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Monday, 23 February 2015

Pit bull terrier kills two-year-old girl in West Mifflin, Pennsylvania




Pit Bull terrier



Police say a 2-year-old girl has died after being mauled by a pit bull in a Pittsburgh suburb.


Police say the dog attacked Paylynn Devaugh inside a home in West Mifflin around 8:45 p.m. Sunday.


The girl was pronounced dead at Jefferson Memorial Hospital.


Police say Paylynn lived in nearby Forest Hills.


An autopsy is scheduled for Monday. The investigation is continuing.


West Mifflin is about 10 miles southeast of downtown Pittsburgh.


According to the website dogbites.org, which tracks "dangerous dog breeds":


* 42 U.S. dog bite-related fatalities occurred in 2014. Despite being regulated in Military Housing areas and over 700 U.S. cities, pit bulls contributed to 64% (27) of these deaths. Pit bulls make up about 6% of the total U.S. dog population.2


* Together, pit bulls (27) and rottweilers (4), the second most lethal dog breed, accounted for 74% of the total recorded deaths in 2014. This same combination also accounted for 74% of all fatal attacks during the 10-year period of 2005 to 2014.


* Annual data from 2014 shows that 48% (20) of the fatality victims were children 13-years and younger, and 52% (22) were adults, 20-years and older. Of the total adults killed by dogs in 2014, 73% (16) were ages 50-years and older.


* In 2014, 19% (8), of all dog bite fatality victims were either visiting or living temporarily with the dog's owner when the fatal attack occurred, down from 38% in 2013. Children 6-years and younger accounted for 88% (7) of these deaths.


Is the UN obsolete? Lavrov says time has come to get its act together

Lavrov

© RIA NOVOSTI / Sergiy Kuznecov

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov



The UN would be effective in settling international disputes, if some member-states didn't try to use it for dominating world affairs, Russian Foreign Minister believes, adding that such efforts led to bombings in Serbia, war in Iraq and chaos in Libya.

Sergey Lavrov has called for the UN, about to celebrate its 70th anniversary, to be an independent and effective leader in global decision-making, despite attempts by some of its members to usurp the organization's functions.


"It's time to answer the question: do we really want the see the UN an effective and influential instrument of preserving peace and security or are we ready to allow it turn into the arena of propagandist struggle, with the UN being excluded from the process of finding key solutions to international problems," Lavrov said, at the open debate for the United Nations Security Council (UNSC), held on Monday in New York.


Lavrov listed episodes in recent history, which he sees as violations of the UN charter, caused by a will to dominate world affairs.




"It's enough to remember the bombings of Serbia, the occupation of Iraq under a false pretext... and the rude manipulation of the Security Council mandate leading to destruction and on-going chaos in Libya," the minister said.

The Russian Foreign Minister has denounced attempts at either turning the UNSC into a body for unconditional and bulk approval of decisions made by the "leader," or for making it steer away completely from decision-making.


Lavrov talked of "unsavory methods... such as massive pressure on sovereign states, attempts at imposing on them decisions and standards in politics, economics and ideology."


"For those unwilling to obey there are techniques of inspiring inner conflicts and carrying out regime change operations," the foreign minister added. "One example is open encouragement of the anti-constitutional coup in Ukraine."


The UNSC resolution, clamping down on funding of the so-called Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS), initiated by Russia and approved earlier this month is one of the positive examples of the council's independent work, Lavrov believes. The resolution on eliminating chemical weapons in Syria is another such example, according to the minister.


Writing your way to happiness by editing your personal narratives

handwriting

The scientific research on the benefits of so-called expressive writing is surprisingly vast. Studies have shown that writing about oneself and personal experiences can improve mood disorders , help reduce symptoms among cancer patients , improve a person's health after a heart attack, reduce doctor visits and even boost memory .

Now researchers are studying whether the power of writing — and then rewriting — your personal story can lead to behavioral changes and improve happiness.


The concept is based on the idea that we all have a personal narrative that shapes our view of the world and ourselves. But sometimes our inner voice doesn't get it completely right. Some researchers believe that by writing and then editing our own stories, we can change our perceptions of ourselves and identify obstacles that stand in the way of better health.


It may sound like self-help nonsense, but research suggests the effects are real.


In one of the earliest studies on personal story editing, researchers gathered 40 college freshman at Duke University who were struggling academically. Not only were they worried about grades, but they questioned whether they were intellectual equals to other students at their school.


