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Wednesday, 14 January 2015

EU cries foul as Russia shifts Ukraine gas transit to Turkey

Russia plans to shift all its natural gas flows crossing Ukraine to a route via Turkey, a surprise move that the European Union's energy chief said would hurt its reputation as a supplier.

The decision makes no economic sense, Maros Sefcovic, the European Commission's vice president for energy union, told reporters today after talks with Russian government officials and the head of gas exporter, OAO Gazprom (GAZP), in Moscow.




Gazprom, the world's biggest natural gas supplier, plans to send 63 billion cubic meters through a proposed link under the Black Sea to Turkey, fully replacing shipments via Ukraine, Chief Executive Officer Alexey Miller said during the discussions. About 40 percent of Russia's gas exports to Europe and Turkey travel through Ukraine's Soviet-era network.

Russia, which supplies about 30 percent of Europe's gas, dropped a planned link through Bulgaria bypassing Ukraine amid EU opposition last year. Russia's relations with the EU have reached a post-Cold War low over President Vladimir Putin's support for separatists in Ukraine.


Sefcovic said he was "very surprised" by Miller's comment, adding that relying on a Turkish route, without Ukraine, won't fit with the EU's gas system.


Gazprom plans to deliver the fuel to Turkey's border with Greece and "it's up to the EU to decide what to do" with it further, according to Sefcovic.


Different Habits


"We don't work like this," he said. "The trading system and trading habits -- how we do it today -- are different."


Sefcovic said he arrived in the Russian capital to discuss supplies to south-eastern EU countries after Putin scrapped the proposed $45 billion South Stream pipeline. The region, even if Turkey is included, doesn't need the volumes Gazprom is planning for a new link, he said.


Ukraine makes sense as a transit country given its location in Europe and the "very clear specified places of deliveries" in Gazprom's current long-term contracts with EU customers, Sefcovic said.


"I believe we can find a better solution," Sefcovic said.


The 28-nation EU is planning build an energy union to reduce dependence on Russia and facilitate transition to a low-carbon economy. Russia was planning South Stream for about a decade, first claiming it would meet expanding demand in the EU, then saying would ensure supplies from high transit risks via Ukraine.


'No Options'


Gazprom has reduced deliveries via Ukraine after price and debt disputes with the neighboring country that twice in the past decade disrupted supplies to the EU during freezing weather.


After building and acquiring export pipelines, the company cut transit via Ukraine to about 62 billion cubic meters last year from 137 billion in 2004.


"Transit risks for European consumers on the territory of Ukraine remain," Miller said in an e-mailed statement. "There are no other options" except for the planned Turkish Stream link, he said.


"We have informed our European partners, and now it is up to them to put in place the necessary infrastructure starting from the Turkish-Greek border," Miller said.


Russia won't hurt its image with a shift to Turkey because it has always been a reliable gas supplier and never violated its obligations, Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak told reporters today in Moscow after meeting Sefcovic.


"The decision has been made," Novak said. "We are diversifying and eliminating the risks of unreliable countries that caused problems in past years, including for European consumers."


Chomsky: We Are All – Fill in the Blank.

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FBI arrests Ohio man for 'plotting' ISIS-inspired attack on Capitol


© Reuters / Gary Cameron



The FBI today arrested an Ohio man for allegedly plotting an ISIS-inspired attack on the U.S. Capitol, where he hoped to set off a series of bombs aimed at lawmakers, whom he allegedly considered enemies.

Christopher Lee Cornell, 20, of Green Township, was arrested on charges of attempting to kill a U.S. government official, authorities said.


According to government documents, he allegedly planned to detonate pipe bombs at the national landmark and open fire on any employees and officials fleeing after the explosions.



© Butler County Sheriffs Office

Christopher Lee Cornell, 20, of Green Township, Ohio, was arrested on charges of attempting to kill a U.S. government official in an alleged plot to attack the U.S. Capitol.



The FBI first noticed Cornell several months ago after an informant notified the agency that Cornell was allegedly voicing support for violent "jihad" on Twitter accounts under the alias "Raheel Mahrus Ubaydah," according to charging documents. In addition, Cornell allegedly posted statements, videos and other content expressing support for ISIS -- the brutal terrorist group also known as ISIL -- that is wreaking havoc in Iraq and Syria.

"I believe that we should just wage jihad under our own orders and plan attacks and everything," Cornell allegedly wrote in an online message to the informant in August, according to the FBI. "I believe we should meet up and make our own group in alliance with the Islamic State here and plan operations ourselves."


