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Can Republican Scott Brown save Planned Parenthood? (The Week)

Forexfloor.org New York – The Massachusetts senator joins two GOP colleagues in opposing a House bid to strip federal funding from the family-planning group House Republicans’ hopes of stripping all federal funding from Planned Parenthood hit a big obstacle Tuesday, and his name is Sen....

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Haiti Abstains (The Nation)

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The Nation — Despite a massive UN mobilization, Haitians stayed away from controversial presidential elections in large numbers on March 20, raising serious questions about the legitimacy of the government poised to take power.

“The majority of the Haitian people did not vote in this election because the majority of people stand behind Lavalas,” said Wilnor Moise, a 29-year-old former bus conductor from Cit

Have scientists cracked the speed at which the universe is expanding? (The Week)

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New York – Yes — and you’ll be pleased to know the magic figure is 73.8 km/sec/megaparsec. So… what the heck does that mean?

Scientists discovered in 1998 that not only is the universe expanding, but it’s expanding at a rate that continues to accelerate. Now, using the brightness of a specific type of star and supernova as a guide, they’ve been able to work out exactly how much faster that expansion happens as the universe grows. Hint — it’s very, very fast indeed. Here, a quick guide:

So, how fast is the universe expanding?
The universe is expanding at 73.8 kilometers per second per 3.26 million light years, give or take 2.4 km, according to a study published in the Astrophysical Journal.

Uh, what?
The expansion of space means that galaxies are speeding away from us. The farther away they get, the faster they move. So, according to this equation, a galaxy 3.26 million light years away — or one megaparsec — is moving away from us at around 73.8 kilometers per second. A galaxy two megaparsecs away would be travelling twice as quickly, and so on.

Japan’s radioactive tap water and 3 other new risks (The Week)

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New York – Japanese officials set off warning bells in Tokyo by reporting that the city’s tap water could imperil infants. And that’s not the only contamination risk sparked by the nuclear crisis

After discovering dangerous levels of radiation in the tap water in Tokyo and surrounding areas, Japanese officials have warned parents to prevent their infants from drinking it — triggering a run on bottled water. Radioactive fallout from the struggling nuclear reactors in Fukushima prefecture has also prompted restrictions on agricultural products in Japan and several other countries. How dangerous are the contamination risks for Japan’s reeling population? Here, a brief guide:

1. Tap water
Tokyo’s water officials said Wednesday that they’d found dangerous levels of radioactive iodine-131 — 210 becquerels per liter, to be precise — in the city’s drinking water. Although levels up to 300 becquerels per liter are considered safe for adult consumption, anything over 100 becquerels is a risk for babies. Officials pledged to deliver bottled water to the 80,000 homes with kids under age 1, but people in Tokyo and surrounding areas didn’t wait around, emptying store shelves of bottled water. Though iodine levels had dipped back to 79 becquerels by Thursday, city officials said that “continued monitoring of the situation is essential.”

2. Vegetables
Dangerous levels of radioactive contamination were found in 11 kinds of vegetables in Fukushima and neighboring Ibaraki prefecture. The Japanese government ordered those two prefectures, plus two more, to halt all shipments of affected vegetables, and restricted sales from six other surrounding prefectures. U.S. health experts agreed that the recorded radiation levels in these green leafy veggies don’t pose much of a health risk, but a Japanese official still warned that people should “refrain from eating them as much as possible, as a precaution.”

3. Milk
Dairy products are perhaps the biggest health concern, especially for Japan’s children. In the U.S., milk that was contaminated by the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear plant disaster — cows ate grass blanketed in radiation, and kids drank the milk — is blamed for at least 6,000 cases of thyroid cancer so far. The U.S., Singapore, and Hong Kong have banned milk products from the four worst-hit prefectures, and Japan has suspended raw milk shipments from Fukushima and Ibaraki. That’s a bit of an overreaction, says U.S. health physicist Peter Caracappa. He estimates you’d have to drink 58,000 glasses of tainted Japanese milk to raise your lifetime cancer risk by 4 percent.

4. Seafood
The high levels of radiation in the seawater around the Fukushima reactors are a big threat to Japan’s multibillion-dollar seafood industry, and several Asian countries have already banned Japanese seafood. Japan insists that no fish are being caught anywhere near the reactors, and that they’re diligently testing seafood, and have found no dangerous levels of radiation. A U.S. sushi chain’s refusal to buy Japanese fish is an “overreaction,” says Edward Flattau at The Huffington Post. But radiation could still increase as it moves up the food chain, from small fish to bigger ones, “insidiously concentrating at the top where we reside.”

