Monthly Archives: June 2009

Defining America’s Breakfast Cereals

Cheerios (General Mills)

Some people in this world have too much time on their hands… How advertisers present their products to consumers has led one of the most popular cereals in America to be scrutinized by the Food and Drug Administration…The report from Source Metro Networks…

Is Cheerios a drug?  While the Food and Drug Administration seems to think so, most Americans don’t.  A new poll shows that 87-percent disagree with the FDA’s recent remarks that the cereal should be regulated as a prescription drug because of the health claims in its advertising.  Just four-percent agree.  Consumers also don’t want Cheerios leaving the grocery store.  More than 90-percent don’t think it should be pulled from the supermarket and sold exclusively in pharmacies because the brand is promoted as an aid in reducing cholesterol.  While 35-percent note they’re more likely to buy a product because of its advertised health benefits, 45-percent say such marketing has no influence on their purchasing decisions.

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Palace Seized During Coup in Honduras

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More upheaval in Central America… We don’t hear much from many Latin American nations these days. With the exception of Cuba and Venezuela, most of the countries south of us simply don’t get much air time. Until this weekend. As far as capital cities go, Tegucigalpa isn’t much of a household word unless you work for the State Department. The weekend coup changed all that, as we read in this report from the Washington Post

 By William Booth and Juan Forero
Washington Post Foreign Service
Monday, June 29, 2009

MEXICO CITY, June 28 — Soldiers stormed the presidential palace in the Honduran capital of Tegucigalpa at dawn Sunday and forced President Manuel Zelaya into exile in Costa Rica. The military-led ouster sparked a regional crisis that thrusts the impoverished banana-growing country onto the international stage and revives painful memories of coup-fueled turmoil in Latin America.

The coup was condemned throughout the Americas. President Obama joined other regional leaders in calling for a peaceful return of Zelaya to office.

But the Honduran National Congress defiantly announced that Zelaya was out, and its members named congressional leader Roberto Micheletti the new president on Sunday afternoon.

The Honduran Supreme Court also supported the removal of Zelaya, saying that the military was acting in defense of democracy.

Zelaya, a leftist ally of Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez, told reporters that he was woken by shouts and gunshots early Sunday. While still in his pajamas, the Honduran president said, soldiers took him to a waiting air force plane that flew him to Costa Rica. The coup was mostly peaceful, though tanks and soldiers occupied streets in Tegucigalpa.

Senior administration officials in Washington said Sunday that U.S. diplomats had been negotiating behind the scenes to stop the coup. “We have worked hard to avoid this,” a senior Obama official said in a background briefing with reporters. “This has been brewing a long time.”

U.S. officials said the Honduran military, which has traditionally maintained close ties with the United States, had broken off contact with U.S. diplomats after the coup. Obama is due to meet Álvaro Uribe, president of regional power Colombia, at the White House on Monday, and Honduras is now likely to be high on the agenda.

Military coups in Latin America have become rare, but Argentine President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner said Sunday’s events in Honduras reminded her of “the worst years in Latin America’s history,” when coups were common and often led to cycles of violence. The coup draws the Obama administration into its first real diplomatic test in the hemisphere, in a country where people have complex feelings toward the United States. The Reagan administration’s contra war against the Sandinista revolution in Nicaragua was fought from Honduras, one of the poorest countries in Latin America, whose fragile economy is supported by remittances from Hondurans living in the United States.

Zelaya was removed from office as Hondurans prepared to vote Sunday in a nonbinding referendum asking them whether they would support a constituent assembly to rewrite the constitution. Zelaya’s critics said he wanted to use the referendum to open the door to reelection after his term ends in January 2010, an assertion that he denied.

The referendum — which U.S. officials described as more of a “survey” than a true vote — was condemned by broad swaths of Honduran society as an obvious power grab. The Honduran Supreme Court called the referendum unconstitutional, and leaders of Zelaya’s own party denounced the measure.

The scene in Tegucigalpa on Sunday was chaotic, and it was unclear what would happen next. As Zelaya condemned his forced ouster at a news conference in Costa Rica, the Honduran Congress voted to accept what it claimed was Zelaya’s resignation letter.

Zelaya denied that he had signed such a letter. A senior U.S. official said, “It is hard to take that letter seriously given how President Zelaya was removed from office.”

Zelaya said he was still the legal leader. He said he would attend a meeting of regional leaders Monday in Nicaragua to seek a return to office. But in taking the oath of office as president, Micheletti characterized Zelaya’s removal as a patriotic measure designed to restore democracy.

