Saturday, December 31, 2011

Nina Burleigh: Women and Human Rights

Last night I had an interesting exchange with a smart NYC high school senior, who challenged me on the notion: if you think women don't mind walking around with black blankets over their heads in 120 degree heat, then you need to reexamine whether you think women are like you, that is, human.

I said the treatment of women is a human rights issue, not a "cultural" issue.

And this very smart young man called me out on this.

He said, well, do you think a global "monoculture" is a good idea? And should we "police" these cultures?

I had never heard the term "monoculture" before, must be a concept that entered the high school history/sociology classes since I graduated, but I get it: What would the world be like if every culture in the world was the same? Like eradicating fermented yak milk, blowfish sushi, Peruvian flautists, colorful Indonesian textiles, Irish jigs, Ukrainian folk dance... .

What would be the point of bringing cameras on adventure travel, right?

I also never suggested "policing" to bring universal human rights to women. I'm just suggesting that women have them.

Because we all DO agree that if a society practices slavery, or the systematic discrimination against (or murder of) an ethnic group that includes men, then that behavior is best discouraged, if not policed. No one has suggested recently that the eradication of those behaviors has produced a monoculture.

Would global cultures be less vibrant if women had universal human rights?

Are we losing cultural value when societies stop forcing women to cover their flesh for fear of inciting male lust and God's displeasure? Do we risk becoming a monoculture when women are no longer being denied education, the right to drive, the right to choose when and whom to have sex with or marry, the right to divorce, and run for public office?

I am almost getting why our right wing idiots complain about morally relativistic teacher/philosophers. Almost, but... not yet. I believe in tolerance and debate and not making judgments about people who are different than I am.

But I do think that kid was wrong.

Read more on women and religious oppression at Under the Black Blanket.

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Follow Nina Burleigh on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ninaburleigh

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/nina-burleigh/global-womens-rights_b_1173644.html

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Friday, December 30, 2011

MLS player Adu to train with Spanish club

updated 9:04 a.m. ET Dec. 29, 2011

MADRID - Major League Soccer player Freddy Adu will train with Rayo Vallecano and may join the Spanish club.

Rayo sporting director Felipe Minambres says Adu will train with Rayo for 12 days starting on Friday.

Adu, who has played for the Philadelphia Union and U.S. national team, confirmed his trip to Spain on his Twitter account.

The 22-year-old Adu played for the Union last season but was among the players left unprotected last month in the MLS expansion draft for the Montreal Impact.

Adu previously played for European clubs Benfica, Monaco, Aris and Cauykur Rizespor of Turkey.

He won't be the first American player to sign with Rayo. Former U.S. goalkeeper Kasey Keller previously played for the topflight club.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Lebanon rallying around team

Ali al-Saadi gave Lebanon a 1-0 lead against South Korea and the sectarian chants echoing across Cite Sportive stadium suddenly gave way to a more hopeful cheer.

Off-field woes

Football in 2011 was dominated by events off the field rather than on it.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/45814743/ns/sports-soccer/

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Intel Thunderbolt may reach Windows in April with Apple help

Thunderbolt said ready to go for April

Intel's Thunderbolt for Windows PCs could arrive in April, purported insiders stated Monday night. Apple is reportedly helping Intel adopt the standard the two co-created, Digitimes heard. PC builders ASUS and Sony, as well as mainboard builders ASRock and Gigabyte, are expected to be part of the first wave.

Apple is believed to have achieved Intel's hoped-for goal of building an ecosystem of demand and accessories. The expansion would help overcome some of the trepidation over the standard, where a Thunderbolt controller chip is believed to cost over $20 where USB 3.0 is much cheaper.

Thunderbolt was developed partly at Apple's prompting to develop a very high-speed yet small cable that could also merge the display signal. Although few devices exist that use it, it has given Apple an advantage where even a MacBook Air can use a multi-disk external RAID drive as quickly as it could if it were an internal drive. USB 3.0 is less expensive but has half the effective bandwidth and isn't officially meant to drive more than data, although it can be used for video.

An April target may be a clue as to when the first Ivy Bridge chips are in the market in earnest. Intel rarely launches chipsets and their processors separately.

By Electronista Staff

Source: http://feeds.electronista.com/click.phdo?i=b4357746363cbb8a4a6fe2117b710a31

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Struggle of Israel?s Channel 10 Tied to Political Wars - New York Times : International

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NewsXS_Middle_East/~3/skZVwb1wyM4/rss

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Back in campaign mode, presidential hopefuls focus (AP)

DES MOINES, Iowa ? Republicans in search of their party's presidential nomination are returning to campaign mode after a brief Christmas respite, with Rick Santorum planning a hunting trip with conservatives in Iowa and Mitt Romney phoning supporters.

With just a week until Iowa holds its leadoff caucuses and many still undecided, the final push ahead of the Jan. 3 contests was heading into a critical time. Campaigns planned new television ads and phone calls to persuade holdout caucusgoers still weighing their options.