Sources: New York Times, Reuters, The National, The Daily Yomiuri, CNN, VPR, Bloomberg, Huffington Post

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Newt Gingrich’s Libya ‘flip-flop’: What was he thinking? (The Week)

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New York – Gingrich hammered President Obama earlier this month for not intervening in Libya. Now he’s griping, “I would not have intervened.” Huh?

Former House speaker and current GOP presidential aspirant Newt Gingrich has done a “complete flip-flop” on his Libya position, says George Zornick at ThinkProgress. On March 7, he told Fox News that, were he president, he would unilaterally “exercise a no-fly zone this evening,” on the grounds that “we think that slaughtering your own citizens is unacceptable.” After President Obama did just that a couple weeks later, Gingrich slammed him, telling NBC, “I would not have intervened,” especially not using “American and European forces.” Gingrich has since tried to explain the discrepancy in a Facebook post. Is this cynical politics at its worst, or just a minor misstep?

He just has loose lips: Gingrich stuck his foot in his mouth, and it’s hardly the first time,

March Madness: By the numbers (The Week)

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New York – The annual NCAA men’s basketball tournament is down to 16 teams. Does anyone in America still have a perfect bracket?

The Sweet 16 round of the NCAA Division I basketball championships starts Thursday, and office workers and bookies nationwide are heavily invested in the outcome of the next round of games. But they aren’t the only ones with a big stake in March Madness. Here’s a look at college basketball’s biggest event (and perhaps the most lucrative of any sport), by the numbers:

$10.8 billion
Price for TV and internet rights to the men’s tournament over 14 years

2024
Year when that new broadcast deal, between CBS and Turner Broadcasting, ends

$620 million
TV ad revenue CBS earned from last year’s men’s tournament

$100 million
Amount that championship game host Houston is expected to garner in direct spending

$100 million
Amount of federal tax revenue lost in 2006 due to Division I colleges’ tax-exempt status

$256,000
What a men’s Division I team earns for each tournament win

$26.7 million
Basketball revenue earned last season by perennial tournament favorite (and reigning national champ) Duke

$75 million
Estimated amount of March Madness wagers placed in Las Vegas

$3 billion
Estimated amount of March Madness wagers placed in U.S. office pools

$1.3 billion
Estimated cost of lost worker productivity during the tournament

5.9 million
Number of brackets submitted to ESPN.com’s Tournament Challenge

0
Number that correctly picked all Sweet 16 men’s teams

1
Number that correctly picked all Sweet 16 women’s teams

7,549
President Obama’s ranking in the ESPN men’s bracket challenge (99.9th percentile)

37,812
Obama’s ranking in the ESPN women’s bracket challenge (81st percentile)

Sources: Yahoo/Investopedia, RealClearMarkets, TV By The Numbers, ESPN, L.A. Times, Forbes

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The new oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico (The Week)

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New York – A miles-long slick contaminates a stretch of beach hit hard by last year’s massive BP spill. Who’s to blame this time?

Almost a year after the massive BP oil disaster began with the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon oil rig, sticky clumps of oil are once again washing up on Louisiana beaches. Fishermen say the slick is several miles long. What caused the latest spill, and how much damage will it do? Here, a brief guide:

How bad is the spill?
Photographed from the air, the slick appears to stretch for miles. Oil has washed up in spots along 30 miles of coastline around Grand Isle, one of areas hit hardest by last year’s spill, the worst offshore oil disaster in history. But this time, the amount of oil in the Gulf appears to be limited. It’s “nowhere near the volume of Deepwater Horizon,” says Coast Guard Rear Adm. Mary Landry, as quoted in The Wall Street Journal, “but still significant enough.”

What caused it?
State agents traced the oil to a Houston company — Anglo-Suisse Offshore Partners. Anglo-Suisse has accepted responsibility, saying it had a small leak in a dormant well about 30 miles southeast of Grand Isle. It has been out of production since Hurricane Katrina, which damaged the platform.

Will it wreak much environmental damage?
Probably not; we’re unlikely to see oil-soaked birds this time around. Anglo-Suisse announced Tuesday night that it had plugged the well for good, so the environmental damage should be limited.