“I did not get here through the ignominy of a coup d’etat,” Micheletti told lawmakers after taking the oath of office. “I give thanks to God for this beautiful opportunity.”

In Venezuela, Chávez, speaking on national television, called the overthrow the work of “the bourgeoisie and the extreme right.” He said Venezuela would “guarantee” that its close ally Zelaya would be returned to power.

“This is a coup against all of us,” Chávez said. “We have to do everything to stop it.”

Late Sunday, Chávez put his troops on alert and said he would respond militarily if his envoy to Honduras was harmed. Chávez said Honduran soldiers took away the Cuban ambassador and left the Venezuelan ambassador on the side of a road after beating him during the army’s coup. A senior U.S. official sought to play down the potential for military action by outsiders, saying, “We don’t believe Venezuela is planning on sending any troops.”

The United States maintains troops at the Soto Cano Air Base in Honduras to assist the Honduran military and police with anti-drug interdiction and other missions.

“This gives Chávez the high moral ground to go on with his narrative about right-wing oligarchs who don’t tolerate leftist governments,” said Michael Shifter, an analyst at the Inter-American Dialogue in Washington. “There’s nobody better at seizing these moments than Chávez.”

In Washington, Obama said he was “deeply concerned by reports coming out of Honduras regarding the detention and expulsion of President Mel Zelaya.”

A senior administration official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the United States would work alongside the Organization of American States to restore Zelaya, and the official predicted that the organizers of the coup would find themselves isolated and facing stiff pressure to allow Zelaya’s return.

But a senior Honduran official, also speaking on the condition of anonymity, said he did not foresee the new government backing down. He said the country’s Congress had appointed a commission Thursday evening to investigate whether the president’s referendum was in line with the constitution. The commission reported back Sunday afternoon that the president had violated the constitution, and the Congress voted to remove him. That procedure is “within the constitution,” said the senior official — although the coup that occurred hours earlier was not, he acknowledged.

“The decision was adopted by unanimity in the Congress. That means all of the political parties. It has been endorsed by sectors that represent a wide array of Hondurans — the Episcopal Church, the Catholic Church. And well, of course, the armed forces,” he said.

“The difficult part will be for the international community to see things as the Honduran people see them,” the official said.

Across Latin America, governments used strong language to condemn the overthrow and demand that Zelaya be returned to office. Those governments included Bolivia, Nicaragua and Ecuador — all close allies of Honduras in a leftist alliance of nations led by Chávez. Countries such as Costa Rica, which has close ties to the United States, also condemned the coup. Costa Rica’s president, Oscar Arias, spoke alongside Zelaya at a news conference in San Jose, the capital.

“This is a lamentable step back, not just for Honduran democracy but for Central American democracy and throughout the hemisphere,” Arias said.

In an interview with Spain’s El País newspaper before his ouster, Zelaya said a planned attempt to remove him from power had been blocked by the United States.

“Everything was in place for the coup, and if the U.S. Embassy had approved it, it would have happened. But they did not. I’m only still here in office thanks to the United States,” he said in the interview, which was published Sunday.

A senior administration official would not confirm that account, but said, “We were very clear . . . that any resolution of the political conflict in Honduras had to be democratic and constitutional.”

Forero reported from Caracas, Venezuela. Staff writer Mary Beth Sheridan in Washington contributed to this report.

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Mysteries on a Distant Moon

saturn

Legendary science fiction writers have speculated for years through their writings. Isaac  Asimov,  Clifford D. Simak, Arthur C. Clarke,  Frank Herbert and many others have captivated readers for years. Countless movies have been filmed that focused on life on other planets. Now it seems that Saturn, one of the largest planets in the solar system, has some interesting activity occurring on one of its moons… The story from Wired Science

By Alexis Madrigal

The plumes of gas and ice shooting from the south pole of the Saturnian moon Enceladus contain sodium salts, which is the best evidence so far that the satellite harbors a liquid water ocean.

NASA’s Cassini probe observed the salts in Saturn’s outermost ring, which is believed to be composed of material ejected from Enceladus. That news, published Wednesday in Nature, is sure to excite life-hunters hoping to find extraterrestrial microbes within our solar system.

“Those salty grains provide our current best smoking (or steaming) gun pointing to present-day liquid water near the surface of Enceladus,” space scientist John Spencer of the Southwest Research Institute, who was not involved with the research, wrote in an essay accompanying the findings.

