was “relatively low,” the new report said.

The findings, which appear in the Journal of the American Medical Association, come in the wake of widespread safety concerns over weight-loss procedures. (See Reuters Health story of July 26, 2010.)

“Our results show that, at least in the state of Michigan, bariatric surgery is now remarkably safe,” Nancy J. O. Birkmeyer, of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, told Reuters Health in an e-mail.

Mom’s pregnancy diet not tied to wheezing risk

(Reuters Health) – A woman’s overall diet during pregnancy may not be related to her child’s risk of developing wheezing problems by preschool age, a new study suggests.

Wheezing refers to a high-pitched whistling sound, most obvious while exhaling, that is usually caused by blockages in the small breathing tubes in the chest.

Occasional wheezing is common in infancy and early childhood, and is often related to viral infections. But young children with recurrent wheezing episodes are more likely than other children to develop asthma, particularly if they have risk factors such as family history of allergies and asthma.

Is a stiff hamstring more susceptible to a strain?

(Reuters Health) – While a stiff leg may help you run faster and jump higher, it may also make you more prone to sitting on the sideline, hints a new study of Australian Rules Football players.

Researchers found significantly more preseason leg and hamstring stiffness among players who would later sustain a strain, compared to those who maintained healthy hamstrings throughout their practices and matches.

Australian Rules Football, a variant of football, is a high-intensity, intermittent running game, combining skills such as kicking, hand passing, and jumping. It is played on a large oval-shaped grass field.

“Hamstring injuries occur regularly in Australian Rules Football,” lead researcher Mark Watsford of the University of Technology in Sidney, Australia, told Reuters Health in an email.

Punting the Pundits

Punting the Pundits is an Open Thread. It is a selection of editorials and opinions from around the news medium and the internet blogs. The intent is to provide a forum for your reactions and opinions, not just to the opinions presented, but to what ever yoHe was not the only lawmaker to solicit donations in this manner, his lawyers argue, saying that peers who did the same thing were not punished.

Bob Herbert: A Sin and a Shame

The treatment of workers by American corporations has been worse – far more treacherous – than most of the population realizes. There was no need for so many men and women to be forced out of their jobs in the downturn known as the great recession.

Many of those workers were cashiered for no reason other than outright greed by corporate managers. And that cruel, irresponsible, shortsighted policy has resulted in widespread human suffering and is doing great harm to the economy.

“I’ve never seen anything like this,” said Andrew Sum, an economics professor and director of the Center for Labor Market Studies at Northeastern University in Boston. “Not only did they throw all these people off the payrolls, they also cut back on the hours of the people who stayed on the job.”

snip

There can be no robust recovery as long as corporations are intent on keeping idle workers sidelined and squeezing the pay of those on the job.

It doesn’t have to be this way. Germany and Japan, because of a combination of government and corporate policies, suffered far less worker dislocation in the recession than the U.S. Until we begin to value our workers, and understand the critical importance of employment to a thriving economy, we will continue to see our standards of living decline.

Being one of those short women, thanks, Gail.

Gail Collins: Let’s Make It Real

At the beginning of his much, much, much discussed visit to “The View,” Barack Obama squished himself into a long, low banquette where the five women who converse on the program were seated.

I cannot tell you how happy this moment made me. During the presidential campaign, whenever Obama was sharing a stage with Hillary Clinton, the seating arrangement always seemed to involve high stools. He draped his tall, lanky frame over his stool gracefully. Clinton, who would have looked like a middle-aged schoolgirl doing detention if she perched up there, opted to stand and be uncomfortable.

On behalf of all the short women of America I say – go for it, women of “The View.” I’m sure you did not want to cause the president of the United States any distress, but he was so totally due.

Paul Krugman: Bad for the Jews

Outside my usual beat, but the statement from the Anti-Defamation League opposing the construction of a mosque near Ground Zero is truly shocking. As Greg Sargent says, the key passage – it’s a pretty short statement – is this one:

   

Proponents of the Islamic Center may have every right to build at this site, and may even have chosen the site to send a positive message about Islam. The bigotry some have expressed in attacking them is unfair, and wrong. But ultimately this is not a question of rights, but a question of what is right. In our judgment, building an Islamic Center in the shadow of the World Trade Center will cause some victims more pain – unnecessarily – and that is not right.

snip

One thing I thought Jews were supposed to understand is that they need to be advocates of universal rights, not just rights for their particular group – because it’s the right thing to do, but also because, ahem, there aren’t enough of us. We can’t afford to live in a tribal world.