In the message, Cornell said that such attacks "already got a thumbs up" from radical cleric Anwar Awlaki "before his martyrdom."


Awlaki was killed in a U.S. drone strike in 2011, but his online messages calling for attacks on the West live on.


U.S. officials considered Awlaki an operational leader within al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, the Yemen-based terror group tied to the deadly assault on a satirical magazine in Paris last week.


Cornell and the informant met in Cincinnati over two days in October, and then another two days in November. During the last meeting, Cornell told an FBI informant that members of Congress were enemies and that he wanted to launch an attack on the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., according to charging documents.


Cornell then allegedly saved money to finance the attack and researched how to build bombs, the FBI said.


Earlier today, while also taking "final steps" to travel to Washington for the attack, Cornell allegedly bought two semi-automatic rifles and 600 rounds of ammunition from a store in Ohio, authorities said.


Within hours of Cornell's arrest, the FBI and Department of Homeland Security issued a bulletin to law enforcement agencies across the country notifying them of the case.


"The alleged activities of Cornell highlight the continued interest of US-based violent extremists to support designated foreign terrorist organizations overseas, such as ISIL, by committing terrorist acts in the United States," the bulletin read. "Terrorist group members and supporters will almost certainly continue to use social media platforms to disseminate English language violent extremist messages."



© Butler County Sheriffs Office

Christopher Lee Cornell, 20, of Green Township, Ohio, was arrested on charges of attempting to kill a U.S. government official in an alleged plot to attack the U.S. Capitol.



Chomsky: We Are All – Fill in the Blank.

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Solutions: Guerrilla Gardening



© corbettreport.com



The problems are obvious: food safety scandals, the death of family farming, food supply insecurity, the revolving door between corporate lobbyists and government regulators, and many more. The solution should be equally obvious: rolling up our sleeves and getting in the garden. Join us today as we explore this simple, natural solution to one of our most fundamental problems.

[embedded content]





Comment: James Corbett gives an excellent overview of the current climate in the food world, from safety, production, regulation and control, to the evils of GMO foods. Corbett talks about The Lunatic Farmer: Joel Salatin and Polyface Farms solutions to the growing 'food problem'. Corbett also quotes from the excellent book by William Engdahl

This skillfully researched book focuses on how a small socio-political American elite seeks to establish control over the very basis of human survival: the provision of our daily bread. "Control the food and you control the people."


This is no ordinary book about the perils of GMO. Engdahl takes the reader inside the corridors of power, into the backrooms of the science labs, behind closed doors in the corporate boardrooms.


The author cogently reveals a diabolical World of profit-driven political intrigue, government corruption and coercion, where genetic manipulation and the patenting of life forms are used to gain worldwide control over food production. If the book often reads as a crime story, that should come as no surprise. For that is what it is.


Engdahl's carefully argued critique goes far beyond the familiar controversies surrounding the practice of genetic modification as a scientific technique. The book is an eye-opener, a must-read for all those committed to the causes of social justice and World peace.




Chomsky: We Are All – Fill in the Blank.

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Tanzania bans witchdoctors in attempt to end albino killings

Albino

© Yasuyoshi Chiba/AFP/Getty Images

At least 74 people with albinism have reportedly been murdered in the east African country since 2000.



Tanzania has banned witchdoctors in an attempt to combat a rise in the killing of people with albinism for their body parts, officials said on Wednesday.

At least 74 people with albinism have reportedly been murdered in the east African country since 2000. After a surge in 2009, the government placed children with albinism in special homes to protect them.


Witchdoctors believe their body parts bring good fortune and wealth. Isaac Nantanga, an interior ministry spokesman, told Agence France-Presse: "These so-called witches bear responsibility for the attacks against albinos."


The government and the Tanzania Albinism Society have agreed to form a taskforce to conduct special operations against the kidnaps, abductions and murders. But the society warned that a ban on witchcraft alone does not go far enough. Ziziyada Nsembo, its secretary-general, said on Wednesday: "It's just a starting point. The government should understand it is an endless story from 2006 until this time. No action has been taken to stop the killings."


Witchdoctors may not be the ultimate source of the problem, she added. "We haven't seen where these hands, legs and skin are taken. This is the big question. If the witchdoctors will tell us that they are taken to somebody, and what purpose they are used for, we will be in a better position. Through the witchdoctors we can reach the real culprits. That is our one demand: for the government to find these people."


A hereditary genetic condition that causes an absence of pigmentation in the skin, hair and eyes, albinism affects one Tanzanian in 1,400, according to experts. It affects just one person in 20,000 in the west.