Since 2005, when Cassini spotted plumes jetting out from Enceladus, the moon has become one of the hottest topics in solar-system science. In 2008, water vapor was discovered in the plumes, and Enceladus joined Mars and Jupiter’s moon Europa as the likeliest places to find liquid water — and therefore life as we know it — outside Earth. Though the planet is covered with ice and too far from the sun to derive much warmth, the gravitational field in the Saturnian system is believed to warm the moon by a frictional process called tidal heating, possibly allowing it to maintain a deep liquid water reservoir.

But the presence of the hypothesized subsurface ocean isn’t as simple to confirm as it sounds.

A second study in Nature Wednesday that looked at the same plumes from ground based telescopes found no evidence of sodium vapor. That rules out the possibility that the plumes are just near-surface ocean water blasted out into space, complicating our understanding of the moon’s internal dynamics.

“I’m still a little skeptical,” said astronomer Nick Schneider of the University of Colorado, Boulder, lead author of the second study. “There are other ways to explain the results.”

Taking both papers together, we now know that an intermediate step is necessary to explain the plume, if liquid water is indeed present under the tiny planet’s icy glaze. Scientists had hoped that water from a deep ocean was simply making its way up through cracks in the ice towards the surface, where it was erupted into space.

“That scenario is out according to both of our results,” Schneider said.

Explaining both results requires some sort of distillation process that would give you pure vapor and then some salt pieces that are carried along during eruptions.

“Our picture of its subsurface must now be expanded to include the possibility of misty ice caverns floored with pools and channels of salty water,” Spencer wrote. “What else may lurk in those salty pools, if they exist, remains to be seen.”

There are other explanations of Enceladus’ behavior. For example, Susan Kieffer of the University of Illinois said the simplest explanation of the planet’s internal structure doesn’t require water at all. The presence of clathrates, ice-like lattice structures that can trap gases, could just as easily explain what we see on the moon.

“We proposed that the crust of Enceladus was composed of two layers: One, a surface layer of ice with carbon dioxide, and two, starting at no more than 3 kilometers, a mixture of icy clathrates that overlaid the core,” Kieffer said. “Gas is released from the clathrates by the earthquakes associated with the tectonic activity at the south pole. In that way, we were able to account quantitiatvely for the gases observed in the plume. ”

Support among scientists for the ocean hypothesis has gathered a lot of steam from the range of Cassini observations.

Fortunately, we might be able to settle the disputes with further observations. Cassini will be flying by the moon at least four more times by mid-2010, and could make as many as 12 fly-bys before 2015, if NASA extends its mission.

Unfortunately, NASA has no current plans to send a probe crashing through the ice anytime soon. Enceladus lost out in the most recent round of mission planning to the Jovian moon, Europa, to be NASA’s marquee outer planet mission.

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New Jobs Coming to Jackson

socialsecurityIn spite of the heat, it is always great to return home to Tennessee… We work throughout the year dreaming of vacations, of getting to some really cool place with sandy beaches and appealing things to do and see. That’s all very well and good. At the end of it all, you’re ready to return home, sleep in your own bed, take out your own trash, watch your own TV in your favorite armchair, and appreciate the wonders of your own state, your own community and your own home.

 

Jobs are coming to Jackson in a big way… Close to 175 Social Security jobs are headed to Tennessee, as we see in the following news release from Social Security Online…

 

Social Security to Open New Teleservice Center

in Jackson, Tennessee

Center Will Help Agency Handle Calls from Boomer Wave

Michael J. Astrue, Commissioner of Social Security, today announced that the agency plans to open a new teleservice center (TSC) in Jackson, Tennessee, which will be the first new call center opened by Social Security in more than a decade. The Jackson TSC will employ about 175 people once it is fully operational.

“Social Security is facing an unprecedented wave of people needing our services as baby boomers retire,” Commissioner Astrue said. “Response times have been improving significantly, and the new Jackson TSC will help us provide even more timely service to the 60 million Americans who call our toll-free number each year.”

Social Security currently has 35 TSCs operating in locations all across the country. All TSCs take calls from throughout the U.S. and provide service via Social Security’s national toll-free number, 1-800-772-1213 (TTY 1-800-325-0778). Live service is available from 7:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m. Monday through Friday. Automated service is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

More than two-thirds of the calls to Social Security’s 800 number come from the Eastern and Central time zones. Jackson was chosen as the site for a new TSC because of the additional capacity needed in these time zones to handle calls. In addition, with four colleges and universities in Jackson and several others within a short commute, the Jackson area will provide Social Security with a highly-skilled and well-educated workforce.