Still, the timing couldn’t be worse for Big Oil, could it?
No, especially when the oil and gas industry is trying to convince regulators, politicians, and the public to let it recommence deep-water drilling in the Gulf of Mexico, its goal now that new regulations are in place to prevent a repeat of BP’s disaster. And if Anglo-Suisse is found to have underreported the size of its spill to avoid government oversight (as some commentators suspect), it could face stiff fines. Also, says Brett Michael Dykes at Yahoo!, now that the company is on record as the responsible party, “it will be on the hook for the full cleanup expenses.”

Sources: Business Insider,

Could Detroit disappear? (The Week)

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New York – The population of the Motor City declined by an astonishing 25 percent in the last decade. Could it vanish altogether?

Any visitor to Detroit can tell the city is wasting away, with vast swaths of empty lots and dilapidated houses across the once-proud metropolis. But new data from the 2010 Census makes it official: The population of the Motor City has plummeted to its lowest point in 100 years. The city lost one-fourth of its residents, about 237,500 people, in the last 10 years — which amounts to about one person every 22 minutes. At this astonishing rate of decline, can Detroit really hope to exist for much longer?

Detroit is doomed: How can Detroit hope to recover from this? asks Douglas A. MacIntyre at 24/7 Wall St. It has almost no tax base, few social services, a threadbare infrastructure, and “no enticements to bring new businesses back to town.” It would cost “tens of billions of dollars” to help Detroit — money that the federal government is unable and unwilling to spend. “The city’s wastelands will never go away.” In time, they may be all that’s left.
“As Detroit dies, solutions disappear”

Detroit can survive as a smaller city: There is a solution to Detroit’s plight, says an editorial in the Detroit Free Press. We must convince residents to move to areas “that still have solid population bases,” produce a “credible plan to abandon the infrastructure in other areas,” and give them up to farmland. We are a “fundamentally changed city” now. Time to start acting like one.
“A smaller, stronger Detroit”

Other cities have recovered from disaster: Look on the bright side, says Laura Parker at AOL News. Although Detroit’s recovery may “face long odds,” cities have bounced back before. Pittsburgh, for example, has reinvented itself as a “healthcare and high technology hub” since the steel industry collapsed. If it can attract a replacement to the depleted auto industry, Detroit could have a future yet.
“Can anything be done to help cities like Detroit?”

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Did God have a wife? (The Week)

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New York – Yes, says a leading theologian. And she may have been edited out of the Bible

All the great religions of the world share the belief that there is but one solitary creator of the universe. But they could be mistaken, says British-based theologian Francesca Stavrakopoulou. “I have come to a colorful and what could seem, to some, uncomfortable conclusion that God had a wife,” she says. Who is God’s companion and where has she been hiding all these years? Here, an instant guide:

Who is God’s wife?
Our creator’s better half is a powerful fertility goddess named Asherah, says Stavrakopoulou. She was once worshipped as the companion of Yahweh, the name of God in the Hebrew bible.

What’s the evidence for this?
The existence of an ancient goddess named Asherah has been acknowledged for some time, but Stavrakopoulou has unearthed fragments of ancient pottery in Syria dating back to around 800 B.C. that refers to “Yahweh and his Asherah” — implying that the two were a “divine pair.” There are also lines in the Bible that refer to worship of the goddess in Yahweh’s temple in Jerusalem. “In the Book of Kings,” says the theologian, “we’re told that a statue of Asherah was housed in the temple and that female temple personnel wove ritual textiles for her.”

If she’s really God’s wife, why isn’t she in the Bible more?
It sounds a bit “Dan Brown-ish,” says The Huffington Post, but “the Bible’s editors may very well have wiped her almost clean from the document.” Several Old Testament experts say the ancient authors who collated the texts either cut out references to Asherah, or translated her name as “Sacred Tree.”

Why would she have been cut out of the Bible?
After the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem in 586 B.C., Israelite leaders emphasized strict monotheism, in order to unite their different tribes. The idea, says theologian Aaron Brody, was that there’s “one god not only for Judah, but for all the nations.” Before that, polytheism — or the worship of a number of gods — was quite common. Several of the ancient Israelite gods, such as El, Baal, and Molek, were similarly cast aside in favor of Yahweh.