The students were divided into intervention groups and control groups. Students in the intervention group were given information showing that it is common for students to struggle in their freshman year. They watched videos of junior and senior college students who talked about how their own grades had improved as they adjusted to college.


The goal was to prompt these students to edit their own narratives about college. Rather than thinking they weren't cut out for college, they were encouraged to think that they just needed more time to adjust.


The intervention results, published in , were startling. In the short term, the students who had undergone the story-changing intervention got better grades on a sample test. But the long-term results were the most impressive.


Students who had been prompted to change their personal stories improved their grade-point averages and were less likely to drop out over the next year than the students who received no information. In the control group, which had received no advice about grades, 20 percent of the students had dropped out within a year. But in the intervention group, only 1 student — or just 5 percent — dropped out.


In another study, Stanford researchers focused on African-American students who were struggling to adjust to college. Some of the students were asked to create an essay or video talking about college life to be seen by future students. The study found that the students who took part in the writing or video received better grades in the ensuing months than those in a control group.


Another writing study asked married couples to write about a conflict as a neutral observer. Among 120 couples, those who explored their problems through writing showed greater improvement in marital happiness than those who did not write about their problems.


"These writing interventions can really nudge people from a self-defeating way of thinking into a more optimistic cycle that reinforces itself," said Timothy D. Wilson, a University of Virginia psychology professor and lead author of the Duke study.


Dr. Wilson, whose book , was released in paperback this month, believes that while writing doesn't solve every problem, it can definitely help people cope. "Writing forces people to reconstrue whatever is troubling them and find new meaning in it," he said.


Much of the work on expressive writing has been led by James Pennebaker, a psychology professor at the University of Texas. In one of his experiments, college students were asked to write for 15 minutes a day about an important personal issue or superficial topics. Afterward, the students who wrote about personal issues had fewer illnesses and visits to the student health center.


"The idea here is getting people to come to terms with who they are, where they want to go," said Dr. Pennebaker. "I think of expressive writing as a life course correction."


At the Johnson & Johnson Human Performance Institute, life coaches ask clients to identify their goals, then to write about why they haven't achieved those goals.


Once the clients have written their old stories, they are asked to reflect on them and edit the narratives to come up with a new, more honest assessment. While the institute doesn't have long-term data, the intervention has produced strong anecdotal results.


In one example, a woman named Siri initially wrote in her "old story" that she wanted to improve her fitness, but as the primary breadwinner for her family she had to work long hours and already felt guilty about time spent away from her children.


With prompting, she eventually wrote a new story, based on the same facts but with a more honest assessment of why she doesn't exercise. "The truth is," she wrote, "I don't like to exercise, and I don't value my health enough. I use work and the kids to excuse my lack of fitness."


Intrigued by the evidence that supports expressive writing, I decided to try it myself, with the help of Jack Groppel, co-founder of the Human Performance Institute.


Like Siri, I have numerous explanations for why I don't find time for exercise. But once I started writing down my thoughts, I began to discover that by shifting priorities, I am able to make time for exercise.


"When you get to that confrontation of truth with what matters to you, it creates the greatest opportunity for change," Dr. Groppel said.


The Weight of Chains: US/NATO Destruction of Yugoslavia (Documentary)


Boris Malagurski's award-winning Canadian film "The Weight of Chains", dealing with the breakup of Yugoslavia from a different angle. If you thought you knew why Yugoslavia broke up, get ready for 2 hours of shocking facts that will shed a different light on Western intervention in the Balkans. Malagurski exposes the root causes of the Yugoslav wars and explains that the goal for the West to create economic and geopolitical colonies in that part of the world.

"The Weight Of Chains" presents a Canadian perspective on Western involvement in the division of the ethnic groups within Yugoslavia and show that the war was forced from outside - regular people wanted peace. However, extreme fractions on all sides, fuelled by their foreign mentors, outvoiced the moderates and even ten years after the last conflict - the hatred remains and people continue spreading myths of what really happened in the 1990s. Why did all this happen?


[embedded content]




Who's in the film? Everyone from former "Economic Hitman" John Perkins, Retired Major General of the UN Army Lewis Mackenzie, Canadian economist Michel Chossudovsky, Canadian journalist Scott Taylor, former Canadian Ambassador to Yugoslavia James Bissett, humanitarian Vlade Divac... and the list goes on!