“Social Security consistently ranks as one of the top federal agencies to work for,” noted Commissioner Astrue. “With President Obama having called a new generation of Americans to public service, I am confident that Social Security will become the employer of choice in Jackson.”

Social Security will be working closely with the General Services Administration to facilitate the process for opening the new TSC. The process provides for open competition and normally takes 18 to 24 months to complete.

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End of an Era

rip III

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Getting Tough on Tobacco

tobacco

One of the more interesting elements of health and politics happens to be tobacco. This product means big bucks for the states where tobacco is grown, and even bigger bucks for the companies which produce cigarettes…

New legislation could become law that could very well affect the tobacco industry, as we see inthis article from UKmedix News…

Written by Richard Simmons | Wednesday, 03 June 2009 |

“as many as 4,000 children every single day are ensnared by tobacco”

President Barack Obama has given his approval to an American Senate bill which would give new powers to the Food & Drug Administration to control the tobacco industry in America. The new rules would allow them to step in and regulate the advertising, manufacturing and even the packaging of all cigarettes and tobacco products which would give them an unprecedented amount of control. The argument is that since tobacco causes so many smoking related illnesses it is only fair that it is properly regulated by the health authorities in America. It is estimated that around 400,000 American people are killed every year as a result of tobacco.

Some of the tobacco companies have even given their backing to the bill and said that they are happy to cooperate, whereas others have said that it is unfair. President Obama is the first American president for some time who has actually admitted that he struggles to keep away from cigarettes and that quitting for him was a big battle. Many other health organisations in America such as the American Cancer Society have given the bill their full support and are hoping that it will be enacted into the laws of America.

The Democratic Senator Christopher Dodd said that as many as 4,000 children every single day are “ensnared by tobacco” and that this bill should help lower the numbers who become addicted and then go on to develop smoking related illnesses which often kill them.

Interestingly the Congressional Budget Office estimated that this new bill could save the American people $900 million over ten years because of the impact that it would have in reducing smoking related health care costs. As Ukmedix News from the evidence we have seen we believe that smoking causes far more financial damage to nations then is usually appreciated.

Smoking is arguably the most addictive habit there is and at Ukmedix News we know that many people need help to quit, but we also know that it is not impossible to do it.

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No Network Like a Social Network

networking

Surprise, surprise. The numbers are in and they are, simply put, extraordinary… Americans are joining social networks in droves. If you think blogging is big, look at the following numbers from cnet news…

The explosion in social networking may be even greater than imagined. The time that people in the U.S. spend on social network sites is up 83 percent from a year ago, according to a report from market researcher Nielsen Online. Facebook enjoys the top spot among social networks, with people having spent a total of 13.9 billion minutes on the service in April of this year, 700 percent more than in April 2008, Nielsen said. Minutes spent on Twitter soared a whopping 3,712 percent to almost 300 million, versus around 7.8 million from the same month a year ago. Former top dog MySpace watched its usage drop nearly one-third to around 4.9 billion minutes, from 7.2 billion in April 2008. MySpace still scored the number one spot for online video among the top 10, thanks to its users streaming more than 120 million videos from the site for April of this year.

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“We have seen some major growth in Facebook during the past year, and a subsequent decline in MySpace,” Jon Gibs, Nielsen’s vice president for online media and agency insights, said in a statement. “Twitter has come on the scene in an explosive way perhaps changing the outlook for the entire space.” But the report also offered a cautionary note: the social networking user can be fickle, quickly bouncing from one service to another. “Remember Friendster? Remember when MySpace was an unbeatable force? Neither Facebook nor Twitter are immune,” said Gibs. “Consumers have shown that they are willing to pick up their networks and move them to another platform, seemingly at a moment’s notice.” Despite its growth and popularity, Twitter may be especially vulnerable to users who don’t stick around. Another Nielsen report from April found that 60 percent of Twitter users–dubbed Twitter Quitters by the media–abandon their tweets after only one month of use. Only about 30 percent of users on MySpace and Facebook jump ship. Nielsen Online, part of the Nielsen Company, measures consumer use of online and mobile services and other related media.

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Clinging to Hope

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Bits and pieces are turning up off the coast of Brazil as the search continues for Flight AF 447 that disappeared on Tuesday. Here’s the latest from the BBC…

Brazilian aircraft searching for an Air France jet which went missing with 228 people aboard in an Atlantic storm have spotted debris on the ocean.