Fred Kaplan: Reading the Intelligence

Why spies, counterspies, and counter-counterspies are so popular right now.

It shouldn’t be so surprising that spies and paranoia are back in popular culture or that they’ve made a rousing comeback in the news.

The box-office hit Salt stars Angelina Jolie as a CIA agent who turns out to be (spoiler alert, but much slighter than it sounds) a sleeper-agent for the KGB, trained from her youth to infiltrate American power centers and await the signal for “Day X,” when she’ll help the Russian empire rise again and destroy its enemy. A new AMC series, Rubicon, has something to do-it’s not yet clear what-with spy networks and paranoia. (“Not all conspiracy theories are theories,” the ads intone.) In June, the real-life FBI arrested 10 Russian sleeper-spies who’d been living for years Virginia and New Jersey suburbs (though, again, it’s unclear what they were supposed to be doing besides living high on the American hog). And just this month, an Iranian nuclear scientist, who defected to the United States after serving as a CIA informant, redefected to Tehran, where his bosses now say he was a double-agent, feeding misinformation to Langley, Va., all along. It’s a producer’s dream of good timing-a new movie and TV show, both with preposterous plotlines, coming out at the same time that uncannily similar plotlines are splashed on front-page headlines and take up hours of cable newscasts.

R. Jeffrey Smith: Rangel says colleagues who similarly sought donations were not punished

Rep. Charles B. Rangel  (D-N.Y.) has chosen a less-than-collegial defense to charges that he violated House ethics rules when he asked corporate donors with legislative interests to give to an academic center bearing his name.

He was not the only lawmaker to solicit donations in this manner, his lawyers argue, saying that peers who did the same thing were not punished.

With a trial of Rangel by the House ethics committee possible by mid-September, his legal team reached across the Capitol to point a finger at Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who helped raise money for a center named for him at the University of Louisville. Rangel’s team cited similarities with the recently deceased Sen. Robert C. Byrd (D-W.Va.) and with former Republican senators Trent Lott (Miss.) and Jesse Helms (N.C.).

“These activities have never been regarded as creating an improper benefit to a Member,” the lawyers said in their 32-page rebuttal. The logic apparently figured heavily in Rangel’s reluctance to negotiate a settlement to 13 charges of ethical misconduct, even when colleagues said Friday they had been ready to impose only a reprimand: Why should he be singled out when others haven’t?

Zachary A. Goldfarb and Philip Rucker: Wyly brothers built an empire side-by-side

Born during the Depression in a northeast Louisiana plantation town of 3,000, Charles Wyly and his younger brother Sam have been inseparable since childhood: numbers 3 and 13 on the state-championship high school football team, business partners who turned ideas into billion-dollar companies, philanthropic champions and benefactors of politicians, including the Bush political dynasty. Now the brothers are co-defendants in a far-reaching securities fraud suit.

The reclusive pair, who both settled in Dallas, amassed extraordinary wealth after starting a software company during the computer industry’s infancy and investing their earnings in other technology firms, restaurant chains, clothing stores and energy companies. They showered money on environmental causes, public broadcasting, arts groups, charities and Republican and conservative causes in Texas and nationwide.

But their wealth — and largess — had a dark side, according to a fraud suit filed Thursday by the Securities and Exchange Commission. The charges, culminating a six-year probe, accuse the brothers of creating an elaborate network of overseas accounts and companies through which they made illegal trades, reaping more than a half-billion dollars in hidden profit. The Wylys deny the charges, according to a spokesman, who said they have always supported causes in which they believe and relied on their lawyers and accountants in structuring business arrangements.

F1: Hungaroring Qualifying

Well, I have to be up and take notes anyway since Richard and Emily are off attending a wedding in upstate New York (not that one).