Romney, who kept this state at arm's length for most of the year, seemed to increase his efforts in Iowa as polls found him in a stronger position. He planned to talk with supporters in a series of telephone calls here and to New Hampshire and Florida on Monday between working on a speech that aides described as his final pitch to Iowans. Romney planned to deliver that speech Tuesday evening and then set out on a bus tour of Iowa.

However, he was to share the highways with Rep. Michele Bachmann, Texas Gov. Rick Perry and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich. All scheduled bus tours to start then, too.

Each is running out of time and looking to derail Rep. Ron Paul, the Texas congressman who seems to have the most sophisticated network of volunteers ready to organize ahead of the caucuses. Paul was to return to Iowa this week to meet with supporters he has kept in touch with since his unsuccessful run in 2008.

Others, too, were ready to turn on their own political machines and had fresh ads ready to air.

Gingrich, who last week criticized the negative tone of the campaign, was ready to directly challenge Romney on the economy, an issue Romney has made central to his campaign. Gingrich's standing in public and private polls has slipped as he faced unrelenting criticism from the candidates and their allies.

Gingrich was expected to use clips from Romney's previous campaigns distancing himself from President Ronald Reagan and pitch Gingrich's economic plan as "Reaganomics 2.0." Gingrich also was expected to compare Romney's tax plan with his own.

Santorum, meanwhile, planned to announce support from another wave of Iowa conservatives. He scheduled a pheasant hunting trip in Adel for Monday afternoon. While he trails in polls and has not spent significant money on ads, Santorum is hoping his nonstop courtship of Iowans yields a late surge. He visited all 99 of Iowa's counties during the summer ? an accomplishment Bachmann has feverishly tried to replicate.

Bachmann, a congresswoman from Minnesota, last week darted through small towns, reminding voters that Santorum lost his 2006 re-election bid in a blowout and that Paul's foreign policy views were outside the party's orthodoxy. Looking to recapture voters' interest, her plan was to return to hand-to-hand campaigning on Tuesday.

Perry, too, was looking to keep up his message: his rivals are insiders unable to change Washington. He planned to return to his tour bus on Tuesday.

Meanwhile, former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman kept his focus on New Hampshire. Early in the campaign, he said he would not compete in Iowa and instead make his start in New Hampshire, which comes second on the nominating calendar.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111226/ap_on_el_ge/us_gop_campaign

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New iPad User? Some Starter Tips, Tricks, and iPad App Recommendations ? iPad Insight

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Welcome to any new iPad users visiting here today. If you?ve just received a new iPad or iPad 2 as a holiday gift, congratulations ? it really is a superb device. The iPad is wonderfully easy to use and there are excellent apps to help you do just about anything you want to do with it. From productivity to iPad newspapers and magazines to gaming and fun, it?s? great device for any of these things.

Here are a few of our articles that I hope will help you get going and get the most out of your iPad:

iPad Basics

Some useful tips for those of you who are just getting to know the iPad.

How To Save Images in the iPad Safari and Mail Apps?

Yes, You Can Print from the iPad

iPad Basics: How To Attach a Photo to an Email

How-To: Use The iPad as a Digital Picture Frame

iPad and iOS 5 Basics ? How To Split the Keyboard

How To Use Folders on iPad ? Video Demo

iPad Tips & Tricks

Some of the best tips and tricks for the iPad.

How To Make AirPrint Work with Just About Any Printer

Potential Quick Fixes When Your iPad Won?t Connect to Your Wifi Network

How To Setup Wi-Fi Sync for the iPad in iOS 5

How To Work with PDFs on the iPad

Good to Know: Apple?s Support Doc on How to Clean iPads and Apple Products

How To Get Videos from iPhone to iPad Without iTunes Sync

For more great tips see our full iPad Tips & Tricks section.

Great Free iPad Apps

Who doesn?t like free right? Happily there are lots of excellent iPad apps that are free. We feature one of them every Saturday in our Best Free iPad App of the Week post. Here are all of our picks for best free iPad apps.

Best iPad Apps

Apps are a huge part of what makes the iPad such an amazing device. There are outstanding iPad apps covering an incredibly broad range. Here are our guides to the very best of iPad apps:

Best iPad Apps of 2011

Best iPad Apps of 2010

Your New Favorite Source of iPad Information

I hope that?s what iPad Insight will soon become. If you enjoy our iPad app reviews, iPad accessory reviews, and iPad tips I hope you?ll want to follow the site closely. Here are some of the best ways to do that:

Subscribe to our RSS feed:

rss2? Our RSS feed is: http://feeds.feedburner.com/JustAnotherIpadBlog. You can just click on the handsome little button for it at the top of our right sidebar and add it to your favorite RSS reader app so you never miss any of our great app reviews, iPad tips, or iPad accessory reviews.

Check out (and Like) our Facebook page:

facebook2? Our Facebook page is here: http://on.fb.me/jtjHbX. We post article links there as well, along with photos and screencaps of latest apps and accessories reviewed. We also run some spur-of-moment giveaway contests on the Facebook page. You can also like our Facebook page via the widget near the bottom of our right sidebar.