Some oil, a plane seat and other items were sighted 650km (400 miles) north-east of Brazil’s Fernando de Noronha island, the Brazilian air force said. The find can only be confirmed once the items are retrieved and the first boat is not due to arrive until Wednesday. The jet was heading from Brazil to Paris when it vanished early on Monday. While it has yet to be confirmed that the debris is from the Airbus, it was spotted in a region of the ocean consistent with its flight path, the BBC’s Adam Mynott reports from Charles de Gaulle airport in Paris. Accident investigators need to recover material from Flight AF 447 and, crucially, the flight and cockpit voice recorders if they are to establish how it fell into the sea, our correspondent says. Two Lufthansa jets, which were in the same area as the Air France plane half an hour before it vanished, may provide clues as to what happened, the UN weather agency says.

Mini-subs

Plane crews from Brazil, France and other countries had narrowed their search to a zone half-way between Brazil and west Africa, hoping to pick up signals from the Airbus’s beacons. Brazilian air force spokesman Col Jorge Amaral said a Brazilian plane had picked up radar signals indicating “floating metallic and non-metallic materials” at 0100 Brazilian time (0400 GMT) on Tuesday. At about 0530 Brazilian time, a plane spotted debris in two locations approximately 60km apart. “In this area, they saw an orange buoy, an airplane seat, small white pieces, an airplane turbine as well as oil and kerosene,” Col Amaral told reporters in Rio. “The search is continuing because it’s very little material in relation to the size [of the Airbus A330].” Col Amaral was also quoted by the Associated Press as saying a life jacket had been spotted amid the debris. “The locations where the objects were found are towards the right of the point where the last signal of the plane was emitted,” he said. “That suggests that it might have tried to make a turn, maybe to return to Fernando de Noronha, but that is just a hypothesis.” Searchers now planned to focus their efforts on collecting the debris and trying to identify it, the spokesman said. France is sending a research ship equipped with two mini-submarines to the search area. The mini-subs on the Pourquoi Pas can work at depths of up to 6,000m and the area where the plane disappeared has maximum depths of 4,700m (19,700 ft), French naval experts told AFP news agency. Prime Minister Francois Fillon told the French parliament that the cause of the plane’s loss had still to be established. “Our only certainty is that the plane did not send out any distress call but regular automatic alerts for three minutes indicating the failure of all systems,” he said. Experts remain puzzled that there were no radio reports from the Airbus and they say that such a modern aircraft would have had to suffer multiple traumas to plunge into the sea, our correspondent says.

Lufthansa data

The two Lufthansa aircraft recorded data on prevailing temperatures and winds, the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) said. Because the exact accident site was unknown, it was “extremely difficult to say how close they were”, WMO official Herbert Puempel told Reuters news agency in Geneva. “But the observations will certainly be used by the investigating group,” he added. Most of the missing people are Brazilian or French but they include a total of 32 nationalities. Five Britons and three Irish citizens are among them. Crisis centres have been set up at Charles de Gaulle airport in Paris and Rio de Janeiro’s Tom Jobim international airport. French President Nicolas Sarkozy will attend a religious service for the families and friends of the missing passengers and crew at Notre Dame Cathedral, Paris, on Wednesday.

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The Fight Goes On

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May was a tough month for our armed forces in Iraq.  The men and women in uniform continue their peacekeeping efforts in that nation, and the losses have been higher than normal. The story from the BBC…

US forces in Iraq suffered their highest casualties last month than any month since September 2008.  May saw 24 US soldiers killed, bringing the total number of US casualties since the 2003 invasion to just over 4,300.  US forces are due to be off the streets of cities and main towns by the end of June, while combat operations across Iraq are due to end by September 2010. Civilian deaths from violence in Iraq fell sharply in May, according to Iraqi government figures.  The defence, interior and health ministries gave a civilian toll of 124, down from 355 in April, AFP reported.  US President Barack Obama has pledged to remove all US troops from Iraq, other than those involved in training, by the end of 2011.  Although overall violence is sharply down on the levels of several years ago, the surge in US military deaths in May has left many here feeling uneasy about what will happen as the Americans begin their pullout, the BBC’s Nicholas Witchell in Baghdad says.  But Iraq’s leaders are confident and say Iraqi forces are now quite capable of handling internal security without US support, he says.  In September 2008, 25 US troops were killed – the highest recent toll for US forces. The figures take into account both combat and non-combat deaths.

Story from BBC NEWS:

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