Join me below the fold.

So to bring you up to date, we’re a little over halfway through the Formula One season and this week’s race in Hungary is the last one before a 4 week August layoff.

Yes, this is the same race where Filipe Massa got whacked in the head with a spring last year.

The main rule change of note this year is that they no longer re-fuel the cars during the race.  They still make pit stops to change tires, at least once under a rule requiring that they change compounds, but in fact 2 or 3 times as even the hard compound Bridgestones deteriorate pretty quick.

So far this year the Red Bull team has clearly had a faster car, dominating qualifying and starting on pole almost every race.  Unfortunately (if you root for Red Bull that is) due to mechanical failure and driving and strategy mistakes they are second in the Team standings and Vettle and Webber are 3rd and 4th in the Driver’s contest.

Did I mention they don’t like each other much?  They’ve collided at least once and 2 races ago Vettle wrecked his new aero package and the Team yanked the one Webber was using and gave it to him because they didn’t have any spares.

Now the team of love is Ferrari where last race Massa got Team Orders to stand aside for Alonso and dutifully waved 2 fingers at him (that’s how they flip you the bird in Europe you know) as he cruised by.  That cost the team a $100,000 penalty, but hey- it’s only money and it’s not like they ordered him to crash to bring out a Yellow like Renault did with Piquet.

I root for McLaren and Hamilton and while I really question some of the team’s race management, they’re leading the standings at the moment.

For this race they have a new bottom diffuser and they will be the only team (nope, 2 other teams including Williams) using the F Duct, a device that ‘spoils’ the air going over the rear wing reducing downforce and drag on straight ways.  Also the Hungaroring is thought to favor cars with downforce.

Not that it did them much good in practice yesterday where they were almost a second behind the Red Bulls.

Things to look for in qualifying are how fast the super soft tires deteriorate and whether there are any unexpected results (things like Schumacher failing to make Q2 again).  Desirable grid positions are odd numbered so it’s just about as good to be 3rd as 2nd.

It’s 3 rounds of knockout qualifying where they drop the slowest 7 in each of the first 2 rounds.  Weather does not appear to be a factor today.

On This Day in History: July 31

This is your morning Open Thread. Pour a cup of your favorite morning beverage and review the past and comment on the future.

On this day in 1948, the Broadway musical “Brigadoon” closed after 581 performances. It originally opened on March 13, 1947 at the Ziegfeld Theater. It was directed by Robert Lewis and choreographed by Agnes de Mille. Ms. De Mille won the Tony Award for Best Choreography. The show was had several revival and the movie starring Gene Kelly and Cyd Charisse premiered in 1954.

Brigadoon is a musical with a book and lyrics by Alan Jay Lerner and music by Frederick Loewe. Songs from the musical, such as “Almost Like Being in Love” have become standards.

It tells the story of a mysterious Scottish village that appears for only one day every hundred years, though to the villagers, the passing of each century seems no longer than one night. The enchantment is viewed by them as a blessing rather than a curse, for it saved the village from destruction. According to their covenant with God, no one from Brigadoon may ever leave, or the enchantment will be broken and the site and all its inhabitants will disappear into the mist forever. Two American tourists, lost in the Scottish Highlands, stumble upon the village just as a wedding is about to be celebrated, and their arrival has serious implications for the village’s inhabitants.

 30 BC – Battle of Alexandria: Mark Antony achieves a minor victory over Octavian’s forces, but most of his army subsequently deserts, leading to his suicide.

781 – The oldest recorded eruption of Mt. Fuji (Traditional Japanese date: July 6, 781).

904 – Thessalonica falls to the Arabs, who destroy the city.

1423 – Hundred Years’ War: Battle of Cravant – the French army is defeated at Cravant on the banks of the river Yonne.

1492 – The Jews are expelled from Spain when the Alhambra Decree takes effect.

1498 – On his third voyage to the Western Hemisphere, Christopher Columbus becomes the first European to discover the island of Trinidad.

1588 – The Spanish Armada is spotted off the coast of England.

1655 – Russo-Polish War (1654-1667): the Russian army enters the capital of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, Vilnius, which it holds for six years.