This film was funded exclusively through donations, so please support the project by buying a DVD of the film through the film's website.


The director of this film, Boris Malagurski, has made several films to date, the last one being "Kosovo | Can You Imagine?", a controversial documentary exposing how remaining Serbs in Kosovo have little or no basic human rights, which won several awards at film festivals around the world and was broadcasted as well.


BEST OF THE WEB: Skyfall: Does the Russian meteor explosion portend more disasters?


chelyabinsk fireball

In mid-February 2013, a meteor fireball streaked across the sky and slammed into the central Russian city of Chelyabinsk. The shock-wave resulting from the overhead explosion equaled the energy released from about 20 nuclear bombs. It damaged nearly every building in the city and injured thousands of people. RT went to central Russia to talk with witnesses and scientists, and to find out whether the Russia should get ready for more such phenomena.

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Comment: Etymology of 'disaster':

1590s, from M.Fr. (1560s), from It. "ill-starred," from dis-, here merely pejorative (see dis-) + astro "star, planet," from L. , from Gk. (see star). The sense is astrological, of a calamity blamed on an unfavorable position of a planet.



...and before astronomy was 'adjusted' to become the science of the study of planets, it was concerned with the study of comets and when they would return...

Locust swarms causing damage to crops in New South Wales, Australia




Locust swarm



Swarm activity of locusts have been reported across 100 kilometres of the central west, with farmers having to hand feed stock due to crop loss.

Central west, senior biosecurity officer, Rhett Robinson said said flying swarms are affecting the feed available to livestock and farmers are having to hand feed.


"There is major potential impact to sowing.


"Low density swarms can wipe out a newly emerging crop within days."


Mr Robinson said over 130 reports of locust activity had been received since January.


"We've had reports in areas such as Gilgandra, Collie, Armatree and Curban.


"Locusts have been reported north in Gulargambone and east in places such as Mendooran."


Mr Robinson said one of the biggest risk factors is medium density swarms can wipe out newly emerging crops.


"They nip off the growing tips."


Medium density swarms are usually 10 adults per square metre, and high density swarms are 50 plus."


Mr Robinson said locusts prefer cereal crops, including oats and wheat.


"There have been reports of crop loss to lucerne, where they strip all the leaves off, doing a lot of damage."


Central west Local Land Services (LLS), Team Leader Invasive Species and Plant Health, Lisa Thomas said land holders must monitor swarms to identify laying and eggbeds so prompt treatment can be undertaken to prevent further damage to emerging crops and pastures.


"The impacts of locust are about to be realised now that we have second generation locust flying with plans to lay eggs locally due to the ideal conditions."


Earlier this year an aerial survey was conducted in areas of Collie, Curban and Tooraweenah, where bands were identified.


"Due to the lush pasture conditions many smaller bands were not identified and not treated so now we have the swarm development across several parts of our region.


"Locust bands will begin to develop again by early March and reports must be made so chemical can be supplied for land holders to treat locusts as this is an obligation of all land holders," Ms Thomas said.


She said LLS biosecurity officers are validating swarm densities, environmental factors and locations to determine if there is sufficient scope to get approval to undertake aerial operations.


"Strict criteria is set by Department of Primary Industries (DPI) for the initiation of plague locust aerial campaigns and this control method must meet the requirements provided within the DPI Policy. Locust bands will begin to develop again by early March and reports must be made so chemical can be supplied for land holders to treat locusts as this is an obligation of all land holders."


She said locust activity will now move into the third generation, as present flying locusts are expected to lay eggs on local soils.


"It is critical that all locust activity is reported so chemical can be applied at the appropriate phases of development when results are best achieved. Flying locust are nearly impossible to control as there are many efficiency factors including environmental constraints and policies that restrict operations within the settled areas, so all efforts must be made to control locust on the ground at banding stages."


Work of prominent climate change denier, Willie Soon, was funded by energy industry

global cooling

© www.dailymail.co.uk

And...now it's global cooling!



A prominent academic and climate change denier's work was funded almost entirely by the energy industry, receiving more than $1.2m from companies, lobby groups and oil billionaires over more than a decade, newly released documents show.

Over the last 14 years Willie Soon, a researcher at the Harvard-Smithsonian Centre for Astrophysics, received a total of $1.25m from Exxon Mobil, Southern Company, the American Petroleum Institute (API) and a foundation run by the ultra-conservative Koch brothers, the documents obtained by Greenpeace through freedom of information filings show.