Body parts sell for around $600 in Tanzania, with an entire corpse fetching $75,000. A US survey in 2010 found that while most people in Tanzania are Christian or Muslim, 93% said they believed in witchcraft. Despite the scourge, only 10 people have been convicted of murder.


Last month a four-year-old girl was kidnapped from her home by men armed with machetes in the northern Mwanza region. Police have since arrested 15 people, including the girl's father and two uncles, but she remains unaccounted for.


Nsembo said: "The situation is so bad because people with albinism are afraid of going out and are not going to work. Children are hiding in the house. Mothers take children aged one and two to a special centre for their safety where they are like orphans: they lose the love of their mothers.


"It's because of a lack of knowledge. People don't understand that the difference is the skin but inside we're just the same."


The government has also launched an education campaign to end the killings. Home affairs minister Mathias Chikawe told AFP: "We are keen on addressing the issue of abductions and killings of people with albinism once and for all.


"We are against those who cheat people [telling them] that they will be rich by possessing charms, as well as fortune tellers and those distributing talismans. People should also be repeatedly told that the only way of becoming rich is through hard work and not possessing charms."


In August, a UN rights expert warned that attacks against people with albinism were on the rise ahead of Tanzania's October 2015 national elections, encouraging political campaigners to turn to witchdoctors for good luck.


Isaac Mwaura, a Kenyan MP with albinism, said Tanzanian gangs were crossing into neighbouring Kenya to carry out abductions.


"You can clearly see people in politics going for these concoctions," Mwaura told the BBC. "People will kill people with albinism in return for what they believe is this good fortune, and that is totally wrong. This problem has now become a regional problem because of Tanzania not having taken strong measures to curb it."


Tanzania's Daily News newspaper, in an editorial earlier this month, condemned the "disgusting" trade and said it had brought shame to the nation. The attackers "stalk unsuspecting people with albinism, pounce on them, hack off their body parts and run away with them," it said.


Chomsky: We Are All – Fill in the Blank.

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Study Shows Voters See Far Beyond The Expensive Suits And Practiced Language Patterns Of Politicians



Rick PerryMitt RomneyBarack Obama

Many of us have forgotten how to judge the character of another. Their words only tell half the story. For example it is good to watch television with the sound off, this allows you to see numerous nonverbal cues. Body language alone speaks volumes about someone. You can see shy people pull their bodies inward, shift their shoulders in and put their hands in their pockets. We have patterns that emerge that tell everything about ourselves. What we think of ourselves and others. Politicians in general are not immune, but they have been cultivated to hide those flaws. Lessons in culture, neural-linguistic programming, rapport and a lot more goes in to the most prominent politicians. Bill Clinton in particular was trained by two of the best in the business Kevin Hogan and Tony Robbins. They tell them never to stretch your arms past their shoulders as it makes you seem like you are lying. You end up looking like the fisherman who said I caught a fish 'this big'!



Science Daily has a great study on nonverbal communication:


As the old saying goes, "you never get a second chance to make a first impression."


When it comes to presidential candidates in nationally televised debates, though, a series of studies by a Texas Tech University professor in the College of Media and Communication are showing the nonverbal repertoires that make up a presidential candidate's communication style are important influencers of voter reaction.


Erik Bucy, a regents professor of strategic communication at Texas Tech, is a popular guest lecturer around the world for his research on nonverbal expressions in political news and presidential debates and how those televised leader displays affect public perceptions of candidates.


Over the past year, Bucy has presented the results to several national associations, spoke at a symposium on nonverbal communication and democracy in Sweden, guest lectured at UCLA and participated in an invited conference sponsored by the C-SPAN Education Foundation and Purdue University.


Some of this work, conducted in collaboration with researchers from the University of Wisconsin (UW), is summarized in a paper entitled "The Power of Television Images in a Social Media Age: Linking Biobehavioral and Computational Approaches via the Second Screen," soon to be published in The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science.

What Bucy and his colleagues discovered is candidates' facial expressions, gestures and voice tone do as much do as much or more to drive public reaction to the debates than what the candidates actually say.


"This frustrates some people who study media and politics because they want the discussion to be all about the issues," Bucy said. "What we're documenting is, in fact, people respond a lot to behavior. Not everybody pays really that close of attention to elections or knows all their party's positions on the issues, but they can get a sense of the candidates' traits by observing competitive political behavior. And traits are reliable predictors of candidate support."