1703 – Daniel Defoe is placed in a pillory for the crime of seditious libel after publishing a politically satirical pamphlet, but is pelted with flowers.

1777 – The U.S. Second Continental Congress passes a resolution that the services of Marquis de Lafayette “be accepted, and that, in consideration of his zeal, illustrious family and connexions, he have the rank and commission of major-general of the United States.”

1790 – First U.S. patent is issued to inventor Samuel Hopkins for a potash process.

1856 – Christchurch, New Zealand is chartered as a city.

1865 – The first narrow gauge mainline railway in the world opens at Grandchester, Australia.

1895 – The Basque Nationalist Party (Euzko Alderdi Jeltzalea-Partido Nacionalista Vasco) is founded by Basque nationalist leader Sabino Arana.

1913 – The Balkan States signs an armistice at Bucharest.

1919 – German national assembly adopts the Weimar constitution, which comes into force on August 14.

1930 – The radio mystery program The Shadow is aired for the first time.

1932 – The NSDAP wins more than 38% of the vote in German elections.

1936 – The International Olympic Committee announces that the 1940 Summer Olympics will be held in Tokyo. However, the games are given back to the IOC after the Second Sino-Japanese War breaks out, and are eventually cancelled altogether because of World War II.

1938 – Bulgaria signs a non-aggression pact with Greece and other states of Balkan Antanti (Turkey, Romania, Yugoslavia).

1938 – Archaeologists discover engraved gold and silver plates from King Darius in Persepolis.

1941 – Holocaust: under instructions from Adolf Hitler, Nazi official Hermann Göring, orders SS General Reinhard Heydrich to “submit to me as soon as possible a general plan of the administrative material and financial measures necessary for carrying out the desired final solution of the Jewish question.”

1945 – Pierre Laval, the fugitive former leader of Vichy France, surrenders to Allied soldiers in Austria.

1945 – John K. Giles attempts to escape from Alcatraz prison.

1948 – At Idlewild Field in New York, New York International Airport (later renamed John F. Kennedy International Airport) is dedicated.

1954 – First ascent of K2, by an Italian expedition led by Ardito Desio.

1959 – The Basque separatist organisation ETA is founded.

1961 – At Fenway Park in Boston, Massachusetts, the first All-Star Game tie in major league baseball history occurs when the game is stopped in the 9th inning because of rain.

1964 – Ranger program: Ranger 7 sends back the first close-up photographs of the moon, with images 1,000 times clearer than anything ever seen from earth-bound telescopes.

1970 – Black Tot Day: The last day of the officially sanctioned rum ration in the Royal Navy.

1971 – Apollo program: Apollo 15 astronauts become the first to ride in a lunar rover.

1972 – Operation Motorman: British troops move into the no-go areas of Belfast and Derry, Northern Ireland. End of Free Derry.

1972 – Three car bombs are detonated in Claudy, Northern Ireland, killing nine in what is believed to be a Provisional Irish Republican Army attack.

1976 – Viking program: Viking 1 – NASA releases the famous Face on Mars photo.

1981 – General Omar Torrijos of Panama dies in a plane crash.

1981 – 42-day strike of Major League Baseball ends in the United States.

1981 – A total solar eclipse occurs.

1992 – Georgia joins the United Nations.

1999 – Discovery Program: Lunar Prospector – NASA intentionally crashes the spacecraft into the Moon, thus ending its mission to detect frozen water on the moon’s surface.

2006 – Fidel Castro hands over power temporarily to brother Raul Castro.

2007 – Operation Banner, the presence of the British Army in Northern Ireland, and the longest-running British Army operation ever, comes to an end.

Popular Culture (TeeVee). Season Finale for Dr. Who 20100730

(10 pm. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

Many of you who read my posts know that I am a very big fan of the British TeeVee series, Dr. Who.  This is not a recent infatuation.  I have followed The Doctor since 1978, when I first discovered the series.  It was 15 years old by then.

I have written a number of posts about this series, and you can find them by examining my profile on the Kos site (I have not written on Docudharma.com or Thestarshollowgazette.com as long).  As you read those, you will find that I have a very special place in my heart for that series.