According to the documents, the biggest single funder was Southern Company, one of the country's biggest electricity providers that relies heavily on coal.The documents draw new attention to the industry's efforts to block action against climate change - including President Barack Obama's power-plant rules.


Willie Soon

© heartland.org

Researcher Willie Soon



Unlike the vast majority of scientists, Soon does not accept that rising greenhouse gas emissions since the industrial age are causing climate changes. He contends climate change is driven by the sun.

In the relatively small universe of climate denial Soon, with his Harvard-Smithsonian credentials, was a sought after commodity. He was cited admiringly by Senator James Inhofe, the Oklahoma Republican who famously called global warming a hoax. He was called to testify when Republicans in the Kansas state legislature tried to block measures promoting wind and solar power. The Heartland Institute, a hub of climate denial, gave Soon a courage award.


Soon did not enjoy such recognition from the scientific community. There were no grants from Nasa, the National Science Foundation or the other institutions which were funding his colleagues at the Center for Astrophysics. According to the documents, his work was funded almost entirely by the fossil fuel lobby.


"The question here is really: 'What did API, ExxonMobil, Southern Company and Charles Koch see in Willie Soon? What did they get for $1m-plus," said Kert Davies, a former Greenpeace researcher who filed the original freedom of information requests. Greenpeace and the Climate Investigations Center, of which Davies is the founder, shared the documents with news organisations.


"Did they simply hope he was on to research that would disprove the consensus? Or was it too enticing to be able to basically buy the nameplate Harvard-Smithsonian?"




From 2005, Southern Company gave Soon nearly $410,000. In return, Soon promised to publish research about the sun's influence on climate change in leading journals, and to deliver lectures about his theories at national and international events, according to the correspondence.

The funding would lead to "active participations by this PI (principal investigator) of this research proposal in all national and international forums interested in promoting the basic understanding of solar variability and climate change", Soon wrote in a report to Southern Company.


In 2012, Soon told Southern Company its grants had supported publications on polar bears, temperature changes in the Arctic and China, and rainfall patterns in the Indian monsoon.


ExxonMobil gave $335,000 but stopped funding Soon in 2010, according to the documents. The astrophysicist reportedly received $274,000 from the main oil lobby, the American Petroleum Institute, and $230,000 from the Charles G Koch Foundation. He received an additional $324,000 in anonymous donations through a trust used by the Kochs and other conservative donors, the documents showed.


Greenpeace has suggested Soon also improperly concealed his funding sources for a recent article, in violation of the journal's conflict of interest guidelines.


"The company was paying him to write peer-reviewed science and that relationship was not acknowledged in the peer-reviewed literature," Davies said. "These proposals and contracts show debatable interventions in science literally on the behalf of Southern Company and the Kochs."


In letters to the Internal Revenue Service and Congress, Greenpeace said Soon may have misused the grants from the Koch foundation by trying to influence legislation.


Soon did not respond to requests for comment. But he has in the past strenuously denied his industry funders had any influence over his conclusions.



"No amount of money can influence what I have to say and write, especially on my scientific quest to understand how climate works, all by itself," he told the in 2013.



As is common among Harvard-Smithsonian scientists, Soon is not on a salary. He receives his compensation from outside grant money, said Christine Pulliam, a spokeswoman for the Center for Astrophysics.

The Center for Astrophysics does not require scientists to disclose their funding sources. But Pulliam acknowleged that Soon had failed to meet disclosure requirements of some of the journals that published his research. "Soon should have followed those policies," she said.


Harvard said Soon operated outside of the university - even though he carries a Harvard ID and uses a Harvard email address.


"Willie Soon is a Smithsonian staff researcher at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, a collaboration of the Harvard College Observatory and the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory," a Harvard spokesman, Jeff Neal, said.


"There is no record of Soon having applied for or having been granted funds that were or are administered by the University. Soon is not an employee of Harvard."


Both Harvard and the Smithsonian acknowledge that the climate is changing because of rising levels of greenhouse gas concentrations caused by human activities.


Pulliam cast Soon's association with the institutions as an issue of academic freedom: "Academic freedom is critically important. The Smithsonian stands by the process by which the research results of all of its scholars are peer reviewed and vetted by other scientists. This is the way that the scientific process works. The funding entities, regardless of their affiliation, have no influence on the research."