Let's talk about rapport for a moment, politicians want to make a deep connection with their voters. George W Bush acted like he was a real Texan and made obvious attempts at sounding like an idiot. Today we call them 'Bush-isms' but the best way to get rapport with someone is to talk like that someone and act like that someone. Because we like ourselves and we like people like us. An old school technique for getting deep rapport was called matching and mirroring. When someone changed their body language you wait three seconds and do it yourself and make it look like you both are mirror images of each other. You can breath in sync with someone, that also works well. If you are not good at this you can really piss people off. Obama has dabbled with conversational hypnosis, you can use it redefine arguments such as:


“The issue isn't (high taxes), it's about (roads and schools), and that means..”

“I agree (taxes are high) and would add the issue isn't about the revenue but how useful we are using it..”


You lead everyone away from the problem at hand toward something that you can debate properly. One of the hidden tricks of the trade that Obama overuses is future pacing. Pushing an important agenda forward and avoiding the issue altogether:


“The issue is not the misuse of the people's taxes but how we can work together to ensure the American people benefit from their hard earned money they send to Washington every year.”


We notice everything about these politicians on a subconscious level. That is not to say that voters truly understand politicians they might get an idea about one and just vote for another selected politician. We have the information available to us but we are too busy and too distracted to notice. I've gotten myself out of very bad situations based on gut reactions that came about through nonverbal communication. I'll be adding a few pictures of politicians from the previous election and I surely would love to know what were the first thoughts you had about them.


Mike Vail is a US based investigative journalist, geopolitical analyst, and publisher of StratRisks.com. You can read Michael's articles on BlacklistedNews.com, and follow him on Twitter @MichaelVail




Another US move to flank China: Japan approves largest military budget since WWII

japanese military budget

© Reuters / Yuya Shino

A Japanese Ground Self-Defense Force (JGSDF) Type 74 armoured tank takes part in an annual new year military exercise with the JGSDF 1st Airborne Brigade at Narashino exercise field in Funabashi, east of Tokyo January 11, 2015.



Japan's government has approved its largest military budget in 70 years, in contravention of the country's pacifist constitution, in a display of force to its highly militarized neighbors. The extra military spending comes amid a stalling economy.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's Cabinet has given the green light to an unprecedented nearly 5 trillion yen ($42 billion) defense budget, which comes into force in April. The extra military expenditure mirrors an expanded overall budget, which has reached a record 96.3 trillion yen ($814 billion). The budget still awaits parliament's approval, where the government coalition headed by Abe has a majority in both houses.


The 2 percent increase in military spending is the third hike during Abe's rule. Since he took office in December 2012, Abe ended the 11-year decline in defense spending. In 2002, Tokyo passed its previous highest military budget of 4.96 trillion yen.



Japan proposes record US $42 billion military budget to counter China's rise http://t.co/Y2PKTTKeim http://ift.tt/1yaRa6k


- NDTV (@ndtv) January 14, 2015



"This budget will contribute to achieve both economic recovery and regaining fiscal health together," PM Abe said at a press conference Wednesday.

In line with plans announced in late 2013, Abe's Cabinet plans to spend 24.7 trillion yen between 2014 and 2019 on military hardware, including on amphibious vehicles, drones, fighter jets and submarines.


Japan's military purchases consist mainly of US-made military hardware and homemade weaponry.




Tokyo intends to buy six 5th-generation F-35A stealth fighter jets (reportedly for $148 million apiece), as well as five US-made Bell Boeing V-22 Osprey tilt-rotor aircraft (which have an estimated price tag of $68 million each).

Japan passes record defense budget http://t.co/AiXjqYev3P http://ift.tt/1yaRa6m


- Circa (@Circa) January 14, 2015



Japan's so-called Self-Defense Force is also looking forward to get a fleet of US-made Global Hawk drones (estimated cost over $100 million a unit), yet this will take place over a five-year period and funds for this purchase will not be allocated from the 2015 military budget, Japanese officials told AFP.

The Japanese Defense Ministry's shopping list also includes 20 Kawasaki P-1 (350 billion yen a unit) national-made maritime patrol aircraft, at 350 billion yen apiece) which are already in service with the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force.


Tokyo's increased military expenditure comes amid rising tensions between Japan and China over territorial disputes in the East China Sea.


Abe's government is struggling to prevent the economy slipping into recession. The country has an aging population and soaring welfare costs.




In 2014, Japan's population fell for a third straight year, with the elderly (over 65 years old) making up 25 percent of the nation. Social security spending in 2015 is expected to account for about one-third of the budget.

The Cabinet is boosting government spending, changing its tax policies and prompting the nation's senior citizens to spend more on the younger generation.