Tonight we shall examine the season finale for the current iteration.  It was good, if a bit rushed in the last episode.

Matt Smith is good as the title character.  Even from the first episode I liked him very much.  He somehow has brought the Tom Baker persona into the 21st century.  Before we continue, let us pay our respects to the previous actors who have portrayed him.

I found a really nice clip of all of the characters who have played The Doctor since 1963 (except for Matt Smith) and the opening credit theme music.  Note how it has changed over they years from a very simple electronic music to complex orchestral productions.

This next one has the Matt Smith theme, too.  I put both of them in because I liked some of the extended movements in the first one better.

William Hartnell (1908 - 1975), 55 years old when he took the role, was The Doctor from 1963 to 1966.  In the very first episode, An Unearthly Child, the chameleon circuit on the TARDIS failed, and it took its last shape, that of a British police call box.  NOTE:  there are many TARDISs, the one belonging to The Doctor being a stolen, obsolete Type 40-A.  The Master had a stolen, obsolete Type 40-B, and the dematerialization circuits are not compatible.  Ill health and a bad temper caused him to leave the show.

When he left as The Doctor, the producers thought up the regeneration thing.  Thus came Patrick Troughtonn (1920 - 1987), at 46 years when he started, an excellent Doctor.  Many of the early episodes have been lost, but recently found to some extent.  There are lots of gaps in the early days.  This Doctor is important in that he became friends with the Brigadier during his run.  

In 1970, Jon Pertwee (1919 - 1996) became The Doctor at age 51.  I always liked him very much, but he was still, like the previous two, sort of an older man.  He was a snappy dresser, though, and I loved his tuxedos as he fought for the safety of the universe.  Note that Time Lords are not restricted to just one galaxy.  The Master, his arch rival, at that time was played by Roger Delgado, and he was excellent in the part.  Unfortunately, Mr. Delgado was killed in an automobile accident and Pertwee just lost interest in the show.  He retired in 1971 and paved the way for, in my opinion, the very best Doctor of all, Tom Baker.

This was also the first time that the regeneration of a Time Lord was treated in depth.  Sarah Jane was with him as he changed (if you look closely, you can see that Elisibeth Sladen’s hair was longer after the regeneration than before, because the scenes were shot months apart).  By the way, the Sarah Jane companion character is the only one to have a spinoff series from BBC, although it did not last.

Tom Baker (1934 - present) was just great.  Starting the role in 1974 at the age of 40, he played the part longer than anyone has, until 1981.  He was all tooth and curls, and wore the scarf and fedora.  The former Mrs. Translator knitted for me, from pure wool, two knockoff scarves from the series.  I still wear them in cold weather.  Here is a picture of me wearing the multicolored one.

The Doctor with Scarf

It was also during this era that the control room of the TARDIS became rather sterile and scientific.  No clutter there, just the control panel and the indication of dematerilization and rematerilization.  Actually, I sort of like the simpler look of the control room for the TARDIS.  I find the new one to be sort of cluttered, but, on the other hand, my “control room” is extremely cluttered as well.  I guess that is a sign of a very cluttered mind, and The Doctor must have one, like I have.

The companions were excellent during Tom Baker’s reign.  Sarah Jane Smith, Adric, Leela (WHAT a HONEY!), K9, and the two Romanadvoratrelundars, not to mention the rest.

After Tom Baker, Peter Davidson (1951 - present) became the new Doctor in 1981 at the age of 29 and played the role for .  He never seemed to me to be comfortable with the part, but he was decent in it pretty much.  His companions were not very memorable, unlike Tom Baker’s.

Davison did not renewe after 1984 for typecasting reasons, and BBC replaced him with the disaster know as Colin Baker (1943 - present).  He was, hands down, the very worst actor to play The Doctor, and he doomed the program for decades.  He was 41 when he started, and there was a year and a half taping hiatus, so he really only played The Doctor for a year and a half.  BBC finally fired him not only because he was a horrible Doctor, but also because he was impossible with whom to work.