Should we be sceptical of Stavrakopoulou’s claims?
The devout may wish to know that the theologian is an atheist who says her research is a “branch of history like any other.” She has also said that Eve should not be blamed for the Fall of Man, as she had been “very unfairly maligned as the troublesome wife.”

Sources: Discovery, Huffington Post, TIME, Daily Mail

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Google Books: Shelved for good? (The Week)

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New York – A judge rejects Google’s settlement with authors and publishers. Is this the end of the search giant’s plan to digitize all the world’s books?

Google’s ambitious plan to digitize every book ever published was thrown into “legal limbo” this week, when a federal judge rejected a $125 million settlement the company had made with authors and publishers. Judge Denny Chin said the plan would give the company a “de facto monopoly” and allow it, in some cases, to profit from books without the permission of their authors. Is this the end of the road for what would have been the world’s largest digital library and bookstore? (Watch a report about the decision)

Yes, and good riddance: Chin’s message is “blunt” and “scathing,” says Nicholas Carr at Rough Type. Google’s “scanner-in-chief” — co-founder and soon-to-be CEO Larry Page — will not be allowed to “unilaterally rewrite copyright rules,” and steal the work of authors. Let’s hope Page learns something from this, and comes up with a plan that respects everyone’s intellectual property rights.
“A message to you, Larry”

Google can still revive the dream: Google Books is dead… but only for now, says David Post at The Volokh Conspiracy. “The project would be an incomprehensibly valuable boon to all of humankind,” so it’s worth reviving. Since most of the publishing industry sided with Google, it’s only books published in the ’30s, ’40s, and ’50s, whose copyright holders can’t be found, that are a real sticking point. Congress could fix that, though, by changing the applicable laws to make these books available to Google, or anyone else willing to give them new life.
“Google books, dead for now”

And a virtual library is a good idea: Yes, no single company should be able to monopolize “access to our common cultural heritage,” says Robert Darnton in The New York Times. But “we should not abandon Google’s dream of making all the books in the world available to everyone.” There must be ways to surmount the “legal, financial, technological,” and political obstacles, and create a comprehensive digital library that truly is public.
“A digital library better than Google’s”

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Can Republican Scott Brown save Planned Parenthood? (The Week)

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New York – The Massachusetts senator joins two GOP colleagues in opposing a House bid to strip federal funding from the family-planning group

House Republicans’ hopes of stripping all federal funding from Planned Parenthood hit a big obstacle Tuesday, and his name is Sen. Scott Brown (R-Mass). The junior senator from Massachusetts (and one-time Tea Party favorite) said the measure simply “goes too far.” Two other GOP senators, Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) and Susan Collins (R-Maine), had already voiced their opposition to the House plan. But does having a male Republican vocally support “family planning and health services for women” effectively save Planned Parenthood’s $330 million from the chopping block?

Brown doomed the defunding bid: There is some “deliberate ambiguity” in Brown’s support for Planned Parenthood, says Allahpundit at Hot Air. But if he’s serious about not voting to defund the family-planning group, House Republicans are in a bind. If they attach the measure to the budget, and three Senate Republicans vote against it, Democrats will “crow about ‘bipartisan opposition’” to defunding. So they’ll have to “let the Senate shoot it down” by itself, and let Brown bear the blame.
“Scott Brown: I oppose defunding Planned Parenthood”

Brown is all talk: The Republican’s words of support of Planned Parenthood would carry more weight if he hadn’t just voted to defund it two weeks ago, says Matthew Yglesias at ThinkProgress. He’s not some House back-bencher, he’s a pivotal senator, with real power. He could have opposed this the first time around. Because “if he’s voting to defund Planned Parenthood, then all the statements in the world don’t mean a thing.”
“Supporters of funding Planned Parenthood shouldn’t vote for bills that defund it”

It’s actually Planned Parenthood that may save Brown: His stand for Planned Parenthood means the Republican “intends to vote in a way that more reflects his state’s electorate,” says Joe Gandelman at The Moderate Voice, “and less the way Tea Party movement Republicans demand him to vote.” The probably means a Tea Party challenger next year, and frequent attacks by Rush Limbaugh. It’s not easy being a Republican in the blue Bay State — just ask Mitt Romney — but taking a moderate stand could actually help Brown in his reelection bid next year.
“Scott Brown against cutting all Planned Parenthood funding”

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