Abe has previously tried to alter the country's pacifist constitution and downplay the restrictions it imposes on the national armed forces, but has failed to gain the necessary public support. Instead, his government has reinterpreted the law, saying that it allows the Japanese military to come to the rescue of an ally under attack.


Chomsky: We Are All – Fill in the Blank.

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service - if this is your content and you're reading it on someone else's site, please read the FAQ at http://ift.tt/jcXqJW.


Study Shows Voters See Far Beyond The Expensive Suits And Practiced Language Patterns Of Politicians



Rick PerryMitt RomneyBarack Obama



Many of us have forgotten how to judge the character of another. Their words only tell half the story. For example it is good to watch television with the sound off, this allows you to see numerous nonverbal cues. Body language alone speaks volumes about someone. You can see shy people pull their bodies inward, shift their shoulders in and put their hands in their pockets. We have patterns that emerge that tell everything about ourselves. What we think of ourselves and others. Politicians in general are not immune, but they have been cultivated to hide those flaws. Lessons in culture, neural-linguistic programming, rapport and a lot more goes in to the most prominent politicians. Bill Clinton in particular was trained by two of the best in the business Kevin Hogan and Tony Robbins. They tell them never to stretch your arms past their shoulders as it makes you seem like you are lying. You end up looking like the fisherman who said I caught a fish 'this big'!



Science Daily has a great study on nonverbal communication:


As the old saying goes, "you never get a second chance to make a first impression."


When it comes to presidential candidates in nationally televised debates, though, a series of studies by a Texas Tech University professor in the College of Media and Communication are showing the nonverbal repertoires that make up a presidential candidate's communication style are important influencers of voter reaction.


Erik Bucy, a regents professor of strategic communication at Texas Tech, is a popular guest lecturer around the world for his research on nonverbal expressions in political news and presidential debates and how those televised leader displays affect public perceptions of candidates.


Over the past year, Bucy has presented the results to several national associations, spoke at a symposium on nonverbal communication and democracy in Sweden, guest lectured at UCLA and participated in an invited conference sponsored by the C-SPAN Education Foundation and Purdue University.


Some of this work, conducted in collaboration with researchers from the University of Wisconsin (UW), is summarized in a paper entitled "The Power of Television Images in a Social Media Age: Linking Biobehavioral and Computational Approaches via the Second Screen," soon to be published in The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science.

What Bucy and his colleagues discovered is candidates' facial expressions, gestures and voice tone do as much do as much or more to drive public reaction to the debates than what the candidates actually say.


"This frustrates some people who study media and politics because they want the discussion to be all about the issues," Bucy said. "What we're documenting is, in fact, people respond a lot to behavior. Not everybody pays really that close of attention to elections or knows all their party's positions on the issues, but they can get a sense of the candidates' traits by observing competitive political behavior. And traits are reliable predictors of candidate support."



Let's talk about rapport for a moment, politicians want to make a deep connection with their voters. George W Bush acted like he was a real Texan and made obvious attempts at sounding like an idiot. Today we call them 'Bush-isms' but the best way to get rapport with someone is to talk like that someone and act like that someone. Because we like ourselves and we like people like us. An old school technique for getting deep rapport was called matching and mirroring. When someone changed their body language you wait three seconds and do it yourself and make it look like you both are mirror images of each other. You can breath in sync with someone, that also works well. If you are not good at this you can really piss people off. Obama has dabbled with conversational hypnosis, you can use it redefine arguments such as:


“The issue isn't (high taxes), it's about (roads and schools), and that means..”

“I agree (taxes are high) and would add the issue isn't about the revenue but how useful we are using it..”


You lead everyone away from the problem at hand toward something that you can debate properly. One of the hidden tricks of the trade that Obama overuses is future pacing. Pushing an important agenda forward and avoiding the issue altogether:


“The issue is not the misuse of the people's taxes but how we can work together to ensure the American people benefit from their hard earned money they send to Washington every year.”


We notice everything about these politicians on a subconscious level. That is not to say that voters truely understand politicians they might get an idea about one and just vote for another selected politician. We have the information available to us but we are too busy and too distracted to notice. I've gotten myself out of very bad situations based on gut reactions that came about through nonverbal communication. I'll be adding a few pictures of politicians from the previous election and I surely would love to know what were the first thoughts you had about them.


Mike Vail is a US based investigative journalist, geopolitical analyst, and publisher of StratRisks.com. You can read Michael's articles on BlacklistedNews.com, and follow him on Twitter @MichaelVail