That led the way for Sylvester McCoy (1943 - present) to take the role at age 44 in 1987, the first Scot to play The Doctor.  He was OK, I guess, but by then the money was gone from the series and it sort of languished.  One thing introduced in his term was another Time Lord, The Rani, who had evil intent.  His series was sort of forgettable, but it was not his fault.  In 1989 taping was halted, seemingly forever due to lack of money and interest.  I still think that Colin Baker had a lot to do with that.

Then the series went away.

In 1996, they tried to revive it, and used McCoy for continuity.  Paul McGann (1959 - present) played The Doctor, and battled The Master for one last (?) time.  It was a one time made for TeeVee movie, but reignited interest.  By the way, McGann was 37 when he took the role.

Then the series became energized once again.  BBC decided to try again, and called on Christopher Eggleston (1964 - present) to play The Doctor.  He was a good choice at age 31 in 2005 when the series started back, because he had the rough looks of Tom Baker and also his enthusiasm.  The producers also rightly found a good companion, Rose, to stand by him.  The first episode revived one of The Doctor’s ancient enemies, the Nestines, and was quite good.  Several of the episodes were sort of silly, but all in all it was OK.  He left after only one season for reasons that are still debated.

After Eccelston decided to quit, David Tennent (1971 - present) took the job in 2005 at age 34.  He was really a pretty good Doctor, but sort of wimpy.  He told BBC that he always wanted to play The Doctor since he was little, and thus lived his dream.  Would that I could play The Doctor, but they do not want a old, Arkansas raised, American for the part.  But I could do it!

Finally, Tennent decided to quit in 2008 (although his episodes aired until 2010) and Matt Smith (1982 - present) became what is the current Doctor.  At age 27, he is the youngest actor to play the part.  He is excellent!  The producers did well in finding him.  He has enthusiasm for the role, and plays it well.  You have to remember that he is only just recently regenerated, so is irrational from time to time.

I must add that there were a couple of motion pictures in the 1960s with Peter Cushing playing a human called “Dr. Who” that was loosely based on the series, but not canonical at all.  Then one Rowan Atkinson also played The Doctor in an affectionate sendup of the series, here:

The embeddig feature was disabled, so all that I can do is give you the link.  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Do-wD…

Most folks talking about The Doctor focus only on the actor playing him.  This is wrong.  The ancillary characters are at least as important, if not more so.  The producers got this one just about right.  Amelia Pond (and her husband, now) is the perfect companion.  Young, attractive, extremely bright, fearless, and impulsive, she is the perfect foil for The Doctor, just at Leela and Sarah Jane were years ago.

I know that this is a long build up to the critique of the finale, but there is something important to the dogma of the story here.  Time Lords only have 12 regenerations, and Matt Smith is the eleventh Doctor.  Thus, only two are left, if one considers that birth does not count.  Added to than, in the Colin Baker series, there was The Doctor as the Valyard in his last regeneration.  I do not know how the producers will deal with that.  Thus, The Doctor is in danger of becoming extinct due to lack of regenerative ability.

I would like to see The Doctor to regenerate into a female in one of the two cycles left.  That would be an interesting twist to the series.  Why does a doctor have to be male?  Stay with me for a minute.  What female actor could play The Doctor?  Nix on Jolie or Densch, just not right. Nor Anniston or other pretty girls.  We need a female Doctor who is attractive, but not too sexually feminine.  Many of the previous male Doctors were not what folks would think of as “hunks”.

So who could play a female Doctor?  By the way, in the Tennent series, there was a child borne with some Time Lord characteristics.  Perhaps she will surface next season.  I can not think of any actresses who could play The Doctor.  Any suggestions would be welcome.  It does turn out that Katherine Zeta-Jones was considered for the Matt Smith role.

Well, I did not do what I intended with this post.  I meant to critique the season finale, and instead wrote a summary of the behind the scenes things associated with Doctor Who.  Let us get down to brass tacks now.

The finale was good.  From the observation of the wall of rock, (The Hello, Sweetie!) I knew that it would be good.  If you look very closely, The Doctor’s Greek name (Sigma Theta, or Theta Sigma, I forget the order) are the first two Greek characters after the English ones.  The producers and writers went very deep into obscure Who trivia, because that name was used in only one Tom episode in the 1970s.