Follow us on Twitter:

twitter2? Our Twitter account is @iPadInsightBlog ? follow us for links to latest articles and occasional NBA and general sports trash talking and such, or gloating about how great a town Austin is.

Or ?

You can also add us to your iPad or iPhone home screens, for quick single tap access, by just browsing to iPad Insight, tapping the standard Share button, and tapping on the ?Add to Home Screen? item.

GPlusIconFor those of you who are on Google+, we now have an iPad Insight page, which you? can find here: https://plus.google.com/105395290617380279146

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I hope you?re enjoying the heck out of your iPad.

Source: http://ipadinsight.com/ipad-tips-tricks/new-ipad-user-some-starter-tips-tricks-and-ipad-app-recommendations

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Six Pets Die In Stockton Apartment Fire ? CBS Sacramento

STOCKTON (CBS13) ? Stockton fire fighters are trying to find out the cause of a fire in a Stockton apartment that killed several pets.

Flames broke out this morning in the top floor of the apartment complex on West Poplar Street at Commerce Street.

Fire investigators say the fire started in the back part of the unit, possibly in a bathroom or bedroom.

Five dogs and a cat were killed.

Source: http://sacramento.cbslocal.com/2011/12/26/six-pets-die-in-stockton-apartment-fire/

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Veterans helped guide Iraq war from Washington, D.C.

WASHINGTON - Tanya Bradsher felt a rush of relief each morning when the updates came in letting her know how many U.S. troops were left in Iraq.

Each time the number ticked closer to zero, it meant more of her fellow veterans had made their final trip out of Iraq safely. Her biggest fear was that the remaining U.S. troops would get hit on their way out. She would hold her breath and think, "Today is a good day; tomorrow hopefully will be a good day."

Dec. 18 was the day Bradsher, a lieutenant colonel in the Army, had been waiting for. The last of all U.S. troops in Iraq safely crossed the border into Kuwait, bringing the divisive war to a close.

Bradsher, a lieutenant colonel in the Army, witnessed the war's final days from a unique vantage point. The soft-spoken mother of three is one of several Iraq war veterans now working in the White House, helping President Obama bring the war that defined them to a close.

In moving from the battlefield to the White House, they have given the war a face and voice in the West Wing, serving as a constant reminder that, for a small percentage of Americans, the long, divisive conflict has been a matter of life and death.

"It's a bit of a gut check on everything you say and do about the policy of the war and the politics of it," said Ben Rhodes, deputy national security adviser for strategic communication.

Mindful of the politics of war, some of the veterans who now work for Obama are careful not to draw a direct connection between the president's positions on the Iraq war and their decision to work for his administration.

Still, Steve Miska, Obama's director of Iraq policy, said he had "an overwhelming sense of relief" when the president announced that the war was coming to a close. An Army lieutenant colonel and father of two, Miska did three tours of duty in Iraq, including a 16-month stint that spanned the height of the sectarian violence there.

"My goal was that my generation finish this war so that my son, who is thinking about what he's going to do in college in two years, would not have to complete it with his generation," he said.

Mixed emotions

The military's departure from Iraq has stirred mixed emotions for the veterans in the White House. It's surreal, they say. Bittersweet. A moment of contemplation.

"You go back to your personal recollections of people maybe you know that were lost in battle, to their families, and to the guys who came back very much changed. And I think most people do come back changed in some way," said Matt Flavin, who joined the military after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and served in Iraq from 2005 to 2006, working in Baghdad and Ramadi.

Flavin now is director of the White House office on veterans and wounded warrior policy, focusing on how the administration can assist the veterans returning home from Iraq, as well as Afghanistan.

With no military background himself, Obama has often sought the guidance of veterans like Flavin, Miska and Bradsher, who is a spokeswoman for the National Security Council. Before delivering a speech Dec. 14 at Fort Bragg, Obama had the Iraq veterans review the remarks he planned to deliver to service members and their families.

Darienne Page, an Army veteran now working in the White House on veterans and wounded warrior outreach, traveled with the president to Fort Bragg. The war's finality hit home for her on that trip, she said, when she met a young service member who asked her to thank the president for allowing him to spend his first Christmas home with his family in four years.

"To be able to give that to someone and to know that you're responsible for making sure that this guy is home for the holidays, there honestly is no better feeling in the world," said Page, who deployed to Iraq in 2003.

Like the president, the Iraq veterans in the White House do not speak about the war as a mission accomplished. They are candid about the challenges Iraq still faces, yet proud of the work they did there: clearing insurgent strongholds, helping bring down the levels of violence, and restoring basic services for the Iraqi people.

Each veteran has a vision for Iraq's future: A stable, democratic government. Safe and vibrant cities. A place where they could one day return with their families to visit their Iraqi friends.

But for now, with all U.S. troops having left Iraq, their thoughts are increasingly with the families of the nearly 4,500 Americans killed in war and making sure they know a simple truth.

"Their sacrifices really were worth it," Bradsher said.

Source: http://fayobserver.com/articles/2011/12/25/1145476

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Ice Cream Sandwich no llegar? al Galaxy S ni a la Galaxy Tab