The finale knitted together all of the episodes from when Matt Smith took over the role.  The crack in the universe in Amelia’s room was finally knitted together, and why she was all alone in the house was also explained.  This also explained why The Doctor was attracted to her in the first place:  she had a unique role to play in healing the universe.  It also happened to be the very day after The Doctor reappeared to Amy, now all grown up in our human timeline.  This is important because that was her wedding day.

The plot was quite twisted.  The Doctor had been drawn to first century England (under Roman occupation) because of a painting that Van Gogh had made of the TARDIS being destroyed (in the story, Van Gogh has visions), relayed to The Doctor by Winston Churchill through the mysterious River Song, who apparently will some day wed The Doctor.  They encounter the mysterious Pandorica, the prison of the most dangerous living being in the universe.  As it finally opens to release whoever is inside, all of the Doctor’s enemies materialize, and he realizes that it is to imprison him, not to release someone else.

Through some use of River’s time gauntlet, he extricates himself and puts the mortally wounded Amy in his place.  Since the Pandorica is also a time dam, she remained alive until the present day, well, a few years before the present day, on earth.  The rest of the universe had been destroyed by the rip in reality.  Only the exploding TARDIS preserved the earth and moon (a fellow Dr. Who fan reminded me today to ask why the moon is always its mirror image in Dr. Who), whilst the rest of the universe was destroyed.

The Doctor used the Pandorica’s restorative powers, along with the remnants of the Eye of Harmony (the power supply for the TARDIS), to restore the universe, at the cost of his being erased from history.  However, before he left Amelia back at her home as a child, he implanted a suggestion in her mind to remember him.

At her wedding reception, she began to remember (by the way, her parents had been restored when The Doctor repaired the universe).  Soon enough, everyone was remembering him, and the TARDIS materialized in the reception hall, and out popped The Doctor for the reception.  She basically willed him to be restored.

After the reception, he encountered River Song again, who reclaimed her time gauntlet and expressed some cryptic thoughts, like everything will be changing.  After the reception, as The Doctor was getting ready to leave, Amy and her new husband came around to tell him good-bye, or so he thought.  As it turned out, they said good-bye to everyone else and joined him in the TARDIS for who knows what adventures to come next season.

Like all good season finales, it left several questions open.  One is, now that the universe is restored, will The Doctor’s home planet, Gallifrey, be restored?  One thing that really bothers me about the new reboot of Dr. Who is that he is the last Time Lord.  We need more, and Gallifrey, back for some interesting stories.  Second, how will Amy and her husband do as a married couple traveling with The Doctor.  He has never had a married couple as companions in the history of the series, all the way back to 1963.  Third, how will his relationship with River develop?  Forth, what is the fascination of the production team with bodies of water?  River Song, Amy Pond?

Please share your thoughts about the season finale, or any other aspect of Dr. Who.  I am particularly interested in your thoughts on who your favorite companion(s), and your favorite nemesis(es) are.  I am torn between Leela, Sarah Jane, or the first Romanadvoratrelundar as my favorite companion, and between the Nestines and the Zygons as favorite nemesis.

Look for me Sunday at 9:00 PM for another installment of my science blog, Pique the Geek.

Warmest regards,

Doc

Crossposted at Dailykos.com and at Docudharma.com

ADL Jumps In On The Wrong Side Of The Mosque Debate

(8 am. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

Every once in a while, something happens that is so completely wrong, so inexplicably confused, that it makes you shake your head in utter  disbelief.  Today was one of those days.  The Anti Defamation League  (ADL), an organization that has been in the forefront of the battle for religious tolerance for decades, announced that it opposed the building of a mosque near the former World Trade Center site.  I find this almost impossible to believe.

The New York Times reports:

The nation’s leading Jewish civil rights group has come out against the planned mosque and Islamic community center near ground zero, saying more information is needed about funding for the project and the location is ”counterproductive to the healing process.”

The Anti-Defamation League said it rejects any opposition to the center based on bigotry and acknowledged that the group behind the plan, the Cordoba Initiative, has the legal right to build at the site. But the ADL said ”some legitimate questions have been raised” about funding and possible ties with ”groups whose ideologies stand in contradiction to our shared values.”

”Ultimately this is not a question of rights, but a question of what is right,” the ADL said in a statement. ”In our judgment, building an Islamic center in the shadow of the World Trade Center will cause some victims more pain — unnecessarily — and that is not right.”

Please read this carefully.  The Cordoba Initiative has an unquestionable legal right to build at the site.  But apparently, that’s not the end of the discussion.  The right to build the mosque is not in question.  No. Something trumps that.  ADL tells us that they have questions about funding, as if that were ADL’s business, and then there’s this magnificent urban planning point.  Apparently, there is theoretical penumbra around former World Trade Center site in which all of the construction should not be “counterproductive to the healing process.”  If the mosque were further away, say 2 more blocks, maybe it wouldn’t impinge on the theoretical penumbra, but as it is now, it’s too close for comfort.  What shameful rubbish.

The big question is what the construction of a mosque has to do with 9/11.  On any level.  Islam is a religion of peace. The people who brought down the World Trade Towers were fundamentalist lunatics.  Nobody is saying that the proposed mosque has anything at al to do with those people.  Or their views.  Or supported the events.  Or is subversive.  No.  There is no arguable connection.  The connection, if you want to call it that, is just this: the hijackers were muslim, and the mosque is muslim.  You see how that prevents healing?  I don’t.  You can put all of the whip cream you want on that steaming pile, and it will never, never, never be a dessert.

The Cordoba Institute says it will be transparent and will deal with the Attorney General’s Charity Bureau about its funding.  Great. That ought to be the end of that thread of the argument. We can expecct the Attorney General to check the funding. What remains, I am saddened to say, is the bigotry.

And whenever there is collossal bigotry,  people line up to justify it.  The  Community Board, the Mayor, and many others recognize that there is no legal, justifiable basis in a city to say that the Mosque that can legally be built on this site shouldn’t be built.  It has a right to be built.  Who can abrogate that right?  Nobody.  And whose against it?  Can you guess?  Newt Gingrich, Sarah Palin, and a caterwauling mass of rightwing nut jobs. And joining them, to my shock and my great horror, ADL.

ADL’s position has horrified others as well:

The ADL, one of the most prominent groups in American Jewish life, is known for its advocacy of religious freedom and interfaith harmony. Its position on the mosque was met with shock and condemnation by several groups.

Jeremy Ben-Ami, head of J Street, the dovish, pro-Israel group, said he would hope ADL would be at the forefront in defending the freedom of a religious minority, ”rather than casting aspersions on its funders and giving in to the fear-mongerers.”

The Rev. Welton Gaddy, head of the Interfaith Alliance, a Washington advocacy group, said he read the ADL statement ”with a great deal of sorrow.”

”As an organization that for nearly 100 years has helped set the standard for fighting defamation and securing justice and fair treatment for all, it is disappointing to see the ADL arrived at this conclusion,” Gaddy said.

The Council on American-Islamic Relations urged ADL to retract its statement.

You can add my voice to those.  The ADL is seriously and embarrassingly off course here.  It needs to retract its statements.  But that doesn’t matter to ADL’s National Director:

Abraham Foxman, national director of the ADL, defended his position.

In a phone interview, he compared the idea of a mosque near ground zero to the Roman Catholic Carmelite nuns who had a convent at the Auschwitz death camp. In 1993, Pope John Paul II responded to Jewish protests by ordering the nuns to move.

”We’re saying if your purpose is to heal differences, it’s the wrong place,” Foxman said of the mosque. ”Don’t do it. The symbolism is wrong.”

Read that again.  It makes no sense whatsoever.  If your purpose is to heal differences, you don’t jump into disputes on the wrong side, when religious freedom is at stake, and you don’t attempt to justify your position by incendiarily invoking the Nazis.  That is just entirely too much.  And it show how terribly wrong ADL’s position is.


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simulposted at The Dream Antilles and docuDharma and dailyKos

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